Archive for September, 2007

Watching bad TV so you don’t have to.

It is that magical time of year again, when the U.S. networks roll out the best of the best, the shows that made the cut after countless meetings between paranoid executives, determined talent and artificially earnest agents. Millions upon millions of dollars have been sunk into these shows. For months now, they have been paraded before focus groups and critics, tweaked and and doctored and polished until they shone. Which, of course, begs the question: Shouldn’t these shows be, you know, GOOD?

Forget about the recent legal woes of your favorite Hollywood starlets, for nowhere is there more proof of Hollywood’s continuing dependence on illegal substances than a quick perusal of the 2007-8 television season. First, we have an over-reliance on shows featuring ordinary people gifted with superpowers, a marketing choice seemingly based around the fact that if people like Heroes, then they will love Reaper’s story of the teenager with the magic Dirt Devil that vacuums up the damned. Sadly, I did not make that up.

Failing that, they are offering shows based on films from the 80s (The Sarah Connor Chronicles, coming early 2008), TV shows from the 70s (The Bionic Woman), spin-offs from existing shows (Private Practice), and, yes, insurance ads (Cavemen). In some cases, like The Bionic Woman, the networks managed to display a stunning gift for predictability by combining the two themes of this season into one: familiarity and superpowers. If this doesn’t turn people away from the Internet and cable, then…well, I’ll sit with a self-satisfied smile on my face and say, “THIS is what you get for canceling Veronica Mars, you bastards!”

Perhaps the most painful example of the fall television disaster is CBS’s vampire-with-a-soul offering, Moonlight. Now, I could offer plenty of commentary on the premise, but I’ll let the straight description from TV.com speak for itself:

Moonlight follows Mick St. John, an immortal vampire and private investigator and his struggle to exist after he was bitten 60 years ago by his vampire bride on their wedding night. It also follows his internal torment as he falls in love with one he should not, one who is mortal named Beth, a news reporter, as well as his dealings with the woman who made him a vampire, his sire Coraline.

Ah, yes. A vampire-with-a-soul who is also a private investigator who also loves a mortal woman but is NOT Angel. They are completely different shows. On different networks. And, indeed, there is absolutely no place for comparison because, while one of those shows was good, the other…well, sucks, to use the unavoidable description. Really, really sucks. Rather than waste more time on this review than the writers spent coming up with the premise, I offer you five reasons why you should not, under any circumstances, watch this show.

1. The dialogue. Oh, the dialogue. The lead helpfully says, “When I became a vampire, my senses went up to 11,” offering his fresh take on vampiric abilities through the always-topical Spinal Tap reference. Not enough? How about his line when confronting an enemy: “I know she was here, man!” Yes, man. Next, he will be threatening him with, “Dude, I’m so going to drink your blood!” and “That’s a groovy crucifix, baby.”

2. The character’s name is Mick St. John. Enough said.

Moonlight3. The cast. Alex O’Laughlin plays the lead character with such a general lack of emotion (save smugness and a cooler-than-thou attitude) that the viewer roots for decapitation. Sophia Myles continues to promote her specific brand of sleep-inducing acting by barely seeming to appear on screen, even when she is the only person in the frame. If I could bear to watch this show again, I would be looking forward to her first scene with Shannyn Sossamon, a scene which would only be notable for containing less interest or charisma than you would find at a city council discussion of traffic lights. The only bright spot is Jason Dohring, but his ability to actually make the banal lines sound interesting is quickly smothered by the charisma vacuums with which he is surrounded. On the plus side, however, so long as the other three actors are kept busy, they won’t be turning up on any shows I actually like.

4. The plot. The red herring is so obvious that the actual killer is clear to anyone who has ever seen an episode of Murder, She Wrote. This, sadly, leaves the viewer with only the cast and the dialogue for entertainment. It was a very long hour.

5. The altered mythology. Now, I have no problem with a show creating its own universe, so if they want to say that vampires don’t die from a stake to the heart or direct sunlight, I’ll accept that. However, since they clearly rewrote the traditions as an excuse for the lead to preen while wearing black wrap-around sunglasses and skulking artfully in the shade, I call foul. Next week: St. John is forced to wander about shirtless on the beach with a ’sexy’ glower on his face.

There is a tiny little sliver of hope for the show, as Dave Greenwalt has taken over show-running duties, and his experience with Angel suggests he has some gift with this preposterous premise. However, unless he plans on having the vampires attack all the writers before setting themselves ablaze as penance for their crimes, I don’t think he has a chance in hell.

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Dexter, my boy

My television obsessions come and go, though I like to think that this is due less to a fickle nature than to the difficulty in maintaining a consistently good program over several years. My first obsession, the show that I refused to miss, was Twin Peaks. Fortunately, my friends shared this love, and we spent many a Saturday night in high school huddled around the television, practicing our best crazy-dwarf speech and competing to see who could freak the others out with the best Bob impression. This may be an excellent time to point out that I was something of a dork in high school. Of course, this tight-if-bizarre program quickly degenerated into David Lynch’s personal dreamscape, bless his demented soul, and the show vanished.

