Showing posts with label Jenji Kohan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jenji Kohan. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 27, 2017

The 1980's Lose Their Glow With Season 1.



The Good: Acting is okay, A few moments of humor
The Bad: Mediocre direction, Dull plot, Unlikable/uninteresting characters/Predictable character arcs
The Basics: Glow Season 1 fails to maintain the viewer's interest.


Netflix usually has a strong record with its television shows, as opposed to its original release films. So, when the streaming service releases a new television series, I have a long habit of binging it right away and reviewing it. As such, it says something that it has taken me so long to get through the first season of Glow. Glow dropped four days ago and its first season consisted of ten (roughly) half-hour episodes. And it took me until today to finish trundling through the season to review it.

Glow is a pretty simple concept for a television show and the fundamental problem with the frequently-boring first season of the show is that it does not get much more complicated than its original set-up, even though it tries through a Lost-esque series of character revelations involving backstories for the main characters. In fact, the more Glow attempts to flesh out its characters, the more it feels like a show we have seen before . . . with better, more interesting, more likable, characters.

Set in the 1980s, Ruth Wilder is an aspiring actress who is very serious about her craft, but who has not had much in the way of work. She loathes the crappy roles being written for women and has trouble getting cast as a result. Ruth is set up to audition for G.L.O.W. - Gorgeous Ladies Of Wrestling and the coked-up director, Sam, cuts her fairly early in the audition process. But, when Ruth goes to assert herself during a training session, her best friend Debbie (a former soap opera actress) comes in and starts a legitimate fight with her in the ring, based upon the fact that Ruth slept with Debbie's husband. That inspires Sam to cast both of them for the project.

Soon, though, Sam's ambitions for a long narrative and compellingly-derived characters for each of the actresses falls prey to the producer's desire to save and make money and just show off women wrestling. So, despite Ruth, Debbie, Cherry, and Arthie having smart ideas for their characters, they are quickly put into little boxes based upon their ethnicity or appearance and they find themselves moving toward doing a pretty generic wrestling show.

The thing is, Glow Season 1 has moments of potential, but it focuses far more on the setting and weird esoteric details instead of the characters. So, for example, in the eighth episode, a decent chunk of time is wasted showing the pregnancy test Ruth takes. We get it; it's the 1980s - pregnancy tests were different then. But we got that the show was set in the 1980s from the soundtrack and blue jeans of the first episode, long before we see the classic Tampax packaging and the drawn out pregnancy test. This robs the episode of the chance to actually develop some of the characters. In the same episode, when Sheila is having a birthday party foisted upon her, Jenny is saddened when she does not have the chance to get Sheila to blow out the candles. The sadness she emotes is presented, but it lacks impact because Jenny has had virtually no presence in the show up until that point.

In a similar fashion, Glow seems to be obsessed with pushing the envelope by showing what can't (traditionally) be shown on television. So, while rejecting that there will ever be a time when two black women wrestle two KKK-outfitted women, Glow Season 1 actually shows that match. Characters use blow, screw, and have affairs and abortions. The problem is, there's a whole "who cares" aspect to the first season of Glow - it plays like a behind-the-scenes soap opera documentary of a sports movie with incredibly narrow appeal.

The death knell of Glow Season 1 is that in a television show with a predominately female cast and most of the protagonists are women doing something that is vaguely covered under the banner of "female empowerment," Marc Maron steals the show. Maron's character of Sam is the director, who wrangles the women and is a smarmy washed up guy, is a variation on his quasi-autobiographical character from Maron. But Marc Maron steals every scene he is in and makes an often dismal show watchable.

Unfortunately, there is not enough Marc Maron, not enough character, not enough cleverness or originality to make the first season of Glow worth watching.

For other works from the 2016 – 2017 television season, please check out my reviews of:
"World Enough And Time" - Doctor Who
"The Return Part 8" - Twin Peaks
Orange Is The New Black - Season 5
House Of Cards - Season 5
The Flash - Season 3
Supergirl - Season 2
Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt - Season 3
Agents Of S.H.I.E.L.D. - Season 4
Sense8 - Season 2
Dear White People - Season 1
Legends Of Tomorrow - Season 2
The Walking Dead - Season 7
Thirteen Reasons Why - Season 1
Grace And Frankie - Season 3
Iron Fist - Season 1
Love - Season 2
Santa Clarita Diet - Season 1
A Series Of Unfortunate Events - Season 1
One Day At A Time - Season 1
Travelers - Season 1
The OA - Season 1
Gilmore Girls: A Year In The Life
"Invasion!" - Arrow
Luke Cage - Season 1
Stranger Things - Season 1

3/10

For other movie reviews, please check out my Film Review Index Page for an organized listing!

© 2017 W.L. Swarts. May not be reprinted without permission.
| | |

Saturday, June 10, 2017

Riot Into Misery: Orange Is The New Black Season 5 Is Utterly Unpleasant.


The Good: Good performances, Good message about the prison-industrial complex
The Bad: Oppressive tone, Almost no real character development, Repetitive psychologically disturbing plots
The Basics: Orange Is The New Black Season Five is flat-out miserable to watch.


For every major Netflix show, I binge the season and review it. Easily the show that my wife has preferred compared to me is Orange Is The New Black. With the release today of Orange Is The New Black Season 5, I was surprised by how late in the day she wanted to begin the season. My wife often suggests that I write shorter reviews for things that warrant it. As I near the end of watching Orange Is The New Black Season 5, I'm convinced that I will actually make her happy with the brevity of my review of the season.

Man, Orange Is The New Black Season 5 is flat-out miserable. There are, perhaps, five laugh-out-loud lines in the thirteen episode season and the dramatic aspects of the fifth season of Orange Is The New Black tread almost entirely toward the horrific. Orange Is The New Black Season 5 is so disturbing that it is hard to make it through once and unfathomable to get excited about watching a second time.

Orange Is The New Black Season Four (reviewed here!) climaxed with a corrupt guard sneaking a gun into Litchfield Minimum Security Prison when Taystee, reacting to Caputo's press conference following the murder of her best friend, instigated a riot. The fourth season ended with Dayanara holding the gun and aiming it at the guard while the rest of the inmates looked on.

Season Five of Orange Is The New Black begins with the resolution of the stand-off. Daya, frazzled, accidentally shoots the guard in his thigh. This sets off a prisonwide riot, which leads the various factions within Litchfield to riot. The guards are taken hostage, the doors are barred, and various key areas of the prison are raided for supplies.

And Orange Is The New Black Season 5 quickly degenerates into torture porn. The show quickly turns away from having any real entertainment value and it loses its sense of social commentary when most of the protagonists leap into becoming villains. The season is an excruciating, humorless, series of prisoners abusing guards, horrible medical emergencies, and tense moments. The ninth episode of the season is a flat-out horror episode, which is the culmination of tension, crazy characters falling apart and absolutely unpleasant moments. While other seasons of Orange Is The New Black have illustrated the problems of the prison-industrial complex and made the prisoners at Litchfield sympathetic and empathetic, by the time a guard gets anally violated by one of the inmates in the fifth season, they have mortgaged all of their relatability.

