I would probably not even think of watching this series if
J.J. Abrams wasn’t involved. It
kind of boggles my mind that the guy behind Lost and Fringe is behind
this show as well. He wrote the
pilot, and Matt Reeves (the director of Cloverfield, if I’m not mistaken) directed. Keri Russell is the title character, in
case you were under a rock in 1998.
The pilot also stars Scott Speedman as Ben, Amy Jo Johnson as Julie, and
Scott Foley as Noel (pronounced ‘Knoll’, just so you know). There are some other characters, but
they’re not that important, this is really a four-person show at this point.
For a pilot, this thing really moved along. It was only 44 minutes long, but it
definitely felt longer. I don’t
meant that to sound like it was boring – I mean a lot of stuff happened. There’s a thing in comic books called ‘decompressed
storytelling’, or, put another way, ‘writing for the trade.’ It’s where two or three issues worth of
story are stretched into six or seven issues so that it will be better able to
be sold as a collected edition later on, and it is one of the main things that
I hate about current comics.
Single-issue comic book stories are all but a thing of the past at this
point, and it’s terrible. The
pilot of Felicity is the exact
opposite of decompressed storytelling. It honestly felt like a season’s-worth
of stuff happened. Feelings are
confessed more than once, friends betray each other, and Felicity has multiple
nutball meltdowns throughout.
Storylines that could have been played out over the course of thirteen
or twenty-two episodes are completely blown through, and it’s amazing.
There’s a lot of status to quo here, and they don’t waste any time doing
it, and it’s incredibly refreshing.
Felicity, as mentioned, is nuts, and also kind of a disaster
at life. I know she’s a teenage
girl, with the hormones and the not thinking about things before she does them,
but man, this whole thing is just a cluster almost from the moment we meet
her. She chooses to upend her life
and go to college in New York, partly to spite her super-controlling parents,
but mostly because she’s got it bad for Ben. They’ve never been together. They’ve hardly ever even spoken. But after he writes some nice stuff in her yearbook, she
decides that this is a healthy thing for her to do. Then, when things don’t go exactly as she hoped they would,
she waffles back and forth between going back home to do what her parents want
her to do and sticking it out, trying to be friends with Ben and have a life of
her own. Ultimately she decides on
the latter, but the road to get there is not pretty. I hope she gets less bananas. Then again, like I said, she’s a teenage girl, so what am I
supposed to expect?
Ben seems like kind of a man-whore. When Felicity first runs into him in New York, he’s got some girl on his arm, and they kiss and seem really close, and then we never see her again. Then he’s hooking up with Julie after who knows how many dates (I’m thinking one). Maybe he’s not really a man-whore, but I think he has man-whore potential. He’ll bang anything that moves if it’s not Felicity. That’s rough.
Ben seems like kind of a man-whore. When Felicity first runs into him in New York, he’s got some girl on his arm, and they kiss and seem really close, and then we never see her again. Then he’s hooking up with Julie after who knows how many dates (I’m thinking one). Maybe he’s not really a man-whore, but I think he has man-whore potential. He’ll bang anything that moves if it’s not Felicity. That’s rough.
Noel reminds me of Xander Harris, in the best way possible. I have a friend who hates Xander, and there is something wrong with her because Xander is the most likable character ever, except for when he’s mean to Anya. But in the ‘super-likable’ category, Noel fits right in, especially when he confesses his feelings for Felicity. Jennie and I are both immediately on Team Noel. Too bad I know that, in real life, he cheated on Jennifer Garner. No man cheats on Agent Sydney Bristow and lives to tell the tale as far as I’m concerned. Noel must inevitably die.
At no point in the pilot did Amy Jo Johnson duck off to morph into the Pink Power Ranger. That made me sad. She did, however, wear two different earrings throughout the episode. That also made me sad. Where does she do her jewelry-shopping, in people’s trash cans?
I could probably do more to tear into this, but, honestly, I enjoyed it. I know there will probably not be any smoke monsters or parallel universes on this series, but I’ll give it a shot anyway. It’s pretty brainless so far, no matter how hard the characters try to sound deep and smart. Kids, amirite? Also, I’m already ‘shipping Felicity and Noel, and I do enjoy a good ‘ship. We’ll see how this thing goes.
6 comments:
As someone who, like Felicity (I'm assuming), was raised on a diet of Friends reruns and romantic comedies, the whole moving to NY thing felt very much like the beginning of a movie where she'd humiliate herself for a while and then she and Ben would fall in love THE END. I say that having no idea if they end up together at some point.
Also, who hates Xander Harris?!
I'm re-watching the series and the part of the pilot that totally bugged me was Ben kissing that random, and then being all, "I'm into Julie." And they never mention the random AGAIN?! So dumb. Anywhoo... I love this show so much, it is so embarrassing and good.
Felicity season one is SO GOOD. Basically for all the reasons you list here. The rest of the series? Meh.
Team Noel all the way, at least for season one . . . you'll see what I mean if you get that far. Basically, I think once JJ Abrams went away to make Alias, this show started to suffer. At least, that's my half-baked, not well-researched opinion.
I love Felicity. There, I said it.
Hi,
My fiancee Jennie and I are getting married next year and were hoping to use your blog's URL for our wedding website. It seems like you have not actively used your blog since sometime in 2011. Would you consider giving up the URL so that we could take it over?
Thanks,
Joe L.
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