Direct Beam Comms #148

TV

Mr Inbetween

I hadn’t even heard of this FX show until a few weeks ago, and it wasn’t because I saw a trailer or commercial for it on TV or online. I only heard about Mr Inbetween because I happened to see a poster for it that caught my eye, otherwise I doubt I’d have checked out this wonderful series at all since I can’t watch what I don’t know about.

Originally developed for FX Australia but airing here on FX since that channel went “belly up,” Mr. Inbetween follows Ray Shoesmith (Scott Ryan), an underworld hood who’s equally at home tossing guys off of balconies as he is threatening someone for owing $10,000 to the wrong people. As Ray puts it, “I’m the guy who’s here to make you regret not paying up.”

And since Mr Inbetween is an FX show I figured it would have all these over-the-top action scenes of machine guns and violence like practically every other original show they air but that’s just not the case here. There is violence in the first episode, Ray does toss one unsuspecting man off a balcony and onto the hard ground below and in the second he murders a man who might not had it coming, but Mr Inbetween is much more nuanced, grounded, and much more a character piece, than say a similar show on FX like Mayans. Ray feels like a real person with real problems from his job to being a single dad who’s also on the wrong side of 40 for someone who needs to stay in top condition to beat people up for a living.

Unfortunately, I suspect because Mr Inbetween is grounded and because there aren’t machine gun fights every episode, it seems as if FX is burning this one off, airing two episodes back-to-back Tuesday nights at 11:30 PM Eastern. I guess the prime-time slots on FX are already full of things like airing The Avengers for the 100th time.

Oh well. If you’re interested in quality programming that’s character based, checkout Mr Inbetween while you can.

The Good Place

The Good Place
The Good Place

Most sitcoms ascribe to the rule that nothing ever changes. Just look at something like Big Bang Theory. That series has been on the air 12 seasons yet new episodes today aren’t that much different then the ones that debuted more than a decade ago. Which is perfect for shows headed towards syndication where episodes air out of order all the time which might lead to confusion if shows tied together in any real meaningful way. Sitcoms are the comfort food of the TV world where viewers know they can tune into just about any episode and spend a half hour or so with their TV friends. All of which is fine, I just find those kinds of shows in permanent stasis boring.

But it doesn’t have to be that way, there’s one network sitcom that breaks this mold and that sitcom is The Good Place On NBC. In The Good Place characters change all the time.

Spoilers for the first few seasons of the show follow.

In the first season Eleanor Shellstrop (Kristen Bell) awakens in heaven after an accident only to realize that because of a mixup she was supposed to go to the bad place but switched places with another person who just so happens to also be named Eleanor Shellstrop too. As the season progressed and Eleanor did her darnedest to turn good and really earn a spot in the good place it was revealed that, a) there were others in the good place who were supposed to be in the bad as well and b) it was all a ruse by supposedly good overseer Michael (Ted Danson) who reveals that they’re really in the bad place.

And the second season starts with the characters having their memories wiped and Michael starting over tricking everyone that they’re in the good place. Only this time if Michael fails he’ll be put in a very bad place himself.

The third season begins right after the end of the second where Michael, not wanting to be burned alive for all eternity on the surface of a star, helps Eleanor and her group find a way to the real good place. But in order to do so they’re all sent back to the Earth as if they never died in order to prove to the universe they really do deserve a place in the good place. The group comes together not realizing they already know one and other but there’s one small problem, a new member who just so happens to be a demon (Adam Scott) sent to make sure they don’t earn a ticket to the real good place.

The Good Place
The Good Place

What I dig about The Good Place is that the characters have evolved and changed throughout the series. If in the first season Eleanor is a self-centered destructive person then by the second she’s actively looking out for others in her group, going as far as turning down a spot in the good place if it meant that everyone else couldn’t go with her. And the same goes for Michael, who’s the character who’s changed the most in the series. If in the first season he’s a goofy, lovable guy who can’t understand why his perfect creation is failing in all these weird ways, he’s trying to trick Eleanor into believing it’s because of her, then in the second he starts as this slimy demon who’s actively trying to hurt the main characters of the show until he comes to the realization, abet over hundreds and hundreds of times of “rebooting” everything and trying to convince Eleanor and her group that they’re really in the good place, that what he’s doing is wrong until he goes about helping them escape.

