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Showing posts with label Hodge. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hodge. Show all posts

THE SKED'S MIDSEASON RETURN: "Private Practice"



Thursday night brought a mother lode of returning serialized dramas to broadcast TV, with both ABC and CW returning to duty.  Let's start by looking at ABC's 10PM PRIVATE PRACTICE, airing a fresh episode for the first time since a 2-hour special on November 17.

WHERE WE LEFT OFF:  As usual, there was all manner of trouble for the Santa Monica doctors.  Pete and Violet (Tim Daly and Amy Brenneman) were in the midst of a marital break-up; Amelia (Caterina Scorsone) had just emerged from a brutalizing bout with drug addiction and rehab, which included her breaking the heart of Sheldon (Brian Benben); Cooper (Paul Adelstein) had just discovered that he had a son with a one-night stand that he never knew about, somewhat to his wife Charlotte (KaDee Strickland)'s chagrin,;and Addison (Kate Walsh)'s continued determination to have a baby, now by adoption, was widening the cracks in her relationship with Sam (Taye Diggs).


WHERE WE AREPrivate Practice has always been the weak sister to Grey's Anatomy, which of course is also produced by Shonda Rhimes.  The show lacks the narrative engine of the young doctors' ambition on Grey's, and it has a tendency to punch its metaphors, and the analogies between its patients' predicaments and those of their doctors, with a clumsy unsubtlety, as in this episode where the "rules" that govern a menage a trois trying to have a mutual baby (one woman's egg implanted in the other) fall apart, all too squarely echoing the rules Violet and Pete are trying to set in their separation, and the rules Cooper has to start enforcing with his new son--and in case the parallels weren't clear enough, we got a scene where all the doctors talked about how the menage's issues reminded them of their own.

Nevertheless, the show wisely didn't try to push the suds further than usual for its midseason debut, instead providing a fairly typical episode.  There was some big news, notably the episode-ending conclusion (or so it seems) of Addison and Sam, but mostly the developments were incremental.  Enough unspecified time had gone by since the last episode that Charlotte, the show's Bitch With A Heart Of Gold, was ready to let Amelia perform surgeries again, and Pete and Violet had officially broken up, but there was no special melodrama.

The trouble with Private Practice this season is the same one that afflicts many soaps when they get to their 5th season:  after a while, all the show can do is rotate its romantically-involved characters and relationships.  (Now that Addison and Sam are done, presumably the show will play the card of putting her with Benjamin Bratt's Jake, as has been inevitable since he joined the cast.)  Storylines like Cooper's newly-discovered son feel awfully close to shark-jumping, and how many times can Addison be bitterly disappointed in her drive to have a baby? (In this episode, a birth mother so admired and respected Addison that she gave her baby to a church couple instead.)   It would be best for all concerned if the series could start pointing its way to a definite finale, the way cable shows have increasingly been able to do--but Private Practice's rating, hovering around 2.5 in a fairly stable way that's down only about 10% from last season, as opposed to the 25% nosedive Grey has taken (although Grey's average rating is still almost a point higher than Practice's) makes it a valuable performer for the network, and likely to keep spinning its wheels for a while to come.

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THE SKED'S PILOT + 1 REVIEW: "The Playboy Club"


A lot can happen between the creation of a TV pilot in the spring and production of episodes for the regular season:  a writing/producing team is hired, audience focus groups weigh in, networks and studios (which may have had their own turnover in the off-season) give plenty of notes, both helpful and otherwise, and critics begin to rear their ugly heads.  The results can include changes to tone, pace, casting and even story.  Here at THE SKED, we're going to look past the pilots and present reviews of the first regular episodes of this year's new series as well.

Previously... on THE PLAYBOY CLUB:  It's the early 1960s, and somewhere in New York, Don Draper is creating his dazzling ad campaigns.  But in Chicago, the center of the world is the Playboy Club, Hugh Hefner's monument to bunnily clad women.  Maureen (Amber Heard) is new to town and to the Club, but no sooner does she catch the eye of shady lawyer/aspiring politician Nick Dalton (Eddie Cibrian) than the local crime boss assaults her, resulting in a murder by high-heeled shoe.  Nick helps Maureen hide the body, and while the killing isn't discovered, Nick's girlfriend Carol-Lynne (Laura Benanti)--who happens to be Maureen's supervisor at the Club--sees them together and dumps Nick.  Meanwhile, other bunnies include secret lesbian Alice (Leah Renee Cudmore), who has a marriage of convenience with a closeted gay man; Brenda (Naturi Naughton), who wants to be the first black Playboy Playmate; and Janie (Jenna Dewan-Tatum), who's hiding a secret.

Episode 2:  The series, even more than the pilot, feels like a drama set 20 years earlier than it actually is.  The first regular episode, written by series creator Chad Hodge, dispenses for the most part with the civil rights story that at least made an appearance in the pilot; instead, we get a sequence where lesbian Alice tries to restrain her drool when Maureen asks her to help with photos for a prospective Playboy cover shoot.  (Alice, although a bunny herself, being suddenly barely able to control herself in the presence of female flesh.)  The show is nothing more than a backstage soap opera, and old-fashioned to a fault.


Instead of any social commentary at all, we get the continuation of the main storyline from the pilot:  Nick and Maureen worry about whether the gangster's body is going to be found, while Carol-Lynn fumes over the attraction between the two. Although the episode flirts with the possibility of Carol-Lynn becoming a mentor to Maureen, by the end, even though Carol-Lynn's taken Nick back, she's making "scarlet woman" remarks about Maureen and darkly threatening her about the bad things that can happen to someone in Chicago.

In other plots, Nick moves forward with his run for State's Attorney by bribing Mayor Daley, and Alice's gay husband covers up a potentially incriminating photo of Nick with the dead gangster's son in order to make a good impression on Nick.  (The husband's whole family, Alice included, is ridiculously at the Club because her conservative father-in-law decided it would be a fun place to bring the wife and daughter-in-law.)  We also find out that Janie is on the run from an abusive husband, and that Brenda's ambition is to buy real estate.  In another hugely unconvincing story beat, Maureen is so moved by the latter that when she wins the competition to be a Playboy cover girl and the money prize that goes with it, she secretly gives the cash to Brenda.

With the exception of Laura Benanti, who definitely classes up the joint, the acting doesn't help much either.  Cibrian is starting to seem like Jason Sudeikis playing Jon Hamm, and Heard, while gorgeous, is inexpressive.  Compared to Pan Am (the pilot at least)--let's not even mention Mad Men--Playboy Club looks pretty skimpy visually, too.  Most of the action takes place in the club itself, and while Pan Am's lush production design is wonderfully specific--you just know months of research have gone into duplicating every detail--everything in Playboy is a little dull and generic. 

In all, there's no reason to feel better about The Playboy Club now that it's in series mode, and a few causes to doubt it even more.  They did make one good decision, though:  no more arthritic narration from Hef himself.

Original VerdictIf Nothing Else Is On...

Pilot + 1:   Running Low On Potential

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