Archive for the ‘John from Cincinnati’ Category

‘Luck’ creator has uneven track record at HBO

March 18, 2012

Kevin Dunn in HBO's "Luck" (Photo: HBO)

By ADAM BUCKMAN

Is David Milch out of luck?

Well, HBO keeps going back to him, despite the pay-cable channel’s uneven track record with the critically acclaimed producer/writer of TV shows people either love or hate.

Milch’s latest creation, the HBO horse-racing series “Luck,” made television history last week when it was abruptly cancelled due to the deaths of three horses during the filming of the show.  The latest, an accident in which a horse fatally injured itself while being walked back to its stall (it was euthanized), happened last Tuesday.

A day later, HBO made the stunning announcement: Production on “Luck” was being shut down for good.

The show was in the midst of filming one of the early episodes in its second season, even as the first season was still underway.  “Luck,” airing Sunday nights at 9 on HBO, has its second-to-last episode on Sunday (March 18) and its final, first-season episode — now its last episode ever — the following weekend (March 25).  Only nine episodes were made for the first season, and HBO was so excited about the show (for, among other reasons, it had succeeded in luring Dustin Hoffman to star in his first TV show) that the cable channel renewed it for a second season almost immediately after the very first episode aired back in late January.

Now, that’s not going to happen as “Luck” goes into the history books as the first TV series ever cancelled due to the deaths of animals used in its production.

In the wake of this week’s cancellation announcement, two subjects to contemplate: (1) Will “Luck” be missed?  And (2) what of David Milch, the bard of Buffalo (the New York city where he was raised), for whom “Luck” was his fourth go-round with HBO (that we know of)?

First, on the merits of “Luck”: Like Milch’s other shows, this one was an acquired taste.  And according to at least one report we read the other day, “Luck” drew more than a million viewers for its premiere and then, eventually, the audience fell to about half that.  The story even suggested HBO was seeking an excuse to cancel “Luck,” and the unlucky horses provided the reason the channel needed to pull the plug.  That’s just conjecture, but my take is: That’s not a far-fetched scenario at all.

Why’d so many people abandon the show?  For the love/hate reason suggested above.  The thing people love about Milch’s shows, primarily, is the intriguing, highly literate dialogue he writes for his characters.  Lovers of great writing appreciate when his characters engage in his trademark verbal sparring, even when they go off on irrelevant tangents, such as last week’s out-of-left-field conversation in which two characters debated the details of the Three Stooges’ “Niagara Falls” comedy bit.

The unusual tone and tempo of the dialogue is also why millions get turned off by Milch.  For one thing, it’s not what they’re used to hearing on TV shows.  For another, his shows often suffer from an action deficit.  Often, you go entire episodes without much happening.  Instead, the hour is sucked up by dialogues that, yes, are very creative, but also stultifying.

That was the thing with “Luck”: The acting was great, for the most part  (Hoffman, Michael Gambon, Jason Gedrick, Joan Allen, Dennis Farina, Jill Hennessy and all the rest), the horse-racing scenes were electrifying, and the cinematography was beautiful.  Still, not much happened.  And that’s a turn-off for many.  (Why include the phrase “for the most part” above?  Because the one cast member I didn’t care for was Nick Nolte, who played a gravel-voiced horse trainer.)

As for Milch, his track record with HBO is fascinating: First, there was “Deadwood,” everyone’s favorite Western series and the one that changed forever our perceptions of how the Old West should be portrayed from here on out.  Well, that series got cancelled suddenly before Milch had planned to end it, and fans howled in protest.  HBO promised some future “Deadwood” TV movies, but no one believed that, and indeed, they never happened.

Then there was Milch’s one-season series about a dysfunctional family of southern California surfers and their interactions with a godlike alien – “John From Cincinnati.”    For most people, that show was even less accessible than “Luck.”  (But again, like with all Milch shows, opinions vary widely.  I happened to love “John From Cincinnati” and consider it to be one of the finest TV shows ever produced.  Go figure.)

He then tried his hand at another cop show (he’d long been associated with “NYPD Blue” on ABC) called “Last of the Ninth” (referring to the Ninth Precinct of the NYPD).  He produced a pilot for HBO, but the network declined.  Then they said yes to “Luck” and that show bit the dust because of dead animals.

Will HBO take up any new business with Milch after all of this?  Well, it’s not his fault the horses died, but on this question, as with all Milch questions, there are two camps: Those who love him hope HBO will try again with him.  Those who can’t stand his shows won’t mourn the passing of “Luck.”

If you’ve been following “Luck” up to this point, I suggest you carry it through to the end, even though the March 25 finale does not serve as a series ender.  Truth is, you only really have to expend two more hours with this star-crossed show.  And then it’s good-bye and good luck to “Luck.”

“Luck” airs Sunday nights at 9/8c on HBO (for two more weeks, alas).

 # # #

DON’T MISS: “Jerk: My Life as a Columnist on the TV Beat” by yours truly — only at AdamBuckman.com.

