Revisiting the 80s in Absurdist Fashion. Night Court is Back!

In Night Court, the mix of humour and empathy made the early series special which the new continuation strives to achieve.

Night Court 2023NBC’s Night Court is back in session, and instead of giving us a series laden with nostalgia, there’s some updates to show that life has moved on for some, others stuck in a rut, and the new faces are replacing familiar ones. That is, a few members of Harry Stone’s courtroom have either retired or have passed away. Although the first two episodes don’t have the zest that the original series had, I waited for the next releases to judge if the series is solid sitcom gold or not.

So far, John Larroquatte still got it as Dan Fielding, the character he plays. He’s a far cry from the irrepressible version from long ago, and to see how he developed to that state is why I’m loving this show. Although he was really hesitant to return to working at the old haunting grounds, the new young magistrate has high hopes that he can do what his collegue from long ago could offer. Be empatic and keep people from going to jail.

In the latest, “Dan V. Dating,” he’s certainly getting challenged in more ways than one. So far, this is the best episode to date, and it suggests that this series is more about Dan than the other characters. Hopefully that’ll change as the character arcs for the others get better. This new Night Court needs to better balance the narratives between the five. I’m finding the newcomers are basically replacements of those those performers who sadly passed away. Nothing’s been said about what happened to Christine Sulliven (Markie Post) or the others. She will always be that perky ray of sunshine and Abbey Stone (Melissa Rauch) gives similiar vibes. Had she lived, I’m willing to bet the producers would have put her on the bench once again.

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Date Due: The Librarians to Return by the End of Year

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Good news, fellow adventure book lovers. TNT announced today that the series The Librarians is renewed for a second season! That means there will be ten new episodes featuring Rebecca Romijn, Christian Kane, Lindy Booth, John Kim and John Larroquette, and these episodes will broadcast sometime in the later part of this  year.

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The Future for The Librarians Needs Rescue

MV5BNDI5NzMwMjAxNl5BMl5BanBnXkFtZTgwOTc2NDg1MzE@._V1_SX214_AL_On TNT, The Librarians makes for some great Christmas time and mid-season filler material when all the prime-time shows are taking a break. But, fans of The Librarian trilogy will be sad that Noah Wyle is not helming the TV series.

Ten years ago, producer/director Dean Devlin created a light-hearted whimsical take of the pulp-action adventures of Indiana Jones. Instead of a globe-trotting professor of archaeology intent on preserving artifacts of the past, viewers are introduced to Flynn Carsen (Noah Wyle), an irrepressibly and socially awkward hero who tends to bumble into situations where his vast knowledge saves the day more often than his charm. Carsen is the type of guy who would prefer a life in academia, earning himself multiple PhD’s so he can be a storehouse of information. But if it was not for one particular professor who simply kicks him out of graduate studies to get a life, he would most likely there until he becomes chairman.

When he gets a letter from the Metropolitan Public Library, he gets a chance at doing what he loves. But there is more than meets the eye to what the job of being a bookworm entails. What a true ‘Librarian’ represents is essentially that of a Knights Templar — to protect the weak and uphold an ideal.

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