Home
NEW TODAY
SCRIPT CONTESTS
FREE EVENTS
WATCH MOVIES
NEW MOVIES
FESTIVAL VIDEOS
PICTURES
READ POETRY
MOVIE SCENES
SUBMIT your FILM
POETRY CONTEST
DAILY PODCASTS
WATCH FREE FILMS
THE LAST RITE
2010 MOVIES
ACTORS
ACTRESSES
DIRECTORS
MOVIES by YEAR
FILM FRANCHISES
MOVIE GENRES
NOTES and IDEAS
WATCH VIRAL
GET OUR E-ZINE!
CONTACT US
TOP 100 Sex
FAQ
2011 MOVIES

Subscribe To This Site
XML RSS
Add to Google
Add to My Yahoo!
Add to My MSN
Subscribe with Bloglines
 

RUBY AND THE ROCKITS and
MICHAEL AND MICHAEL HAVE ISSSUES
TV REVIEWS
by Mitchell Bard

Ruby and the Rockits

helpimagehelpimage

MITCHELL BARD PODCAST on July 25 2009!!!









Search WILDsound

WATCH the Best of Film Festivals

SUBSCRIBE to the Film Festival
YOUTUBE Group!
TOP WILDsound Pages
2009 MOVIE GENRES2009 MOVIE REVIEWS
Drama Movies
Comedy Movies
Action Movies
Thriller Movies
Animation Movies
Horror Movies
Kids Movies
Romance Movies
Adventure Movies
Crime Movies
Fantasy Movies
Mystery Movies
Sport Movies
War Movies
Biography Movies
Comic Book Movies
History Movies
Sci-Fi Movies
2009 Movie Columns
WATCH 2009 MOVIESWATCH SHORT FILMS

Best films from all over the world!
VIRAL MOVIESWATCH VIRAL VIDEOS

Funny/Insightful films everyday!
MOVIE BLOGSMOVIE/TV BLOGS

Daily columns from our pundits!
BOX OFFICE RESULTSBOX OFFICE RESULTS

Daily domestic results!
2009 MOVIE TRAILERSMOVIE TRAILERS

Best of what's coming up!
OUT ON DVDOUT ON DVD

What's out on DVD and BluRay!
RUBY AND THE ROCKITS
RUBY AND THE ROCKITS and MICHAEL AND MICHAEL HAVE ISSUES
TV Review

by Mitchell Bard

"Looking for a Decent New Summer Show, I Went 0-for-2 with Ruby & the Rockits and Michael & Michael Have Issues"

Summer is not the easiest time of year to find new shows. With the networks rolling out one inane reality show after another, to find alternatives, you have to open your mind up to possibilities you might not normally consider and take chances. Last week, I was pleasantly surprised by "Dating in the Dark." This week, I was far less lucky with "Ruby & the Rockits" (ABC Family, Tuesdays at 8:30 p.m. Eastern) and "Michael & Michael Have Issues" (Comedy Central, Wednesdays at 10:30 p.m. Eastern).

I have twice written about programs on ABC Family, which can be difficult because I am about as far from the cable network's targeted demographic (teenage girls) as one can get. Last year, I talked about how "The Secret Life of the American Teenager" worked better for teens than for adults, and earlier this summer, I wrote about the lead-in to "Ruby & the Rockits," an adaptation of the film "10 Things I Hate About You," which I found to hold some charms for adults, even as teens were the clear target audience.

I decided to give "Ruby" a chance mostly because I was taken in by the premise: A former 1980s pop star finds out he has a teenage daughter, which causes him to try and reconcile with his brother, who is also his former bandmate. I find something very entertaining about the idea of a 1980s star living in the 21st century. I have a soft spot for the Hugh Grant film "Music & Lyrics," and the former 1980s star premise is a big reason why. Early in the movie, we see the 1984 music video for Grant's character's old band Pop!, "Pop! Goes My Heart," and it is so dead-on in every way for that era of music, from the song itself to the tremendous period detail of the video, that it is truly brilliant (see for yourself here).

