Procedurals 1: Anything You Say Can and Will Be Used Against You.
This thread is for procedural TV, shows where the primary idea is to figure out the case. [NAFDA]
I figure they'll be keeping the new narrative beginning to Castle just long enough to get new viewers up to speed, and then probably drop it next year.
Liked the ep last night! Nice to see the cop group all having their moment under the tree, complete with My Favorite Coroner (that woman kicks ass and delivers really good snark) and the two minions adding to the snark level ("Dead body in a tree, mommy and daddy arguing--all's right with the world").
Here's hoping that now that Beckett and Castle are back together, we'll have more daughter time next week.
I really enjoyed the Castle episode too. NF can do not much wrong in my mind. Loved the father/daughter time, as usual.
I was surprised to see that they seem to be toning down Castle's mom's joie de flair and Beckett's severe presentation. Her hair is longer, lighter and layered...her clothes, softer. I'm not sure why she needs to be more 'accessible.'
I totally agree about the coroner. She's my favorite sub-character.
Stephen J. Cannell! I love the writer's poker game. I doubt we'll get much of it...probably wicked expensive...but I find myself hoping for it in each episode.
Now that you mention it, who was the other writer in the poker game? I heard him called Colin, but all I could think of was Colin Dexter, who's British, so that couldn't be right.
It was Michael Connelly, Kathy. I haven't read any of his stuff, but may now...go team cross marketing!
I loved that James Patterson was in an episode last season. I've listened to nearly ALL his stuff.
Thanks, bonny! So it was "Connelly" I heard, not "Colin." They did reference his detective's name, but since I've not read his books, it didn't help ID him for me. He's a pretty stiff actor--you could tell they decided to give most of the lines to Cannell instead probably due to the fact he was better on screen. Loved the reference to his book King Con, which is probably my favorite of his. I'm a sucker for good con game stories, though.
I know nothing about Russian accents--was hers at all correct?
Cannell is the man.
He created "The Rockford Files" despite dyslexia so severe he writes everything out phonetically first and has an extra secretary transcribe it in standard English.
I hero-worship him.
I know everybody in the hard-boiled world loves Connelly too, but personally? His work doesn't blow my skirt up. I don't know why(well,ok, naming a detective after Hieronymous Bosch is a little Much, but in a world with crime-solving siameses, I'm not sure that's enough.)
CSI: Miami ... My god, it was mind-bogglingly bad
Hee--did you see the Dr. Horrible bit on the Emmys? Capt. Hammer said that CSI:Miami was his favorite of the three because it didn't strain his brain.
Capt. Hammer said that CSI:Miami was his favorite of the three because it didn't strain his brain.
Which made me laugh even harder when CSI came up on Castle last night. Watching CSI: Miami as a comedy might not be good enough now, but I am going to try and ride out the
Delko departs
storyline.
OK. I watched House earlier. I needed some tea before I could post.
Yes, there were issues with it. Some of them were major.
I still liked it rather a whole desperate lot. And I'm the girl who spends most of her life taking apart disability/mental health portrayals in TV drama because they don't match my experience. If they can make me go from shouting at the screen that this is not what psychiatric hospitals are like, to being so drawn in that I needed to turn off my phone and close e-mail, they've done rather well. Even if they're curing catatonic people with music boxes (ha, ha ha, ha ha) and persuading one of my fellow bipolar types to take medication (ahem). Still an awesome story about four people's journeys (the least interesting of those people being House) that I'm going to have to watch again tomorrow.
If The Girl pans it, I will be unimpressed.
I still wish psychiatric hospitals of the sort that top specialists could afford were represented realistically. He'd have been in a veritable hotel.