Archive: December 2009 (21-30 of 54)

Dec 15 2009 10:01 AM ET

'Lie To Me': A truck, a bomb, a 'Dr. Horrible' singalong

Although its plot had no suspense and holes you could drive a truck with a bomb through (we knew there was no way that truck was going to explode when the star of the show, Tim Roth, was standing beside it, right?), and its subplot was as cutesy as all get-out, Lie To Me was extremely entertaining last night, I thought.

There’s something about this season that’s just clicking. I could spend an hour just watching Roth’s Cal Lightman glower at clueless clients and Kelli Williams wiggle down the hall of The Lightman Group in a tight dress every week, couldn’t you?

To be sure, the main story, about a trucker who claimed to have a bomb set to go off unless he spoke to the President about his foreclosed family-farm, had its moments of tension. And the subplot was the one most EW readers would have tuned in for, since it featured Buffy/Dr. Horrible star Felicia Day as a teacher who somehow thought it would be a good idea to bring third-graders to see Roth’s Cal scowl as an educational day-trip

But that subplot permitted Lie co-star Brendan Hines to strum a guitar and sing a sweet harmony with Day, and both of them got along just swell.

As for the trucker, well, I looked at that portion of the episode as an excuse for Lie To Me to bring in that fine character actor Miguel Ferrer to do what he always does: make a thankless role (this time, as a grumpy FBI official) seem like a human being.

Put Roth and Ferrer in the same room and you’ve got some clever acting going on. I was sorry that last night was Lie To Me‘s fall finale.

I look forward to its return. Do you?

Dec 15 2009 09:37 AM ET

Golden Globes TV fresh-faces: 'Dexter,' 'True Blood,' and 'Good Wife' fans should be 'Glee'-ful!

Filed under: News and tagged: ,

The Golden Globes used to be the home of surprises, making the Emmy nominations seem stodgy. But with a few exceptions, this year’s TV nominees could have been predicted by anyone with a pay-cable subscription: True Blood, Dexter, Big Love, and (on basic cable) Mad Men dominated the Globes. Not that there’s anything wrong with those choices.

Still, I’m cheered by the some fresh faces and shows among the nominees:

• Julianna Margulies, for best drama actress in The Good Wife: yay, a 10 p.m. CBS network drama about grown-ups gets some recognition!

Modern Family and Glee in the comedy category: How great that Modern Family in particular, a show that found its great comic voice from the moment its pilot aired, should be selected for nomination so quickly by the Globes! And to have Matthew Morrison, who leads up Glee, nominated is a fine choice among so many comedy-series possibilities.

Dexter fans, sharpen a knife in celebration: John Lithgow (for his Trinity killer turn) joined previously-nominated Michael C. Hall and Dexter itself in being nominated!

• The comedy-category vote-of-confidence resides in Courtney Cox’s nomination for Cougar Town. That sitcom is wildly uneven, pretty clever, and Cox is, of course, a TV-awards favorite, but seeing her join the ranks of Edie Falco (hoo-ray: Nurse Jackie!) and Toni Colette (United States of Tara) is impressive. Even more impressive? The nomination of Glee’s Lea Michelle in the same category (Best Comedy Actress).

Hung: The freshman HBO dramedy got some Globes support — stars Thomas Jane and Jane Adams were both nominated!

As for the predictables, well, I’ll tell you right now, in any TV-movie/miniseries category, bet your mortgage on HBO’s Grey Gardens – that thing is catnip to any awards voter.

The same goes for Mad Men: While I hope True Blood, Dexter, and Big Love give it strong competition, this industry fave is going to be hard to beat as Best Drama. Same goes for Jon Hamm in the best-actor category.

Read the full list of nominations here.

What do you think of the nominations? Who do you hope will win?

Dec 15 2009 07:56 AM ET

'The Sing-Off' premiere: Keen singing and swan songs

I didn’t expect much from The Sing-Off, the new a capella competition show that combines American Idol, Glee, and America’s Got Talent with host Nick Lachey and the sad little caterpillar pasted to his upper lip. But during its two-hour premiere, The Sing-Off offered some pleasures both intentional and inadvertent.