While the acting in the fifth season of Orange Is The New Black is good, it is not watching the season for it. The make-up effect for Maureen's beaten and now-infected face, a finger getting blown off, shit buckets, a scalping, bloody gunshot wounds, a horrific stroke, and the constant dehumanization of so many characters . . . there is nothing at all pleasant in Orange Is The New Black Season 5. As circumstances escalate within the prison and by random external forces - Gloria's son is hospitalized, for example - Orange Is The New Black becomes increasingly unpleasant to watch.

There's really not more to say about the season than that. The minutiae only details the excruciating nature of the season's actions. Uzo Aduba is guaranteed a Best Actress nomination, if not an outright win, but given that her character of Suzanne is tortured, taken off her medicine, and comes completely unspooled.

Orange Is The New Black Season 5 transforms the dramedy into a horror and it is not worth watching.

For other works from the 2016 – 2017 television season, please check out my reviews of:
"The Return Part 5" - Twin Peaks
"The Pilot" - Doctor Who
House Of Cards - Season 5
Supergirl - Season 2
Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt - Season 3
Agents Of S.H.I.E.L.D. - Season 4
Sense8 - Season 2
Dear White People - Season 1
Legends Of Tomorrow - Season 2
The Walking Dead - Season 7
Thirteen Reasons Why - Season 1
Grace And Frankie - Season 3
Iron Fist - Season 1
Love - Season 2
Santa Clarita Diet - Season 1
A Series Of Unfortunate Events - Season 1
One Day At A Time - Season 1
Travelers - Season 1
The OA - Season 1
Gilmore Girls: A Year In The Life
"Invasion!" - Arrow
"Flashpoint" - The Flash
Luke Cage - Season 1
Stranger Things - Season 1

3/10

For other television reviews, please check out my Television Review Index Page for an organized listing!

© 2017 W.L. Swarts. May not be reprinted without permission.
| | |

Sunday, October 2, 2016

A Worthwhile Theme Is Nailed Home In Orange In The New Black Season 4!


The Good: Wonderful message, Good acting, Good character development
The Bad: Beats the theme to death, Far too many characters to service them all well
The Basics: Orange Is The New Black Season Four expands the cast and illustrates the severe issues with for-profit prison systems in America.


Orange In The New Black is a show that my wife loves and I have watched repeatedly with her. It was fairly surprising to me that I had not yet reviewed the fourth season of the show. Orange In The New Black Season Four aired in June and I've watched it a couple of times now, but I watched it while I was on vacation from blogging. The surprising thing to me about taking so long to review the fourth season of Orange In The New Black is that I enjoyed it so much and it has the most universally-relatable theme of any of the seasons. Instead of following Piper whining, exploring the characters with a very insular war within the prison or dealing with the melodrama of Piper and Alex's on-again/off-again relationship, season four of Orange In The New Black is a belabored exploration of the problems that come with a for-profit prison system.

At times, it means that Orange In The New Black Season Four beats that theme to death and it utilizes characters who were previously insignificant to flesh that out, but it gets the point home.

The fourth season of Orange Is The New Black picks up on the same climactic day that ended the third season (reviewed here!) and it is impossible to discuss the fourth season without referencing where the third season ended. The fourth season of Orange Is The New Black is a theme-driven episode that explores what happens when Caputo gives up on doing right at Litchfield Minimum Security Prison to get laid by another executive and the inmates in his care suffer as a result of it.

Opening with MCC's new batch of inmates arriving at Litchfield on the day that most of the inmates have fled through a hole in the fence, Alex Vause is nearly killed by the guard her former employer has placed in the prison. Rescued by Lolly, Vause survives and has to dispose of the body, which she does in the garden. Caputo brings in a team from the maximum security prison building down the hill to recover the prisoners and he manages to get everyone back. While Litchfield takes in the celebrity Judy King and creates a double-standard for care in order to keep good public relations, Alex works to protect her business interests, which puts her in (metaphorical) business with the new white supremacists. Putting the angry authoritarian Piscatella in charge, Caputo cedes control while letting his current girlfriend railroad him on the projects he wants to initiate in order to make life better for the inmates.

Caputo's big education project is decimated for "vocational training," which has the inmates working to build new dormitories for future inmates. While building the new dorm, the construction crew bulldozes the garden, which exposes the body parts buried there. To protect themselves, Red and Frieda throw Lolly under the bus, which makes Vause feel guilty. Harassed by Burset's ex-wife, Caputo and Sister Ingalls expose the fact that Sophia has been unjustly detained for months. But Caputo's reliance on Piscatella leads to an inmate revolt that has sudden and tragic consequences.

The fourth season of Orange Is The New Black transitions Maria Ruiz and Blanca Flores to the forefront of the narrative and Diaz (Daya's mother) manages to get out. The three characters who had been largely insiginificant eat significantly into the screentime previously devoted to characters like Healy, Warren, and Morello, who are severely diminished in the fourth season. Sophia and Nichols are absent for the bulk of the season and Sister Ingalls is a virtual non-entity. The real surprise is how Flores goes from being - essentially - a one-bit joke in the first season to being a significant character who entirely redirects the momentum of the fourth season.

Orange Is The New Black Season Four also smartly reduces the melodrama between Piper and Alex. Vause is preoccupied with her guilt after killing the would-be assassin she used to work with and Piper is obsessed with saving her business from the third season. There is a blink-and-you-miss-it line that destroys the third season's business and the consequences of that essentially set off a gang war between different ethnic groups in the prison.

All the while the situation in Litchfield is deteriorating, Caputo cedes more authority to Piscatella, which is a tragic mistake. Piscatella asserts authority over the inmates and trusts in the least-competant guards MCC could hire - including a slacker, a lovesick rapist, and a psychopath who abuses inmates. In many ways, Orange Is The New Black Season Four is an exploration of the natural abuses that happen when the corporate bottomline motivates people in the care and service industries and in that way, there is a strong psychological horror component to the season as disparities in care and abuses run rampant in Litchfield.

Orange Is The New Black Season Four continues to flesh out the characters in and associated with Litchfield Minimum Security Prison. The essential characters for the fourth season of Orange Is The New Black are:

Piper Chapman – Having gotten Stella condemned to Max, she finds herself on her own as Alex works out her own issues. She falls in with the White Supremacists, who get into a business war with the Dominicans at Litchfield. After she is branded by her enemies, she returns to Red and her friends to try to take a stand for Litchfield,

Alex Vause - After killing Kubra's assassin, she finds herself in the awkward position of having to trust Lolly. She becomes more isolated in her guilt and only when Nicky returns is she able to confess what she did. She and Piper slowly resume their relationship,

Red – She generally lays low until the body is found in the garden. One of her new bunkmates snores, keeping her awake. Piscatella targets her and begins keeping her awake, making her severely sleep-deprived for him to interrogate. When Nicky returns, she throws her a party and soon thereafter is disappointed that Nicky is using drugs again,

Nicky Nichols – Finally released from max after doing sexual favors for the guards there, she returns and starts using crack again. Her new drug habit allows Alex and Piper to come clean with one another. She decides to quit cold turkey again, which Red does not believe will take,

