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Terriers - Season 1 - Wednesdays on FX

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- Sepinwall on Terriers:
Sepinwall said:
Why you should be watching 'Terriers' - and why FX should save it

I am too damn old and too damn cynical to get my heart broken by another brilliant-but-canceled TV show. But dammit if FX's "Terriers" isn't on the verge of doing just that.

The buddy detective series heads into the home stretch of its first season tonight at 10 with its 11th out of 13 episodes. Based on the absolutely embarrassing ratings - most recent episodes have averaged around half a million viewers, which is bad even by basic cable standards (in that same period, FX's biggest hit, "Sons of Anarchy," has averaged well over 3 million) - I would in no way be surprised if these are the last three episodes of the series ever made.

And I'm not ready for that to happen yet. "Terriers" is too good - the best new series in what's been an incredible year for new series (see also "Boardwalk Empire," "Treme," "Rubicon" and FX's own "Justified" and "Louie," to name just a handful) and a sparkling blend of wit and atmosphere and chemistry and gut-punching emotion - to be gone that quickly.

It started off good, riding on the alchemy between stars Donal Logue and Michael Raymond-James, real-life pals playing best friend PIs in a dingy seaside SoCal town. It got even better, with a deft mix of standalone and serialized stories. Some weeks, we got simple cases that could make you laugh and gasp in the space of an hour. Other weeks, the guys got in way over their heads in a dark, knotty and never dull story involving the best kind of villains for any good PI story: rich and powerful men doing wicked and mysterious things, little imagining that low-rent little guys can do anything to stop them. And throughout that mix, we've gotten great heart-on-sleeve acting by Logue and Raymond-James as each deeply flawed hero struggled to do right by the women they loved (and in some cases, were done wrong by those women).

So "Terriers" has gotten better and better as it's gone along, and these last three episodes are a cut above what's come before.

Tonight's episode, written by producer Tim Minear (who knows from one-and-done heartbreak from his work on shows like "Firefly," "Wonderfalls" and "Drive"), is an extended flashback to the last days on the police force for Logue's alcoholic Hank, and to how he and ex-thief Britt (Raymond-James) met. Like so many episodes this year, it's a fantastic showcase for Logue, an actor who's been around forever doing good work in both straight comedy ("Grounded for Life") and serio-comedy ("The Tao of Steve"), but who's never been able to demonstrate the range or depth of feeling he has here. Hank is both incredibly charming and incredibly self-destructive - both his ex-partner (Rockmond Dunbar) and ex-wife (Kimberly Quinn) enjoy his company immensely, but neither much trusts him - and again and again throughout the season Logue has shown you why everyone keeps falling for Hank. As someone who has destroyed everything good in his life - sometimes more than once - he has a tremendous capacity for empathy, and there are scenes on this show that would feel entirely routine elsewhere but are ridiculously powerful because of how Logue plays Hank's reaction to other people's pain. It's an award-worthy performance on the kind of show that unfortunately doesn't tend to get awards recognition.

The two after that are tying up the big season-long mystery about a shady land deal, and the shadier lawyer (Michael Gaston, oozing casual menace) orchestrating it all, and they do so almost perfectly. There are a lot of moving pieces in these last two - not just the mystery itself, but personal story arcs for Hank and Britt, and for their exes (Laura Allen has done some very strong work as Britt's girlfriend), as well as some commentary on the town of Ocean Beach itself - and all of them come together at the end. Endings for TV seasons/series are hard, whether you're a big hit (the "Lost" ending didn't/couldn't satisfy everyone) or a boutique drama (AMC's "Rubicon," which was recently canceled for ratings on par with what "Terriers" gets, failed to wrap up its conspiracy story well), but "Terriers" pulls it off as well as any show of recent vintage. It helps that one of the showrunners is Shawn Ryan, whose conclusion to "The Shield" was a masterclass in how to go out on a high note, while the other is Ted Griffin, whose "Ocean's Eleven" script was as well-constructed as you'll find for a big-budget all-star vehicle.

Things end so satisfyingly, in fact, that in some ways the final scene works better as a series-ender than a season-ender. (You'll understand when you see it.) I've heard friends say that they don't want to catch up on "Terriers" - or start it at all - because they don't want to get too attached to another short-lived series. But if FX does pull the plug, you will have gotten a great 13-episode ride with a clear beginning, middle and end. (As Fienberg put it on our podcast this week, would you not read a really satisfying book - or go to a great movie - just because you know there'd be no sequel?)

But just because the final scene works so well as a series-ender doesn't mean I want it to be one. "Terriers" is too good to go away so quickly - and unlike a "Firefly" or "Freaks and Geeks" or any of a number of other one-and-done shows whose cancellations made me sad, this is one that I think had the potential to do better, and still has that potential.

