Showing posts with label Sherlock Holmes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sherlock Holmes. Show all posts

Friday, May 8, 2015

TV Spotlight – The 25 Best Series on Television – May 2015

It is that time of the year again when we find out what will be on TV in the Fall/Spring/Summer 2015-2016 and what will not be. It is a good time to discuss the best series on television (or, what is on HBO, AMC, FX, and Netflix).

Let us start with HBO, which boasts TV’s best lineup of dramas and comedies. Also on HBO are television’s best two news programs Last Week Tonight with John Oliver and Vice (forget your local and national new coverage, it is pointless and severely lacking by comparison).


Game of Thrones is the most popular series in the world and it is maybe television’s only true must-see series (particularly for fantasy/adventure genre fans). Its popularity has given HBO the ability to become autonomous with their HBO Now service.


Girls is the brilliantly funny and resonant dramedy from Lena Dunham. The series began as sort of a Sex and the City for a new generation, but I think it has become so much more, really getting at the meat of these characters and what it is like the grow up and become an adult in a much more substantial way. It is also good fun to watch.


Veep is Armando Iannucci’s hilarious political comedy (that feels very much like an extension of his film In the Loop). Sadly, he is leaving the series at the end of Season 4 (its current season), but the great mix of characters/actors and its sharp wit make it one of TV’s best comedies.


True Detective is an anthology series, with new characters, location and a case each season. Season 1 was incredible; Season 2 looks to be primed to be just as good. Nic Pizzolatto has assembled a wonderful cast for Season 2 (but it is still hard to imagine it eclipsing Season 1, which was probably the best thing on television in 2014).


Silicon Valley is a satire from Mike Judge that seems to perfectly capture the culture of the high-tech landscape in Silicon Valley, while remaining biting and hysterical. I am really interested to see where this show with go in the future, as things so far have moved relatively slowly (in terms of pushing the plot forward in a major way).


The Leftovers is fantastic on a character level, as it looks into the lives of the people left behind in a small suburban community after what could be called the Rapture. Opinions are rather mixed, probably due to the religious overtones associated with the series, but personally I think it is an excellent series.


Togetherness debuted this year, telling the story of a couple whose marriage seems to be falling apart. There series is funny and dramatically engaging, but really it is Season 1’s finally that really makes this a must. It is electric.

Moving on to Netflix…


House of Cards is Netflix’s biggest series, but with each season it seems to be losing what made it so good – its characters. At the end of Season 3, we are left with a bunch of unlikable people that we do not really even want to root for and thus do not care about. Watching House of Cards has become more about what will happen next in the plot and not because we are interested in where the characters will be taken next (on a character level). That is too bad, but maybe everything will turn around in Season 4. Otherwise, this might fall out of the top 25.


Orange Is the New Black is probably the best series on Netflix now. It is different from anything else in the medium. The only question I have is how do the show’s writers keep it fresh when the characters are so confined?


BoJack Horseman is a weird and wonderful animated comedy about a washed up sitcom actor who also happens to be a horse. It is a bizarre series, but infectiously funny.


Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt is the new series from Tina Fey and Robert Carlock. In many ways it feels a lot like 30 Rock in tone and comedy style, though I would argue that it is superior. It too is infectious and addictive.


Daredevil is the first of four planned collaborations between Marvel and Netflix. It is the best superhero series on television (and better than most of the Marvel films as well). As the beginning of watch will eventually become the Defenders, I cannot wait to see how AKA Jessica Jones, Luke Cage and Iron Fist turn out (after the brilliance of Season 1 of Daredevil).

Moving on to Yahoo Screen…


Community was cancelled by NBC only to find a new home on Yahoo Screen. The result is a show that is mostly the same as it was before – very funny, odd and among the greatest things the sitcom-like format has to offer. Will we get a Season 7 or just go straight to the movie?

Moving on to AMC…

With Mad Men ending this year and Breaking Bad ending last year, AMC needs to develop some new great show to take their place (a tall order, given that during their runs both were in the top five of almost every critic’s list).


