Moonlighting S2 E14

Spoilers

“Every Daughter’s Father is a Virgin”

We get to meet Maddie’s parents in this episode, but the episode is not the happy reunion on might expect.

Turns out that Maddie’s father, Alexander Hayes, has been having an affair. Maddie’s mother, Virginia, confided in Maddie that she suspected the affair. Maddie was upset and decided that she would follow her father and prove that he was not cheating. However, David talked her out of it by offering to do the job instead.

We had a whole sequence set to “Poppa was a Rolling Stone” by The Temptations where David followed Mr. Hayes around Los Angeles, ending up at a hotel where Hayes had a room where his mistress was.

Finding out the truth, David told Maddie, who immediately wanted to tell her mother. David and Maddie once again engaged in a verbal joust about lying.

In the end, Maddie did not tell her mother, but confronted her father in a rageful manner.

Cybill Shepherd was excellent in this episode. She was given a pretty meaty role in this episode and she excelled at it. Bruce Willis really showed David’s concern for his partner and that he was actually good at following a mark.

Robert Webber and Eva Marie Saint played Maddie’s parents and hit every note pitch perfectly. That is why you cast this quality of actors in these roles.

The tone of this episode was much more serious than many of the Moonlighting episodes, though it was bookended by silliness, kicking off the episode with David and Maddie addressing the audience once again (with David wearing a McMahon headband???). They read letters from viewers all wondering when they were going to kiss.

The end of the episode included a major 4th wall breaking as David spoke directly to the camera.

This was an episode that showed that Moonlighting could go in a different direction than what they had done prior.

Picket Fences S3 E3

Spoilers

“The Bus Stops Here”

Racial tensions take over Rome as a federal order came down that 400 black students from Green Bay would be bussed into Rome schools.

The parents of Rome got together, fully recognizing their prejudice, but trying to find a way to stop the kids from being brought in.

Paul Winfield played Federal court judge Harold Nance, who made the order. There were some epic scenes between him and Judge Henry Bone. Winfield and Ray Walston bring similar massive personas that take up the whole room.

I have to say that one of the things I really love about this show is how they use all of their secondary and tertiary characters are characters we have seen in previous episodes. Ed from the jury episode was back. So was a couple of the teachers from previous stories. It felt like a real little town with faces that we are familiar with. Cool.

The ending scene with the National Guard coming in to confront the Rome police department who was deployed to prevent the students from getting off the bus. The moment was tense, but Jimmy ordered his deputies to back down and the black kids walked into the school.

In a side story, the murder trial appeal winds up heading to the Supreme Court. Seeing Wambaugh and Littleton hugging in celebration was a hoot.

Bonus Action Vol. 1 E7

Spoilers

“The Z Knights vs. The B Team”

The big battle over the Arcfire did not go very well at all.

In an epic encounter, our party battled through the combat doing what they could. The main antagonist was challenging and targeting Victor took our young hero down.

It felt tough for others in the group. Bric tried something desperate at the end that could have backfired, but Rory came up HUGE with a major Nat. 20 roll when he needed it.

I am avoiding too many details, because you should really watch the episode yourselves.

Picket Fences S3 E1 & E2

Spoilers

E1: “Survival of the Fittest”

E2: “Systematic Abuse”

I kicked off the third season of Picket Fences with the first two episodes. They start it off with a murder case over a sixteen year old girl named Susan. A drifter named Brian Latham had tried to pick up the girl and is arrested for the crime.

When they could not find the girl, Kenny, who had found a cross among Brian’s things, went in to see Brian and asked him to help direct the police to a place where the body might be. Kenny asked him to help, Catholic to Catholic. Brian told Kenny that he could check a pond.

Susan was in the pond, wrapped in a tarp. Wambaugh tried to get the body thrown out as fruits of a poison tree, but Judge Bone, in a surprise ruling, decided to allow the evidence anyway.

Episode two focused on the trial itself, with Littleton and Wambaugh battling in court. The show does a great job of showing the trial, with all of the testimony.

It felt clear that Brian Latham was the guilty party. There was nothing that led us to doubt that. Until the final scene that is. When Brian had been found guilty, he spoke to Kenny and told him, Catholic to Catholic, that he did not kill Susan.

What a cliffhanger. There was no question that he was the guilty party. The show went to great lengths to show that. The glances that Brian made when Wambaugh was coaching him on his testimony seemed obvious that he was understanding what he had to do.

