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Haven: The Complete Second Season - Blu-ray Review

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Haven - The Complete Second Season

4 stars

If you conduct a Google search about Syfy’s Haven, chances are you won’t find a wealth of information about this ongoing television series.  That, my friends, is a shame.  Based loosely of Stephen King’s The Colorado Kid, the remarkable mythology behind the supernatural series has a chance to be better connected and more satisfying than ABC’s Lost.  I’m not kidding either.  Its mysteries are answered (imagine that) before new ones are introduced and the superb cast, led by Emily Rose, Eric Balfour and Lucas Bryant, keep bringing their A game and enthusiasm to each episode with remarkable intrigue.

The show centers on FBI agent Audrey Parker (Rose) who arrives in the town of Haven, Maine to solve the murder of a local ex-con, but she soon discovers that the city is a refuge for people with supernatural abilities.  Some are helpful, some are not.  Both sides know a war between the two factions is coming.

She also discovers a personal connection to the town and its ‘Troubles’ as a seeming war begins to build between the old guard and the younger generation.  And, as we saw with the ending of Season One, she discovers that even she isn’t immune to the strangeness in the town when she watches a woman enter the town and introduce herself as … herself.  Audrey isn’t Audrey anymore.

Season Two of Haven, involving twelve regular episodes and one Christmas-themed episode, isn’t your standard television show.  Each episode features a heavy bout of supernatural occurrences involving various members of the idyllic town, garnished with a hint of Stephen King source material, and an over arc that pushes the intrigue forward for its main cast and minor characters.

This season the characters of Evi Ryan (Vinessa Antoine), the other Audrey Parker (Kathleen Munroe), Dwight Hendrickson (WWE Superstar Edge), and Chris Brody (Jason Priestly) are introduced while the character of the Rev (Stephen McHattie) is expanded as he assumes leadership of the fight against the Troubled.  The new additions to the cast expand on the weirdness in the town and help tighten the arc involving our three main characters as their own individual relationships are tested.  While the romance angle between the three is played down, there is a strain of that running through the series and, when the show settles on its first relationshippy episode, it is done with success and leads straight to a third season (premiering on Syfy on September 21st).

Science Fiction has always served as a metaphor for the human condition.  The writers of Haven know this and ground each episode with intelligence and charm.  Season Two flexes its muscles and stops simply being a Monster-Of-The-Week type show with a major plot line that shows no signs of wearing thin.  Gone are the filler shows of the first season.  Being a fan of the look and feel of the show, Season Two is a major step in the right direction.  The writing has sharpened and so, too, is the mythology.  Simply put, everything improves with this season of Haven.

Welcome back to the town where everyone has a secret that can lead to your own death.  Enjoy your stay.



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