Jennifer Ehle and Patrick Wilson star in A Gifted Man |
Barely four weeks into the new fall TV season, and we’ve already seen our first causalities: NBC’s neither sexy nor smart The Playboy Club, ABC’s dead-on-arrival Charlie’s Angels remake, and NBC’s workplace comedy Free Agents, have all been cancelled. (Perhaps I was alone in this, but I was rather charmed by Hank Azaria and Free Agents, and I regret that it wasn’t given more time to mature). In the end, however, I expect the 2011 fall TV season will likely be remembered for highly anticipated and expensive disappointments like Terra Nova, and impressively original cable fare like Homeland. (About Terra Nova, perhaps the less said the better, but Homeland deserves a special mention, and not only for the compelling case that Susan Green recently made on this blog. Showtime’s Homeland marks the return of Damian Lewis to television, last seen when NBC’s brilliant but short-lived series Life came to an untimely end in 2009. Lewis’ talent to portray quietly dangerous men with unfathomable internal lives is on full display in Homeland, and his presence alone would make the series worth your time!)
But sometimes, if you’re lucky, you don’t have to wade through
CGI Brachiosaurs and 60s-era stewardesses to find great television. Every once
in a while, good TV can play by established rules, and still bring something
refreshingly new, smart, and entertaining to the small screen. This season that
show is CBS’s A Gifted Man, and hopefully it hasn’t gone unnoticed. A
Gifted Man is a medical drama with a twist, and so far it seems to be doing
almost everything right.
Director Joanthan Demme |
The show is built around two great actors, neither of whom has
spent much time on the small screen. Patrick Wilson (Watchmen, Little
Children) exudes charisma and competence, and his Michael Holt is so
sincere and confident in his self-absorption that it is almost impossible to
fault him for it. Wilson
is capable of portraying not only Michael’s achievement, but also what it has
cost him. (As he says to the young tennis star in the first episode, “Being the
best at tennis, surgery, whatever – it can’t be part of your life, it has to be
instead of it. I get that.”) Jennifer Ehle, largely a newcomer to
American TV and most famous for her role as Lizzie Bennet in BBC’s Pride and Prejudice in 1995, is absolutely refreshing as the late Doctor Anna Paul
– though her uncanny resemblance to Meryl Streep can sometimes be a little
distracting! Ehle is incredibly likeable and brings a wry charm to the role: her Anna
seems genuinely as surprised and disturbed by the turn of events as Michael.
Michael and Anna’s scenes have a comfortable tone, fully consistent
with the playfulness and intermittent intimacy of two long-separated exes.
Margo Martindale on Justified |
Its timeslot notwithstanding, A Gifted Man isn’t your
usual CBS ghost story. The supernatural element – which no doubt will develop
over the course of this first season – is still currently playing second fiddle
to a compelling medical drama and its well-developed characters. In the end, it
is a story about relationships – the ones between Michael and his patients, and
the developing one between Michael and Anna. Perhaps A Gifted Man will be a
disappointment to any Ghost Whisperer or Medium fans who tune in.
The supernatural elements are downplayed in favour of character and dialogue. (In
fact, even after four episodes, it is still possible, if thematically unlikely,
that Michael is in fact suffering from hallucinations instead of visitations –
a fact which hasn’t escaped him either.) Ten minutes into the pilot episode and
you’ll be cured once and for all of any notion that the show is “House meets Ghost Whisperer”. The show’s decidedly adult sensibility means
that there will be no words scrawled on bathroom mirrors, none of the urgent, frenzied
tone of many Hollywood ghost stories that suggests
that our characters’ hearts might simply burst at any moment. The supernatural elements
of A Gifted Man are more Truly, Madly, Deeply and less Ghost.
Ghost-Anna’s impact on the world is limited to her conversations with Michael. She
too is a victim of circumstance, with no control or agency over her current
fate, or even when she appears and disappears. Aside from being invisible and
immaterial, her character basically plays by the same rules as any mortal one. She
doesn’t know the future, and her knowledge of the past is limited to what she
could have known in life. What makes the show often so original is that it is
as much her story, as it is Michael’s.
One of my concerns, coming out of the pilot episode, was
that the haunting becomes a metaphor for their failed marriage, and for
marriage in general. If so, my fear was that the show would develop a dark
symbolic structure to it that would have been irredeemable: a message like “the
best wife is a dead wife,” one who lives solely for the betterment of her man, along
with the implication that a good woman ceases to exist when the husband leaves
the room! But even early on it is clear that Anna is there for herself. She has unfinished business in the world and people to help. Michael is her sole contact to the world, but she doesn’t exist solely a prop for Michael’s inevitable redemption.
There may be many different reasons why you haven’t watched A Gifted Man – perhaps you don’t like ghost stories, perhaps you’ve lost faith in broadcast television, or perhaps you aren’t normally at home on Friday nights. But whatever the reason may be, make sure find the time to check it out. In a new season that already had its share of disappointments, A Gifted Man is sure to be a pleasant, and highly entertaining, surprise.
There may be many different reasons why you haven’t watched A Gifted Man – perhaps you don’t like ghost stories, perhaps you’ve lost faith in broadcast television, or perhaps you aren’t normally at home on Friday nights. But whatever the reason may be, make sure find the time to check it out. In a new season that already had its share of disappointments, A Gifted Man is sure to be a pleasant, and highly entertaining, surprise.
MARK!!! I don't have time for another tv show, grrrr......I can't. It's settled then, you'll stop writing. Whew, glad that's over.
ReplyDeleteWhat! Free Agents cancelled! It was funny...I guess that explains it.
ReplyDelete