Friday, June 17, 2016

Orange Is the New Black Is Better Than Ever in Season 4

Orange Is the New Black has gotten its groove back in Season 4. After a sophomore season that was plagued by a conflict that led nowhere (remember Vee?) and a Season 3 that was mixed at best, the fourth season of Netflix's breakout hit matches, and possibly exceeds, its initial outing in terms of quality and binge-ability.
When Orange Is the New Black premiered way back in the summer of 2013, it felt incredibly fresh, telling stories the likes of which had never been seen on TV before. But now, in the wake of shows like Amazon's Transparent, Netflix's Master of None and even Fox's Empire, it's no longer considered groundbreaking to feature characters of various (i.e. non-white) races, sexualities, and gender identities. Yet Orange continues to give viewers the sense that it's forging new territory, and shedding light on issues that aren't typical dinner table fodder.
Season 1 told these stories through the lens of Piper Chapman (Taylor Schilling), an upper-middle-class white woman who was sentenced to prison for being a fringe participant in her former girlfriend's drug ring. Seasons 2 and 3 expanded the show's scope, exploring the back stories and present-day conflicts faced by other characters including the multilingual Poussey (Samira Wiley), perpetually smitten "Crazy Eyes" (Uzo Aduba), and mother-daughter convicts Aleida (Elizabeth Rodriguez), and Daya Diaz (Dascha Polanco).
Season 4 continues to broaden its focus, without shortchanging the characters we've come to grow and love. The show deals with the very real issue of prison overcrowding, as well as the plight of trans inmate Sophia Burset (Laverne Cox) as she withers away in solitary confinement while her loved ones desperately seek answers about her well-being. On the other side of the bars, through a new character from MCC, the company that manages Litchfield, the new episodes offer a depressing - though at times hilarious - glimpse of the behind-the-scenes bureaucracy and political mindset that goes into running a prison.
The new character of Judy King, played by Blair Brown, is also a welcome addition. WhileLorraine Toussaint's Vee felt like a cartoonish villain who was shoved into the mix in order to force a rivalry that was ultimately pointless, Judy King's newcomer is more fully realized - and, not for nothing, is based on Martha Stewart, who actually did serve time in the prison on which Litchfield is based. King's character proves to be a catalyst for frank discussions about racism and privilege. (Let's just say that King proves to be more like Paula Deen than Martha Stewart).
But one of the biggest delights of Season 4 is seeing new alliances form between characters we're familiar with who haven't shared much screen time before. Despite the huge ensemble of actresses that Orange has, it's rare to see characters emerge from their own cliques and interact with others on screen. Think about what a treat it was to see the unlikely friendship emerge between Big Boo (Lea Delaria) and Pennsatucky (Taryn Manning) last season. In Season 4, those types of relationships continue to flourish, with surprising connections formed between characters like Alex (Laura Prepon) and Red (Kate Mulgrew), and Taystee (Danielle Brooks) and Caputo (Nick Sandow). (Yep, you read that last one right.)
But what about Piper, you might ask? Just kidding—no one is asking that question.Orange producers have seemingly come to terms with the fact that Piper is one of Litchfield's least interesting inmates. But, her storylines in Season 4 are compelling because she finally starts to suffer some significant, realistic consequences for her asinine actions - which, if you can believe it, only amplify in Season 4. And they go far beyond a slap on the wrist or a few days in the SHU. It's a much more believable (and at times, darkly humorous) depiction of what would happen to someone like power-hungry Piper Chapman in a real prison.
The cast and creators have remained notoriously tight-lipped about Season 4 duringOrange's months-long hiatus, but one thing that those connected with the show have teased is that the new season is darker. While that's certainly true in some respects,Orange has also reclaimed its humor, in the early episodes at least. The first part of the season strikes more of a balance between comedy and drama than Seasons 2 and 3 did, with plenty of laugh-out-loud moments into the more serious muck. Things don't really take a turn for the dark until the season's final hours, with a heartbreaking twist that will stick with viewers long past when their binge-watch is done.
In Season 4, Orange Is the New Black once again epitomizes the concept of binge-watching. It's the type of compelling TV that leaves you barreling through the individual episodes, while at the same time not wanting the season to end. The only problem with such a compelling run is the fact that we have to wait so long for Season 5.
All 13 episodes of Orange Is the New Black Season 4 will be available on Netflix on Friday, June 17.