Flores - When Piscatella asserts dominance over the inmates, she takes a stand for inmates rights and reveals the true extent of her willpower,

Daya – When her mother is released, she falls in with the wrong crowd, who is running drugs through Sophia's old salon,

Suzanne “Crazy Eyes” – Pursued by a crazy inmate who loved her writing, she strives to understand intimacy. She has a violent outburst at the worst possible time,

Poussey – As a big fan of Judy King, she is psyched to be able to hang out with her. She continues to develop a relationship with Soso, despite Soso making some ugly assumptions about her past. She starts to look forward to her post-imprisonment time when Judy offers her a position,

Tasha – "Taystee" becomes Caputo's personal assistant, which makes her privy to all sorts of information before it becomes public knowledge. She also begins to act as Caputo's conscience as things go south in the prison,

Lorna Morello – She starts to become paranoid about her husband spending time with her sister and freaks out. Of all people, Nicky is able to call her b.s. when she returns,

Gloria Mendoza – She becomes guilt-ridden over Sophia's "protective custody" in maximum and works with Sister Ingalls to get her freed. She is charged with looking after Daya after Diaz is released and completely falls down on that front,

Doggett – Mortified by the fact that Ramos is now driving the bus and concerned about her safety (fearing that she might be raped by Coates). Coates's constant attempts to apologize lead her to believe he made a mistake, which puts her at odds with Boo,

Big Boo - Upset that Doggett is willing to forgive her assailant, she works on the dorm project as a way to waste time,

Judy - The celebrity is given a separate quarters upstairs at Lichfield and she brings Yoga Jones on as her non-threatening white roommate. Together, they live in relative luxury, with drugs and screwing Luschek. When videos surface from the 1980s that make her appear racist, she purposely leaks pictures of her and Cindy in order to get better publicity. She starts teaching cooking classes until the program is cut,

Sophia - She is stuck in max where she attempts suicide multiple times while Caputo denies to authorities that she is even there. She is saved by Sister Ingalls, Caputo and a smuggled cameraphone,

Ramos - Now driving the prison bus, she is tormented by a new guard who overhears her and Flaca playing a game and uses it to torture her,

Cindy - Her new Judaism quickly fades, though she has a little battle of wills with the new Muslim inmate who shares her cube. She gets into a faux-relationship with Judy in order to boost her status,

Baxter Bayley - A young, inexperienced guard brought in by Caputo and MCC, he was basically a screw up at the local high school who fell into the job at Litchfield. He is poorly trained and after being used by Piper, he stumbles under Piscatella's control, though he tries to stand with Caputo,

Joe Caputo – Turning effective control over to Piscatella, he starts sleeping with Linda from MCC. He keeps pitching programs that are undermined and reduced. After watching his old ally at MCC rally publicly against the company, he starts turning on MCC, getting Sophia released,

and Sam Healy – Fearing that he is ineffective, he takes Lolly under his wing. But, when he realizes he was completely wrong about the mentally ill woman, he has a nervous breakdown.

In the fourth season of Orange Is The New Black, the acting is quite honed. Blair Brown joins the cast and fits in effortlessly with the established cast. Nick Sandow continue to take the role of Caputo to new emotional depths, illustrating greater emotional range as an actor. But, despite the billing, it is Samira Wiley who steals every scene she is in of the fourth season. Wiley's Poussey is given so much more depth and character in the fourth season of Orange Is The New Black.

Ultimately, season four of Orange Is The New Black continues to illustrate growth on all fronts as the series manages to effectively redefine itself.

For other works from the 2015 – 2016 television season, please check out my reviews of:
The Flash - Season 2
Game Of Thrones - Season 6
Grace And Frankie - Season 2
Agents Of S.H.I.E.L.D. - Season 3
The Walking Dead - Season 6
Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt - Season 2
Legends Of Tomorrow - Season 1
Jessica Jones - Season 1
Daredevil - Season 2
House Of Cards - Season 4
Doctor Who - Season 9

8/10

For other television reviews, please check out my Television Review Index Page for an organized listing!

© 2016 W.L. Swarts. May not be reprinted without permission.
| | |

Monday, June 22, 2015

Communities, Characters, And Businesses Rule Orange Is The New Black Season Three!


The Good: Decent character development, Good performances, Moments of message
The Bad: Light on plot
The Basics: In its third season, Orange Is The New Black develops the characters without doing much more around Litchfield's minimum security women's prison.


Third seasons are an interesting turning point for most long-running television series'. Outside the random show that gets cancelled after having a rockin' third season - Happy Endings (third season reviewed here!) I'm looking at you! - third seasons seem to be where most television shows actually hit their stride, even if they involve a little bit of retuning. In the third season of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine (reviewed here!), the space station-based science fiction show got a starship and a more tightly serialized plot; in the third season of Lost (reviewed here!), the other occupants of the island were explored and two random new passengers from Oceanic 815 were thrown into the cast; Orange Is The New Black has a similarly transformative third season.

The third season of Orange Is The New Black picks up a short time after the second season (reviewed here!) and it is impossible to discuss the third season without some (generally minor) spoilers from the prior season. The second season of Orange Is The New Black is essentially a war story; the third season redirects from the tightly serialized plot and belabors the characters who are residents in Litchfield Women's Prison. After a season with a well-developed plot and characters who had shifting allegiances, the third season of Orange Is The New Black minimizes the plot and focuses on character backstories and building the relationships between the characters.

It is, arguably, the best season of the show so far.

Orange Is The New Black is essential on the plot-front for key elements like a new company taking over the management of Litchfield, the return of Alex Vause, and Dayanara having her baby. Beyond that, all of the essential elements of the third season are character-based, character-focused moments and movements. The show, in its third season, focuses on relationships and the effects of business. Instead of having dramatic plot turns, people in the third season form and react to communities and enterprises and the change in pace has the effect of making viewers care more about the characters they have known for the two prior years. Just as with the second season, the third season of Orange Is The New Black plugs ahead without maintaining a focus on characters who have been previously established (Alex Vause gets an episode flush with flashbacks, whereas Piper Chapman does not) and there are two episodes that actually feature flashbacks for multiple characters (on my second viewing of the season, I watched like a hawk, but there are still no "easter eggs" wherein one inmate's backstory has other Litchfield characters peppered in!) instead of maintaining a tight focus on a single character.

On the plot front, the season opens with Doggett driving the new prison van as Mother's Day approaches. With most of the inmates preparing to be visited by their children for the day, Piper and Alex reconnect as Red, too, returns to general population. In the wake of Figueroa's embezzlement and dismissal, Caputo finds it difficult to keep the prison financially viable. While his solution is to get rid of prisoners through early release, the savings he generates are soon eaten up when he has to replace all the mattresses, thanks to one of the children bringing bedbugs into the prison. The financial crisis escalates until Caputo has to turn to a private company, Management And Correction Corporation, to take over the management of Litchfield.