This is not a glacially-paced, cerebral drama like "Rubicon." It's not a weekly hour of mortification like "Freaks and Geeks." It's not a mash-up of two genres that are each a tough sell on their own like "Firefly." It is a loose and funny buddy show, starring two absurdly likable actors you buy instantly as friends. It's just standalone enough to be accessible to newcomers (my wife, who doesn't have the TV-watching time I do, dipped in and out of the season but understood and loved all the episodes she saw) yet rich and complicated enough to appeal to those FX viewers who were complaining that "Justified" spent too much time telling disposable stories in its early episodes.

It's been stuck with an unfortunate name, one that makes sense if you've seen the show (Hank and Britt are scrappy and won't let go of a problem once they get their teeth into it) but does a poor job explaining what it is to outsiders. Ryan said on our podcast that many people thought it was a reality show about dog-fighting, and that perception wasn't helped by an odd marketing campaign that for a long time wouldn't show any footage of Logue and Raymond-James, and instead just featured shots of an angry dog.

Mid-stream title changes are hard for networks to justify ("Cougar Town" is stuck with an even worse moniker, and that show's producers have taken to making fun of it in their opening credit sequence each week), but even something as simple as rechristening the show "Terriers: PI" would help a hypothetical second season. A new marketing campaign that put the two leads front and center from the beginning would do even more so.

I don't know how much either would help, as the show is starting from a deep, deep hole. (Even doubling this season's ratings might not keep the show around for a third.) I recognize that TV is a business, not a charity, that FX is home to many other fine shows (almost all with better ratings) and therefore can't be accused of not caring about quality if they cancel it.

But here's why, if I'm FX president John Landgraf, I'm considering it, even if the numbers don't tick up at all in these last few weeks:

The FX identity that Ryan created with "The Shield" has been a mix of risk-taking and quality. You notice FX's shows because they're edgy and usually don't feel like anything else on television, but you stay with them because they're really, really good. (Sometimes, they're so good at first that you stay with them long after they've stopped being good; see "Nip/Tuck" or "Rescue Me.") The FX brand needs good shows - good dramas, especially - and really it needs at least one great drama at all times. For a long time, it had "The Shield," and then that show's final season overlapped with the uneven but promising debut for "Sons," and then "Sons" had a beloved second season. So even leaving other FX dramas like "Damages" aside, the channel has had some kind of standard-bearer for a very long time now. But "Sons" is in the midst of a problematic third season. The ratings are fine, and many fans have enjoyed it, but many haven't, whereas the praise for season two was near-universal. Maybe it's a bump in the road, or maybe "Sons" isn't a show that can sustain itself creatively. It'll still be a hit and a money-maker for a good long while, but in terms of the FX brand? We'll see.

And if "Sons" doesn't return to brilliance, what takes over the torch? "Justified" had a mostly strong debut season, but not a perfect one. I liked the pilot for the upcoming boxing drama "Lights Out" quite a bit, but don't know if it will sustain that quality, or if viewers will take to it. (The "Terriers" audience is comically small but fierce in its loyalty; if you want to show that loyalty, Ryan is suggesting people e-mail user@fxnetworks.com and/or try to download episodes from iTunes, as FX is said to be tracking both.) "Rescue Me" is over the hill and going away. There are other shows in the pipeline (including another SoCal detective show, which ain't a good sign for "Terriers"), but they're a ways away and no one knows yet if they're any good.

We know that "Terriers" is good - that it's great. We know that the ratings right now aren't commercially viable. But if FX wants to be able to say that they have an identity and stand for something - and the conversations I've had with Landgraf and many other FX execs, past and present, suggests that this is the rare channel with a real sense of mission in this regard - then bringing back "Terriers" as a kind of loss-leader isn't such a terrible thing.

You try tweaking the name, and the marketing, and maybe even figure out a way to piggyback it onto a more successful show (though the problem there is that FX shows are too raunchy to air before 10, and it's hard to start a drama at 11) and you say, "We are a business, and we obviously care about ratings, but we also care about quality, and we stand for this. This is a great show, a show that represents many of the things we aspire to, and we have enough other hits on the air that we can carry this one just a little longer," and you see what happens. If it doesn't work, people understand, but you've bought yourself a lot of good publicity and karma and you've maybe helped some of your other shows skate by if they have creative bumps.

The show's tagline was "Too small to fail." Are you going to make a liar out of a tagline, FX?
 
