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Second Chance. (Spoilers.)

Guy Gardener

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Second Chance.

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A futuristic look at Frankenstein, by way of of a hard boiled cop drama. Wunderkind tech industrialists bring a 75 year old sheriff back from the dead, and back to his youth, until the old grumpy codger looks like that #### Warlow from True Blood.

No twists and turns, but no obvious defects either, and I do like a lot of the secondary cast because of their presence in other superb projects over the years like The Loop, Aliens in America, White Collar and Greek.

I'm not sure why but the so called star in the leading role is always the weak link in genre shows like this, even though he's an accomplished British actor pretending to be a yank. Poor bastard has to act left handed. So yeah, the hero in this piece has super powers. Stronger, faster, tougher, better. The usual, from having his body rebuilt by super science, which means every week I suppose, that he's going to be solving crime with his super powers while being happy that he's not old any more but sad that his kids and granddaughter don't recognize him any more.

Dilshad Vadsaria is cripplingly attractive, but I'm familiar with tolerating that burden. She plays one of the wunderkinds: Mary Godwin, which is of course Mary Shelly's maiden name. There's probably other literary references in there I'm too stupid to notice, but this is barely horror, and barely science fiction. Back from the dead sure, but back form the dead and handsome with the intellect of a grumpy old man? It's more like timetravel than anything else, since as this old cop has regained his youth, he kinda wants it to be 1977 again so that he can relive his prime like a real man should, full of porter house steak, bourbon and cigarettes, which because of the limitations of his resurrection, he's probably going to find difficult to carry through on.

I saw this advertised months ago as "The Frankenstein Code" which was a much better name. The original episode order from FOX has already been cut to 11 episodes, so unless there's unexpected swell about the leads shirtlessness, I doubt that there's going to be a second season.

Meh?

Watchable, but 6 out of 10.
 
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The third title for this show is so generic it's basically already making it a dead-show-walking.

Also, see Now and Again (1999-2000):

[yt]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yTsgq-a9CUw[/yt]
 
Yup. See, I didn't mention Now and Again because I was restraining myself.

But the association is fricking obvious.
 
It's never a good sign when a show goes through three different titles before it premiers.
I do plan on giving it a try since the trailer looks cool.
I was a big fan of Now and Again so it will interesting to compare the two.
Guy, something has been bugging me about you posts. Why do you swear in some posts and censor yourself in others? I've seen you drop an f-bomb in one thread, and then not even say ass in another.
 
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Tact isn't real if you don't prove now and then that there's a reason to use it, and vice versus.

Oh, Glee alumni Vanessa Lengies is a stunning little princess in the Second Chance mix too, but if you really want to see her range, check out Mixology.

Oh?

I've never seen Big time Rush, it's one of those basic Nickelodeon sitcoms tweens think are funny, but the actress playing the granddaughter survived four years of that shit.

Holy ####! She's almost 19???
 
The twin brother on this show is a wee bit creepy.

On the subject of twins, shouldn't the brother's computer assistant (that looks like a margin doodle in an Acme Novelty Library strip) be able to understand their "twin-speak" language after hearing it so much? They developed it when they were children, after all, so it shouldn't be sophisticated enough to baffle an AI.

I wasn't going to be able to record this when it airs (busy time period), so it's a nice relief to see the pilot and know that I'm not going to be missing out on much.
 
Oh this is rich.

On a torrent site, the blurb for this product is...

Welcome to the Second Chance guide at TV Tome. Charles Russell dies, but since he is too good for hell and too bad for heaven, he is given the opportunity to go back to 1987 to assist his younger self, Chazz, in making better decisions at critical junctures in his life in order to (hopefully) get into heaven. As of December 1987, the show was revamped and retitled Boys Will Be Boys. The entire fantasy element of the series was dropped, along with Charles and St. Peter.

:)

A Matthew Perry sitcom, so long ago, was also called Second Chance.
 
Anyone still watching this even though you know it's one-and-done? The second episode was a major step backward for a show that wasn't very good to begin win. The writing is so clunky, especially the dialog.
 
I found the pilot mildly enjoyable, but unfortunately it airs against a bunch of other things so I won't be watching. I'm always curious to try near-future tv shows, though the excitement tends to quickly wear off (Almost Human, Minority Report).
 
Second Chance moving to Fridays with Sleepy Hollow. It's a burn off for Second Chance, but is it a burn off for Sleepy Hollow too?
 
At least they had Duvall find out the truth about his "half brother" and didn't drag it out too long. Three episodes in is good. Too many shows drag out these type of reveals for too long.
 
I thought the formula finally worked out the kinks, and we could enjoy piledriving down a blind alley to cancellation.
 
The homicide-solving aspect of the show is still pretty bad. It's like they wanted to graph the sci fi element onto a procedural but don't really know that much about what makes a good procedural.
 
Other way around.

This series used to be called The Frankenstein Code, and Mary Goodwin is the maiden name of Mary Shelly, author of Frankenstein. Trying to write a futuristic Frankenstein story seemed to be the impetus of their creative process.

Whatever soulless network Suit said "Make him a cop" could have just as easily have said "Make him a lawyer!"
 
Don't know if anyone else is still watching this, but heading into next week's final episode it seems like they knew this show was dead in the water and they might actually wrap everything up. There are no more secrets or unresolved plot points, just a conclusion to everything that's already come before.
 
It definitely got better.

The backbone plot is way more important than the crime of the week, but with out the crime of the Week, Mary wouldn't have fallen in love with Jimmy, and then there would be no story.
 
Well, the show ends with a season two setup, but I don't think it's that big of a deal. It doesn't exactly make you scream that you want more. The series is more or less contained to the 11-episode run if anyone wants to give it a shot.

Although....

After Otto died, it would've been fitting to let Jimmy die too and end the show at that, instead of going all Transcendence and Incredible Hulk.
 
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