The reign of MCC is fraught with problems: the guards are off-put by being cut down to part-time and losing their benefits, Caputo finds himself working for the son of MCC's director and trying to re-find his footing in the new corporate structure, and the inmates are turned on one another for a job at the prison that pays $1/hour. While a cult forms around the usually-mute Norma, Piper exploits the new business (the prisoners are tasked with making underwear for a company analogous to Victoria's Secret) to start an enterprise of her own. Piper and Alex manipulate one of the new MCC guards into exporting panties from the prisoners for Piper's brother to sell online. With the prison panty business growing, tensions begin to rise between Piper and her workers (the other prisoners), while Piper and Alex's relationship hits a rough spot. While Piper is tempted by Stella, Alex believes she is being hunted by Kubra within the prison, which leads to Piper not being there for Alex when her girlfriend needs her most!

The longer the third season of Orange Is The New Black went on, the more I began to think about Vicky Jeudy. Jeudy plays Watson and my mind drifting continually to her probably because I was watching most of the third season while stationed at a table next to Denise Crosby at a Star Trek convention the weekend it made its debut. Crosby is famous for leaving Star Trek: The Next Generation in its first season (reviewed here!), ostensibly for having so many episodes in the early first season that were focused on her character Tasha Yar. As the season progressed, the writers had to focus on other characters and Crosby felt a bit of bait and switch (many of her mid-season episodes had Tasha Yar simply saying "hailing frequencies open"). In the first season of Orange Is The New Black (reviewed here!), Watson was one of the most significant characters. Jeudy had a very minor part in the second season's war within the prison (one has to wonder if Jeudy was disappointed that her character, Watson, who had real integrity bought into Vee's cult from the moment Vee had cake brought to her!) and in the third season, Watson is a virtual non-entity. Watson has one snarky utterance and a single flashback that does virtually nothing to enhance her character. Such is the nature, it seems, of Orange Is The New Black; characters important in one season are usurped by characters that were virtual non-entities in the prior seasons. The third season of Orange Is The New Black is very much Jeudy's "hailing frequencies open" season; viewers will have to wait a year to see if that is enough to make Jeudy jump ship.

As Waston continues her descent into utter anonymity and Sister Ingalls joins her on the road to being a forgotten member of the ensemble, Norma, Marisol ("Flaca"), Doggett, Cindy, and Boo continue their ascent to the forefront of the narrative. While Stella leaps into the narrative for the latter half of the season, Susan, Tasha ("Taystee"), Poussey, Gloria, and Sophia vie to maintain the airtime and storyline attention they built in the prior season. Arguably, only Red and Healy have the same level of attention in the third season as they did in the prior two.

Because of its lack of a strong story for its third season, Orange Is The New Black is obsessed with characters in its third season. The essential characters for the third season of Orange Is The New Black are:

Piper Chapman – Passing the midpoint of her imprisonment at Litchfield, she reconnects with Alex. Alex's return to Litchfield is accompanied soon after by Piper confessing her involvement in her return. Soon, she declares Alex her girlfriend and the two begin an honest, loving portion of their relationship. When Piper goes to work for the lingerie company brought in by MCC, she discovers how much material they waste and repurposes it to making extra panties of her own. But as her business begins to take off, she starts to trust Stella and distance herself from Alex,

Alex Vause - Back in prison after betraying Piper in Chicago and flipping on Kubra, she becomes convinced that Kubra will send someone to kill her. She becomes instantly suspicious of Lolly, who arrives shortly after MCC takes over and seems to be performing surveillance on her. She becomes increasingly paranoid,

Red – Returning to the prison wounded and soon learning her husband has destroyed her business on the outside, she befriends Healy (though Gloria is convinced she is just playing an angle). With MCC's takeover, she manages to get back in the kitchen, where she finds herself unable to bully Norma. She starts at the bottom, but when Gloria freaks out, she is a positive alternative for Caputo to choose. She spends most of the rest of the season telling inmates that the crap MCC is serving is not representative of her cooking . . . though she does manage to execute one awesome meal, thanks to the garden the seniors have,

Nicky Nichols – After working with Boo to try to get rid of the heroin Vee left behind, she finds herself tempted by it. She tries to enlist Luschek to export the drugs . . . with disastrous consequences for her,

Daya – Her pregnancy progressing, she is alarmed when Bennett flees his post. When Pornstache's mother pops up and she learns her own mother is extorting her, Dayanara begins to debate whether to keep the baby or give it over to Mendez's mother. She finds herself in conflict her mother and her own conscience,

Suzanne “Crazy Eyes” – Mourning the disappearance of Vee (and believing she is still alive), she becomes a handful for Tasha. When a new prison counselor comes into Litchfield, she begins to express herself creatively. That leads to her writing a serialized sex-filled book that has a number of the inmates obsessed,

Leanne – Her past is revealed as she begins to organize a religion around Norma. She finds herself bullying Brook Soso and basically filling the niche Pennsatucky once had,

Poussey – Still wrestling with feelings for Tasha, she finds herself listing . . . especially after the bedbugs lead to the destruction of the prison library. She keeps getting drunk to avoid the pain of facing a life without a romantic partner. Initially interested in the cult forming around Norma, she rejects the hive mind when Leanne organizes the group and start treating Brook poorly,

Tasha – "Taystee" is convinced Vee is dead (how no one traced the course from Litchfield to the quarry where Rosa crashed the truck and found Vee's body along the way is a pretty major plothole in the season) and struggles to move on. She slowly grows into the role of new denmother for the black women at Litchfield, especially working to keep Suzanne in line and out of psych,

Lorna Morello – More and more unhinged, especially after Nicky is taken away, she starts corresponding with various men to get money for her commissary account. But her scam quickly turns into genuine affection for one of the men who visits her (arguably because he goes and beats up Christopher for her),

Gloria Mendoza – Running the kitchen leaves her too busy to pay attention to her son on his occasional visits. After worrying that he will become a thug, she works out an arrangement with Sophia so Sophia's wife will bring him to Litchfield on visits. That soon leads to conflict when Michael is a bad influence on her son and she loses her position running the kitchen trying to spend time with her son. Complaining to Daya's mother leads to a hate crime against Sophia for which Gloria feels guilt, but fails to do anything about,

Doggett – Her backstory is more thoroughly revealed and the tragedy of her white trash upbringing is mirrored in the way a new guard begins to use her. She and Boo continue their unlikely friendship and when the new guard assaults her, they work together to get revenge,

Big Boo - After working with Nicky to make money off the prison's drug stockpile, she and Doggett hang out more and more. She tries to use Doggett's religious extremist community to make money for her own commissary account before returning to her roots. She supports Doggett during her flirtations with a new guard - especially because it gets her doughnuts, but quickly recognizes when things turn in that relationship. She orchestrates a revenge plan with Doggett and is incredibly compassionate to her unlikely friend,

Norma - Still silent in the prison, her backstory is revealed as that of a cult member for a charismatic hippie. She tries to do nice things for people and, in the wake of the Spanish magic that she and Gloria believe led to Vee's disappearance, comes to believe she has special powers. Attempting to bring miracles to the prison leads to others to try to build a religion around her, which she seems mostly okay with,