And then… like a bomb… everything we knew about the case was flipped on its side. There was some top line writing involved here.

There was one laughable moment. The trial was being broadcast over local TV and they showed a group of boys in what looked like a locker room including Matthew watching the trial. They were arguing about what they thought of the case. This was silly. No group of 5ht graders (I think that was what Matthew was) are going to have a TV tuned in to a trial in the locker room. That scene pulled me out of the story.

Otherwise, this was a great couple of episodes that kicked off a major story for the third season.

The X-Files S1 E23, E24

Spoilers

“Roland”

Roland is a decent episode that feels like several of the other episodes of season one.

This is yet another episode from this first season that I have not seen before. I am not sure why there were so many episodes in this first season that I missed. I am also curious when I start into season two if there will be fewer episodes that I have not seen already.

The most standout aspect of this episode was the performance by Željko Ivanek as Roland. His performance as the intellectually disable janitor Roland, who was separated from his identical twin when he was young. His brother was in an accident and died, though they were keeping his brain alive. This was a way that he was able to control Roland and get him to finish his work and kill his enemies.

Interesting, and okay.

“The Erlenmeyer Flask”

And then there was this one.

Whoa, this was so much better than Roland.

The X-Files mythology went into high gear as we see the death of Deep Throat. The way the mysterious governmental agents systematically destroy the evidence and manipulate the situation can become very frustrating. You see Mulder and Scully come so close and yet everything is pulled away.

The whole episode is centered around the use of extraterrestrial bacteria, bacteria that does not exist anywhere in nature. This episode gave a lot to Scully, who normally does not get to see the evidence outside of Mulder’s testimony. When she pulled out the original source of the bacteria, it makes it more difficult to believe that she could still be a skeptic.

At the end of the episode Mulder tells Scully that Skinner had told him that the X-Files was being shut down and they were being reassigned. Mulder dedicated himself to keep searching for the truth.

The season one episodes were a little more inconsistent than I remember about the rest of the series. It may have been a season to see how to make this series, what worked and what did not. There were some outstanding episodes here too.

Picket Fences S2 E20, E21, E22

Spoilers

“My Left Shoe”

Father Barrett is revealed to have a shoe fetish and, when Howard Buss went on the local station and revealed it to all of Rome, the questions about Father Barrett’s worthiness are raised by the whole town.

It also opened up the whole town to wonder about masturbation. Especially Matthew, who worried that it was actually a sin. Matthew’s discussions with Jill, Jimmy and even, eventually, Wambaugh were hilarious and oh so real.

There was a lot of hypocrisy in this episode, since it was just a few episodes ago that Barrett was one of the leading voices rallying against Rachel Harris, a fact that was brought up a couple of different times.

The ending when the city of Rome stood in his parish in support of him was an emotional moment.

“Frosted Flakes”

A sad and tragic story about a young boy who has leukemia and has been given just 6 months to live. His parents wanted to explore the possibility of the experimental procedure of cryogenics in order to freeze the boy until a cure could be found.

Of course, this topic divided the Rome community, including Jimmy and Jill. Everyone in the community wanted to have their say about the idea of cryogenically freezing a nine-year old boy. Sadly, a lot of the arguments overshadowed the tragic story the show was presenting to us.

Judge Bone always does a great job of summarizing the situation though and wrapping things back up.

“Howard’s End”

Howard Buss’s Alzheimer’s Disease was getting worse. It was so bad that he was in the mayor’s office, in a diaper, with a bow and arrow, thinking that he was Bill Pugen.

His son Kevin, who we saw earlier this season needing a heart transplant, found his father suffering and he took a gun from the desk drawer and shot Howard in the head.

After talking with Howard’s daughter, Jill decided against the surgery that could have saved Howard’s life. This choice made Jill feel very guilty for the rest of the episode.

Kevin stood trial for the murder of his father, and nobody really wanted to see him convicted. Littleton even voiced this to Maxine, wondering if he should cross examine Kevin. He chose to do so to honor the adversarial process.

However, when Jimmy got on the stand, he testified that Kevin was unable to distinguish between right and wrong. This was a switch for Jimmy, helping to open up the insanity defense for Kevin. The perfect image of Jimmy was tarnished, but many were thankful for it.

