Review: AMC Doubles Down on Zombies with ‘Fear’

AMC’s The Walking Dead largely began (following a brief prelude illustrating his near-death experience) in media res with Frank Grimes (Andrew Lincoln) waking after the zombie apocalypse was already well underway. Frank’s unconsciousness and subsequent revival was a good way to quickly integrate the audience into the new world and quickly introduce them zombie gore. Its spin-off, Fear the Walking Dead, has a trickier setup as it details the beginning of the new zombie order in the culturally diverse setting of Los Angeles.

While it doesn’t necessarily skimp on the Dead‘s familiar thrills and gore, Fear inevitably suffers in comparison because it needs to give us something new in this extremely familiar world. Dead‘s characters, and to a great extent the audience as well, are mostly numb to the potential that anyone could die at any given moment. Fear doesn’t know that gruesome reality yet, so its characters are still in this perplexed and horrified state as they gradually wakens to the terrors around them. As a viewer who has been there/done that, I grew slightly impatient with Fear‘s finished product.

To its benefit, the show introduces us to an extremely multi-cultural cast, something that the Los Angeles setting necessitates. Kim Dickens (Gone Girl) and Cliff Curtis star as dating teachers who must deal with her druggie son’s recent accident and hospitalization. Much of the pilot is spent with this fraying family unit, sort of an emotional deep-dive into these characters with whom we need to quickly sympathize. Dickens’s son, played by Frank Dillane, is a heroin junkie living in an abandoned church when he has the series’s first encounter with a zombie, his former girlfriend. He spends the next several scenes trying to determine if that was a side effect of bad drugs or if it was reality. The question is definitely resolved for him by episode’s end when he shoots and repeatedly runs over his zombified drug dealer. Meanwhile, Los Angeles slowly begins to crumble as a mysterious virus begins attacking healthy humans.

The most effective scenes of Fear are not the traditional zombie scenes because, frankly, The Walking Dead does them a lot better. The Fear zombie attack scenes are small and contained. There are no hoards, yet, so it’s typically restricted to one-on-one encounters. But the show rises in tension because the living have no idea what they’re facing. They do dumb things like walk into dark rooms and approach lumbering people because they don’t expect what we know is the obvious outcome. What I personally found the most interesting in Fear was one of the closing scenes in which a zombie attacked EMT after a car accident, captured on camera by local news affiliates. It reminded me of the recent round of police brutality captured and published on You Tube, and that association was truly chilling.

Still, you can’t help but feel like you’ve pressed reset on The Walking Dead. Granted, I’ve only seen the pilot, so I’m hoping for a different tone to the remainder of the series that would differentiate it from the original. It certainly has a more unique look to it with amber hues and graffiti-stained walls giving us a vastly different canvas than the back woods of Georgia. If Fear can effectively establish itself as a different entity, then only then will it deserve to stand with The Walking Dead without seeming like a cold and calculated money grab (which it most certainly is, but the creators need to at least try and hide that fact).

As it stands now, Fear is a mildly interesting diversion that will live or die by its originality alone – a tough task given how much zombie material has come before it.

X-Files Flashback: ‘Our Town’

Season 2, Episode 24
Director: Rob Bowman
Writer: Frank Spotnitz

The X-Files continues on its conspiratorial path to make vegetarians of us all in “Our Town,” an episode dedicated to the joys of both cannibalism and poultry processing. Aside from yet another weak reliance on the “Scully’s in danger” running theme, the episode is clinically effective and deserves a far better reputation than it seems to have amongst viewers and critics alike.

We begin with a variation of the “teens parking in the woods” introduction. In this case, middle-aged George Kearns parks with his younger lover Paula. Rather than make out in the car, she runs off into the woods, enticing George to follow her. Disoriented, he loses sight of her and is quickly surrounded by multiple torch-bearing entities. George turns to face an axe-wielding man in a tribal mask who quickly cuts off his head. Mulder and Scully are brought in to investigate because George Kearns was a federal health inspector who was writing up multiple violations against Chaco Chicken, a local chicken processing plant. Through the course of the investigation, they discover that George suffered from Creutzfeldt-Jakcob disease, a rare illness that causes dementia. They uncovered this because multiple people in the town, Paula included, began suffering from similar symptoms, eventually leading to their deaths.