Sophia - Worried that Gloria's son is a bad influence on Michael soon turns problematic when Michael acts out and acts violently against other children. She sits out most of the season until the situation with Gloria escalates and she tries to break up Michael and Gloria's son, much to Gloria's anger. Attacked by Gloria's allies, she turns to the only person she still considers a friend,

Marisol - "Flaca" is given a backstory wherein she avoids her mother's sewing business and cranks out fake drugs until she is caught. She ends up working alongside Piper in the new sewing job. Frustrated by that, when she realizes how much money Piper is making on the outside, she organizes the labor for better terms,

Cindy - Taking a cue from Lolly, she begins getting the Kosher meals when the food at Litchfield gets terrible. Her scam is soon caught, but she decides that Judaism is actually for her and she moves to convert,

Stella - An inmate who is suddenly noticed by Piper, she expresses interest in Piper, though her intent is not immediately clear,

Joe Caputo – Trying to be a good guy, he sells out the prison to try to save the jobs of the guards who are complaining when it becomes apparent the prison will close. He hatefucks Figueroa and helps to organize the guards when MCC breaks up their union. Tired of being constantly beaten down while trying to do the right thing, he takes advice from an unlikely source after Sophia is put in protective custody,

and Sam Healy – Still struggling with his mail-order bride, he begins to bond with Red. As his marriage falls apart, he starts to do nice things for Red. He is frustrated when a new counselor moves in on his turf and other inmates, like Soso, tell him how bad he is at his job.

Orange Is The New Black continues to have excellent performances in its third season, especially from new players (in this work) Mary Steenburgen (Delia Powell, Pornstache's mother) and Ruby Rose (Stella). The real winners on the acting front in the third season of Orange Is The New Black are Taryn Manning (Doggett) and Lea DeLaria. Manning's Doggett is given an expanded role which makes her incredibly sympathetic. But the writing that does that would be nothing without Manning's performance. Manning makes Doggett's powerful scenes entirely heartbreaking, from tears to dead-eyed expressions at horrible moments, Manning illustrates wonderful range in the third season.

Lea DeLaria plays Boo and in the third season she has the chance to explore her character's character more. What DeLaria does very well in the third season is take a character who was reliable for edgy lines in prior seasons and makes her into a viable person. Boo is furious when Doggett is taken advantage of (my muted terminology is only for minimizing spoilers!) and DeLaria plays the role of "big sister" to Doggett with the right balance of aggression and compassion. It's a fine line and DeLaria walks it with impressive ability.

Ultimately, the third season of Orange Is The New Black leads to a surprising place that puts all the actors (not characters) in jeopardy, but makes for an astonishingly solid season that deepens the characters trapped in Litchfield prison . . . even if very little occurs within the season.

For other works from the 2014 – 2015 television season, please check out my reviews of:
Sense8 - Season 1
Grace And Frankie - Season 1
Agent Carter - Season 1
Daredevil - Season 1
The Newsroom - Season 3
House Of Cards - Season 3
Doctor Who - Season 8
True Blood - Season 7
”Shadows” - Agents Of S.H.I.E.L.D.
”City Of Heroes” - The Flash

7.5/10

For other television reviews, please check out my Television Review Index Page for an organized listing!

© 2015 W.L. Swarts. May not be reprinted without permission.
| | |

Sunday, June 8, 2014

War In The Women’s Prison: Orange Is The New Black Season Two Increases The Conflict!


The Good: Some surprisingly good performances, Good plot and character development
The Bad: Some unfortunate plot/character twists, New characters are overbearing
The Basics: Orange Is The New Black returns with new characters that shift the balance of the story for most of the second season . . . effectively.


Netflix shows this year seem to be all about conflict. I know, all great stories have conflict. But the big Netflix shows seem to be going for strategy and a sense of warfare. Earlier this year, House Of Cards Season Two (reviewed here!) was essentially an extended chess match that felt like war was breaking out in the American political story the show portrayed. This weekend’s big television release is Netflix’s Orange Is The New Black Season Two and it is very much a story that feels like the build-up to an all out war, even as it is set within a women’s prison. The thirteen episode second season of Orange Is The New Black has a very similar plot format to the first season, but it has a reshuffling of characters that actually makes the second season superior to the first.

Orange Is The New Black Season Two continues the story of Piper Chapman and the inmates and administrative personnel of Litchfield Women’s Prison in New York State. The show continues the story that was begun in the first season (reviewed here!), but it is not driven by Piper Chapman in the way the first season was. Stripped of much of the character melodrama that dominated the first season, the second season has a very different dynamic and throughout the season, there is a growing sense of menace and politics that works well in the show’s favor. Some of the changes that come in the second season of Orange Is The New Black were necessary based on the show’s losses of Miss Claudette, Pornstache and Alex Vause (for most of the season). The new characters that replace them force the show away from a character-centered melodrama into a more political and warlike show.

A month after Piper was attacked by Doggett, Piper is taken out of solitary confinement. Abruptly put on a plane that takes her – and all sorts of other prisoners (including men) – to Chicago. Shocked at the shuffle, Piper faces a horrible new existence until she sees Alex in the Federal penitentiary. Called as a witness in the case against the drug dealer that she and Alex once worked for, Piper calls Larry’s father to act as her lawyer and is advised to tell the truth about all she knows. When Alex tugs on her heartstrings, she lies under oath for her.

Back at Litchfield, the prisoners participate in a Mock Job Fair. The Mock Job Fair pits the Black and Latina inmates against one another when Taystee and Flaca go head to head in the mock interview. When Taystee’s “mentor” Vee gets locked back up, the status quo is further disturbed. Piper’s return to Litchfield comes shortly after Doggett is returned and is given new teeth. Vee manipulates the black prisoners to join her and she begins a new contraband business. Pushing against Red and Gloria, the manipulative Vee meets resistance from Poussey. As the conflict between Vee and her enemies leads to heightened tensions in the penitentiary, Chapman takes control of her circumstances as best she can. When she is granted a furlough when her grandmother falls critically ill, she is ostracized by her peers and learns that Larry had sex with someone she knew. With the guards being given a shot (write-up) quota, tensions rise and lead the players in power to fight for control of Litchfield.

Peppered throughout the second season of Orange Is The New Black are subplots involving Larry, the ex-fiance of Piper, a reporter’s quest to expose wrongs at Litchfield (and using Piper to do so), and recurring drama from the first season involving Daya and her pregnancy. Given how many characters there are in the mix in Orange Is The New Black, none of the first season characters are featured in flashbacks, save Red and Alex. For those unfamiliar with the first season of Orange Is The New Black, the second season follows a similar plot format, which was very much a mirror of Lost (reviewed here!). Each episode features a serialized plotline that continues the plotline of the tensions and conflicts growing at Litchfield Correctional Facility while fleshing out a character per episode with flashbacks that illustrate either backstory that shows how the featured character ended up in prison or plays a theme in flashbacks that mirrors the current plotline.

Throughout the season, Vee is built up as the show’s primary antagonist and as the season moves towards its climax, there is the feeling that the season will end with at least one assassination. There is a wonderful sense as the season progresses that the third season would include the resolution to a mystery of “who killed Vee?” That tension and the fact that so many people have motive to move against Vee moves the latter half of the season along at a rocket pace. As a political protest within the prison walls goes awry, one of the least-recognizable characters from the first season steps up to try to make actual and real change for the inmates of Litchfield.

