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Hercules The Strong Wants You To Watch NOW & AGAIN! Do Not Defy Him!

Hey, everyone. "Moriarty" here. Hercules and I decided to have a brief summit meeting this evening about the great work he's done here on COAX lately. We met at Olympus, where Herc was good enough to provide some sweet ambrosia served by lovely frolicsome wenches. How the hell you advertise for "frolicsome wenches" is beyond me, but he's a god... he's got the hook-up. As he often does, he tried to convince me to watch a new show or two. This is a man who advocates for TV in a serious way. In addition to discussing tonight's return to the air by NOW & AGAIN, he's got a bit to say about why the show's worth catching overall. Enjoy.

“Now and Again” is so good you’ll forget you’re watching CBS!

What’s something as fabulously and entertainingly inventive as THIS -- comedy genius Glenn Gordon Caron’s first TV series since the groundbreaking late-1980s juggernaut “Moonlighting” -- doing on the same channel as “Nash Bridges,” “Becker,” and “Walker Texas Ranger?”

No matter. I’ve waited seven years for “Now and Again,” and having to remember which channel carries the Tiffany Network is a small price to pay for fun of this caliber.

Why seven years?

Because “Now and Again” is the REAL “Lois & Clark.”

The GOOD “Lois and Clark.” The “Lois and Clark” we were promised SEVEN YEARS AGO, when the crack ABC marketeers (God love ‘em) promoted it to press and public alike as -- “‘Superman’ crossed with ‘Moonlighting.’”

“Lois” creator Deborah Joy Levine’s spirit was willing, but her ability to emulate Caron’s precision characterization and dialogue was THE weakest. 1993’s “Lois & Clark” played more like “Superman” crossed with “Hart to Hart” or “I Dream of Jeannie.”

“Now and Again’s” premise, recounted at the start of every episode, is that fortysomething insurance executive Michael Wiseman’s body was obliterated by a speeding subway train, and his brain was salvaged and implanted by government scientists into a man-made genetically-engineered 26-year-old superbody. “The only catch is,” the announcer points out each week, “under penalty of death, he can let no one from his past know he is still alive. And that, my friends, is a problem, because this man is desperately in love with his wife, his daughter, and his former life.”

One of the adjectives most often associated with the “Now and Again” is “original,” and perhaps the most original aspect of the show is that it’s really two shows set in the same universe.

The first show each week deals with Wiseman (Eric Close) and his brainy, imperious creator (the scene-stealing Dennis Haysbert) as they solve crimes, undertake government missions, and generally keep the world safe.

The second show each week deals with Wiseman’s wife Lisa (Margaret Colin) and daughter Heather (“Welcome to the Dollhouse’s” Heather Matarazzo), two bright, witty and vulnerable young women who suddenly find themselves trying to carry on following the “demise” of the man they both love.

Coincidences and other circumstances cause Wiseman to cross paths with his wife from time to time, but mostly they are forced to long for each other from separate corners. While Wiseman deals with mad scientists and supervillains in Manhattan, Lisa very separately sorts out insurance matters and pursues a career as a real estate agent in the city’s suburbs.

For a rundown of all of the Wisemans’ adventures to date, go here!

Caron, who is said to have a hand in all the scripting, keeps everyone’s storyline lively. As one might expect, he has little difficulty getting the “Moonlighting” end of the “Moonlighting” meets “Superman” equation right. And it’s a tribute to his craftsmanship that Lisa’s suburban adventures are absolutely no less compelling than Wiseman’s big-city superheroics.

Wiseman has the Last Son of Krypton’s super-strength, super-agility, and super-speed, but also turns out to be something of a super-wise-ass, with dialogue much closer to that of Bruce Willis’ David Addison than Dean Cain’s Clark Kent. Witness:

“Hey, the regular teacher’s back!” Wiseman greeted Haysbert last week, well in earshot of the bald, humorless and overdemanding government agent temporarily assigned to him. “Good thing, too -- none of the kids liked the substitute!”

