The Leftovers recap: The wrong Kevin

How "Crazy Whitefella Thinking" tenderly examines Kevin Garvey Sr.'s search for meaning

Kevin Sr.
(Image credit: HBO/Ben King)

According to the faith of the Indigenous Australians, a songline is a swath of land, where, eons ago, the creator-beings wandered. With their wanderings, they brought about the world as we know it. Standing in those places, and lifting one's voice in tribute, can connect you with these creators. So, in his quest to save that world as we know it, Kevin Garvey Sr. (Scott Glenn) voyages to the songline down under. Though The Leftovers has cultivated a niche as the most spiritually minded show on TV (Reza Aslan, a one-man cottage industry of all things faith-based, serves as an executive producer), this third episode of the third season is less interested in whether Kevin Sr.'s cross-cultural grandstanding will avert the apocalypse than it is with the question of his character. Communing with the creator-beings might open the boundaries of time and space, but the old chestnut holds true: Wherever you go, there you are.

The episode opens on an image of Kevin Sr. back on the day of the original Departure; he stands, silent and helpless, as cars burn, smoke billows, and shocked survivors wail in the streets. He may be the police chief, the town's stalwart protector, but there's absolutely nothing he can do now. That moment will break the hinges off the iron door of his personality and usher in a wild wind, a force that knocks him off-balance, either into out-and-out mental illness, an awkward kind of half-baked mysticism, or a profound sense of purposelessness (the show suggests it's a combination of all three). This installment, called "Crazy Whitefella Thinking," isn't only a showcase for Scott Glenn (though it is certainly, and wonderfully, that); it is an acerbic, pointed, and, at times deeply tender examination of a different, though no less potent, kind of loss — a loss of personal meaning, of one's place in the world.

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Laura Bogart

Laura Bogart is a featured writer for Salon and a regular contributor to DAME magazine. Her work has appeared in The Atlantic, CityLab, The Guardian, SPIN, Complex, IndieWire, GOOD, and Refinery29, among other publications. Her first novel, Don't You Know That I Love You?, is forthcoming from Dzanc.