Orange Is The New Black keeps a strong character mix for its second season. The primary characters for the second season include:

Piper Chapman – After an abrupt move out of Solitary Confinement, she lies under oath in order to try to show loyalty to Alex. When that backfires on her, she is returned to Litchfield. There, she is cold to the new inmate, a political activist (Brooke Soso) who she recognizes as weak. Working to get her possessions back (no one thought she would be returning), she is told by Suzanne what actually happened the night she was attacked by Pennsatuckey. Her strength is not compromised by her return to Litchfield, though she is shaken to learn that her grandmother is ill. When she makes peace with Healy, he helps her get furlough and in the wake of learning that Larry slept with her best friend, she breaks down and gets in contact with Alex again. In retribution to her digging into irregularities at Litchfield, Figueroa threatens to have her transferred. When her digging draws Healy’s attention, she starts a prison newsletter,

Larry Bloom – Very much a background character this season, he adapts to the fallout between him and Piper by getting involved with Piper’s best friend’s family. After having an affair with her, he finds himself unable to see Piper romantically,

Red – Having lost all of her power, she joins the company of the senior citizen inmates. When she discovers a grate in the abandoned greenhouse at the prison, she devises a new plan to smuggle contraband into the prison. An old adversary of Vee, Vee’s return to Litchfield gives her the impetus to regain her strength. She sets about to organizing her old family and playing Gloria against Vee. Having lost her influence, she is forced to accept Piper as a new roommate. While she is terrified that Vee will kill her, she is fearless in trying to protect her prison family and her family on the outside,

Nicky Nichols – She gets into a contest with Boo for who can have sex with the most (and highest point) inmates. She is tempted by Vee’s minions when they start smuggling heroin into the prison. She manages to find strength and chooses her side late in the game,

Daya – As her pregnancy continues, her peers in the Latina community start extorting Bennett to get contraband. For her part, she uses her former lover for prenatal vitamins and sex when the hormones hit her,

Suzanne “Crazy Eyes” – Having inadvertently rescued Piper from her own worst elements (and killing Doggett in a blind rage), she quickly falls under the spell of Vee. She begins to act as Vee’s enforcer, especially when it comes to driving a wedge between Taystee and Poussey. This season she is more violent and virtually impossible to empathize with,

Leanne – Out from the influence of Doggett, she asserts herself. She joins Soso’s “revolution,” but for ridiculous reasons,

Poussey – Incredibly strong, she is enamored with Taystee, but understands her best friend does not lean the same way. She fights Vee’s influence from the moment she arrives and resists “the business” that Vee starts up,

Taystee – A former worker for Vee, she falls in with her former “mother” when Vee arrives in Litchfield. She becomes Vee’s saleswoman on the inside and pushes her best friend, Poussey, away,

Lorna Morello – One of the most grounded characters in season one, it turns out that she is an obsessive stalker of a like mind with Suzanne. She has a brief escape when she learns Christopher is getting married to someone else on “their” date,

Gloria Mendoza – Now in charge of the kitchen, she becomes a serious player in the conflict between Red and Vee. When she realizes Vee has played her, she helps Red out occasionally,

Doggett – A month after attacking Piper, she gets out of solitary confinement. With Healy’s help, she gets new teeth. Very much minimized this season, she becomes a “project” for Healy, though she finds herself without a flock,

Vee – Truly a viper, she is a drug smuggler who extorts, murders and manipulates. She takes Suzanne on as a lieutenant and is willing to sell her out when the need serves her. She knew Red back in the day and works to cut into her market share of prison contraband now and in the past. She smuggles in tobacco in order to create a new business. She goes head to head with Red and manages to manipulate Red and Taystee effectively,

Natalie Figueroa – The prison administrator, he husband is running for State Senate. She embezzles for him and soon her budget misappropriations come back to haunt her,

Joe Caputo – One of the good guys, he actually fights for the women at Litchfield. He is sympathetic to the imprisoned nun who joins the hunger strike even to her own health detriment. He plays bass in a band and his crush on one of the guards at Litchfield ends abruptly when he has to crack down on his staff. He becomes an unexpected ally to Piper,

John Bennett – Is extorted by the Latinas when they threaten to expose him for getting Daya pregnant. He smuggles some contraband in in his prosthetic leg until he stands up to his extorters,

and Sam Healy – To protect himself from his leaving Piper in the yard to be killed by Doggett, he gets Doggett new teeth. When he gets himself therapy for how his mail order bride treats him, he starts to channel his new piece of mind into the prison. He starts a Safe Place program with Doggett in order to try to get the women in the prison therapy.

Orange Is The New Black is better in its second season than in its first. Because the show is not as focused on Piper and her weird tug back and forth between Alex and Larry, the complexities of the prison life are more thoroughly explored. The show is generally smart, though some of the “surprising” conceits are anything but. While Orange Is The New Black seems clever with things like the wedding that occurs while Piper is on furlough, 30 Rock beat Orange Is The New Black to the punch with the exact same plot development in its final season (reviewed here!).

One of the other, perhaps more significant, detractions to the second season of Orange Is The New Black is way the characters are prioritized for focus in individual episodes. Outside of Red and Piper, none of the characters who received backstory treatment in the first season are given extended stories in the second. Unlike Lost, which had a similarly large character mix (and format for presenting backstories), the thirteen episode season is not as extensive as the twenty-two episodes of the usual season of Lost. As a result, several of the interesting characters from Season One - most notably Sophia - are neglected and relegated completely to background status in Season Two. While it is cool to get the backstory of characters neglected from the first season - like Gloria, Morello, and the nun - the fleshing out of those characters comes at the price of deepening further the already-established characters. In that way, the Lost analogy becomes quite compelling; the stories in the second season of Orange Is The New Black are analogous to only learning how Sun learned English or how Sawyer came to write the letter he carries in Lost (without, for example, further learning how Sawyer witlessly killed the shrimp shack owner or conned the widow or ended up in prison, etc.). For sure, there is plenty of fodder for future seasons, but the show neglects several of the promising established characters in favor of a short premium cable-style season (which is disappointing).

The second season of Orange Is The New Black is both more poignant and funnier than the first season. Fleshing out the characters – especially the peripheral ones – generates a number of laughs as well as some of the best dramatic moments. Most of the performances are familiar from the first season. Taylor Schilling is able to play Piper as a stronger individual than in the first season, which gives her the appearance of more range, though she is not given the opportunity to flex those acting muscles as much as one might expect.

The season’s two standout performances are from Kate Mulgrew and Michael Harney. Mulgrew is given more exposure in the second season of Orange Is The New Black as Red. As both the new roommate of the series’ protagonist and the adversary of the season’s primary villain, Mulgrew is given much more airtime than in the first season. Her role requires her to play Red as both contrite, alone and then as a scheming individual who wants her influence and family back. As Red becomes more of a leader again, Mulgrew is able to bring out a maternal quality that she seldom gets to tap into in her popular roles. She has the ability to express powerful emotions with only a twitch of her cheeks and the best directors in season two of Orange Is The New Black manage to capture that!

