
Arson Thriller 'Smoke' Isn't Nearly as Subversive as It Thinks
Smoke gets off to an insufferable start. Freighted with procedural clichés, the Apple TV+ thriller follows a mismatched law-enforcement duo tracking two prolific arsonists. Dave Gudsen (Taron Egerton) is an arson investigator with a standoffish stepson and literary ambitions. His new partner: police detective Michelle Calderone (Jurnee Smollett), an ex-Marine who's sleeping with a superior. Initial tension gives way to drunken bonding. Pretentious stylistic choices exacerbate the lazy setup. Episodes open with dictionary definitions of thematically appropriate words like transmogrification and, for some reason, fury on title cards. There are arty shots of billowing infernos. A mournful Thom Yorke song soundtracks the credits. In voiceover, Dave expounds, hackily, on the annihilating power of fire.
After two interminable episodes, a bombshell resets the show, eliminating some of its worst excesses and contextualizing others. Smoke becomes watchable. Yet in its swerve away from one egregious set of tropes, it embraces others that are, if less irritating, almost as tired. An emerging critique of aggrieved white machismo comes off, mostly, as a shallow topical hook.
Like so many disappointing Apple TV+ projects, from Nicole Kidman's Roar to Billy Crystal's Before, the series substitutes marquee names for quality control. Loosely based on the true crime podcast Firebug, it was developed by one of Hollywood's favorite authors, Dennis Lehane (Shutter Island, Mystic River), who was also on the writing staff of The Wire and helmed Apple's well-received 2022 miniseries Black Bird. The cast includes John Leguizamo, Greg Kinnear, and Anna Chlumsky. Ntare Guma Mbaho Mwine, a standout in The Chi and Treme, brings a fragile authenticity to the tricky but pivotal role of a maladjusted fast-food worker.
But the actors are poorly served by the material. Kinnear is miscast as the detectives' folksy, complacent boss. Leguizamo's character is too broadly sleazy, Chlumsky's too bland. At the story's forefront, Michelle is a dated Strong Female Character with a maudlin history of trauma. Egerton, an executive producer, has taken on a role so elastic, and so clearly shaped by the need for nine episodes' worth of cliffhangers, it barely holds together.
Populated by unhinged men and masochistic women, and punctuated by fiery, increasingly histrionic set pieces, Smoke fails to reconcile its mood of noirish nihilism with its efforts at social commentary. Despite feinting towards subversion, Lehane has produced a typical—overlong, caricature-laden, easy to watch but also to forget—streaming crime show.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Buzz Feed
an hour ago
- Buzz Feed
29 Popular Things That Were Not Worth The Hype
A while back, we asked the BuzzFeed Community to tell us things that got a TON of hype but turned out to be disappointing. Here are the surprising results: "To me, what is not worth the hype is McDonald's French fries. They are super thin, and you have to eat a handful to get the taste. The 'large' portion isn't even that large. There's much better." "Game of Thrones. It's boring. I can't even make it through the first season. And I don't mean it's boring for a lack of action; I don't mind that if the writing is good. I mean, even the dialogue is bad. It vacillates between obnoxiously pompous and cartoonishly coarse depending on who's talking." "Hot yoga. Downward-dogging in a 350-degree oven with someone else's sweaty crack in my face, and inhaling the scent of BO. Hard pass." "Six years of watching the show Lost. It was all great, but the ending was the worst ending ever! Nobody I knew was happy about the ending of that show. So disappointed! The writers didn't even know how to end that show. Still disappointed after all these years!" "The Apple bandwagon. Hahaha, no. Eff Once I finally begrudgingly made the switch two years ago, I went with Samsung. Could not be happier. Zero regrets." "Y2K. Turn off your computers on NYE 1999, or everything will crash! Nope." "College. People told me it would be the best years of my life; I would discover who I was and learn how to be an adult. I was miserable. I changed majors three times and learned nothing that would help with my career. I was at my lowest point mentally and had breakdowns constantly." "Citizen Kane. Movie snobs say it's one of the best movies of all time. I saw it and was bored. It's one of those movies people say they enjoyed (when they really didn't) simply to be considered intellectual, especially if you're in a movie/art and entertainment field." "Getting a transplant. 'It'll make your life SOOO much better!' Six months after, I went into rejection, and they gave me a buttload of steroids to save it. After that, my body reacted and put on twice my weight, and I couldn't stand or walk for long without agonizing pain. I had to buy an electric wheelchair." "AirPods. Everyone had to have them because of how 'compact' and discreet they were, and now, I think they've mostly been replaced with over-the-ear headphones or corded ones since they don't stay in your ears, and the audio quality goes way down after a couple of months." "Blackberry was 'all the hype' until everyone jumped on the Apple bandwagon." "Family Guy and subsequent Seth MacFarlane shows that followed the same formulaic setup. It was just the same jokes over and over and over again. And just not funny after the first couple of seasons, IMO." "Any music festival or outdoor concert. I'm over them, and I will never go to another one no matter how many of my friends say, 'But this one will be better/more amazing/so fun.' No. They are the worst. Sweaty, smelly masses crushed together. The women's bathroom situation is always a nightmare. Food and drink costs are not just price gouging, but price-eviscerating." "Running barefoot. It was a thing, and I was talked into it by a fellow runner. It was a complete hour of painful humiliation followed by a week of bruised and battered recovery. Never again." "Bridgerton, Season 3. Other than Penelope, it's meh. I'm more just outraged at waiting two years, getting four mediocre episodes with so much going on; I have to have an 'A Beautiful Mind'-style chart next to me each episode. Penelope deserves a season to herself, but I