Certain genres might increase or wane in popularity over the years, but they will always endure. Westerns, for example, never faded into obscurity after their zenith, but series like Graham Roland‘s Dark Winds and Taylor Sheridan‘s Yellowstone helped restore them to mainstream status. Something as malleable to the times as supernatural horror will never go out of style, either — especially vampires. They’ll just be reimagined, because even the most reliable conceits need revitalizing from time to time. Combining genres is one of the easiest ways to inject new energy into a familiar story, and the sheer creativity required to sell an unconventional mash-up often leads to the most intriguing outcomes. Take the horror Western, for instance, a combination that’s somewhat familiar to moviegoers but has been underutilized on television. One of the most underrated series to ever attempt this ambitious blend, From Dusk Till Dawn: The Series, is a lean, mean, and sleek feat of cable television. Airing from 2014 to 2016 on the El Rey Network, From Dusk Till Dawn combines the escalating tension of a heist thriller with the unhinged gore of a throwback vampire B-movie — all set within a sun-tinted Neo-Western landscape.
What Is ‘From Dusk Till Dawn: The Series’ About?
Much like director Robert Rodriguez‘s 1995 cult classic film of the same name, From Dusk Till Dawn‘s first season opens with professional criminals Seth (D. J. Cotrona) and Richie Gecko (Zane Holtz) on the run from the law after botching a bank robbery that was supposed to herald the start of their new lives. Instead, their carefully planned heist implodes, leaving several officers and innocent civilians dead. As the pair race across Texas toward Mexico to escape the wrath of Texas Ranger Freddie Gonzalez (Jesse Garcia), whose mentor died during a related confrontation, they find themselves caught up in a larger scheme — one orchestrated by some very ruthless vampires.
‘From Dusk Till Dawn’ Is a Tense Heist Thriller Full of Twists and Turns
Turning From Dusk Till Dawn into a series lets Rodriguez, who serves as showrunner and creator, expand on his film’s most interesting and underdeveloped components. Three seasons of 10 episodes each might not sound like much in this truncated age of streaming television, but the longer format results in a refined take on the original that smooths out the movie’s rougher edges and blends its multi-genre strengths with insightful precision. Specifically, From Dusk Till Dawn emphasizes its heist roots by devoting the premiere episode just to the first confrontation between the Geckos and Gonzalez. Heist tales only succeed if high stakes and sufficient tension exist; stretching out this pivotal incident achieves that atmosphere. Once the violent stand-off has added more bodies to the brothers’ running tally, the series flashes back to the bank robbery and how it, too, fell apart. For a pair of experienced thieves, it’s a subversive, nasty, and almost slapstick turn for the Geckos’ “one last job” moment to immediately go wrong — especially since it sets off a chain of increasingly nail-biting events.
As Season 1 progresses, almost everything that can go wrong, does go wrong. The cat-and-mouse chase between the brothers and Gonzalez unfolds like a row of cascading dominos. Each new twist forces Seth and Richie into tighter corners, making them more desperate and therefore more likely to make terrible split-second decisions — like abducting pastor Jacob Fuller (Robert Patrick) and his two teenage children, Kate (Madison Davenport) and Scott (Brandon Soo Hoo). While thoroughly likable and charismatic, the Geckos fall firmly into the category of antihero. Killing law enforcement officers isn’t part of their plan, but even if they argue it away as self-defense, they’re the ones who shoot first and conveniently neglect the “ask questions later” part.
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Complicating things further are Richie’s visions of an enigmatic woman. Initially confused, he follows her advice with growing devotion, carrying out acts of uncharacteristic and unwarranted violence. Instead of being Seth’s trusted, deeply protective brother and literal partner-in-crime, Richie becomes an unpredictable threat — and it’s not like this heightened situation needs one more stress factor. Meanwhile, all three of the Fullers are trying to outrun their own demons, and Gonzalez’s grief over his mentor erases the already thin line between apprehending criminals and his personal vendetta. It’s only a matter of time until every participant’s emotional heat hits its boiling point.
‘From Dusk Till Dawn’ Should Be the Blueprint for Horror Westerns
After Season 1 culminates with a reverse heist inside the world’s most dangerous escape room (think: ravenous vampires and the archaeological death traps), later seasons continue the genre-merging. Richie dashes off into the sunset with Santánico Pandemonium (Eiza González), a morally gray but highly sympathetic vampire queen, but the pair’s enthusiastic Bonnie and Clyde routine quickly reaches a crossroads once Santánico’s true plan surrounding an ancient vampire hierarchy comes to light. Conversely, Seth and Kate are forced to platonically Bonnie and Clyde their way through various small heists just to survive.
Even when the third and final season widens its focus from character-based stakes to a widespread threat, From Dusk Till Dawn never strays from its winning formula: darkly comedic camp, constantly escalating suspense, unique vampire lore based on Mesoamerican mythology, and gruesome violence of both the neck-biting and gun-shooting variety. And no matter how wide its scope gets, every element ties back to the ensemble’s increasingly complex interpersonal dynamics and internal conflict. That isn’t an easy accomplishment, but from premiere to finale, this series makes a multi-genre homage look easy.
From Dusk Till Dawn: The Series
A Texas Ranger is in hot pursuit of the infamous Gecko brothers and their hostages. They all end up trapped in a desert bar secretly run by vampires and discover a vampire conspiracy.
- Release Date
- March 11, 2014
- Creator
- Robert Rodriguez
- Seasons
- 3
From Dusk Till Dawn: The Series is available to purchase on Prime Video in the U.S.
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