Daily Archives: May 2, 2011

Nikita “Glass Houses” S1 E20 Review + Recap

Let me start by saying again that I am an unabashed fan of Nikita. It’s not deep or intellectual. It’s not going to pop up on any Emmy shortlists. But it’s a fun show, with an exciting pace and one of the few action shows currently on network television with female leads (including an Asian-American female, no less).

Was this the best show I saw last week? No, but it might be the best episode of Nikita yet. Taken with view of the entire series’ run, this week’s episode was stellar.

First of all, “Glass Houses” marks the first time the writers managed to limit exposition to the voice-over and just one sentence of dialogue. This was a key weakness in some of the earlier episodes, and my Nikita-loving heart rejoiced when they pulled this off.

The Nikita storyline was full of emotion and character development. The Alex storyline was lighter on emotion, but included some unexpected plot twists. Massive spoilers ahead.

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Raising Hope “Mongooses” S1 E17 Review + Recap

Out of the many shows that premiered in 2010, Raising Hope has been one of my favorites.

The single-cam sitcom, helmed by My Name Is Earl creator Greg Garcia, is surprisingly funny and endearing. Martha Plimpton and Garrett Dillahunt are hilarious as the parents of the main character, Jimmy, played by a lukewarm (but improving) Lucas Neff.

The one qualm I have with Raising Hope is that the show never quite seems to know what to do with Cloris Leachman. In the first half of the season, her character, Maw Maw, was incoherent, a one-note gimmick that wasted Leachman’s comic talent. After the season break, the writers have been changing how they deal with the character. She’s coherent more often, which leads to some wonderful dry humor. She’s still mostly senile, but that still can lend to some good jokes.

Like most freshman shows, Raising Hope had some kinks to work out in the first half of the season. However, by episode 17, the show has a nice stable of recurring characters and in-jokes. The leads are fleshed out, and in general, the show works.

This episode, however, did not.
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