The real star of the show, though, is the guy who put Wiseman back together again. Haysbert’s Dr. Theodore Morris is Wiseman’s superb foil, part Lex Luthor, part Don King, and part Oscar Wilde.

A lot of what drives the fascinating relationship shared by Morris and Wiseman can be traced back to episode one, when Morris had a conversation with Wiseman's’ disembodied brain. Morris gave Wiseman a choice. Wiseman could a) agree to all of Morris’s demands and have his brain transplanted into a new body -- or b) decline, at which point his brain would be disconnected from the speakers, cameras and oxygen and tossed into the nearest garbage pail. Wiseman’s brain decided to go with the new body.

Morris sees Wiseman as little more than a lab animal; he not only deprives Wiseman of contact with his loved ones, he insists that his guinea pig maintain a Spartan lifestyle: Wiseman is confined to quarters, forced to subsist on a bland, carefully regulated diet, and until last week was deprived of all knowledge of the outside world: newspapers, radio, television. (Despite his superpowers, Wiseman can’t flee his stifling world because his keepers have installed something akin to a lo-jack in his skull.)

Still, Morris seems in recent episodes to have promoted Wiseman from lab rat to pet mouse, even granting his bored-silly experiment permission to read. I laughed aloud as Morris indulged a bit of selfishness even as he tried for once to play good-hearted humanitarian: “I have some Grisham in here and some, um, ‘Gray’s Anatomy.’ Uh, it was just there and I – I’ll – I’ll keep this.”

Caron also seems to have no difficulty marrying comedy with clever, thought-provoking science fiction. The first three episodes featured an eye-opening subplot about a meek-looking Asian man who engineered a reign of terror with raw eggs: eggs, which when cracked, turned all nearby human beings into messy lumps of bleeding tissue.

(Sounds like an “Ain’t-It-Cool” kind of series, yes? “Now and Again” should not be confused – but always is – with “Once and Again,” ABC’s Sela Ward series from the creators of “thirtysomething.” “Once and Again” has yet to reduce an entire subway train of commuters to screaming piles of bleeding flesh.)

Another great episode involved a pharmacist who had invented a serum that made people utterly fearless, causing them to do all sorts of insanely fearless things. Wiseman barely arrived in time to stop the druggist from dumping the solution into the city’s water supply.

More recently, Wiseman and Morris tracked down Wiseman’s long-lost prototype, a superman who escaped the government, indulged some plastic surgery, and established himself as a world-famous (not to say undefeated) heavyweight boxing champion.

Last week, the show depicted a world in which microscopic, self-replicating robots of Morris’ design escaped and managed to throw civilization into chaos -- by eating away all of the world’s ink, reducing all books, love notes and money to blank paper.

Tonight’s episode, “The Bugmeister,” is an okay installment with a killer ending. (Spoilers beyond.)

It begins as a man is pursued through an office building by a bee. Within minutes he is stung and collapses dead upon an escalator.

When a mosquito enters Wiseman’s room, Morris is thrown into a panic. When Wiseman kills it, Morris orders the superman’s hands wrapped in plastic. On the way to a lab, Morris explains to Wiseman that there has been an epidemic of deadly attacks by “out of season” insects and he wants the mosquito’s corpse analyzed.

Meanwhile, Heather visits a New York museum, where she is taunted by classmates over a failed romance, but soon meets a charming entomologist named Stanley Bing.

Morris gets a call telling him there is nothing unusual about Wiseman’s mosquito. Wiseman, recently allowed reading privileges, relates that the paper is calling the insect attacks an outbreak of “white-collar cholera,” because all the victims had white-collar jobs. Morris dismisses the moniker as ridiculous. “It’s not as if they check your tax returns before they attack.”

The next day, Heather decides to revisit the entomologist. As he shows her his lab, she learns he is bitter about new breeds of crops that repel and/or kill bugs.

Bing’s benefactor, unhappy that Bing’s new report categorizes his corporation’s agricultural methods as ecologically unsound, cuts off Bing’s funding. That night, the ex-benefactor’s bed is swarmed by thousands of ants which promptly devour him.