Not only do the characters change but each episode of the show builds upon the last which is death for syndicated series. Viewers can’t start with a random episode and enjoy the show. The only way to watch The Good Place is to start from the first episode and watch from there. Though the series might be bad for syndication it’s great for binge watching via streaming services.

But that’s why I think I like The Good Place so much. I never know what’s lurking around the next corner or how the characters will evolve as the season progresses.

Manifest

Manifest
Manifest

The plot to the new NBC series Manifest is genuinely interesting. In it, a airliner takes off from Jamaica in 2013 but lands in New York in 2018. Five years have passed outside, but inside the plane it’s only been a few hours. For some like Michaela (Melissa Roxburgh) it means a mother who’s passed away and a fiancé who ended up marrying her best friend. For others like Ben’s (Josh Dallas) son, it means treatment options for what was considered five years ago terminal leukemia.

Now the idea that a plane taking off and landing someplace/somewhen else isn’t unique, “The Odyssey of Flight 33” from The Twilight Zone and the Stephen King novel The Langoliers immediately spring to mind. Still, Manifest could be a really interesting series about what it’s like to fall asleep in one world and wake up in another.

Some of which is present in Manifest, there are interesting ideas about what happens to a family separated for years and brought together and a woman trying to pick up the pieces of a life broken while she was away and how these people are seen by the outside world.

But in the first episode of Manifest the show takes a bizarre left turn. Instead of focusing on the whole time travel thing, which is pretty interested in itself, the creators of it decided to insert a weird, almost superhero, thread to the series. Here, Michaela begins hearing voices, one warns that a bus she’s riding in is about to hit a little kid and another tells her that she needs to release a few dogs locked behind a gate. She thinks she’s going crazy until her brother shows up after hearing the same thing. And it turns out letting the dogs go was the beginning of cracking the case of two missing girls.

I don’t know how interested I am in sticking with Manifest, the whole voices thing has me really worried. Like, isn’t the whole airplane full of people traveling in time five years interesting enough, isn’t there enough material for at least one season of a show from that all by itself?

Murphy Brown

Murphy Brown
Murphy Brown

I remember I used to watch Murphy Brown when it was originally on but honestly can’t remember when I stopped. I wasn’t watching it up until the series ended in 1998 after 10 seasons, nor can I honestly even remember a single episode of the show. Some of that has to be that as far as I can tell other than the period Murphy Brown aired the series never ran in syndication. I’m assuming this is because episodes were sometimes very topical so that jokes about Dan Quayle that worked in 1988 might not be as funny to those alive today who weren’t even born with he was Vice President.

I take it back, I do remember two things about Murphy Brown. The first was that one of the running gags on the show was the character of Murphy Brown had a rotating cast of characters who played her secretary with a new face at the desk every week. That and she had a guy played by the late Robert Pastorelli who spent the seasons constantly renovating her house.

But as for actual episodes and stories, I don’t remember a single one.

And now 20 years after the series originally ended comes another season of the show also on CBS. This time instead of being a brash 40-something Murphy’s a retired 70-something who’s watching the world change around her with no outlet for her opinions. So she decides to get the gang back together and take a job hosting a new show.

I though the first episode of Murphy Brown was interesting, if I’m not sure that I’ll stick around for many more. Sitcoms that measure success by how many jokes they can deliver per minute usually aren’t my thing.

Comics

Marvelocity: The Marvel Comics Art of Alex Ross
Marvelocity: The Marvel Comics Art of Alex Ross

Marvelocity

Comic book artist and illustrator Alex Ross has already had a collection of his work from DC published with Mythology: The DC Comics Art of Alex Ross and now comes a collection of his work at Marvel with Marvelocity.

Here is the beloved Marvel Universe of comics characters, brought to thrilling life as only Alex Ross can. They’re all here: Spider-Man, Captain America, Iron Man, the Avengers, the Guardians of the Galaxy, the X-Men, the Fantastic Four, Black Panther, and many more—all seeming to leap, blast, and launch off the page.

For almost thirty years, Ross has been working nonstop to create some of the most astonishing images in comics, and while Marvelocity collects the very best of that oeuvre, it’s much more than that. Inside are hundreds of drawings, paintings, and photographs that have never been published before, including an original ten-page story featuring Spider-Man versus the Sinister Six, redesign proposals for the X-Men and the Fantastic Four, and a re-creation of an epic battle between the Sub-Mariner and Iron Man.

But this isn’t just the story of the Marvel characters—it’s also the incredibly inspiring true tale of a little boy who only ever wanted to draw and paint super heroes. And with enough determination, talent, and very hard work, that’s precisely what he did. Marvelocity is the result, and is sure to entrance and delight fans of all ages.

Swamp Thing: The Bronze Age Vol. 1

If you’ve yet to checkout the early appearances of Swamp Thing you might want to pick up this reasonably priced collection that retails for just $25.

Deep in the bayou of Louisiana, far from civilization’s grasp, a shadowed creature seen only in fleeting glimpses roils the black waters…a twisted, vegetative mockery of a man…a Swamp Thing! These are the tales that introduced Alec and Linda Holland, Anton Arcane, Abigail Cable, the Patchwork Man, the Un-Men, plus an appearance by Batman! Collects THE HOUSE OF SECRETS #92 and SWAMP THING #1–13.

Movies

The Night Stalker
The Night Stalker

The two classic Kolchak TV movies get a first-time-ever release on HD this week from Kino Lorber. This is a “must buy” for me as these movies were some of the best things to ever air on broadcast TV.

The Night Stalker:

An investigative journalist takes a stab at the supernatural. This unforgettable first entry in the Night Stalker series introduced the world to the quirky reporter with a penchant for the paranormal and became one of the top-rated TV movies of all time. Investigating a series of Las Vegas murders, Carl Kolchak (Darren McGavin, The Night Strangler) discovers that each victim has been bitten in the neck and drained of blood. Though Kolchak’s outlandish theory about the murders gets him nowhere with the police, his initiative to apprehend the killer himself gets him into hot water… with a modern-day vampire…Teleplay by legendary sci-fi/horror writer Richard Matheson (The Incredible Shrinking Man).

The Night Strangler:

Supernatural phenomena, baffling murders and offbeat humor mark this second Night Stalker offering with a great cast and suspense so palpable, it’ll feel like a presence right there in the room with you. Surfacing in Seattle, Kolchak (Darren McGavin, The Night Stalker) uncovers another maddening mystery: Every 21 years—for the past century—a serial killer commits a spree of murders, drains his victims’ blood and then quietly disappears. But Kolchak is onto this monster and is about to discover a shocking underground lair… an army of rotting corpses… and the ageless madman behind it all. The great Dan Curtis (Burnt Offerings) produced and directed this highly-rated TV movie written by legendary sci-fi/horror writer Richard Matheson (I Am Legend).

Dark Phoenix trailer

What To Watch This Week

Deadly Friend
Deadly Friend

Tuesday

The most recent Marvel Studios movie Ant Man and the Wasp gets a release on digital this week.

Wednesday

HDNET Movies will be airing one of the greatest horror movies of all time today, The Evil Dead.

Saturday

Insomniac Theater: A truly bizarre horror flick from 1986 Deadly Friend that has one thing going for it — it was directed by Wes Craven — airs very early Saturday morning on TCM.

Quite possibly my favorite classic sci-fi horror movie of all time The Thing From Another World also airs on TCM Saturday afternoon.

The Reading List

Cool TV Posters of the Week

Direct Beam Comms #147

Movies

Rumor is that Henry Cavill won’t be returning to the role of Superman/Clark Kent/Kal-El he’s been playing in films since 2013. While Cavill’s been portraying the character for five years, he’s only had one movie of his own, the first Man of Steel, but has also played him in Batman vs Superman and Justice League. Fans are reacting with the news with a bit of shock, but let’s face it, Cavill was never going to play Superman forever. So far five guys have played the character in the movies; Kirk Alyn, George Reeves, Christopher Reeves, Brandon Routh and Cavill and a few more on TV; George Reeves again, Tom Welling and Dean Cain.

And when it comes to the cartoons I’m not even sure how many have voiced Superman. There are many as diverse as Bud Collyer who voiced him on screen in the early 1940s to Jerry O’Connell who played him this year in The Death of Superman.

And that’s not counting Nicolas Cage who very nearly played Superman in a 1990s production that would have been titled Superman Lives that would’ve been written by Kevin Smith and directed by Tim Burton.

So, in many ways Cavill is in good company. Sooner or later his tenure would end and I think it’s best for these actors to leave on good terms with roles like this. He’s played the character for a few years, and whether or not you liked his version/take on the strange visitor from another planet, I think he played him well.

In the short-term there’s been rumors that the new Shazam (Zachary Levi) or the upcoming Supergirl will be filling in for the last son of Krypton whenever a villain needs to be punched in the face really hard. But fear not, eventually some other actor will be brought in to fill the man of tomorrow’s boots.

Lost movies

The cast of Galaxy Quest
The cast of Galaxy Quest

I’ve always been interested in versions of movies that almost were. One example of this is the recent Solo: A Star Wars Story. That movie was originally going to be directed by Phil Lord and Chris Miller who were three weeks away from being finished with their version before being fired for “creative differences” and director Ron Howard was brought in to complete the film/reshoot scenes.

While I really dig Howard’s version of the movie, I wonder what Lord and Miller’s version would’ve been like? Here are a few other movies that started out one way but ended another.

Enemy Mine
Originally begun by director Richard Loncraine, this sci fi flick starring Dennis Quaid and Louis Gossett Jr. was halted and Loncraine fired when the studio didn’t like what he was delivering. Wolfgang Petersen was brought in and threw out Loncraine’s footage, redid everything from the special effects to the sets, reshot the script from the first page and delivered the finished film of what we now know of as Enemy Mine.

Galaxy Quest
While there’s not another version of Galaxy Quest floating out there like there might with Solo: A Star Wars Story or Enemy Mine, the tone of Galaxy Quest did change after the film was completed. Originally, the movie was rated R and scenes were cut and objectionable language changed in order to secure a PG–13 rating. But if you pay close attention, there’s still a hint of this rated R version hiding in the PG–13 version of the movie that was released. When Tim Allen and Sigourney Weaver’s characters are climbing through the innards of their ship the NSEA Protector, there’s a part where they have to crawl through a Rube Goldberg inspired section where it looks like everything inside is meant to cut, squash or burn the two to death. Weaver’s character takes one look at the setup and says, “Well, screw that!” But if you watch her mouth, what she’s really saying, and what was dubbed over, was “Well, f@#k that!”

Today that line might have survived the cut and made it into the PG–13 version of the movie, but back in 1999 when the movie was released that was a no-go.

The Girl in the Spider’s Web trailer

Captain Marvel trailer

TV

The Haunting of Hill House TV spot

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G9OzG53VwIk

What To Watch This Week

Manifest
Manifest

Monday

Mainfest
This new series that looks absolutely not at all like a sequel to Lost mixed with This is Us premiers on NBC this week.

Tuesday

Doctor Who
Beginning Tuesday morning with episodes of the Doctor Who spin-off Torchwood, BBC America will be airing 13 days straight of Doctor Who.

Thursday

Murphy Brown
The old sitcom reboot train continues with Murphy Brown, a new show that picks up more than 20 years after the series ended back in 1998. And to be honest, I can’t believe Murphy Brown ran all the way ’til 1998.

The Good Place
The third season of the oh-so-good The Good Place returns to NBC this week.

The Reading & Watch List

Cool Movie & TV Posters of the Week

The Orville – Great sci-fi hiding on network TV

There’s not a lot of hope in sci-fi these days, and it’s been like that for quite a while. The ever popular Battlestar Galactica reboot, though it was an amazing show, was guilty of this, are most modern sci-fi series like The Expanse and Black Mirror too. Their themes seems to be that because present day is so cruddy, surely the future will be cruddy too. And those shows have a point. In the whole of human history there’s never been a time when mankind’s been able to get over our petty disagreements and squabbles — which gets reflected in our sci-fi.

That’s why I find the FOX series The Orville, created by Seth Macfarlane of Family Guy fame so interesting. In it, it’s a few hundred years in the future and things are pretty great. We still have our problems, but they’re mostly solved and mankind instead devotes its time to less destructive pursuits like exploring the galaxy.

The Orville
The Orville

Over the years MacFarlane hasn’t hidden the fact that he’s a huge fan of Star Trek, going so far as to have a small acting role in Star Trek: Enterprise. And his love for Star Trek shows in The Orville, which is the closest thing to the original Star Trek since the original Star Trek, even more so than Star Trek: The Next Generation.

Sometimes I think sci-fi’s “hopelessness” is because the creators of sci-fi TV series and movies strive towards realism, and sometimes their definition of “realism” is that dark=real. And that’s great, but things don’t have to be “dark” to be real. Even the latest incarnation of Star Trek with Star Trek: Discovery is following this model where things are dark and dreary and the universe is a dangerous and forbidding place.

And I love “dark” — I’m a fan of The Expanse and Black Mirror and probably would be a fan of Discovery too if I subscribed to CBS All Access. But while there’s a lot of series that show just how the future might be just as worse as the present, there’s only one modern sci-fi show I can think of that follows the mold of the original Star Trek series and says that the future will be bright, shiny and better than the present. And that show is The Orville.

The Orville
The cast of The Orville

Originally advertised as a sort of “Galaxy Quest the TV series as brought to you by the guy who created Family Guy,” The Orville turned out to be a sci-fi show with a lot of heart and good intentions about the crew of the ship of the same name as they explore the galaxy.

Not all episodes of The Orville are perfect, there’s a few clunkers in the first season. But overall I’d say that the first season of The Orville was better than the first seasons of things like The Next Generation or Deep Space Nine which is saying a lot.

There’s one episode in particular that I think surmises the first series of The Orville as a whole. As the ship zooms through space the Orville the crew are on the bridge all watching an old episode of Seinfeld and are trying to explain to an alien crew member why it’s funny. It’s a small moment in a show that has nothing to do with Seinfeld, but I can’t imagine this scene happening on any other modern sci-fi show, only on The Orville, which is part of the reason why it’s so special.

The Orville did well enough in the ratings that it’s been picked up for a second season that’s set to start this winter. Now whether or not the show was picked up because FOX liked it, or they wanted to keep MacFarlane happy at FOX and not jumping ship like a few other series creators did this year to other venues like Netflix or Amazon Prime doesn’t really matter. Regardless of why The Orville got picked up, the fact is that it did get picked up made me very happy.

You have plenty of time on catching up on the first season of The Orville since the second doesn’t start until December 30.

The Orville
The Orville

Direct Beam Comms #146

TV

Rel

The first new network show of the fall season Rel premiered last Sunday on FOX, with regular episodes scheduled to premiere Sunday, September 30. Last season that network did much the same thing with The Orville, premiering the first episode to coincide with the start of the NFL. But, whereas The Orville had an interesting first episode, Rel did not.

I really dug The Carmichael Show on NBC which was co-created by Jerrod Carmichael and co-starred Lil Rel Howery — and Carmichael is co-producing Rel which was created by Howery. But whereas The Carmichael Show was a series with bite, Rel is a relatively toothless.

I giggled a few times during this first episode about Rel, a nurse who’s wife’s left him and taken the kids to Cleveland after she slept with Rel’s barber, but overall the first episode felt like a standard sitcom with lots of jokes that come out of all the obvious places. I’ll give Rel one more try when the series returns in a few weeks since you never can be sure if the first episode is any indication as to where the show’s going to go from here, but otherwise I’ll probably be done with this one by the end of the month.

The Deuce

The Deuce
The Deuce

The second season of the David Simon/George Pelecanos series The Deuce premiered on HBO last Sunday and makes a jump in time five years in time from the first. Mostly gone are the grimy streets of New York City 1972 which have been replaced with nicer ones circa 1977. The grime might not be visible, but it’s still there hidden behind closed doors. Prostitutes and drug dealers still abound, but now they ply their trade more quietly and not in the open.

