Dec. 13th, 2012

I guess it's about time for an incomplete mid TV season round-up, hmm? Let's see.

The greatest disappointment of the season, so far, has been Revenge. This was my unexpected favorite show of last year, but, alas, this year the show has seriously slid off – more plunged off – the rails, mostly because not enough wealthy people have been thrown off buildings, shot, or boarded exploding planes. Focus, show, focus. Also the show has brought on some new villains called "The Initiative" who are just not using enough Botox or wearing enough designer clothing to have the same sizzle. Admittedly someone fell off a balcony which was nicely dramatic and added more people with English accents which is always a good thing, but, not enough. It's a classic example of the importance of sticking with your original concept.

To counter this, last year's greatest disappointment, Once Upon a Time, has improved somewhat this year, largely because it's given up on its original concept, which was "tell what really happened in fairy tales and story books," which thanks to Network Interference became "tell what really happened in Disney movies," and rarely managed to give new twists on either, despite a generally strong cast. (Lena Parilla in particular has had a lot of fun playing the Evil Queen, mostly, I suspect, because of the fabulous Evil Outfits.) Paired with this was a "real world" storyline that made no sense the more you thought about it (if nobody can come in and out of Storybook, how exactly are they getting gas to drive their cars? That sort of thing) and overall just never hit the potential of the cool concept. I couldn't exactly blame the guy playing the genie for fleeing the show, even if he ended up fleeing to the train wreck that is Revolution.

Anyway, this year the show has more or less said, to hell with the retelling fairy tales concept, and instead just gone with a hodgepodge of various characters from various books who wander around an Enchanted Forest (Motto: With our Enchanted Geography, You, Too, Can Reach the Enchanted Pond and the Enchanted Beanstalk and the Enchanted Towers and the Enchanted Poppies and Anywhere the Plot Needs You To Be Within Hours!) interacting with each other, which is a lot more fun and oddly ends up making more sense – I mean, we've all been waiting to see the Queen of Hearts and Captain Hook join forces. So that's all good. It helps that Captain Hook is really rocking the Sexy Bad Boy vibe. It's probably not a good sign that of the many, many men the show keeps throwing at its main protagonist, Emma, this is the first pairing I've liked. I mean, he's Captain Hook. (That said most of the men thrown at Emma have not exactly been the upstanding hero types.)

Which is not to say that this season hasn't had its bumps. Kudos to the show for finally introducing an Asian character (who in her last scene rather hinted that she's more than willing to, shall we say in a family friendly sort of way, go both ways), minus several hundred points for casting an actress who can so far be most kindly called "wooden" (up until the seriously gay scene, that is). Minus still more points for completely underusing the talented Sarah Bolger and inexplicably forcing her to use an American accent. (The accents are all over the place in this show and make no sense anyway, so why anyone isn't using native accents I can't tell you.) And since people still can't get in and out of Storybook (with the exception of maybe three or four people) I'm still wondering how they are getting gas for their cars. Does the town have an oil refinery we haven't seen? Anyway.

The other fairy tale show, Grimm (aka "the successor to X-Files and Fringe, except instead of aliens and whatever Fringe thinks it's doing this week we're going with shapechangers very loosely based on various fairy tales, frequently not the ones collected and retold by the Grimms"), stuck with "exactly what are we supposed to do with the generally useless girlfriend on this show," went with "love triangle with a suspiciously convenient amnesia angle!" which at least gave the actress something to do, and allowed the show to explore its mythology further. I'm still not loving it, but it's a considerably better thought out show than Once Upon a Time; less ambitious, but usually more satisfying, and not a bad replacement for X-Files and Fringe.
And speaking of Fringe --

Previous seasons of Fringe have explored the bizarre, the disgusting, the parallel, and the very bad science that happens when you keep a cow in the lab.

This season, Fringe has at least given up on the cow. (Unless it got Ambered, in which case, I don't want to know.) So that's a plus. But Fringe has also given up on something else, and it took me awhile to identify it: Hope.

(Also, "fun," but we'll get there.)

I'm behind this season, so perhaps this eventually did get addressed, but the first few episodes were almost relentlessly grim and depressing. Even the few moments of reunion/joy/happiness were, well, depressing. It probably doesn't help that the set designers, reading the scripts, have gone with, "Ok, well, grey it is then!" and the camera people have followed their lead with nice grey filters everywhere.

The result is a show that I'm just not looking forward to watching any more. It's odd. I'm not against grim and depressing – I mean, I've been reading and watching Game of Thrones. I will probably even end up watching Anna Karenina on DVD eventually, which if I remember correctly did not exactly have a happy ending in the book.

But some place in the third episode of this season I realized the problem. I'm assuming, because this is television, and this is the last season of Fringe and the showrunners know this, that the show is – eventually – going to end up with a happy ending. (As proof I show you the final episode of last season which had the possibility of being the last episode of Fringe ever when it was filmed.) And that's great. I love happy endings.

But they have to feel right. They have to feel justified, not contrived. And they have to fit into the universe of the story that has been written.

I could believe in happy endings in the first four seasons of Fringe: this was a show where people encountered monsters and flipped universes and parallels and fought or learned to work with them; the entire point of the show was, "secure the monsters for everyone's safety." But the part of the point of this season – set in a grim future – is to restore the damn monsters. So not only am I watching a grim, depressing and very grey future, I am watching a future where everyone wants things to go wrong again. (And on a sidenote, I'm watching a future that's suggesting that most of what was done in the first four seasons was completely wasted since they were all running around chasing the wrong monsters.)

I can accept the incredibly depressing ending of Anna Karenina because within the crafted universe of that story it can have no other ending. I have a bad feeling that at the end of Fringe, I'll be thinking of other possible endings. (For instance, not having this season.)

Anyway, thanks to this I haven't been watching as much Fringe as I generally would have, and while flailing to find something to watch that wasn't Fringe, ended up watching the new Upstairs, Downstairs. Oh, dear. Enough for its own separate entry. Which will have to wait a bit since I'm about to head out.

October 2018

S M T W T F S
 123456
78910111213
14 151617181920
21222324252627
28293031   

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags