Posts Tagged ‘Cougar Town’

Review: Cougar Town

Sunday, October 4th, 2009

Sitting down to watch the much hyped Cougar Town I was surprised by its 22 minute run time, I had been expecting something more akin to Desperate Housewives, but since Eastwick seems to have gone that route, the single camera sitcom format is perfect. Created by Bill Lawrence the man behind Spin City and Scrubs, it stars Courtney Cox (Friends and Dirt) the show is certainly packing some veteran talent, even relative new comer Dan Byrd (Aliens in America) delivers a confident performance.

Newly divorced realtor Jules (Courtney Cox) is suddenly aware of her age, her sagging  body and prospect that she is doomed to spend the rest of her life a single mum. Although she thinks she has a close and kooky relationship with her son Travis (Dan Byrd), she is unaware of how she embarrasses him. Her younger friend Laurie (Busy Phillips) wants to get her out of the house and so she ends up in bar and later back her place to enjoy the benefits of sex with younger guy. A new world has opened up and for the first time in a long time she feels alive and unfortunately for her 17 year old son this is something he is going to have to get use to.

This is one busy pilot, almost as if it was written for an hour slot and boiled down, scenes struggle to last longer than the annoying guitar music that segways over each cut. At such break neck speed it is hard to keep track with all the characters, and rather than well formed B and C stories we get one big over complicated A story. What makes this frustrating is there is a lot of really good moments, characters and ideas here, we just are not given the time to enjoy them.  Hopefully as the series continues the pace will slow down so we catch our breath and enjoy the show.

We have become very use to seeing older guys with younger girls, but the Cougar movement is certainly challenging those expectations.  We have seen it in Desperate Housewives, joked about it on SNL, sighed at Accidentally on Purpose, but Cougar Town despite its title, might be the first to really examine the plight of the single middle aged woman.  The term Cougar is almost a misnomer here, Jules is just woman who has opened her eyes to the possibilities before her, she might even have the power to re-brand the Cougar as something exciting rather than scary. However, there is one bug, Courtney Cox still looks kinda hot, she still has a great body and all those other shallow things we look for, the idea that she is over the hill just is not realistic so it is hard to make an emotional connection to her dilemma when many women that age (and younger) would kill to look that good.

This is a fairly solid first outing for Bill Lawrence’s new show, scrubs had run its course (however, it is being rebooted later this year as Scrubs: Interns), so it must be good to for him to sink his teeth into something new.  The characters are all interesting to watch, although Courtney Cox’s new character doesn’t feel like she has too many differences to her most famous role as Monica, while Christa Miller is playing nearly exactly the same character as she did on scrubs. This isn’t bad thing, the actors are very comfortable in these shoes and revel in the performance. The comedy is more mature than we have seen from Bill in the past due to the sexual nature of the story.  This doesn’t feel like Scrubs or Spin City dumped in Florida, it stands confident in its own shoes.

The first episode performed very well and I expect in the coming weeks the initial order of 13 episodes to extended for a full 22.

Created and Written by: Bill Lawrence, Kevin Biegel
Directed by: Bill Lawrence
Starring: Courteney Cox, Dan Byrd, Ian Gomez, Brian Van Holt, Josh Hopkins, Christa Miller, Busy Philipps
Date premièred: 23rd September 2009
UK Details: Living 2010

Review: Accidentally on Purpose

Thursday, September 24th, 2009

Like the mass of new hospital based dramas, this year also sees a huge Cougar movement.  This has been brewing for a while in shows such as The New Adventures of Old Christine, Desperate Housewives and a popular sketch on Saturday Night Live, however it is also prevalent in reality with Demi Moore, Madonna and Hale Berry. While Accidentally on Purpose is not the biggest cougar show of the season (that title goes to Cougar Town – reviewed soon), it is the first.

In case you are asking what a cougar is, the Urban Dictionary defines a cougar as “An older woman who frequents clubs in order to score with a much younger man. The cougar can be anyone from an overly surgically altered wind tunnel victim, to an absolute sad and bloated old horn-meister, to a real hottie or milf.” Our hottie in question here is celebrity scientologist Jenna Elfman, who you might remember from Dharma And Greg or not… the show was quite forgettable.

So the show starts with Billie (Jenna) at her work party with her quirky friend Olivia (Ashley Jensen, who you might remember as the quirky friend in Ugly Betty and Ricky Gervais’ quirky friend in Extras), Billie has recently broken up with her boyfriend since he was not going to propose and now 37 she is feeling a little over the hill. Then she gets hit on by young 20 something chef Zach (Jon Foster), they go back to his bachelor pad and make babies on his mattress on the floor.

Now pregnant Billie decides to break off the relationship, but Zach’s dad walked out on him when he was a kid and he doesn’t want the same for his child, so although the relationship is sexually over he now moves in.

There you have it, the pilot sets the scene for Billie and Zach’s worlds of the professional and the young playstation playing bachelor to collide.  This episode is all set up and it is basically an odd couple comedy, beyond that there is nothing which is knock out funny or original, it just is a bog standard easy watching studio sitcom. There must be something bitter sweet for the actresses getting work from this the rise in popularity of the Cougar, on one hand they are getting work, but on the other they have been relegated to being portrayed as over the hill simply on account of their age on paper. In TV terms men at 37 have not yet reached the age where they can be classed as distinguished while women are clawing at the curtains desperate to get their hands on a wedding ring or a penis which ever comes first… no pun intended.

Written by: Ryan Murphy & Brad Falchuk & Ian Brennan
Directed by: Claudia Lonow
Starring: Jenna Elfman, Jon Foster, Ashley Jensen, Nicolas Wright, Grant Show, Lennon Parham
Date premièred: 21st September 2009
UK Details: TBC


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