I think this show exhausted my 'quirky' tolerance. Seeing as that's all this show seems to be about. ZOOEY DESCHANEL'S CHARACTER IS QUIRKY. This show screams it every minute of every episode. It has good moments, mostly with the guys, and as a girl-centric girl, I never thought I'd say something like that, but it feels like this is pretty much a stand-up routine about a crazy girl that just never ends.
Sure, I was okay with it at first. I could handle the mess of hormones and crazy that Jess was, for quite a while. But I just couldn't keep handling the zany levels of quirky.
I smiled once. (The least funny game they've ever played. Hee./) Does this make me a heartless person? Maybe. Who could get tired of Zooey Deschanel? Me, apparently.
Like Dexter, I would give this show different ratings based on its season.
Season one kinda sucked. I don't know why I kept watching it, and frankly, when I did, I usually binge-watched it when Hulu told me my episodes were about to expire. It was about a whiny, neurotic girl thrown from the city into a more rural town than I'm from. (And considering that at least 60% of my High School were farming kids, that says a lot).
Then, character development happened. Yes, Dr. Hart is still neurotic, but it is more frequently played straight, laughed at, referenced, and thoroughly better handled than it was in the first season. Lemon grows from a spoiled bitch into spoiled sweet. Dr. Brieland gives up his vendetta against Dr. Hart, which greatly helped the show improve.
So now, it focuses a lot on relationships, and Dr. Hart not knowing what she wants in life. While yes, this is definitely a 'girl show' it's a fun girl show. The tangled relationships all feel real, and so do the characters.
I am concerned that, with Lemon and Wade owning the Rammer Jammer together, that the show might go downhill again, focusing mostly on their squabbles, but it's an example of the show growing, taking a risk, and I can't argue with that.
There are two forms of comedy I love: nonsensical comedy and satire. A satire is poking fun at something that genuinely happened, or happens. A nonsensical comedy is when it's revealed Maw-Maw's mother is alive, so Maw-Maw's mother is brought in to live in the house. Maw-Maw's mother and Maw-Maw have had a feud for years, until Maw-Maw gives her mother a quarter. The mother then shits herself to death. It's all okay, because Maw-Maw can't remember her mother's visit, but seems to think she and her mother reconciled sometime long-ago.
Raising Hope manages to hit both of those, but is usually just a straight nonsensical comedy. Jimmy, previously known as doofus--not in a mean way, I call my rabbit the same thing--fathered a baby to a serial killer, and is now trying to raise it. He still lives with his parents, and he's crushing on a girl who works in the supermarket. Oh, and his great-grandmother, Maw-Maw, who has Alzheimers, lives with them. Whereas The Riches couldn't figure out how seriously it wanted to take itself, specifically when it came to it's character's drug habits, Raising Hope knows how seriously it wants to take itself: Not at all. Especially when it comes to Maw-Maw, whose Alzheimers moments are always played for laughs.
Sabrina has to be my favorite character, who seems to be the 'straight man,' to the family's crazy guy, at first. Sure, she draws faces on the fruit and re-arranges the store she works at, but that's just because she's bored. Then it's revealed that she sleeps with pantyhose on her head at night. Why? Spiders.
'Nuff said.
None of the characters, except Sabrina, are particularly intelligent, moral, or rich. Unlike shows like Revenge, Pretty Little Liars, House of Cards, and so on, I feel like I've met most of these people, making this comedy strangely relatable. Sure, it takes place in a not-quite-reality, but so long as it's a consistent not-quite-reality, I'm perfectly fine with that. (The logistics of them being allowed to keep Maw-Maw just because she threatened a few cats, and a serial killer being let go because she survived her execution, are nonsensical, but standard in its own universe.)
This is definitely not for everyone. While it's a smart comedy, it's not a realistic one, and it could bother some people.
Well, to relax the vitriol Hemlock Grove brought out of me, I watched The Riches again. Now again, I adore two actors in this show. Eddie Izzard, of course, and Shannon Marie Woodward. Now, let me be clear. This show isn't a good show. It just doesn't piss me off half as much as Hemlock Grove did. Unfortunately, while I loved it the first time, I didn't like it that much the second time.
The sexually confused child is handled very well. Their gypsy culture is handed... alright. (Not that I know anything about gypsy culture.) Unfortunately, drugs are the center of the show, and it's handled very inconsistently. One minute, the mother has a total meltdown because she can't get her 'urban' drugs, next she's being introduced to 'suburban' drugs, next her husband goes on quite a hilarious drug trip. (Eddie Izzard is much too good at comedy for that not to have come out as funny as it did.)
