Season premiere review: 'Enlightened' - 'The Key': Debil McDillett, I presume?
Learning to appreciate Mike White's abrasive-by-design HBO series
Dermot Mulroney (or possibly Dylan McDermott) with Laura Dern in the "Enlightened" season premiere.
"Enlightened" is back for a new season, and I have a few thoughts on where the series stands creatively at this point coming up just as soon as I join a gym and inherit a timeshare...
Unlike several other TV critics I strongly respect, I never really warmed to the first season of "Enlightened." I accepted after a while that Mike White wasn't making a comedy by any conventional definition, but that still didn't make me like the show, in part because it was a show that didn't particularly want us to like it — or, specifically, to like Amy Jellicoe. There have been plenty of great television shows built around unlikable protagonists (HBO is using one of them as the lead-in to "Enlightened" at the moment), but I'm hard-pressed to find a show this committed to making its main character this difficult without some kind of compensating factor.
Walter White is brilliant, Don Draper charming, Hannah Horvath funny and occasionally self-aware. Amy, though, is so oblivious, so needy, so narcissistic, that the show frequently puts me in the position of sympathizing with her former colleagues — all of whom have been shown to be pretty despicable people — simply because they have to deal with Amy.
It's a show where the character who's the most grating is also the only one talking about trying to improve the world; she's doing it for selfish reasons (her anti-corporate crusade is about making herself feel better about her fall from grace) and in the clumsiest way possible, but she's also saying things we wish the Abaddon execs would hear if they were coming from a voice they could tolerate.
And the more I watched the show last season, and again with these new episodes (I've watched five so far), the more I've come to at least admire White's willingness to tell the story mostly from Amy's perspective.(*) It's basically a show about a prophet bringing genuine wisdom down from the mountain, only no one will listen because she is an incredible pain in the ass. Who would make such a show? Mike White would, and it's one I often cringe through, and that I can't necessarily say I always enjoy while watching, but one I've come to respect more and more as it's gone along.
(*) That he was able to do "Consider Helen" last season, and then do a couple of episodes this season told from the point of view of other characters, is just a reminder that while Amy has no clue how others perceive her, Mike White is acutely aware. He has the empathy Amy thinks she has, but that she deeply lacks.
I don't think I'll be doing weekly reviews of "Enlightened," but perhaps I'll check back in on occasion, and definitely at the end of this season. I'll be curious to see the reaction to it this year. It's no longer on Mondays, but I don't know that its audience is going to balloon on Sundays, especially with a divisive show like "Girls" as its companion piece. But when HBO was dropping the axe on its other low-rated half-hours like "Hung" and "Bored to Death," this was one that survived, presumably because HBO wants to stay in the Mike White business. And the more I watch "Enlightened," the more I can understand why.
Plus? Dermot Mulroney, whom I now apparently like in everything. (Thanks a lot, "New Girl"!)
What did everybody else think?
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January 14, 2013 at 12:16AM EST Reply to CommentTwo things:
1) You've convinced me. Lord knows I don't need any more shows on my plate but I'll check this one out.
2) Did you ever watch the movie LIVING IN OBLIVION? I thought Mulroney was pretty funny in it.
Tulor
January 14, 2013 at 1:17AM EST Reply to CommentI don't really understand why Amy needs to compensate with something to make her sympathetic.
Where she lacks awareness, she maintains a true desire to change and stands by the intention to do true good in this world. Aren't those qualities sympathetic in itself?
/3rt
January 14, 2013 at 1:19AM EST Reply to CommentI'm anxious where this season takes Amy — and it certainly seems like jail.
John
January 14, 2013 at 2:19AM EST Reply to CommentI don't watch Girls. But I disagree with you somewhat with your definition of unlikability. Walter White started out almost completely sympathetically, and saying Don Draper is charming pretty much nullifies an appeal to unlikability.
Now, Pete Campbell is unlikable. Avery on Nashville is unlikable. And yes, Amy Jellicoe is unlikable. But that's one of the reasons I like the show. It's a challenge.
PotatoSolution
January 14, 2013 at 3:20AM EST Reply to Comment(Alan shakes fist at the sky)
MULROOOOOOONNEYYYY!!!!!!
Chris
January 14, 2013 at 10:51AM EST Reply to CommentYou haven't worked in long enought corporate Amercia to relate. This show nails it!
James
January 14, 2013 at 11:20AM EST Reply to CommentI did not watch Enlightened S1 when it was originally "aired." I had intended to, but perhaps it was your middlin-at-best review, Alan, that put me off of it. Or perhaps it was the fact that I knew no one else that was watching it. But a friend whose opinion I respect (and I don't have many of those) finally watched it on HBO Go about a month ago and turned me on to it.
And I was so glad that he did. Count me among the few hardy souls who love the offbeat humor of Mike White. Who appreciate the awkwardness even as I somtimes cringe and avery my eyes. And yes, those who don't see that Amy has to be so overtly likeable to "carry" this show. The fact is there are people as painfully self-absorbed and annoying as Amy. I applaud that Mike White and Laura Dern put her out there, warts and all.
The show has flaws, of course. One of the drawbacks of a half-hour show (and especially one with such a short season) is that it can be hard to delve deeply into the characters. I too grealy enjoyed the Helen episode and look forward to more of this in S2.
