Broken Mirror

Random Musings on Politics and Entertainment

"The mirror... it's broken."
"Yes, I know. I like it that way. Makes me look the way I feel."

-C.C. Baxter and Fran Kubelik in The Apartment

Friday, June 23, 2006

Awards: Writing/Directing in a Comedy

Writing in a Comedy Series

Bill Callahan, SCRUBS - "My Fallen Idol"
Steve Carell, THE OFFICE - "Casino Night"
Greg Daniels, THE OFFICE - "Conflict Resolution"
Dean Lorey and Chuck Tatham, ARRESTED DEVELOPMENT - "Fakin It"
Aaron McGruder, THE BOONDOCKS - "Return of the King"

Directing in a Comed Series

Zach Braff, SCRUBS - "My Way Home"
Ken Kwapis, THE OFFICE - "Booze Cruise"
Charles McDougall, THE OFFICE - "Conflict Resolution"
Lev L. Spiro, ARRESTED DEVELOPMENT - "Fakin It"
Richard Alexander Wells, SCRUBS - "My Urologist"

TV Season 2005-06: The Good

Desperate Housewives

Desperate Housewives was faced with a tremendous problem for season two. Season 1 was carried along by a compelling mystery. While the performances of the main four actresses were brilliant, the narrative was carried along by the circumstances surrounding Mary Alice's death. Unfortunately, season 2 failed miserably at coming up with any sustainable narrative arc. We were introduced to the Applewhite family, and the beginning of the season teased us that this might develop itno something far more interesting. And with Alfre Woodard, it should have been. Sadly, this story went nowhere. I have rarely seen an actress as talented as Alfre Woodard so poorly used on a show. None of the other stories ever developed any momentum. Sure, there were some fun side plots, such as Lynette navigating her return to work and Bree dealing with a several family crises. But the stories for Susan and Gabrielle were inconsistent and poorly developed. The season never really gained any momentum and suffered through a very weak season finale that failed to set up interesting possibilities for season 3. The reason this show is ranked as high as it is is due to the performances of Felicity Huffman and Marcia Cross, who turned in brilliant performance after brilliant performance. They made this season much more enjoyable than it would have been otherwise.

Best Episode: "Next"
Worst Episode: "Remember"
Best Performer: Marcia Cross
Worst Performer: Eva Longoria
Rank Against Previous Seasons: 2nd/2

Alias

It's been a strange ride for Alias. What started out as a fun, fast paced action show with clever cliffhangers and a sexy lead reached it's apex in season 2 with an incredibly well planned season arc that brilliantly merged intense supenseful stunts and thoughtful emotional complexity. Unfortunately, Lena Olin left at the end of season 2 and the show went into a tailspin the next year. Saly it was a tailspin it would never really recover from. Things got better in season 4, with some interesting individual episodes, but the absence of a season long arc was upsetting. Still, it managed to close out the season with the finest single episode in the entire run of the show, thanks again to the return of Lena Olin. They tried to do some different stuff in season 5, bringing in a couple fresh faces (Amy Acker and Rachel McAdams were good, Balthazar Getty was not), but still suffered from some of the same post- season 2 flaws (idiotic fake deaths, inconsistent season arc). The season finale itself was a mixed bag in some respects, but did provide a nice conclusion to things. It was an extremely inconsistent show, but when it was on it's game, it wa sone of the most purely entertaining shows on television. I'll miss this show.

Best Episode: "Reprisal"
Worst Episode: "Prophet Five"
Best Performer: Victor Garber
Worst Performer: Balthazar Getty
Rank Against Previous Seasons: 4th/5
Season Grade: B

Conviction

I've never been a big fan of the Law & Order series. Despite the obviously high production values, the self-contained procedure-based format made everything feel pointless. While I don't necessarily need a continuing soap oepra storyline to capture my interest, I do like there to be some kind of minimal character development. Without that, there's little reason to care what happens. This makes the failure of Conviction all the more distressing. Conviction was a Law & Order spinoff that did not benefit from it's brand name and sharply departed from the structure. Instead of focusing solely on the procedure and arguments, conviction spent plenty of time developing its characters, following their journeys as young, idealistic, prosecutors. The most interesting were the lovely Julianne Nicholson as the nervous and shy newcomer, and Eric Balfour as a tough guy from the streets that decided to go to law school. The romance that slowly developed between these two was nicely played and it helped that they had terrific chemistry together. However, Conviction certainly wasn't a perfect show. The wooden Anson Mount basically functioned as the lead character and he was extremely dull. Some of the soap opera-ish elements were not well thought out, including an ill-conceived love triangle betwen Mount, Milena Govich, and Stephanie March. Still, there was plenty to enjoy here and it's a shame that viewers rejected this format. At least it ended with a beautiful closing shot of Balfour and Nicholson. Bravo.

Best Episode: "Hostage"
Worst Episode: "True Love"
Best Performer: Julianne Nicholson
Worst Performer: Anson Mount
Grade: B


Kitchen Confidential

One of the most promishing shows coming into this season was Kitchen Confidential. It had a fun, eclectic cast filled with Alias's Bradley Cooper, Buffy's Nicholas Brendan, Freaks & Geeks' John Francis Daley, and Grosse Pointe's Bonnie Sommerville. There was also alot of buzz due to it's fast-paced, quirky nature, and the fact that it was a workplace comedy about a workplace that we haven't seen much of lately. For the most part, Kitchen Confidential was a good show. The ensemble cast clicked just as expected, althoug Bonnie sommerville never completely fit in. There were some fun guest stars throughout, including John Larroquette as a dying chef, and Michael Vartan as a french rival. The problem is that the show never really found it's comic rhythm. The fast pace sped over many of the better jokes, and didn't stop enough to ground the show in any kind of narrative stability. I have no doubt that the show would have succeeded if given enough time. It had the potential to be great. Unfortunately, it needed some more time to do that, and the abysmal ratings prevented that from happening. In a world where Two and a Half Men is a hit, it's a shame that a fresh, inventive show like this never had a chance.

Best Episode: "Dinner Date with Death
Worst Episode: "Exile on Main Street"
Best Performer: Julianne Nicholson
Worst Performer: Anson Mount
Grade: B

Tuesday, June 06, 2006

Awards: Guest Actor/Actress in a Drama Series

Guest Actor

Sharif Atkins as Dr. Michael Gallant, ER
Michael Cera as Dean, VERONICA MARS
Michael Emerson as Henry Gale, LOST
Richard Jenkins as Nathaniel Fisher, SIX FEET UNDER
Oliver Platt as Oliver Babish, THE WEST WING

Guest Actress

L. Scott Caldwell as Rose, LOST
Charisma Carpenter as Kendall Casablancas, VERONICA MARS
Tina Majorino as Cindy "Mac" Mackenzie, VERONICA MARS
Katey Sagal as Helen, LOST
Alia Shawkat as Stacy Wells, VERONICA MARS

TV Season 2005-06: The Average

24

Like last season, 24 opened with a very exciting and compelling story: Chloe, Tony, Michelle, and President Palmer were all the targets of assasinations. This led to a very exciting story about the possible release of nerve gas. We had some interesting side characters, including Jack's new girlfriend Diane Huxley and her son (whose kidnapping was one of the most tense moments of the year) and the return of Audrey Raines. This made the opening handful of episodes very exciting and tense. Unfortunately the writers lost control of their premise and everything fell apart. They were doing some interesting things with President Logan and his wife Martha. Then for some reason it was decided that Logan was corrupt and involved in the whole plan from the beginning. This twist really feels like it was made up on the fly, because Logan's earlier actions made no sense in retrospect. It was so much more interesting when he was just incompetent. That was actually far more frightening than he ever was as an actual villain. The show got so wrapped up in the Logan betrayal story that they dropped the nerve gas plot until the very end. It seemed like the show could close out on a strong note, but the finale once again was more about setting up season 6 than wrapping up this one. Still, I will never forget the image of Edgar's death scene. That's definitely one of the most unforgettable moments of the year.