The youngest kid doesn't seem sure whether he wants to be a girl or a boy. He's introduced as a girl, then revealed to be a boy. The family is very supportive of this, but tells him for this con, where they pretend to be a dead guy's family, he has to choose a gender.
The only bits worth watching were not found on youtube. The introduction, where they pull off a grand con to get presents for the mother getting out of jail, and the drug trip in episode 10. After that... it isn't really worth it. It isn't that this show is bad. It just wasn't good either.
I think all the show's problems stem from the fact that, even by the second season, The Riches hasn't figured out what it wants to be. Hiring two great comedic actors, Shannon Woodward and Eddie Izzard, for what seems to primarily be a drama. It opens with a comedic scene, and as an author, I know openings are there to set the tone for the rest of the work. It ends on a cliffhanger that can only go badly, and to be honest, if the cliffhanger had been resolved, I might have liked the show better. This isn't fair to the show, but it's true.
It really does seem to want to be a drama, with Minnie Driver's character's drug problem, and the youngest son's transgender issues being taken very seriously--most of the time. The arranged marriage plot is very heavy-handed, but the comedy just seeps in, with the girl being arranged to marry a very mentally challenged man, who the show alternately makes fun of and attempts to take seriously.
So perhaps The Riches was attempting to be a Dramedy, but it never really finds the balance between comedy and drama to really make it work.
A few posts back--Revenge, to be exact--I mentioned that there was a show I had watched recently that brought up way too many questions, and yet way too few answers. This was the show.
While I loved House of Cards, Hemlock Grove can go die in a fire. My vitriol may have a lot to do with the, in my opinion, unnecessary cat sacrifice--funny how I get more upset about a cat's death than a human's in tv shows--how unlikeable most of the characters are, how little they answered, how much it feels like they pulled the ending out of their butt, how much I hated Famke Janssen's accent, and how unnecessarily, unrepentantly, and unceasingly dark it is.
Now, let's be fair. I know the cat sacrifice thing bugs me because I'm an animal lover. I know the accent thing is very trivial, no matter how out-of-place it feels. And I know DARK shows have their place. But I feel that dark shows should have their light moments, and Hemlock Grove never did. I didn't need a laugh, but a smile, or a quiet moment, would have been nice.
Hemlock Grove opens with what is called a cold-opening, where we are introduced to someone who gets immediately killed, and then it never stops.
The two main characters are a werewolf and a vampire. The vampire's sister, Shelly, is some sort of completely unexplained creature--all we know about her is that it was heavily implied she was brought back from the dead when she died as a baby--with the ability to manipulate light, glow when she feels emotion, inability to speak, very large stature, overly large eye, scars all over her head, and baldness.
Shelly exemplifies the 'all questions no answers' philosophy this show has. Sure, the whole 'died as a baby' thing threw me a pretty good bone, but it was never followed up. WHY DOES SHE GLOW? Why can't she talk? Why is she so monstrous looking? Why? Why? Why?
I didn't need all the answers, but one or two would have been very helpful.
The nature of werewolves is explained thoroughly, and quickly. The nature of vampires might as well have been Grandma's secret recipe for all we knew about them, until the end. Even then, the questions move along. We are introduced to an ancestor of the vampire character, who had a movable tail mid-back. She cut it off, and died, and became a vampire. Apparently, vampires are created when they die of their own hand. (Important.) But they also have to be born of a vampire?
Now, I'd like to discuss two reveals, and how pissed they made me. Due to the spoilery nature, they will be vague. Do not read until the next sentence in bold if you don't want spoilers.
So, first, the rogue werewolf. It's the white-haired girl. This was almost completely pulled out of the show's ass. The retrospective explanation did help a lot, and the death of the two blonde girls did make sense, in retrospect. However, the girl's reasoning didn't make a lick of sense, even in a 'oh, she's a crazy person' way. The character spends most of the time in a mental hospital, and she stillgets out to go kill people. There were no clues whatsoever.
I will give the werewolf reveal props, however. The scene where she transforms needs to be used in special effects schools, because it was good. It was even better than the first transformation scene. The actress gets credit too: sexual release she got from transforming was effectively creepy.
Now secondly, the father of the 'immaculately conceived baby.' This one had at least a little more lead-up, with the father going and raping a girl, then mind-raping her afterwards to cover it up, before the reveal. And the father is the only one shown to have mind-powers like that, and the father of the girl even suggests she had been raped, which she had.
Come to think of it, I can't find a totally logical reason why I hate that reveal. I just do. Maybe it has something to do with the fact that you are expected to like this character enough to follow him. Shows can do anti-heros well, but there are some lines people just can't cross, and still come off as likeable.
