Monday 13 May 2013

New NBC Series Trailers and First Impressions: The Michael J. Fox Show, The Blacklist, Believe, About a Boy and More

NBC held their Upfront today in New York, officially unveiling their 2014-2014 lineup to advertisers.

The full trailers for all of NBC's upcoming new series were shown at the Upfront, but unfortunately, they've only posted the ones for shows debuting in the fall, with the additional footage we saw today from the midseason slate being held for now. Which is a shame, because I'd love for everyone to see the trailer for J.J. Abrams and Alfonso Cauron's Believe, which looked especially cool.

<p style="text-align: center;"><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong><a href=" http://www.ign.com/articles/2013/05/12/nbc-2013-2014-schedule-no-set-timeslot-for-community-revolution-moving-believe-midseason-and-more"><span style="color: #ff0000;"><strong>NBC's New Schedule: What's Airing When</strong></span></a></strong></span></p>

Below are the trailers that have been released, along with additional clips from the series, and my first quick initial thoughts - followed by quick write ups on the trailers not available to post yet.

Be warned, Upfronts trailers are very spoilery - basically giving you an overview of what occurs in the entire pilot episode.

The Blacklist

This is the show NBC clearly sees as the one with the most potential. The network's president, Bob Greenblatt, noted it was their highest testing drama out of the last 125 drama pilots over the past decade. It's no accident it's getting the best timeslot on the network, after The Voice on Mondays.

It looks very fun to me, with James Spader having a ball as a master criminal who, for reasons of his own, is helping the FBI hunt down other criminals - while specifically asking for the help of a young FBI agent who has no knowledge of a connection between them. The Silence of the Lambs influence on the criminal/FBI agent dynamic is very clear, but it also has an overlying mystery and other aspects that make it stand out. And director Joe Carnahan (The Grey, Smoking Aces) brings his skill to the proceedings.

The Michael J. Fox Show

Who doesn't love Michael J. Fox? We all grew up watching him and it's great to have him back on TV. Embracing his real life condition was somewhat necessary, but Fox already proved on Curb Your Enthusiasm that he has a great sense of humor about his struggle with parkinson's disease. The meta aspects of the story (Fox is playing a TV personality going back to work, though a newscaster) are interesting and the show looks funny and endearing.

Dracula

I don't know about this one... NBC is capitalizing on the vampire craze of the past few years by going back to the most famous vampire of them all. The period setting does at least help Dracula stand out from all of the modern day vampire stories at this point, but the footage looks fairly hammy.

Ironside

This looks to be a straight forward procedural in most ways, but built around a different kind of protagonist (albeit by remaking a classic TV series). Certainly Blair Underwood has charisma to burn, but ultimately, this will likely be another variation on "Damn, this guy is smart!" each week. Not that there's anything wrong with that, of course, if done well. And this character's specific scenario, a detective now in a wheelchair after being shot, is interesting and adds another layer. That being said, probably not appointment television for me. But if you love case of the week shows, go for it!

Sean Saves the World

NBC's latest attempt to launch a successful traditional, multi-cam sitcom, this one does boast two stars who know their way around this world with Sean Hayes and Linda Lavin. It looks amusing, if not great, and we'll see if NBC has any luck grabbing the larger audiences shows like this still can get (Hi, CBS!). If anything, it certainly looks to be an improvement over Whitney and Guys with Kids.

Welcome to the Family

This comedy about two less than friendly families brought together by their teenage children's shotgun wedding looks pretty middle of the road, but in a pleasant way. Nothing breaking new ground here (why do I feel the words "Modern Family" were evoked in the pitch?) but good for a few laughs.

On to the shows whose trailers were shown at Upfronts but are not released wide yet...

Believe

I've been excited about this one from the get go. J.J. Abrams' name as a producer is the selling point, but it's Alfonso Cauron's presence as both co-creator and director that really is notable. The acclaimed director of Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban and Children of Men leaves behind much of his usual visual signature (the show's visual style is much more "TV norm" than you might expect), but the trailer still had a very poignant, artful and gripping tone to it, as a young girl with superpowers becomes the focus of multiple groups, good and bad, with plans for her. It looked highly emotional, filled with big moments and plenty of action (Resident Evil's Sienna Guillory stands out as a particularly skillful assassin). I can't wait to see this one.

Crisis

This show will be paired with Believe midseason on Sundays, and it looks to be a good partnership. While lacking that extra spark Believe hinted at, Crisis looks to be a well done, intriguing thriller, as a bus of children are kidnapped - including the president's own child and several other kids whose parents are highly influential and powerful people. There's a big conspiracy/mystery element, as we get hints at what the kidnappers want and who is involved, and it's terrific to see Gillian Anderson (The X-Files) back as a series lead.

The Night Shift

The most unimpressive of NBC's new drama pilot trailers was easily this one. This look at the night crew at a military hospital seems very cliched and routine; filled with moments that feel like third rate ER episodes.

Undateable

Bill Lawrence has given us strong comedies like Scrubs and Cougar Town, but this show -- about a bunch of "undateable" guys, getting advice from a new friend who seems to have the moves they don't --felt pretty lackluster based on the trailer. There were several obvious jokes and moments that failed to resonate. But hey, Cougar Town didn't start great either, so Lawrence gets a "I'll give it a few episodes" pass.

The Family Guide

While J.K. Simmons is tempting fate, starring in his second network comedy in a row with Family in the title, after the very lame Family Tools, he looks to have found better material here. Playing a blind father, Simmons brings the warm gruffness he's known for. Some of the moments in the trailer strain credibility (this guy would really try driving, with his son, on their street?), while others were humorous. But it does have an ace in the hole in the form of the title character, the new guide dog Simmons' character is given. Because... doggie!

Chicago PD

This spinoff of Chicago Fire will likely be familiar territory to anyone who's seen Dick Wolf's output. But who can argue with the success of the man behind the Law & Order franchise? At least Chicago PD has one notable element, centering on a gruff cop who seems to have had his own vaguely criminal past. Still, expect the usual type of Law & Order-ish Wolf cop stories. Which certainly has worked out fine for him in the past, so who can argue with that?

About a Boy

A new version of the story from the popular book and film of the same name. About a Boy stars David Walton, one of those actors who has appeared in many failed comedies. But this will hopefully be the right one for him, because it looks very funny and very sweet. Which is what you'd hope coming from Jason Katims, the executive producer of Friday Night Lights and Parenthood. I look forward to having Katims make me cry again from time to time, in the midst of a half hour comedy.


Source : ign[dot]com

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