Kevin Saves The World
US TV

Review: Kevin (Probably) Saves The World 1×1 (US: ABC)

In the US: Tuesdays, 10/9c, ABC

Faith-based television has a bad reputation. That is, it has a reputation for being bad. To be fair, that’s largely because not only is it preaching to the converted, it typically airs on networks with small budgets and few creatives. The result is dogmatic, hectoring TV that has the subtlety of Pat Robertson.

But when it airs on mainstream networks, it can often rise above the banal. Sure, you can still end up with the likes of Of Kings and Prophets (cancelled so quickly I didn’t even have time to review it) and the just horrific Saving Grace, but you can still end up with jaunty little shows like Joan of Arcadia, Highway to Heaven or even Quantum LeapTouched by an Angel? Well, let’s not speak about that…

Trouble is the good ones are all much of a muchness and new kid on the block Kevin (Probably) Saves the World doesn’t exactly deviate from the standard formula. It sees Jason Ritter (The Class, The Event, Another Period, Goliath) playing the titular Kevin, a somewhat aimless complete nobody and failure as a human being, who tried to commit suicide – and failed at that, too. Sister JoAnna Garcia Swisher (Privileged, Animal Practice) is so worried about him trying again that she gets him to move in with her, back in the small town in which they grew up but which he left a decade ago. That’s despite the fact Ritter wasn’t there for her when her husband died, something Ritter’s niece (Chloe East) still hates him for.

One night, a meteorite – one of more than 30 – strikes the Earth nearby and Ritter being somewhat dumb, only goes and touches it. When he wakes up, he can suddenly hear and see Kimberly Hebert Gregory (Vice Principals), who claims to be a ‘warrior of God’ – what we call an angel. She tells him that he’s one of the 36 righteous souls who keep the world going. In fact, he’s the only one left and he now has to find 35 others whom he can anoint as the new righteous souls. At least, once he’s becoming properly righteous himself.

Trouble is, no one else can see or hear Gregory, although they can at least see the results of her actions, and he can’t tell anyone that he’s one of the righteous ones. Ritter’s also not even emotionally equipped to make himself, his sister or his niece happier or better. So can Kevin save the world?

This again?

So there you go. It’s Joan of Arcadia again. It’s also Quantum Leap again. It’s even Highway to Heaven again. It’s the “God moves in mysterious ways to go and help the little guy to help other little guys, usually with the help of some kind of angel that can only be seen by said little guy” formula that we’ve seen so many times before. Gregory is precisely the kind of older black woman that Community satirised as inevitably being a TV ‘cosmic mentor’. Ritter eventually sees the light and starts becoming a better person. There are no surprises other than JoAnna Garcia Swisher being a professor of engineering.

But beyond that slavish following of the template, Kevin (Probably) Saves The World is actually okay. It can be quite heart-warming, doesn’t tell you you’re a sinner and doesn’t quote scripture at you. It takes itself a lot less seriously than you might expect, with Ritter being a complete idiot and most of Gregory’s life lessons for Ritter involving her hitting him or something bad happening to him like his car being run over. Ritter’s funny and appealing, and not a loathsome, godless atheist as you might have expected, either.

There’s a good supporting cast as well, with India de Beaufort (Kröd Mändoon, Blood and Oil) as Ritter’s ex, who’s now one of East’s teachers and holds a slight torch for him still; J August Richards (Angel, Raising the Bar, Agents of SHIELD, Notorious) is a local cop and possible romantic interest for Garcia Swisher.

There’s also ample room for the series to expand. Those other meteorites all brought angels to Earth as well, so there’s the possibility for them to show up. Garcia Swisher is working with the US government to find out the significance of so many of them all hitting the Earth at the same time.

Probably not

Of course, for Kevin to save the world, if the show lasts the maximum of seven seasons, Kevin has to find an average of five righteous souls a season, so we’ll quickly know if it this is the kind of show that’s planning on treading water and moping around town for its run, or whether there’ll be some actual pace to it. Somehow, I doubt it’ll be the latter but you never know.

Would I watch seven seasons to find out? Almost certainly not.The comedy, dialogue and plotting are pretty weak. It’s unremarkable stuff at every level, although it’s not bad and does have potential.

All the same, it’s good to know that reasonably good faith-based TV can still be made.

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Will and Grace
US TV

What have you been watching? Including Bad Blood, 9JKL and Will and Grace

It’s “What have you been watching?”, my chance to tell you each week what movies and TV I’ve been watching recently and your chance to recommend anything you’ve been watching. TMINE recommends has all the reviews of all the TV shows TMINE has ever recommended, but for a complete list of TMINE’s reviews of (good, bad and insipid) TV shows and movies, there’s the definitive TV Reviews A-Z and Film Reviews A-Z. But it’s what you have you been watching? I bet it’s better than what I’ve been watching. And I watched a lot

Week one into the new US TV season and I reckon I’m keeping up pretty well. Admittedly, I’ve had to ditch Boxset Monday and move WHYBW? from Tuesday to Wednesday to do it, but I don’t think that’s going to cause too many fainting fits.

This week, I’ve reviewed (and even previewed) the first episodes of:

That’s not the whole gamut of new shows, mind, and still to come this week are my reviews of Kevin (Probably) Saves The World (US: ABC), Ten Days in the Valley (US: ABC) and The Gifted (US: Fox; UK: Fox UK). I’m also planning to have a look at Alias Grace (Canada: CBC; UK: Netflix) and Absentia (AXN), and I might even give 4 Blocks (Germany: TNT Serie; UK: Amazon) a whirl if I have the time.

On top of that, there are a few other new shows – but I’ll be dealing with them after the jump, along with the regulars, both old and new. So follow me over the page to where I will cast my eye over the latest episodes of The Brave, Get Krack!n, Great News, Halt and Catch Fire, The Last Ship, Lethal Weapon, Lucifer, My Myself and I, Professor T and Star Trek: Discovery, as well as fill you in on new arrivals Bad Blood, 9JKL and – what’s this? – Will and Grace. Is that right?

(Yep, I dropped Bang and The Good Doctor. What you gonna do?)

Continue reading “What have you been watching? Including Bad Blood, 9JKL and Will and Grace”

The British are coming to steal all your jobs! AKA the international nature of US TV in a single shot

The Good Doctor is an insultingly bad TV show. I thought the first episode was reasonably terrible and I had to give up during the second episode when it rapidly became “let’s laugh at the autistic guy not understanding social situations, even though he’s in his 20s”.

But I did get as far as this scene, which I think sums up the current state of US TV.

The Good Doctor Casting

Firstly, we’re not watching an original US show, we’re watching an adaptation of KBS2 (South Korea)’s 굿 닥터 (Good Doctor):

Good Doctor (Korean)

Secondly, let’s run through that cast. From left to right, we have Freddie Highmore. He’s English and starred in Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. He puts on an American accent.

Next we have Antonia Thomas. She’s English and starred in Misfits. She puts on an American accent.

Then we have Chuku Modu. He’s English and starred in Game of Thrones. For a change, he uses an English accent.

Finally, we have Nicholas Gonzalez. He’s… wow. American.

So we have a US TV show based on a South Korean TV show in which of four characters:

  1. Only three characters are American
  2. Only one of the actors playing them is American
  3. Three of the actors are British
  4. One of the characters is British.

And it’s just had a full season order, so that’s not something that upsets Americans, it seems.

Ladies and gentlemen, the current state of US network TV in a scene.

 

 

Major Crimes
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