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Showing posts with label hornsby. Show all posts
Showing posts with label hornsby. Show all posts

THE SKED'S PILOT + 1 REVIEW: "How To Be A Gentleman"


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 HOW TO BE A GENTLEMAN:  Andrew (series creator David Hornsby) is happy to be an oddity:  a prim and proper writer of magazine columns about etiquette who prides himself on behaving in an old-fashioned gentlemanly manner at all times.  Despite the fact that his peculiarity has driven off his wife, and that even his mother (Nancy Linehan), sister Janet (Mary-Lynn Rajskub) and brother-in-law Mike (Rhys Darby) regard him as an alien in their midst, life is basically good.  Then a new publisher takes over the magazine, demotes Andrew's accepting boss (Dave Foley) and demands that Andrew's columns become hipper and more in touch with modern reality.  As it happens, Janet and Mike have just bought Andrew a birthday gift certificate for a personal training session, which turns out to be given by Bert (Kevin Dillon).  Bert used to bully Andrew in high school, but now he's eager to help Andrew become a "real man."  Andrew somewhat hesitantly submits to Bert's tutoring, and that will lay the cornerstone for a new friendship.


Episode 2:  Just in case the show's premise weren't contrived enough, the second episode of Gentleman, written by Hornsby and directed by Pam Fryman, pushes things in an even more sitcommy direction:  Bert isn't just Andrew's new life guide and trainer, the two of them are now roommates, because although Bert tries to make Andrew believe he's moving in to Andrew's apartment in order to intensify their training on a 24/7 basis, in fact Bert lost his own apartment when he put all his money into the gym.  This development unfortunately emphasizes what's most repetitive and predictable about the show, namely the Andrew/Bert byplay. 

The main storyline of the episode has Bert encouraging Andrew to make passes at all the best-looking women in a bar, so Andrew will be rejected repeatedly and thus become immune to rejection.  To his own surprise, Andrew instead meets a woman who's game for an evening together; but naive as he is, he thinks it's true love, and ignores Bert's sage advice that it was only a one-night stand.  The story puts the two men together almost constantly, reinforcing the dynamic between them over and over (Bert is crude but good-hearted; Andrew is endlessly deluded).  It's already starting to feel suffocating, and the show is only 2 episodes old.  

The B story is actually more entertaining, except that it doesn't really have an ending:  Mike is a New Zealand immigrant, and although his and Janet's marriage is completely genuine, they have to be tested by Homeland Security to make sure he didn't marry her for a green card--which is complicated by the fact that Janet can't handle tests and goes completely blank at the most routine questions.  Rajskub and Darby have a complimentary off-beat charm that makes them far more pleasant to watch than Johnny Drama Bert repeatedly explaining the rules of guy-hood to Andrew.

The premiere ratings for How To Be A Gentleman were underwhelming (we'll see how it holds up in a little while), and getting off to an inauspicious series start creatively won't help any.  The show needs to tread a very precise line between the oddball and the traditional if it's going to work, and initial signs are that it's in danger of a tilt.

Original Verdict:  Potential DVR Alert

Pilot + 1:  Needs to Figure Out Its Tone
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THE SKED PILOT REPORT: CBS's "How To Be A Gentleman" - PREMIERING TONIGHT


 
Disclaimer:  Network pilots now in circulation are not necessarily in the form that will air in the Fall.  Pilots are often reedited and rescored, and in some cases even recast or reshot.  So these critiques shouldn't be taken as full TV pilot reviews, but rather as a guide to the general style and content of the new shows coming your way.

HOW TO BE A GENTLEMAN -  Thursday 8:30PM on CBS:  Potential DVR Alert

Considering how utterly contrived it is, HOW TO BE A GENTLEMAN is a surprisingly pleasant half-hour of television.  Whitney Cummings may have written her own star vehicle sitcom, but David Hornsby has done her one better by writing and starring in one that's actually promising and funny.  (OK, Cummings also co-wrote 2 Broke Girls, so she has 2 new shows on the air, but that's just mediocrity in bulk.)


"Based" on books of modern etiquette for men by Thomas Nelson, How To Be A Gentleman gives us Hornsby as Alan, writer of a magazine column on the subject.  Alan is gentlemanly to the point of snobbery, concerned as much with when it is and isn't appropriate to wear a vest as with principles of courtesy.  His sister (Mary Lynn Rajskub) finds him hard to take, and as a birthday present she gives him a gift certificate to a personal training session at a local gym, knowing a gentleman can't ignore any gift he's received.  Well, guess what--it turns out the personal trainer is Bert (Kevin Dillon), who used to bully Alan in high school and is now a PG-13 version of Johnny Drama from Entourage.  Since, as it happens, Alan's magazine has been taken over and he's being forced to write a less polite version of his column, he agrees to be taken under Bert's wing and taught about modern manhood.

You can certainly see the jokes coming in Gentleman, but the script is witty enough to keep them amusing.  Also, Pam Fryman directed the pilot, and she brings the same deft touch she supplies regularly to How I Met Your Mother, underplaying the obvious.  The cast also helps:  Hornsby knows that Alan is a bit of a cartoon, but he manages not to let him become a prig.  Dillon is so much in his own wheelhouse that his biggest worry should be typecasting.  It's always great to see Rajskub (even if, on some level, she'll always be Chloe from 24), and sharp talents like Rhys Darby (as Rajskub's husband) and Dave Foley (as Alan's boss) add to the ensemble.

It's instructive to look at How To Be A Gentleman in comparison to some of the other men-being-men sitcoms we're getting this season, like Man Up and Last Man Standing.  Here, the characters all have a little shading to them (they actually seem to like each other), and the script doesn't just roll from one purported punchline to the next; these are people you might want to revisit the following week.

Gentleman has perhaps the most enviable timeslot of any new series this year:  not only does it follow the hit Big Bang Theory in its hour, but it's a model of compatibility with its lead-in.  Mitch Metcalf's Thursday projection has it in 2d place for the slot, just barely behind FOX's X-Factor, and ahead of Charlie's Angels and Parks & Recreation.  The show, frankly, isn't in the same league as its NBC competition (although in fairness, Parks & Rec took a season to find its own footing).  But it's not bad, and in network TV, "not bad" in the right timeslot is often more than good enough.

Read more about TV's new shows at THE SKED PILOT REPORT.

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