Tag Archives: Joel David Moore

Forever vs. Person of Interest

The Tuesday night decision is rapidly becoming which to record (Forever or Person of Interest) and which to watch ‘by appointment’ as folks in the television industry like to refer to watching television shows when they are scheduled to air.

ABC's Forever, poster from the ABC.com Site

ABC’s Forever, poster from the ABC.com Site

Forever has great chemistry between the actors, and characters that continue to develop before our very eyes week after week.   The commercial for tonight’s episode of Forever shows a scene in which Police Detective Jo (Alana De La Garza) is sitting down over drinks or a meal with Dr. Henry Morgan (Ioan Gruffudd) and his roommate Abe (Judd Hirsch).  Now for those who have not been watching the show that may not sound like a scene with extraordinary comedic potential — but those who have been tuning in every week know that while Henry looks to be significantly younger than Abe, Henry adopted Abe when he was a newborn and is the only father Abe has ever known.  So when questions like “how do you two know each other?” come up, one can only imagine the awkward and entertaining conversation that will take place.

There have been several scenes where Henry, despite physically appearing to be clearly younger, has clearly been fatherly towards Abe, and these two talented actors have pulled the scenes off with such heart and authentic performances that the viewers find themselves willing to believe there just might be a universe in which this is possible.  By contrast there have been scenes where the indulgent son Abe has been picking up the slack for his somewhat absent minded professor dad, always in very minor ways, but in a subtle manner that says he knows when dad gets curious and intrigued, dad is going to get caught up in his lab experimenting, or go off investigating, and Abe just smiles, helps him on with his coat and like a proud son encouraging his father to keep on making him the most popular kid in school because his dad is the coolest on the block.

Person-of-Interest-poi-bannerAs for Person of Interest, last season took a serious turn away from the original premise.  It was that premise that fascinated and drew in so many viewers.  When given 1 single piece of information about a person, and told they need help, our lead characters set out to do what they can.  (That piece of information is a social security number that enables them to find their name, and from there hopefully more information.)  Reese, Finch, and now Shaw, Fusco and sometimes Root, do not know whether the person they are out to help is a victim who needs protecting, or a criminal who needs to be stopped — and usually set on a better path.  What they know is they are a Person of Interest (and irrelevant to those looking for terrorists and major national threats).

Person of Interest appears to be taking a turn back towards its foundation, with Fusco (a once corrupt cop who has had a spectacular arc over the course of the show as Reese stepped in and pushed him into helping people instead of working with other corrupt cops) now partnered with a new cop in the homicide division — Reese, instead of trying to hide from the system Reese finds himself trying to work within it, to a degree.  Most of our main characters are hiding from the evil machine Samaritan that came online at the end of last season, and as a result Finch is now a college professor by day, and reluctant team member by night, as he wrestles with his conscience trying to determine if all their efforts actually amounted to accomplishing anything good.  Did they truly save anyone?  Help anyone?  Or did just as many people get hurt despite their good intentions?

As an added bonus with Person of Interest, we get the occasional appearance of Elias — aka Enrico Colantoni.  His appearances are almost always a highlight.

Forever and Person of Interest are two very different shows, and yet they are both high quality programs that leave viewers like me with the tough decision every Tuesday at 10 PM (9 Central) do I tune into Person of Interest on CBS, or record it because I need to flip over to ABC for my weekly dose of Forever.

Forever – Growing an Audience

ABC's Forever, poster from the ABC.com Site

ABC’s Forever, poster from the ABC.com Site

Forever has been growing an audience for the past two weeks, and rightfully so. (5.6 million audience members last week, up to 6 million this week.) With consistent quality scripts, inviting characters, wonderful interplay between  Ioan Gruffudd (Fantastic Four) as Dr. Henry Morgan and Judd Hirsch (Taxi, Damages, Maron. Numb3rs) as Abe the show has heart and charm while solving crimes in New York City.

Thus far the episodes have been mostly episodic, for audience members who have not been tuning in each week it is fair to say you could tune in next week and not feel crippled because you are a first time viewer — that said, take the time to go back and view the four episodes that have aired so far.

Each has added depth to the characters, layers to the world they inhabit, and built the relationships between them.  The show is entirely watchable without these things, but you will not regret taking a chance on Forever.

Forever airs TUESDAYS @ 10|9c on ABC

Forever @ ABC – http://abc.go.com/shows/forever
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BC @ IMDB

Forever – Watch It Online Now

The first episode of Forever, coming this fall on ABC is available on-line now at the ABC site (and we are hearing some cable/video-on-demand boxes have it), and is well worth the time to check out… or you could be patient, and wait until it premiers, on your television, Tuesday Sept. 23.

This is a show that caught my eye at San Diego’s Comic-Con International with an interesting trailer at the ABC booth, and the first episode lived up to my hopes.  It fulfills the promises, introducing us to the main characters and giving us a sufficient idea of how they are connected to one another, and just enough back story on the key players to make them interesting, and prompt me to want to come back next week and find out more.  I’ll concede there was at least one moment where I groaned and wondered why they chose to open that door and head down that path… but since I have no idea what is ahead, or where we are going, that simply leaves me wondering where the path I would not have chosen will take us, and if I will be satisfied when we reach the end of it, or if I will wish we had taken a path less traveled.

ABC's Forever, poster from the ABC.com Site

ABC’s Forever, poster from the ABC.com Site

Forever stars: Ioan Gruffudd (Ringer, Fantastic 4), Judd Hirsch (Taxi, Numb3rs), Alana De La Garza (Law and Order, Do No Harm), and Joel David Moore (Bones, Avatar), all of whom are familiar faces with a large body of work between them, and they come together with some very nice performances, honestly, when you pull together such an evenly matched cast, how is one to choose a stand out?  Instead it would be fair to say they continually bring out the best in one another.

With flavors of previous characters visible you can easily understand why these actors came to mind when the show was being cast, and yet already it appears they will be playing different characters than we have seen them in before, simply with a similar foundation and core, I felt subtle differences even in this first episode (perhaps in part because I was watching the screen, watching to see if they were there or not), again making me curious to see what future episodes have in store for the audience.

This is a great trailer for the show, but be warned, it draws heavily on the first episode to pitch the show, that said, I really do love how it sells Forever.