âHeroesâ: a seasonâs slide
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So, letâs get right to it: What was up with the second season of âHeroes,â and what might happen tonight?
A combination of factors -- including story lines dragged out too long, stars (and writers?) possibly stretched with movies and other opportunities and âHeroesâ haters coming out in force -- helped topple the show from its ratings and critical perch. The strength of âDancing With the Starsâ and âSamantha Who?â probably didnât help, though it would seem that the audiences are vastly different.
Despite that, âHeroesâ soldiered on. Tim Kring, the showâs creator, acknowledged creative drawbacks and took responsibility. You donât hear that often, but it still didnât make up for the first two-thirds of the season. The pile-on notwithstanding, there were good and bad elements.
Good: Jack Coleman as HRG. Whenever that guy is on the screen, you just know that SOMETHING is going to happen. Smart, ruthless and mysterious, he and Zachary Quinto chew up scenes whenever theyâre onscreen.
Bad: The Maya and Alejandro (pictured above) storyline. Her powers? Great. But you knew he was going to die, and their story line shouldâve been summed up in two, maybe three episodes.
Good: Kristen Bell as Elle. Like HRG and Sylar, Elleâs mystery and sociopathic qualities were a bit over the top, and much-needed. Kristen Bell is a great addition, and along with Dana Davisâ Monica, should remain in some form.
Bad: Subtitles. The international and multicultural hook of âHeroesâ is nothing but a good thing, but many have decried the subtitles. With Hiro speaking Japanese and Maya and Alejandro speaking Spanish, there was a lot more reading going on this season than there needed to be.
Good: Adam Monroe. David Anders as a bad guy who canât be killed, is driven by a long lost love and is righteoues in his . . . wrongness. How they will resolve his storyline is one of the most anticipated show points.
Bad: The disappearance of anticipation. This was a problem with the audience and the show. Storytelling is a delicate balance. You canât drag things out because folks will become disinterested, and on an ensemble show you have to find which stories are strongest . . . and stick with them (lesson learned from âLostâ). On the flip side, TV pundits rushed to condemn the show pretty early into the season. They fanned the flames before the show could work itself out of the doldrums.
So, what will happen tonight? The promos say that some of the heroes will fall. Message boards around the Web want Nikki (Ali Larter) to go. That would be a blow to young Micah (Noah Gray-Cabey) since he just lost his dad, but maybe itâd be a good move creatively. Making her evil could also be a great twist. Micah and Monica would be a great crime-fighting team.
Bob, the enigmatic leader of the Company, may meet his maker, and Mayaâs naivete should get her killed (especially with Sylar pulling the strings). She may also just be too dangerous to keep around.
Itâll be interesting to see what the writers come up with and how theyâll entice viewers to come back for a third season. More to come later on . . .
Photos: NBC Universal
-- Jevon Phillips