Turns out that Walter Chaco, Paula’s grandfather and the owner of the plant, had crash-landed in New Guinea in 1944 near a local cannibalistic tribe. Having learned their ways and the supposed age-defying benefits of cannibalism, he devised a plan to kill and cook local citizens and feed them back to the chickens, keeping both Chaco and selected local towns people young beyond their years. After Scully is kidnapped by Chaco, a ceremonial bonfire is held to effectively kill and eat her, but the townspeople turn against Chaco due to the ramping disease that will kill them all. Even the town sheriff is in on it, serving as the mask-wearing axe man. Mulder shows up just in time to free Scully but was unable to save the beheaded Chaco whose remains are likely fed to unsuspecting chickens in the final scene.

OK, so a lot of this episode makes absolutely no sense at all. Why would the government, after shutting down the cannibalism factory / chicken processing plant, allow someone to feed the suspect slop to chickens at the end of the episode? How is a small town able to keep that big of a secret when 87 people have died in a relatively short amount of time? If the sheriff is in on the crime, then why did he allow the dragging of the local river to uncover all those bones? Why did they even dump the bones in the shallow river to begin with? If the disease is passed through consumption of another diseased person, then why did Paula go insane so quickly after George’s death? Seems like that would take longer than 24 hours to take hold. Plus, she had obviously been experiencing symptoms long enough to warrant receiving medication from the plant doctor which she takes just before going insane. Why did Walter Chaco keep heads in his red cabinet of death? How did that not smell? And at the end of the episode, the plant floor manager is apparently trampled to death by terrified townspeople. How did that even happen? It’s not like there was any question as to which way to run when Mulder shot the axe man. They were in a field. Run anywhere… just not on top of somebody. Repeatedly. Killing them.

Despite the six or seven plot holes I just thought of in as many minutes, I did like “Our Town” for its intrigue and admittedly disgusting plot. What I felt was really missing, though, was an increased sense of irony. Clearly, the writer had irony in mind when he titled the episode “Our Town,” referring to Thornton Wilder’s early 20th century play about an idyllic small American town. Yet, none of that irony is inherent within the actual episode itself. The director and cast play “Our Town” in a deadly serious and straightforward manner, which is fine but a lighter, more satiric hand would have greatly benefitted the material.

I mean, after all, they are feeding human remains to chickens. There’s gotta be a joke in there somewhere. Right?

Podcast Preview: Music! Makes the TV Come Together

On Monday’s Water Cooler Podcast, the Cooler gang gather around to discuss their favorite television theme songs. Whether they’re pop or orchestra-based, certain theme songs are inevitably stuck in our heads and are often the first aspects we recall of a classic TV show. Favorites like Cheers, The Simpsons, and Mary Tyler Moore are just a few of the many theme songs we plan to fondly discuss as we try to dig into the reasoning behind why they’re so successful. 

Before we jump into our main topic, we jump off the Emmy bandwagon for a week and take a look at some recent news stories. It’s a packed week at the Water Cooler, and we look forward to having everyone gather-round the Cooler with us. 

X-Files Flashback: ‘Soft Light’

Season 2, Episode 23
Director: James A. Contner
Writer: Vince Gilligan

Late in its second season, The X-Files lucked out and stumbled upon a writer that would remain a large series influence for the remainder of its run. The same writer would move on to create one of television history’s greatest dramas and its recent, Emmy-nominated spin-off. That writer is Vince Gilligan, and “Soft Light” was his first produced X-Files episode. Gilligan’s contributions would substantially grow over the course of the series, but “Soft Light” gets things started on an appropriately sinister note.