Some of the groups, culled from around the country, were Glee-fully good and others were bad (no surprise that Face was sent home — over-emoting the already over-the-top “Livin’ On A Prayer” just doomed those guys). A couple of the acts — Voices of  Lee; Noteworthy — made such a point of emphasizing their religiosity in their taped introductions, I wondered when one of them was going to realize that one of their opponents was a bunch called the Beelzebubs. Beelzebub. As in demon. As in Satan. Don’t let those nice blazers the Bubs wore fool you, kids! E-e-e-e-k! Run for your lives! (For the record, I thoroughly support the Beelzebubs, as the group was founded in 1962 and named by a Tufts student who was reading Paradise Lost, thus the source of their name.)

But getting back to running for your life: Maxx Factor, the all-female barbershop quartet, broke into a version of “Rehab” that was meant to make us chuckle warmly and say, “Awww, see? The ladies covered an Amy Winehouse song — how racy!” I was racing to the fridge for a soda before they finished that bit of cutesiness.

This being the post-Susan Boyle era of TV competition judging, no act was ridiculed in the making of this show. And I do have to say that Ben Folds is my new favorite TV judge, hands down. The once-and-future Ben Folds Five leader was smart, articulate, funny, and perhaps the only person currently on TV who can use “keen” as a word of praise and not seem like he’s reading from an old Archie comic book.

The other two judges seemed cast as types. Former Boyz II Men member Shawn Stockman took the Randy Jackson role (“Wow, wow!”; “Pitchy”), while Pussycat Doll Nicole Scherzinger was the Paula Abdul effusive-babbler (“Your voices are limitless!”).

When Lachey explained that each group voted off would sing a parting tune, he said, “We call it their ‘swan song’” — as though he thought the term “swan song” was some mysterious foreign phrase that only inside-the-biz folks could possibly comprehend without him enunciating very carefully.

All in all, kinda fun. Will I stick around to see which act that you-you-you will be voting for to win the cash prize and the Sony Records contract? Probably not. But e-mail me if Voices of Lee ever looks up “beelzebub” in the dictionary…

Did you watch The Sing-Off? What did you think?

Dec 14 2009 11:21 AM ET

'Dexter' death: Was it a dream? Was Trinity not the killer?

Filed under: News and tagged: ,

I’m reading the comments on my review of last night’s holy-cow!-finale of Dexter, and I’m struck by how many people believe — or hope — that the final scene was a dream. SPOILER ALERT: Do not read further if you don’t want to know to whom I am referring. READ FULL STORY »

Dec 14 2009 09:05 AM ET

'The Jacksons: A Family Dynasty': A big family mess

The first two hours of The Jacksons: A Family Dynasty, which aired last night, was rather sad, and I don’t just mean because it reminded us all over again what a void the death of Michael Jackson had left not only in the Jackson family but on the world-stage.

Begun before Jackson died, A Family Dynasty is now a series of squabbles and desperation-moves, although it’s impossible to tell whether, had he lived, Michael would have taken much of a prominent role in what amounts to a rehab of the Jackson brothers’ faded popularity:

Certainly the Jackson who comes off worst on this six-part series is Jermaine, who blows off a family photo-shoot and flies off to Vienna to promote a Michael tribute concert without his brothers’ involvement (and that subsequently fell apart).

Why did he, listed among the executive producers, even agree to allowing such botches to be included here? I guess the prospect of getting back in the spotlight was too powerful to resist. One thing that seems obvious: I doubt that the other Jackson with a real career, Janet, will be popping up too often on this docu-psycho-drama.

You can read my full review of The Jacksons here.

Did you watch The Jacksons: A Family Dynasty? If you did, having seen it would you watch it again?

Dec 13 2009 11:05 PM ET

The shocking 'Dexter' season finale: Read this review if you've seen it

Filed under: News and tagged:

“The messes are piling up,” ghost-Harry warned Dexter in Sunday night’s season-four finale.

