Recalling the spinoff `s golden age
Transcription
Recalling the spinoff `s golden age
FEBRUARY 2, 2014 SUNDAY TELEGRAM N15 DVD Releases ALSO THIS WEEK MURRAY CLOSE/UNIVERSAL PICTURES ANNE MARIE FOX/FOCUS FEATURES VIA AP TOP PICKS McConaughey at his best By Tom Russo I GLOBE CORRESPONDENT n “Dallas Buyers Club” (2013), Matthew McConaughey transforms from a hardpartying, homophobic roughneck into an AIDS patient shrewdly finding ways to beat the FDA and smuggle unapproved medi cations for himself and others. McConaughey and a crossdressing Jared Leto rightly received Oscar nods for the film, based on the reallife expe riences of ’80s accidental activist Ron Woodroof. Just as striking, though, is the career metamorphosis McConaughey himself caps off in playing Woodroof. Some will recall the actor’s run as Vanity Fair “It” Guy in the mid’90s, when he supplied movies like John Grisham’s “A Time to Kill” with no end of hunky gloss. But over time, the whole mantanned stud persona seemed to elicit fewer hub bahubbas and more ughs, with McConaughey churning out tepid work like the romcoms “Ghosts of Girlfriends Past” and “Fool’s Gold.” (Indeed.) He’s climbed out of that rut in the last few years with a string of projects and character roles which, combined with “Buyers Club,” can make for some interesting power view ing. (Consider it a DIY bonus to make up for the disc’s dearth of supplements.) There’s his grungy, offthegrid fugitive in last year’s Southernfried drama “Mud.” There’s his turn as a stylistically square DA prosecuting unlikely murder ermortician Jack Black in “Bernie.” And there’s his sendup of his himbo image as the welloiled strip club owner in “Magic Mike.” No word as yet on a release date for McConaughey and Woody Harrelson’s intriguing HBO crime drama “True Detective,” which wraps its season in March. (Universal, $29.98; Bluray, $34.98) DRAMA ABOUT TIME (2013) Director Richard Curtis (“Love Ac tually”) spins the tale of a frequently tonguetied everyguy (Domhnall Gleeson) whose ability to revisit mo ments in his own life is about getting things right, not throwing things off, especially with his charming new crush (Rachel McAdams). Oh, the pos sibilities the story imagines — and oh, the heartache that inevitably arises just the same. Gleeson (2012’s “Anna Karenina”) is consistently appealing as Curtis’s new, de facto Hugh Grant standin (the same halting likability, with a dash of Ron Weasley thrown in). Bill Nighy is all looselimbed affa bility as Gleeson’s dad, who’s also tem porally gifted. Extras: Featurette on Curtis’s romance oeuvre. (Universal, $29.98; Bluray, $34.98) ACTION ESCAPE PLAN (2013) In a new teamup from “Expendables” compadres Syl vester Stallone and Arnold Schwarze negger, Sly plays a security consultant who infiltrates prisons, and Ahnold is the fast friend he makes after being left to rot in a secret superpenitentia ry. For the first halfhour, you start to think maybe it’s possible to recapture those ’80s popcornmovie thrills. Trouble is, it’s all Stallone’s show — Schwarzenegger hasn’t even come into the picture yet. The moment he does, some of the air goes out of the room, and we’re squarely in indulgence terri tory. Extras: Semiaptly titled “Clash of the Titans” featurette. (Lionsgate, $29.95; Bluray, $39.99) BAGGAGE CLAIM Spurred on by a mon strous mother who wants to see her eldest daughter married, flight attendant Paula Patton has 30 days before her younger sister’s wedding to recheck old exes in various cities to see if she overlooked Mr. Right. Will she land on time or stay stuck in a holding pattern? Extras: cast interview, director’s commentary. (20th Century Fox, $29.98; Bluray, $39.99) ROMEO & JULIET Appar ently aimed at a youth audience weaned on “Gossip Girl,” this ver sion cuts most of Shake speare’s speeches, in vents new dialogue, and features young actors who are clueless (Doug las Booth and Hailee Steinfeld play the star crossed lovers) and old pros who overact. It’s