The best TV series of 2018

I find that it’s really tough to rank TV series in this “best of” list every year. Like I think Better Call Saul and The Haunting of Hill House were my #1 and #2 shows of 2018, but for the rest the order is kind’a arbitrary. There were lots of great shows this year and putting them in any reasonable order is at best guesswork and at worse however I felt the day I was generating this list.

Better Call Saul

I’m honestly surprised that after all these years I still love Better Call Saul on AMC as much as I do. Usually, after a few seasons of a show I start to lose interest but I haven’t so far with this one. I think that’s because Better Call Saul has evolved and changed each season, meaning that what is Better Call Saul in its most recent fourth season is very much different than what it was in its first.

Essentially, Better Call Saul is the story of Jimmy McGill (Bob Odenkirk) and his transformation from being a meek and mild attorney to the infamous cut-throat lawyer to the criminal underworld Saul Goodman. Maybe “transformation” isn’t the best word, maybe a better one would be “descent.” Where Jimmy is a guy who can’t catch a break, as he starts becoming more Saul-like ironically he starts catching loads of breaks and begins making money doing things like selling disposable cell phones to crooks and even getting his law license back by lying and playing the sympathy card.

Crime does pay for Jimmy, even if we as the audience know that the end of the road for Goodman doesn’t lead to a fancy house and lots of riches, it leads to hiding out as a guy named “Gene” a lonely manager of a Cinnabon in Nebraska, on the run and panic stricken constantly looking over his shoulder for a bullet that may never come.

The Haunting of Hill House

The Haunting of Hill House
The Haunting of Hill House

Each year there’s always at least one series a season that surprises me as to how good it is, and that show in 2018 was The Haunting of Hill House on Netflix. This horror series is the stuff of nightmares, and I mean that literally since watching it gave me real nightmares. While most horror shows follow the same tried and true path, there are monsters and they are out to get us, The Haunting of Hill House is quite a bit different. This series about a family set in two time periods, one in the early 1990s where mom, dad and their four kids are trying to flip what turns out to be a haunted house, and modern-day where this family now grown are still dealing with all the ramifications of what happened when they were living at Hill House, and especially what happened the last night they stayed there, is fascinating. Most horror shows rely on the scares first, second and last and while there are a lot of scares in The Haunting of Hill House, see my report about nightmares above, it also has this underlying core of sadness to it.

The family of the 1990s were this not quite perfect but happy together family unit, yet because of what happened to them, and what we find during the course of the show is still happening to them, have splintered and shattered. They’re not quite family anymore and are instead simply “acquaintances.”

And honestly, I don’t know anything scarier than that.

The Terror

What do you think this guy is eating on The Terror?

I never thought there’d be more than one horror series on my best of list yet this year there’s two. The second is another amazing AMC series The Terror about an expedition to the Arctic that went disastrously wrong in the 19th century. This fictionalized telling of a real-life event seems to either be set a night, or the equally scary time of gloaming where the sun has just set casting the world in a weird, mysterious glow. And since this expedition was to the Arctic, a place where the sun is either up for months at a time or set for an equally long period, it means that much of the show is cast in this weird etherial light.

Mr Inbetween

Mr Inbetween
Mr Inbetween

I hadn’t even heard of the FX series Mr Inbetween until I stumbled upon a poster for the show that was set to start airing the next day. I was suspicious at first about a series where the lead guy is a hit-man in Australia who’s got anger management issues since that sounds like something Tony was going through in The Sopranos 20 years ago. But Mr Inbetween is different and I was hooked right from the first scene. Starring and written by Scott Ryan, Mr Inbetween is the rare crime show that has fully fleshed characters, not character archetypes. The stories vary from Ryan’s character Ray Shoesmith trying to help out a friend who’s been beaten and put in the hospital while at the same time trying to keep his new girlfriend in the dark about where he slips off to at night when he goes out to hurt people.

The Expanse

The Expanse
The Expanse

The fourth season of the SyFy series The Expanse continued to deliver in the realm of science fiction in one of the most satisfying sci-fi series on TV these days. Wait, did I say “SyFy!?” Well, SyFy in their infinite wisdom decided to cancel The Expanse shortly before the latest superb season ended. I guess they must’ve needed its time slot for more appropriate sci-fi shows like the reality monster makeup series Face Off. Luckily, Amazon Prime quickly picked up The Expanse for a fifth season which is set to premiere there sometime next year.

Barry

Barry
Barry

The HBO dramety Barry about a depressed hitman (Bill Hader) who dreams of becoming an actor in LA was another surprise this year. Barry can go from hilariously funny to downright scary in the blink of an eye, and I can’t think of any other show that can do that without coming off cheesy. And the way Hader plays Barry, he comes off as a real, troubled guy the audience is rooting for at the start of the show but by the end of the first season might actively be hating because of some of the things he does throughout the episodes.

