Supernatural: It’s A Girl!

February 9th, 2012 | by | supernatural, the cw, tv shows

Feb
09

Honestly, could things get more bleak? That was the most depressing.thing.evar! This, however, does not mean I didn’t like it, because I did, but there was a part of me that wanted to jump in front of Sam’s gun there at the end…

So we begin this week’s adventure with the boys in yet another NotMetallicar (I miss the old girl!), and Dean suffering from not only grief, but is burnt out in the worst way. Sam has found a series of brutal murders of seemingly nice, attractive men who happen to have a mysterious symbol carved into their chests. Gross!! Dean is dubious, and sippin’ from Bobby’s flask, but Sam convinces him.

After chatting with a a fresh, young coroner, they find out that the DNA from the crime scenes aren’t human, confirming Sammy’s suspicion. But instead of heading back to whatever dull motel room they are currently occupying, Dean heads out to troll for chicks. Leading us to a much too short shirtless Dean tryst with a lovely redhead from the local meet-market, The Colbalt Room, while yet another man gets gruesomely slaughtered.

Of course Dean’s hook-up turns up UberPreggers, and proceeds to give birth to a rapidly growing little girl, while surrounded by a creepy group of ladies who are our Big Bad this week, an ancient group of Amazonian warriors.

The beautiful boys are having a hard time tracking down the meaning of the symbol carved in the victims hairless chests, and after lamenting over not having an ace in their pocket to call, they hit up a local professor (Mayor Wilkins from Buffy! I love that guy). After much cajoling, they get him to dig up some helpful info, just as Dean’s progeny turns into one of the scariest teenage girls you have ever met.

While Sammy heads back to the Professor for some Greek translation, Dean gets a visit from his almost full grown daughter. She seems sweet at first, but that’s just a ruse, ’cause this gal has brought one big knife to lop off her daddy’s hands and feet before throwing him around that dismal motel room. And in the nick of time, Sammy shows up and kills the girl dead, much to the shock of Dean.

And here comes the comparison between Emma and  poor Amy, and honestly I think it’s lame. Are they even now? Did Dean need a taste of his own medicine for Sam to feel better? Are we gonna have to suffer through more Winchester angst? I hope not. Those boys have been getting along so well lately, and I don’t know if I can bear another season of suffering like that. It’s bad enough that Dean is desperately depressed, and Sammy is seemingly just fine… which we KNOW he can’t be that okay after all those horrible hallucinations back at the beginning of the season. I get the feeling that some big, Other Shoe is gonna drop hard. Soon. All that being said, the killing of both Amy and Emma do underscore the fact that Sam and Dean don’t get anything nice. Bobby is dead, Papa Winchester is long gone, every woman Sam sleeps with dies a horrible death, and now Dean ends up seeing his daughter shot in front of him. Sam’s desperate “Don’t die.” to Dean at the end was heartbreaking. Those poor little boys.

Besides our little morality play near the end there, it was a good, gory ride, and we continue with SmartDean and HappySammy. This is also the second (or is it third?) time weird little things happen that is obviously convincing Dean that Bobby is watching over them from the beyond. It’s a nice thought, but I’m not sure I buy it. I think I’m with Sammy on this bit.

Oh yeah, and the Big Bad ladies get away! Ruh-roh.

Next week: CLOWNS. (eek)

 

No Comments »

‘Hawaii Five-0′: More Daddy Issues!

February 6th, 2012 | by | cbs, hawaii five-o, tv shows

Feb
06

By Stu Robinson,

After a couple of milquetoast episodes, CBS’ Hawaii Five-0 brought some meat to the luau in Episode 14.

Joe comes clean and reveals Shelbourne’s identity. Danno helps his ex-wife deliver her baby. The ambush of a delivery truck leads to a terrorist threat.

The episode begins with a flashback to 1992 and the day McGarrett’s father sent him away to the mainland. “It’s not safe for you here anymore,” Jack McGarrett (William Sadler) tells young Steve.

Before we get into the details, let’s review the two lackluster preceding episodes for their contribution to the back story.

Episode 12

CBS hyped the wedding of Chin Ho and Malia, but that was just a scene tacked onto the end. The episode begins with an homage to The Goonies – Gratuitous Corey Feldman shoutout! – as three boys enter a dark, old military bunker. They unpack climbing gear and start dropping down a hole into an uncharted lava tube below.

Where, of course, they stumble upon a body.

Measuring for tuxedos.

McGarrett, Danno, Chin Ho, Joe White and Kamekona are being sized for wedding tuxes when the call comes in. Arriving at the scene, they find Max wearing a spelunking getup, complete with a spotlight on his hard hat. This formula of Max + Goofy Outfit = Humor is wearing thin.

