The Cape Review | The Cape TV Show
The Cape Review. What is the new series on NBC? NBC bring a new TV show “The Cape” in this 2011. It premiered on NBC during the 2010–2011 television season as a midseason replacement. The Cape is a hero that is similar to Batman or Superman, a guy who relies mainly on practical training and intelligence. The Cape beginning with a 2-hour pilot episode on Sunday, January 9, 2011 at 9 pm Eastern and Pacific Time. An encore is scheduled for Monday, January 10, with follow-up episodes continuing on Monday evenings in the 9 pm timeslot beginning January 17.The series, set in the fictional metropolis of Palm City, follows Vince Faraday, an innocent police detective who was about to leave the force that has been corrupt. When his police chief is murdered by the mysterious individual known as Chess, Faraday learns of a plot by billionaire Peter Fleming to take over the police department.
Unfortunately, when a e-mail arrives that leads him and his partner Marty Voyt to a cargo train equipped with weapons, Voyt sets up Faraday and is kidnapped by Chess, who frames Faraday for a crime he did not commit and then left for dead after he is caught by the police. Vince is eventually saved by a circus ringleader who prepares him with special abilities to defend himself against his foes. Separated from his wife and son, he tries to clear his name while protecting them from being killed in the event that he should be reported alive. He takes the law into his own hands by taking the guise of his son's favorite comic book hero, The Cape, after he is given a special suit that has unique capabilities. Vowing to get rid of the corruption that has taken over both the city and the police force, Vince goes after the person responsible for setting him up and causing his "demise".
The Cape Series Premiere Review: What Did You Think?
There isn’t much more that I can say about The Cape that I didn’t already say in my advance review. Upon re-watch, I still find many of the same complaints I had before to mostly hold true.Something Max Malini says in the first hour of the premiere sort of sums up what the The Cape is from my perspective: “I want to say something profound, last words and all.”
I suppose I’m expected to leave my cynical disbelief at the opening credits, but this is meant to be the story of a man in the real world who adopts a comic-book persona, not simply an adaptation of a comic book. There’s a subtle, but tangible difference. It’s been done before, and far more realistically, in films like Batman Begins and The Dark Knight – which were themselves adaptations.
Perhaps I’m overly judgmental because of my enormous attachment to Batman, but so much seems to be culled straight from those films, such as the scene where The Cape goes after Scales and his crew at the docks, using his cape to yank henchman into the shadows.
Instead of feeling ominous and daunting, it was limp and rushed, ending with Scales easily thwarting him. I wouldn’t fear The Cape if that’s how altercations with him were going to go down. It came across as a paltry ripoff compared to the similar, better executed scene in Batman Begins.
I know, television and movies are practically apples and oranges, but it’s nearly impossible not to make comparisons here when the subject matter is so very much alike. The final scene with The Cape standing on top of one of the tall buildings looking out across the city just couldn’t have been more derivative.
As for the performances, they’re mostly adequate. I don’t find David Lyons nearly as off-putting as some other critics, though he does have one of those “two faces.” In some scenes he’s a handsome fellow, but then at certain angles he just looks… odd. In any case, he does a decent job with the material, and I did find his scene with Trip on the balcony to be surprisingly touching.
Jennifer Ferrin does a decent job as Dana Faraday, but spends more time crying and acting exasperated with Trip than doing much else. When she stood up for her last name trying to get the job at a legal firm, I saw a glimmer of hope that she’ll get better material in the future.
Just because this is comic book subject matter, the main antagonist has to feel like a cartoon character? If that wasn’t annoying enough, all the chess references he makes in his villainous speeches remind me the inane snow and ice puns The Governator recited as Mr. Freeze in Batman & Robin (and we know what a quality film that was).
I do somewhat like the character of Malini, even if if I find his frequent pontificating a little grating. But I guess his role as Vince’s mentor requires some of that. At least he adds a bit of humor to the mix, such as his non-death scene when Vince came to rescue him from Chess.
Summer Glau’s Orwell is easily the character I like best, probably because it’s Glau, but I am curious enough about her backstory to come back for more. It’s a major plus for Glau to finally be in a series where she can emote coherently, and she completely won me over as she elicited shades of Sydney Bristow in the scene where she went undercover.
The second hour, “Tarot,” felt more a bit more realistic than the first, and Cain was a more threatening, if not fully-fleshed, villain, so I’m cautiously optimistic about the direction the series is preparing to take.
The strongest thing The Cape has going for it, I think, is the father-son relationship. If they focus the show on their connection and tell the story of a boy’s faith in his father, and a father’s self-sacrificing love for his son, without getting lost in campy dialogue and one-dimensional villains-of-the-week, there’s a chance it could find its footing and evolve into something that’s actually profound.
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