Stop me if you’ve heard this one before: a doctor on a network drama seems like he’s kind of an asshole, but his unconventional approach ends up getting results that no one else can achieve. He’s also sexy and brooding, clearly haunted by a past that he won’t open up about, but which has turned him into the person he is today. If that sounds familiar, you’ve hit on the central problem with The Resident, Fox’s new medical drama. In an era of so-called “Peak TV,” where there’s a show for virtually every taste, this one (co-created by Amy Holden Jones, Hayley Schore, and Roshan Sethi) feels too generic to stand out and merit the requisite investment of time and attention.
That’s too bad, because in this case the asshole doctor in question is played by Matt Czuchry, who’s distinguished himself through his work in supporting roles on Gilmore Girls and The Good Wife. Cary Agos, his character on the latter show, was a fascinating combination of conflicting impulses, someone whose aggressive ambition concealed unexpected complexity and humanity. He brings much of the same charisma to his role here as Dr. Conrad Hawkins, the titular resident. When new hire Devon (Manish Dayal) arrives for his first day on the job, Conrad’s predictably awful to him, but Czuchry lets us see how he’s testing this inexperienced and overconfident naif (Devon’s straight out of Harvard) to make sure he’s not going to get someone killed.
Bruce Greenwood and Matt Czuchry in The Resident |
The emphasis on how business
considerations often secretly trump medical ones might make for an
interested, complicated series, but unfortunately The Resident
botches it by turning Conrad’s superior, Dr. Randolph Bell (Bruce
Greenwood), into a villainous caricature. Bell is a celebrity doctor
with an international reputation, and his image adorns the hospital’s
exterior. However, in the opening scene of the pilot, we see him
manage to kill a patient during a routine procedure and proceed to
orchestrate a cover-up. Greenwood gets to work against the solid,
upstanding type that he played in the rebooted Star Trek
franchise, but he’s limited by the role, which mostly requires him
to act as the foil to the virtuous Conrad. Nor do the writers seem to
know when to stop: as if we weren’t already sufficiently convinced
that Bell’s thoroughly bad, he proceeds to blackmail a subordinate,
Dr. Mina Okafor (Shaunette Renèe Wilson), by threatening to get her
deported back to Africa if she doesn’t perform a high-profile
operation for him and let him take the credit.
The Resident
compounds the problem of turning its antagonists into cardboard
villains by essentially replicating the same trope in another
subplot, this one featuring tension between Conrad’s sometime
girlfriend Nicolette (Emily VanCamp) and the more senior Dr. Lane
Hunter (Melissa Kanakaredes) over the latter’s treatment of a
patient. While prestige dramas like Breaking Bad could
sometimes lay it on a bit thick with the murky morality of their main
characters, The Resident manages to fall between two stools in
trying to retain some of the ethical ambiguity of darker, more
complex shows within the familiar context of a network medical drama.
The Resident wants to offer a new take on a complex and timely
issue, but in order to do so, it needs to embrace a degree of
ambiguity and be more generous to its antagonists. In most other
respects, it’s a rote medical drama, with patients of the week and
intra-hospital romantic entanglements that will likely play out in a Byzantine fashion over multiple seasons. At a time when there’s so
much else to watch, the prospect of tuning in every week to see what
Czuchry and his castmates can do with such material simply isn’t
enticing enough.
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