GLOW

GLOW
GLOW

I’m not quite sure how they do it, but a TV series about women’s wrestling in the 1980s is one of the best things on Netflix right now. Mostly about the behind the scenes lives of the women who star in this show-within-a-show, GLOW chronicles how hard it is to make something, even something as silly as a women’s wrestling show, especially if you were a women in the 1980s.

Black Mirror

Black Mirror
Black Mirror

Black Mirror is one of the most disturbingly accurate shows on these days about what it’s like living in our 21st century where it seems like we’re constantly crashing into the future where people controlling the technology don’t always have our best interests in mind, or even realize the ramifications of what they’re doing, while our world constantly shifts around us and not always for the better.

Little Drummer Girl

Little Drummer Girl
Little Drummer Girl

Another limited series that ran on AMC this TV season was the adaptation of the John Le Carré novel Little Drummer Girl. I totally dig these spy series, especially ones by Le Carré like Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, Smiley’s People and now Little Drummer Girl too. I just wish AMC had given this one a little more time for people to catch it, rather than burning its six episodes off in a three night “event” the week of Thanksgiving.

Direct Beam Comms #128

TV

Barry

The first season of the HBO series Barry ended last week and I’ll come right out and say it — Barry is the best new series of 2018 so far.

About a hitman of the same named played by Bill Hader, the character lives in Cleveland but winds up in Los Angeles to kill a wannabe actor who’s sleeping with a mob bosses wife. When the hit goes wrong and some of the bosses goons try and take out Barry but are gotten the better of, Barry ends up having to stay in L.A. to make up the hit but falls in with an acting class where he realizes he’d rather be an actor than a hit-man, even if he’s a much better hit-man than actor.

Barry
Barry

The tone of Barry is something that I don’t think I’ve seen before on TV, or even in the movies. At times the series is genuinely funny yet at other times it’s terrifying as Barry plies his trade or as others try and ply the same trade on him. The show never pulls its punches when it comes to the violence as it all feels very real, unlike what I would’ve expected Barry to be in what would seem to be a comedy. And the characters too range the gamut from mob underling NoHo (Anthony Carrigan) who’s got a man-crush on Barry but isn’t afraid to use a chainsaw in order to get his bosses way or acting class student Sally (Sarah Goldberg) who’s so self-centered she doesn’t realize how self-centered she is, even if Barry’s in love with her.

All throughout this first season I rooted for Barry. He’s a great, conflicted character who wants to move from his old murderous life but who’s uncle and manager (Stephen Root) won’t quite let him move on. But every time we think we know who Barry is he does something terrible. I don’t want to spoil things but Barry does things in the series that are so reprehensible that in any other show he’d be the bad guy. Barry is able to justify these things by telling himself that it’s all about him extracting himself from being a hit-man. Yet I think that it’s worth remembering that Barry’s a dangerous guy with a set of skills that includes murdering people and covering his tracks.

I almost feel like if Barry goes on a few more seasons, which I really hope it does, I’ll be rooting against Barry as much as I started out rooting for him.

Upfronts

Honestly, this year’s TV Upfronts was one of the most bland in memory. Coming out of the Upfronts last year there were eight network series that I was interested in checking out. This year there’s just three. For the most part, it seems as if the TV networks are going back to the old “standards” of multi-cam sitcoms, cop shows, lawyer shows and medical shows. The stuff that’s dominated TV screens for years now is going to dominate the networks even more in 2018.

The Passage
The Passage

I think the biggest thing to happen at the TV Upfronts actually happened a week before the Upfronts, with two shows Brooklyn Nine-Nine and Last Man Standing switching networks. Nine-Nine was a FOX show but next season will air on NBC and Last Man was cancelled by ABC but has found new life on FOX. This does happen with series from time time to time, the last time I remember it happening with scripted series was when Stargate moved from Showtime to The Sci-Fi Channel. It does make sense for Nine-Nine and Last Man to switch networks since in actuality even though Nine-Nine aired on FOX it was being produced by Universal Television, which is a subsidiary of NBC, and Last Man was being produced by 20th Century Fox. So by those series moving networks means a few more episodes of them for syndication and streaming which would mean a few more bucks for their production companies down the line.

The shows I’m looking forward to are, Roswell, New Mexico on The CW but only because I was a fan of the original Roswell series, Manifest on NBC that looks a whole lot like a take on Lost and the post-apocalyptic vampire drama The Passage on FOX that’s been in development for a few years but will finally make it to TV screens this fall.