The funeral for Howard was remarkably emotional, with Judge Bone getting up to prevent Wambaugh from speaking. The whole picture of the town of Rome walking past the coffin, tapping on it because Howard had asked Judge Bone to do it saying that ‘he’ll hear it,’ was extremely emotional and nearly broke me. It was a beautiful end to a character that had been important since the first season.

This brought the second season of Picket Fences to a close. There were some of the best episodes of the series in this season. Overall, it may be considered the best season of the show’s time on the air.

The X-Files S1 E22

Spoilers

“Born Again”

Once again, I have never seen “Born Again” before today. There have been several episodes of this first season of The X-Files that I do not remember at all. It has been a benefit of this rewatch.

This episode deals with the reincarnation of a police officer who was involved in a theft and killed. The reincarnation was in the body of a little girl and involved some kind of telekinesis.

There are some strange bits in this episode and, honestly, the little girl did not seem to be the best actress. This felt as if it were just a run of the mill episode of the X-Files.

There was a weird use of technology in the episode including a way to see last images seen.

It felt like just some lazy writing.

Honestly, this is not my favorite episode.

Moonlighting S2 E13

Spoilers

“In God We Strongly Suspect”

Another great Moonlighting episode that gives us some solid characterization of our two main leads.

An escape artist/magician dies in an attempt to escape from a container full of water. His wife comes to Dave and Maddie to have them watch the body of her husband until it was time for the cremation. Why? She claimed that her husband said that he would return from the dead and kill his wife.

The body disappears from the casket and the wife winds up dead.

This was a fun plot, and it was helped along with the fact that we learned some intriguing tidbits of Dave and Maddie. Specifically, that Maddie did not believe in God, which horrified David.

If I had guessed, I would have flipped the pair around in their religious beliefs. If you said one of the pair of them was an atheist, I absolutely would have guessed David.

We also discovered that Maddie is not in to celebrating her birthday. So when David and the staff pulled a surprise party for her, Maddie responded in a fairly cold manner.

There was a really charming scene where Maddie went to a magician named Abbie Cadabra to ask him some questions. Abbie was played by Eddie Quillan.

There was a fun beginning tag on the episode where David and Maddie talked to the audience about the episode, claiming that it was supposed to be in 3D, but they did not finish it. Maddie also broke the fourth wall in this episode with a line about “Flying fig”.

American Horror Story: Murder House S1 E8

Spoilers

“Rubber Man”

Episode 8 had a lot of things happening, and many of them dealt with a suit of black latex.

We discovered that it was not Ben who put on the rubber suit and had sex with Vivien. We discovered that it was Tate, which makes more sense on why Vivien’s babies might, I don’t know, have hooves, as the nurse seemed to believe.

We learned more about the gay couple, Chad and Patrick, who were previous owners of the house involved in the murder/suicide, which was not actually a murder/suicide. They were killed by Tate as well. Tate killed them when they stopped looking to adopt a child. Tate was trying to get a child for Nora.

Tate and Violet had sex and he worried that Vivien was going to take her away because she was leaving the house. Vivien accidentally shoots Ben when she is afraid of the spirits in the house. Hayden is manipulating the situation, trying to torment and drive Vivien crazy. Ben seems to be buying it, not believing what Vivien is seeing.

This is really the step of the series where Tate becomes less of a romantic and tragic figure and shown more as a sociopathic killer.

EYG Comic Cavalcade #70

November 26, 2023

Good Sunday everyone. We just had a bunch of snow last night and that makes for a nice day inside on my last day before Thanksgiving break comes to a close.

Then, last night on the WWE Survivor Series, former Marvel Comics Drax limited series writer, CM Punk returned to the WWE. In related news, major snowfall happened in Hell as it froze over.

I was able to finish off the remaining books from last week’s large pull of comics as well as a couple of back issues.

Comics include:

Planetary #7. “To Be In England, In The Summertime.” Written by Warren Ellis and illustrated by John Cassaday. Elijah, Drummer and Jakita go to try and find the truth about the death of an old friend named Jack Carter. I do like the way this series is going.

Ice Cream Man #5. “Ballad of a Falling Man.” Written by W. Maxwell Prince and art by Martin Morazzo. Cover art was by Frazer Irving. This was a great story. A man jumps off a building from 100 floors. We see some of the things happening in the building on his way down. Very creative and fun.