We kick things off in a Richmond, Virginia, hotel (Gilligan grew up near Richmond and frequently visited his grandparents there) where Chester Ray Banton (Tony Shalhoub) bangs on a hotel room door in a dimly lit hallway. Across the hall, another resident of the hotel watches from his hotel door peephole. As Banton backs up, his shadow extends under the door, and the observing man disappears into a black, burnt spot on the floor. Mulder and Scully are called in by a former FBI academy student of Scully’s who was assigned the disappearance – the latest of many – as her first case. They eventually discover Banton’s involvement thanks to his penchant for hiding out in a brightly lit (the “soft light” of the title) train station. Banton was experimenting with dark matter and accidentally exposed himself to a particle accelerator, causing his shadow to effectively become dark matter that absorbs those who touch it. It wasn’t entirely clear if the accident was entirely accidental given the nefarious acts of his partner later.

Mulder reaches out to X who attempts to kidnap Banton but ends up releasing him by accident. Banton wants to kill himself in the particle accelerator after killing Scully’s former student, but he is trapped by his colleague who immediately contacts X. X shoots the colleague and removes Banton from the chamber, using the colleague’s body as a decoy. We close with X supervising experiments on Banton in a government facility.

“Soft Light” bears little thematic resemblance to Breaking Bad. There is, I suppose, the occurrence of bad things happening to good people (Scully’s student’s intentional murder), but it’s not an unusual happening with the larger context of The X-Files. This episode bears a stronger resemblance to Gilligan’s earlier cinematic work like Wilder Napalm. The interest in the supernatural. The inability for a man to control his inflicted abilities. It all stems from the comics that heavily influenced Gilligan. What is highlighted here is the excellent dialogue, the confidence that Gilligan employs to convey the silly plot, that carries the episode.

The other major star of “Soft Light” is actor Tony Shalhoub who harnesses his by-now patented set of quirks and ticks to convey Banton’s sleepless neuroses. His is a great performance despite somewhat being limited to a series of “Don’t come near me” histrionics. His strongest moment comes at the end when he cries a single tear at an unpleasant future as the subject of government experiments. That is one of Gilligan’s more substantial contributions: the enhanced sinister nature of X.

Overall, the episode is a solid entry in The X-Files collection. It’s perhaps better known for the future promise of greatness (Gillian, Shalhoub) than for greatness displayed now.

Teaser: ‘Hotel’ Spawns Two New Teasers

The American Horror Story series is infamous for several things, particularly the uncanny ability to garner multiple Emmy nominations for each season. One thing fans and detractors alike consistently comment on is the state of their season teasers, which are traditionally scarier and more artful than the main season itself.

Will American Horroy Story: Hotel prove different? We won’t know until October 7 if that again proves true, but here are the latest teasers to whet your appetite or disappointment, depending on your expectations.

 


 

EmmyWatch: Casting Award Nominations Announced

Fox’s Empire shows up on another list of awards that isn’t the Emmys – this time, the Casting Society of America’s first-round Artios Nominations. Empire received two bids and was joined by other snubbed Emmy series Bloodline, Blackish, Jane the Virgin, Grace and Frankie, How to Get Away With Murder, Gotham, The Good Wife, and The Affair.

The CSA Artios awards will undergo an additional round of voting August 24 through September 8. Winners will be announced at the Film and Television joint ceremony in January 2016.

The full list of nominees (including theatrical events) is as follows:

TELEVISION PILOT COMEDY
Blackish
Grace and Frankie
Jane the Virgin
Transparent
Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt

TELEVISION PILOT DRAMA
The Affair
Better Call Saul
Empire
Gotham
How to Get Away with Murder

TELEVISION SERIES COMEDY
Episodes
Orange is the New Black
Silicon Valley
Transparent
Veep

TELEVISION SERIES DRAMA
Bloodline
Empire
Game of Thrones
House of Cards
The Good Wife

TELEVISION MOVIE OR MINI-SERIES
American Horror Story: Freak Show
Olive Kitteridge
The Slap
Wayward Pines
Wolf Hall

