Six seasons, Rick. I liked it well enough, was never sorry to see it, but I never fell in love with it. ONCE AND AGAIN and its ever-better predecessors were more my family drama (with comedic aspects) meat. (The blithe assumption that youth was on balance the Wonder Years for us all didn't help it much, for me.)
The family watched most of the episodes of THE WONDER YEARS and FULL HOUSE that were telecast at the same time. Maybe I'm missing something here but I found a disconnect between Kevin and his family, a different kind of growing up.
No, Jeff, but had I been about her age, I might well've (particularly if the scripts had been less broad, on balance); DMc certainly has had an interesting career (we can only hope she's thought so, as well). Prashant, did you mean in terms of the last sequences here or the whole series? Certainly, THE WONDER YEARS was trying to achieve something considerably more ambitious than FULL HOUSE was...including trying to approximate actual familial tension rather better than FH would even begin to consider doing.
Kind of a typical gang of TV adolescents. One went to Harvard, one went to Paris, Mom ran a company, knucklehead brother takes over his Dad's place in business. They all stayed in touch. I'm sure a bunch of minor characters all moved to NYC and had huge apartments while working at bodegas.
Patricia Abbott is the author of more than 125 stories that have appeared online, in print journals and in various anthologies. She is the author of two print novels CONCRETE ANGEL (2015) and SHOT IN DETROIT (2016)(Polis Books). CONCRETE ANGEL was nominated for an Anthony and Macavity Award in 2016. SHOT IN DETROIT was nominated for an Edgar Award and an Anthony Award in 2017. A collection of her stories I BRING SORROW AND OTHER STORIES OF TRANSGRESSION will appear in 2018.
She also authored two ebooks, MONKEY JUSTICE and HOME INVASION and co-edited DISCOUNT NOIR. She won a Derringer award for her story "My Hero." She lives outside Detroit.
Patricia (Patti) Abbott
SHOT IN DETROIT
Edgar Nominee 2017, Anthony nominee 2017
CONCRETE ANGEL
Polis Books, 2015-nominated for the Anthony and Macavity Awards
10 comments:
"little suburban town"? Biggest freaking parade ever. That's TV for ya.
One I never watched, though I heard some good things from those who did. How many seasons did it run?
Six seasons, Rick. I liked it well enough, was never sorry to see it, but I never fell in love with it. ONCE AND AGAIN and its ever-better predecessors were more my family drama (with comedic aspects) meat. (The blithe assumption that youth was on balance the Wonder Years for us all didn't help it much, for me.)
The family watched most of the episodes of THE WONDER YEARS and FULL HOUSE that were telecast at the same time. Maybe I'm missing something here but I found a disconnect between Kevin and his family, a different kind of growing up.
Yes, but did you fall for Winnie Cooper, Todd? A lot of us did.
Jeff M.
Oh, that was such a good show. It was a little uneven here and there but overall it was well done.
No, Jeff, but had I been about her age, I might well've (particularly if the scripts had been less broad, on balance); DMc certainly has had an interesting career (we can only hope she's thought so, as well). Prashant, did you mean in terms of the last sequences here or the whole series? Certainly, THE WONDER YEARS was trying to achieve something considerably more ambitious than FULL HOUSE was...including trying to approximate actual familial tension rather better than FH would even begin to consider doing.
Kind of a typical gang of TV adolescents. One went to Harvard, one went to Paris, Mom ran a company, knucklehead brother takes over his Dad's place in business. They all stayed in touch. I'm sure a bunch of minor characters all moved to NYC and had huge apartments while working at bodegas.
First time I ever saw the ending. Yes, well handled.
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