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Tuesday 30 November 2010

Terriers

By one means or another I try to keep up with at least the pilots of the new crop of each season's US TV shows, and in the current season one's been the standout for me - Terriers, from FX, starring Donal Logue (who I thought was miscast in Life but is perfect here) and Michael Raymond-James (who played the Cajun guy in season one of True Blood).

Imagine the Fred Ward/Kevin Bacon team from Tremors transplanted, along with their pickup truck, to scratch a living as unlicensed private eyes in a beachfront suburb of San Diego, and you'll have a sense of what it's about.

Not an exact sense, of course, because this isn't a high-concept drama; the private eye thing gives it genre credentials and offers the viewer a point of entry but once inside, it's a character-driven show. One of the questions you'll often hear in development is, "What's [insert name of main character]'s superpower?" These characters don't have any. They've got their wits and their good hearts and their tenacity, and they're written and played in such a way that they will - if you commit to the show and get to know them - win you over.

And therein lies the problem. Terriers is a critics' darling but almost no one has been watching, despite a pedigree that includes creator Ted Griffin (Oceans 11) and showrunner Shawn Ryan (The Shield) and a bunch of gorgeously-shot stories that balance intrigue and emotion. It's hard to win over an audience that doesn't show up.

Various reasons have been offered for the audience's failure to find the show (do you see what I did there?) Some blame the title, which I suppose doesn't help; it wasn't much of a hook for me, I know. Others blame a misleading/off-putting advance campaign, which I can't comment on because I didn't see it.

The latest argument I've heard is that Terriers is at odds with the FX 'brand'; though it seems to me to be a perfectly compatible companion in tone and content to Justified, FX's hit of a previous season.

As I write this, the show's first season is coming to a close and the prospect of a second is far from certain. I think FX would be mad to dump this gem. They'll search long and hard to find a property of this quality and it makes far more sense to regroup, try again, maybe with a 'special event' marathon rerun of the entire season, and get the marketing right this time.

UPDATE: 'Twas not to be. FX cancelled the show on December 5th.

4 comments:

Dan said...

For me, Terriers failed because (a) it premiered during the crush of new US shows returning, with a poor opening episode, so the few people who bothered to tune in didn't come back, and (b) the title's terrible.

As much as I hear it's a great show from people whose opinions I trust (such as yours), there's now NO time for it in my life. Maybe things would have been different had it premiered late-October, with a cooler title and more imaginative pilot?

Stephen Gallagher said...

I'd be curious to see how FX promoted it, as some people are saying they were misled into thinking it was actually a show about dogs.

Good Dog said...

Caught the pilot of Terriers and really loved it. I felt it was like the bastard offspring of The Rockford Files and Veronica Mars, which was a very good thing. I remember Donal Logue from his stint on er, then a week or so later watched Sneakers and was surprised to see him as the scientist who created the code-breaking machine. Also read that Logue and Raymond-James are long-term friends and that ease between them came across. I hope it gets renewed because I’d like to see more. Oddly enough, I just couldn’t get into Justified when it was shown on (I think) one of the Five channels.

Stephen Gallagher said...

I was less in love with Justified by the end of the season than I was at the beginning - I felt they slid out of balance, fell in love with a running story that wasn't all that great, and allowed the focus to move away from the central character that had hooked my interest in the first place.

Apparently the viewing figure for Terriers was around a miserable 500,000. Way more than the number of people who saw a Shakespeare play in his lifetime, but not good for TV.