Michael Harney is brilliant as Healy. There is a great moment at the season’s midpoint when Harney proves himself as Healy has he preaches to Piper. That moment allows Harney to present a depth of compassion with his voice and eyes that is exceptional.

Even without seeing the first season, Orange Is The New Black holds up as (mostly) compelling television in its second season. The case that prison conditions are deplorable is somewhat overstated, but the characters are compelling enough to be watchable and the series is set up for an incredible third season!

For other works with Taylor Schilling, please visit my reviews of:
Stay
Argo
The Lucky One

6.5/10

For other television reviews, please check out my Television Review Index Page for an organized listing!

© 2014 W.L. Swarts. May not be reprinted without permission.
| | |

Sunday, May 25, 2014

Rapidly Diminishing Returns: Why Weeds Isn’t Worth It!


The Good: Moments of character, Moments of humor
The Bad: Repetitive, Terrible protagonist, Ridiculous plot
The Basics: In a story that does little more than prove that enough is never enough, Weeds (the complete series) wears out its welcome long before all eight seasons are viewed.


There are few television series’s that I continued with based on inertia alone the way I did with Weeds. Weeds is a 102 episode (roughly a half hour each) television series that has an immediately original concept that is quickly milked to death and then extended for about six more seasons. The show, which aired on Showtime, won awards for the acting of Mary-Louise Parker (for no discernable reason that I can find given how poorly she acts and differentiates her character of Nancy Botwin from, for example, her character of Amy Gardner on The West Wing, reviewed here!) and writing (from series creator Jenji Kohan), but otherwise was a frequently-nominated strike out for comedy on the awards circuit. The thing is, outside the premium cable amount of drugs and nudity presented, Weeds has shockingly little going for it and that is never more clear than when one sits down and watches Weeds The Complete Series.

The full-series boxed set has all of the content of the previously released DVD (or Blu-Ray) sets of:
Season 1
Season 2
Season 3
Season 4
Season 5
Season 6
Season 7
and Season 8.

While I usually do an intensive analysis of a television series’s plot and characters, I find that with Weeds, I am unable to muster up the enthusiasm. What is the show about? Nancy Botwin and her family and the people she uses. Who is Nancy Botwin? Nancy Botwin is a high-functioning sociopath whose husband dies in the series premiere. Botwin and her two children live in Agrestic, a gated community for the wealthy and privileged. When her husband dies, Nancy is forced to acknowledge that she has no marketable skills and so in order to maintain her standard of living, she becomes a pot dealer in the suburbs.

What follows is the story of Nancy Botwin and her descent into crime. Nancy, accompanied by her brother-in-law who lusts after her, her two children and various sidekicks dimwitted (Doug and Dean) and treacherous (Heylia and Celia) gets into trouble with rival dealers and suppliers, local law enforcement and the DEA. She gets out of her troubles by lying to, having sex with or marrying her adversaries when simply setting her enemies against one another or burning a place to the ground does not work. And then she runs away. Dragging her family, Doug, and whichever other lackey is around at the time with her, Nancy relocates to San Diego, Dearborn (Michigan), New York City and Connecticut over the course of the series. So, Weeds is a simple idea relocated repeatedly in an attempt to stay fresh, but utterly failing after its first two seasons to engage the viewers sufficiently to be worth the investment of time and money.

What is so bad about Nancy Botwin? Nancy shows no real regard for anyone in her life. She uses her children as an excuse to do horrible things and she is willing to turn on even her kids when the situation calls for it. In fact, outside protecting her son Shane from a murder charge after he kills a woman in defense of Nancy, Nancy shows no real regard for even her children (whom she claims to be doing everything for). Moreover, Nancy drags Andy around and constantly uses him, even after she learns that he is hopelessly in love with her. She has no qualms about using his love for her to get what she wants from him and then abandoning or betraying him. She is, literally, a sociopath the way she betrays everyone with her single-minded focus on her own survival. As a result, she is neither an empathetic character, nor one who is particularly enjoyable to watch.

What is so bad about Weeds then? In addition to having a pretty lousy protagonist, Weeds has a disturbingly limited concept that makes no real sense. Nancy Botwin is faced with a big financial crisis, like millions of Americans are every day. She makes a bad initial choice, which is to stay in Agrestic and become a pot dealer. The thing is, America is huge and there are plenty of places she could move (one garage sale would have given her more than enough money to move to a place with a lower cost-of-living) and get a job to make ends meet. So, the show starts off with a lousy decision . . .

. . . and then it just keeps making the same bad decision over and over again. There are several times in the course of Weeds where Nancy Botwin gets ahead: she is not just scraping by, she has more than enough to keep her and her family provided for for the foreseeable future. And she never quits while she is ahead. Instead, she gets into increasingly preposterous situations that force her and her family into worse (usually life-threatening) situations. And she never learns. Weeds sucks because Nancy Botwin is horrible, short-sighted, and remarkably stupid for a drug-peddling mother and she is surrounded by idiots who continue to let her use them over and over again. And the ones who manage to escape the dark cloud of Nancy’s influence . . . invariably return to her, even after they can acknowledge how abysmal she actually is!

Outside Mary-Louise Parker, the acting in Weeds is good. Justin Kirk, especially, is impressive with an uncommon amount of range and depth as Andy Botwin. Young actors Hunter Parrish (Silas Botwin), Alexander Gould (Shane Botwin) and Allie Grant (Isabelle Hodes) all grow up over the course of the eight-season series and illustrate an incredible amount of talent and performance ability, even when their characters are emotionally stunted. Like Mary-Louise Parker consistently hitting on only one note, Kevin Nealon plays Doug Wilson with a constant goofy quality one expects from anyone who saw him perform on Saturday Night Live in the 1980s or 1990s.

The end result is a simple analysis for a simple show: Weeds is not clever, not particularly original after the set-up and not enduringly great in any way, shape, or form. That makes it easy to pass up and not worth adding to one’s permanent library.

For other shows that premiered on Showtime, please visit my reviews of:
Dexter - Season 1
The L Word
Dead Like Me
Jeremiah - Season 1
An American Crime

2.5/10

For other television reviews, please visit my Television Review Index Page for an organized listing!

© 2014 W.L. Swarts. May not be reprinted without permission.
| | |

Sunday, January 12, 2014

An Unremarkable End Comes To Weeds With Season Eight!


The Good: Moments of character, Sense of resolution to the story
The Bad: Repetitive, No great performances, Lousy resolution for most characters
The Basics: Weeds ends its run with a thirteen-episode season that unremarkably repositions the characters from the Botwin family.


Perhaps the irony of the final – eighth – season of Weeds is that long before the final (two-part) episode, “It’s Time” comes up, it is clear that it is well past time for the show to have ended. The final season of Weeds is packed with political messages and innuendo, but on the character front, it wanders in much the same way virtually every other season has; the protagonist of the show, Nancy Botwin, does what she can to pay her bills legitimately, but lacking any real life experience that is marketable, she ends up falling back into the crime-filled lifestyle of a pot dealer. Long before the season takes a turn back to having Nancy’s usual character reassert itself, the formulaic nature of the show is evident and executive producer and head writer Jenji Kohan does not disappoint (or surprise).

