Fox has launched its new season, and one of the first out of the gate is Gotham. When we left off, Bruce had just found the entrance to a secret lair of his Dad’s; Barbara had gone bat-guano crazy; Jim and Lee were hitting it off, but Jim was going head-to-head with just about everyone else; and the Penguin was dumping Fish Mooney back in the sea.
The new season was all about power shifts in Gotham, and we’re back to the same theme of Season 1 really quickly — will Gordon do a bad thing in order to achieve the greater good? This time it is a favour for Penguin i.e. collect on a debt, so that Penguin will find a way to get the Commissioner fired and Gordon reinstated as a cop. The moralist in Jim says no, but a conversation with Bruce gets the momentum going again.
Fox has been teasing that this year is all about “rise of new villains”, now that Penguin is on top but Fish and Falcone are basically gone. This episode brought along the new king maker, Theo Galvin and his sister Tabitha (likely the future Tigress). Barbara joins their crew of criminal misfits, along with Jerome who appears destined to be the Joker. And the Riddler has gone off the deep end with a full psychotic break.
Overall a decent premiere, but there is a lot in there that is just placeholders for the rest of the season.
Let me start off this post with a caveat that should be obvious — SPOILER ALERT. All six of the premieres I’m reviewing are for new shows, so there’s virtually no way that I could review them without revealing a fair amount of detail, including backstory. The short version is that I’m passing on Hand of God and Public Morals, considering Heroes: Reborn and Minority Report, and going all in on wherever Supergirl and Blindspot want to take me. Beyond that, read at your own risk.
I’ll start with Hand of God, starring Ron Perlman and Dana Delany. Here’s the premise — Perlman plays a judge who is known as a bit of a hardass with criminals, and who is involved in some shady land deals with a friend. His daughter-in-law was raped, his son was forced to watch, his son then tried to commit suicide and is now in a coma. Perlman seems to be losing it — the show opens with him in a fountain in public, praying to a sun god or something, acting looney-tunes (which isn’t very becoming for a prominent judge), and oh yeah, he’s also naked. He goes to see his son in the hospital and his son, or presumably God through his son, tells him to “get” the guy who raped the daughter-in-law. Perlman thinks he’s losing it, add in some ballyhoo with a possible scamming preacher, and the religion stuff is a bit messy.
Nevertheless, there is the undertone of violence all through it. Perlman physically forces the daughter-in-law — yes, I said forces — to look at a possible rapist to identify him, including having him show his penis to her through a viewing wall. Feels like the Judge is raping her again. Fortunately, even though she says she doesn’t know if it’s him, the Judge KNOWS, so has an inmate kill him, revealing the guy (a cop, btw) DID in fact do the rape, but it was because “they” told him he had to, and cue the requisite conspiracy plot…dun, dun, dun. I liked the shows Saving Grace and Eli Stone, so the religion doesn’t bother me. Equally, I’m okay with conspiracy plots. Plus violence generally, as long as it isn’t purposefully gratuitously graphic. But this show was just plain slow and boring. Amazon may end up with a hit on its hands, but I won’t be watching. Pass.
Heroes: Reborn on NBC is pretty much what the title says — a reboot of the popular series from a few years ago (2006???? Really???? wow!) where X-men err I mean Mutant X err I mean “Evos” (Evolved Human Beings) have started to display powers. When the first season of Heroes launched, the main mantra of “Save the cheerleader, save the world” was compelling. A great counterpart to the weirdness of Lost and the myriad of copycats that went nowhere. Season 1 was awesome. Season 2 was uneven. Season 3 and 4 were unfocused, dark and well, incomprehensible at times. It just never matched the magic of Season 1. The new series has launched in a very odd yet strangely compelling fashion. [For my review of the so-called “pilot”, I totally screwed up. It is NOT the actual pilot, it is a series of webisodes done as a prequel to the pilot.]