What to Watch This Weekend: The Premieres of Orange Is the New Black and The Last Ship, the Swan Song of Vicious, and the Finale of Penny Dreadful


What to watch on Friday, June 17...

SEASON 4 PREMIERE, 12:01am Pacific, Netflix
Orange Is the New Black
All 13 episodes of the fourth season stream today.

8:30pm, Disney
Girl Meets World
After getting a bad grade in “Girl Meets Permanent Record,” it dawns on Riley that her high school scores will haunt her for all time, an inescapable black mark upon her soul that shall forever impair her ability to attain professional success, human affection, or divine salvation. Or, y’know, they’ll become totally irrelevant once she gets into college. Either way.

9pm, ESPN
O.J.: Made in America
Part four centers on the “trial of the century,” which was so rife with dramatic twists and thematic reflections of contemporary American culture that it could make for a pretty decent TV drama. Somebody get my agent on the phone.

10pm, Syfy
Wynonna Earp
An admirer with a grudge puts the town at risk in “House of Memories.” Meanwhile, Wynonna matches wits with Bobo Del Rey and defends Dolls against a new threat.

10pm, Cinemax
Outcast
Kyle and Rev. Anderson tackle a bizarre possession in “All Alone Now.” I’m not certain what distinguishes a bizarre demonic possession from an ordinary, run-of-the-mill demonic possession, but I guess that’s why they pay me to write about TV shows and not to perform exorcisms.

11pm & 11:30pm, IFC
Comedy Bang! Bang!
In the first half-hour, T-Pain, Scott, and Weird Al put their heads together to pen a song, Scott makes a productivity-boosting breakthrough, and Weird Al previews his new food-centric TV show. In the second, Aubrey Plaza works her feminine wiles on Scott while an adventurer arrives with tales of ribaldry.

SEASON 4 PREMIERE, 11pm, Cartoon Network
Decker: Unclassified
Special agent Jack Decker and codebreaker Jonathan Kington join forces to thwart a sinister plot in the latest installment of Tim Heidecker and Gregg Turkington’s action-adventure spoof.

SEASON 4 PREMIERE, 11:15pm, Cartoon Network
Check it Out! With Dr. Steve Brule
The good doctor examines cars, music, and more of the universe’s impenetrable mysteries.

LATE-NITE:
– Ricky Gervais, Tony Hale, and Brian Regan on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, 11:35pm, NBC
– Aaron Paul, Michael Ian Black, and Silversun Pickups on Late Show with Stephen Colbert, 11:35pm, CBS


WHAT ARE YOU WATCHING TONIGHT?

Thursday, June 16, 2016

Person of Interest ".exe" Review: A Trip Down Memory Lane Reminds Us That Season 5 Should Have Been Longer

