following actors around
Mar. 10th, 2009 09:25 pmFollowing actors from favorite TV shows around after those shows leave the air can be a hazardous proposition. After Buffy left the air, we watched one episode each of the new shows starring Alyson Hannigan and Nicholas Brendon, which were both so hideous we never saw another.
Eliza Dushku, also from Buffy, is in something called Dollhouse which is said to be made by Joss Whedon, but from the evidence of the three episodes I've seen so far, I really don't think it is. That must be just one of those rumors. There is nothing remotely of the Whedon touch about it, and Dushku is badly miscast, something the Joss I know would never do.
Imagine my surprise, then, to find that the first episode of Castle, starring Nathan Fillion, late of Firefly, was actually pretty good. Needless to say, it's not about a castle any more than Firefly was about a firefly. Fillion plays a mystery writer named Rick Castle who tags along to murder scenes with a woman detective he's got the sweets for. Castle is an egoistic goofball, more like Captain Hammer than Captain Tightpants, but rather amazingly, Fillion does not overplay him, and he's amusing rather than annoying, partly because - despite himself - Castle is also smart.
The plot of the first episode was bog-standard Evil Murderer. The detective has the same corps of interchangeable assistants of most drama shows. (I had to give up on House because I couldn't tell any of the regular characters besides Dr. House apart.) The character of Castle's ex-wife was played by a watered-down Emma Caulfield type, and the real thing would have been better. But the show was pretty enjoyable, pretty well written, pretty well acted, and I'd be willing to see it again. Maybe Joss Whedon had a hand in it.
Eliza Dushku, also from Buffy, is in something called Dollhouse which is said to be made by Joss Whedon, but from the evidence of the three episodes I've seen so far, I really don't think it is. That must be just one of those rumors. There is nothing remotely of the Whedon touch about it, and Dushku is badly miscast, something the Joss I know would never do.
Imagine my surprise, then, to find that the first episode of Castle, starring Nathan Fillion, late of Firefly, was actually pretty good. Needless to say, it's not about a castle any more than Firefly was about a firefly. Fillion plays a mystery writer named Rick Castle who tags along to murder scenes with a woman detective he's got the sweets for. Castle is an egoistic goofball, more like Captain Hammer than Captain Tightpants, but rather amazingly, Fillion does not overplay him, and he's amusing rather than annoying, partly because - despite himself - Castle is also smart.
The plot of the first episode was bog-standard Evil Murderer. The detective has the same corps of interchangeable assistants of most drama shows. (I had to give up on House because I couldn't tell any of the regular characters besides Dr. House apart.) The character of Castle's ex-wife was played by a watered-down Emma Caulfield type, and the real thing would have been better. But the show was pretty enjoyable, pretty well written, pretty well acted, and I'd be willing to see it again. Maybe Joss Whedon had a hand in it.