Review: “Scoundrels” and “The Gates” offer passing summer distraction on ABC
scoundrels abc
ABC's  "Scoundrels" stars Virginia Madsen as Cheryl West, David James Elliott  as Wolfgang "Wolf" West, Patrick Flueger as Logan West/Calvin "Cal"  West, Leven Rambin as Heather West, Vanessa Marano as Hope West and  Carlos Bernard as Sergeant Mack. 
As summer network offerings  go, ABC’s double helping of suburban hijinks — “Scoundrels” and “The  Gates” — are better than most.  But I only recommend checking them out  if you aren’t already committed to some Sunday night cable shows, like  “True Blood,” “Drop Dead Diva” or “Leverage,” which also premieres  tonight (on TNT).
ABC gets credit for filling  the void left by “Desperate Housewives” and “Brothers & Sisters”  with replacements that could be those shows’ distant cousins.
First up tonight is  “Scoundrels,” which, like “Brothers & Sisters,” mines drama from the  a bunch of feuding siblings and parents trying to escape the burdens of  the family business. But in this case, the “business” is crime.
Virginia Madsen offers the  best reason to watch as West family matriarch Cheryl, who thinks it  might be time for her family to get out of the crime game. After all,  her husband, Wolf (“JAG” star David James Elliott letting his hair down)  is on his way to prison, and her ne’er-do-well son Cal (Patrick John  Flueger) doesn’t quite have the brains to be a criminal kingpin. Cheryl  thinks maybe the family should follow the example of Cal’s twin brother,  Logan (also played by Flueger), who has gone straight and just passed  the bar.
It’s hard to get past the  gimmickry of Flueger’s dual roles in the pilot, and the criminal capers
When Wolf West (David James  Elliott) is sentenced to a four-year prison term instead of the expected  four months, Cheryl West (Virginia Madsen) realizes she’s going to be a  single mom for the next few years. With the family coming apart at the  seams, Cheryl decides that it’s time for them to get out of the family  business altogether. However it’ll prove a challenging task for every  member of the family, since a life of crime is all they’ve known.
Madsen is winning as always,  and this put-upon mother hen plays to her strengths. It’s also nice to  see Vanessa Marano (aka April, Luke’s daughter on “Gilmore Girls”) add a  juvenile delinquent spin to her trademark brainiac routine as Cheryl’s  youngest daughter, Hope.
But “Scoundrels,” which is  based on the New Zealand series “Outrageous Fortune, lacks bite. These  guys and gals aren’t as rakishly charming as the criminally cool gang on  “Leverage.” And that includes Elliott, who plays Wolf a bit tame. And  while the family can be a bit zany, they aren’t as funny as ABC thinks  they are. When Cal runs afoul of an Asian crime family with a misguided  scheme involving a dragon tchotchke, it’s neither really threatening or  really funny.
The term “dramedy” was  invented for shows that are both dramatic and comedic. But unless Madsen  is on screen, “Scoundrels” is often neither.
More intriguing, if no more  engaging, is “The Gates,” which crosses “Desperate Housewives” with  “American Gothic” and “The Vampire Diaries.”
Frank Grillo stars as Nick  Monohan, the new police chief of The Gates, a private gated community  holding as many secrets as manicured lawns. Nick quickly learns that  he’s just a glorified security guard in a town that wants its  law-enforcement to not be very enforcing. That’s because the residents  of The Gates like to occasional drink their neighbors blood or claw  their eyes out. Yes, it’s another show with vampires, witches and  werewolves.
But it’s also a show with  Rhona Mitra, who plays feisty bloodsucking housewife Claire Rattcliff.  Mitra, who most recently brought her sultry accent to “Stargate  Universe” plays quite the vamp (in all meanings of the word), and, like,  Madsen, elevates this show when she’s on screen.
But “The Gates” isn’t just  about Claire. It’s also about Frank’s kids, who must deal with life in a  new high school and the “Twilight”-ish saga that goes with having  shapeshifting classmates. And there’s Frank’s wife, who runs afoul of  the town’s feuding witches.
“The Gates” is an exclusive  community, but the show is trying to be a bit too inclusive. It’s a  melting pot of supernatural cliches, which can be tasty only if it  focuses on the right flavors.
More screen time for Mitra  would be a good place to start.
Watch “Scoundrels” and “The  Gates” beginning at 9 tonight on ABC.
No comments:
Post a Comment