feel like she is still a background character. I get they had to establish Francesca (which they are at fault for giving her one minute of screen time in the first two seasons) — BUT the fact they are taking the spotlight away from Penelope to do it is tragic. I wanted a plus-sized woman in the front of the season, but god forbid they do that. Also, every time Colin is on screen, I'm like, 'Someone come and tell this guy to shut up.'" "Chick-fil-A. The chicken is just meh. Nothing great. And their fries suck." "Disneyland. My first trip to the park was with the USC marching band, and we were there to show off for the upcoming Rose Bowl. I'd spent three years with classmates/bandmates/friends telling me what an 'amazing experience' Disneyland was." "The Tesla Cybertruck. It looks like it lost service while loading and only managed four pixels." "The McRib Sandwich, every single time. I tried it again during the last promotion, thinking I was just not giving it a fair chance. Nope! Now, return the chicken wraps, McDonald's! You owe us for that, and it's the least you could do." "CW did an amazing job with the DC shows. Snyder was a sure thing when his version of Justice League was released. The Flash movie was amped up and advertised a lot, emphasizing Michael Keaton's return as Batman. That movie was a mess, even with Keaton." "Something I ordered because it looked pretty effective on TV — a little drain snake for home use. Appeared to work great in the ad, but what I got was a little piece of Velcro on a wire that was too wobbly to ever go into a drain." "Agatha Christie's work. I read Murder on the Orient Express a few years ago and was enjoying it throughout, trying to pick up on clues and figure out whodunnit before getting to the end. Oh, no! I get to the end with about three suspects out of 14, one being significantly the most suspect, and the detective solves the crime with new information presented at the end. I was not happy with that!" "Cryptocurrency. It was supposed to revolutionize commerce from the ground up, but it made no sense to me initially. The fact that these coins had to be 'mined' using wild amounts of electricity further distanced me from investing." "Schitt's Creek. It just wasn't funny. Felt like you had to laugh at it because people told you it was hilarious." "Turning 50. I thought it was a big deal, but it was really just another day like the day before and the one after." "The original Shake Weight." "Going way back here: the Xbox Kinect. It was Microsoft's answer to the Wii, and everyone got one, used it for three months, and then never touched it again. Gimmick technology has that tendency, but at least it was fascinating to experience it at the time." "Avengers: Endgame was a fantastic movie. The next MCU phase was looking to be good. Spiderman came out and was amazing. Then, every movie from there was such a disappointment." And finally... "Being an adult. I know they tried to warn us when we were kids, but all I wanted to do was grow up. Now, I'm here, and adulting is hard. Definitely did not live up to the hype"." What are some other things that didn't live up to the hype? Tell us your thoughts in the comments, or if you prefer to remain anonymous, you can use the form below.
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Lewis Hamilton Called Out 'BS Scenes' in F1 Movie Says Damson Idris
Lewis Hamilton Called Out 'BS Scenes' in F1 Movie Says Damson Idris originally appeared on Athlon Sports. Lewis Hamilton isn't just lending his name to the upcoming F1 movie, he's shaping it's authenticity. Actor Damson Idris, who plays the lead role in the Hamilton-co-produced Apple Original Film, opened up about Hamilton's involvement on set and how the seven-time world champion made sure the movie didn't drift into Hollywood fiction. 'He kinda called [expletive] on some of the sequences that wouldn't happen in real life,' Idris revealed in a recent interview. 'It was really just a sense of encouragement from Lewis. Anytime he came on set — everyone would be really excited.' The film, directed by top gun: Maverick's Joseph Kosinski and produced by Jerry Bruckheimer, stars Idris as a former F1 driver making a comeback. Hamilton, who has been deeply involved in ensuring the film reflects the reality of the sport, helped tweak scenes to reflect the intensity and complexity of life in the paddock. According to Idris, Hamilton's input went beyond technical accuracy — he brought motivation and mentorship. 'He'd congratulate me and encourage me to keep going, and that fuelled me throughout the whole process of filming,' the actor added. While most of the film remains under wraps ahead of its international release, these behind-the-scenes insights offer a glimpse into the level of care Hamilton is putting into the project. For a sport often misunderstood in pop culture, Hamilton's insistence on realism could be what sets this film apart. In short: when Hollywood tried to overtake F1 reality, Lewis Hamilton hit the brakes. With global fan anticipation building, and Hamilton's stamp of authenticity behind it, the movie could do for F1 what top gun: Maverick did for fighter jets — and Hamilton wouldn't have it any other story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 17, 2025, where it first appeared.


The Onion
7 hours ago
- The Onion
Driving Surges In Popularity Thanks To ‘F1' Film
LOS ANGELES—Coinciding with a spike in interest in cars and moving fast, a trend report published Friday by Edmunds Research confirmed that driving was surging in popularity thanks to Apple's new film F1 . ' F1 has really pushed driving into the forefront of culture, and now it's having a moment,' said report co-author Jared Eash, who noted that millions of the film's fans across the country were crowding into car dealerships and heading out onto streets and roads in an effort to try out the motor vehicle trend for themselves. 'Personally, I love getting into my Nissan Sentra and driving around Kansas City. I feel just like Brad Pitt! And I know I'm not alone. There are some superfans who say that thanks to the movie, they operate a car every day, or even multiple times a day. F1 has officially put cars on the map.' At press time, the popularity of driving was reportedly waning after those trying it for the first time learned about stop signs.