Author: John Paulsen (Page 45 of 79)

Quickhit review: “K-Ville”

Our main TV reviewer, Will Harris, put together a terrific preview of the fall season for Bullz-Eye, but I thought I’d chime in on a few of the premieres and see if we can get some discussion going about the new season.

“K-Ville” follows a New Orleans cop Marlin Boulet (Anthony Anderson) and his mysterious new partner Trevor Cobb (Cole Hauser) as they try to navigate the crime-filled streets of a city on the rebound. Anderson had a nice stint playing Antwon Mitchell on “The Shield,” and after a start in comedy, his career has taken a decidedly dramatic direction. To this point, Hauser has done mostly supporting work in films, but is now taking his quiet confidence to the small screen. The show looks a lot like a Bruckheimer film and the two lead characters have a nice dynamic. The backdrop of New Orleans is a gritty one, so the series needs to be careful to keep itself completely realistic. (SPOILER: The whole running-up-and-wrapping-a-chain-around-the-leg-of-a- helicopter-so-it-couldn’t-take-off routine didn’t really work for me.) I’m not sure the world needs another cop show, and one wonders if the country is willing to re-live the depression of Katrina on a weekly basis, so the series seems to be doomed from the start. Still, the cast is good, the writing is decent and the premiere was enjoyable (if a bit heavy-handed), so it has a shot. I’m going to take it week-to-week.

So, what did you think?

If you missed the premiere, Fox is re-airing it tonight at 9 PM…and if you miss that, too, there’s always this teaser:

Prison Break: “Orientacion”

After a season of being on the run, some fans of the show complained that they missed the overwhelming claustrophobia of the first season. Well, to put it succinctly, it looks like the old “Prison Break” is back.

When last we left them, Michael, Mahone, T-Bag and Bellick were all sent to Sona, which is Panama’s toughest and most ruthless prison (of course). I had to laugh when that cat at the American embassy painted an overly bleak picture for Linc. He said that Sona was “the worst of the worst,” that “the guards had pulled out” and are now just “keeping a perimeter.” Good grief.

With Lincoln exonerated, I was curious to see how the show would be able to reinvent itself, and it looks like Michael’s new mission will be to break a very important person (Whistler?) out of Sona. He only has a week to do it, so assuming one episode per day, this new storyline might only eat up a third of the season. Whistler is probably the guy that Bellick spoke to in the basement. Speaking of Brad, how disturbing was it to watch him walk around in those tighty whities?

Mahone wants to help Michael, if only to get Michael to testify on his behalf once the two are out of prison. Since Mahone killed his pops, Michael isn’t too keen on the idea, but he might not have much of a choice given how badly the cards are stacked against him. T-Bag seems to have already wormed his way into the good graces of Luchero, a Panamanian drug kingpin who runs the prison. By the way, Luchero is played by Robert Wisdom, who was terrific as Major Howard “Bunny” Colvin on “The Wire.” It will be fun to watch him play such a cartoon-ish character.

It looks as if the roles of LJ and Sara will once again be to coerce the brothers into working for the unseen powers that be. I get the feeling that Michael and Sara won’t be able to truly be together until the series finally comes to an end, whenever that is.

It also appears that two or three new women will have major roles this season. There’s the woman that Linc met at the bar, the prostitute that dressed up as a nun, and the woman outside the prison who was looking for the notes from the guy in the basement. (They’re all brunettes, by the way.)

And there’s still the question of all that money which, if I remember correctly, is sitting in a lagoon under a few feet of water.

So we’re off. Do you like the new direction of the show or do you wish they had wrapped everything up at the end of last season? I’m not sure how I’d answer that question, but so far, so good.

Jerry O’Connell, used car salesman

In a recent issue of Stuff (yes, I read Stuff, but in my defense, my subscription was free), Jerry O’Connell describes his new sitcom, “Carpoolers.”

“I have to hand it to Bruce McCulloch, the writer – who was one of the cocreators of ‘The Kids in the Hall’ – because it’s really funny. It’s four dudes who take the carpool lane every day, and they think they’re a lot cooler than they are. It’s basically ‘The Office’ meets ‘Arrested Development.'”

“‘The Office’ meets ‘Arrested Development'”? So you’re saying that your new sitcom is a combination of what are arguably the two greatest sitcoms of the decade? There’s a fine line between selling and overselling, Jerry, and you’re about a mile from it.

Still, a guy’s gotta do what a guy’s gotta do, right?

These are two of my favorite things…

Fans of “Veronica Mars” that are still sore over its cancellation can take some comfort in the knowledge that its star, the lovely, spunky Kristen Bell, will be joining the cast of “Heroes” this season.

Former Veronica Mars actress Kristen Bell is set to join the cast of Heroes for the upcoming season. Bell, 27, had been rumored to be considering a role on Lost since the cancellation of Veronica Mars in the third season earlier this year, but chose Heroes instead. She will play Elle, a woman with mysterious links to two characters’ pasts, according to trade magazine Variety.

This should be good.

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