CHILDREN’S PILOT AND SERIES (LIVE ACTION)
Austin & Ally
Dog with a Blog
Girl Meets World
Instant Mom
Lab Rats

TELEVISION ANIMATION ADULT
American Dad
Bob’s Burgers
Bojack Horseman
Family Guy
Robot Chicken

TELEVISION ANIMATION CHILDREN
The Adventures of Puss in Boots
Bubble Guppies
Dora & Friends: Into the City!
Sanjay & Craig
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles

NY BROADWAY THEATER – COMEDY
Fish in the Dark
Living on Love
Love Letters
You Can’t Take It with You

NY BROADWAY THEATER – DRAMA
The Audience
Constellations
The Elephant Man
The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time
This is Our Youth

NY BROADWAY THEATER – MUSICAL
An American in Paris
Finding Neverland
The King and I
Something Rotten!
On the Twentieth Century

NY THEATER – COMEDY
39 Steps
A Month in the Country
Big Love
The Flick
What I Did Last Summer

NY THEATER – DRAMA
Between Riverside and Crazy
The Glass Menagerie
Hamlet
Punk Rock
The World of Extreme Happiness

NY THEATER – MUSICAL
Fly by Night
Found
Clinton, The Musical
New York Spring Spectacular
Revolution

REGIONAL THEATER EAST
Ain’t Misbehavin’
Arcadia
Can Can
Carousel
Diner
First Wives Club

REGIONAL THEATER WEST
Bright Star
Les Miserables
Othello
Arms and the Man
One Man, Two Guvnors

LOS ANGELES THEATER
What the Butler Saw
The Country House
Hair
Race
Spring Awakening

SPECIAL THEATRICAL PERFORMANCE – EAST
Oliver!
Paint Your Wagon
Parade
Tick, Tick … Boom!
Zorba

SPECIAL THEATRICAL PERFORMANCE – WEST
The Addams Family
Hello Dolly!
Tarzan
Unscreened Summer Series

THEATER TOURS
Irving Berlin’s White Christmas
Kinky Boots
Matilda The Musical
Rodgers + Hammerstein’s Cinderella
Blithe Spirit

SHORT FILMS
Day One
Dragula
Muted
Rita Mahtoubian Is Not A Terrorist
Share

WEB SERIES
Cop Show
Deadbeat
Karl Manhair: Postal Inspector
Olive and Mocha
Resident Advisors
Side Effects

Making the Case for ‘Orange is the New Black’

Note: Over the next week, the Awards Daily TV crew will be Making the Case to win for each nominee in the Outstanding Comedy Series and Outstanding Drama Series categories in random order. We’ll be dropping one each day through the Emmy voting period. Share/retweet your favorites to build the buzz!

Netflix’s Orange is the New Black

Metacritic Score: 95
Rotten Tomatoes Score: 87%
Number of Nominations: 4
Major Nominations: Outstanding Drama Series, Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama (Uzo Aduba)

First, it’s criminal that Orange is the New Black is only nominated for 4 Emmys. Did everyone think that everyone else was going to nominate it for stuff, so they didn’t bother? Is this an example of the Netflix/binge schedule hurting one’s chances for awards (Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt and Transparent racked up tons of nominations)? The second season of Orange is the complete antithesis of a sophomore slump. It opens up the yard of Litchfield to a tapestry of characters that regular network television seriously lacks.

The first season of Orange was a scrappy newcomer, but the second season gave us permission to meet the characters to a greater extent than another program would. One cannot argue a case in favor of this show without first and foremost describing these women. You love these characters—love, love, love them. You crave their histories prior to getting involved with the law and you gravely anticipate watching them making the mistake that lands them in the clink.

The season opener does something pretty daring. It takes the character that everyone hates, Piper Chapman, and sticks her in a completely different prison for the entire episode. People need to really get over their hate of Taylor Schilling’s character, but removing her from the main action was risky since it might turn viewers off enough to make them turn off their Netflix. We are reminded that Piper and the gang could be in even worse situations. By the halfway point of this season, however, Piper is just a stitch in the show’s tapestry of characters. Her lone wolf monologue shows a feral side to her that illuminates her desire to get the hell out of there.

