Struggling with daddy issues
I’M not going to lie, my excitement went into overdrive upon learning that Prodigal Son was returning to M-Net for a second season.
Aside from the stellar cast returning, I was chuffed to see that Catherine Zeta-Jones had a special guest star role.
Although she has meandered over to the small screen world from time to time, this was a move that deserved a bit of noise.
Unfortunately, I will have to wait a little longer to see her on-screen character, Dr Vivian Capshaw, who interacts with serial killer Martin Whitly (Michael Sheen) aka “the Surgeon”.
Tom Payne (The Walking Dead fame) reprises his lead role as Martin’s son, Malcolm Bright. He changed his surname after his father was arrested for several murders, one of which haunted Malcolm for the better part of season one.
While this is a new season with a fresh batch of gruesome kills, Malcolm’s demons continue to accrue as the series picks up from the aftermath of Nicholas Endicott’s death.
The writers decided to have a bit of fun with the start of season two, where Malcolm finds himself on a ledge with the Penthouse slasher.
He says: “Sorry, this ledge is taken... It’s been one helluva year for all of us. Got real dark for me though – family issues. It’s my father’s fault.
“He’s in my head, serial killers, they tend to do that. Tried to run away from it, deny it, but, you know, he’s my father. We all have issues.”
The first episode saw JT Tarmel (Frank Harts) running the show while Gill Arroyo (Lou Diamond Phillips), a lieutenant with Major Crimes in the NYPD, is recovering in hospital.
Gill been a surrogate father to Malcolm since he arrested Martin. At the time, Malcolm was a scared little boy.
As an adult, he joined the FBI as a profiler.
But he was let go after disregarding protocol one too many times.
Gill, privy to his prowess in profiling criminal, hires him. But Malcolm’s new role within the NYPD sees him grudgingly reconnect with his father, who wiles away his time at Claremont Psychiatric Hospital. When Malcolm said he had family issues, he wasn’t kidding.
His mother Jessica (Bellamy Young) isn’t a fan of his interaction with his
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