Gallagher’s
Forum
Whatever Happened to Predictability?
By
Jon Gallagher
Fuller
House (Netflix,
2016) – Creator: Jeff Franklin. Stars: Candace Cameron Bure, Jodie
Sweetin, Andrea Barber, Michael Campion, Elias Harger, Soni Bringas,
Dashiell Messitt, Fox Messitt, John Brotherton, Juan Pablo Di Pace,
Scott Weinger, & Ashley Liao. TV-G.
I
should confess that during the eight-year run of Full
House on ABC, I never saw a single show. While it was on
from 1987 till 1995, I was working a second-shift job at a local
factory and didn’t see much prime time TV (even though we had a
VCR, no one at home could figure out how to make it record one show
while they watched another). To be honest, I wasn’t real interested
in seeing a saccharinely-sweet show about a widower and his three
daughters.
After
I got laid off from the factory, I went back to school full time at a
private, liberal arts college and homework combined with obligations
to the family combined to keep me away from the TV.
It
wasn’t until the show went off the air and Nickelodeon picked it up
that I began watching it with my youngest daughter who was born in
2004.
I
actually enjoyed the show. It was a nice, family-friendly program
that had very distinct characters with easily recognizable
personalities. Sure, the plots ran thin, and everything always worked
out by the end of the show (unless it was continued to the next
week). Yes, I got sick of cute little Michelle saying “How rude!”
(and for that matter, all the catch phrases on the show). Yes, I
couldn’t understand how Uncle Jesse and Joey could go from jobless
to overnight success almost every week. But it was still fun to
watch.
Eight
seasons was enough for network executives. The expenses of producing
a weekly show with so many stars is staggering, and as the kids grew
up, the innocence of their teenage years were about to transform into
more than the family-friendly series was going to be able to handle.
The
stars went on about their ways. Bob Saget and Dave Coulier both
continued with their stand-up comedy routines, something they’d
brought with them to the series when it began. Jodie Sweetin
(Stephanie) developed an addiction to meth, got married three times,
but finally straightened her life out in 2008. Both Candace Cameron
Bure and Lori Laughlin continued to find work in Hollywood, both
doing guest shots on various TV series and starring in made-for-TV
movies.
Andrea
Barber (next door neighbor Kimmy Gibler) quit acting and went to
school, staying in close contact with her former castmates.
The
three biggest stars continue to have success. John Stamos has gone on
to find fame in other TV series, guesting on some and playing a lead
role in others. He’s been known to produce some projects as well,
including Fuller House.
The
Olsen Twins, Mary Kate and Ashley, who played a single role on Full
House, became a mega-million-dollar marketing enterprise. Their
faces were plastered on everything from lunch boxes to backpacks to
notebooks as the cash rolled in. They made a few movies that were
written especially for them, starred in their own TV series, and then
dropped out of Hollywood once their cuteness wore off. Mary Kate
continued to act on occasion, most notably on the the HBO series
Weeds, while Ashley did mostly cameos and uncredited
appearances. In the past 10 years, they’ve done little in the way
of film or TV, concentrating on a fashion empire they’ve been
building instead.
The
cast still managed to stay in touch. Saget told Stephen Colbert on
the latter’s talk show that the cast had become a real family and
they often saw each other socially. In fact, Bure was the matron of
honor at one of Sweetin’s three weddings.
A
reunion had been talked about for years. Since the show has been off
the air for 20 years (but still around because of reruns on
Nickelodeon), an entire generation had been introduced to the Tanner
household, my own 11-year-old daughter included. Stamos acted as
producer, got together with Jeff Franklin, who created the original
series, sold the idea to Netflix, an internet-only based broadcast
entity, and filming began several months ago.
Fuller
House takes a look at the same Tanner house that we last saw two
decades ago. The kids are grown and have kids of their own. In the
pilot for the new series, DJ (Bure) has just lost her fire-fighting
husband and is set to raise three sons on her own. Danny (Saget) and
his wife are getting ready to move to Los Angeles where he and
Rebecca (Laughlin) will begin hosting a nationally syndicated morning
show just like the one they’ve been doing in San Francisco for the
past 25 years. Uncle Jesse (Stamos) is also beginning a new job as
the musical director for his favorite soap General Hospital
(where Stamos got his acting start as Blackie Parrish). Joey is doing
standup comedy at the Venetian in Vegas several times a week.