I have to compare this to House of Cards, because the cast of both series is supposed to be full of 'anti-heros:' people who aren't good people, but still likeable. The difference is how they handle it: House of Cards makes it work. Every character, no matter what lines they crossed, still came off as fascinating or likeable. By the end of Hemlock Grove, none of the characters we've spent any time with--excluding Shelley--come off as likeable or fascinating. Netflix is perfectly happy to cross some lines due to freedom from censors. It's VERY gorey. It's sexual in a very creepy way--like the reveal that the evil werewolf goes straight for the female victim's crotches, or, as mentioned before in the spoiler-paragraph, the evil werewolf's sexual release before their transformation scene. It's dark. There's swearing. Nudity galore. Most egregiously: a girl kisses a half-corpse who is nude. Why? IT'S EDGY. At least the rape scene, graphic as it is, has some foreshadowing, character-development-implications, and so-on, to it. The half-corpse thing gets the girl in the mental hospital, which just raises more questions later on. The only thing it can imply is the girl's complete mental collapse, which could have been shown effectively any other way.
There are only two characters that are completely likeable from start to finish, (three if you count the cat who gets sacrificed) and one dies, and one gets framed for a murder she didn't commit, and has to leave town.
The mother of the werewolf disappears for no good reason--yes, her trailer was destroyed by hicks who were destroying it for completely illogical reasons themselves--but she leaves her son with a family of vampires she openly admits she hates, with almost no justification whatsoever. Then, the werewolf leaves the vampire completely alone, which destroys the vampire. This is done for no clear reason. He gets cleared of the murders, but still feels he has to leave town.
The most frustrating thing about the show was probably the entire town jumping on the 'he's a werewolf!' train. I've seen groupthink. I've studied groupthink. But I highly doubt groupthink would cause people to collectively agree a man committed crimes an animal clearly did, and brush it off as: 'well, he's a fictional--as far as we know--creature!'
How do they get this idea? Crazy girl says so. Yes, they blame a man for murders based on the word of a crazy teenager, who has based her decision about the boy being a werewolf from his complete and total sarcastic response to: "Are you a werewolf?"
This show left me very angry, very frustrated, and very disappointed. When it was supposed to be disturbing, it was just confusing. When it was supposed to be heartwarming, it wasn't. When it was supposed to be intriguing, it was frustrating. When it was supposed to make you sad, it made you angry.
Despite my dislike of Famke's accent, the actors all did a fabulous job. They just had a shit script to work with.
And for those who want to see the only worthy scene (very gory), the werewolf transformation, here it is, in all its naked and disgusting glory:
The second transformation was much better, as the special effects in here are a bit iffy when the skin starts ripping in the back, but that would be spoilery and not on youtube, so I'll settle for this one.
If this is how Netflix is going to use its unique powers, creating great original series and bringing back Arrested Development, they will get all my money.
This show can most easily be compared to Revenge, in that every single character is a chessmaster. The plot is set in motion by a betrayal of Frank Underwood by the newly elected president, who decides to go against his promise to nominate him for Secretary of State. Frank then destroys everyone, everywhere.
I almost wish I was kidding, but I'm not. If Frank didn't go on his rampage, nobody would be where they are by the end of the first season. Most notably, a character would not be dead.
In such a realistic series as this, and one with a very lovable anti-hero (I think he becomes an anti-villain at the end of the series) the death mid-season comes as a complete shock, and a moral-event-horizon for me.
Enough stabbing-in-the-dark at vague plot points, let me introduce the chess masters:
Frank Underwood: Obviously.
Claire Underwood: She runs a charitable organization, but that doesn't mean she is charitable.
Zoe Barnes: She may be young, but she's VERY clever.
Gillian Cole: A bit of a spoiler, but by the end of the season, you'll see why she makes the list.
These three, and by the end of the season, four (and two mystery chess-masters), are constantly running into each-other, and plans both benefit and fall apart thanks to each-other.
This show screams Gritty. It opens with a dog being shot, a line that not many shows cross. The protagonist is revealed to be bisexual, and that bit of himself is portrayed positively, which is also a line not many are willing to cross. He is in an open relationship with his wife, meaning they both cheat on each other, but they both know who with and when the cheating happens, and don't really care. A character is an alcoholic and a drug addict. Another is a prostitute. Another gets into a very abusive relationship with a much older man. There is nudity. References to self-injury and suicide. Netflix knows that it doesn't really have moral guardians to answer to. After all, children aren't really going to stumble upon this show while channel-surfing. They take full advantage of this fact.
