Book Review: Back to Frank Black: A Return to Chris Carter's Millennium
"Back to Frank Black: A Return to Chris Carter's Millennium" is a compilation of essays on the topic of Millennium, a TV show in three seasons which follows the investigations of Criminal Profiler Frank Black in the final years leading up to the year 2000 and the new millennium. The show is also an examination of the nature of evil. It aired on Fox between 1996 and 1999, but ultimately was cancelled prior to the change of the millennium due to what was considered to be poor ratings at the time - ratings that would be considered to be top notch and desirable in our post-millennial TV landscape.
"Back to Frank Black: A Return to Chris Carter's Millennium", published by Fourth Horseman Press, is available in both a hardcover and a paperback edition through a number of distribution outlets. Very eager to acquire and read my copy, I ordered my copy before Christmas and so I opted to get the paperback edition to save more money for Christmas gifts.
I ordered my copy through amazon.ca. My book was beautiful when i received it, but the cover is now dog-eared and tattered along the edges - the price of bringing it everywhere. I know now, I should have sprung for the hardcover edition, and recommend you do so, learning from my mistake.
"Back to Frank Black: A Return to Chris Carter's Millennium" is the perfect companion to the your Millennium DVD set, if you have it (and i totally recommend acquiring the full series if you haven't yet) and is a must-have book for any fan of the works of Chris Carter or his TV show, Millennium.
The 510 page book features two Forewards (by Lance Henriksen and Frank Spotnitz) and an Introduction (by Chris Carter), 27 essays, an Appendix of all the episodes - broken down by season and in the order of air date - and is fully indexed.
Much of the material is based on interviews with the actors, writers, and producers of the show - which were conducted by James McLean and Troy L. Foreman, hosts of the Back To Frank Black Podcasts - as source material, and excellently summarized in an essay format by the editors of the book, Adam Chamberlain and Brian A. Dixon.
As an avid listener of the BTFB Podcasts this is a double-edged sword. Because I've listened to the podcasts over and over again to learn as mush as i can about the series, the actors, the writers (and the craft of writing), the producers and how they translated the written word into the final vision that we all saw on our screens, much of the book is a rehash of the same material. While interesting, I know the material intimately and found it difficult to read these essays word by word. On the other hand, the essays give me the interview material in a reference-like version so I can look up things conveniently, without having to listen to whole podcasts to seek it out. The best of these essays draw material from multiple interviews, such as those with Lance Henriksen who has been a frequent guest on the Podcast, and ties them all together neatly.
For me, though, the best and most interesting essays are those that are interspersed between these interview based ones. In some cases they draw on the interview source material and in some cases they don't.
Chapter XX, 'Second Sight: Profiling, Prophecy and Deductive Reasoning in Chris Carter's Millennium' by Brian A. Dixon is one such essay and takes a look at the detective genre from its beginnings in the writings of Edgar Allan Poe with "The Murders in the Rue Morgue" through to "Millennium" to recent portrayals of "Sherlock Holmes".
Chapter XVIII, 'Evil Has Many Faces: The Darkness In The World of Millennium' by Adam Chamberlain is another brilliant piece which examines the exploration of evil in "Millennium".
Chapter XVI, 'Seeing Evil: Lucy Butler as Legion Through the Eyes of Frank Black' by Alexander Zelenyj is another such brilliant article.
There are other contributions by James McLean, Joe Tangari, John Kenneth Muir, Gordon Roberts, Paul Clark, Joseph Maddrey that are equally as insightful and important to the understanding of the phenomena that was "Millennium".
And this compilation of essays would not be complete without the inclusion of the voice of Jordan Black, daughter of Frank and Catherine, as portrayed by actress Brittany Tiplady, and written by the same-self person, now a journalist, poet and writer. Brittany was recently interviewed by James and Troy on the Back To Frank Black Podcast, so if you haven't heard it, look for the Podcast and enjoy.
"Back to Frank Black: A Return to Chris Carter's Millennium" is a must-have book for your library. Brilliant, insightful, relevant and timely, in its entirety it forms an argument as to why we need to see Frank Black and Millennium return for the public to see. Written, produced and aired in the late 1990's, Millennium was ahead of its time, and foreshadowed the world we live in, now, on the other side of the Millennium. It showed us the path we were on, though we knew it not. Through the experience and vision of Frank Black, our interpreter of the world of Millennium - a world that mirrors ours - we gain insight into the world around us and the nature of evil that exists in it. We need Frank Black more now than ever, to illustrate what's gone wrong, and where we're going. If a movie were to be made, as Lance Henriksen puts it, "it could be the most dangerous movie ever made."
Finally, in closing, it's also important to know that every sale of this must-have book also supports Lance Henriksen's favoured charity, "Children of the Night", an organization dedicated to getting children off the street and, where possible, reuniting them with their families. Nobody involved in the production of this book asked to be paid. Everyone contributed to it out of love for this show, out of the belief that we need Frank Black and Millennium back, and out of the spirit of generosity and giving to support "Children of the Night". I invite you to help out. And to enjoy.
- Stephen Lowe