Better Call Saul is an easy answer, being the prequel to Breaking Bad centering on the unscrupulous lawyer Saul Goodman (or as he is known on this series Jimmy McGill). Thanks to the tireless work of Bob Odenkirk, Vince Gilligan and Peter Gould. This series is excellent, living up to the seemingly high expectations.


The Walking Dead is AMC’s other heavy hitter, and maybe their most addictive series (I usually wait until it is on Netflix because every episode is a cliffhanger). It is amazing that this show has not become tired and boring given that every episode or storyline seems to go the same way (things kick off and then zombies show up to add extra tension). It has its slow moments, but it also has it fantastic, edge-of-your-seats moments.

Moving on to Cinemax…


The Knick is a medical drama that is also a period piece, and so far that formula is working very well, especially on premium cable, giving it an edge over what similar networks shows can even attempt.

Moving on to Comedy Central…

Inside Amy Schumer is hilarious and has made itself mandatory pop-culture viewing (but I do not really think of it as a series, thus it is disqualified from this list); however…


Broad City is also mandatory pop-culture viewing. It is works as a great companion series to Girls, as it too is about young women making a go of it in New York City. It is not nearly as dramatic as Girl, but probably stranger and often funnier. I recommend watching both.

Moving on to FX…

FX is also losing many of its standout dramas with Sons of Anarchy and Justified (a personal favorite) ending.


Fargo is their big dramatic series now, also working as a black comedy. It was promoted as an anthology series, but I expect to see some of Season 1’s characters show up in Season 2.


Archer is an animated spy series comedy that just builds on itself to such an extent that it feels like the whole show has become a series of inside jokes, which is fantastic for its fans that have been with it since the beginning. The voice-acting and jokes are tops (and often insane).


Louie is a comedy series from Louis C.K. that often feels like a drama and seems to resonate on a much deeper level than one would ever expect. Yes it is funny, but more so it is thoughtful and shows us life as it is (which is something that seems to be strangely missing from TV dramas).

Moving on to Masterpiece Theatre…


Sherlock is returning in 2015 with a Christmas Special, and Season 4 in 2016. I cannot wait.


Downton Abbey, everyone’s favorite period soap opera, is ending with Season 6, which will give Julian Fellows the ability to do almost anything with his characters, which should make for great television.


Wolf Hall tells the same story as The Tudors. You could just watch that, but Wolf Hall tells it so well and has such a great cast that it is well worth visiting the exploits of King Henry VIII yet again.

Moving on to NBC…


Hannibal is the only network series on this list. It is also one of the five best series in any format. It is incredibly stylish, well-acted and features wonderful writing and directing. I think it is the best iteration of the characters so far.

And finally, moving on to the Sundance Channel…


Rectify is a slow burn character. It is the opposite of most TV series. It asks you to invest in its characters as it slowly builds the tension without giving you much action or twists or soap operay moments (House of Cards should take notes, as it has delved into full on soap opera theatrics).


There you have it. The 25 TV Series that I think are the best currently on TV for the 2015-2016 season.

Friday, June 13, 2014

TV Spotlight – The 25 Best Series on TV – Part 5: 5-1

Rank: 5
Genre: Horror/Drama
Channel: NBC
Current Season: Third
Season Premiere Date: February 2015
Plot Summary: The relationship between FBI criminal profiler Will Graham and his therapist Dr. Hannibal Lecter is an interesting one – they are doctor-patient, friends, coworkers, and even cat and mouse. Will begins to investigate a series of murders, seeking Dr. Lecter’s advice. Little does he know, at first, that Lecter is right in the middle of the whole mystery.
Why It’s Worth Watching: Hannibal is maybe television’s most stylish production, as it is masterfully shot and designed. Creator Bryan Fuller is among the best on TV when it comes to writing series that are a bit odd but wonderfully put together aesthetically and feature full and interestingly complex characters. The show is fairly graphic, and thus it might not be for everyone – plus, it has a very black sense of humor – but for those willing to stomach its more colorful elements it is the best that network television has to offer (feeling very much like a cable series).

