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TV Review: “Endgame”

A short-lived show about an agoraphobic Russian chessmaster who solves murders. As one does.

Endgame title card

The “arrogant and eccentric asshole genius who solves crimes” trope is an ancient one (hey, Sherlock!), and “… but never leaves his house” is also a sizeable subcategory (think Nero Wolfe, among many others). Endgame fits pretty neatly into that setup, but is sufficiently charming and innovative to have deserved a longer run than it got.

Endgame title card

Running on Canadian TV 2011-12, it’s the story of Arkady Balagan, an ex-pat Russian chessmaster living as a hermit in a Vancouver luxury hotel, unable to leave after witnessing the fiery killing of his fiancee, Rosemary, in front of the place. Unable to travel for competition purses, and not earning enough money from pay-to-play chess games with the hoi-polloi, Arkady backs into a career as an amateur solver of mysteries (usually murders), using his analytical skills, his ability to read opponents, his talent at visualization, and just plain old being the smartest guy in the room. Being a melancholic Russian who drinks a lot apparently doesn’t hurt, either.

Since he can’t leave the Huxley hotel (and since they can plausibly set only so many murders inside of the place), he ends up making use of the usual varied band of helpers as legmen, on- and off-premises: the game theory grad student who’s willing to be paid in games with the master, the bartender at the hotel who serves him so much booze, the savvy immigrant housekeeping staffer, the sister of his fiancee Pippa (who’s usually pursuing leads about Rosemary’s murder), and, occasionally, the obnoxious head of hotel security who’d actually love to throw him out on his ass.

Endgame cast

This is not deeply original TV, nor the most innovatively-written thing you might watch, but it does quite a nice job of the tropes it uses. Chess lends itself to the plots in various clever ways. Arkady’s visualized puzzling things out (where he steps into the scenes he’s speculating about) is fun. And the mysteries (most, but not all, of them about murder) are pretty well written.

Shawn Doyle as Arkady does great Russian, and plays the bored, entitled, asshole eccentric in quite the entertaining fashion. The supporting players all do nicely with what they’re given, and most of them get some time in the plot spotlight over the course of the 13 episodes.

EndgameThe weakest part of Endgame is, ironically, the motivating force behind Arkady’s dilemma: the mysterious daylight murder of his fiancee. This is a key element in the early episodes, with Arkady certain (to the point of alienating folk) that it was a KGB hit on him, because he’s donated so much money to pro-democracy movements in Russia, but as the season wends on, Arkady seems less and less invested in the murder, even as the plot being revealed around it gets bigger, hitting a flashpoint in the last episode. The contrast is confusing, and muddies what should have been a much more solid through-line to the series.

Endgame ran on Showcase TV in Canada, but didn’t do well ratings-wise and was canceled. It was rerun by Hulu, with hopes that it might do well enough to warrant a second season, but no go. It’s currently viewable at Imdb.com TV (through Amazon Prime), though it can take a while to find, as any search for “Endgame” keeps pulling up some stupid superhero flick.

Overall, I thought it worth the time I invested into watching through it. It reminded me, a bit, of the much more successful US series The Mentalist (the eccenric, unlikeable, genius, outsider crime-solver driven a bit nuts by the murder of his beloved). I do wish we’d had a chance to see more of Endgame, but I enjoyed what we got.

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2 thoughts on “TV Review: “Endgame””

  1. Just saw a commercial trailer for The Endgame show to air tonight. Right off the bat two sides, the law in uniform lead by a black lady and the other side faced masked terrorist mob lead by a white lady. This is a typical political correctness crap that your network wants to thrust on the viewers. It is typical for the liberal leftest to portray whites as the bad people and only blacks could portray law bidding. This show will too as to many shows that is guaranteed one will not watch. White people are not all bad just as all black people are good. I will turn off all this portrayal of racism to make a point not to be racist. Take your trash shows to your liberal leftist and make them see lies. Your network is like all liberal leftists, HYPROCRITES.

    1. I believe you are talking about a very different TV show than I was.

      Beyond that, does the trailer you see actually assert that whites are bad people and blacks are good people? Would the show be any different if the races were reversed, or if one person was Asian and the other Hispanic? Is any case of a black person being the good guy and/or the white person being the bad guy an inherently racist portrayal? What about the other way around? Are we out of shows where there are white leads as the good guys? What the hell are you on about?

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