I thoroughly enjoyed the first season of AMC's The Killing. That said, like many others, I too was disappointed with the cliff-hanger at the end of the season. While the producers may have thought it was cute to bring one more twist to this murder mystery, I was ready to learn the identity of the killer. If the Danes could do it in their original production, why are we playing around with a great recipe? So now the producers have been humbled and say they will reveal the killer of Rosie Larsen in the second season. AMC's senior vice president of original programming, Joel Stillerman, stated, "For everybody who was frustrated, we hear you. We would have taken a different approach to managing the expectations about what was going to happen." He added, "It was never intentionally meant to mislead anybody. Our goal was to create a brilliant piece of character-based story telling. We think we got there, but we definitely didn't manage expectations the way they should have been managed." Bravo for honesty. Now fix it!
7/30/11
7/20/11
More Damages, Luckily
The fourth season of Damages started on DirectTV last week (July 13). The first three seasons were well-made thrillers with plenty unexpected twists and turns, and I expect nothing less from the latest season. And while I have always found Glenn Close to be scary as a character as well as in real life, she is the perfect star in this psychological (if not pathological) thriller where her law firm is in the middle of high stakes drama. Sadly, this season will not run on network TV as has been the case with the past DirectTV-created episodes, but I expect the new season will be available on iTunes and Netflix down the road.
Damages has also has the ability to breath life into actors we had taken for granted while also identifying new talent. For instance, his part in the first three seasons of the show caused me to reevaluate my opinion of Ted Danson, who I had previously viewed as a has been sit-com actor. His role as Arthur Frobisher, a ruthless corporate owner, later somewhat daft reformed soul, was fun to watch and a solid piece of acting. Of course, as I tuned into Mr. Danson again I found he was still quite funny in Curb Your Enthusiasm while also the essential ingredient in a three-way friendship on another great HBO program, Bored to Death.
Timothy Olyphant also showed his stuff as a dark hero primarily in season two of the program. While he met a gruesome end, his nuanced character added depth and mystery to the show. Of course, Mr. Olyphant went onto to great things with his own series Justified. Season two also brought William Hurt onto the show as a suffering scientist, husband, and father who recently lost his wife. His character was difficult to watch since he was always holding something back.
Season three brought Martin Short onto the cast and allowed us to see him in a whole new light as a power-grabbing, manipulative lawyer defending a Bernard Madoff-like businessman and his family. He also had a chance to act with Lily Tomlin, who played the businessman's wife. As is always the case, the show was completely ruthless and both Short and Tomlin were in the thick of things until the bitter end.
Season four brings John Goodman to the forefront. I have not seen him on anything since Treme, where his character was a little over the top, so I hope they provide him with a more subtle role. Damages has a way of showing us a new side of an actor and I look forward to this new season.
Damages has also has the ability to breath life into actors we had taken for granted while also identifying new talent. For instance, his part in the first three seasons of the show caused me to reevaluate my opinion of Ted Danson, who I had previously viewed as a has been sit-com actor. His role as Arthur Frobisher, a ruthless corporate owner, later somewhat daft reformed soul, was fun to watch and a solid piece of acting. Of course, as I tuned into Mr. Danson again I found he was still quite funny in Curb Your Enthusiasm while also the essential ingredient in a three-way friendship on another great HBO program, Bored to Death.
Timothy Olyphant also showed his stuff as a dark hero primarily in season two of the program. While he met a gruesome end, his nuanced character added depth and mystery to the show. Of course, Mr. Olyphant went onto to great things with his own series Justified. Season two also brought William Hurt onto the show as a suffering scientist, husband, and father who recently lost his wife. His character was difficult to watch since he was always holding something back.
Season three brought Martin Short onto the cast and allowed us to see him in a whole new light as a power-grabbing, manipulative lawyer defending a Bernard Madoff-like businessman and his family. He also had a chance to act with Lily Tomlin, who played the businessman's wife. As is always the case, the show was completely ruthless and both Short and Tomlin were in the thick of things until the bitter end.
Season four brings John Goodman to the forefront. I have not seen him on anything since Treme, where his character was a little over the top, so I hope they provide him with a more subtle role. Damages has a way of showing us a new side of an actor and I look forward to this new season.
