Or Getting Beyond "Adorkable"
New
Girl premieres tonight at 9/8c on FOX. As such, the following review is
spoiler-free, and can be read without worry.
FOX obviously has a lot riding on New Girl as the comedy to help fill in that hour between Glee and the local news (and to
hopefully act as a better follow-up than Raising
Hope ever did). The ads for the show – which unfortunately only use footage
from tonight’s pilot – permeate the airwaves not just on FOX, but on the sister
stations as well. They also released the pilot two weeks early for download
(and a week later on Hulu) in an attempt to drum up interest. And that’s to say
nothing of all the billboards, bus banner, and general print and online ads
that are bound to be out there. (I don’t live in a major metropolitan area, so
that last one in hard to gauge.) Yet despite all these measures, it’s clear that
FOX is most banking on the mere presence of Zooey Deschanel to bring in the
viewers.
It’s not a bad plan, really. Deschanel is quite a
fetching woman, and her geeky yet adorable persona obviously appeals to sizeable
and fervent subset of men. (My own personal soft spot for her comes from the
fact that she played Trillian in the film version of Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy. Admittedly the script didn’t give
the character much to do, but still. She was Trillian, and that’s enough.) And
that’s what worries me about how the series is going to proceed. Regardless of
however Deschanel got the job – whether she auditioned for it, or if the show
was developed based on some contract she had with the network, I can’t tell –
there is something about her presence on the show that feels so calculated, and
the show itself seems so geared towards the Deschanel persona, that I get
worried about how the rest of the series is going to pan out.
Deschanel plays Jess, a woman who, upon finding out that
her boyfriend was cheating on her, moves out and ends up living in an apartment
with three guys, played with aplomb by Jake Johnson, Max Greenfield, and (at
least in the pilot) Damon Wayans, Jr., as Nick, Schmidt, and Coach,
respectively. The series has been advertised with the disgustingly cute
portmanteau “adorkable”, as it’s clear that FOX wants you to buy that this is
Deschanel’s show, and in many respects it is. The show’s theme was co-written
and performed by Deschanel, and utilizes lines that her character says, and
it’s her plight that is clearly meant to drive the show. Thus, for at least the
first batch of episode, one can make the safe bet that every A-plot will be
about Jess.
Yet – and I am saying this in no uncertain terms –
Deschanel is not the best part of the pilot, and that’s something not even my
soft spot for the actress can hide. I don’t want to say that anything about
Jess as a character or Deschanel’s performance is bad; in fact it’s quite good,
assuming you don’t find anything objectionable about this sort of Manic Pixie
Dream Girl role, which is frankly holds about the same level of MPDG-ness as
all of her other roles, just proportionally amped up in order to fit the
comedic tableau. The main complaint here is that the role here feels designed
just for Deschanel (and again, it very well could have been), which sometimes
leads to the show overplaying her MPDG qualities, and it ends up feeling more
manufactured at times, to the point that Jess isn’t a person so much as a
collections of quirks. This is something that most comedies struggle with early
on – and admittedly all of the other characters are equally underdeveloped –
but given what’s apparent from FOX’s marketing strategy, the network very well
may try to stunt any character growth, to the point where the show gets locked
into dealing with this same version of Jess over and over again.
So then what does work for the show? The real treasure
here are the three male characters, and it’s something that I hope the show
learns to cultivate sooner rather than later. The biggest laughs of the pilot
come from them, especially within the first 5 minutes as Nick, Schmidt and
Coach are allowed to bounce off of each other in a tit-for-tat,
fast-paced-conversation sort of way. (It’s also telling that Deschanel/Jess is
at her funniest when she enters into similar exchanges with any of the guys.) I
don’t doubt that there will inevitably be an episode where the A-plot centers
around of the guys – that’s just how these sitcoms tend to evolve, and there’s
already a few seeds planted in the pilot that could grow into full-fledged
stories for each character – but how the show handles it is key. If they just
have the characters hang in the background and only interact with Jess when
it’s time for Deschanel to make a funny, any sudden attempt to have them act
like real characters will feel cheap. However, if the show uses these actors
for the comedic and narrative potential they have now, it will not only make
the spotlight transition smoother, it will also make each episode before it
much stronger.
The plot, if you could call it that, runs fairly loose
and ramshackle, and I think it’s rather a boon’s to the shows energy. In the
past few years, there has been a resurgence of “hang-out sitcoms”, where not a
whole lot seems to happen in any given episode, but the audience has a good
time just hanging out with the characters. (Think Cougar Town.) While New Girl
isn’t at that stage yet – the network and the show are still clearly too
invested in the “Jess learns about dating or life or whatever” angle – it’s a
show that could very easily make such a lateral move. If the show did so, I
believe that the focus would naturally shift from Deschanel-in-the-lead to more
of an ensemble comedy (similar to the transition Cougar Town undertook when it stopped being about Jules and became
more about The Cul-De-Sac Crew), and any move that gives the guys a large role
would make the show stronger overall. Please understand that I am not
advocating for a more-dude oriented show – I tend to hate “dude comedies” and I
do like Deschanel’s presence – but rather that I am asking for show that is
more varies by giving different comedic creations equal play.
FOX’s current slogan is “So brash, so bold, so FOX”, and
regardless of whether you think the whole of FOX’s programs could be described
as either brash or bold (or if you have problems with “FOX” being used as an
adjective), New Girl is none of those
things. It’s ultimately a fairly sweet show, an attitude that will probably
help it do well in the timeslot after Glee.
But this isn’t about whether New Girl will survive; it’s about whether it will
become a show worth sticking around for. And whether it seeks out such
improvement is something that only time will tell.
Other Thoughts:
At one point, this show was definitely called The New Girl. Now it’s just New Girl. I don’t know why the network
decided to drop that definitive article, but I don’t like it. New Girl just feels too short of a
title, and The New Girl seemed to be
expressing something, well, definitive about Deschanel’s character, and I quite
liked that.
Oh, there’s one other character introduced here, Jess’
model friend Cece, who gets even less to do than the guys, and frankly didn’t
do anything that the guys couldn’t have done. She’s just there so that Schmidt
can drool over a model, and it’s something I hope that show drops quickly, as
it has no real narrative place or momentum. (Tellingly, she isn’t even present
in most of the paper advertisement, and she is given one line in the TV spots.)
Sorry, Hannah Simone, but you can look pretty just about anywhere.
Final casting note: Though Wayans is in the pilot, he
will not appear in future episodes due to his commitment to Happy Endings. Instead, the second
episode will have some dialogue that writes Coach out and writes in Winston,
played by Lamorne Morris. Thought it feels weird that the show clearly feels
the needs to have one black actor in the bunch – and once again, I can’t tell
if this is a script issue or a network mandate – personally I’m just glad that
the show didn’t swap actors for the same part and hoped that no one would
notice. However, given that Coach is the least defined character for the group,
maybe it’s for the best, and creator Elizabeth Merwether can have a chance to make
a stronger black character the second time around.
Ryan's Comment: "Corbin, I just wanted to let you know that I disagreed with your review of "New Girl." However, my opinion is probably inconsequential, because I would have been content with just 23 straight minutes of Zooey Deschanel acting like a dork."
ReplyDeleteMy comment: "Corbin, I just wanted to let you know that I disagreed with your review of "New Girl." However, my opinion is probably inconsequential, because I would have been content with just 23 straight minutes of Zooey Deschanel acting like a dork."
ReplyDeleteSure, this is more than a year later than the original post but I would really like to know what you think of "New Girl" now. So... what do you think?
ReplyDelete