McGarrett and Max repel down to the body, which bears a gunshot wound and damage from the fall. They attempt to turn the body over and are startled when the victim moves his head and moans. This stiff isn’t so stiff! He’s still alive despite being shot, dropped down a hole and left for 12 hours.

(I wonder if the girls in the 2009 movie Sorority Row considered that possibility when they pitched a presumed-dead Audrina Patridge down a similar hole. Eh, who am I kidding? People from reality TV never go away. They’re like the undead, but with better skin.)

Back on Oahu, the episode unwinds into a depressing story of a couple lowlifes scamming the parents of a young man who was presumed murdered, but whose body never was found. They lure the father to Honolulu with $50,000 in cash using a story that the missing son had been seen on the island. Dad starts to smell the scam and ends up in the lava tube; one of the scammers is found dead in a car trunk.

Meanwhile, Joe’s behavior becomes ever more squirrelly. The week before, he kidnapped Hiro Noshimuri, leader of the yakuza on the islands, in order to gain information about the mysterious Shelbourne. He’s last seen driving away with the crime boss in his car trunk. Now the mobster’s son, Adam (Ian Anthony Dale), wants answers, but Joe claims he doesn’t know where the father is. McGarrett also discovers that Joe has made a quick trip to Japan and back. Joe refuses to explain, again asserting that he’s trying to protect Steve.

Other details worth noting:

  • Tom Sizemore returns as police Capt. Vince Fryer. He is investigating the body in the car trunk while Five-0 is trying to identify the comatose man from the hole. They agree to pool resources, but their differing styles make that interesting. Heightening the contrast is the way Fry always appears pale, wearing a pale-colored (usually blue) suit and filmed in pale light – while the Five-0 team, excluding Danno, is a tanned, colorful bunch.
  • Gail O’Grady (NYPD Blue) plays the wife of the comatose guy from the hole.

Quotes:

  • “Thank you, Capt. Caveman.” ~ Danno to Max, after Max describes the crime scene while wearing spelunking attire.
  • “You’ve been hanging with McGarrett too long.” ~ Chin Ho to Danno, after the latter uses a live grenade in an interrogation.

Episode 13

Episode 13, which involves the murder of a teenage girl in her own bedroom, never gives viewers the chance to solve its central crime. Getting to the killer and motive requires so many degrees of separation that Kevin Bacon wouldn’t figure it out.

Meanwhile, Joe is back from another mysterious trip to Japan (on Hawaiian Airlines, of course) but drawing increased attention from the local yakuza over is refusal to explain Hiro’s disappearance. Adam Noshimuri wants answers about his father’s fate, and is willing to get them legally or extralegally.

After McGarrett rescues Joe from a mob beating, Joe asserts that he helped Hiro fake his own death. But that leaves us no closer to the identity of Shelbourne – and wondering where Wo Fat has been hiding since the North Korea episode.

In other news:

  • Lab technician Charlie Fong (Brian Yang) has another chance to show off his forensics expertise for Kono.
  • Another Lost cast member, Sam Anderson, turns up on Oahu as a shady jury-selection expert.
  • We got a “Book ‘em, Danno,” and it came organically, not tacked on at the end of the episode.
  • Once again: Good guys drive Chevys; bad guys drive Fords.

Episode 14

In the opening flashback, McGarrett is told by his father: “If anything happens, you can always trust your Uncle Joe.”

The advice clearly doesn’t square with Joe’s recent behavior. We see McGarrett tailing Joe to an antiques shop, which is closed. After trying the door, Joe walks away into an alley, where he and McGarrett have a confrontation. But Steve can’t get anything out of him until later, after Joe has survived a yakuza drive-by shooting while barely saving a bystander. McGarrett arranges a meeting with Joe and Adam Noshimuri. Adam is ready to kill Steve and Joe, but the latter pulls out a cell phone, hits speed dial and hands it over. Adam listens briefly, presumably to his very-much-alive father, Hiro. Joe then explains that he helped Hiro fake his death because he had become a loose end to Wo Fat. Hire figured that if Wo Fat though he was dead, he’d move on and leave Adam alone.

Meanwhile, the investigation of the delivery-truck ambush points to the very same antiques shop. Steve and Joe return, and this time they break in. The find the proprietor, a known forger, in the rear with a gunshot wound. He is conscious, and tells them two terrorist suppliers stole blank U.S. passports from the truck, forced him to complete them and planned to sell them to the highest bidders. With help from, you guessed it, Hawaiian Airlines, Five-0 captures the two suppliers in a jetway at the airport.

