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How I Met Your Mother starring Josh Radnor, Jason Segel, Alyson Hannigan, Neil Patrick Harris and Cobie Smulders

Posted on September 17, 2010 Written by ripitup

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How I Met Your Mother starring Josh Radnor, Jason Segel, Alyson Hannigan, Cobie Smulders and Neil Patrick Harris
How I Met Your Mother starring (from left) Neil Patrick Harris, Alyson Hannigan, Jason Segel, Cobie Smulders and Josh Radnor.

How I Met Your Mother starts a couple of decades from now, as Ted decides to tell his teenage son and daughter how he met their mother. We go back to 2005, when Ted is hanging around with his best friends Lily (Alyson Hannigan) and Marshall (Jason Segel). He knows both of them from college and they are a couple. When Lily and Marshall get engaged, Ted (Josh Radnor) realizes that he might be ready for the long term commitment too. But his other good friend Barney (Neil Patrick Harris) has no intentions of settling down and he loves having Ted as a wingman and involves him in ridiculous situations to pick up girls. While his methods mostly work for Barney and his one night stands, Ted wants more. It is then he meets Robin (Cobie Smulders)- a Canadian news reporter who is currently living and working in the States. . He thinks it is pretty much love at first sight (and love after first date, to be exact) but Robin isn’t after anything serious.

The first episode ends by Ted (weirdly, Ted’s narrations aren’t done by Josh Radnor but Bob Saget); telling his kids that Robin isn’t the mother.

From then on, it is all about the adventures and mishaps of this group of 5 and Ted’s constant efforts in finding the woman of his dream while they hang at their favorite bar, crack jokes and analyze relationships .

I have to admit that had I been a producer, I’d never have thought this concept would catch up. The show first aired in 2005 and Ted has been telling the story ever since. The movie Definitely, Maybe has a somewhat similar concept, as Ryan Reynolds’ character tells his young daughter (Abigail Breslin) his romantic past, involving three different women – and one of them is her mother. I was frankly not that impressed with Definitely, Maybe as I found it a little slow, boring and not that interesting.  While How I Met Your Mother is definitely funnier and more entertaining (and it was an instant hit among my Friends and Coupling-worshipping group of friends), I never quite got addicted to this show.

Now, don’t get me wrong. How I Met Your Mother has a great cast and the characters are not that hard to empathize with. But my problem is that the episodes aren’t quite as hilarious as I’d expect a sitcom to be. And the whole close friends dating thing has been done too many times. Oh, don’t give me that ”but you also love Friends (1994-2004) and Coupling (of course the UK version: 2000-2004)” look. I do. But you see, Friends characters had so much originality – with their characters occupations and back stories, jokes and use of the English language for cracking jokes, the characters’ eccentricities, guest appearances by your favorite actors (Susan Sarandon, Julia Roberts, Tom Selleck, Sean Penn, Reese Witherspoon, Michael Vartan….) and the perfect sitcom combination of both funny one-liners, on-going inside jokes, hilarious events and wonderful use of physical comedy. Coupling had great original characters (Jane and Jeff), wonderful observations and shameless, original & hilarious jokes about sex (which wouldn’t disappear even at a funeral scene!) which was combined brilliantly by physical comedy (especially by characters Jeff and Steve).

And because those two were immensely hilarious, I overlooked the storylines that resembled all those soap operas (Dawson’s Creek, Grey’s Anatomy…) where friends dated all of their friends. I mean look at Friends: Ross dated Rachel and made out with Phoebe (one episode). Monica was his sister. Monica dated Chandler, but her “official” first choice was Joey. Rachel dated Ross and Joey. Thankfully Phoebe never exactly dated any of them. They all hung out together.

In Coupling: Susan slept with/dated Steve and Patrick – dated Jeff but couldn’t sleep with him because he got nervous. Jane dated Steve and attempted to sleep with Patrick and Jeff. Sally dated Patrick.

While as far as I know Lily never dated Ted or Barney, but Robin dated Ted and Barney. And then there is other thing getting old: the womanizer character who is certainly not all that good-looking and charming, but for some reason every girl on the show loved (doing) them. Friends had Joey, Coupling had Patrick and How I Met Your Mother has Barney.