Rank: 4
Genre: Mystery/Drama
Channel: PBS
Current Season: Fourth
Season Premiere Date: 2016
Plot Summary: The tales of Sherlock Holmes and his crime-solving partner Dr. Watson (set in modern times).
Why It’s Worth Watching: I am not sure when Sherlock will return for its fourth season precisely, but early indications point to sometime in 2016 (there are also plans for a fifth season as well). With season three, Sherlock (which was already great) took things to a new level aesthetically, creatively, and in terms of storytelling. Episodes The Sign of Three and His Last Vow are among the best things I have ever seen on television. I cannot wait for more.

Rank: 3
Genre: Period Drama
Channel: AMC
Current Season: Seventh (part two) and final
Season Premiere Date: April 2015
Plot Summary: Donald Draper is an ad executive in New York City during the 1960s. He has had success and has a way about him, but like America as a whole during the 1960s Don too begins to feel his world change around him, bringing up complex feelings and emotions.
Why It’s Worth Watching: Mad Men has been among my favorite shows on television ever since it debuted in 2007. Lead by Matt Weiner, its writing is second to none and it features a tremendous cast (with actually well written female characters). It also continually creates amazing episodes that are the epitome of why today is called television’s golden age – episodes like this past season’s The Strategy and Waterloo (The Suitcase is my favorite of the series). This is a series that will be greatly missed when it ends (and it will thereby spell the end of AMC’s claim as the pinnacle of TV’s dramatic series, with Breaking Bad also coming to an end and HBO again turning out brilliant series after brilliant series).

Rank: 2
Genre: Mystery/Drama
Cast: Unknown
Channel: HBO
Current Season: Second
Season Premiere Date: January 2015
Plot Summary: Set in California, three characters investigate a new mysterious crime.
Why It’s Worth Watching: While we do not yet know many details of what season two of True Detective will look like and who it will star, there is no doubt that it is television’s second most anticipated series. Season one, led by Nic Pizzolatto’s great writing, strong performances from Matthew McConaughey, Woody Harrelson and Michelle Monaghan, and the absolute stellar directing of Cary Joji Fukunaga (of which only Pizzolatto is returning for season two), seemed to take what was possible of a TV-crime-drama to a new level. Personally, I think it will be very hard for them to match season one’s brilliance, but I am sure excited to see what they do and what story they tell now. True Detective has claimed its spot as television’s best new series and very well could run the table come awards season.

Rank: 1
Genre: Adventure/Fantasy/Period Drama
Channel: HBO
Current Season: Fifth
Season Premiere Date: April 2015
Plot Summary: Seven noble families fight for control of the throne of Westeros (some faring better than others).
Why It’s Worth Watching: Game of Thrones is the quintessence of event television at its very best. Every episode has become an eagerly anticipated weekly ritual. The series succeeds on its blend of great characters and writing along with violence, suspense, intrigue, sex, and adventure/fantasy elements. It really has a little bit of everything, plus a sensational cast. It is able to grab its viewers because (for once) it is a series that is truly narratively shocking and absorbing, constantly defying expectations and breaking all the rules (the series did kill off its main character in the first season after all). It is also endlessly re-watchable. Planned to be seven seasons, Game of Thrones seems to only get more interesting and more exciting as the series progresses.

Sunday, June 2, 2013

TV Preview 2013/2014 – 25 Must-Watch Series, Part 5: 5-1


Rank: 5
Genre: Period Crime Drama
Creator(s): Terence Winter
Channel: HBO
Current Season: Fourth
Season Premiere Date: September 2013
Plot Summary: Nucky Thompson runs Atlantic City during Prohibition by controlling the selling of alcohol. He lives a bit of a double life. He wants to be seen as a respected member as the community (and family man), but he also must be a feared gangster in his dealings with the likes of Arnold Rothstein, Al Capone, and Lucky Luciano.
Why It’s Worth Watching: Boardwalk Empire has taken the vacated place that The Sopranos once held on HBO as their premier crime drama (and character drama). Creator Terence Winter also worked on The Sopranos, and has brought the same depth that Tony had to his lead Nucky. The entire cast is fantastic and all play wonderful characters. There is no better gangster series on television (or among recent films for that matter) balancing the graphic violence with strong storytelling.

