Sorry to keep y’all waiting, but I warned you the posts would come a little fewer and further between. The TV season has kicked off, so here are some real quick mini-impressions of what’s premiered so far.
True Blood: Strange Love – This series has potential, but the writing has got to improve. The characters all seemed completely over the top, and all the exposition really got in the way. But that might have just been necessary for the show to get it’s footing, so I’ll give it another chance or two. Although the whole silver-hurts-vampires thing really bugged me, I did appreciate the fact that they called out the fact that it’s normally reserved for werewolf lore.
Entourage: Fantasy Island – The boys of Entourage are back, and I realized how much I missed them with this episode. It probably helped the show that I wasn’t that crazy about True Blood and anything would have looked good by comparison, but Entourage felt fun again after taking itself too seriously in it’s most recent run.
Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles: Samson & Delilah – While I understand that it wasn’t the show’s fault that the first season was cut short by the writer’s strike, this season premiere just didn’t feel like a season premiere. And of course it couldn’t, because it took place immediately after the very cliffhanger-y moments of the previous episode. I found myself not totally remembering everything that happened last season with the Turk, and the “Previously on” didn’t help much. I also hated Shirley Manson’s character right from the start, with her boring speech on the majesty of the machines, and the reveal that she is a T-1000 just felt haphazard. Does this show really need *another* Terminator running around? And WTF was up with John’s repairing of Cameron’s chip? The Terminator’s main circuitry works like a NES game – you just blow on it, clean off the dust, and it goes back to working all of a sudden? Lame.
Fringe: Pilot – So far, this has been my favorite television of the season. This episode worked brilliantly as both a stand alone and as a series premiere. They completely resolved the episode’s main mystery, but tied it into one over-arcing conspiracy story that should play out really well as the series continues. The introduction of the characters was handled well, the plot didn’t seem overly convoluted, and the extended length plus limited commercials made the pilot feel like a movie. My only complaints would be the way the music was very close to what you hear on that *other* J.J. Abrams show, and while I dug that they tried something new with the “this-scene-takes-place-in…” text, the bold letters in the middle of the locations just didn’t work for me.
Also, a belated goodbye to Swingtown, which seems unlikely to get picked up for a second season. Watching swinging suburbanites in the summer of ‘76 (say that fast three times) made for some enjoyable viewing while nothing else was on. Except anytime the daughter was on screen…
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