Heather’s school nurse calls Lisa to see how Heather is feeling. Lisa has no idea what the nurse is talking about.

On orders of the Pentagon, Morris and Wiseman meet with city officials baffled by the insect attacks. They learn more than 100 New Yorkers have lost their lives to these attacks, including the CEO of a pesticide manufacturer, a member of the board of directors of a chain of bait and tackle shops, and a city official who ordered a spraying of Malathion. Morris suggests that the specificity of the attacks indicates a human being is behind the bugs’ behavior. Anxious to collect a specimen of these killer bugs, Morris suggests they might attract one if they “declare war.”

Morris installs Wiseman in the deputy mayor’s office and advises him not to destroy any bugs that might attack him. We then learn that a newspaper with the page-filling headline “DEPUTY MAYOR DECLARES WAR ON BUGS!!!” just hit the street.

Back in the suburbs, Lisa grounds Heather for missing school for three days.

Michael, asleep in the deputy mayor’s chair, awakens to find a bee stalking him. The bee flees for its life, and Wiseman chases it through city hall and onto the roof. Wiseman grabs the bug, but we see in an episode-closing freeze-frame that Wiseman, who does NOT share Superman’s flying ability, has just stepped off the roof of a skyscraper.

Tonight’s is the first of three new episodes CBS has yet to air. Stay Tuned.

I warn you not to defy me!

I am -- Hercules!

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Reader Talkback

This is...
by dougmac
Apr 21st, 2000
06:49:31 AM
This is a GREAT show!
by N2DVD
Apr 21st, 2000
07:07:20 AM
Out of season insect attacks? Bwahaaha!
by LSHB
Apr 21st, 2000
09:37:01 AM
I love this show
by Nora Charles
Apr 21st, 2000
09:38:16 AM
Question about Now and Again/Jackie Harvey...
by agentcooper
Apr 21st, 2000
09:52:17 AM
Give it a chance!
by Darla
Apr 21st, 2000
09:59:34 AM
He's wrong about Lois and Walker
by Martokrules
Apr 21st, 2000
10:02:33 AM
John Goodman makes it work.
by mikaelb
Apr 21st, 2000
10:46:31 AM
The Best new Show
by MR FURLEY
Apr 21st, 2000
11:04:27 AM
N&A = best thing ON Clueless Broadcasting System
by Ninja Nerd
Apr 21st, 2000
02:00:12 PM
Why people watch Walker, Texas Ranger
by neovsmatrix
Apr 21st, 2000
07:41:08 PM
Now and never again
by 1831
Apr 21st, 2000
09:49:28 PM
One of the BEST Shows./ Why Him...
by BrianSLA
Apr 22nd, 2000
12:29:56 AM
Now & Again
by KILROY2U
Apr 22nd, 2000
12:50:50 AM
We must save this show!
by phgreer
Apr 22nd, 2000
01:14:31 AM
You must be hard up because this show is crap
by Eyegore
Apr 22nd, 2000
01:45:03 AM
Hey LSHB
by The Garbage Man
Apr 22nd, 2000
01:59:35 AM
Waste of Talent
by Redbeard_NV
Apr 22nd, 2000
06:12:14 AM
Roger Bender and Heather
by neovsmatrix
Apr 22nd, 2000
08:28:55 AM
Re: Eyegore's comments
by neovsmatrix
Apr 22nd, 2000
08:45:25 AM
The reason some people don't get it....
by N2DVD
Apr 22nd, 2000
09:25:32 AM
Defending N&A...
by Mandolin6
Apr 22nd, 2000
09:57:17 AM
now and again
by pepsigal
Apr 22nd, 2000
11:53:11 AM
Are we watching the same show?
by Ash Housewares
Apr 23rd, 2000
07:27:14 PM
Now & Again & Again &Again...
by The_Newf
Apr 24th, 2000
04:50:28 PM
Yes it's the same show
by neovsmatrix
Apr 24th, 2000
07:31:22 PM

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