So, where is Danno while all this takes place? He’s at the hospital with ex-wife Rachel (Claire van der Boom). She has gone into early labor with the baby fathered by her second husband, who is out of town on business. While their daughter, Grace (Teilor Grubbs), waits in the lounge, Danno coaches Rachel through the birth of the other man’s child – with Rachel shooting him appreciative looks throughout. Later, we see Danno outside the nursery taking photos to send to the baby’s father.

Comic relief in the episode comes from the team’s decision to spring Sang Min (Will Yun Lee), everybody’s favorite human trafficker, from prison to take part in an undercover operation. “Holy mullet! Who’s this guy?” Lori Weston asks upon seeing

Scene with Sang Min at Kamekona's truck.

Sang Min’s mug shot. When Lori and Kono visit the prison to recruit Sang Min, he greets them with, “Oh, look at this! Sweet and Spicy, huh?” He agrees to cooperate on one condition, at which point he leers at the two woman and says he’s been in prison a long time and has needs.

What he needs, it turns out, is shrimp from Kamekona’s food truck. We next see him chowing down at a picnic table near the beach, garishly disguised in a promotional T-shirt and hat from the Komekona Collection and pausing between bites to proposition passing bikini babes. He gets serious and rises to his feet when McGarrett walks up. There is a moment of awkward hostility before McGarrett breaks down in laughter. “I’m sorry,” he says. “I know you want to do the whole dramatic staredown thing, but I can’t take you seriously in this getup.” I actually wonder if that was scripted, or a blooper that the director thought was too good not to use.

Less amusing was an adjacent scene at the same location. I’ve noted from the start that the new Hawaii Five-0 is rather heavy-handed with product placement. It has pushed the line so far, it was hard to imagine how it could cross over. But the writers found away. So how much product placement is too much? After finding an “Out to lunch” sign on Kamekona’s shrimp truck, our heroes walk around back and find him at a table piled with Subway sandwiches. The big man tells McGarrett he’s “trying to eat smarter, brother. It worked for Jared, and that boy was huge.” Kamekona continues like he’s reading the script for a Subway commercial: “The best thing about it? They make it any way you want it!”

Puh-lease! Placement and promotion are enough; leave the full-blown commercials for the commercial breaks.

The Big Revelation

Near the end of Episode 14, Steve and Joe visit Jack McGarrett’s grave at Oahu’s famous Punchbowl cemetery. There Joe reveals that Shelbourne isn’t real – that he killed Wo Fat’s father, which Joe and Jack pinned on the fictitious Shelbourne. So Wo Fat has Daddy issues too. Who knew? Besides Joe, I mean.

After telling the story of Shelbourne, Joe informs Steve that it’s his turn to go away for a while. Will Joe return? The season finale would be a good bet.

So, let’s review everyone’s Daddy issues:

  • McGarrett – Being sent away to a mainland military school as a boy. Hearing his father’s murder over the phone. Constant clues to his father’s unfinished business. And an inner need to carry out his father’s legacy, wherever it might lead. (To a lesser extent, the same issues dog McGarrett’s younger sister, Mary Ann.)
  • Danno – A divorced, non-custodial parent’s determination to be as much of a father has he can to his young daughter. For Danno, that involves moving from New Jersey to Hawaii and maintaining a complex relationship with his ex-wife.
  • Hiro Noshimuri – Under threat from Wo Fat, the former yakuza boss fakes his own death. Like Papa McGarrett, he doesn’t want his business to endanger his son.
  • Wo Fat – Like McGarrett, he’s after the person who killed his father.

###

Stu Robinson, a college friend of the TV Tyrant, is a writer, editor, media-relations practitioner and social-media guy based in Phoenix.


No Comments »

Alcatraz! & Touch

January 26th, 2012 | by | 24, alcatraz, fox, lost, new shows, season premiere, series premiere, touch, tv shows

Jan
26

My DVR most likely hates me. It does its duty, and does it well, but I just keep adding more and more shows to it. I wouldn’t be surprized if it slides itself off the television one night and strangles me in my sleep.

 

JJ Abrams can do just about anything and I will tune in with fangirly glee. I am that easy. I do, however, have the sense to expect a big pile of crap along with my glee. No point in having wild expectations, only to have them dashed against The Rock.

Three episodes of Alcatraz have aired so far, and I am finding it pretty entertaining. We have a secret lair (which is mighty inconvenient with all that water surrounding it, if you ask me), some kind of selective time traveling, Hurley being the smart one, Sam Neill just being awesome by being Sam Neill, and for all of you out there who miss Lost, some potential numbers shenanigans. Personally, I don’t think the numbers mean anything this go around, but I thought Fringe was just gonna be a X-Files rehash, so what do I know?