Rank: 4
Genre: Crime Drama/Mystery Thriller
Creator(s): Mark Gatiss and Steven Moffat
Channel: Materpiece Theatre on PBS
Current Season: Third
Season Premiere Date: September 2013
Plot Summary: Set in present-day London, Sherlock Holmes and Dr. John Watson assist the police in solving their most befuddling crimes.
Why It’s Worth Watching: Sherlock, despite its famous name and characters, is really nothing more than another detective procedural, and yet it is wonderfully fresh and engrossing. Mark Gatiss and Steven Moffat have made Holmes’s mysteries feel new and vital, while Benedict Cumberbatch and Martin Freeman are completely brilliant as Holmes and Watson. The series has a long-episode format with each lasting ninety minutes, which allows each narrative to play as its own film exhibiting lush character development and story depth (unrivaled on TV by any other procedural) – A Study in Pink, The Great Game, A Scandal in Belgravia, and The Reichenbach Fall are all incredible episodes.

Rank: 3
Genre: Adventure/Fantasy Drama
Creator(s): David Benioff and D.B. Weiss
Channel: HBO
Current Season: Fourth
Season Premiere Date: March 2014
Plot Summary: Four prominent families battle one and other for control of the Iron Throne and the Kingdom of Westeros.
Why It’s Worth Watching: Game of Thrones is the most entertaining series on television. That is due to its superb ensemble cast, production value, and excellent storytelling. Each new episode feels like an event. Plus, the series seems to be getting better with each season (as season three has been very strong so far), which is actually surprising given the sheer number of characters and storylines that the writers must manage. For fans of fantasy narratives, there is nothing better right now than Game of Thrones.

Rank: 2
Genre: Period Drama
Creator(s): Matthew Weiner
Channel: AMC
Current Season: Seventh, and final
Season Premiere Date: March 2014
Plot Summary: Donald Draper is one of New York City’s best ad men during the 1960s. The series navigates the changing social and cultural climate of the era and how it affects Draper and his co-workers.
Why It’s Worth Watching: Mad Men is the best written series on television. It won four straight Primetime Emmys for Best Dramatic Series (and was nominated as well for season five, losing to Homeland) and five straight inclusions on AFI’s TV Program of the Year list. Plus, it has one of television’s best ensembles (with Elisabeth Moss beautifully playing TV’s best female character Peggy Olson). While season five was slightly polarizing (though, I would argue it is just as good as the first four seasons), season six continues the show’s strong run of critical acclaim. Television will be losing something special when season seven comes to an end.

Rank: 1
Genre: Crime Drama
Creator(s): Vince Gilligan
Channel: AMC
Current Season: Fifth (part two), and final
Season Premiere Date: August 11, 2013
Plot Summary: After being diagnosed with cancer struggling, but brilliant, high school chemistry teacher Walter White decides to cook meth in order to make enough money to support his family when he is gone. He turns to a former student (and junkie), Jesse Pinkman, for help. However, Walter and Jesse seem to just fall deeper and deeper into the world of crime, forgetting their moral compasses and losing who they once were as they embrace the darkness.
Why It’s Worth Watching: Breaking Bad has the most compelling lead character on television in Walter White. If you have not yet started watching this series, start right now (it is streaming on Netflix). The show seemed like it might be burning out a bit during seasons three and four as creator Vince Gilligan turned more towards character development than story progression, but it has paid huge dividends when the action started to ramp up to a fever pitch. The show has been incredible from the latter part of season four through the first part of season five. Part two’s eight episodes are undoubtedly going to be amazing.

Monday, August 13, 2012

TV Preview 2012/2013 – 25 Must-See Series, Part 4: 10-6



Rank: 10
Genre: Sci-Fi/Mystery
Current Season: Fifth
Channel: Fox
Return Date: September 28, 2012
Plot Summary: FBI agent Olivia Dunham, and her team, investigate strange and paranormal occurrences and phenomena.
Why It Made the List: Fringe started out as sort of an almost procedural drama with character story arcs linking multiple episodes, but it has become a much more serialized series in the last two seasons. If you were to watch an episode of season one and then an episode of season four, you would be completely lost story wise and maybe even narrative structure wise (not just character wise, as would be the case with most procedurals). Network TV just does not offer good dramas anymore because they try to attract too board an audience and often play it far too safe with characters and situations (sadly, because that is what most people watch looking at the ratings). Fringe is the last great Network drama (and the only one to make this top 25 list – at least of the big 4: ABC, CBS, NBC, and Fox), and season five is its last. The show has a great mix of action, mystery and dramatic elements along with wonderful characters making it the best sci-fi genre series right now.

