Of all the current, superhero/comic-book adaptations on commercial television, "Gotham" remains the best and most honorable. It's not politically slanted in the sneaky way that "Supergirl" has become, nor does it get into the "I wanna marry my surrogate sister" motif of "The Flash", let alone pad itself with tiresome verbosity like "Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D."
As promised from the get-go, "Gotham" concentrates on young Bruce Wayne, and we watch his development through the versatile guise of David Mazouz. "Gotham" is also Jim Gordon's story; and thanks to Ben McKenzie, it never fails to be a rocky, realistic and engaging one.
In addition, Alfred Pennyworth (Sean Pertwee); Harvey Bullock (Donal Logue); Oswald Cobblepot/Penguin (Robin Lord Taylor); Edward Nigma/Riddler (Cory Michael Smith); Ivy Pepper/Poison Ivy (Maggie Geha) and Selina Kyle/Cat Woman (Camren Bicondova) are equally developing souls, each in search of something elusive, but with an implied, fervid hope of fulfillment, whether good or bad in the ultimate run.
I suppose the same will be said of Jonathan Crane/the Scarecrow (Charlie Tahan) when he psychologically enters, as well as Ra's Al Ghul (Alexander Siddig) when he expands his influence, or at least tries to do so on our adolescent hero-to-be. It also seems destined that other favorites, new and old, will surface during the interludes, even if they're not yet publicized: After all, secrecy and surprise are part of the show's crafty scheme. (All the same, I'd love to see the Joker indisputably established through Cameron Monaghan's Jerome. Heck, wouldn't we all?)
Regardless of the various characters and their varying ways, it's imperative that focus remain on the Dark Knight's inevitable ascent. The path seems secure. "Gotham" is inherently Batman's tale, even if the Caped Crusader has yet to be seen or mentioned. However, the producers appear intent in mounting his reveal, for Season 4 (labeled "A Dark Knight" for its first half and for its second, "Dawn of Night") are culled from the comic-book sensations, "Batman: Year One" and "The Long Halloween".
While other superhero shows skirt around what they've promised to be, it's ironic that the once thought series-on-the-cusp is now the most faithful to its mythological core, both in heart and spirit.
As a Batman fan--as a superhero fan--I'm grateful that Fox is continuing its noble campaign. My gut tells me the best is yet to come; the vibes certainly feel sharp (and dark) enough.
Season 4 commences Thurs, Sept 21, one week ahead of its otherwise projected debut: further proof of the network's commitment to reward and widen its popular program's viewership.
"Pax Penguina" was a good start for the new season. Man, the Scarecrow looks quite on target. Didn't expect an appearance so soon; not complain', either.
ReplyDeleteAlso, what an interesting take on unionism: satirical, really, but most effective in driving home a new view of good vs evil.
DeleteWatched "Fear the Reaper". Man, it really is happening! The Dark Knight is rising!
ReplyDeleteSay, Falcone's daughter is quite the looker. Riddlette was easy on the eyes, too, but I guess she's through. Anyway, Season 4 is really SHAPING up, if you catch my salacious meaning. Well, heck, it's always nice to have pretty ladies in the mix. Reminds me of the way they used to do shows, like with "Batman '66"; "Green Hornet"; "Man From U.N.C.L.E."...even "Get Smart".
ReplyDeleteWhoa! So could it be? Did Bane just enter the scene?
ReplyDeleteI'll be a son of a gun. It's official. Grundy is now part of the mix. Whoa...
ReplyDeletePS: Wish to add that the character feels faithful to the comic version and is, therefore, comic. The fit is an odd one for "Gotham'"s dark tone. I wonder how this will click in the long haul...
DeleteSo, this news about another recasting for Poison Ivy is a surprise. Wonder when this was decided. Peyton List (Lisa Snart on "Flash") will replace Maggie Geha.
ReplyDeleteI understand the idea of evolving Ivy and from that,her form could change, but I can't help but suspect there's a bad-blood angle to all this. Maybe I'm wrong, though...
Supposedly, the casting change is set for next season, so I'm assuming we'll get more info on the matter in the interim.
The switch/transformation on Ivy came sooner than I thought. Interesting that this happened, and I still don't know exactly why it was decided, but all the same, it's now part of history. Looks like Petyon List will add a new twist to the part that Maggie Geha had pretty much established (for the sake of adult form) for a long(er) haul.
ReplyDelete"One of My Three Soups" was an engaging episode: a cool mix of old and new storytelling styles. Often this sort of merger would feel awkward to me, but here it moved with sensible precision. Also, it was great to see three, big baddies team up!
ReplyDeleteWith 'Mandatory Brunch Meeting", "Gotham" may have hit its height of mad entertainment. Don't know where twin-brother angle is going, but just having Jerome back in demented-clown action is satisfying enough.
ReplyDeleteWell, the Joker deal is now sealed. What can I say? Figured they might pull a switch, though don't know why the necessity. Just glad the same actor is playing the part, but would have fancied him as two instead of one.
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