Looks as though each episode will be the appearance of one of the inmates , and our heroes tracking them down. The first two reappeared inmates seemed to have some sort of directive to get something done. Sylvane got a big-ass key from some poor guy, and Cobb shot whatsherface (what? I don’t know names yet!) totally on purpose. This last guy, while insanely CREE-PEE, didn’t seem to have a job to do, and he ended up dead, dead, dead. I wonder how many people thought, like I did, that when they brought that dead guy back to NewAlcatraz, and handed him over to the apparently perpetual Alcatraz doc, that there would be a shot to the neck or something, and the guy would be brought back to life. Anyone? Just me?

Much like Fringe in its early days, Alcatraz seems to be only okay with the MOW stories, but really interesting with the set up of its mythology. I love this kind of storytelling, and I hope that the audience has the patience for us to get to know these characters and find out what the hell is going on.

 

I love New York City. I lived in Brooklyn for 12 years and I miss the damn place on a regular basis.

I adore Kiefer. I own all eight seasons of 24 (including the TV movie, ‘Redemption’). I even sorta, kind of stalked the man not once, but twice on the streets of NYC.

So Fox, a network I keep wanting to hate, handed me me a shiny new show that not only takes place in my beloved city, but stars a lovely and awesome (as usual) Kiefer. Touch.

Now this show made me nervous. I want to laud anything Kiefer is in, but this sucker is from Tim Kring who gave us Heroes, which started out as a fantastic show, and devolved into one hot mess.  The man has great ideas, but seems to have trouble following through.

As far as I’m concerned, so far so good. Was the twisty, turny-ness a little convoluted? Yup. Do I care? Nope. Give me something fantastical to believe in and I will happily jump on board. I was worried that this was gonna be an hour of SadDadKiefer, but there were some nice, light moments, and Kiefer had plenty of edge to keep the character from falling over into self-indulgent woes-is-me’s. And the moment at the end, in the rain, on the cel tower? I teared right up. Well played, sirs!

I liked Touch, and am excited to see if they can pull this off week to week. Unfortunately, we’re gonna have to wait until March(!!) to get our next taste. But you know me, I will sit patiently for another dose of Kiefer-ness.

 

No Comments »

Supernatural: Another Time Travel, Another God…

January 20th, 2012 | by | supernatural, the cw, tv shows

Jan
20

Dear Supernatural,

I hate episodes where those shiny Winchester brothers are separated almost the whole time. Please cease and desist with these storylines and let those boys hunt together as intended.

Love and Kisses,

Erika

Ahem. :)

I am gonna breeze through the first episode after the winter break, because it was just okay, and I want to start the drool-fest over ‘Time After Time After Time’. We start off ‘Adventures in Babysitting’ with a couple weeks of the SadWinchesters mourning the loss of their surrogate dad, Bobby. It is a nice little tribute, and I have to say I will miss him myself.

Anyhoo, this eppy we get Sammy off to help the daughter of a hunter, get himself snagged by a couple of wily Vetalas, and have Dean and Chrissy (daughter of opening scene hunter) come to the rescue. Meanwhile, Dean is obsessing about those pesky numbers Bobby left them with on his deathbed, meets and hangs with Mr. Frank Devereaux, and after finally getting some much needed Zzzz’s, heads off to get Sammy out of his latest mess. Chrissy is a cute thing with hunter spunkyness, and I do find Frank amusing (although I hope he will be is short supply, as he could become quite annoying), but this episode was just… good enough for me. Not only were the boys separate for most of the time, but they weren’t even working on the same thing until the end. The scenes with Dean and Chrissy were  fun, and I wish more of the female characters on this show were like her.

Oh well, at least they didn’t kill her, like they do to all the other kick-ass ladies on this show.

Regardless of my annoyance of two episodes in a row where the Winchesters are doing things separately, this latest episode is proof that the TV Gods love me. Not only did we finally(!!) get Krycek to guest on this show, but Logan Echolls (Jason Dohring will always be Logan to me), as the Big Bad was gravy. Thank you, ye gods of the airwaves, for giving me such riches. Read full story

No Comments »

H50 Episode Recalls Real-Life Case

December 12th, 2011 | by | cbs, hawaii five-o, tv shows

Dec
12

By Stu Robinson,

Season 2, Episode 11 of CBS’ new Hawaii Five-0 draws heavily from a real-life 1976 school bus kidnapping in Chowchilla, Calif., in which the hostages were placed underground in the back of a buried truck. 

The real-life hostages eventually managed to climb out and get help. In the TV version, it’s Five-0 to the rescue. The episode is what I’ve called a “pursuit” episode – and it’s a roller-coaster ride as McGarrett and crew tie the crime to a recent cocaine bust and race to find the hostages before the drug gang kills them.

