Posted on: Wednesday, August 24, 2005
Seven best new television shows for fall
By Frazier Moore Associated Press
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Geena Davis portrays Mackenzie Allen, the first female president of the United States, in ABC's "Commander-in-Chief," which premieres Sept. 27.
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TOP PICKS "Head Cases," Fox
"Just Legal," The WB
"Prison Break," Fox
"Reunion," Fox
"Bones," Fox
"Commander-in-Chief," ABC
"Sex, Love & Secrets," UPN |
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Star attorney Jason Payne (Chris O’Donnell, right) opens a law firm with troubled Shulz (Adam Goldberg) in the Fox comedic drama “Head Cases,” debuting Sept. 14.
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You say you like a drama where aliens imperil planet Earth? Well, brace yourself for three new intruders: ABC's "Invasion," CBS' "Threshold" and NBC's "Surface."
Or maybe you identify with women torn between career and family. Trading on that theme, "Ghost Whisperers" and "Close to Home" will soon come your way from CBS.
Chefs cook up comedy while running restaurants on both "Freddie" (ABC) and "Kitchen Confidential" (Fox). Lawmen mourn colleagues killed in the line of duty on "Criminal Minds" (CBS) and "Killer Instinct" (Fox).
In short, when you take a look at the networks' new fall shows, patterns begin to reveal themselves.
A year after "Lost" and "Desperate Housewives" reminded everybody that a defiantly original series can shake up the whole TV universe, not much about the freshman slate reflects that level of fresh thinking.
Among the lamest ahead: "Inconceivable," a drama about a fertility clinic, from NBC (where creative infertility has reached epidemic levels), and "Twins," a WB sitcom about odd-couple sisters who run a company that makes lingerie.
On the other hand, the fall crop should still have its pleasures, if pilot episodes are any predictor.
Consider two engaging comedy-dramas, both about oddball lawyers who defend their underdog clients and each other's eccentricities.
On Fox's "Head Cases," Chris O'Donnell plays Payne, a slick L.A. lawyer who has a nervous breakdown. When he's ready to return to work, his posh law firm doesn't want him. Who does? Apparently only Shulz (Adam Goldberg), an impetuous slob with whom Payne is paired by their psych-ward therapist as outpatient buddies. Shulz is also a lawyer. Thus is born of necessity a loopy new law firm, complete with shabby-chic offices at Venice Beach.
Also at Venice Beach (could both firms maybe share a receptionist?), you'll find the mismatched attorneys of WB's "Just Legal": a geekish teen prodigy (Jay Baruchel) and a courtroom burnout (Don Johnson) who finds his passion for the law re-ignited by this gung-ho junior partner. That is, when the kid's overeagerness doesn't drive him up the wall.
Five other new dramas are also worth checking out:
Premiering Monday, Fox's "Prison Break" is the first fall series out of the gate, and looks to be the most inventive of all. It depicts the complex social order at a state penitentiary where one of the inmates has strategically gotten himself jailed in order to rescue his brother, who's on death row there for a murder he didn't commit. A nutty concept for a show? You bet. But its appeal is in its (pardon the term) execution. Once viewers get a peek at "Prison Break," for them there may be no escape.
"Reunion" uses the shrewdest time scheme for a series since another Fox breakthrough, "24." On this new melodrama-mystery, six friends graduate from high school in the summer of 1986 with their lives full of promise. But the premiere leaps forward to 2005 long enough for a funeral service remembering one of this group as "brutally murdered, in their prime, by an unknown assailant." But who? Each weekly episode will find the gang of six a year older and a year closer to the present, moving them toward their 20th anniversary reunion (with the murder solved) at season's end.
Of the three new crime dramas (among 19 crime dramas on the schedule), Fox's "Bones" stands out because of its star, Emily Deschanel. A forensic anthropologist with beauty, smarts and a knack for karate, headstrong Dr. "Bones" Brennan is saddled with an FBI agent (or is he saddled with her?) as a condition of her getting to move beyond ancient burial sites and dig into FBI murder cases. The fact that the agent (David Boreanaz of "Angel") is a handsome he-man seems beyond her concern. Here's hoping it stays that way. They make such a hot couple clashing, who needs romance?
"Commander-in-Chief" bears certain similarities to "The West Wing": For instance, both are dramas about a U.S. president. But ABC's commander in chief is neither a Democrat nor a male — she's an Independent and a woman. Elected vice president, Mackenzie Allen becomes chief executive upon the death of the man who made her his running mate to win female voters. Now can she weather foes in Washington plotting her downfall — particularly the sly speaker of the House (Donald Sutherland), who wanted her to step aside so he could claim the Oval Office? With Geena Davis as the very presidential President Allen, this show seems electable as a hit.
Finally, a group of twentysomethings inhabit the hip, hilly neighborhood of Silverlake in the sudsy UPN soap, "Sex, Love & Secrets." Seizing on a formula of sex, love & secrets, this cool new melodrama picks up right where "Melrose Place" (which was set in nearby Hollywood) left the genre six long years ago.
And it reaffirms a TV truism: Anything abandoned long enough can seem fresh.
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