The Practice and Boston Legal: A Miscarriage of Justice - Page 3

I suppose I would not continue to rant about the vacuous disappointment that goes by the name Boston Legal . It lacks the raw energy and spontaneity of The Practice but it's not just that. It's listening to the endless self-congratulation of the cast for a show that is pretty much phoned in from the word "go." That's famished at the core. I actually like the cast, but it's all such a travesty.

The forced, glib jokes that are so lame they make you cringe, punctuated with the musical equivalent of rim shots. (It really is better to know that it's supposed to be funny, don't you think?)

The sophomoric sexual humor that makes Howard Stern sound like Noel Coward.

The melodrama with all the bite of a box of stale cornflakes.

David Kelley has confused expediency with finesse, floodlights with illumination, innuenendo with subtlety. Who would have thought the progenitor of The Practice could have spawned such a turgid mess? The first season is now available on DVD and (as I understand it) the new season of Boston Legal is just around the corner.

At last. A chance to catch up on your laundry.

I dedicate this column to the excellent cast of The Practice:

  • Michael Badalucco - Jimmy Berluti
  • Camryn Manheim -Ellenor Frutt
  • Steve Harris - Eugene Young
  • Dylan McDermott - Bobby Donnell
  • Kelli Williams - Lindsay Dole
  • Lisa Gay Hamilton - Rebecca Washington
  • Marla Sokoloff - Lucy Hatcher
  • Lara Flynn Boyle - Helen Gamble
  • Ray Abruzzo - Detective Michael McGuire
  • Jessica Capshaw - Jamie Stringer
  • Holland Taylor - Judge Roberta Kittleson
  • Jason Kravits - A.D.A. Richard Bay
  • Linda Hunt - Judge Zoey Hiller
  • Bill Smitrovich - A.D.A. Kenneth Walsh

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Article Author: Christopher Soden

Christopher Soden holds Vermont College’s MFA in Poetry. He writes film & literary critique, essay, performance pieces and dramaturgy. Honors and positions: Poetry Editor: Espejo. President Emeritus: The Dallas Poets Community, The Poetry Society of …

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  • 1 - Shari

    Sep 20, 2006 at 2:16 am

    I feel your pain and I congratulate you on not using the words "ethically-challenged" to describe Alan Shore.

    One of Kelley's biggest problems is with female characters who he has lost the ability to write without keeping Ally McBeal firmly in mind. A character is either neutered or obsessed with sex.

    Perhaps part of the problem is that Kelley can't see a woman in anything but a sexual way unless she's elderly or overweight and there's a paucity of either type of woman on BL save Candace Bergen and the occasional Betty White appearance. And Shirley Shmidt is essentially one of his neuters.

    As you mentioned, they've stripped Shore of most of his bite by chaining him to Denny Crane and offering him too few interesting cases in which to showcase his unconventional personality. The reason his character worked so well in The Practice was because his stay there was short-lived. Now that he's a part of the regular staff at Crane, Pool and Schmidt, he's had to be toned down a lot to keep at least a shred of credibility to his continued employment. Shore as a character would work a lot better as a solo practitioner.

  • 2 - TV & FG

    Sep 20, 2006 at 9:07 am

    Personally, I think that "The Practice" was an excellent show early in its run, and then much like Kelley's "Ally McBeal" severely lost its way and needed to disappear (possibly a couple of seasons before it did).

    I also find "Boston Legal" absolutely hysterical, and quite clever. I think it's funny in a way "McBeal" never was and handles court and the law in a far better manner than "The Practice" ever did. I think the in-jokes on "Boston Legal" are great and Shatner is fantastic as an utterly ridiculous, over-the-top character. And what about Candice Bergin, Julie Bowen and the rest? It's a really well-rounded bunch of supporting players. I'd actually argue that "Boston Legal" took till about the end of its first season before it hit its stride and that the second season was truly inspired.

    I am very much looking forward to wherever it may head from here.