Person of Interest's penultimate episode ".exe" sure didn't feel like a penultimate episode, which is unfortunate for a series looking to finish an outstanding five-season run strong. It wasn't a bad episode per se, in fact, it was quite good, but it did feel like a misuse of time and placement given Person of Interest's larger stakes. The shortened 13-episode final season had been compact, efficient, and thrilling -- something other seasons had a hard time keeping up over 20-plus episodes -- but ".exe" made me wish that Season 5 had been longer in order to flesh out some of these ideas a bit better. Hey, no one is going to complain about wanting more Person of Interest, right?
In the episode, Harold Finch (Michael Emerson) wormed his way into the NSA headquarters to deploy the Ice-9 virus that would destroy Samaritan and, as collateral damage, the Machine. (And probably your strawberry iMac or iPhone 1 that you're reading this on.) And though Finch has been determined to take down Samaritan at all costs since he pledged to destroy it with fire in his eyes in "The Day the World Went Away" (still my favorite episode of the season), the doubt about whether or not what he was doing was right persisted. No one can blame him for that either, as there was no way to stop Samaritan without also killing his computer baby.
So the Machine stepped in and showed Finch a series of simulations of the world if the Machine had never existed. Finch was a millionaire after he and Nathan Ingram (Brett Cullen) signed a half-billion dollar contract with the government, but Finch never pushed to splinter the Machine into the irrelevant-person saving wonderbox we know it is today. Fusco (Kevin Chapman) was ostracized from the police force as a rat for his part in working for HR and later turning on them (and Carter was alive, and promoted... and also out to lunch, apparently). Shaw (Sarah Shahi) was back to working for Control as a goon, killing one of my favorite actors Jacob Pitts. John Reese (Jim Caviezel) had the grimmest future of them all, as his body was found floating in the Hudson around the time that Finch found him and saved him from his beard and hobo smell in the actual timeline. And Root (Amy Acker) was working for Samaritan, but as the old Root, the one who still referred to humans as "bad code."
This was a marvelous way to bring characters back from the dead for one last hurrah (I was particularly happy to see Michael Cole, Shaw's old buddy), but story-wise, it could have used more time to breathe. Like, another 10 episodes or so. The simulations went by so quickly that they felt matter of fact instead of getting a grip on their emotional impacts, and yeah, I know that they were being flashed to Finch while he was still shimmying through top-secret sections of the NSA so he didn't have time to digest the whole story. But that's exactly why these sims could have held up in their own episode, instead of sharing screentime with other parts of ".exe."
What I really think I'm doing here is bemoaning the fact that Person of Interest is almost over when there's still so much worthy story to tell; it feels like too much is being crammed into these final two hours. We barely got to relish Greer's (John Nolan) death (though his turn into self-sacrificing maniac Samaritan disciple was creepy and a great way to go).
Like Fusco's storyline as he scraped up dirt about the missing bodies Samaritan was knocking off. He found out that it was FBI agent LeRoux (David Aaron Baker) who was behind the murders and cover ups, but considering what else was at stake with what Finch was doing, Fusco deserved better than the crumbs that he was so often given. Coming after the touching inclusion on the real truth about the war of the machines,Person of Interest quickly relegated Fusco back to the outskirts. On the one hand, I wanted Fusco to be part of the team more as we say goodbye to POI. But on the other, Fusco is a cop at heart, and he's going to do cop things. Again, I wish there was ample time to enrich this story and give it the oomph it deserved, instead of saving it for the second-to-last episode while all hell was breaking loose in the rest of the episode.
Where ".exe" excelled was in setting Finch's mind (and ours) at ease about what needed to be done. The Machine-less sims all posed a world where our familiar friends were on pretty terrible life paths. But what was missing the most was the scary truth: "The government has a secret system, a machine that spies on you every hour of every day." Just because the Machine wasn't there, it didn't mean Samaritan wasn't, either. Samaritan was always going to happen, and it's possible that the Machine's true reason it was created wasn't to stop irrelevant numbers from falling into danger, it was to stop Samaritan. That's at least one interpretation, and some solace in the Machine's likely death (I'm still holding out hope that Finch has her on a pocket drive somewhere). Another more personal interpretation would be to say the Machine came to be to make the lives of Team Machine better.
Either way, the Machine's life was always going to be limited if Person of Interest wanted to stay true to its message. The biggest defense that Finch was doing the right thing was consistent with what Finch had said all along. Humanity should dictate how humanity evolves. Despite Finch's love for gizmos and artificial intelligence, Finch didn't waiver on what he thought was most important, and that was that machines should never interfere with our lives. Samaritan brought about great things to preserve humanity like a team of German efficiency experts brought in to clean up a poorly run nuclear power plant, by taking away things that made us human, like our ability to make mistakes and learn from them and our ability to control our own destiny. Samaritan had to be stopped, and the Machine was there to help him do it.
We've got one episode left, and it's hard to say what direction Person of Interest will go in. I still think that it needs to resolve the relationship between Finch and Reese -- which at one point was the heart of the story -- before it signs off, and promos for the series finale seemed to indicate that. But can that be done in just one more episode? We'll find out.
It was a program that ran great!
66 votes
It had some issues starting up, but it was fine.
6 votes
It crashed.
4 votes


NOTES OF INTEREST

– Ummm... is that going to be our last image of in-the-flesh Root? Working for Samaritan and buddying up to Greer? If so, that's unfortunate. 
– Reese: "Just remember what happened to that fat German kid in Willy Wonka." Ha ha. 
– Shaw: "Oh hey we were just looking for some bad guys. Look at that, found one." *BANG*
– Will we get any more Bear? WE NEED MORE BEAR!!!