- Matt Roush @ TV Guide with some thoughts on Terriers in his weekly Q&A:
Question: Couldn't agree with you more regarding Terriers. This has fast become one of my favorite shows. The problem is that the show is not the show that the promotions (what little there was) showed us. I could have done without the "quirky detectives on the beach" show in the promos, but this show is no more about private detectives than Friday Night Lights is about football. Virtually every scene with Hank Dolworth and his sister (played by Donal Logue and HIS sister!) was heartbreaking. Is it too early to contact DirecTV with a candidate for the 101 Network? — Rick

Matt Roush:
Let's hope it doesn't come to that. Yet. I'm hoping FX will decide to give this show a second season and a second chance. There's been quite a bit of fan and critical buzz swelling lately which could work in its favor. In fact, Terriers seems to be getting more fuss, at least in my corner of the world, than Sons of Anarchy these days (although, sadly, nowhere near the ratings). But you've hit on a major problem where Terriers is concerned: Perception. It was clearly a devil of a show to market and promote, and even now, it takes some explaining to get across just how entertaining — and devastating — this show can be. It's not just a buddy romp and it's never merely a caper-of-the-week show. Character-driven hardly begins to describe a show that's original yet accessible, amusing without being silly, suspenseful and violent without being gratuitous or exploitative, and always deeply human. It's the nicest surprise of the fall season. I just wish more people would find and embrace it. But regarding a rescue from DirecTV or any other corner, I find that possibility highly unlikely, in part because the show has flown so far under the radar, for whatever reason.

But the show has generated a fair amount of mail lately, including this question from Michael: "I am happy Terriers is still on FX, and would just like to know if it will be played out entirely through the first season, and how long before we know if it's renewed for a second season? And my biggest question is how long before we find out if Britt is the Baby Daddy or not???"

Let's wait and see on that last question. (No spoilers here.) But the good news about a show like this airing on a network like FX is that regardless of ratings, we're almost always likely to see as many episodes as are initially ordered. (There are three more left, with the season finale airing Dec. 1.) It's pretty rare, though not unheard of (see Caprica), for a cable network to pull a show before it concludes its original run. Can't say how long we'll have to wait for word of a renewal. Whichever way FX goes with this one, it won't be an easy call.
 
Rich kid named Whitman gets into trouble and gets out of it because his parents are rich and donate to the university. Where have I heard this one before....
 
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I'm quite afraid that the spectacular nature of this show will eventually cause the Universe to implode.

so maybe that's why it'll end to save us all :,(
 
during the line up, I was like "yeah she's confuse", but damn at the end.

nice to origin of their meeting. Big Bad wolf on the next episode. :D

I'm leaving my tv on Fx the rerun
 
bathala said:
during the line up, I was like "yeah she's confuse", but damn at the end.
That was really well done, just slipping the truth right in there. He's even taken aback when asked to step into the lineup, but we assume it's just occupational laziness. Then the witness sort of starts going in his direction, and everyone groans and knows she's a dead end on finding the perp.

Very well done. When the 'twist' comes it doesn't feel cheap. We were given the hints and not even in an obtuse manner. It's not some bullshit where the show/movie flashes back to the same shot and shows him now holding the rapist's tool kit (you know the kind of flashback I'm talking about, where the hint is created solely in the flashback while trying to make you feel like you missed it).
 
Yeah, I thought the terriers-twist was fantastic. I thought it was going to be the rich boy and the woman identifying the cop would just be another roadblock. Then BAM. Hank and Mark have created an airtight case right in front of the audience and the criminal without anyone noticing.
 
Dan said:
Very well done. When the 'twist' comes it doesn't feel cheap.
Exactly. It makes sense in retrospect, but they didn't blow it by giving it away through an obvious hint earlier in the episode. I like the way this episode was shot and edited, too.


- Poniewozik's review
Terriers is a funny, entertaining detective show, but it also has enough darkness to recognize that the traits that make a good detective—skepticism, persistence—can be the result of disturbing issues, and that there's a fine line between doggedness and mania.

In last night's fine episode, "Sins of the Past," the present-day Britt storyline and the Hank flashback both showed how damaging it can be to nurse past hurts and to investigate the past. Donal Logue, in particular, did some of his best work of the series in showing us that Hank's suspicion and brooding over the past is not just the result of his breakup with Gretchen. It, maybe even more so than his drinking, was the cause of it, as well as the cause of his dismissal from the police force.

When we meet Hank in flashback, his drinking problem is pretty far advanced, so it's hard to untangle exactly what's cause and what's symptom. But when you see him completely lose it with Gretchen over what he believes is a rape in her past—as furious with her as with her supposed rapist, if not more so—it's clearly not just the whiskey talking. Hank, lovable underdog though he may be, is also a guy with deep-seated injustice and anger issues, and his talent at detective work both grows from those issues and, in a way, enables them. (Why let the past go when you can investigate it?)

