REVIEW

TV Review: Raines

Written by Nancy Fontaine
Published March 11, 2007

I like ghost stories. I'm not talking about the scary stuff, though; I'm talking about when spirits help solve crimes, for instance.

So, I'm perfectly set up for Raines, the new NBC drama that premieres on March 15. (You can watch it beforehand, as I did, at NBC's website.) Michael Raines, played by Jeff Goldblum, is a detective returning to work at LAPD for the first time after three months — he and his partner Charlie (Malik Yoba) were hit in a shoot-out. Charlie is apparently disabled; he uses a cane and is not working. So when Raines catches the case of young woman found shot in the back in a parking lot, he works it alone.

Raines' first stop is the victim's apartment, where he comes across a young woman. "Are you her sister?" he asks. Raines is alarmed when she tells him she is Sandy Budreau, the victim. Afterward, he checks in with Charlie, who reminds him that he always talked to the victims. "Know the victim, find the killer, remember?" It's just that in the past Charlie was in the car with him, and the victims didn't appear in the flesh and talk back.

Raines admits to Charlie he's hallucinating, and his colleagues express concern about how much he's talking to himself. And it is to himself he talks. Although he sees Sandy, she doesn't know any more than he does and constantly reminds him of the fact, or turns questions back on him. "Why?" he asks. "Why do you think?" she responds.

Raines tries to take the easy route in solving the crime, going on circumstantial evidence, but Sandy does not go away. "Maybe you haven't solved the crime to your satisfaction," says Charlie. Indeed. With the help of his hallucination, Raines pushes on, and, of course, he does solve the crime. Even so, Sandy doesn't leave him. "Is there something else I can do you for you?" he asks. Naturally there is one more thing. And one more surprise.

You'd think a show about someone who sees dead people might be passé. I mean, Haley Joel Osment did it so well in The Sixth Sense, and the brilliant HBO series Six Feet Under made artful use of dead characters. Not to mention that the television show Medium (also on NBC), in which a detective dreams of victims, has been on the air for many years now. So what does Raines have to offer? What makes it different? Aside from the fact that it's not actual ghosts he sees?

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Nancy Fontaine is a librarian living in New Hampshire with her husband, two cats, and every four years during presidential primary season, the national press.
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TV Review: Raines
Published: March 11, 2007
Type: Review
Section: Video
Filed Under: Video: Crime, Video: Drama, Video: Television
Writer: Nancy Fontaine
Nancy Fontaine's BC Writer page
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#1 — March 13, 2007 @ 21:39PM — Lisa McKay [URL]

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