Having said all of this, I found my heart sinking a little bit watching last night's episode. I am hoping that the effort to appeal to a broader audience won't ruin the show but my first reaction was that they have suddenly changed direction without warning and not in a good way. It's not clear how much time has passed since the end of the S1 finale but I presume it is only a day or two based on how Amy reacted to Tyler's entrance...and yet, all the characters feel different and the plot changes don't really make sense. Amy's overly altruistic remonstrations from last season may have been self-service but at least they felt (at times) like they could have also been meant for legitimate change...now it just feels like she wants to screw over the head honchos. Tyler caved way too easily and offered only token resistance, now this feels like a botched caper plotline rather than a character study.
I loved seeing Diane Ladd and Luke Wilson as they managed their relationship with Amy. I loved the writing for the Doug character, HR reps, and Amy's former co-workers in Health and Beauty as they navigated the mine-field that is Amy Jelico...and this episode had none of that.
I'm still hopeful for the show, and I won't stop watching, but sometimes taking the advice of "the people" to get more ratings can backfire. White has create a nice little niche show here, and I hope he hasn't ruined it.
ds Thanks for this - I watched Enlightened from the beginning of season 1 because I thought Mike White would make a sincere, honest effort with this series. If I hadn't seen what backstory Amy had, I never would have embraced her stumbles, her falls, her desires, hopes, and that mind-numbing stubbornness she still has that there is wrong in the world, and despite how flawed she is, and how many mistakes she's made, she wants to do one thing right, but not in a small way. She will fall in a big way again and the damage might be even greater than she imagined, or lived through the first time.
January 14, 2013 at 1:30PM ESTBen Kabak
January 14, 2013 at 12:24PM EST Reply to CommentThis show is unfunny and pretty awful.
Greg
January 14, 2013 at 2:23PM EST Reply to Comment"(her anti-corporate crusade is about making herself feel better about her fall from grace)"
Most people who do charity work do it to make them feel better too (among other reasons). That's not selfishness from Amy.
And Hannah Horvath's self-awareness only makes her more annoying. In the beginning of Girls, she knows that everytime she goes to Adam's she'll leave feeling worse about herself, but she she goes there anyway. Nobody in their right mind would go, but she goes because she's a TV character, and not an actual human being.
lolabelle
January 14, 2013 at 2:48PM EST Reply to CommentThis review is ridiculous. Enlightened is a fabulous show, and Amy is one of television's MOST likable characters. She is funny, flawed, brave, and most of all, warm-spirited. She's infectious and she's not afraid to dream big. Girls is a show about Girls; Enlightened is a show about a woman, a real, complex, flesh-and-blood woman. You must have a heart of stone not to be able to recognize Laura Dern's beguiling appeal in this role. Also, the show in general is brilliant. Mike White is a genius of supporting characters, making every small moment with them say more than entire story arcs in other shows. The setting of ominous Abbadon against dreamy, sunny California is beautifully done. This is pretty much a perfect show.
Sareeta
January 14, 2013 at 8:03PM EST Reply to CommentSo nice to have this show back. Laura Dern is a very talented actress, and while Amy can be irritating (I was really mad when she made Tyler wait in the car while she went up to Dermot's apartment), I feel like she had good intentions. Is she using this as an excuse to get revenge on Abadon, yes. But the company is doing terrible things. Also, I really like that piece of music they use at the end of the episode. I remember it was used last season during Amy's mom's episode. Looking forward to episodes from the perspective of the other characters. Tyler's my favorite character in the show.
Trilby The show uses great music! That was Elvis Perkins, Doomsday.
January 15, 2013 at 10:34AM ESTSareeta
January 14, 2013 at 8:03PM EST Reply to CommentSo nice to have this show back. Laura Dern is a very talented actress, and while Amy can be irritating (I was really mad when she made Tyler wait in the car while she went up to Dermot's apartment), I feel like she had good intentions. Is she using this as an excuse to get revenge on Abadon, yes. But the company is doing terrible things. Also, I really like that piece of music they use at the end of the episode. I remember it was used last season during Amy's mom's episode. Looking forward to episodes from the perspective of the other characters. Tyler's my favorite character in the show.
Sareeta Sorry for the double post. You can delete the second one if you want.
January 14, 2013 at 8:05PM ESTSana
January 14, 2013 at 10:12PM EST Reply to CommentI was waiting for your Dermot Mulroney comment. New Girl just made him likeable!
Trilby
January 15, 2013 at 10:29AM EST Reply to CommentAlan- Your comments about seaon one early on influenced me to not watch it. Boy was I/you wrong! When I finally gave it a shot I fell in love with the concept and the characters. Season one was beautifully shot, interesting, thought-provoking-- more so than any other show I can think of. I am happy to give season 2 a try and go wherever it takes me.
Trilby
January 15, 2013 at 10:33AM EST Reply to CommentPLUS, Laura Dern is a treasure. Now, I will watch her in anything. I will watch her drink coffee, stare out a window. She is amazing.
And how can you not like a show with lines like "Well, stay anal, you two!"
cd
January 22, 2013 at 2:29PM EST Reply to CommentI really love this show and I think it is a brilliant companion piece to "Girls". In fact, in many ways, I think it is the middle-aged companion piece: Marnie's rage, Jessa's smugness and flightiness, Hannah's self regard and Shoshonna's credulousness all rolled into one mid-life failure, resurrected on the gospel of American self-help and moralism..."My intentions are good. My intentions are SO good."
"Enlightened" people of the most destructive people around.
It doesn't make me feel good, but it's GREAT!