“You have your demons, I accept that,” said Rita to Dexter.

“Nothing is inevitable,” said Dexter to Arthur Mitchell, the Trinity killer.

I’m telling you right now, do not read this unless you’ve seen the shocking Dexter season finale. READ FULL STORY »

Dec 13 2009 08:16 AM ET

'Saturday Night Live' recap: Taylor Lautner and a show full of Tiger Woods jokes

So it turns out Saturday Night Live was saving most of its Kanye West-Taylor Swift jokes not for Swift, but for this week’s show hosted by her boyfriend Taylor Lautner. And they were just as lame as you’d expect.

The only thing worse would have been if SNL made a lot of obvious jokes about Tiger Woods — and that’s just what happened: it seemed as though half of the show last night consisted of Tiger material.

Woods was the subject of the mirthless cold-open. And then Jason Sudeikis played a PGA commissioner made nervous about Woods’ announced “indefinite break” from the tour in no fewer than three unfunny promotions for the PGA tour. As an incentive to keep people watching the golf tournament, he promised that “if you hit a slice, you get hit by Kimbo Slice” and that whoever gets the “worst score has to appear on an episode of Jersey Shore.” Judging from the applause for the mere mention of that MTV phenomenon, SNL should have done a Jersey Shore parody this week. Even when the writers make the right reference, they’re doing the wrong sketch for it.

But wait, there was more: Three Tiger jokes on “Weekend Update,” including a character-moment for Nasid Pedrad as “mistress number 15.” Pedrad’s performance was good; it was the punchlines that failed her.

The first time I laughed was when Fred Armisen wheeled out his “Native American comedian Billy Smith” during “Update.” I can’t help it: I love Armisen’s inventive varieties of bad comics (“These jokes kill on the reservation”).

To those of you who’ve noted how little most of the female cast members are given to do, it’s worth noting that Abby Elliott put in more screen-time than she probably has all season, and that Kristen Wiig limited herself to just one big screech-out moment, as nervous “Aunt Sue.”

Oh, right: host Lautner. He danced at every opportunity, such as a show-choir skit, but there was certainly no glee to be found here:

Lautner also gamely played a girl who was on “Team Edward” debating a “Team Jacob” fan portrayed by Jenny Slate. There was also a school sketch that made so little sense, there was a weird moment when students played by Andy Samberg and Pedrad questioned the teacher (Bill Hader) as to why we were all listening to “this nonsense.” They were, in effect, surrogates for the audience, in the studio and at home. The sketch dribbled to an embarrassingly studio-silent conclusion.

Biggest laugh of the night: Ricky Gervais, not on SNL, but in a real commercial for the Golden Globes (he’s hosting on NBC Jan. 17).

Just before Lautner said good night, there was a moment of silence for Heino Ripp, who was a technical director for SNL from 1975 to 1983 and whose history in television extended all the way back to Sid Ceasar’s classic sketch series Your Show of Shows in the 1950s.

Music guest Bon Jovi made a lot of anthemic rock. That Jon Bon Jovi seems like a nice guy.

Here’s an open plea to next-week host James Franco: It’s up to you to redeem the month of December for SNL, pal. Please leave General Hospital immediately and start rehearsing.

Did you watch? Did you laugh at/with Taylor Lautner more than I did?

(You can follow me on Twitter.)

Dec 12 2009 08:54 AM ET

'Dollhouse' recap: 'Meet Jane Doe' and 'A Love Supreme'

Another week, another double-shot of Dollhouse. These two hours started out tediously, and concluded smashingly. I could have done without the prolonged wind-up of the first episode, entitled “Meet Jane Doe,” in which Echo was on the lam from the Dollhouse, eating out of dumpsters, and helping a Latina woman, Lisa, who’s fallen on hard times. When Echo and her new friend fell into the clutches of a tritely malevolent sheriff, the only surprise was that he was played by Glen Morshower — Aaron Pierce from 24, but with a Southern drawl that suggested someone among this episode’s three writers (Maurissa Tancharoen, Jed Whedon, and Andrew Chambliss) had just caught Rod Steiger in In The Heat Of The Night on a sleepless night.

