Re: No Ordinary Family: "No Ordinary Marriage" - Oct. 5 - Grade & Disc
So every episode title is going to be "No Ordinary _____?" Arrgh, I hate formula titles.
However, I liked the episode. It was better than the pilot. I like the focus on the characters discovering the use and limitations of their powers. I particularly liked the implicit acknowledgment of the laws of physics; no matter how strong Jim is, he doesn't have as much mass as a car or van and therefore couldn't stop it in its tracks. Although they bent the laws a bit when he held onto it from behind at the end there. Maybe that could be possible if his shoes had amazingly good traction, but it's a reach. At least he didn't keep it up long.
I like it that they're not being religious about keeping the secret. Jim letting Cho in on his powers was nice -- or so I thought. I'm really disappointed that she got killed off.
Still not crazy about the kids. And I'm not crazy about Stephanie teaching her daughter that it's right to consider herself the most important thing in the world to her. That's kind of egocentric.
And yeah, I noticed the X-Men comic.
A Wolverine comic, actually. And last week the lab assistant had a Kitty Pryde figure complete with Lockheed. Since this show is on the Disney-owned ABC, we're bound to get plenty of Marvel references and only more oblique DC references (like Jim insisting on referring to "a single bound" rather than "jump" last week). Which is ironic, since as someone pointed out in a review I read, Jim's powers are virtually identical to Superman's original 1938 power set, before his abilities started getting magnified. Superstrength, bullet-resistant but not invulnerable skin, and the ability to leap considerable distances.
I also noticed that they're toning down the kid's super brain power so that he's not too much of a genius who could figure out everything in no time.
It strikes me as very similar to the powers of the Marvel character Amadeus Cho, right down to the visual representation of the computations he performs.
And I don't think they toned it down so much as clarified it. All he was shown doing in the pilot was gaining a sudden grasp of mathematics. There was no suggestion of any super-intellectual powers beyond that.