Similarly, early in the first episode of "Ruby & the Rockits," two kids watch the hit video of the titular Rockits, and watching it pretty much tells you everything you need to know about this program. Namely, that what was on screen didn't look or feel anything like a 1980s music video. To call it lazy would be, well, lazy. The complete lack of production value makes A Flock of Seagulls' low-tech classic "I Ran" look like Tom Petty's epic Alice in Wonderland homage "Don't Come Around Here No More." Taped in front of a black background that looked like someone's basement, with smoke resembling fire extinguisher exhaust, the Rockits video isn't believable for a nanosecond (the song, either), and it was an omen of things to come, since, even by ABC Family standards, nothing in "Ruby & the Rockits" has a scintilla of authenticity, credibility or believabilty.

The pilot begins with teenager Ruby (Alex Vega of the "Spy Kids" franchise) showing up at a rehearsal of former Rockits lead singer David Gallagher (David Cassidy of the Partridge Family), who is doing an extended gig at a Florida casino. Ruby tells David that she is his daughter and has come to live with him. David, a self-professed devotee of the rock-and-roll lifestyle, proceeds to try and dump Ruby on his brother and former bandmate, Patrick (Cassidy's real-life half-brother, Patrick Cassidy), who for the last 20 years has owned a car dealership and adopted a suburban lifestyle with a pretty wife, Audie (Katie A. Keane), who used to dance backup for the Rockits, and two typical sitcom kids: pudgy wise-cracking pre-teen Ben (Kurt Doss) and doltish Jason Mraz/John Mayer-wannabe teenager Jordan (Austin Butler).

Patrick and Audie agree to take in Ruby, and the first episode ends with Patrick learning to get along with David to show his kids how brothers should behave, even going on stage with David during his gig to perform some old Rockits hits. Ruby is behind the reconciliation, and she even takes Jordan's saccharine-weepy ballad and turns it into a decent teen pop song (a device used earlier and better in both "The Doors" and "That Thing You Do").

I get that this is ABC Family, not FX, so the story isn't going to be dark. But the tone goes beyond teen-friendly (and even tween-friendly) to toddler-friendly, which is kind of disconcerting when you think about the drama at the heart of the show. Ruby's mother has died, and her grandparents are so senile that they don't recognize her, so she runs away on her own and seeks out her biological father, whose first act as a parent is to foist her off onto his brother's family. But from Ruby's reaction, it is all just the greatest thing, as she instantly finds a replacement mother figure in Audie, a music collaborator in Jordan, and even a new father to go to a parent-teacher meeting in David (by the end, the insufferable and self-interested David learns just enough to know he has to go with her). The speed with which everything settles for Ruby, and the off-handedness with which the tragedy of her situation is treated, felt shocking (and, honestly, irresponsible) to me, especially considering the target demographic.

I'm sure, though, that if "Ruby & the Rockits" had been entertaining, and if the show felt plausible in other regards, I wouldn't have been so distracted by Ruby's tragic back story. But little about "Ruby" works or entertains. Virtually every scene felt forced and false. The dialogue is stiff and cliched. Like the lazy attempt at recreating a 1980s music video, a scene that encapsulated the diagrammed nature of the show had Patrick walking from his bathroom through his bedroom holding a hair brush. You knew immediately that when he reached the mirror, he would be prompted by his image to use the brush as a microphone as he dusted off his old 1980s singer moves. And you knew newcomer Ruby would catch him in the act. And yet there was no plausible reason for Patrick to be holding the brush, other than to eventually be inspired to perform. And, to me, when things feel false and choreographed, any possibility of humor is lost. The set pieces and jokes in "Ruby" nearly always seemed to fall flat.

Aside from the implausible nature of the action, the biggest problem with "Ruby & the Rockits" is David Cassidy. Granted, he's not working with the best material (typical joke: he complains of his brother: "The man is a total prima donna," before immediately turning and yelling to a lackey: "I'm still waiting on that water!"). But his performance is so forced, over-the-top and false (I know I've used the word a lot, but it fits), it's hard to watch. For someone who grew up on a sitcom, it's shocking how Cassidy seems to lack even the most basic sense of comic timing.MICHAEL AND MICHAEL HAVE ISSUESThe rest of the cast is fine. Vega is obviously talented. She sings the show's theme song, and also performed the song she rewrote for her cousin, and she has a perfectly acceptable teen pop voice. Her eager-to-please performance in the show made me think she belonged on ABC Family's sister station, Disney, in a Miley Cyrus-like sitcom. Even though Vega is 21, she still has the bearing of a teenager. Keane is fine as the warm-but-strong mother figure, and Patrick Cassidy is blandly fine as the responsible brother/parent.

