Saturday, September 7, 2013

DROP THE PILOT:  Courtesy of the Paley Center's Preview event, I spent almost 7 hours today watching pilots--seeing almost all the NBC, CBS, and CW pilots (two exceptions--Dracula, which screened at the same time as the CW pilots, and The Originals, the last pilot shown, which I skipped).  I believe all were final for broadcast versions, lacking only credits.  My (somewhat lengthy) thoughts follow:

The Best
  •  The Michael J. Fox Show--Like its leading man, it's just so goshdarn likable that you can't help but smile.  There are real questions about what the show looks like going forward (is it a workplace comedy or a family comedy? can the supporting cast generate interesting stories?), but I'm in on this one without question, and today's casting news suggests there's interesting stuff ahead.
  • The Blacklist--In my view, the Alias pilot is one of the best of all time.  This pilot reminded me a lot of a lesser version of that one, though without the visual and structural inventiveness of Alias.  Young woman gets brought into a shady operation, and in the process, secrets are revealed about the operation, the man who brought her in, and herself.  In addition, the twist about her relationship with Spader that the trailers seem to suggest isn't revealed in the pilot, and the pilot's ending suggests that we're going in a different direction.  Most importantly, more than any other pilot I saw, I understand exactly what the show is week to week after watching this--each week, they hunt down another criminal from Spader's "Blacklist," and we also have mythology bits sprinkled in.  Yeah, I'll watch.
  • The Tomorrow People--Young, pretty, people with superpowers on the run from an EEEEVIL government agency that wants to capture them?  Yeah, we've seen this before, but it's well executed, makes good use of NYC location filming, and has fun with it.  It's a perfect leadout for Arrow.
(More after the break)

Friday, September 6, 2013

TURKISH DELIGHT ON A MOONLIT NIGHT: Tomorrow the IOC will be deciding between the bids of Istanbul, Madrid, and Tokyo to host the 2020 Summer Olympics. Who will/should it be?

edited Saturday 4:36p: It's Tokyo, which will host the Summer Games for the first time since 1964.
YOU HAD ME AT "SPAGHETTI":  I am extremely amused by the suggestion that James Franco had never seen a celebrity roast before participating in his own, though my favorite dig may have been Jonah Hill's on Bill Hader:
Bill Hader was brilliant on SNL and when he left the show every single person was like, "What are you doing? You're never ever going to work again." And what does my man Bill do? Boom, he books a T-Mobile commercial. Who's laughing now, Lorne Michaels? My man Bill is. If that thing goes national, we could be talking like 10, 15 grand. This guy's cashing checks from the fourth largest mobile provider in the nation. I respect Bill because Sprint was coming after him hard, but he held out for that fuck you T-Mobile money.
Related: Fifteen of the better roast sets ever.

Thursday, September 5, 2013

HBO NEEDS TO GET ON THIS:  With news that Angela Lansbury will get an honorary Oscar this year, I'd assumed that would complete an (arguable) EGOT for her.  Not quite.  Despite a plethora of Emmy nominations, including one for every single season of Murder, She Wrote, nary a win.  She's lost to:
  • Sharon Gless and Tyne Daly (twice each) for Cagney and Lacey
  • Dana Delany (twice) for China Beach
  • Patricia Wetting (twice) for Thirtysomething
  • Sela Ward for Sisters
  • Kathy Baker for Picket Fences (three times)
  • Mary-Louise Parker for Angels in America
  • Amanda Plummer for L&O:SVU

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

BOOGIE IN YOUR WHAT? 20 years after his last music album and 28 years after his first and only Top 40 hit (the immortal "Party All The Time"), Eddie Murphy will be releasing a new all-reggae music album this fall, and has a new single out.
A DIFFICULT TRUTH TO HANDLE:  Radar Online is reporting that Jack Nicholson quietly has decided to retire from acting, with diminished memory cited as a key factor. 

He is 76, the most-Oscar nominated male actor of all time (8 lead and 4 supporting across five decades, with two wins in the former and one in the latter), and if this is true then his last-minute-substituting-for-Bill-Murray role in James L. Brooks' How Do You Know (2010, and his fourth film with Brooks) will have been his last screen work. It's not, of course, the one we'll remember first, and as the 1994 AFI Tribute notes:
A rebel with an unquenchable spirit — both onscreen and off — Nicholson's roles have spanned all genres. His performances offer an impressive variety of experience, yet his artistry is consistent. He has had the courage to tackle offbeat, often unsympathetic, roles; but he invests each of his characters with humanity and intelligence.... 
TWO REFLECTIONS INTO ONE:So, British songstress Ellie Goulding ("Lights") has covered "Mirrors" with a relatively stripped down arrangement. Does it prove Timberlake and his team can write songs, or is the song just boosted by JT's charisma?