It is NOT an easy show to watch, but I am still somehow hooked. I like all of these characters, including Frank, which is quite an impressive feat of writing and of course I suspect has much to do with Kevin Spacey, his actor, as well. All of these characters could have been considered to cross the line at one point, but they're all still likeable somehow anyway. That is an achievement.
I wish this show had gone to air. It had SO MANY good things going for it. I did not watch The Munsters growing up; I was more of an Addam's Family gal. However, this show made such a good case for it. Portia and Eddie Izzard, center and center-right, for those who don't know, are actors that could convince me to watch just about anything after, well, everything they've done, and they don't disappoint here.
Everything was well-shot, well-acted, well-written, intriguing, and hilarious.
I completely understand why it was not picked up, as it was clearly a VERY expensive pilot, but I sincerely hope NBC reconsiders bringing it back someday, because it is worth it.
Unlike the Wonder Woman pilot, this was very tightly plotted, and every plot they attempted to lay down for the rest of the season did wonderfully, and really highlighted the characters we were going to be dealing with.
The boy has had his first werewolf transformation, but his parents don't want to tell him that he isn't as normal as Marilyn is, something that has clearly been very important to him. The grandfather, played by Izzard, thinks this is ridiculous, and eats a lion in front of the boy. Grandpa has other concerns, however, as Herman, the boy's father, and a frankenstein creation, has been having heart problems, but doesn't want a new heart. This concern of Herman's is completely understandable to the audience: he says it's the only part of him that is truly his anymore, and he's afraid that a new heart won't skip a beat when he sees his wife, symbolizing his fear of not feeling the same way about her.
Meanwhile, Marilyn is trying to temper Grandpa's behaviors, and trying to get him to accept her as part of the family.
Even though most of these plots are somewhat resolved by the end of the pilot, they set up a very intriguing cast of characters and problems to follow through on.
I said in a previous review that I was going to discuss the idea of surrounding the main character by caricatures via a show that did this on purpose. It works with this show, for a few reasons. The first being that the show is so deeply entrenched in Daria's mind that it's easy to buy the idea that the characters are actually more rounded than Daria gives them credit for. The second being simply: It's satire.
People tend not to take cartoons seriously. Between the Dora the Explorers and the Spongebob Square Pants, there is the idea that cartoons are aimed exclusively at children. Often the greatest praise someone will give a cartoon is that adults can enjoy it too. And while this is not aimed at adults, it's the sort of workplace satire where the workplace is High School.
Honestly, it's an idea I wish had been done more than once, because it brought out great jokes that everyone could relate to. I didn't know the angry, overworked, under-paid teacher, but I did know the sister who seemed to do everything right, and out-shined me without even trying. The kid with the guitar, who was nice enough, but never going to go anywhere. The sarcastic artist.
This show is darkly funny, and strangely relatable. It isn't afraid to speak its mind, or even make fun of itself.
Daria is finally coming out on DVD, but as usual, you can see it with Hulu+, and you can see the two movies using Amazon Instant.
I like to say that, as an author, it makes enjoying media difficult. Why? Because you think like an author. For example, when the show opens, with someone getting shot, and jumps back to 'six months ago,' as an author, I know the only way they're going to be able to properly pull it off is if they're pulling the wool way over our eyes.
And they were.
There aren't a lot of surprises for me in television, but I'm fully, and enthusiastically, willing to admit that Revenge does this to me on just about a daily basis. Even if it is starting to seem a bit trite that everything comes back to this single corporation, I am still very excited to see where it will go.
I like to watch shows full of characters smarter than me, and just about every character is smarter than me. Even the specified layman, Jack, is smarter than me. I couldn't pull off half these schemes they do, nor could I defend myself against them. Every character is a master of Xanatos Speed Chess, and that makes the twists and turns nearly impossible to predict.
Even if it starts off fairly formulaic, it gets significantly better as it grows into its own shoes. It, unlike a show I will soon review, raises and answers enough questions to remain intriguing, but satisfying.
A show like Revenge, I suspect, will become an Unintentional Period Piece because of the economical politics surrounding it. It was clearly made during the recession, and clearly takes place during it too. A young woman, screwed over by a corporation, going to take down a bunch of rich people?
Maybe I'm overthinking it.
I have a question for any readers out there who have seen Revenge. Do you think Emily is faking all semi-balance of emotion? Does she truly love Aiden? Or does she just know he'll be a great alibi? I personally, have no idea if Emily's a very, very talented psychopath, or just a very screwed up, angry, smart girl.