a movie that only a 13 yearold girl with an English paper due could love. Extras: makingof, set design, and hair and makeup featurettes. (20th Century Fox, $22.98; Bluray, $29.99) FREE BIRDS Owen Wil son and Woody Harrel son provide the voices of cartoon turkeys who go timetraveling back to the first Thanksgiving to get their species off the menu. Sounds fun, right? Of course, if the movie could have given us a little story develop ment beyond just the premise, that would have been nice, too. With Amy Poehler. Extras: trailer, behind thescenes animation featurettes. (20th Centu ry Fox, $29.98; Bluray, $39.99) DEATH WISH: 40TH ANNIVERSARY EDITION This disquietingly influ ential vigilante thriller made its lead, Charles Bronson, a major inter national star. It also ur banized and updated the classic vengeance narrative of the western. Extras: trailer. (Warner, Bluray, $19.98) JULES AND JIM In Fran cois Truffaut’s third fea ture, from 1962, it’s the years before World War I and the title characters love the same woman, Catherine. How could they not, since she’s played by Jeanne Moreau in what may be her most vibrant perfor mance. Extras: audio in terview and French tele vision interviews with Truffaut; 1985 docu mentary about Henri Pierre Roché, author of the novel the film’s based on. (Criterion Collection DVD/Bluray, $39.95) CUTIE AND THE BOXER A marriage between two artists doesn’t always lead to domestic tran quility, as Zachary Hein zerling’s impressionistic documentary about Ushio and Noriko Shino hara demonstrates. The Japaneseborn couple have stayed together for 40 years, still pursuing their art and squabbling in their garretlike Brooklyn, N.Y., loft. This portrait of the artists, Oscar nominated for best feature documenta ry, is all the more inspir ing because of its harsh honesty. (Starz/Anchor Bay, $24.98; Bluray, $29.99) GLOBE STAFF CUTIE AND THE BOXER Tom Russo can be reached at trusso2222@gmail.com. RADIUSTWC LIVE ACTION Love, American Style T he dreamy gaze of a young Scott Baio could melt the sturdiest of Trapper Keepers in the e a r l y 1 9 8 0 s . Me a n while, America had watched Erin Moran bloom from Ron Howard’s little television sister on “Happy Days” into a woman who could fill out a sweater like a young Annette Funicello. Therefore, a “Happy Days” spinoff highlighting the passionate, yet chaste, desires between Chachi Arcola (Baio) and Joanie Cunningham (Mo ran) was as inevitable as Fonzie telling Potsie to sit on it. In March 1982, Chachi sat at a piano, serenaded Joanie with a syrupy pop ballad, and “Joanie Loves Chachi” made its debut. The complete series is released Tues day on DVD. But there was little love for “Joanie Loves Chachi.” Viewers tuned in for those first few episodes, then quickly jumped ship during the second season. Eventually Moran and Baio’s charac ters returned to “Happy Days” and married in the show’s finale. This was the perilous fate of televi sion characters in the golden age of spinoffs. Counting a live musical and several animated series, “Happy Days” — itself a spinoff from “Love, Ameri can Style” — produced more than 10 different shows. Some were huge hits (“Laverne & Shirley,” “Mork & Mindy”) and others are now answers to obscure trivia questions. Anyone remember “Blansky’s Beauties”? “Out of the Blue”? It’s easy to look back and chortle at these desperate attempts to stretch a successful series into a TV franchise. But with the forthcoming “Breaking Bad” spinoff, “Better Call Saul,” the “How I Met Your Mother” spinoff, “How I Met Your Dad,” plus the contin ued success of any show that starts with “NCIS” (spun off from “JAG”), our appetite remains ravenous. The spinoff universe of the 1970s and ’80s is a fascinating study in what happens when TV executives spot a winning formula, and then wring it until it’s dry as a molted snakeskin. “All in the Family,” characters Maude Findlay (Bea Arthur) and George Jef ferson (Sherman Hemsley) were plucked from the