Did I get too much into comparison mode? Whoops. Sorry about that. But if you look at the end dates of these two shows and the beginning of How I Met Your Mother, you see that it came out a time when two of the most hilarious sitcoms around ended. So I needed an instant substitute. While this show is might be a placebo, it really isn’t the real deal (pardon the metaphor). It is funny, but not constantly hilarious and it is not funny enough to send me to the floor laughing or cause me stomach pains. I realize that the part of the intended charm is that the characters are everyday people, but for me it is a turn off. I know a couple of Teds, Marshalls, Robins, Lilys and even Barneys (or who want to be Barneys or who kid themselves about being a Barney) in real life. So why should I follow events and characters I see on a regular basis?

When it is on TV and I am eating, it is a perfect show. But it is too ordinary to be addictive.

For Friends and Coupling (only the first three seasons), my vote is a 10/10.

How I Met Your Mother is a 7/10. I prefer Jason Segel’s movies for the time being.

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Filed Under: TV shows Tagged With: Abigail Breslin, Alyson Hannigan, bob saget, Cobie Smulders, comedy, Coupling, definitely maybe, Friends, how I met your mother, how i met your mother cast, how i met your mother tv show, Jason Segel, jason segel movies, Josh Radnor, Neil Patrick Harris, Ryan Reynolds, TV shows

The Closer starring Kyra Sedgwick

Posted on September 13, 2010 Written by ripitup

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The Closer starring Kyra Sedgwick, J.K. Simmons and Jon Tenney
The Closer. From left: Michael Paul Chan, J.K. Simmons, Kyra Sedgwick, Jon Tenney and Corey Reynolds

Brenda Johnson (Kyra Sedgwick) has just been appointed to LAPD as Chief of Police. Previously located in Atlanta, she has great training and results under her belt when it comes to interrogations: she manages to get confessions and close cases fast. But at her new office, she faces hostility from her new colleagues, as she is new, a little tough and doesn’t take crap from anyone. However she soon proves her reputation and even though she gets on people’s nerves, she is probably the worst thing that can happen to criminals. Co-starring as her boss is J.K Simmons.

There is also Brenda’s relationship with FBI agent Fritz (Jon Tenney), which could have gone a lot more smoothly if their cases didn’t intersect and Brenda wasn’t obsessed with getting justice.

***

The Closer first aired in 2005, but I hadn’t paid much attention to it first. Kyra’s accent threw me off a little (it is not her interpretation of the accent but the accent in general) and well, there were so many criminal dramas going on, I really didn’t think this one was different.

Well, while it may not be unique, it certainly is different and entertaining; not to mention a little addictive. I love watching a woman in charge and her unusual methods to get things done. After a while, the accent doesn’t bother me much as the story does pull you in.

While I am not as attached to the show as I am to Castle and The Mentalist, I realized it was really good TV and a rather good substitute. Kyra Sedgwick finally won the Emmy this year for Best Actress in Drama as well. Kyra was also nominated for Golden Globe many times and won in 2007.

Give this a shot. Your favorite moments might just be the ones where she gets her suspects/criminals to confess- her tactics are well worth seeing. And it is good to see Kyra as a leading actress.

Other Posts on Kyra Sedgwick

6 Hollywood Couples: Gorgeous, Glamorous and Happy Together

Phenomenon starring John Travolta, Kyra Sedgwick and Robert Duvall

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Filed Under: TV shows Tagged With: crime, drama, j.k. simmons, jon tenney, Kyra Sedgwick, the closer, the closer tv series, the closer tv show, TV shows

Leverage starring Timothy Hutton, Gina Bellman and Christian Kane

Posted on August 8, 2010 Written by ripitup

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Leverage and Timothy Hutton as Nathan Ford

I didn’t post on the blog on Friday because I was busy catching up with my Leverage season 1 episodes. I was hooked on the show from episode 1 and became a Timothy Hutton fan. In fact I can’t believe I published an article called Television’s 3 Most Brilliant, Emotionally Broken Men and forgot to make it a 4, by adding Leverage’s Nathan Ford (Timothy Hutton) to the list.