  • 3 - Ty

    Sep 20, 2006 at 6:37 pm

    I totally feel you, but I still watch BL because of the lack of 100% courtroom drama's on TV (L&O doesn't count because it is not 100% legal drama)...thank god Justice and Shark are two new 100% legal dramas to add some flavor to world of 100% legal drama.

  • 4 - NancyGail

    Sep 22, 2006 at 10:59 am

    I take it you don't like BL. I don't always either, and I do the reviews. Perhaps the best part (for me) is the real life situations which get made into storylines. Oh, The Practice in its last season happend like this-DEK was told tht the only way it would happen was if he fired half his cast. From what I've read, Alan Shore then was a lot nastier. However, his adeptness at that still manages to come out.

  • 5 - Baronius

    Sep 23, 2006 at 8:23 pm

    I agree with every word you said about The Practice, except calling Lara Flynn Boyle beautiful. When The Practice was firing on all cylinders, it was amazing. The last season was horrible, and it has kept me away from Boston Legal. Shore/Spader is a caricature of - of what? I have no idea. Crane is, as near as I can figure, a caricature of Shore.

    I still can't believe that a show could be so bad that I wouldn't watch Julie Bowen.

    I've been thinking about The Practice recently, mainly because of Justice. I liked the way cases would take from 1/2 to maybe five episodes. Justice feels so forced in fitting that 44 minute limit. Of course, both shows abuse the "murder trial starts in two days" cliche. That was my favorite absurdity on The Practice. "Sure we'll take the case. When does the trial start?" Heh.

  • 6 - Jewels

    Sep 24, 2006 at 11:15 pm

    Nicely written, I understand your affinity with TP but I find the bada bing humor of Boston Legal more to my liking. I do think that Kelley needs to start doing something different with Spader. (Regarding Shatner, he's on target with him, actually.) With James, it is getting old and not so clever anymore. There is so much more Spader's character could do - the first season was really well done, but he is (Kelley) losing his way a bit with some of the characterizations getting trite and boring. Enjoyed the article.

  • 7 - Christopher Soden

    Sep 25, 2006 at 2:40 am

    I appreciate everyone's thoughtful and reasoned feedback. To my mind, what Kelley has done with BOSTON LEGAL amounts to the same as taking a fine meal (roast lamb, potatoes, brussels sprouts, salad, Italian Cream Cake) pureed it in a Cuisinart, and spoon fed it like baby food to audiences too stupid or lazy to appreciate being intrigued or challenged. I'm sick of the way so many members of the entertainment industry PANDER to the philistines and knuckleheads. If Kelley were an escort they'd be calling BOSTON LEGAL: "Hand Job."

  • 8 - alpe

    Nov 22, 2008 at 3:30 am

    What did you think of "Murder One" - should you have happened to watch it?

  • 9 - zour

    Apr 13, 2009 at 5:31 pm

    I've just finished watching the very last episode of BL. It was such a great pleasure!
    If you were tied up to german television series like I am, you'd never ever write so harsh about BL. Instead your tv set would be no more.
    TV series here are almost all shallow, featherbrained and boring. No TV station does something like Kelley does.
    BL seems to take a lot politics into courtroom, replaying obscure or prominent verdicts and being
    fun with these topics all the time.
    I can understand some kind of disappointemnt while having so many good stuff on TV. But for me
    Boston Legal is just a life raft.
    The 4th seaoson of The Practice will be dubbed soon. Maybe I'll agree with you afterwards.

  • 10 - Christopher Soden

    May 22, 2009 at 7:27 am

    I thought MURDER ONE was excellent.

  • 11 - Simeon Cole

    Dec 26, 2011 at 8:20 pm

    I think BL is amazing. Televeision has and always wil be entertainment. Those producers and critics whom forget that the art form is simply art often attempt (and fail mind you) to fulfill its function.
    As a means to sparking debate and creating awareness concerning social issues often too complex for the average television viewer or critic to comprehend (certainly bloggers)I believe BL does a wonderful job.

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