In fact, the final season of Weeds, which picks up with the moment that the seventh season (reviewed here!) unremarkably ended, starts with a lack of surprises and plods along in a repetitive and familiar way for most of the twelve episodes (the final episode is a double-long series finale, so there are technically thirteen episodes in the DVD boxed set). The plot device which concluded the seventh season and seemed to force Showtime to produce an eighth season was a shooting that was so unsurprising that it is laughable that the producers tried to create any doubt as to who the target of the shooting was. At the end of the season - and the series – the show leaps ahead seven years and the device works well only so long as one forgets how the prior seven seasons have gone; the entire series finale is predicated on the concept that the Botwin family, which has spent almost a decade on the run, moving constantly, and getting into more trouble than was ever truly worth it, remained uncharacteristically stable in the seven year gap in order to establish the business empire they have at the climax of the series. More than any other conceit in the series, this might well be the most preposterous.

When the inauguration of the new Botwin family compound in Connecticut is interrupted by Nancy getting shot in the head, the brief family peace is broken. While Shane starts hunting for the shooter, Andy has sex with Nancy’s sister and meets with the hospital chaplain for an intriguing conversation. After seventy-seven days in the hospital, Nancy is conscious and has racked up a bill of almost half a million dollars. After leaving the hospital, Silas sets up with a new pot grower and Shane hunts down the guy who shot Nancy. Nancy decides to have Kiku buy her out.

As Nancy begins swimming therapy in her neighbor’s, Rabbi Dave, pool at night, she begins to divest herself of the pot business and becomes committed to helping people. That takes the form of actively resisting people like Kiku – who pays her off in product – and busting a drug-dispensing clown at the hospital. When Nancy and Silas both start working legitimately for a pharmaceutical company, Nancy once again proves she’ll do anything to sell and Silas finds happiness growing weed legally. While Shane finds himself graduating the police academy and falling in with corrupt cops and Andy continues to search for real love while avoiding romantic entanglements with Nancy, Doug finds his true calling by creating a fake charity and then a cult. With Nancy rededicating her life to Stevie, Silas is given an offer that he might not refuse, which is bound to change the Botwin family forever.

The set-ups in Weeds Season Eight are designed to surprise viewers, but they seldom work. Nancy Botwin has, since pretty much the middle of the first season, made the premise of the show invalid. Botwin became a drug dealer to provide for her family and at various points in the series, she has had more than enough money to do that. In the eighth season, she has rededicated herself to getting custody of Stevie from her sister and she genuinely seems committed to that. But how she goes about getting Stevie and keeping him is much more predictable than audacious. While she gives up the pot selling, she is still ruthless in her pursuit of money, prostituting herself to a doctor in order to get the drug samples she needs to unload out and continuing to use people around her. It is, however, hardly surprising when she sends the drugs Kiku brings around through the wood chipper, just as it is unsurprising how she uses intimidation and threats to get her what she wants.

The heart of the show remains Andy or Silas. Andy actively works to push aside his feelings for Nancy, but in the eighth season of Weeds he finds his usual, formulaic sense of love and heartbreak. Andy pursues Nancy’s sister, Jill, and he becomes an integral member of her family . . . until her estranged husband returns and she (and her daughters) then rejects Andy. Andy manages to further distance himself from his feelings for Nancy by advising Rabbi Dave on how he can pursue Nancy most effectively. Silas essentially found his purpose in the prior season, but when the grower he teams up with in the beginning of season eight has a mental breakdown and destroys his crop, Silas is once again adrift. However, because Silas already has truly found himself (he’s a pot farmer!), his arc is largely just re-establishing his crop and then finding personal satisfaction. To that end, his deaf girlfriend Megan (from the earliest seasons of the show) pops back up and they rekindle their relationship. This is an entirely inorganic relationship and it is almost like actor Hunter Parrish was asked, “Who did you like working with the best?” and they designed the character arc around that.

As the series winds to a close, it is worth knowing who the essential characters are. In the final season of Weeds, the cast is comprised of:

Nancy Botwin – Having been shot in the head after just making peace with her family, she racks up incredible medical bills (in a plotline that is almost entirely dropped). Determined to keep Stevie, she stops a corrupt drug-pushing clown from profiting off the suffering of dying hospital patients and when she is released from the hospital, she begins to work on herself. Trying to stay on the straight and narrow, she befriends Rabbi Dave, divests herself of the bad influences in her life and gets a legitimate job. In order to keep the job and succeed at pushing legitimate prescription drugs, she sleeps around and backstabs. She also bribes the locals to get Stevie onto the soccer team. She sets up as an entrepreneur to profit from the legalization of marijuana,

Silas Botwin – After Kiku falls apart and his happiness as a pot grower is disrupted by getting involved with a mentally unstable grower, he finds joy in making new strains of weed for Big Pharma. After rekindling his past relationship with Megan and having a few scuffs with Shane, he gets an offer from Big Tobacco that might allow him to realize all his dreams and get him out from under his mother’s thumb,

Shane Botwin – Secretly attending the police academy, he graduates around the same time as Nancy gets out of the hospital. He successfully hunts down the shooter and tries to impress Nancy by busting him legally while Nancy tries the vigilante route. He develops a relationship with Angela Mullen, a fellow police academy graduate, who is offered a much better position than he is upon graduation. While he profits off an impound lot scam run by his father figure and another corrupt cop, he stagnates,

Doug – When the corporate scheme that he and his firm bankrolled goes bust, he abandons Whit and goes solo. Scamming the system with a “charity” he set up to skim corporate profits, he starts using the homeless as a write-off and then as a labor force for a cult he forms,

and Andy Botwin – After his relationship with Jill flounders, he leaps into a relationship with Shannon, a college student. Abruptly marrying her – despite pining for one of his ex’s – he finds a great deal of happiness teaching at a Jewish school and moving on from his feelings for Nancy, despite the pull she exerts on him.

The final season of Weeds is unremarkable on the acting front, though there are no truly bad performances either. The fundamental problem with the season is that the movement that happens occurs more in the form of an ever widening circle as opposed to characters tacking off in a new direction, truly challenging themselves and growing. Instead, the characters just keep going round and round and given how unlikable Nancy Botwin is as the primary focus of the season, it is very hard to get invested.

That said, the actual finale is a good one to the series and while it might not be the most exciting, it does leave one feeling like they never have to look in on the lives of the Botwins ever again. Only the die-hard fans will really need to tune in to the final season to watch the characters flounder around through menaces, relationships, emotionless sex, and crime peripheral to the drug trade; the rest can be content with the idea that Nancy Botwin was shot at the climax of the prior season and leave it at that.

For other works with Mary-Louise Parker, please visit my reviews of:
R.I.P.D.
The West Wing
Saved!

4/10

For other television reviews, please visit my Television Review Index Page for an organized listing!

© 2014 W.L. Swarts. May not be reprinted without permission.
| | |