The whole family is gathering for a going away party for Danny. Stephanie (Sweetin) shows up fresh from her gig in England as a DJ. Even Kimmy Gibler (Barber) crashes the breakfast and reveals that she’s in charge of planning the party.
The
only cast member missing is Michelle (the Olsen twins) who Danny
explains is “busy running her fashion empire in New York.” As
soon as he says that, the entire cast breaks the fourth wall, and
stares into the camera with a “seriously?” look on their faces.
It got the biggest laugh from the live studio audience.
Even
Jesse and Rebecca’s twins return, and are all grown up, trying to
graduate from college, sometime in the next decade. It appears that
they’ve spent the last several years double majoring in partying
and surfing, not necessarily in that order.
Steve, DJ’s high school boyfriend, makes an appearance, raiding the
refrigerator (nothing has changed) and lamenting the fact that he and
DJ never got married.
Among
the newcomers are DJ’s three sons, Kimmy’s teenage daughter, and
Kimmy’s smooth-talking, lady-killing, Latino ex-husband. The oldest
boy, Jackson, is somewhat of con artist with his younger brother Max
being the victim (Max has to do what Jackson has told him because
Jackson put a small device in Max’s head that could make it explode
at any second). The youngest son is still an infant.
Kimmy’s
daughter is about the same age as Jackson and is the perfect foil for
him. Either some serious fireworks, or some adolescent romance, could
be afoot here, possibly both.
In
the pilot, DJ is struggling on the day of the going away party and
she confesses to Tommy (the baby) that she’s not sure how she will
handle it as a single mom once everyone leaves. As luck would have
it, the baby monitor is on as she laments her troubles as the entire
family listens in on the remote device in the kitchen.
Stephanie
decides she’ll cancel her upcoming gigs and move in with DJ to help
with the kids. Kimmy, who has always wanted to live in the Tanner
house anyway, also decides to move in and help.
The
pilot was exceptionally well done and I found myself smiling broadly
throughout most of it, and even getting a little moist around the
eyes from time to time. The jokes were good, the one liners were spot
on, the fourth wall was broken just enough to keep things
interesting, and the cast looked like they were having the time of
their lives.
Within
a week of debuting the new series, Netflix announced that it had
ordered a second season. It was unprecedented to happen so quickly
and Netflix may live to regret the decision.
I
gave the pilot a solid A,
probably out of pure nostalgia. If you enjoyed the original series,
then you’ll enjoy this. If you didn’t enjoy the original series,
then you have no hope of remotely liking this.
And
therein lies one of the problems in making this a regular series,
rather than just doing a one-time reunion show.
In
order to enjoy the new series, you almost had to be a fan of the old
series. Sure, there are new characters and new situations, but more
than half of the gags, jokes, and personality disorders are based on
the old show and if you aren’t familiar with the original, then
you’re going to have a lot of catching up to do to understand the
new series, a task you might not find worth the effort.
The
new show seems to lack the magic that the original had. Maybe the
kids aren't as cute. Maybe the adults aren’t interesting enough.
Maybe I’m just sick of seeing cute kids trying to steal the show.
The
point is, the new show seems to have a bunch of characters who are
all determined to outdo one another with one liners. One character
will recite their one liner, then wait for the appropriate audience
response. Then the next character will take their turn delivering a
one liner, and then wait. The live audience reaction is what gives
the actors their timing, and it seems a little awkward at times.
Maybe the director is filling in some of the less-well-received jokes
with canned laughter; I’m not sure.
At any rate, the subsequent shows aren’t nearly as fun and crisp as the pilot which is too bad. Since they aren’t under the same restrictions as a network shows, they can run longer – much longer as a matter of fact – than the 22 minutes allotted to a half-hour sitcom on network TV (the pilot ran 35 minutes without commercials). They should find a way to use this to their advantage and do some storytelling rather than just delivering punchline after punchline.
The
same critique can be applied to each and every episode I’ve seen.
After binge-watching a few episodes, they all seemed to blend
together, but that can happen with any show.
I’ve given the pilot a solid A, but the regular series is disappointing and ends up with a C-. Those who never watched the original show may not be so kind.
I never watched the original show and definitely wouldn't bother to see this
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