Thursday, January 13, 2011

TV Reviews for January 2011



TV REVIEWS

Law & Order SVU: Episode #261 “Mask” the Latest Sordid Tale

by Joe Viglione January - 13 - 2011

http://www.tmrzoo.com/2011/19578



In its new time spot on Wednesday nights at 10 PM, Law & Order SVU brought veteran (and Oscar-winning) actor Jeremy Irons onboard for “Mask”, episode #261, the thirteenth of this twelfth season. For the general audience which tunes in for the latest sordid tale it is the usual well-crafted sixty minutes of whodunit, a Perry Mason drama (from the detectives’ perspective, not the lawyer’s) which graphically delves into all aspects of human sexual behavior, this episode touching upon topics such as lesbianism, incest, rape, mugging, sex addiction and ethics. Have we missed anything?

For the obsessive SVU fans who post comments on the All Things Law And Order blog, well, they are looking for more bang for their buck, however, the program is still a good watch despite its mileage.

Where Irons was a terrorist, Simon Peter Gruber, in the third Die Hard film, here he is a recovered sex-addict who is now a sex therapist, Captain “Cap” Jackson. The thing that drives this critic bonkers about SVU is all the coincidences, some first lover from the past of Ann Jackson, the daughter of Irons’ character, oh just happens to be an essential part of the plot.

It’s as aggravating as members of the SVU detectives’ respective families always bringing extra drama to the drama. You never got that in Perry Mason and it is a distraction from the thing that made SVU so popular. The Whodunnit. The thing that made Murder She Wrote (264 episodes in 12 seasons, an achievement which SVU is about to surpass), Ellery Queen, Columbo and so many others – including the aforementioned Perry Mason series, so special. It’s the whodunnit, not Eliot Stabler fighting with his wife, not Detective Olivia Benson obsessing about her mother’s alcoholism. In real life Mariska Hargitay (the actress who plays Benson) is the daughter of the late Jayne Mansfield, and was actually in the car on June 29, 1967 (at three and a half years old) with two of her brothers on that fateful trip. Her mother would be proud at what a terrific actress Hargitay has become, and the chemistry between her and Christopher Meloni, he of the drama Oz in the 1990s.

So smack dab in the middle of Season 12 we have these personalities who have become essential tv due to reruns happening simultaneous with new programming, and the fact that the current show, “Mask”, maintains the good drama we expect is an indicator that the high standards are still there. Bea Arthuer left The Golden Girls after seven seasons, the show dropped from the top 10 (where it ruled for 6 years) to 30th place, yet Golden Girls, as influential as it was, didn’t expand. SVU can grow stronger if it gets back to the core element that makes a murder mystery show so compelling: the mystery.

Corinne Heller at On The Red Carpet.com noted from a conference-call interview that Irons said: “I like playing characters who are not necessarily what they seem,” “I like playing enigmas. I like playing people who live outside our normal life experience.”

Perhaps calling upon that enigma for future episodes with an eye towards more action and less in-house drama is the prescription to keep this show moving forward and breaking new ground rather than fading out. The fact that the show works so well in repeats gives us a chance to give a second opinion in a timely fashion.

Joe Viglione is the Chief Film Critic at TMRZoo.com. He was a film critic for Al Aronowitz’s The Blacklisted Journal, has written thousands of reviews and biographies for AllMovie.com, Allmusic.com and produces and hosts Visual Radio. Visual Radio is a fifteen year old variety show on cable TV which has interviewed John Lennon’s Uncle Charlie, Margaret Cho, Ray Manzarek, John Densmore, Felix Cavaliere, Marty Balin, Bill Press and hundreds of other personalities.




THE CAPE
http://www.tmrzoo.com/2011/19425



Rugged Australian actor David Lyons is pretty much unknown in these parts, his appearance as Dr. Simon Brenner on ER’s last two seasons giving TV fans a glimpse of his talents. In The Cape he plays as cliche a superhero as you can get, as close to Batman as NBC can bring the character without a copyright infringement suit. His “cape” is made out of spider’s web, given to him by Max Malini (actor Keith David), who is – for all intents and purposes – Morpheus from The Matrix working with Neo, Lyons’ Vince Farraday/The Cape character. If you thought The Matrix took every element it could from movies and tv that came before, series “creator” Tom Wheeler thought so too. You’ll find pieces of The Terminator TV series, Batman Begins, The Dark Knight, Spiderman 1, 2, 3…and The Matrix, of course, all wrapped up in this serious version of the Batman TV series from the 1960s, sans Robin, of course. But there is Orwell, played by Summer Lyn Glau from, gee whiz, Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles where she was a terminatrix called Cameron. You can’t get away from how the producers cleverly are picking up on the fan base built by the Terminator TV series which aired for two short seasons in 2008 and 2009, and for those who enjoyed that program, many of the atmospheric touches transfer over to this.

Is character development too pushy? You betcha, but Max Malini (how bad can you get with a name like that? Mad Max indeed…) is one of the better characters with his philosophical ramblings making the show a clear case of “give the people what they want”.

It’s a weekly Dark Knight program for television which will settle in on Monday nights starting with the repeat of “Pilot” and “Tarot” on Monday, January 10 (2 hours) and one hour programs beginning on Monday January 17th.

There are no disguises, the villain who runs ARK Corporation, Peter Fleming (played by James Frain) might as well be the head of Blackwater or Gotham City’s Arkham Asylum. His henchman, Chess, might as well be Scarecrow/ Dr. Jonathan Crane from Batman Begins, the masked fellow who uses drugs and psychological terror, much like Chess does in The Cape. Scales, played by Vinnie Jones, could be Harvey Two Face from Batman and/or The Kingpin from Spiderman, take your pick, the producers don’t care, long as you watch. As Marvel and DC Comics had similar super heroes and super villains, NBC is quickly cashing in on the power of the comic book mystique doing so well on the big screen, hoping it translates to home viewers. It’s instant replay, and it worked a couple of seasons for the 1960s Batman and for the Terminator Sarah Connor Chronicles, though both series diving rather quickly. If this blatant amalgam is to take off it needs to find its own identity quickly and break some new ground. Time will tell if The Cape can find its niche.

You can find more out about The Cape at www.nbc.com/the-cape/

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