What we see of Hank in flashback sheds a whole new light on everything we've seen of him so far this season—not just his investigating Gretchen's new man, but also his imploring Britt to take the advice that, it turns out, he could never follow in his own: forgive, forget, move on and be happy. Seeing Britt at his lowest here, acting out spitefully and mauling the wrong guy in a parking lot, is distressing; seeing him and Hank at odds and essentially alone is even more so. And yet, seeing the two of them meet for the first time, we can also see how badly the two of them need each other, and how they just might be able to help the other avoid the mistakes they've made on their own.
 
I've been watching The Shield for the first time this past week, and with Shawn Ryan being involved in both shows I was thinking about why I'm enjoying both of these shows so much. It's definitely character direction.
Somehow Terriers has had these characters doing exactly the right things to make me love them or hate them or sad for them without ever coming off as heavy-handed. It's as if someone pulled real people out of thin air. The level of character development really is astounding. Britt and Hank have almost never made a choice that I 100% agreed with, but we know all of their intentions and desires, and the intimacy forces devotion. Even when Hank's intruding into Gretchen's personal life or keeping a secret from Britt or drunkenly pursuing a wealthy kid, I can't help but love the guy.
 
Incredible episode. Though I'm going to be really sad to see it go, I do wonder if they would be able to make another season as good as this/have stories left to tell.
 
Clevinger said:
Incredible episode. Though I'm going to be really sad to see it go, I do wonder if they would be able to make another season as good as this/have stories left to tell.
I don't see how there wouldn't be more stories to tell. Even if the Lindus conspiracy gets completely wrapped up in two episodes (which I'm doubting at this point) they're PIs, there are always more cases. And there are still so many places the characters personal lives could go.
 
Yes and yes. RT @shapella: any chance Terriers gets second season with the sad ratings? Does FX take into account the other weekly showings?

Didn't say it was likely, but still a puncher's chance. RT @MFBurch: any chance Terriers gets second season with the sad ratings?

Need loyal #Terriers fans to let FX know you want us back and appreciate the quality of the show.

Email to user@fxnetworks.com in support of #terriers is being tallied. Send if you haven't, and RT this.

.
 
Another fascinating thing about the episode is the structure. One partnership is fixed just as another partnership is dissolved by betrayal.
And the betrayal wasn't some major earth shattering event, it was just a character beat from a few episodes ago.

So goooood.
 
firehawk12 said:
Probably the first time I didn't notice the red herring. Well done. :lol

I mentioned that to my GF that for once, I had no idea that was coming - she was shocked. Most TV shows telegraph the unknown "bad guy" pretty easily, but for once a show didn't. Of course looking back it made sense, but not in an obvious way.
 
GashPrex said:
I mentioned that to my GF that for once, I had no idea that was coming - she was shocked. Most TV shows telegraph the unknown "bad guy" pretty easily, but for once a show didn't. Of course looking back it made sense, but not in an obvious way.

I think it helped that the bad guy blended into the background - just like any true villain would. The problem with most procedurals is that they make the bad guy a character - so it's either an actor you recognize or a character who just has too many lines for him/her not to be the killer.
 
I like that they didn't have the villain go crazy and start shouting once they nailed him with the evidence. He just requests a lawyer and is led off without much fanfare. Also, the rich guy was still a pain in the ass and not 100% let off the hook even though he helped catch the real rapist.
 
- Why nobody watched Terriers

Blog post speculating on why the ratings are so low along with this tidbit about the final three episodes:
There's one reason I'm smiling and you're not.

I've watched the next three episodes of Terriers. I've watched tonight's episode, by the always incredible Tim Minear. (It's the episode Donal Logue hyped excitedly to me months ago.) I've watched next week's episode, which delivers a "Oh holy sh--" moment that will leave you scrambling for the pause button, just to let it sink in. And I've watched the finale. I could have watched the finale in an oxygen-free environment, because I held my breath the entire time.

And while Shawn Ryan's series finale of The Shield was the best series finale I've ever seen, Terriers brings itself to a close in that vintage Shawn Ryan way: satisfying, gut-wrenching, and perfectly poetic.

All said, Terriers is the best new show that aired this fall. It may be the best show that aired this fall, period.
More via the link.
 
I thought this episode was insanely good. I was tired when I watched it and thought the case wrapped up a little too neatly, but the more I replay it in my head the better it gets. Full of beautiful and heartbreaking character moments.

Someone please give Logue an Emmy. What a soulful performance he gives every week.
 
I haven't fallen in love with a show so much since firefly. I actually wrote a very detailed and heartfelt email to FX about it. Mock all you want. Terriers must stay on TV. If Nathan can break the curse with Castle then Terriers can make it.
 
I haven't seen them yet at any of the usual sources.

EDIT:
MRaymondJames said:
heard we were at 725,000 last night, up from 529,000. Hopefully verified online soon. This from Ted Griffin
Let's hope those numbers in the 18-49 demo went up, too.
 
just emailed that address, first time ever for a TV show.

Great news if true on those ratings!
 
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