No, the interesting stuff was taking place back at the Dollhouse, where Topher was still babbling about the long-gone Summer Glau’s Bennett: “She went all Cyclon on me,” yelped Topher, “she disarmed me with her arm… and her glasses and her face.” There was a lot of tension between Keith Carradine’s Harding, lording it over Olivia Williams’ Adelle DeWitt. Harding is planning on opening up a Dollhouse in Dubai, he wants to split up Sierra and Victor (oh, the horror!), and as Langton muttered to DeWitt, “You’ve got to take back this house.”

Echo is being trailed, romanced, trained, and deceived by Ballard to lure her back into the Dollhouse… or maybe he’s letting DeWitt and company think he’s doing this and just double-crossing everyone: we shall see. In any case, Echo is now aware of her life as Caroline and her other imprints, or as Ballard cracks when they play house in a dingy hovel, “Thirty-six personalities and not one of them can cook.” (Ballard doesn’t make many jokes, does he?)

The talking-points for this hour are:

• Echo: “They made me aggressively sexual and phenomenally creative in bed; also sociopathic… and at least seven times gay.” But who’s counting?

• Topher: “I figured out how to [create] a portable device that will imprint anyone… an innocent person, with a new personality.” In other words, no “treatments” necessary with Topher’s new zap gun.

• DeWitt: “I accept the situation,” she says of her new subservience to Harding, while warning him, “Power is always used to get more power.” Harding is too smug to hear in this the true subtext: That DeWitt is about to launch a major counter-coup against him, because — Topher’s words here — “You are the coldest bitch on the planet.” Yes: Olivia Williams in full mean-Brit mode is fun.

The second hour had the enormous asset of Alpha: Alan Tudyk making a pretty triumphant return in a dapper suit and a very loud shirt and tie. Committing his first murder even before the opening credits, Alpha has set his sights on Echo, his new “number one” target (Whiskey used to be first in his shrivelled heart).

This episode, called “A Love Supreme” (I didn’t hear any John Coltrane on the soundtrack, but maybe I missed it, jazz fans?), also brought back one of Echo’s best clients ever, Joel Mynor. Not because Mynor is a particularly interesting client (really, have any of them been? they’re all just sad or mean men, aren’t they?) but because he’s played by the always-terrific Patton Oswalt. With Ballard right behind her, Echo wants to protect Joel from Alpha, who wants to kill anyone Echo is rubbing up against. Which also, of course, includes Ballard.

Echo, now in command of her imprints and able to call upon the right one for the right situation (“I’m obsolete,” moans Topher, “this must be what old people must feel like, or Blockbuster”), is nonethless pretty evenly matched by Alpha — once again, the ever-quotable Topher: “a serial killer who imprinted himself with a bunch of personalities.”

There was a nicely shot action scene in the Dollhouse during which Alpha does a “remote wipe” of all the dolls, who start beating up Echo, Ballard, and the rest of the Dollhouse staff

I liked these episodes, especially the second one, on the basis of the acting and the dialogue, but I’m not sure I was really engaged by Alpha’s motive — in his final scenes, he tortured Ballard simply because he was jealous of Ballard’s relationship with Echo? Seems rather small-scale for a villain of Alpha’s stature. But then, in the Whedon universe, love does reign supreme, doesn’t it? (And where did Alpha go? He just seemed to exit, stage left, about four minutes before the end of the episode.)

At any rate, although the fate of Ballard hangs in the balance (brain-dead, for now), the real person of interest now was given away by the evening’s final shot: a close-up of DeWitt, newly determined to ruthlessly regain control.

Could it be that Adelle DeWitt will prove this series’ more interesting central character than Echo? When it comes to acting, I’d give the odds to Olivia Williams over Eliza Dushku any day.