Rank: 9
Genre: Comedy
Creator(s): Louis C.K.
Cast: Louis C.K.
Current Season: Third
Channel: FX
Return Date: June 28, 2012
Plot Summary: The series basically tackles Louis C.K.’s everyday life – his attempts to find love, taking care of his kids, his standup, and his misadventures
Why It Made the List: Many critics point to Louie as the best comedy on TV right now. In many ways, it is in the same vein as Larry David’s Curb Your Enthusiasm and Ricky Gervais’s Extras – capitalizing on the awkward, strange and sort of sad situations that these characters find themselves in. It is often hilarious, but also oddly inviting on sort of a deeper intuitive way, as Louis C.K.’s exploits are very relatable to us everyday Joes. Fans of comedy sitcoms should check this out (though it is quite different than the average Network sitcom).

Rank: 8
Genre: Crime Drama
Creator(s): Graham Yost
Current Season: Fourth
Channel: FX
Return Date: January 2013
Plot Summary: U.S. Marshal Raylan Givens tries to make peace with his past when he is reassigned from Miami to his childhood home in Eastern Kentucky, which he ran away from as soon as he was able.
Why It Made the List: As a huge fan of westerns, I generally seek them out. Justified is a wonderful modern western. Raylan Givens is the standard old-school town sheriff type character from many of the classic westerns. He both fits in and is completely out of place on this show, according to the situation, which often finds him in trouble. The series seems to be getting better and better with each season as it continues to sort of straddle the line between being a procedural (case of the week) and a serialized drama (complete with each season having a big bad). Givens is also a great conflicted character, which only adds to effectiveness of the show’s stories and drama. For fans of westerns, this is the must-see series right now.

Rank: 7
Genre: Crime Period Drama
Creator(s): Terence Winter
Current Season: Third
Channel: HBO
Return Date: September 16, 2012
Plot Summary: The series follows Nucky Thompson, Atlantic City’s treasurer during its heyday in the 1920s. Thompson rules the town through both political means and organized crime, while rivals try to pull him down.
Why It Made the List: Boardwalk Empire (like most HBO dramas) has excellent production value, a brilliant cast and wonderful directors. What I particularly like about the series is that it blends fictional characters and real life people from the era (for example, one of the main characters is Al Capone before he became a Chicago crime boss), giving the series a historical through-line which allows it to play with and comment on events in American history. It also fills the void in television right now for a great gangster style crime drama (the series creator Terence Winter was a writer on The Sopranos). It is certainly well worth watching for fans of crime dramas (and character dramas for that matter, as Buscemi’s Thompson is one of the best on TV right now).

Rank: 6
Genre: Crime Drama/Mystery
Creator(s): Mark Gatiss and Steven Moffat
Current Season: Third
Channel: Masterpiece Theatre on PBS
Return Date: 2013 (Probably Spring)
Plot Summary: The series is a modern take on the Sherlock Holmes stories.
Why It Made the List: There is not a better mystery series on TV right now. CBS is even doing their own version called Elementary (because adapting British TV for American audiences is the craze right now). Benedict Cumberbatch is absolutely fantastic and captivating as Holmes, completely dominating every scene. The episodes are well written (most of them being phenomenal), and are formatted a bit like individual films (each episode is ninety minutes). The format gives the writers the ability to tell expansive stories (and cases). If you like detective series, you need to be watching Sherlock.

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

TV Preview 2011/2012 – 25 Must See Series, Part 4: 10-6

Has television programming ever been better than it is right now? Not in terms of great individual shows, but in terms of lots of really great shows (many of which did not make this list, and I had some tough decisions) on the air right now. This is a list of the best twenty five series in the upcoming 2011/2012 season.