Icons for your iPod: The greatest TV playlist ever

July 21, 2010

From "The Sopranos": R.L. Burnside -- "It's Bad You Know."

YOU CAN’T GO WRONG WITH THESE SONGS FEATURED IN THE BEST SHOWS AND SCENES EVER PRODUCED FOR TELEVISION

By ADAM BUCKMAN

These 12 songs represent some of the greatest moments, shows and individual scenes in the history of television — a compelling playlist for anyone’s iPod.

(1) “Johnny Appleseed” (Joe Strummer & the Mescaleros): A great song that stands on its own, but became the theme song for the coolest TV series ever made about southern California, “John from Cincinnati” (HBO, 2007).

(2) “Sun/Rise/Light/Flies” (Kasabian): Also from “John from Cincinnati,” this incredible ’60s-infused rock song accompanied the final surfing sequence in the series’ pilot.  Unforgettable.

(3) “Return to Me” (Bob Dylan): This song, Dylan’s acoustic-guitar version of a love song popularized by Dean Martin, was overlaid on one of the best sequences in the entire run of “The Sopranos” — a series of scenes near the conclusion of “Amour Fou,” the penultimate episode of the series’ third season.  It’s the sequence in which Ralph Cifaretto (Joe Pantoliano) is seen telling Rosalie Aprile (Sharon Angela) that her son Jackie Jr. (Jason Cerbone) is in trouble with the mob.

(4) “It’s Bad You Know” (R.L. Burnside): This haunting (and downright frightening) recording by the Mississippi bluesman R.L. Burnside was played ever-so-briefly, but oh-so-ominously in the final episode of Season 1 of “The Sopranos,” just after Tony Soprano pulled a revolver out of a fish’s mouth and gunned down Chucky Signore on Chucky’s boat.

(5) “Moonglow” (Artie Shaw & his Orchestra): No one who watched Ken Burns’ epic 2007 documentary about World War II, “The War,” will ever forget the series’ opening scene of a sleepy Alabama town before the war, as this tender classic of the Big Band era played over the voice of Keith David narrating the story of Glenn Frazier, then 16, who would go on to provide the series with some of the most stunning personal stories of war ever told on TV.

(6) “Waiting for the Train to Come In” (Harry James & his Orchestra, with Kitty Kallen): From the same Ken Burns series, this sentimental track with James’ long trombone intro was used for a sequence near the documentary’s conclusion that showed Americans welcoming their boys home after four years of war.  If you watched this and didn’t cry, then you need to call a cardiologist to treat you for your heart of stone.

(7) “You Are the Sunshine of My Life” (Stevie Wonder): It was one of the sweetest moments ever produced on any show in the history of TV — the moment on “Taxi” in 1982, in the episode titled “Jim’s Inheritance,” when Rev. Jim (Christopher Lloyd) explores his father’s belongings following his father’s death and finds a cassette in a jacket pocket that seems to have been put there just for him.  It turns out to be “You Are the Sunshine of My Life,” a sweet revelation made even better when Jim blurts out: “Dad — I didn’t know you liked Stevie Wonder!”

(8) “With a Little Help from My Friends” (Joe Cocker): Cocker’s gravel-voiced cover of the Beatles’ song from “Sgt. Pepper’s” will forever be remembered as the theme song for “The Wonder Years,” the great, well-loved show about childhood in suburbia, circa 1970.  This series was so uncannily accurate that people of a certain age could have sworn the show was produced specifically about their lives.

(9) “Desperado” (Linda Ronstadt): In season five of “The Wonder Years,” in the episode titled “Stormy Weather” in 1992, this tune was used oh-so appropriately when Kevin’s sister Karen (Olivia d’Abo) was reunited with her boyfriend Michael (David Schwimmer) and they slow-danced on the front lawn in the pouring rain.

(10) “Eli’s Coming” (Three Dog Night): This 1969 song came up suddenly and poignantly at the conclusion of an episode of “Sports Night” titled “Eli’s Coming” in 1999.  It came right at the moment that the “Sports Night” staff heard the stunning news that their executive producer, Isaac (Robert Guillaume) had suffered a stroke.

(11) “Worry About You” (Ivy): This song, with its lyrics, “Bye bye baby, don’t be long.  I’ll worry about you while you’re gone,” was used to unforgettable effect in the final sequence of the pilot episode of “The 4400″ in 2004.  The sequence was one of the most beautiful ever produced for any show, and the song helped underscore the alienation felt by the 4,400 people who had been abducted by alien spacecraft — some decades before — and were suddenly returned to earth in the present day, having not aged at all.

(12) “Breathe Me” (Sia): Like “Worry About You,” this song became one of those go-to tunes for a number of TV shows and movies, but the best use of “Breathe Me” came in the final sequence of the final episode of “Six Feet Under” in August 2005, when Claire Fisher (Lauren Ambrose) left home for New York and the sequence advanced forward, far into the future, to show the deaths/fates of this HBO series’ principal characters.  It was one of the most affecting sequences ever filmed for television.

# # #


Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.