What do you think?

(You can follow me on Twitter.)

Dec 11 2009 11:43 PM ET

See Sarah Palin out-Shatner William Shatner on 'The Tonight Show'

Filed under: News and tagged: , ,

Sarah Palin made a surprise visit to The Tonight Show, proving she can read from a book at least as dramatically as William Shatner can. Conan O’Brien had Shatner on to do one of his periodic readings, this time from Palin’s bestseller Going Rogue. Then to the delighted screams of the audience, Palin came out and read excerpts from one of Shatner’s autobiographies, Up Till Now:

You have to hand it to Palin: She gave as good as she got, didn’t she?

Dec 11 2009 10:49 AM ET

'Fringe' recap: When going crazy makes you a better father

The degree and nature of Walter Bishop’s madness may not seem like the stuff of an exciting Fringe episode, but it sure worked out that way last night: This was one of the best Fringes yet for the way it wove its sci-fi with its emotional subplots with such tight, artful braiding.

The set-up: a number of mental-ward patients, institutionalized for 14 years each, are suddenly acting normal — good news, except that in the case of the first one, mental equilibrium was achieved by slicing off the back of his skull and removing… something.

The perpetrator of this theft was a familiar face, or head: Thomas Newton, himself a severed skull from the Other Side glimpsed by Olivia Dunham, and grafted onto a body in this universe. The hour’s central gimmick was ingenious: three patients, three bits of brain matter removed from them that wasn’t theirs in the first place — it had been implanted, which was what caused their mental distress. We soon learned these samples were meant to be re-implanted into Walter, that his own long-ago mental problems were caused (at least in part — don’t forget the hallucinogens he gobbled like candy in the ’60s) by these bits of missing tissue containing memories lost. Once restored in Walter’s head, this brain tissue might enable Newton and his First Wave army to extract information from him and build a doorway to the Other Side, which would have the rather unfortunate effect of destroying our world.

Science mingled with emotion this night, as Olivia assured Peter that, “Going crazy made [Walter] a better person, a better father.” And science mingled with action, as a gun-toting Olivia tracked down Newton, who’d injected Walter with a “neurotoxin” that would kill him in four minutes unless Olivia agreed to let Newton go free in return for the toxin-cure. This could have been a suspense-killer — no way was Olivia going let Walter die, right? — but instead, it set up even greater tension. “Now I know how weak you are,” the fleeing Thomas (“We’ve got what we need”) Newton cackled to the angrily compliant Olivia. He was right: She cares so much for Walter now that she’ll risk the show’s doomsday scenario (“opening a corridor” between universes that will result in “global destruction”) to save him.

Fringe at its best here is all about divided loyalties, the power of memory and the memory of power — how to get it, how best to use it, and how it corrupts.

This beautifully-directed episode (by Jeannot Szwarc, who’s worked on everything from The Rockford Files to Smallville) featured some gorgeously framed shots of bodies (Newton’s; Walter’s) entering the frame as gliding still figures.

A few final thoughts and a question:

• This was a great Walter episode. His emotional state has been played in the past for laughs (the eccentric with a child’s appetite for snacks), as evidence of mad-scientist genius (he makes connections and hathes theories quicker than anyone), and as tragedy (his commital to St. Claire’s hospital kept him apart from his son for years). This night, all these elements combined, along with some terrific scenes with Josh Jackson feeling guilt/anguish at all his father has been though, for maximum effect. Bravo, John Noble.

• Best exchange of the night: After Walter requests 50 milligrams of valium to calm himself, a doctor says, “That’s quite a high dosage.” “I have quite a high tolerance,” replies Walter.

• Best Walter non sequitur: “I have a terrible headache and a sudden craving for chicken wings.”

• What’s the significance, if any, of William Bell (brief cameo by Leonard Nimoy) using the name “Dr. Paris”?

Did you watch Fringe? I thought this was one of the best episodes yet; did you? And… no more Fringe until January! I crave more than chicken wings…

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