The running theme of family or makeshift familial units is very prevalent throughout the second season. Piper is allowed to say goodbye to her grandmother, and it causes strife among the other groups at Litchfield. Daya’s developing pregnancy forces her to actually communicate with her mother, and Red desperately tries to get back into the good graces of her adopted daughters. Hell, even the clique of senior women feels like silver-haired family clan.

The black members rally behind probably the biggest mother that Orange has seen so far. Vee Parker is played by the magnificent Lorraine Toussaint. The fact that she didn’t receive an Emmy nomination is tragic. Vee returns to prison and immediately reconnects with Taystee, Litchfield superstar and a former superstar drug runner for Vee. There is something deeply fascinating about watching Toussaint in every scene she’s in. Her relationship with Uzo Aduba’s Suzanne (i.e., the only acting nominee) is both calculated and tender simultaneously. While she’s obviously very dangerous, she also helps Suzanne truly shed the “Crazy Eyes” nickname and claim an identity for herself. The series should win Outstanding Drama Series just as a consolation prize for snubbing Toussaint’s subtle yet transfixing performance.

Orange, however, has its very light moments. It’s hard to truly categorize it, because it walks a very fine line between drama and comedy. In one episode, Piper is telling her former fiancé and her best friend to go screw themselves for developing a relationship “behind her back” to such an uncomfortable level that you laugh just to release the tension. In the next episode, you are tearing up because of Lorna’s unhealthy obsession with Christopher. Or Miss Rosa’s final ride. Or Jimmy’s unceremonious eviction from the prison grounds.

The other reason why Orange should be in serious contention (despite its lack of nominations) is because it’s that good. It was one of the first shows to debut on Netflix, and the show is addictive enough to change the way we watch television. When we tuned back into the second season, we expected another stellar batch of episodes. What we got was a surprisingly complicated, heart-wrenching realization that this show is the real deal.

X-Files Flashback: ‘F. Emasculata’

Season 2, Episode 22
Director: Rob Bowman
Writer: Chris Carter, Howard Gordon

I’d lamented on Twitter the other night that I often forget not to snack when I’m watching The X-Files. It’s not a show that easily lends itself to that particular activity, which is ultimately a good thing. Nobody really needs to each when watching TV anyway. But The X-Files occasionally underscores that fact with an extraordinarily gruesome episode. “F. Emasculata” is one such episode.

It begins in a rain forest as a scientist gathers samples of indigenous insects. Passing under a vulture sitting in a tree (a sinister omen if ever there was one), he stumbles upon the decaying carcass of a wart hog that was attracting other vultures. Examining the body closer, he becomes aware of a pulsating pocket of pus that quickly ruptures and covers his face with a cloudy, pus-like substance. Later, the man is dead, also covered with the same pustules. Flash forward to a prison in Virginia where a prisoner receives a mysterious and unrequested package. Inside is what appears to be a ham hock with the same pustule on it. Soon he and most members of his prison ward are infected with this mysterious illness with a mortality rate of 100 percent. Two unknowingly infected prisoners escape the prison with the obvious looming danger of spreading the disease.

Mulder and Scully are called into the prison under the pretense of tracking down the prisoners, but Scully quickly notices the prison quarantine. She inserts herself into the situation as Mulder leaves to find the escaped prisoners with the assistance of federal marshall Dean Norris (Breaking Bad‘s Hank). Scully finds her way to the crematorium (resembling an ancient Roman brick oven) and inspects the bodies that are targeted for burning. A doctor claiming to be associated with the CDC (Charles Martin Smith, The Untouchables) warns her of opening the sealed plastic bags but is struck in the face by an exploding pustule. He later shares details – he actually works for a pharma company – with Scully as he becomes infected and nears death. Scully is suspected to be infected herself, but she turns out not to be. Eventually all infected members of the prison die and are burned, the mysterious illness effectively contained.