It’s a good time for people like ex-prostitute turned porn star/producer Eileen (Maggie Gyllenhaal) who’s off the streets and is now making money shooting dirty movies. Even people like Vincent (James Franco) who once made a living day-by-day tending bar now runs a successful establishment, even if behind doors the mob is really pulling the strings.

I thought the first season of The Deuce was interesting, if I lost interest in it towards the end. It might have been too dark and depressing for me, even if that’s how it really was in early 1970s New York. In the second season much of the darkness is gone, replaced with an interesting sort of late 1970s glamour.

The characters are still the same characters from the first season, they’re still prostitutes, pimps and drug dealers. But it’s like as long as they don’t look like prostitutes, pimps and drug dealers everything’s going to be okay, even as mayor elect Ed Koch and his decades long stint of cleaning up the streets looms on the horizon. 


American Horror Story: Apocalypse

American Horror Story: Apocalypse
American Horror Story: Apocalypse

I’ve been thinking a lot lately about horror movies that used to turn up on TV from time to time but really don’t anymore. I remember seeing things like Dawn of the Dead and The Evil Dead on basic cable abet edited for content, but still on cable. But these days those movies almost never turn up on TV. Sure, maybe they’ll run on some premium channel now and then or make some special appearance in October, but for the most part those movies have been absent from public view the last 20 years.

I think I know the reason why, it’s because newer versions of those movies have been made, and when there’s screen time to show a horror movie the channels always go for the remakes.

And that’s what the latest American Horror story series American Horror Story: Apocalypse feels like to me, a remake.

Nuclear war and WWIII was a big subject of movies and TV shows in the 1970s and 1980s. There were things like the made-for-TV movie World War III, The Day After, and Threads that approached the subject matter with a bit of gravitas and there were also movies like Hell Comes to Frogtown, Radioactive Dreams and, while not directly about nuclear war, Night of the Comet that approached it in a more silly and fantastical manner.

But in the 1990s, 2000s and much of the 2010s fiction about nuclear war was passé and was mostly replaced with movies and TV series about zombies. However, as we enter a new age of fear of the “bomb,” comes American Horror Story: Apocalypse about just that.

Here, it’s seemingly a normal day in downtown L.A. when unexpectedly alerts begin going out and sirens wail of approaching nuclear doom. What follows is panic and chaos on the streets, but for a select few there are safe havens that exist, safe havens that come with a price.

Other than the costumes, the first episode of American Horror Story: Apocalypse felt like bits of Miracle Mile, The Day the World Ended mixed with the colors and styling of a 1960s Hammer Films production. Which makes me wonder, while I thought the first episode of American Horror Story: Apocalypse was interesting, if the episode is essentially one long “homage” of movies like these that have come before, why not just watch Miracle Mile, The Day the World Ended and virtually any of the Hammer Films from the 1960s instead?

Comics

Star Wars: The Classic Newspaper Comics, Vol. 3

Star Wars: The Classic Newspaper Comics, Vol. 3

A third and final volume of the collection of the Star Wars newspaper comic strips is released this week. This collection covers 1982 to 1984, with the entire run of strips having been published from 1979 to 1984.

The concluding volume that reprints for the first time the classic Star Wars newspaper strip in its complete format. The only edition to include each Sunday page title header and bonus panels in meticulously restored original color. Featuring nine key stories from Star Wars Legends written by Archie Goodwin and illustrated by Al Williamson.

Movies

Captive State movie trailer

What To Watch This Week

The Dark Crystal
The Dark Crystal

Sunday

The Bedford Incident_ The Bedford Incident from 1965 airs this week on Sony Movie Channel. Most of this flick just is okay, but it has one heck of a brilliant ending!

Monday

Mothra Insomniac theater — the Japanese giant monster classic Mothra airs very early Monday morning on TCM.

The Dark Crystal The Jim Henson and Frank Oz fantasy epic The Dark Crystal also airs on Sony Movie Channel this week. I remember being seriously creeped out by this one as a kid.

Tuesday

Sicario: Day of the Soldado Sicario: Day of the Soldado got hammered by the press last summer, though it did decent enough at the box office. It gets released on digital Tuesday.

The Reading & Watch List

Cool Movie & TV Posters of the Week