And that’s about it. I was interested in checking out the Magnum P.I. reboot on CBS until I saw the trailer where apparently in the world of Thomas Magnum physics are optional, and the Murphy Brown continuation also on CBS looks interesting even if it’s been so long since the last time I’ve seen an episode of that show it feels like a lifetime ago.

I’ve been disappointed before in the past with a lot of the network TV fare and it looks like in 2018 and 2019 I’ll continue to be disappointed.

Movies

Bohemain Rhapsody movie trailer

Mission: Impossible – Fallout trailer

The Reading List

Cool Movie Posters of the Week

Posters of the Week

Direct Beam Comms #121

TV

Barry

I hadn’t heard much about the new HBO series Barry other than it’s been in the works for a few years now which sometimes spells trouble — though this has also happened with other HBO shows like Westworld and that show turned out pretty good. And, luckily enough Barry is pretty good too. In fact I’d go as far to say the first episode was great.

Bill Hader and Sarah Goldberg
Bill Hader and Sarah Goldberg

Bill Hader stars as the title character, an ex-Marine turned hit-man for a family friend named Fuches (Stephen Root). Barry isn’t happy and is suffering from depression, not quite knowing how his life got off the rails going from serving our country in the military one year to murdering people for money the next. On an assignment in L.A. Barry is following a target and winds up accidentally attending an acting class with him. And after doing a scene on stage to their teacher (Henry Winkler) the “acting bug” bites Barry and he knows he wants to spend the rest of his life acting. Even if that’s contrary to his profession as a hit-man that demands anonymity.

I was surprised just how much I enjoyed the first episode of Barry. It’s a show that’s got a lot of heart, Barry comes across as a realistic, damaged person who made a hugely wrong choice in becoming a hit-man. But the show is also very funny too. I went from laughing out loud to cringing at times from the tension on-screen, sometimes in the same scene which I can’t remember doing in the last sitcom I’ve watched.

We live in an era where many TV comedies and dramas are so saccharine they’re totally unreliable. So, for a show like Barry to come along that’s so full of pathos and comedy with characters who don’t feel like they’ve been mass-manufactured at the sitcom factory is a breath of fresh air.

The Crossing

I hate to say this since I don’t want to curse the new ABC series The Crossing which premieres this Monday, but it’s the series that reminds me the most of the classic show Lost in its early days. And I mean that in a good way. At least I think so.

Steve Zahn and Natalie Martinez
Steve Zahn and Natalie Martinez

Steve Zahn stars as Sheriff Ellis who moved to a small Oregon coastal town to try and get away from big-city problems. Ellis is a modern man who’s called away from his yoga class by deputy Rosario (Rick Gomez) to investigate a body washed up on a beach outside of town. What starts off as a simple drowning turns into a massive tragedy when hundreds of bodies all begin washing up simultaneously. A few are alive but most have drowned. These survivors tell a story of coming from several hundred years in our future where there’s a great holocaust of which the only escape from is to slip into the past. Department of Homeland Security official Emma Rea (Sandrine Holt) doesn’t know what to believe. The people didn’t arrive by boat and there was no plane crash but the survivor’s stories are too incredible to believe.

As the government tries keeping a lid on the situation and Sheriff Ellis is cut out of the investigation things turn when one of the refugees reveals something that might bring the threat from the future to our present.

The arrival
The arrival

The Crossing reminds me of Lost in that there’s some mystery as to what’s going on. However, that mystery isn’t where the refugees come from or why they’re here. That’s pretty much spelled out in the first 15 minutes of the first episode which I appreciated a lot. I think if The Crossing had been made ten years ago the entire first season would’ve been, “WHY ARE THE REFUGEES HERE?” The mystery in The Crossing is what exactly is going on in the future, can we stop it from happening and do some of the people from the future want to stop us from trying to stop it. Now that I think of it, The Crossing has a lot of the time travel elements from the 2012 film Looper but not the same plot.

In a lot of ways The Crossing is a stranded sci-fi family series like Lost in Space or Terra Nova. They’re kind’a like colonists or settlers hoping for a better life and have decided our time is the best place for them to land, so to say. I also dug the little sci-fi references hidden in the show. One of the main characters is named “Reece” and another “Leah” — Kyle Reese and Princess Leah anyone?

I really enjoyed The Crossing but it wasn’t perfect, and these little imperfections bothered me in the fact that they might indicate a greater problem with the show that might not be evident one episode in. The biggest problem I had with The Crossing was there’s a big, bad villain in the show who’s obviously the big, bad villain the moment they step on screen. There was no mystery here whatsoever and when something happens at the end of the episode there was no mystery as to what its outcome was going to be either.

