Now Playing: QUINCY, M.E.
Phil Spector, that's who. How worried do you think he is about his upcoming murder trial in the death of BARBARIAN QUEEN star Lana Clarkson? After O.J. and Bobby Blake and now Michael Jackson, how much evidence does a jury need to put these guys behind bars? In all three cases, the physical evidence was overwhelming (good grief, O.J. even left his own blood behind at the crime scene), but the L.A. jurors let the defendants walk anyway. Of course, these are the same star-struck morons that voted Arnold Schwarzeneggar as their new governor, a Chief Executive whose approval rating is lower and job performance worse than the guy he replaced, Gray Davis.
Speaking of murder, I caught last week's premiere of THE INSIDE, a new crime drama on the Fox network. Yeah, like the networks need another police procedural. Remember PROFILER, which hung around NBC's Saturday night schedule for several seasons in the late 1990's? Well, THE INSIDE is the exact same show, except with younger stars. You've got the young hottie with the "gift" for solving serial murders, the older male authority figure, the wisecracking and slightly less attractive woman sidekick, and the young male hottie for that oh-so-boring sexual tension. Add some creepy music stings, opening titles that rip off SE7EN, plenty of gory crime scenes, and you have PROFILER 2, now titled THE INSIDE. I have no idea what "The Inside" is; the pilot, written and directed by Tim Minear, neglected to mention that.
This ludicrously cast series is impossible to take seriously as long as 25-year-old model Rachel Nichols is its star. She's 25, but looks 17, and was, in fact, cast when the series' original premise was about an FBI agent going undercover as a high school student to fight crime. Nichols might have pulled that off, but when Minear took over the series and insisted on changing the format, he was reportedly forced by Fox to keep her on as the star. Prancing about in lip gloss and a constantly placid expression on her face, Nichols is about as believable as an FBI field agent as I would be in THE MIKHAIL BARYSHNIKOV STORY. Peter Coyote is authoritative as her boss, I suppose, but the show seems to be titled towards making him some sort of shadowy antagonist whose motives in the manner in which he treats the agents under his command are a little shady. Coyote plays a great asshole, however, as does Adam Baldwin as one of Nichols' partners, a wiseass named Danny Love.
The premiere of THE INSIDE finished fourth in its time slot, well behind a ballroom dancing show (!) and reruns (of YES, DEAR!), meaning you'll likely have little time to get into THE INSIDE before Fox cancels it.
I finished the GREATEST AMERICAN HERO Season Two set tonight with "Lilacs, Mr. Maxwell", an extraordinary episode written and directed by its costar, Robert Culp. It's a mature, sensitive look at the emotional side of FBI agent Bill Maxwell (Culp), who we usually see as the stubborn, gung-ho, impersonal partner of supersuited crimefighter Ralph Hinkley (William Katt). In the second-season finale, Maxwell becomes smitten with an efficiency expert (portrayed by DESIGNING WOMEN's Dixie Carter) who turns out to be a KGB assassin ordered to kill him. It's not unlike the teleplays Culp turned out for his I SPY series in the mid-1960's in its attention to the gray areas surrounding honor among spies and duty to one's country. He manages to capture the series' inherent humor and adventure, but adds a dramatic angle unusual to the show, closing with a freeze-frame certain to leave a lump in your throat. I can't wait for the third (and final) season coming from Anchor Bay this summer.
With GAH back on the shelf, I opened Universal's new QUINCY, M.E. box set, which consists of 16 episodes from the first two seasons. QUINCY actually began as a spoke of THE NBC SUNDAY MYSTERY MOVIE, but after four feature-length episodes, proved popular enough to earn its own regular one-hour weekly timeslot, the only MYSTERY MOVIE series to do so.
Universal bills QUINCY as the "Original Crime Scene Investigator", and even though the C.S.I. franchises may not have existed without it, it's closer in its premise to CROSSING JORDAN. Jack Klugman stars as Quincy (first name unknown, even at the end of its seven-season run), a Los Angeles coroner unable to half-ass anything, turning up murders, coverups and police and political corruption and intrigue at an alarming frequency. As the series wore on, QUINCY moved away somewhat from standard mystery plots towards an "issue of the week" premise, as Quincy began examining social issues between murders. This was due to the painstaking day-to-day involvement of Klugman, who became notorious for battling network executives and firing writers and producers whom he felt weren't living up to the high standards he set for his show.
In the premiere, "Go Fight City Hall...To the Death", Quincy investigates the rape/murder of a young woman and ties it into the apparent suicide of her former boss and the apparent accidental death of a former co-worker six months earlier. One of the episode's weaknesses is the obvious incompetence of the police force, represented by Lt. Monahan (Garry Walberg, Speed in Klugman's THE ODD COUPLE series), who refuses to accept medical facts as evidence for the sake of expedience; Monahan's got a suspect in custody, and so what if Quincy's examination of the corpse proves the guy didn't do it.
The success of the series rested firmly on Klugman's shoulders, and he was more than up to the task. Let me be clear--Jack Klugman is a great actor. All you'd have to do to be convinced is to watch any of the four TWILIGHT ZONE episodes he did, including "In Praise for Pip", where he plays a lonely trumpet player, and "A Game of Pool", which pitted him against billiard shark Jonathan Winters. He also held his own in one of cinema's great dramas, 12 ANGRY MEN, against Henry Fonda and major stage stars like Jack Warden, Lee J. Cobb and Ed Begley. In the ten-year period between 1971 and 1980, he was nominated for an Emmy award nine times (five for THE ODD COUPLE, four for QUINCY, M.E.), winning twice (in addition to his 1964 Emmy for a DEFENDERS guest shot).
I won't get into the brilliance of THE ODD COUPLE now, but suffice to say that Klugman is great fun to watch as crusading coroner Quincy. Yeah, sometimes he goes a bit over the top and makes the character too abrasive and bullheaded, but that's part of the fun, seeing Quincy take on the Establishment singlehandedly and usually kicking its ass.
Plus, Klugman's exuberance inspired the wonderful SCTV parody QUINCY, CARTOON CORONER with Joe Flaherty's dead-on impersonation, in which Quincy's examination of Sylvester's flattened corpse sparks an investigation of Tweety.