The brief secondary plot involves McGarrett’s mentor, Joe White. Forced into retirement by the Navy after the North Korea caper in Episode 10, White turns his focus to Wo Fat and the mysterious Shelburne. He starts by kidnapping a yakuza boss on parole after being arrested by McGarrett in Season 1, Episode 13. Later, he brings the criminal to McGarrett and says he’s learned that Shelburne is a person, and Wo Fat is very close to finding him. From the trunk of Joe’s car, where he is tied up, the yakuza boss says Shelburne is “someone Wo Fat fears, and Wo Fat fears no one. For that reason, he won’t rest until Shelburne is dead.”

Joe drives off, telling McGarrett that he’s going to find Shelburne. This is where the plot thickens: In the final scene, Joe uses his mobile phone while driving to call somebody and says, “Steve is getting too close. We’re going to have to move you.”

Notes

We finally got a “Book ‘em Danno” – the first of the season, I think.

The website TV Rockstars reports that McGarrett’s sister, Mary Ann (Taryn Manning) and girlfriend, Lt. Catherine Rollins (Michelle Borth), will return this season. McGarrett put his sister on a flight to Los Angeles at the end of Season 1, Episode 13 in order to get her away from whatever danger remains for them on the islands. The Navy shipped Catherine off to the Persian Gulf at the end of Season 2, Episode 4, when Borth’s own show, ABC’s Combat Hospital, still had a chance of being renewed. It wasn’t, and that is good for Hawaii Five-0. Who can forget the repartee when Catherine and Mary Ann bumped into each other – literally – in the McGarrett kitchen in Season 1, Episode 5:

  • Mary Ann: “Big night last night.”
  • Catherine: “Hmm?”
  • Mary Ann: “Old house; thin walls.”
  • Catherine: “Oh God!”
  • Mary Ann: “Yeah, you said that a lot.”

CBS has announced that Ed Asner (Mary Tyler Moore, Lou Grant) will guest star in an episode this spring. According to the network, “Asner will reprise his role of August March, a character he played in an episode of the original Hawaii Five-0 in 1975, called ‘Wooden Model of a Rat.’ In a first for the modern series, footage from the 1975 episode featuring Asner and his character’s backstory will be used, showing him as an up-and-coming world class smuggler. Now a reformed man after serving 30 years in prison for murder, March lives on Oahu and is approached by the Five-0 to assist on a smuggling case.”

###

Stu Robinson, a college friend of the TV Tyrant, is a writer, editor, media-relations practitioner and social-media guy based in Phoenix.

 

 

1 Comment »

Supernatural: A Turducken Slammer & Other Awful Things

December 8th, 2011 | by | supernatural, the cw, the winchesters, tv shows

Dec
08

NaNoWriMo and then a five-day trip to Toronto got me all backed up over here. Sometimes I don’t write when I hate an episode, but I liked both “How to Win Friends” and “Death’s Door”, so let’s get to it, shall we?

Episode 7.09 was written by my favorite Supernatural writer, Ben Edlund. I love how he veers from ridiculous to horrifying so easily, and makes me believe every second of it. So we start out with the mauling of a non-camper camper type (I believe in tents and sleeping bags on the ground when you camp, that’s how we did it when I was a kid, dammit!) which brings our beloved Winchesters and Mr. Bobby Singer to the Pine Barrens of New Jersey, which always makes me think of  The Sopranos, in search of the Jersey Devil.

Needless to say, this is not the work of the mythical Jersey Devil. And I could go on and on, because this episode is pretty twisty and turny considering we start out in the Pine Barrens and end up in a shootout with leviathan Dick Roman at some distribution warehouse, and since we have already seen the episode that follows this one… well, I don’t need to spend a lot of time on this one. The gist of it all is that the leviathan have spiked Dean’s new favorite sandwich with some kind of grey, gooey revolting-ness that sedates people, making them easier to eat, I assume. Although DoctorLeviathan had a few failures, like the zombie-like guy who attacked the campers, and AngryBrendan waiting tables at Biggerson’s.

Awesome gruesome: The night our trio of heroes go a-huntin’ for whatever is eating people in the woods, they meet one crazy zombie! Which leads us to one of the best, old school autopsies ever! along with some silly, not so grumpy anymore Dean dialogue (I firmly believe that Edlund LOVES to write Dean). My favorite bit being the cat head in the zombie stomach (“You got to be damn hungry to eat a cats head”). EWWW.

So, after some sleuthing and the sobering up of Dean, Bobby gets snatched on the roof of the leviathan hideout and teased by Dick Roman. Our lovely Winchesters come to the rescue, of course, leaving Bobby a moment to rifle through Dicks’ plans, finding out what those plans really are, and melting a bunch of leviathan faces in the meantime.

