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Intense Evil takes faith and the supernatural seriously

The promising (but occasionally disconcerting) new CBS series has some of the most moving and thoughtful explorations of faith, good, and evil that I’ve seen in a television series.

(CBS TV)

It’s not often that network television offers a serious exploration of matters of faith, good, and evil, as well as the presence of the devil in modern society. The new CBS drama series Evil, which debuted Sept. 26, is a rare and mostly refreshing exception: an intense and thoughtful portrayal of a Catholic seminarian and a lapsed-Catholic clinical psychologist who team up to investigate possible possessions and miracles.

Created by the longtime powerhouse writer/producer couple Robert and Michelle King, whose Emmy-winning The Good Wife ran for seven seasons, Evil follows an African-American seminarian named David (Mike Colter) and a psychologist named Kristen (Katja Herbers) who each work providing testimony in court cases involving mysterious incidents.

The two are brought together when Kristen quits her job with the Queens district attorney’s office over an ethical dispute and David realizes that she would be an incredible asset to team up with, bringing scientific and faith-based insights together. David also works with a skeptical high-tech expert named Ben (Aasif Mandvi), whose job is to analyze sound and video recordings of seeming supernatural occurrences and determine if they were doctored.

Their first case (spoiler alert!) involves determining if a vicious serial killer named Orson was compelled by demonic possession, or is in control of his faculties.  At the same time, they’re beset with the intrusive presence of Dr. Leland Townsend (Michael Emerson), who is a fellow psychologist but who takes the side of evil. David has battled him many times and has come to believe that Townsend is a demon in human form, and at one point Townsend taunts a skeptical Kristen by stating his goal is to set as many evildoers free as possible upon the world.

As they delve deeper into their investigation, David and Kristen’s complexities are revealed. David prays the Rosary intensely in private late at night, both in his apartment and while jogging through the New York City streets – yet he freezes upon seeing a nightclub where nubile young women are entering. Back in his apartment, he is seen praying Hail Mary’s with life-or-death fervor as Townsend sits in a chair behind him, taunting him about the fleshly desires he prays to keep at bay.

This may seem like an odd conceit, but I consulted with a priest friend who was a ladies’ man in his pre-clergy life and he found the concept of Townsend’s taunts a brilliant metaphor for the struggles some priests battle. Indeed, the portrayal of David is deeply engaging because he’s not a happy-go-lucky Bing Crosby of the 1940s classic Going My Way, but rather a relatable man who is handsome, human, and quite possibly a character who will draw even non-believing viewers into respect for Catholic clergy at a time when it’s sorely needed.

However, at the same time, the portrayal of David in the first two episodes alludes to some potential troubles. He is apparently tormented by memories of a past girlfriend or wife named Julia who died, and it turns out his struggle during his run past the club wasn’t just about celibacy. Rather, he’s secretly buying psychedelic drugs from a dealer there.

The second episode ends with a bizarre but fascinating scene in which he drifts into altered consciousness after drinking a tea with one of the drugs he bought; having visions of a glowing orb, he asks, “Where are you, God?” and finally, “Julia?”

I am hopeful that Evil is revealing such weaknesses as a means of showing that clergy struggle with the same things as laypeople, while keeping David firmly on the side of good in his work. Loneliness and temptation don’t go away the moment one enlists in God’s Army, and even Jesus, while remaining sinless, had his human moments of struggle at Gethsemane and while tempted by the devil in the desert (cf Heb 4:15).

Meanwhile, Kristen has issues of her own. The mother of a young daughter whose heart condition is likely to kill her before she enters adulthood, she wants to combatively claim she’s too smart for anything that can’t be scientifically proven. But the more she works with David, the more it’s clear that she is being swayed to regain the Catholic beliefs she held as a child.

Just as David is beset by Leland Townsend as the devil on his shoulder, Kristen keeps having terrible night terrors – nightmares that cause sleep paralysis and make her feel genuinely in danger from a pitch-black demon named George. At first, she manages to will George away from threatening her as she sleeps, but soon she’s finding that her young daughter is also threatened by him and that she may have to turn to God for the help she needs to save them both.

Evil is unflinching in the grotesqueness of George and haunting in its use of Townsend, showing that demons can work in various ways. The first episode involving serial killer Orson has some shocking violence in its opening moments before shifting to psychological scares, but the quick edits make the shots gasp-worthy by leaving Orson’s killings largely in the viewer’s active imaginations.

The second episode covers the exploration of a seeming miracle in which a teenage female athlete springs awake in a morgue 177 minutes after being declared dead. Another woman in the same hospital had died an hour before and appears in security video to have appeared angelically floating above the girl as doctors fought to revive her.

It is up to David, Kristen and Ben to figure out if the girl was revived by a miracle or a medical abnormality, while discerning if the death of the other woman was connected. The ensuing mystery is as compelling as the investigation of serial killer Orson’s motivations in the first episode, showing that Evil will be engaging both in its handling of possession and miracles.