show and awarded their own series: “Maude” and “The Jeffersons.” Those shows produced the spinoffs “Good Times” (“Maude”) and 1969–1974 ANIMATED Out of the Blue The Fonz and the Happy Days Gang 1979 1980-1981 Mork & Mindy 1978-1982 competitors’. In addition to the highly rated “Rhoda” (1974–1978), there was “Phyllis” (1975–1977), and the drama “Lou Grant” (1977–1982). The trun cated run of “Phyllis” was likely a re sult of the reallife deaths of several ac tors on the show. Happy Days: The formula ebbed, but refused to A New Musical retreat. The 1980s brought “The Facts 2007-2010 of Life,” which bested its originator, “Diff ’rent Strokes.” “Empty Nest” branched off from “The Golden Girls” which then became “The Golden Pal ace,” and “A Different World” found Blansky's Cosby kid Lisa Bonet at college, albeit Beauties briefly. Those shows are just the skin of 1977 Mork & Mindy/ the pudding. The 1990s were no less prolific for Laverne & Shirley/ spinoffs, but thankfully the tendrils of Happy Days Fonz Hour “Beverly Hills, 90210” (which begat 1974–1984 1982–1983 “Melrose Place” and “Models Inc.”) never stretched as far as those of “All in the Family.” Laverne & With the benefit of time, the failed Shirley spinoffs can be as entertaining as the 1976–1983 successes — with the exception of “The Ropers.” “The Brady Bunch Variety Hour,” a horrifying, sequinencrusted resuscitation of “The Brady Bunch,” made a minor dent in pop culture. Laverne & Shirley Joanie Loves Chachi When Eve Plumb opted out of the Laverne & Shirley With Special Guest Star 1982–1983 campy 1977 show (a very smart deci in the Army the Fonz sion), the role of Jan Brady was filled 1981–1982 1982–1983 by Geri Reischl, creating the “Fake CHRISTOPHER MUTHER, PATRICK GARVIN/GLOBE STAFF Jan” phenomenon. SOURCES: IMDB.com, archives, file photos “The Simpsons” (a spinoff of “The Tracey Ullman Show”) parodied the genre so smartly that it should have served as a warning to the hazards of the genre. In the episode “The Simp son SpinOff Showcase,” Troy McClure ( “ Yo u m a y k n o w m e f r o m s u c h spinoffs as ‘Son of Sanford and Son’) introduces pilots for “Chief Wiggum, P.I.,” “The Lovematic Grampa,” and “The Simpson Family SmileTime Vari BY CHRISTOPHER MUTHER | GL OBE STAFF ety Hour.” It’s “The Variety Hour” that takes direct aim at the Brady Bunch, down to the fake Lisa. “Checking In” (“The Jeffersons”). “All For every successful spinoff (“Frasi In the episode, McClure, voiced by in the Family” then morphed into “Ar er”), there’s a clunker (“The Tortellis”). the late Phil Hartman, cheekily asks, chie Bunker’s Place,” then “Gloria,” and Despite the risks, the results can be de “Spinoff. Is there any word more thrill ultimately “704 Hauser.” liciously enticing. Viewers are already ing to the human soul?” It’s a rhetori Sometimes these sitcom family connected with the characters and cu cal jab, but in those rare cases where trees turned into confusing shrubs rious to see their fate. The nation ea our favorite characters find a satisfying that needed a good pruning. To this gerly tuned in to watch its beloved new life in a successful spinoff, it can day, questions remain about how Rhoda Morgenstern get married on be a thrill. At worst, we get the nostal Maude’s housekeeper in Tuckahoe, “Rhoda.” Until her divorce two seasons gic camp of “Joanie Loves Chachi.” N.Y., ended up living in a lowincome later. housing project in Chicago. And why “The Mary Tyler Moore Show”may Christopher Muther can be reached was she married to Gordy, the weath not have been the most prolific show at christopher.muther@globe.com. erman from “The Mary Tyler Moore in the 1970s spinoffathon, but its Follow him on Twitter @Chris_ Show”? track record was more solid than its Muther. Recalling the spinoff ’s golden age ‘Joanie Loves Chachi’ gets a second chance on DVD For every successful spinoff (‘Frasier’), there’s a clunker (‘The Tortellis’). Despite the risks, the results can be enticing.