A little more villian blah blah, and Bobby runs out to the awaiting getaway van, and Dean peals outta there with Dick running behind pulling off a few rounds in their direction. As they speed away, Dean and Sam giddy with their escape, they realize that Bobby, who hasn’t said a thing since they sped off, has been shot in the head.

And I yell “Noooooo!” at my TV as the executive producer title card pops up.

“Death’s Door” starts right up where we left off, with a zoom into Bobby’s hole in his head, and I have to say I was totally confused at first, with the scene in the Pine Barrens from the previous episode, even if I recognized that it was a little different than the original. It’s a pretty clever way of introducing us to Bobby’s brain, show, and we get an awesome episode traveling through Bobby’s rapidly dying brain.

The conceit, brought to us by Rufus (Hi Rufus!!), is that if Bobby can dig deep enough into his gin-soaked brain, he can find a door out and save himself from death, or at the very least, get the cryptic info he got from Dick’s desk to the brothers (and OMG, another one of my shows with cryptic numbers?). Unfortunately, Bobby has a reaper on his tail who informs Bobby that he is in a coma and dying and he might as well just come along, and we all know those guys don’t give up once they’ve got a bead on you.

Meanwhile, our sorrowful Winchesters stomp and cry in the hospital as they begin to realize that they are going to lose their second Daddy. Dean is not taking it well, as to be expected, harassing the poor organ donor guy and such, while Sammy resorts to his now fall back tic, shoving his nail into his palm to make sure that this isn’t all some horrible, horrible hallucination. It’s pretty sad. I hate to see those boys in pain, and now that they seem to have finally repaired their relationship, they have to deal with this. Why are the writers so mean to them?

Anyway, we get quite the tour of Mr. Singers head, ending with youngBobby shooting his abusive drunk of a dad dead, dead, dead right before he smacks his Mom into oblivion. Nice move, youngBobby, I approve. This is enough to get nowBobby to wake up on his deathbed just long enough to get the numbers to Sammy, and call the boys “idjits” in his fatherly way, and flat line right in front of those lovely boys eyes.

The screen goes black, exec. producer title card, aaaand… Bobby’s dead? For realsies?? Not sure. It would be very Supernatural of them to finally kill off Bobby. Amazing he’s lasted this long, actually. But then again, this is a show where dead people show up all the time, and people escape death countless times, so who knows.  We certainly won’t until January (damn you, holiday hiatuses!).

 

 

No Comments »

McGarrett Goes off the Reservation

November 22nd, 2011 | by | cbs, hawaii five-o, tv shows

Nov
22

By Stu Robinson,

The teaser the end of last week’s show said it all about Season 2, Episode 10 of CBS’ new Hawaii-Five-0: Jenna Kaye! Wo Fat! North Korea! Jimmy Buffett flying a helicopter!

Drama? Sure. Action? Hell yes! Plot advancement? Finally. Plausibility? Zero, zilch, bupkis.

Jenna Kaye (Larisa Oleynik) lures McGarrett to North Korea, ostensibly to ransom her fiancé, whom she said was being held by rebels. Viewers already know that Jenna is a weasel, having seen her drive a getaway car for Wo Fat (Mark Dacascos) at the end of the season premiere. So McGarrett is the only person in the world surprised when she turns her gun on him while Wo Fat sneaks up behind and whacks McGarrett on the head.

Wo Fat has persuaded Jenna to deliver McGarrett in return for her fiancé’s release. Of course it’s a double-cross. When she demands to see her fiancé, she is led to a room where she sees, from behind, her fiancé strapped to a chair and obviously beaten. She advances, and her hope turns to horror as she realizes that he is stone-cold dead. She barricades herself in the room and uses her satellite phone to place a hysterical call to Danno. She has just enough time to give her location, fling her phone out the window and then gruesomely dig out a tiny file from underneath the dead fiancé’s skin before Wo Fat’s henchmen break in and drag her back to the room where Wo Fat is administering a beating to chained-up McGarrett.

Back on Oahu, the investigation of the week has revealed that Jenna has been lying to the members of Five-0. After getting her call, Danno seeks out McGarrett’s mentor, Lt. Cmdr. Joe White (Terry O’Quinn), for help. White arranges a rescue operation that takes the team, along with a handful of Navy SEALS repaying a debt to McGarrett (Season 2, Episode 3), off to South Korea. There, White recruits old war buddy Frank Bama (Buffett) to obtain weapons and helicopter the team into North Korea.

But back to the beating. McGarrett is hanging, arms chained to the ceiling, like a boxer’s punching bag. Which he basically is at this point.

“Tell me about Shelburne,” Wo Fat keeps demanding.

McGarrett’s inability to answer makes the crime lord angrier and angrier, until the lightbulb goes off over McGarrett’s head:

“You don’t have any idea what Shelburne is, do you,” Steve says.