Outside of the prison, the two escaped convicts spread the disease to a handful individuals as the live larvae causing the pustule is only spread through the eruption process. One convict eventually dies after infecting two people, and the remaining, infected prisoner tries to escape the country on a bus to Canada. Discovered by Mulder and the federal marshalls, he takes a teenage boy prisoner, holding him exceptionally close to the near-ruptured pustule. The prisoner is eventually shot by a sniper, killing all those who can attest to what amounts to an elaborate pharma conspiracy to test the plague on a controlled prison population. Mulder later approaches Skinner with his theory but is shut down from coming clean to the press about the pharma company’s gross negligence by the Smoking Man.

“F. Emasculata” contains plot holes as wide as its victims’ vacated pustules, but that’s hardly the point. Instead, it’s a very compelling tale of a viral outbreak, much like the mid-90s film Outbreak or Steven Soderbergh’s Contagion. Given the disgusting nature of the infection, viewers sit white-knuckled waiting for the next person to get sprayed with that cloudy substance. There are effective supporting performances, but really the star of the episode is the accomplished make-up and special effects. The rupturing is incredibly realistic and completely disgusting. I could not bear to watch it, but I could not look away either. The plot is incidental because the terror comes from the spread of this biological entity, the interestingly named “”F. Emasculata.” Is the “emasculata” bug a take-off on the common horror theme of pregnancy and emasculation? It’s an interesting theory to contemplate if not one that is readily supported by the material within the episode.

Finally, “F. Emasculata” becomes the best diet program you’ll ever need. Anytime you feel like eating, just watch this, and the urge will fade away into the ether. At least, that’s what happened to this viewer.

I may never eat again.

Review: IFC’s Spoof Series ‘Documentary Now!’

IFC’s new comedy series Documentary Now! opens by reminding us of all the great documentaries that came in the late 1960s and throughout the 1970s. It’s even introduced by Helen Mirren, lending her considerable gravitas to the proceedings – setting the stage for a Very Important Show. Then, thanks to the considerable comic talents of Bill Hader and Fred Armisen, it expectedly transforms into a spoof of everything we’ve seen thus far. It’s kind of like watching five year olds remaking Tootsie with a camcorder. They basically take a massive dump on greatness before them.

The pilot episode, “Sandy Passage,” parodies the great Grey Gardens, a 1975 doc chronicling two near-shut in women (the aunt and cousin of Jackie Onassis) as they live and bicker in the crumbling titular mansion. Hader and Armisen tackle the pair with Hader as Little Vivvy, the meatier role, and Armisen as her mother, Big Vivvy. As in the original film, Hader models his homemade fashions and dances around the crumbling house, at one point falling through the floor onto the kitchen table beneath. To find any of this funny, you have to know Grey Gardens by heart. Sure, the most popular scenes are all here – the costume of the day, the impromptu tap dance, etc – but they’re only funny if you know how closely they mimic the original. Having only seen the film once, even I have a sense that the filmmakers and actors dug deeply into the original material and recreated it even more slavishly than I realize.

Which lead me to wonder: why is it funny merely recreating the original in drag? Sure, Hader is great, throwing himself into the role of Little Vivvy with relish. Yet, after the initial amusement, the concept begins to wear thin at the halfway mark. That’s when the smart team of comics and writers decided to shift the material in a completely different direction. Chances are, you already know what it is, but I’m not going to spoil it for you. Let’s just say we end “Sandy Passage” in a vastly different place than we started, opening up the material to breathe a little rather than continuing to suffocate with mimicry.

So, what to make of Documentary Now!? Its success depends entirely on your familiarity with the source material, I suspect. The real test for me will be the second episode as it parodies HBO’s VICE series of investigative docs, which I’ve never seen. Until then, much like last year’s Spoils of BabylonDocumentary Now! is an in-joke oddity that spawns mild interest. I’m glad it exists, though, as an outlet for talented comics to try something different – even if it it borders on the incredibly self indulgent.