Ghost Rider #20. “The Kids are All Wrong” by Benjamin Percy and Carlos Nieto. “Kill the Blue-Eyed Man” by Steven Paul Judd and Shaun Beyale. Bjorn Barends did the cover art. Lots of weirdness as Johnny Blaze and Talia Warrroad are in search of Cult of Mephisto leader Stefan Skaar.

Deadpool: Seven Slaughters #1. Seven stories with Deadpool from a series of great writers including Cullen Bunn, Justina Ireland, Rob Liefeld & Chad Bowers, Cody Ziglar, Steve Foxe, Gail Simone, and Marc Guggenheim. The artists of the book include Phillip Sevy, Greg Land, Rob Liefeld, Federica Mancin, Gerardo Sandoval, David Baldeon, and Whilce Portacio.

Blade #5. “Mother of Evil: Part Five” Written by Bryan Hill and art by Elena Casagrande. Blade is on the way to find Adana but he was not ready for what he found. This whole issue was a set up to the final page…Blade face to face with Dracula, looking for help.

Black Panther #6. “Reign at Dusk” Part Six. Written by Eve L. Ewing and art by Matt Horak with Mack Chater. Taurin Clarke did the cover art. This was the first of the new Black Panther series that I enjoyed a lot. This told a story of a Black Panther from a century ago.

Silver Surfer Rebirth: Legacy #3. “Silver & Black” Written by Ron Marz and penciled by Ron Lim. Silver Surfer and Genis come together while Thanos battled the black Surfer. At the end, we see Nova and Galactus. Big time story developing.

A Haunted Girl #2. Written by Ethan Sacks & Naomi Sacks and drawn by Marco Lorenzana. Cover art was by Jessica Fong. Cleo is having a lot of trouble. She does not want to go back to school and she is trying to get through the horrors around her.

The Oddly Pedestrian Life of Christopher Chaos #5. Script by Tate Brombal and art by Isaac Goodhart. Cover art was Nick Robles. Christopher, Dracula Boy and Viv join with Alex Frankenstein and go to a place beneath the ground where monsters exist.

Hexagon Bridge #3. “5. The Departure“. Story and art by Richard Blake. Adley heads out to try and find her parents who she expects Gerardus has them. I’m not 100% sure the story going on here, but it is beautifully drawn and things are interesting.

The X-Files S1 E21

Spoilers

“Tooms”

Eugene Tooms returns to the forefront of The X-Files to continue his horror-filled lifestyle. Tooms, who originally debuted in “Squeeze” earlier in season one, was one of the first really popular of the ‘Monsters-of-the-week’ format that the X-Files used.

However, it also blended the whole conspiracy storyline into this episode as well as we meet Walter Skinner, FBI Assistant Director. Skinner would become a recurring characters and an ally for Mulder and Scully, though here he seemed to be in direct subjugation to the Cigarette Smoking Man, played by William B. Davis. This episode was the first time that we heard CSM speak.

Tooms remained as creepy as he was in “Squeeze” and continued to be a significant threat to Mulder and Scully. He did frame Mulder for attacking him, but that storyline bit did not go anywhere, which seemed a waste of time.

Otherwise, this episode was very good with Tooms getting his fifth murder and almost getting to his hibernation. Thankfully, Mulder and Scully found him and he wound up killed an escalator.

This episode also showed the growing connection between Mulder and Scully, as Scully put herself on the line a couple of times in order to help Mulder out.

Tooms was a fantastically creepy villain and helped give the X-Files credibility in episodes that are not just about UFO cover ups.

Picket Fences S2 E19

Spoilers

“Buried Alive”

A traffic stop by Maxine leads to a a special episode of Picket Fences that examines the relationships of everyone involved.

I remember this episode, but I have to say I thought it was a holiday episode. However, it was simply a visit. Jill’s father returned and this episode had the flavor of the Thanksgiving episode from season one, which is why I seemed to remember it that way.

Maxine pulled Hayden, Jill’s father, over for rolling through a stop sign (something I think about every time I do the same thing) and things get out of hand. Maxine arrests Hayden, taking him down to the station. She says she would drop the charges for an apology, but Hayden refuses to do so.

In order to try and smooth everything over, Jimmy invites Maxine to dinner with them.

This triggers all sorts of fireworks that somehow ends up with an examination of the marriage of Jimmy and Jill.

It is a classic Picket Fences episode that goes into problem after problem, all stemming from each other. Each character laid out their personal resentments and their inner most dialogue to each other in an uncomfortable and suspenseful manner.

