Friday, March 23, 2012

RtC: "Friday Night Lights" (2006-2011)



Adapted from a book and a movie, Friday Night Lights was a TV-show unlike anything you've ever seen before. How a show could start its airing by a voice on the radio talking about the local high school football-team, to become a show with more heart than any other... It's quite a ride, including a writer strike threatening its existence, a strange collaboration to air it twice around and some misguiding marketing, just to mention a few of its behind the show problems.

I love FNL, I love Dillon and I love quite a few of the characters on this show. With those simple facts I'll move on to the whys, the greatness and the heart and soul of a community.

FNL isn't about football, and because it isn't about football it lost out on a lot of fans in its original marketing as a show about football. FNL is about life. Its drama the way drama should be; with a core to draw from, but spreading its wings to include an ensemble cast taking on real life problems. While they do get melodramatic some times, they mostly get away with it because of their big god-damn thumping hearts.

FNL is also produced and shot interestingly. They offered their actors a lot of freedom with their lines, cues and movement, while still being scripted, and then shot it with three cameras in a one-take mind. On one side some might say it doesn't really look that great because of this, as there's almost never that perfect lightning of all characters that other shows strives to get. But the rewards are awesome for those who take the real life feel and dialogue/scene-realism over the esthetics. It just feels a lot more raw and powerful.

Developed to TV by the feature film director Peter Berg (who happens to be second cousin of the book's author Buzz Bissinger) and heavily influenced by Jason Katims (Roswell) as writer, executive producer and show-runner.

And then there's the casting. It's an amazing ensemble for a TV-show, and whether it's leading star Coach Taylor (Kyle Chandler) or small time support Billy Riggins (Derek Phillips) on screen, it sure feels like the characters and not actors. I guess I've mentioned something like this before, but Kyle Chandler did, week in and week out, shine as Coach Taylor; making Brad Pitt's performance in feature film success Moneyball look kind of shabby. I should also mention Connie Britton as Tami Taylor, Adrianne Palicki as Tyra Collette and Taylor Kitsch as Tim Riggins. These four are probably the stand-out performers overall, even if I personally got a soft spot for Aimee Teegarden as Julie Taylor as well. It shouldn't be forgotten that nevertheless this is an ensemble performance more than anything.



Season one is the only one with a full length season, running 22 episodes, and it's by far the strongest one as a result. In fact; when it comes to drama you're hard pressed to find a better first season than this. How a town can be defined so quickly and its characters taking on such a diverse set of problems is inspiring. Is it really possible to fall in love with a town so obsessed with high school football? Sooner or later you might find out Dillon is a hard town to shake, whether you saw it coming or not.

Season two got butchered by the writing strike, and as a result ended cliffhangerly with only 15 of the ordered 22 episodes produced and aired. For a while the show was in real danger of being cut after that, but somehow it managed to come back in half-season format for three more seasons. Overall the second season might be my least favorite one, and it wasn't just because of the way it got cut. It had more problems than just that, but it picked itself up and managed to come back with even more momentum.

I'm not going to go into detail about each season, but rather pray you check it out for yourself. If you like drama, this is the show for you. Or if you like coming of age stories, there's quite a few of them here. Even if it's really not a football show, but a show around the team's players, coaches and boosters, you should still check it out if you like football or even any other sport... It's just that good, you don't need to like many of its elements to fall completely in love with the heart of it all.

Sure... It's also flawed and it had the potential to be even bigger, even better and so on and so forth. Still. You really have to search high and wide to find a show with more heart than this golden piece of Texas. And that's also why the overall comes out better than the sum of its pieces...

★★★★★ Season 1
★★★☆☆ Season 2
★★★★☆ Season 3
★★★★☆ Season 4
★★★☆☆ Season 5


★★★★★ Overall Quality


★★★★★ Revisit Value

FNL is one of those rare shows I've followed from the beginning, and loved it a little bit more for each week. You can't put a quality- or value-stamp on that, but there's no doubt it's something special the few times a show manages to be something like this for you. When you can't wait to watch what happens next week. When the time between seasons is agonizingly long. When you revisit the show's aired seasons before the beginning of each new season. FNL has been that show for me for years, and coming back to it is like revisiting old friends. I can't believe more people didn't follow this each and every step, but it's not too late. There's still a lot of quality entertainment to be had, even if you came late to the party. Friday Night Lights is highly recommended, and I'll miss it deeply.

I also like to mention there's rumors of a feature film to come, and I'm really looking forward to the day Berg and co again take on something new in this journey.

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