7/11/11
July Premiere - Alphas
Tonight the SyFy network premieres Alphas, a story about a group of individuals who learn they have super powers. Yes, another super hero program at a time the TV and movie landscape is littered with the products of this genre. Remember The Cape, which crashed and burned earlier this year? The problem with The Cape was its pale imitation of the Batman movies. Well, read this bit on the mad doctor who leads the Alphas and tell me it does not sound similar to Patrick Stewart's Professor Charles Xavier in the X-Men movies:
Dr. Lee Rosen is a preeminent neurologist and psychiatrist with a long history of hands-on work with patients suffering from neurological disorders. His fascination with Alphas -- ordinary people with very extraordinary abilities known as Alpha Skills -- has led to the formation of a group of highly evolved humans specializing in solving Alpha-related cases. Though not an Alpha himself, he has become the unconventional leader of the team and his nurturing personality and fatherly wisdom are instrumental in holding the group together when stresses and personality conflicts threaten to tear them apart.
Of course, I will keep an open mind and view the pilot. This could be the start of something interesting, though I remain skeptical for now.
Update: I did not care for the pilot. The "special powers" of strength, persuasion, hearing, and autism where not all that magnificent or interesting. I would much rather watch something such as Lie to Me or Leverage where an understanding of human tics or technology can win the day. I liked the review comments on Guy Gab since they were similarly unimpressed:
Since there isn’t much on television these days that is worth viewing, I gave Alphas a shot as it’s a show about ‘ordinary’ people with extraordinary abilities. Sadly, it only has one thing going for it and that’s the story so far. I’ll admit, they hooked me with the intro, but the disappointment came after the first commercial. I’m terribly vexed that Hollywood still hasn’t moved past the stereotypical characters and casting that make up a lot of their failures. I did get a chuckle though when I realized this show is little more than a live action Scooby Doo Mystery.
Dr. Lee Rosen is a preeminent neurologist and psychiatrist with a long history of hands-on work with patients suffering from neurological disorders. His fascination with Alphas -- ordinary people with very extraordinary abilities known as Alpha Skills -- has led to the formation of a group of highly evolved humans specializing in solving Alpha-related cases. Though not an Alpha himself, he has become the unconventional leader of the team and his nurturing personality and fatherly wisdom are instrumental in holding the group together when stresses and personality conflicts threaten to tear them apart.
Of course, I will keep an open mind and view the pilot. This could be the start of something interesting, though I remain skeptical for now.
Update: I did not care for the pilot. The "special powers" of strength, persuasion, hearing, and autism where not all that magnificent or interesting. I would much rather watch something such as Lie to Me or Leverage where an understanding of human tics or technology can win the day. I liked the review comments on Guy Gab since they were similarly unimpressed:
Since there isn’t much on television these days that is worth viewing, I gave Alphas a shot as it’s a show about ‘ordinary’ people with extraordinary abilities. Sadly, it only has one thing going for it and that’s the story so far. I’ll admit, they hooked me with the intro, but the disappointment came after the first commercial. I’m terribly vexed that Hollywood still hasn’t moved past the stereotypical characters and casting that make up a lot of their failures. I did get a chuckle though when I realized this show is little more than a live action Scooby Doo Mystery.
7/7/11
More Sci Fi in July - Haven
I am glad to see Haven is returning to SyFy on July 25th. While I was not originally its strongest fan (see my earlier review), it grew on me as I got to know more about each character. Set in a small Maine town (though really filmed in Nova Scotia), a semi-retired FBI agent (Emily Rose) and small town detective (Lucas Bryant) investigate the strange happenings among the local population. Eric Balfour offers a fair amount of comic relief in his role of a local troublemaker/pirate recently turned concerned citizen/businessman. The awkward relationship between the three of them also keeps the show interesting when the mystery du jour is not too fascinating. Again, it is not Fringe with its parallel worlds, high tech weaponry, and complex storytelling, but that's okay. It has its own small town charm.
7/5/11
Tuning into Andy Samberg
If you need a few laughs at the end of the day, you cannot do much better than tuning into one of videos on The Lonely Island. Where else can you see Andy Samberg and Adam Levine from Maroon 5 serenade Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad? Or how about watching something a whacky as people getting punched before eating? Yes, it's all quite silly, but it's often just the right amount. I was following Andy Samberg's work before he became part of Saturday Night Live (which also offers some of these clips) and it is great to see how far he has come. His irreverent yet often dead-on humor is refreshing. He also seems like a genuinely nice guy. Back in April, Chris Hardwick on The Nerdist podcast had a great interview with Andy where he spoke about his early influences and longer term plans. I look forward to more of his humor in the years to come.