Just then, a guard enters with Jenna’s sat phone. While he talks to Wo Fat, Jenna slides the tiny file to McGarrett. Wo Fat then turns back to them, walks over to Jenna and shoots her dead. He then tells McGarrett they are going to get on a plane and McGarrett is going to lead him to Shelburne.

They’re gone by the time the rescue team reaches Wo Fat’s lair, but Kono taps into a satellite to find Wo Fat’s convoy, which Frank and Lori chase down in the chopper. Lori uses a rocket-propelled grenade (RPG) to take out a bridge, forcing the convoy to backtrack into an ambush by the Five-0 guys, Joe and the SEALS. McGarrett is rescued, but Wo Fat escapes. The episode concludes with Frank flying the team off into the sunset.

At this point, I have to acknowledge:

  • McGarrett would never go into North Korea on his own with Jenna.
  • The plot only works if McGarrett believes Jenna unquestioningly.
  • Jenna would never be so naïve as to believe that Wo Fat would keep his part of their bargain. She’s personally seen how he likes to eliminate loose ends; she drove the getaway care after he killed Victor Hesse.
  • There are easier ways Wo Fat could capture or kill McGarrett. Instead, he lays an overly elaborate trap worthy of a James Bond (or Austin Powers) movie.
  • Neither McGarrett nor his rescuers seem to have a problem acquiring the necessary vehicles and materiel halfway around the world on short notice.

Then there is the most obvious omission – the North Koreans. The country is a giant, paranoid prison camp. Despite the existence of the Korean Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) along the de facto border between the two Koreas, the area is one of the most heavily militarized in the world. The two sides technically remain at war; no peace treaty was signed at the end of the Korean War and there are occasional violent flare-ups. According to Wikipedia, North Korea has the fourth-largest military in the world, at an estimated 1.21 million armed personnel.

Yet Wo Fat’s gang; McGarrett and Jenna; and the rescue team call cross the border unimpeded by the North Koreans. Bama’s helicopter never draws the attention of those 1.21 million armed forces. Then, after a bridge demolition and a jungle shootout, the team flies back across the border without being pursued by North Koreans or intercepted by South Korean forces.

I’ve often written that, with Hawaii Five-0, you have to suspend your perception of reality and just go along for the ride. And I enjoyed this ride, especially after two subpar episodes. But c’mon! There’s suspending reality, and then there’s completely laughing at it.

Guest Stars

The writers did a better job of introducing Buffett than they did with the unfunny reunion of two Heroes cast mates two weeks ago.

Frank: “Drink?”
Danno: “No, thank you. I more of a margarita guy myself.”
Frank: “Can’t argue with you there.”

SEAL leader Wade Gutches, played by veteran character actor David Keith, makes a second appearance.

And Jenna Kaye? While, I’ll say this for the H50 writers: They have no qualms about killing off a character, even one the audience has come to know, when his or her story is at an end.

Romance, and Potential Romance

Chin Ho proposes to his ex-fiancée, Malia Waincroft (Reiko Aylesworth). She accepts, but their embrace is interrupted by Chin Ho’s cell phone and the murder du jour.

When the helicopter lands to pick up the rescue team, Lori bounds out of the shotgun seat to embrace McGarrett with a HUGE hug.

Final Thoughts

For the first time, McGarrett is rendered totally vulnerable – completely dependent upon his friends for survival. He stands up to Wo Fat’s beating and eventually uses the file from Jenna to escape, but he is caught immediately. He has no resources remaining when Danno finds him tied up in the back of a truck. This differs even from the season premiere, in which Joe also led the rescue but McGarrett was able to help himself.

Shelburne became even more of a mystery with McGarrett’s realization that Wo Fat doesn’t know who or what it is either.

Lori picks up an RPG launcher for the first time and takes out a bridge with one shot. There has got to be a joke about women with big guns here somewhere.

###

Stu Robinson, a college friend of the TV Tyrant, is a writer, editor, media-relations practitioner and social-media guy based in Phoenix.

1 Comment »

Supernatural: “When Crazy Groupies Attack”

November 17th, 2011 | by | supernatural, the cw, the winchesters, tv shows

Nov
17

I should be writing for NaNoWriMo, but I am procrastinating and doing this instead. Let’s begin!!

I happen to like it when Supernatural makes fun of itself and its fans, so even though this was what some would call a filler episode, I found it amusing. The THEN clued us in by reminding us of SuperFan Becky from back in the day, when we found out that Chuck had been writing a little known book series called… ‘Supernatural’. (Hee)

The episode is called “Season7, Time For A Wedding!”, and we are introduced to this wedding after Dean gets an urgent text from Sammy, asking him to wear his Fed gear. Dean shows up to a Vegas chapel, mother-of-pearl handled pistol in hand ready for a fight. Instead, he is blindsided by the announcement of Sammy’s wedding… to Becky! Cue the awesome exploding cake title card! Hee!