As I noted when I wrote about "The Secret Life of the American Teenager" and "10 Things I Hate About You," I fully understand I am not in the target audience for these shows, and the same rings true for "Ruby & the Rockits." But I do have eyes and ears, and I can easily see and hear that "Ruby" isn't up to the level of its ABC Family colleagues. I'm sure even tweens and teens will be able to figure out that "Ruby" just doesn't work.

As for "Michael & Michael Have Issues," I would have to agree with the title, with no issue bigger than that the show isn't funny. I didn't laugh once in the 30 minutes of the first episode. Not a giggle, not a tee-hee, not even a chortle. I didn't even move my lips into a quasi-smile. Nothing.

The eponymous Michaels are Michael Ian Black ("Ed") and Michael Showalter (writer-director of "The Baxter"), who have performed together often, most notably on "The State" and "Stella." The premise is a meta show-within-a-show (a sketch program also called "Michael & Michael Have Issues"), with the Michaels enjoying a love-hate relationship with each other. Black and Showalter have historically embraced a kind of smart comedy that challenges audiences. Black is a love-him-or-hate-him kind of guy (I'm definitely not on the love side, although "Ed" is a favorite of mine), consistently playing obnoxious characters who think they're a lot smarter than they really are. Thankfully, playing "himself" on "Michael & Michael," that persona is turned down a bit, so that Black is not really the problem here.

RUBY AND THE ROCKITS PICThe problem is that smart comedy doesn't work without comedy. In the first episode to air (which, from what I can tell, was originally meant to be the second installment, but networks sometimes jump ahead if they're afraid the pilot isn't funny enough), the bits were predictable, and ideas were beaten into the ground, as if saying something for long enough would suddenly turn it funny even if it hadn't been earlier. A central part of the story involves Showalter and Black going to a park to try and buy marijuana as a birthday gift for their uptight producer, Jim Biederman (playing "himself"). Showalter wants to approach the white guy in the hockey jersey and a "Da Bears" mustache, on the theory that he looks so much like a cop, he couldn't be a cop. (Showalter is sure the Rasta guy is the undercover officer.) Black disagrees. Showalter is insistent, but instead of approaching the target, he tells Black to go. I wonder if there was one person watching who didn't know exactly what would happen next: Black, even though he has no reason to do so (remember, he has stated he's sure the guy is a cop), approaches the guy in the hockey jersey and offers him money for pot, the guy turns out to be a cop, and Black is arrested. Showalter, rather than doing anything to help, runs away, failing even to go to the station to bail out Black.

Showalter ends up giving Biederman the book Black suggested earlier as a birthday gift and going home with the pretty new girl at Biderman's birthday party, while Black goes to prison. When Black shows up at Showalter's apartment at 4:00 a.m. to exact revenge, he forces Showalter to go to the park and try and buy pot (really?), only the cop-looking guy turns out to be an actual dealer. While Showalter is buying the pot, Black is mugged and beaten by three hoods. Showalter leaves the park, not seeing Black semi-conscious off to the side.

What is smart and/or funny about all of that? None of it worked for me. And I certainly didn't want to spend 30 minutes with either of these guys, let alone both of them.

"Michael & Michael" goes for the early "Seinfeld" ploy of showing you real-life situations and then the comedy that resulted from them (with "Seinfeld," it was the stand-up jokes; on "Michael & Michael," it's the sketches). It's a good idea, but the problem is that the sketches are not funny. The gift-giving dilemma in real life plays out as a sketch in which nobles give birthday gifts to the king, but Showalter's minister has nothing (he's forgotten). So he offers an I.O.U. for a back rub and, when that isn't enough, five guitar lessons. I remember that "Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip" took a lot of heat from those who thought the sketches in the show-within-the-show weren't funny enough, but I think that charge is far more accurate with "Michael & Michael." The minister-king sketch later finishes with the minister giving the king a massage with a "happy ending." Disturbing? A bit. Funny? Not at all.

