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The Pendragon Cycle: Taliesin Episodes

DailyWire+ has released its beautiful, 7-episode series The Rise of the Merlin, based on The Pendragon Cycle, Stephen Lawhead’s six book series, to regular members last Thursday. The first two eps are up along with a podcast that explains some of the details.

The first episode introduces Charis of Atlantis and the destruction her civilization. It’s an impressive scene in a Greek-style arena. Charis is the head of a seven-person team, male and female, who summersault over running bulls (see the photo of a Minoan fresco above). It isn’t just sport. It’s ritual for the bull god, Bel, to whom Charis is praying when we first see her.

The Atlanteans speak a language invented for the show by Spencer Klavan. It has a great, authentic sound. I picked up notes of Indo-European and Phaffinnic intonations under a clear faux-Latin influence. (I say this as a guy who can spot the subtle flavors in a Hersey’s, so I know what I’m talking about. Don’t get me started on peanut butter blends.)

Twenty years after their home is destroyed, the Atlanteans have established a kingdom in southern Britain, where the Cymry find them, having fled their land to escape barbarian raiders. Taliesin, a bard, is the adopted son of King Elphin. On the first evening, we hear him sing for King Avallach, Charis, and the other Atlanteans a moving song about the Welsh king Pwyll meeting the fairie lord of Annwn in the forest. It’s the first of two songs Taliesin sings in these episodes, and I like them, though they aren’t 4th century ballads. (I assume Lawhead wrote them.) This one in particular has been stuck in my ear for days.

The theme of this part of the series is the move from paganism to Christianity. Both main characters reject offers to sell themselves completely to their pagan gods, and at the end of episode one, the Lord catches Taliesin by surprise. “Look upon me then, Shining Brow!” It’s marvelous.

I love the look of this series so far. The actors are wonderful. (James Arden looks and sounds great as Taliesin.) Dialogue is strong. My one criticism is that a few scenes feel clipped. A dramatic scene at the start of episode two could use a few more minutes of explanation. Or maybe it lacks a foundation. They do explain why everyone is angry in that moment after the scene, but I could use three more minutes of talking it over—maybe hearing the offer put on the table and hearing it rejected before tempers flare.

Episodes drop every Thursday. I’ll try to review the next ones as they come out.

3 thoughts on “The Pendragon Cycle: Taliesin Episodes”

  1. Thanks for this – and please do review future episodes! Having never managed to read the books since they appeared, I’m willing to risk spoilers! I’ve been interested for about as long in the Thera-Minoan Atlantis theories, and more recently enjoyed Mary Renault’s Theseus retelling, so this is an intriguing aspect. (I wonder if Lewis’s connecting Merlin with Numenor in That Hideous Strength is also getting a nod, here?)

    1. I need to look into Renault’s Theseus. I thought I’d heard something about it, but I haven’t. A connection to Lewis would make sense. I haven’t listened to all the production videos they released b/c I wanted to avoid spoilers. So far, Jeremy Boreing has been the main writer, and Lawhead could have taken inspiration from Lewis before him. I think the bull jumping was in the novel.

      1. Thank you!

        Tolkien enjoyed her Theseus novels – her article at the Tolkien Gateway gives a handy overview.

        We’ve got the first of the Lawhead novels, now, but how soon I may get to it…

        I wonder if the folks at Daily Wire would be interested in dramatizing Mor Jokai’s (to my mind insufficiently widely known) Hungarian Atlantis novel(la), Oceánia (1856) – translated by R. Nisbet Bain as “Th City of the Beast” in Tales from Jokai (1904). I’ve just been re-enjoying the LibriVox audiobook of it – and wondering if Tolkien, or any other Inklings, ever happened to encounter it. I can imagine Lewis saying “It’s a corker!”

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