What to Watch Tonight: The Season Premieres of Aquarius and Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee, and the Finales of Orphan Black and Inside Amy Schumer

What to watch on Thursday, June 16...

SEASON 8 PREMIERE, 12:01am Pacific, Crackle
Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee
Judd ApatowJohn OliverMargaret Cho, and Lorne Michaels are among the funny folks joining Jerry on his caffeinated cruises in the eighth season.

6:30pm, Cartoon Network
The Powerpuff Girls
Bubbles may find more than she bargained for when she enters a singing contest in “Bubbles of the Opera.”

8pm, Fox
Bones
After a pro hockey star is found in dead and decapitated in “The Head in the Abutment,” the team must figure out who put him… [sunglasses] on ice. [YEEEAAAAHHH!!!] Booth and Aubrey question the player’s coach (former NHL star Jeremy Roenick, as himself), and along the way, hockey nut Booth winds up strapping on the skates to take on an old rival.

SEASON 2 PREMIERE, 9pm, NBC
Aquarius
The two-hour, three-episode second-season premiere airs free of both commercials and an explanation for existing. Nevertheless, “I’m So Tired,” “Happiness Is a Warm Gun,” and “Why Don’t We Do It in the Road” will air on your television set, and they’ll see Hodiak taking on a missing-persons case, Charmaine taking on a dangerous undercover assignment, and the Manson family taking up a new residence.

SEASON 2 PREMIERE, 9pm, Fox
Home Free
Tim Tebow joins the show as a co-host, pretty much solidifying 9pm Thursday as the most inexplicable timeslot on the schedule at the moment.

9pm, The CW
Beauty and the Beast
Danger puts a damper on Cat and Vincent’s newlywed life in “Down for the Count.” The danger of arguing over who has to do the dishes, amirite?! Ha ha, no but seriously, lots of people want them dead.

SEASON 4 FINALE, 10pm, BBC America
Orphan Black
Neolution is closing in, and communication with Cosima has been cut off, so Sarah must take matters into her own hands in “From Dancing Mice to Psychopaths.” Step one in bringing down the sinister group: lure a high-level Neolutionist nabob into a trap.

SEASON 4 FINALE, 10pm, Comedy Central
Inside Amy Schumer
Andy Cohen guest-hosts a look back at clips from the show’s four seasons.

8pm, Spike
Lip Sync Battle
Crazy Ex-Girlfriend creator/star Rachel Bloom and tightly coiled vortex of intensity Michael Shannon square off in what scientists say may become the most bugnuts fake-singing competition on record.

LATE-NITE:
– Freddie Prinze Jr. and the Lumineers on Conan, 11pm, TBS
– Miss USA 2016 Deshauna Barber on The Daily Show with Trevor Noah, 11pm, Comedy Central
– Mark Thompson on The Nightly Show With Larry Wilmore, 11:30pm, Comedy Central
– Dwayne Johnson, Jim Gaffigan, Phantogram, and Howard Jones on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, 11:35pm, NBC
– Demi Lovato and Nick Jonas on Late Show with Stephen Colbert, 11:35pm, CBS
– Mindy Kaling, Ben Mendelsohn, and Meghan Trainor on Jimmy Kimmel Live, 11:35pm, ABC
– Ed O’Neill, Amber Rose, Justin Flom, and John Tempesta on Late Night with Seth Meyers, 12:35am, NBC
– John C. Reilly on The Late Late Show with James Corden, 12:37am, CBS


WHAT ARE YOU WATCHING TONIGHT?