The premise of the pre-pilot is a new Evo, a young girl who discovers she can control light and darkness — and maybe more. Her brother starts documenting anything and everything related to her powers, a la Claire Bennett’s first video documenting her regeneration powers — “This is attempt #1”. Fast-forward a few years, politics has gotten weird around Evos, and a summit on Evo rights ends up a terrorist-destroyed wasteland. Was it her? Was she involved? Her brother hunts down the old head of Primatech, Noah Bennet, to find the answers. Cue credits. So here’s my issue…I like the premise. Not sure what they will / can do that Mutant X and X-Men haven’t covered in spades before, but a different feel helps. Yet I signed on before, and by Season 3, I was skipping episodes and watching summaries occasionally. I don’t know if they can bring back that original Save the Cheerleader feel, even with some of the old Heroes swinging by for a visit. I’m in, as long as it keeps the storyline compelling.
Minority Report is also a reboot of sorts. The movie starred Tom Cruise as a cop who works in the Pre-Crime Unit — a unit that has three pre-cognitive people who are linked together through cyber/cerebral connections who can “see” crime before it happens. Together, the three of them could get a name, time, address, pictures, etc. They could see lots of crime but the big crime was murder — which would come down to the Pre-Crime Unit as a “red ball” down a chute. Kind of like a ball for a bingo game. Then the cops would go and arrest the murderer before the murder could happen. The big reveal in the movie was the minority report — explained very simply in the TV series, it was that all three pre-cogs didn’t see the future the same way all the times. There was an element of chance. But the PCU brass didn’t tell the public that sometimes the 3 didn’t agree and the one who didn’t would file “a minority report” (the term for judicial panels where one dissents). In the movie, there’s a minority report filed for a murder but no one knows it exists, that perhaps a murder WOULDN’T have happened without intervention, and that someone is manipulating the system. Big scandal results at the end.
The movie picks up 15 years later, PCU has been disbanded, nothing more than a history topic. But the pre-cogs survived, hiding out far from civilization. Dash, Arthur and Agatha were living in seclusion to protect them from having to see crimes and from being exploited. Except Arthur was kidnapped and Dash is looking for him. He is in the big city again, and he is still seeing pictures of the crimes. Disjointed, no names or addresses. Just images that he has been trying to figure out so he can stop a crime. Except he always arrives too late. Until he meets a cop, she finds out his secret, and the two of them team up to stop one. Secretly, since of course pre-cogs are forbidden assets. Stark Sands plays Dash, and he is quite good. I didn’t however feel like Meagan Good as the cop, Lara Vega, really had the character nailed down. It was only one EP, maybe she’ll grow into it, but it was a little soft. I almost felt though that the producers had watched Person of Interest and said, “Give me a softer version of Carter.” Even her hair-styling looks the same. I think the show is okay, and likely of interest to the same audience as PoI which has been kind of lame of late. It might be enough to hold on, but unless they up the ante pretty quick, I’m not convinced the show will be around for the long haul.
NBC is also rolling out Blindspot. They talk about it as if it is the new POI or The Blacklist, but if you nail down the pieces, there’s a much simpler analogy. Person found. Has amnesia. Seems to be involved in espionage, global conspiracy. Has mad skills, including multiple languages, and advanced hand-to-hand combat skills. A super soldier/spy in regular clothes trying to find out who they are. I’ve seen that movie, it starred Matt Damon, and his name was Jason Bourne. Now we have Jane Doe (aka Jane Bourne). Girl found naked in duffle bag in Times Square. She has tattoos all over her body, and ties to the FBI (a name on her back). She can speak a dialect of what appears to be Mandarin (as an aside, the expert field agents say, “Hey, you can speak Chinese?” — even the most basic agent would know that Chinese wasn’t a language and that they speak Mandarin, Cantonese, etc.). Oh, and she has amnesia. So they poke her, prod her, can’t find out anything about her. Except well she has an old SEAL tattoo that is hidden under other tattoos, even though there are no female SEALs (They theorize: “But if she was in Special Ops, we wouldn’t know.”), and when pressed by a wife-beater, she defends herself expertly and violently against two larger thugs in a knock-down, drag-out fight.