Best Episode: "Day 5: 6:00 PM - 7:00 PM"
Worst Episode: "Day 5: 3:00 AM - 4:00 AM"
Best Performer: Mary Lynn Raksjub
Worst Performer: Peter Weller
Rank Against Previous Seasons: 2nd/2 (I've only watched the past 2 seasons)
Final Grade: B-

ER

Last season on ER witnessed a surprising resiliency in the veteran drama. Recent cast additions Parminder Nagra, Shane West, and Linda Cardellini really breathed life into things. This year, they upped the ante by bringing in John Leguizamo and Kirsten Johnston. While both definitely stirred things up, their characters never really developed far enough to make them interesting overall. Kirsten Johnston's strict Nurse Eve Peyton was abruptly dropped at midseason in a way that makes it seem like the actress herself wanted to go, or the producers wanted her out. The writers never were able to find the right note for Leguizamo's Dr. Clemente, and while he pushed some interesting storylines this season, never become a fully realized character worth caring about. The show continued it's habit of doing self-contained special episodes that don't involve most of the main cast. This year we got a trip to the Sudan, where Noah Wyle's Carter was now working to save lives. They cared enough about this story to cast Mary McCormack as another Doctor. This stuff was well done, but I can't help but think that this would be better done as a tv-movie. ER has always been an ensemble show, and it's at it's best when it highlights the cast and lets them do their work.They achieved that goal intermittently this season, especially when the fantastic Parminder Nagra's Neela was highlighted. However, the writers wasted time with a season premiere all about Sam's runaway kid, and an atrocious season finale that featured a shootout, and a kidnapping of Sam's runaway kid. Please put this kid in a mental institution, or send him to the same place as Chip Cunningham and the younger child on Family Matters. Next year, we get a promising cast addition in John Stamos. Hopefully, they can avoid the same traps as season 12.

Best Episode: "Body and Soul"
Worst Episode: "21 Guns"
Best Performer: Parminder Nagra
Worst Performer: Scott Grimes
Season Grade: B-
Rank Against Previous Seasons: 9th/12

Lost

It's rare for a show to drop in quality from season to season at the same rate that Lost did. What was the most exciting show on television last season turned out to be a slow moving, poorly planned bore. After a decent start to the season that gave us the long awaited introduction to the hatch and some interesting backstories for Jack and Locke (Katey Sagal's appearance in Locke's backstories were definitely a highlight of the season), the show fell completely apart. There was very little narrative drive to any of the events going on, and characters were killed off for seemingly no reason whatsoever (other than lack of writer imagination to keep them useful). The season was fairly successful at the more human elements, thanks to the great ensemble cast that overcame the weaker writing. But what was missing was the excitement and suspense of season 1. Every episode seemed to follow a similar pattern of moving deliberately slow until the final couple minutes, where the writers came up with a shocking twist. This got very tiring by the end of the season. Then we were given a season finale that was completely devoid of suspense or intrigue and revolved around a peripheral character that nobody cares about. I'm not confident that things will get any better soon.

Best Episode: "Orientation"
Worst Episode: "Live Together, Die Together"
Best Performer: Terry O'Quinn
Worst Performer: Josh Holloway
Rank Against Previous Seasons: 2nd/2
Season Grade: B-

South of Nowhere

Certainly there was very little to expect from a teen soap on The N, and for the most part South of Nowhere did not really exceed those expectations. It has pretty much everything you'd expect from a low budget cable teen show. You've got one-dimensional characters, bad acting, intensely annoying camerawork, and ridiculously contrived writing. Still, South of Nowhere did manage to succeed on it's own terms with a thoughtful exploration of a teenage girl coming to terms with her own sexuality. The main reason this worked was the very engaging performance from Gabrielle Christian as Spencer, the new girl at school who is quickly befriended by Ashley, your typical "bad influence" girl (played with enough dignity by Mandy Musgrave to overcome the stereotype). The show's first season of 13 episodes followed their growing attraction, as Spencer tries to deal with her feelings for Ashley, while at the same time dealing with a disapproving family who is already suspicious. It's a shame that none of the other characters work in this show. I guess it's supposed to be edgy that one of Spencer's brothers is an African-American who was adopted. Unfortunately, the acting is so bad for this character, and the rest of the family, that they cannot really develop any consistent theme with this premise. The show was sucessful for The N and will return next season. It will be worth watching to see how the main relationship develops, but I'd recommend fast forwarding through everything else.

Best Performer: Gabrielle Christian
Worst Performer: Valery Ortiz
Season Grade: B-