There are no simple, pat answers in each episode, making it a rare show that should spark discussion among viewers – and the fact that those discussions will likely involve faith is a real positive. A discussion between David and Kristen in the second episode is one of the most moving and thoughtful explorations of these issues that I’ve seen in a television series.

That sort of discussion apparently springs, in part, from the Kings’ own relationship. “Robert’s more religious, so he typically goes toward a divine explanation,” Michelle King said in an interview with TheWrap. “I am more secular, so I tend to think things are the result of psychology or science.”

Evil is definitely not for young children, fully earning its TV-14 rating, which is akin to the movie ratings system’s PG-13. Catholic teens and adults should find it a fascinating watch, however, and aside from the frightening elements and glimpses of violence the show presents no morally questionable elements. You’ll could well find that, in this case, Evil is a source for good viewing—and discussion.


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About Carl Kozlowski 18 Articles
Carl Kozlowski is a Catholic writer and comedian who wrote the "Cinemazlowski" movie-review column for EWTN's Catholic News Agency for four years. He is a Rotten Tomatoes film critic and was arts editor for Pasadena Weekly for a decade. He co-owns and co-runs Catholic Laughs, which brings clean, clever standup comedy with a Catholic twist to Catholic parishes and other venues nationwide. He is the author of Dozed and Confused: Tales from A Nutty, Narcoleptic Life (2022), described as a "memoir that is stunning, funny, uplifting and inspirational" by Chicago Tribune.

10 Comments

  1. Enjoyed the first episode. I found it thought provoking and special. It’s been a long time since the Catholic Church had some good press. Hope they keep the quality of writing high and interesting. We all know the world could use a rèminder of how Evil some actions are.

  2. “NO morally questionable elements”?? A drug abusing priest might be one. Graphic violence as entertainment might be anothwr.

  3. About finished S1. Feel it’s kinda rough on the Church, notably when Kristen asked David if he’s upset about the abuse scandal and what the Church does to “Gays”. No mention of the steps taken by the Church to rectify the scandal issues or that those types of evil take place far more often in the secular world or that THAT was likely demonicaly infuanced, the arching premise of the show itself…and what exactly did she mean by her second query? The Church has done NOTHING to Gays…what did that even mean? I’m confident that at the end of the day, this show will fully drag the Church through the mud. We’ll sooner see David fall into a sexual relationship before we see Kristen return to her faith. -J

    • Exactly. NO mention of how the Catholic Church runs 60% of hospitals, schools and charities worldwide. No mention that the BAPTIST CHURCH (in all its divisions) has the highest rate of sexual abuse (stopbaptistpredators.org) by married pastors. And while I had enjoyed the REALISTIC struggles of David, his succumbing to his feelings for Kristen just destroyed the series and I will NOT see the third season. 2more things: a seminarian doesn’t just get ordained a priest, he FIRST is ordained a « transitional deacon » for two years, THEN ordained a priest ; exorcists are highly trained, even secular ones and as someone who has performed some with and without priests (emergency!), a guy like that « Greg » would NEVER be authorized by the Church! I loved Sister Andrea!

      • I watched both first seasons and a few episodes of season three. You both make great points.
        Re the church abuse scandal – of course they never mention how many orders of magnitude worse abuse is in public schools, nor how prevalent in Judaism either.

        The show does the normal ‘woke’ stuff as well, where all the black characters are somehow noble, and the church (and hospitals, and cops (tho no evidence of such) etc) are racist against black ppl – and of course how women are mistreated (the nuns, girl power, etc)… And of course everything Trump or Pro-America being used as ‘bad’…
        But the way it goes into treating violence as OK when you don’t like someone (townsend but also the jerk in the grocery store for cutting in line, and then later, in S3, a man doing an addition to her house.

        The infidelity of Kristin to her husband, and David to the church, as well as the promotion of violence in everyday situations was just too much for me. This show is promoting evil, not fighting it.

  4. About finished S1. Feel it’s kinda rough on the Church, notably when Kristen asked David if he’s upset about the abuse scandal and what the Church does to “Gays”. No mention of the steps taken by the Church to rectify the scandal issues or that those types of evil take place far more often in the secular world or that THAT was likely demonicaly influenced, the arching premise of the show itself…and what exactly did she mean by her second query? The Church has done NOTHING to Gays…what did that even mean? I’m confident that at the end of the day, this show will fully drag the Church through the mud. We’ll sooner see David fall into a sexual relationship before we see Kristen return to her faith. -J

    • SUch a good point – I was more fixated on how apparently the church is just super racist.. I didn’t even catch the ‘what it’s done to gays’ part. Unless I thought, “allowed many into the clergy?”

      But as far as your last observation – you were correct. He did such quickly, and she has been evil many times of her own volition.

  5. This series is junk. Now it’s moving to a streaming service and will be worse. Weird that it got a “good” review here.

    • All these comments are spot on. This show makes a mockery of the Church in so many obvious and subtle ways. Just finished season two and won’t be continuing.

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