Leverage starring Timothy Hutton, Gina Bellman, Christian Kane, Beth Riesgraf and Aldis Hodge
Leverage starring Timothy Hutton, Gina Bellman, Christian Kane, Beth Riesgraf and Aldis Hodge. Image via istediginiizle.com

Leverage is basically a modern Robin Hood Tale- only this time, Robin’s team were already thieves before Robin, Robin used to catch thieves for a living and it is all very 21st century with the latest tech gadgets and toys. Let me elaborate…

Nathan Ford used to be a very successful insurance agent, who caught a lot of thieves and saved the company he is working for millions of dollars. However when Nathan needed the company the most, the CEO did the worst thing he could do: When Nathan’s son was sick, he refused to pay for his treatment, calling it experimental. Nathan lost his son, his marriage fell apart and to say the least, he is not a very happy man.

But worry not, Nathan’s back story is given between the lines and through some flashbacks and despite his tragic past, the show is anything but depressing. With the exception of some moments, this is an action/comedy- and a brilliant one at that.

How Nathan turns to a modern day Robin Hood

The very rich and powerful CEO of a plane manufacturing company finds Nathan and asks him for his help. His designs for the latest plane has been stolen by the rival firm and he needs those designs back before the upcoming shareholders’ meeting. Nathan states that he is not a criminal but this is exactly why the guy needs him- he has hired great thieves to do the job but he does need a honest man to lead them- after all why trust thieves, right? He persuades Nathan using his one week spot: the insurance company he used to work for. Apparently, the rival company is insured by Nathan’s old firm and stealing the plans will do them more than a little damage. Nathan can’t resist so the big heist starts…

The Team of 3: Parker, Eliot and Hardison

Parker (Beth Riesgraf) is a very acrobatic and capable thief. She has been stealing ever since she can remember.

Hardison (Aldis Hodge) is the computer whiz.

Eliot (Christian Kane) is the retriever. Loosely translated, he is the muscle. And he is very knowledgable about fighting techniques and all sorts of weapons.

The problem is, they are used to working as freelancers and they find it really hard to adapt to team work. But Nathan manages to lead them well and the job gets done. The idea is for the team to never see each other again.

However things go awry, as their current employer decides to pull a number on them. After all, why pay them when you can get rid of them?

But the 4 of them survive and realize, the party they worked for wasn’t the victim but the villain after all. So they come together for payback. Problem is, they need a new face as the guy knows them all so enter Sophie (Gina Bellman).

Sophie

English Sophie is a grifter- she steals very valuable staff. But she has become an American citizen and she is laying low. Nathan knows her well because he chased her a lot during his agent days.  Sophie is now working as an actress but she is terrible on stage. However as Nathan tells the others (and is later proven right), Sophie is a brilliant actress when she is pulling a con. Sophie can’t resist working with Nathan when he has switched sides. It later also becomes obvious that there is a certain romantic and sexual attraction between the two.

The Payback

The team does get their payback marvelously. No, I won’t give the details but it is smart, funny and original. What they end up doing makes them rich and they have had so much more fun than they thought they would. And despite their differences, they realize they can pull bigger and better cons together and they want at least one more gig together…

——

You just watch the show. It’s just top notch entertainment; starting from the pilot episode. It has fun but well-developed characters but of course many times, the other characters may seem one-dimensional as most of the burden and back story falls on Nathan’s soldiers but it is OK. The combination of good writing & acting, fun one-liners come together seamlessly. After the first gig, they start choosing rich and guilty parties. They get the victims’ money back, help other people and make “a little” profit too. But of course, as fun as it is, Nathan might have developed a drinking problem. After all, nothing he does will bring his son back. So when the opportunity arises, the team will take it to bring Nathan’s ex boss down…

The show has a wonderful first season and I am currently enjoying season 2. The show will hopefully have a 4th season. I heard that it is based on the British show Hustle, but frankly, I couldn’t have cared less as I adore this cast and not to mention the city the plot takes place in: Los Angeles! Plus, Leverage has a different back story and protagonist.