Those of us who have been watching figure out pretty quickly that Sammy has been victim of some kind of a love spell, but it is a fun ride watching Dean, and special guest hunter, Garth (a mostly wasted DJ Qualls), try and figure out what the heck is going on! Dean gets to be smart, and heroic and be the hilarious Dean that we all love. Poor Sammy is the victim, spending most of the time being either moony-eyed, or tied to a bed, but does get a sweet moment at the end while he gets Becky to agree to an annulment.

After the outing of Guy, the rule-breaking crossroads demon that is helping Becky, and the tricky trick to catch him by the beautiful boys and Sammy’s bride, we get a cameo from our favorite demon, Crowley! He does his sarcastic little ta-dah as usual, and then lets us in on this little nugget: He is keeping the demons at bay so the Winchesters can work their magic and defeat those horrible leviathans. Crowley particularly hates head leviathan, Dick. Like you do with anyone named Dick.

A lot of my favorite funny moments aren’t exactly funny lines, but the way they were delivered. Some of my favorite stuff:

Dean (to Sammy): “Have you forgotten the average lifespan of your hook-ups?” (thank you! (poor Sammy))

Becky doodling Sam ‘hearts’ Becky all over a notebook is creepy, Sammy’s discovery of said notebook and his “This is… beautiful” and hugging of the book is adorable.

Garth: “Now you, you’ll be living with a tri-racial, paraplegic sniper until this all blows over, okay?”

Becky (to a hogtied Sammy): “Are you thirsty? Or do you need a bottle, to you know, tinkle? It’s okay, I can help.”

Guy(crossroads demon): “You’re so pathetic it loops around back to cute.”

Becky: “I was gonna show you off, not that anyone actually knows who you are. ‘Supernatural’ is not exactly popular, but you’re tall, and nice, and they would all think I was happy.”

Sammy (gagged): “Mmmhgh, mghmm, hrhmmngh.”

The reappearance of ‘the knife’! (hooray)

Crowley: “This isn’t Wall Street, this is Hell! We have a little something called integrity.” And everything else he says, as usual.

See, nothing earth shattering or super relevant, but fun. I’m easy.

Next week: Scary-o’s in the forest!!

 

 

No Comments »

Supernatural: Cautious Optimism

November 9th, 2011 | by | supernatural, the cw, tv shows

Nov
09

I have been to Lily Dale (it was just down the road from my college, SUNY Fredonia), and that my friends, was no Lily Dale. Luckily, I know Supernatural is shot in Vancouver, and they did a fine job with this episode, so let’s get on with it!

We open with a stereotypical sham seance that turns into a real, death by ghost one, setting up our episode in the land of the psychics. Dean, after stealing a beater from some poor minor league basballer or something, shows up on his own after hearing about the suspicious deaths on the radio. He amuses his lonesome self by discovering the ‘psychics’ fakery, and decides to head on over to the local diner for some “pancakes and a side of pig”, only to run into PetulantSammy, who is none too pleased to see his big brother, because he is still very angry with Dean over stupid ol’ Amy Pond, like the little baby he is for half of this episode. Dean, doing his best to be a good and cheery big brother, along with being  a good hunter, convinces Sammy to work with him, since neither one of them are gonna leave with some evil ghostie trolling the streets and killing people. They are both in their fake FBI get-ups, which is totally cute, BTW.

Read full story

No Comments »

The 6 Least Ethical Criminal Justice Characters in TV History

November 7th, 2011 | by | tv shows

Nov
07

Justified

There are corrupt cops, and then there are cops pretty much made out of corruption. As long as we’ve had TV cop shows, we’ve had dirty cops, but these six pretty much serve as the worst of the worst.

Doyle Bennett, On Justified

We feel kind of bad for Doyle. He’s actually a good cop in almost every situation, but, like most people, he has a soft spot for his family. Of course, when your family is a bunch of vicious pot-growing hillbillies who have an ongoing vendetta with another bunch of vicious pot-growing hillbillies, that’s a heck of a soft spot, and it gets ugly fast. Then again, he does stop engaging in criminal activities once the family decides to go legit. So there’s that in his favor. We guess.

The…Uh, Well, the Evil A-Team, On “The A-Team”

It never fails; if you have a show with a group of heroes, and it stays on the air long enough, they’ll eventually run into a group of villains just like them. Although in this case, the team in question were a bunch of decorated cops who were also assassins on the side. But, needless to say, they just didn’t have the construction or montage skills of “The A-Team”, and were forced to throw themselves to the ground while being shot at, and then get up and run away. Read full story

No Comments »