The scene is almost a longer recreation of Bourne disarming two police officers who roust him for sleeping in the park. Including the scene where he / she blocks the first “blow”, pauses to look at the block in surprise, and then the fight continues. The rest of the EP is run-of-the-mill, except for the final scene where a number tattoo matches a file number that the head agent is reading (even though 98% of it is redacted). A mystery! Dun, dun, dun! NBC has been promoting this out the wazoo, and with good reason. Jaimie Alexander plays Jane, and she is awesome. Lots of people have seen her as Lady Sif in the Thor movies and wanted her to have her own spin-off, but if they think she got it here, she didn’t. Lady Sif is sleek, strong, confident, sexy, a definitive presence from her demeanor to her hair. By contrast, Jane is almost diminutive in appearance, slim, athletic without being muscular, frightened, unsure, even vulnerable. The difference is striking, and Alexander pulls it off perfectly. Unfortunately, she is playing opposite Sullivan Stapleton as the FBI agent. He’s dark, brooding, has a yet-to-be-revealed backstory of some distinction (either dark or heroic). But the entire EP, you’d swear he was a robot. Almost no emotion. Even when she saves his life at the end. Really, he only has one good scene (action) in the middle of the EP. Quite disappointing. But let’s not kid ourselves — I’m in for the duration. The premise is rock solid and so is Alexander.
CBS has joined the super hero craze (Fox has Gotham, ABC has Marvel Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D., CW has the Flash, Arrow and the upcoming DC Legends of Tomorrow, Netflix has Daredevil) with the addition of Supergirl. For those in the know, Superman is Kal-El, of the house of El. His cousin, Kara, was older and sent to Earth to protect him, but was blown off course by the explosion of Krypton, ending up in the Phantom Zone before escaping in her ship and coming to earth as a teenager. Superman didn’t need her protection, so she hid her powers and tried to live among humans, including her adoptive parents (the Danvers). In this version at least. She is now a young adult, spreading her wings, part of a media conglomerate and working for an uncaring female boss from hell. When her sister’s plane almost crashes, Kara swoops to save her, and voila, her hiding days are over. The public knows there is a female super hero in their midst. Her sister is disgusted — how could she reveal herself, even to save her? — but it quickly becomes apparent that it was an attack on the sister. It appears that Alex, the sister, actually works for an ultrasecret organization (like SHIELD but called DEO) that tracks and monitors extra-terrestrials.
Apparently, the Phantom Zone followed Kara to Earth, and all hell is about to be unleashed. Kara and the baddie face off, and Kara gets her ass handed to her. But her sister helps her devise a new plan, the baddie is vanquished, all is well in the world. Kara even has a new workplace pal — Jimmy, ahem, James Olsen. Who Superman sent to see if Kara needed a friend while she adjusted. Awww, isn’t that sweet? Maybe showing up to help defeat Phantom Zone criminals would have been more helpful, but still, an unshreddable cape is nice too. CW will likely kick its own butt for not picking this up, but their superhero plate was full, so CBS grabbed it. And Melissa Benoist is going to be awesome. With her hair died blonde, and dressed a bit frumpy, she makes an awesome dorky Kara Danvers. I could do without the cutesy “shouldn’t she be SuperWoman?” discussion, and a few other humourous asides until the show is a bit more established, but it is even lighter in tone than the Flash, which is saying something. There’s very little doubt this will go several seasons at least, and I’m along for the ride. Oddly enough, the character I might like best? Her step-sister, Alex, played by Chyler Leigh. So that’s it…six premieres down, thirty-six to go.
