Hand of God (TV series)

Hand of God
Title screen from season two
Genre
Created by Ben Watkins
Starring
Opening theme "An Honest Man", performed by Fantastic Negrito
Country of origin United States
Original language English
No. of seasons 2
No. of episodes 20 (list of episodes)
Production
Production location Los Angeles
Running time 45–66 min
Production companies
Original release
Network Amazon Prime Video
Release August 28, 2014 –
March 10, 2017

Hand of God is an American drama streaming television series created by Ben Watkins. The premiere episode is one of two drama pilots that Amazon streamed online in August 2014, along with Hysteria. Viewers were allowed to offer their opinions about the pilot before the studio decided whether or not to place an order for the entire series. In October 2014, Hand of God was ordered to full series by Amazon Studios.

The series officially premiered on September 4, 2015. A second season was ordered in December 2015, which premiered on March 10, 2017. On September 15, 2016, Amazon Studios announced that the series would end after the second season.

Plot

Hand of God follows Pernell Harris (Ron Perlman), a corrupt judge who suffers a breakdown and believes that God is compelling him onto a path of vigilante justice. He becomes a member of a church called Hand of God, which proves to be a dangerous cult.

Cast

Main

Recurring

Episodes

Season Episodes Originally released
1 10 1 August 28, 2014
9 September 4, 2015
2 10 March 10, 2017

Season 1 (2014–2015)

No.
overall
No. in
season
Title Directed by Written by Original release date
1 1 "Pilot" Marc Forster Ben Watkins August 28, 2014
2 2 "Your Inside Voice" Marc Forster Ben Watkins September 4, 2015
3 3 "Contemplating the Body" Richard J. Lewis Ben Watkins & Daniel Tuch September 4, 2015
4 4 "He So Loved" Sarah Pia Anderson Becky Hartman Edwards September 4, 2015
5 5 "Welcome the Stranger" Ernest R. Dickerson Sam Forman September 4, 2015
6 6 "For the Rain to Gather" Andrew Bernstein Deborah Schoeneman September 4, 2015
7 7 "A Bird in Hand" Peter Medak Teleplay by : Mark Hudis
Story by : Mark Hudis & Ali Garfinkel
September 4, 2015
8 8 "One Saved Message" Mario Van Peebles Ben Watkins & Ben Cory Jones September 4, 2015
9 9 "A Flower That Bees Prefer" Stephen Williams Theresa Rebeck September 4, 2015
10 10 "The Tie That Binds" Brad Anderson Ben Watkins September 4, 2015

Season 2 (2017)

No.
overall
No. in
season
Title Directed by Written by Original release date
11 1 "Gathering Dust" Mario Van Peebles Ben Watkins & Jim Dunn March 9, 2017
12 2 "Telling Me Your Dreams" Peter Medak Ben Watkins & Sam Ernst March 9, 2017
13 3 "We Can't Go Back" Christine Moore Michael Angeli March 9, 2017
14 4 "Not Writing a Love Letter" Sarah Pia Anderson Daniel Tuch March 9, 2017
15 5 "I See That Now" Ali Selim Shernold Edwards March 9, 2017
16 6 "What Do You Hear..." Stephen Surjik Dawn Kamoche & Ariella Blejer March 9, 2017
17 7 "When You Pull the Trigger" Tim Hunter Teleplay by : Ben Watkins & Michael Angeli
Story by : Michael Kastelein & Chris Wu
March 9, 2017
18 8 "The Last Thing Left" Kate Woods Jim Dunn March 9, 2017
19 9 "What a Man Can Be" Peter Medak Sam Ernst March 9, 2017
20 10 "He Must Be" Ben Watkins Ben Watkins March 9, 2017

Reception

The series has received mixed reviews from critics. On Metacritic, the first season has a score of 44 out of 100 based on 19 critics reviews, and an 8.2/10 from IGN. The average rating on TV.com is 8.3 out of 10 based on 33 ratings.

Emily VanDerWerff of Vox called the show "mind-bogglingly bad". Mike Hale of The New York Times wrote that it "loses its focus" and that it feels "attenuated and static". Mary McNamara of the Los Angeles Times gave the series a negative review, writing that it had great acting but "little else". David Sims of The Atlantic wrote that the climax of the series didn't "justify 10 depressing hours of television". In contrast, Robert Rorke of the NY Post called the show "oddly compelling", while Tirdad Derakhshani of The Philadelphia Inquirer wrote, "It's such an engaging, original, quirky, and thought-provoking drama, it should be seen."