I am sorry to disappoint anyone who, hearing of the new series “Kaos,” which Netflix styles as “KAOS,” is expecting a “Get Smart” spinoff. We are instead facing the third series currently in production steeped in Greek history and mythology, after Fox’s animated “Krapopolis” and Disney+’s excellent “Percy Jackson and the Olympians.” (And three, as we say in the news game, makes a trend.)
“Kaos,” which premiered Thursday, is set in a modern, metropolitan, alternative “Krete” (played by Spain), ruled from high above by Zeus (Jeff Goldblum), king of the gods, the capo di tutti capi — if a phrase from across the Ionian Sea may be allowed — and locally, with military overtones, by President Minos (Stanley Townsend), a “bozo” in Zeus’ opinion. Mount Olympus is pictured here as a huge white and gold mansion, where Zeus lives with Hera (Janet McTeer), his queen, wife — and sister, a title helpfully adds.
Other characters pop in and out, not always of their own volition, including Zeus’ brother Poseidon (Cliff Curtis), who hangs out on a luxury super yacht, and son Dionysus (Nabhaan Rizwan), a bored club kid looking for something more. Depressed other brother Hades (David Thewlis) is stuck overseeing the underworld, a bureaucracy rendered in black and white where the architecture is all undistinguished brutalism.
As we begin, Zeus — who looks back wistfully to the days when the family would get together for barbecues — has become obsessed with a newly spotted “vertical wrinkle” on his forehead, which he links to a prophecy predicting the end to the family’s power. (It doesn’t help his mood that a monument unveiled on “Olympia Day” proves to have been defaced by blasphemous anti-gods graffiti and a mountain of excrement.)