As I reviewed the list of new shows earlier, let’s not forget that there are a host of returning shows, all of which fall into a set of five distinct groupings, of which the first four are: shows that I watch, shows that I tried and bailed on, shows that I have no interest in, and shows that I have never even heard of before. The fifth group is a bit cross-cutting but basically are shows I didn’t even realize were still on the air as I thought they were cancelled long ago!
However, rather than go through all of them, I’ll just focus on the twenty-two I regularly watch.
12 Monkeys — This was new last year, and I thought it was cancelled. I guess SyFy ordered some more, so count me in. Pretty dense, pretty dark, but I like it. It ended with the entire time travel program in jeopardy and a significant time paradox looming.
American Ninja Warrior — Running every summer, I love this show, and I really enjoy watching it with Jacob and Andrea. Season 7 is great.
Arrow — This is probably my favorite show right now, although it often gets repetitive of the tortured soul who needs to be alone to be the Arrow but needs friends and family to stay grounded. Add in Thea rising from the dead, and the level of suspension of disbelief required is a bit high. But good escapist fun. It ended with Arrow and Felicity going off into the sunset, so we know that can’t last.
Big Bang Theory — Practically the only comedy in my roster, it has lost a lot of its spark from the first season or two. But throw in the big changes from the end of last season, and could be an interesting shake up for this year.
Blacklist — Lizzie knows her past, what fun is that? Might become a ho-hum procedural now.
Blue Bloods — this is pretty kitschy. Not like Hawaii Five-O, way better than that, but still, I have no idea why I like this show so much.
Castle — Last season should have been the end, and it was done up to be that with the final episode. Yet they got renewed and now they have to figure out how to avoid turning it into Murder, He Wrote in Washington.
Continuum — A limited season show, I have been waiting for this time travel show to deliver on the promise of the first season. The fourth and last season is looming, so I hope they spent the long hiatus on some good writing to figure out whether the future is set and will be saved, or is lost forever.
Dark Matter — I’m really enjoying this show, too bad it is short season. I hope the plot starts moving forward though. Too much time on the ship doing nothing.
Elementary — It left off last season with Holmes possibly committing murder and using heroin, so we’ll see what new hells await. I hope his protege Kitty comes back (and I don’t mean Watson!).
Gotham — I still love Gotham, and I’m hoping it will be great this season without Fish Mooney and hopefully minimizing Barbara.
Grimm — It was a huge cliffhanger for his beloved Juliette, and the return of Trubel. Is she dead? Is it permanent? Did I just write those words?
Killjoys — This is on my “watch” list but it just finished Season 1 with a revolution starting, so we’ll see if it comes back for Season 2.
Lost Girl — Another show coming around for a short season finale. Hope it can muster some of the fun from Season 1.
Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. — Yep, I’m still watching. Or rather, I quit and then I started watching again. Not a must-see, but I’ll bingewatch when I’m bored with other offerings.
NCIS 1,2,3 — NCIS (the original), NCIS: LA, and NCIS: NO are all on my roster, but NO is the weakest. I like Brody, but the rest could jump in the bay. LA is good, but regularly soap-opera-y, and NCIS is awesome but the same week-to-week.
Orphan Black — Still on hiatus, and it was a complex messy season, hope they clean up the storylines for next season.
Person of Interest — I honestly have no idea what to do with this show. It lost its way last season big time with two big departures, and the arrival of Samaritan. Not sure I’ll keep going on it.
Scorpion — if Arrow required suspension of disbelief, Scorpion blows it out of the water. Okay for bingewatching.
Sleepy Hollow — it seemed to lose a bit of focus last year with Katrina, curious to see where it goes this season.
Suits — Yep, it’s soap opera-ish, campy, etc. Fortunately, they have short seasons.
The Flash — Where the Arrow is dark, the Flash is light and optimistic. Cool. Almost like a palate refresher
Undateable — Oops, I said above that I don’t watch comedies besides BBT. Apparently I do. Not sure for how long though as they intend to move to an all-live format this year.