Category: Prison Break (Page 14 of 15)

Bullz-Eye’s TV Power Rankings Return!

Savor the moment, HBO. You currently own more than a quarter of our TV Power Rankings list, but with the imminent departure of “The Sopranos,” “Deadwood” and “Rome,” along with the TBD status of “Curb Your Enthusiasm” and the oddly lengthy shooting schedule for the half-season “Extras,” the end of your reign as BE must-see TV could very well be nigh. For the moment, though, we heart you and wish you would ask us to the prom.

Unless Jack Bauer’s still single, in which case we’re spoken for.

Here’s a sample entry from our list:

13. Curb Your Enthusiasm (HBO): It seems like a long time between seasons of this great comedy, and I often wonder during the show’s hiatus: What trouble is Larry David into right now? Last season, he had to decide whether or not to give one of his kidneys to Richard Lewis. Richard’s cousin, Louis Lewis, was (conveniently) in a coma and Larry kept visiting him in the hospital, secretly hoping that Louis would croak so that Richard could have Louis’ kidney instead. The other season-long storyline was Larry investigating the possibility that he was adopted, leading to several funny scenes with his supposed gentile birth parents. The show isn’t quite as fresh as it was in its first couple of seasons, but with episode titles like, “The Korean Bookie,” “The Christ Nail” and “Kamikaze Bingo,” how could you be? ~John Paulsen

Check out the full list here.

Sheriff Tom Underlay hot on the trail of Michael Scofield

fichtner

While fans of ABC’s recently-departed “Invasion” may weep at what appears to be the final nail in their beloved series’ coffin, fans of “Prison Break” (not to mention “Go”) can rejoice at the addition of stellar actor William Fichtner to the popular Fox drama’s cast next fall.

In a forgivable bit of typecasting, Fichtner will play another law- enforcement official (though a non-alien one, this time), portraying a federal agent seeking to capture Michael, Lincoln, and the other escaped convicts.

Tremendous story potential here, with an actor of this caliber squaring off against the likable cons. In fact, if the writers play their cards right, they might just end up doing for federal marshals on television what Tommy Lee Jones did for them in movies with “The Fugitive.”

One can only hope.

The fox plays nice with the apple

Fans of popular FOX dramas like “24” and “Prison Break” can now rest easy after missing the latest episode of their favorite show: the network giant has just announced the arrival of their library on Apple iTunes.

Along with favorites like the aforementioned series and “The Shield,” the library will also include access to episodes of “Black.White,” “30 Days,” “Buffy the Vampire Slayer,” and “Firefly,” as well as nine more shows from 20th Century Fox.

Holy backstories, Batman!

**MAJOR SPOILERS AHEAD**

I don’t know if anyone is paying attention, but “Prison Break” is back from its seemingly never-ending hiatus. After a couple of episodes in the prison to wrap up the near-escape, last night’s excellent episode took a page out of the “Lost” manual and delved into the backstories of most of the main characters.

Three years prior to Michael’s bank robbery attempt, he wasn’t nearly as sympathetic to his older brother’s situation. As he almost has a romantic liaison with Linc’s ex, his brother calls from a pay phone looking for help. Michael doesn’t answer and Lincoln hangs up and goes into the parking garage to kill a man, who we know was already dead. He didn’t do it for the nookie, he did it for the money – the money that he owed a bad guy in order to buy life insurance for his mother. Money that ultimately paid for his younger brother’s schooling. Once Michael hears this (from Veronica) his quest to save his brother begins.

We find out how Fernando, Michael’s cell mate, landed in prison. He took a liking to a young girl, but one of his friends likes her too and calls 911 to rat him out when he saw Fernando go in to rob a convenience store. Irony reigns as Fernando was only robbing the convenience store to buy a ring for his lady. I doubt he’ll find out that it was his buddy that called 911, but if he does, there will be hell to pay.

C-Note, despite appearances, isn’t a thug. He’s a military man, who got a dishonorable discharge after reporting the abuses in an Iraqi prison. His commanding officer sold him out in order to cover it up, and C-Note couldn’t get a job to pay the rent. He resorts to driving a truck with stolen goods and, when caught, he doesn’t give his associates up. That’s how he ends up in Fox River.

The creepiest backstory has to go to T-Bag. He was actually in a “healthy” relationship with a woman (with two children) when she saw his picture on America’s Most Wanted. She turns him in and, when she visits, he vows revenge once he gets out. It was hard to believe T-Bag when he said he truly loved her, but maybe the nut has a heart in there after all.

I was most surprised by how Dr. Sara Tancredi found her way to Fox River. She was a drug-addicted doctor who finally decided to clean herself up after being too doped up to help a bicyclist who got hit by a car. At one of her support groups, she meets a friendly guy who turns out to be the psychotic prison guard Bellick, who tells her about a job opening at Fox River. He wants to take her to dinner…eww…but she successfully fends his gorilla-like advances off.

Getting a peek into the past of all these characters made this episode one of the show’s very best. Fox has something going with “Prison Break” leading into “24” and the network is primed for a strong run on Monday nights for the rest of the season.

What are the odds?

So it looks like Abruzzi still has a fighting chance, but the gang didn’t have much luck breaking out.

What are the odds, on the day of the prison break, that a custodian would notice a hole in floor vent and get it repaired the very same day? The prison just had a riot and that’s at the top of his list of repairs? And I thought that once the gang made it to the infirmary, all they had to do was shimmy across the wire and get over the wall. Why doesn’t Lincoln just go by himself? Considering that the only way he could think to stall the guard last week was to punch him in the nose, he did prove that his IQ is somewhere in the low eighties, so I’ll give him a pass this time around.

It looks like the show will return sometime next year. It’s certainly a strange move to put a popular show like “Prison Break” on hiatus, but who am I to question the decision-makers over at Fox? After all, they’re the geniuses that decided to cancel “Arrested Development.”

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