There have been others since then. Buffy the Vampire Slayer ruled my Tuesday nights. Season 2 of Alias spawned a still-unsatisfied desire for a massive wig collection and a hot but morally ambiguous mother. Battlestar Galactica made armageddon dirty sexy and dark as hell. Deadwood taught me that I actually don’t know how to curse like a sailor, and each episode I took dutiful notes to improve my foul-mouthed speech.

Most of those are gone now, and some had already lost my love before they went off the air. They took me for granted. The carefully wound stories with which they had romanced me on our first dates evolved into long, rambling anecdotes about their father issues. They started gaining weight, adding unnecessary characters and pointless scenes. It felt like they had stopped trying.

Which is why I look to my current obsession and can only beg, “Don’t ever change, Dexter.”

Yes, I’m involved with a bad boy. The hottest, scariest, smartest bad boy around. Momma warned me about them, but I’m a sucker for a TV show dressed in black leather that rolls up on its Harley, throws its cigarette to the ground and pulls me on to the back, then carries me off into the unknown night. I fucking love this show.

It’s exactly what contemporary noir should be. Recently, the television show Veronica Mars and the film Brick took noir into the high school, and that was an interesting fit. The themes of isolation, individualism and oppression by authority worked perfectly within the high school setting, but the duality that marks the best noir, the conflict between light and dark that defines the protagonist, was never fully developed with a seventeen-year-old character. However, make the hero a freaking serial killer trying to exist in society and you have taken the genre to its natural next step. Dexter is everything a noir anti-hero should be: clever, witty, charming, devious and oh, so dark.

The conventions of the genre are firmly in place: the high-contrast lighting, the odd camera angles, the voice-over narration. But it’s the exploration of the themes that make this show truly stand out. Unlike most films and television, it does not simply ask the viewer to observe the darkness from a safe distance. It demands a moral decision. We watch Dexter preparing for and committing his murders and wonder whether or not we should be cheering him on. Conveniently, he only kills other bad guys, and the character is so likable that we want him to get away with it. Though the ritual of the deaths makes me uneasy, I can’t stop watching. The show drags me into its morally gray world and makes me complicit in the murders, as I never want Dexter to get caught. Kill on, you sick bastard.

The show would not be half what it is without Michael C. Hall in the lead. He can show fear, amusement, dismay or excitement without appearing to move a single facial muscle. When I am queen of the world, he will be able to pave his driveway with Emmy awards. Until then, the best I can do is spread the word. Watch it. But don’t come crying to me if you find yourself a bit disturbed. You’ve been warned.

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I love television.

Hi. My name is Marcia, and I love television.

There. I said it. It only took 30+ years to admit it, but I finally did. I used to say I loved some television shows, perhaps, or that I enjoyed vegetating on the sofa for an hour after a hard day. Only an hour, mind you. No one wants to admit to seeing their entire evening vanish into the depths of the cable box. But to say you love television is synonymous with saying you love to live vicariously through fictional people, or that you love to allow Hollywood programmers to think for you. It’s not acceptable to love this brain-cell-killing, scandal-glorifying idiot box.

But I do. I love films, too, and I’ll surely write about them from time to time, but they don’t give me what I need the way television can. Yes, they can have charismatic actors and stunning cinematography and clever writing, but I can’t think of a single film that features a more subtle actor than Michael C. Hall (Six Feet Under, Dexter), or more beautifully realistic cinematography than Friday Night Lights, or smarter writing than Veronica Mars (a moment of silence, if you will). Films can be wonderful, but so can television.

More than just about anything else, I love stories. I have been a devoted bookworm since I was first hooked on phonics in first grade. I love my friends’ stories, my family’s history, our own epic creations. And, while film can tell a lovely two hour story (or, if it sees fit to include an elf or two, a mere ten hours), the narrative plane of television is limitless. Characters can discover hidden depths over five seasons. People can fall in love and get married and die and, if they’re very lucky, even be on a show where they get to come back to life. Hell, I’m still waiting for the entire cast of Alias to resurrect for a reunion show. They might even decide to make it the zombie reunion show, and they CAN, because anything goes on television. That freedom to tell whatever story they want, over as long as they want…bless ‘em. Pull up your remote control and go along for the ride.

This is not a free pass. Lost nearly, well, lost me when it took the “as long as they want” part a little too literally. Buffy the Vampire Slayer has two seasons of which many fans Do Not Speak because the writers pulled character assassinations that would have made McCarthy take notes. Grey’s Anatomy has been so desperate to keep everything fresh and lively and interesting that it doesn’t even make sense anymore. Stories still need to be good. They need a clear narrative, a marked path for the story to wander along. They need characters I want to know more about. So, yes, I love television, but I sure as sweet hell don’t love all of it.

I’m gonna do my best not to be a snob about it, though. You will never catch me watching Big Brother, because life is too short for that. But for someone else, it tells stories they want to hear. To my great shame, I watch and enjoy America’s Next Top Model, and I’ve never been able to justify that. People like what they like. On occasion, I just want to explore why that is.

I do have a life. I exercise regularly, cook mostly healthy meals, work full-time, see friends whenever possible. I have not yet become so unbalanced that I think the people inside the talking box are my friends. I think there are a lot of people out there like me, whose rich, full lives also happen to include a fair amount of TV-watching. Maybe more than they want to admit. To you, I say: welcome. You are among friends.

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