“Buried Alive” used events from the last year worth of episodes to inform the arguments. Episodes involving Maxine’s therapist, Hayden’s girlfriend, Jill kissing her former fiancée, Thanksgiving, the under sheriff drama were all referenced. I love the use of continuity. Despite the fact that these Picket Fences episodes feel self contained for the most part, they constantly use the things that happen as part of their lives. Just like real people.

I’m not sure that real people lay out their dirty laundry like the Brocks and those in their orbit do in real life (without complete devastation to relationships), but there is no doubt that it makes for riveting drama when they do it on screen.

Doctor Who Special 1: The Star Beast

Even though I am not a Doctor Who fan, I am aware of the character and I was interested in the first of three specials airing on Disney + that were celebrating the 60th anniversary of the character. After watching special 1 today, I am looking ahead to the next two specials, which are “Wild Blue Yonder” (Dec. 2) and “The Giggle” (Dec. 9).

I thought the special did a great job of introducing me to the characters that were going to be important in this story, especially Donna Temple-Noble, played by Catherine Tate. They gave me, a casual viewer, the information that I needed to enjoy the story and the relationships within the story.

David Tennant looks to be having a blast running around and assuming the face of The Doctor once again. Tennant has so much energy and charisma that you immediately embrace the character, even if you have just a passing knowledge of him.

The special effects are decent for a TV movie, which this basically is. Some of the creatures are fun and have a creative design. Again, not knowing what other creatures on the series looks like, it is hard for me to criticize the current situation. Nothing pulled me out of the story, which is a victory.

Catherine Tate was great too. I can see why this character was as popular as I had heard she was. She had great chemistry with Tennant and the pairing truly worked.

The mystery of why Tennant returned to the Doctor’s face is intriguing as I know that has never happened before in the history of The Doctor. It is something that I look forward to discovering.

3.5 stars

Picket Fences S2 E18

Spoilers

“System Down”

James Earl Jones guest stars in a dramatic episode that is as relevant today as it was back in the early 1990s.

The show is similar to the classic movie 12 Angry Men as the show features the conflicts and dialogue inside the jury room. Jimmy’s reputation as a fair man winds him up on the jury despite the fact that this case was involving the shooting of police officers.

A drug dealing black man shoots two police officers who are kicking in his door. There was a video as well.

It felt as if this should have been an open and shut case, but the defense argued that the suspect had a reasonable fear for his life at the time and that this was self-defense.

Watching the jury debate this point was fascinating. The jury spent almost an equal amount of time attacking each other in the jury room. We meet Ed Lawson, played by Richard Masur, who would become an important recurring character. He is an unlikable man who is implied to be a bigot.

There is no falling action in this story. I felt like I wanted to see how some people reacted to Jimmy on this decision, but the show does go to black with Jimmy sitting in the jury box after giving the ‘not guilty’ verdict.

A few scenes between James Earl Jones and Fyvush Finkel were epic. The show does a solid job of giving the jurors who we do not know personalities and an easy way to familiarize us with who they are as characters.

Moonlighting S2 E12

Spoilers

“North By North DiPesto”

So here we are.

Moonlighting would do a few of these DiPesto-centric episodes throughout the series, and they were always lowlights of the show. The episodes were fine and Agnus was a beloved member of the cast, but throwing her into these Moonlighting plots never worked. Mainly because we wanted to see David and Maddie in these Moonlighting plots. So while the episodes are fine, they are just not what we want out of this show.

Maddie even made a fourth wall breaking joke at the end of the episode about talking to the writers about bigger roles for next week’s episode. Some of the reasons behind DiPesto episodes were because of Bruce Willis and Cybill Shepherd’s availability, but this did not seem to be the issue here, as Dave and Maddie were in the episode at the beginning and at the end.

Agnus wound up in some spy craft story with a bunch of spies trying to find hidden plans. It was really an underdeveloped story and needed that extra spice that Dave and Maddie could provide, but weren’t there to do it.

Again, I think the use of DiPesto is fine. I prefer when she is used like she was in “Twas the Episode Before Christmas.” She was a major player in that episode, but it was anchored by Dave and Maddie. These DiPesto episodes get much worse later when they include Curtis Armstrong, who will play office worker Herbert Viola. I’ll talk more about him when he arrives.