Rank: 10                                 
Genre: Sci-Fi/Mystery
Network: Fox
Premier Date: September 23, 2011
Current Season: Fourth
Plot Summary: The series is about Olivia Dunham, an FBI agent who investigates unexplained phenomena with the help of a formally institutionalized scientist Walter Bishop and his son Peter.
Why It Made the List: Fringe started out as a The X-Files like procedural, but with the show becoming more serialized the narrative has become much more interesting. I like this show a lot because it is different from anything else on TV (well as least as much as something on network TV can be). Where it is now from how it started in the pilot is amazing – Fringe’s writers are so ambitious to push the show’s narrative. While this may not be as highly ranked on other TV lists, I love watching Fringe – from its wonderful aesthetic, great performances and writing to its inventiveness and multifaceted narrative. There is not a better sci-fi show on TV.

Rank: 9
Genre: Period Crime Drama
Network: HBO
Creator(s): Terence Winter
Premier Date: September 25, 2011
Current Season: Second
Plot Summary: The series is Nucky Thompson, a politician and gangster who ruled Atlantic City during the 1920s.
Why It Made the List: All you really need to know about Boardwalk Empire is that it is a period gangster series on HBO executively produced by Martin Scorsese – if you are not interested at this point, maybe this show is not for you. It is also one of the best acted shows, dominating the TV Screen Actors Guild awards in 2011. In addition to the principal cast, Boardwalk Empire has great guest stars, including: Michael Stuhlbarg, Stephen Graham, Michael Kenneth Williams, and Gretchen Mol. Gangster genre fans need to see this.

Rank: 8
Genre: Comedy
Network: NBC
Premier Date: September 22, 2011
Current Season: Eighth
Plot Summary: The series is about the employees at the Scranton, Pennsylvania, branch of the paper company Dunder Mifflin – done in the style of a documentary.
Why It Made the List: The Office has two big challenges this season: first, can the show continue without Steve Carell? Second, can the show return to the quality consistency it once had? James Spader has been cast to be Steve Carell’s replacement and it on paper seems like a good choice, but of course we will have to wait to see how it plays out. While the seasons as a whole continue to be good, the episodes consistency has not been quite as good in the last two seasons. The show is also relying too much on celebrity cameos lately. I love this show, more even than the British original (on the surface that sounds crazy, maybe, but it is because I know and love these characters more than the British versions). There have not been too many sitcom style comedies that have done a better job of fleshing out their characters, and this is really why this show is so good – and it is really funny.

Rank: 7
Genre: Western
Network: FX
Creator(s): Elmore Leonard and Graham Yost
Premier Date: February 2012
Current Season: Third
Plot Summary: The series is about an old-school style U.S. Marshal Raylan Givens, who is reassigned to Eastern Kentucky near his hometown, surfacing up old feelings and conflicts.
Why It Made the List: Westerns are few and far between these days, and great ones are even scarcer. Justified is a Modern Western, but still features a lot of the same ethos of the classic Westerns of cinema (and to a lesser extent TV). After Deadwood, Timothy Olyphant is just the perfect person to play the lead in Justified (Raylan is not too different from Seth Bullock, and that is not a bad thing as both a great characters). While season one was very good, it only scratched the surface of the show’s potential. Season two was even better and thus there is a ton of expectation for season three. TV needs a great Western, and Justified is that show right now.

Rank: 6
Genre: Mystery
Network: PBS
Creator(s): Mark Gatiss and Steven Moffat
Premier Date: Spring 2012
Current Season: Second
Plot Summary: The series is a modern update of the Sherlock Holmes story – a brilliant student of details who puts his gift to work solving crimes with the help of his friend Dr. Watson.
Why It Made the List: Sherlock Holmes is a character that has been done a ton of times (and even recently as a blockbuster movie series). Even so, BBC and Masterpiece Theatre’s Sherlock is completely fresh, exciting and original (even when it incorporates classic characters and storylines). I cannot wait to see Sherlock’s impending confrontation with Moriarty, who was done so well in season one. There are so many detective and mystery procedurals on TV today (some good like Bones, but most are just tired and poorly made), Sherlock should be the standard that all these shows and future procedurals to stand against and try to achieve the same level of quality. If you have not seen this yet, get on that.