Mackie and Beatriz are consistently better than the material – they share one very funny scene involving a children’s ball pit – which really begins to veer off the road when the pair make it to Las Vegas and encounter Arnett’s emotionally needy if murderous clown. Joe Seanoa as Sweet Tooth (voiced by Will Arnett) in "Twisted Metal." Skip Bolen/Peacock The two bicker and eventually bond over the course of their travels, while encountering an increasingly bizarre cast of characters, including an insane clown named Sweet Tooth (voiced by Will Arnett, and physically portrayed by pro wrestler Joel Seanoa) and a near-equally crazed lawman (Thomas Haden Church) whose minions were responsible for the death of Quiet’s brother. Yet John’s life changes in two ways – first, when the leader of New San Francisco (Neve Campbell) offers him a chance to stay there permanently, finding a true home in exchange for making a run to acquire a package in New Chicago and when he picks up Quiet (“Brooklyn Nine-Nine” and “Encanto’s” Stephanie Beatriz), who is out for revenge having lost her brother. “Twisted Metal” – a Peacock series spun out of the PlayStation game – manages to start with a rush of zany energy courtesy of the writers behind “Deadpool,” before hitting potholes as it becomes too over-the-top to justify the ride.Īnthony Mackie appears to be having a lot of fun playing John Doe, the nameless “milkman” tasked with delivering material between walled cities in a society upended by a technological crash, driving the lawless highways with only his car (who he talks to regularly) as company. “The Last of Us”), a second was probably too much to ask. With 2023 having already produced one great post-apocalyptic series based on a video game (a.k.a.
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