I've been watching a lot of TV on DVD lately. In addition to my obsessive re-viewings of the first season of The O.C., the first four seasons of Buffy the Vampire-Slayer, the first two seasons of Veronica Mars and Battlestar Galactica, etc., I've been renting shows that I somehow missed the first time around. Here are some thoughts:
Invasion. I think I've talked about this a little before. It's the alien invasion show that was Lost's lead-out last season. Invasion started strong, ratings-wise, but then suffered from Lost's sophomore slump and some time slot jiggering (to make way for Alias's final run). It's a real pity, because this show was smart and relevant. It did a really neat job of using its sci-fi plot to talk about a range of topics, including divorce, adolescence, immigration, gentrification, social class anxiety . . . I think there were others. Great production values, excellent score, some great performances (especially Kari Matchett, currently creeping us out as Powers Boothe's assistant/paramour on 24), strong storytelling . . . I was sorry to finish the discs .
Avatar: The Last Airbender. Animation is kind of a lightning rod genre for me: either I love it, if it's really beautiful and flawless, or else it drives me insane, if it's at all cheap or repetitive. Even something like The Tick, that was incredibly funny and literate, irritates me because I've got problems with the visual presentation. Avatar is really, extraordinarily beautiful for a television show. On top of that, the storytelling is very nice. For a kids' show, it's adult in kind of a refreshing way: it's not throwing in pop culture references for the adults, but it is using fairly sophisticated characterization and storytelling techniques to tell a kids' story. Note: this show is actually still on the air. Season 1 and part of season 2 are on DVD. Season 3 is coming soon, I believe, on Nickelodeon. Oh, one thing that really sucks about this: Nickelodeon lards its DVDs with hateful amounts of trailers and other forms of bullshit promotion.
Kidnapped. Unfairly cancelled after a weak start in a crappy timeslot on loser network HBO. It's got some problems -- a lot of clichés, some unnecessarily expository dialogue -- but a lot that's good and compelling, too. I'm only four episodes into the total 13 NBC ordered. Apparently, those 13 wrap up the story, which is nice. -- Peter