Problems like these can add up as the season goes along, but it’s too early to tell if The Crossing is going to be great, good or bad. But still, I’m hoping The Crossing is more Legion than Inhumans.

The Terror

The new ten episode AMC series The Terror debuted last week with the first two episodes. The network has been promoting this show about the real-life 1845 arctic expedition led by Captain John Franklin (Ciarán Hinds) as a horror series. While I liked The Terror, two hours in there wasn’t much to be terrified about in it, though there was loads and loads of atmosphere.

The cast of The Terror
The cast of The Terror

Word of warning — The Terror stars British actors using a wide-variety of accents and 19th century naval slang. Usually accents don’t bother me but I think it was the wide variety as well as the slang that made it so I could only understand every third or fourth word the characters were speaking. Things got so bad I finally gave up on lip-reading and turned on my TV’s closed-caption feature. I think if you’re going to enjoy The Terror you should consider doing this too.

In The Terror, Captain Franklin commands two ships, the HMS Erebus and HMS Terror, and is trying to find the fabled Northwest Passage that would connect the UK directly to the Pacific Ocean. Franklin’s second in command Captain Crozier (Jared Harris) has been to the arctic before and knows its dangers. So when the ships get stuck in the ice and have to spend a freezing winter in the middle of nowhere, he knows their situation is more dire that anyone else suspects. But there’s something else going on here too, a crew member unexpectedly dies and another falls off the mast and disappears into the ocean before the freeze. When one crewman is trying to service the ship he sees a ghostly figure in the water beckoning to him and another is attacked and carried off by a bear… thing, it becomes obvious that things are more dire than even Captain Crozier knows.

The Terror is a bit of H.P. Lovecraft mixed with something along the lines of Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World but it moves at so slow a pace it wouldn’t surprise me that if those with short attention spans don’t bail out of the show after the first episode. Most movies tell a complete story in two hours, in two hours of The Terror I only felt as if the story had just started.

But like I said I liked The Terror and will stick with it until the end. Even if since it’s all based on facts it’s easy to find out what really happened to the crews of the Terror and Erebus, minus, I suspect, what’s up with the bear thing.

Roseanne

More and more classic series like The X-Files and Will and Grace are getting new season orders sometimes decades after the shows originally ended. The latest of which is the ABC show Roseanne which picks up 21 years after the original run of the series ended back in 1997.

The cast of Roseanne 2018
The cast of Roseanne 2018

The only difference between this new and the classic Rosanne is that in the original series it’s revealed that husband Dan (John Goodman) had died at the end of the series. But now and a bit of retcon later Dan’s alive and well — and Roseanne is a better show for it. In the 2018 Roseanne, Darlene’s (Sara Gilbert) back living at home with her two kids, D.J. (Michael Fishman) is a soldier back from the war with a daughter of his own and Becky (Alicia Goranson) is widower working as a waitress.

Times are still tough in the Conner household but now even more so as Roseanne and sister Jackie (Laurie Metcalf) are fighting over politics, Becky is considering taking $50,000 to be a surrogate for another couple’s baby (a hilarious return for Becky #2 Sarah Chalke) and grandson Mark (Ames McNamara) has to deal with bullying in school for how he dresses.

I didn’t expect to like the return of Roseanne as much as I did but I really liked this new/continuation of the series. When so many other ABC sitcoms all follow the same mold these days of having families that feel fabricated where each and every episode ends on a “ahhhhhh, they really love each other” happy ending, Roseanne isn’t afraid to go to the dark places sitcoms used to go to and mine that place for laughs.

I think as long as you’re able to separate out the character of Roseanne Conner from the real-life caustic personality of Roseanne Barr you’ll enjoy this new/old Roseanne as much as I did.

Westworld season 2 TV spot

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sjVqDg32_8s

Comics

Global Frequency: The Deluxe Edtion

Global FrequencyDC is set to release a new collected edition of this now, ULP!, 16 year old series. There’s been talk on and off for years about turning Global Frequency into a TV series, there was even a pilot made a few years ago that never went to series. Maybe this collected edition will light the fire so to say under some producers butt to get a series on the air?

From DC:

Global Frequency is a worldwide rescue organization that offers a last shred of hope when all other options have failed. Manned by 1,001 operatives, the Frequency is made up of experts in fields as diverse as bio-weapon engineering and parkour. Each agent is specifically chosen by Miranda Zero based on proximity, expertise and, in some cases, sheer desperation! Collects the entire 12-issue series!

The Reading & Watch List

Cool Movie Poster of the Week

Avengers Infinity War poster