Timothy Hutton is great but I am most impressed by Gina Bellman who you will no doubt remember as Jane from the hilarious British sitcom Coupling. While she is acting to get a role, it seems like she brings Jane back because she is totally an exaggerated and crazy when she is acting on stage or for the camera. But there are only tiny moments- in fact there were only 2 little scenes. Apart from that, Sophie is pretty, intelligent and sane- with her only vice being that she is addicted to stealing. And now she gets to do it with a clear conscience as she ends up helping others.

This is the first time I see Beth Riegraf and Aldis Hodge  as actors but I previously watched Christian Kane on Angel, The Buffy spin-off starring David Boreanaz. Kane co-starred as Lindsey McDonald, a lawyer who worked for an evil law firm that did business with demons as well.  And while, he is a good actor- I have to say, Eliot is much more fun to watch, not to mention a lot easier on the eye. What can I say? I love long-haired boys. And I guess it is up to the boys to decide but I do find Gina Bellman and Beth Riesgraf  quite pretty.

10/10.

Favorite Scene from Episode 1 of Season 1

As Hardison and Eliot are on the job, Hardison complains that he doesn’t know what Eliot does as his skills aren’t apparent. A little later, they are surrounded by 4 security guards and Eliot takes them down almost in a blink. Hardison stares in amazement and Eliot replies, smiling: “This is what I do.”

[pro-player width=’530′ height=’253′ type=’video’]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wnJRhnAFZDM&feature=related[/pro-player]

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Filed Under: TV shows Tagged With: action, Aldis Hodge, Beth Riesgraf, Christian Kane, drama, Gina Bellman, Leverage, leverage tv series, television, thriller, Timothy Hutton, TV shows

24 starring Kiefer Sutherland

Posted on August 1, 2010 Written by ripitup

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24 starring Kiefer Sutherland
24 starring Kiefer Sutherland. Image via 22dakika.org/

When 24 came out first in 2001, it soon gained a very loyal following and high ratings that let the show go on for 8 seasons.

It’s admirable when any show goes on for so long in the highly competitive TV industry. But it is even more admirable when that show is not a sitcom or a soap but a high-budget action/thriller/drama. But of course 24 wasn’t another CSI show. It had a unique and refreshing concept: the name 24 literally comes from a day having 24 hours. The show is set in real time and each episode takes place within an hour. We see the clock ticking numerous times during the show and with the inevitable but highly earned commercial breaks, it lasts an hour. The beginning of each episode starts with Kiefer Sutherland’s voice over, telling between which hour-zone that episode will take place. And appropriately, one season lasts for 24 episodes-it ends when that particular day is over.

The plot and the main characters are just as intriguing as the show, with the most central element & character being Kiefer Surtherland’s Jack Bauer. Jack Bauer is a CTU (Counter Terrorist Unit) agent in the Los Angeles branch. He is the toughest, smartest and resilient agent and a most valuable assets. What sets him unique is that while he believes in the organization he is working for, he is much more concerned about justice and catching terrorists more than the rules or any bureaucracy. And while this makes him brilliant, it also gets him into a lot of trouble throughout all seasons.

Season 1 starts on an eventful night. Jack’s devotion to his dangerous work has caused him problems in his family life but he has finally moved back in with his beloved wife Teri (Leslie Hope) and beautiful, intelligent but highly rebellious daughter Kim (Elisha Cuthbert). Jack’s plans for a peaceful family doesn’t last long as Kim has run away for the night around the same United States’s first black President David Palmer’s (Dennis Haysbert) life might be in danger. Not having a clue where their daughter is, Terry sets out to find her and Jack goes to work if the threats are real.

Meanwhile, Kim has gone out with her best friend Janet (Jacqui Maxwell) to two boys from college. It is supposed to be a sexy, fun night out- but soon Kim realizes that the boys have an ulterior agenda, and it has a lot to the with Kim’s father Jack and the men who are planning to get David Palmer killed…

I was so lucky when I caught season 1, because the network was on the reruns, 4 episodes in a row and they weren’t giving any commercials during the episodes, but just between them. 4 non-stop, advertising-free 24 episodes is a lot of thrilling action, full of adrenaline, lots of amazing and unpredictable twists, great insight to well-developed characters and a lot of intelligent villains. Needless to say, I was hooked. And even the finale didn’t disappoint as season 1 came with a brilliant, in-your-face finale.

