octothorpe
Saturday 29th July 2023 12:43am
49 posts
Oh, yeah, I hadn't even thought about where the kids might be; they could've put in a line referring to that. They missed a trick by not getting the babysitter from "Schooling" that we never saw the face of in again(!)
It's a shame the kids have been relegated as they have, as there's definite potential in them now they've significantly aged from earlier episodes, though I would understand if Mack didn't want to go down the route of NGO becoming too similar to My Family.
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I don't really have much to say about tonight's episode, given it was much stronger than last week's, with proper laughs rather than just chuckles. Actually getting the kid(s) involved gave the episode a new layer that I didn't expect, on top of the way in which it dealt with the subject of Lee and Lucy's marriage in a way in which the nuances around its depiction changed as the episode went on. The previous episode of a similar set-up, "Memory", worked in its greater simplicity, but tonight's episode embraced the various aspects of the set and its relation to the characters. And the poor kitchen - that's the second time they've had a row of cabinets collapse on them; are we gonna get an entirely new set for it next week/next series again this time?(!)
One slight issue is I feel Lee's character is becoming ever more fitting of the caricature/stereotype of a pathetic, middle-aged man - potentially yet another trope the show routinely deploys in recent series that could get old - and yet again there was some straining to the whole episode, with the performances and the scripting not feeling as comfortably natural as the show used to be so good at demonstrating; the most convincing acting, IMO, came from the interactions between Lucy and Molly (who seems a tad too old now to be needing a parent to rest next to them as they go to sleep, but I let that go early on). "Beep" and "Hospital" are the high points, so far, of this OK run.
And goof-watch-wise, anyone else notice the second time Lee ate part of his meal, and winced at the taste, he hadn't actually put anything on his fork?!
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New comedy The Power of Parker afterwards got off to a brilliant start - demonstrating Sian Gibson's talent not only as a performer but as a (co-)writer - although it is a shame that it's yet another half-hour comedy-drama that seems designed to be self-contained, rather than a proper sitcom format that could run and run, even though such formats aren't really in vogue these days; yes, Queen of Oz fulfilled that... kinda, but given the ratings both here and down under, as well as the critical reception (which unfairly shaped the judgement of the series IMO, as it significantly improved as it went on), the only run and run that's likely to make is to the bottom of WHSmiths' bargain bin if they ever dare to release it on DVD.