I know that Showalter and Black are critical darlings. (One of their jokes about drugs being bad for people that devolved into a list of all the people for whom drugs are good even made Entertainment Weekly's "Sound Bites" list of funny quotes for the week.) But I don't see it, at least not in "Michael & Michael Have Issues." If you are a fan of Showalter and Black, well, then maybe you need to chalk up my opinion as being from a guy who just doesn't get it. Because I don't. It feels to me like two smug guys who are convinced they are hilarious, so convinced that they believe anything they do will get laughs, no matter how stupid. But if you are not already a fan of the Michaels, I doubt you will find their new show the least bit entertaining.

If summer television can be a bit of a dumpster dive when you look for something worth watching, this week I came up with a couple of cartons of spoiled Chinese food. If you're sick of bad reality television, I doubt you'll find "Ruby & the Rockits" or "Michael & Michael Have Issues" to be much of an improvement.

MOVIE REVIEWS by YEAR and GENRE
Director Movie Reviews
PT Anderson
Wes Anderson
Ingmar Bergman
Mel Brooks
Tim Burton
James Cameron
Frank Capra
Charlie Chaplin
Coen Brothers
Francis Coppola
Clint Eastwood
Federico Fellini
John Ford
Marc Forster
Alfred Hitchcock
John Huston
Elia Kazan
Stanley Kubrick
Akira Kurosawa
McG
Sam Mendes
Christopher Nolan
Tyler Perry
Roman Polanski
Otto Preminger
Sam Raimi
Jean Renoir
Martin Scorsese
Ridley Scott
Tony Scott
Steven Spielberg
Steven Soderbergh
Orson Welles
Billy Wilder
Robert Zemeckis
1920s Movie Reviews
1920 Reviews
1921 Reviews
1922 Reviews
1923 Reviews
1924 Reviews
1925 Reviews
1926 Reviews
1927 Reviews
1928 Reviews
1929 Reviews

1950s Movie Reviews
1950 Reviews
1951 Reviews
1952 Reviews
1953 Reviews
1954 Reviews
1955 Reviews
1956 Reviews
1957 Reviews
1958 Reviews
1959 Reviews

1980s Movie Reviews
1980 Reviews
1981 Reviews
1982 Reviews
1983 Reviews
1984 Reviews
1985 Reviews
1986 Reviews
1987 Reviews
1988 Reviews
1989 Reviews
1930s Movie Reviews
1930 Reviews
1931 Reviews
1932 Reviews
1933 Reviews
1934 Reviews
1935 Reviews
1936 Reviews
1937 Reviews
1938 Reviews
1939 Reviews

1960s Movie Reviews
1960 Reviews
1961 Reviews
1962 Reviews
1963 Reviews
1964 Reviews
1965 Reviews
1966 Reviews
1967 Reviews
1968 Reviews
1969 Reviews

1990s Movie Reviews
1990 Reviews
1991 Reviews
1992 Reviews
1993 Reviews
1994 Reviews
1995 Reviews
1996 Reviews
1997 Reviews
1998 Reviews
1999 Reviews
1940s Movie Reviews
1940 Reviews
1941 Reviews
1942 Reviews
1943 Reviews
1944 Reviews
1945 Reviews
1946 Reviews
1947 Reviews
1948 Reviews
1949 Reviews

1970s Movie Reviews
1970 Reviews
1971 Reviews
1972 Reviews
1973 Reviews
1974 Reviews
1975 Reviews
1976 Reviews
1979 Reviews
1978 Reviews
1979 Reviews

2000s Movie Reviews
2000 Reviews
2001 Reviews
2002 Reviews
2003 Reviews
2004 Reviews
2005 Reviews
2006 Reviews
2007 Reviews
2008 Reviews
2009 Reviews
Genre Movie Reviews
Action Movies
Adventure Movies
Animation Movies
Biography Movies
Comedy Movies
Comic Movies
Crime Movies
Drama Movies
Family Movies
Fantasy Movies
Film Noir Movies
History Movies
Horror Movies
Musical Movies
Romance Movies
Sci-Fi Movies
Sports Movies
Thriller Movies
War Movies
Western Movies

WATCH SHORT FILMS
Drama Shorts
Comedy Shorts
Horror Shorts
Action Shorts
Animation Shorts
Thriller Shorts
DOC Shorts
Experimental
Musical Shorts
1min. Shorts
Viral Shorts

Miami Vice

Ruby and the Rockits


footer for Ruby and the Rockits page