I watched season 2 with the same zeal and gusto.  I now had to see the show episodes one by one and I could hardly wait to see what would happen to Jack Bauer next. After season 1, Jack was emotionally damaged and this added new depths to his character, who never showed his emotions easily in the first place. It was a brand new day and Jack was back to kick some serious butt. But he also didn’t know who to trust, not after what happened in episode 1 (and I am not going to say it. It’s brilliant – just go watch it).

As season 3 started, 24 was proving to be a very good but very risky project for the actors involved. Because aside from Jack Bauer, any character- no matter how big/significant the role, could just be killed that season. Any man, apart from Jack, could be a villain or helping out a villain. And women could hardly be trusted as well. So far, the other male actor who got the most frequent screen time was Carlos Bernard who played Tony Almedia for 7 seasons. Yes, some agents/bosses changed or resigned or reassigned but mostly, if a character left the show, it was because they died. I have to go back to the series to check what happened with Elisha Cuthbert’s Kim, as she appears in only 79 episodes. I don’t remember what happened to her character. The most frequent actress was Mary Lynn Rajskub, who played Chloe from season 2 to the end of season 8. Chloe was a whiz about the technical stuff (computers) and one of Jack’s most trusted allies.

Jack Bauer’s character was never really romantically given a chance and even if he had some romantic involvements (such as with Audrey Raines played by Kim Raver), he really didn’t get to live a relationship on screen as one season only took place in one day and Jack was always busing saving America or the world all together.

But as season 4 started, my addiction to 24 faltered. It wasn’t that the show’s writing got bad, but the concept- the show’s biggest weapon- was now also becoming one of its core weaknesses. Now, no matter how smart, strong, tough, fit, whatever Jack is, there are only so many times you can sell “one man’s saving the world in a day” to the audience. And it does become annoying when one in 2 or 3 actors turn into villains.

Now, while I will always find the writing more brilliant for the first 3 seasons, 24 never does really momentum. However if you have started the show from the first season, you should try to consider each season separately. Otherwise, the show’s realistic real time attitude is just an effect. Yes, Jack Bauer managed to rock for 8 seasons. And if as long as you do isolate each season from each other when it comes to Jack’s super resume, you will enjoy them all.

Now that we are in the holiday season and all my current shows’ actors are on vacation, it just might be a time for me to revisit the seasons I loved and seasons I haven’t checked out yet.

As for some of the racism accusations, I don’t think 24 was ever racist about its villains. True, the show aired in November, 2001 and through its seasons it did involve some Muslim criminals. But 24 had so many villains- they belonged to lots of religions, races and countries. And more often than not, any foreign criminal almost always had an American ally. So, no, I don’t find 24 to be racist. But of couse each to his own. I also find it that it is trying to be against discrimination even as 24 had black male lead who played the president. 24’s later episodes also saw a female president.

IMDB Rating: 8.9/10 voted by over 39.500 people.

My rating: 10/10 for the first 3. I haven’t seen the whole of the other seasons so I will update this post afterwards. If you have your favorite Jack Bauer moments or lines or any other favorite 24 character, please share them.

Also note that 24 is going to be a movie and of course it will be starring Kiefer Sutherland.

Other Drama, Thrillers and/or Drama-Thrillers You Might Like:

Alias – this one is the J.J. Abrams hit before Lost. Starring Jennifer Garner, Michael Vartan and Bradley Cooper.

The Mentalist – serial killers, murderers, California, funny one-liners, entertainment, depression, action and chilling mystery all in one place. Starring Simon Baker and Robin Tunney.

Castle– this one has romance and comedy too. Starring Nathan Fillion and Stana Katic.

Posts Featuring Kiefer Sutherland

10 Celebrities to Wear Flats for: Featuring Taylor Lautner, Johnny Depp, Kevin Bacon, Jon Bon Jovi and More

The Three Musketeers starring Kiefer Sutherland, Charlie Sheen and Chris O’ Donnell

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Filed Under: TV shows Tagged With: 24, action, Carlos Bernard, ctu, drama, Elisha Cuthbert, Jack Bauer, Jacqui Maxwell, Kiefer Sutherland, Leslie Hope, Mary Lynn Rajskub, thriller, tv series 24, TV shows

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