Superstore: Shoplifter – The Dead Guy and Maxi Pads (Review)

Superstore continues to pile on the comedy with Shoplifter.

Superstore - Season 1

Superstore continues to pile on the comedy with Shoplifter.   This episode begins with the priceless moment that Jonah (Ben Feldman) touches the old dead guy on the blue display couch:

Garrett: Oh, Jonah touched a dead guy! Jonah touched a dead guy!

Shortly after the blue couch incident  Jonah meets Amy’s daughter Emma (Isabella Day), who correctly informs the shop assistant that he has loaded a soft drink can incorrectly in the cool case. He learns that Amy has spoken about him at home, albeit rather unflatteringly, and that Emma is not supposed to be at work.

The best bits of the episode were between America Ferrera and Ben Feldman’s characters as well as Day (who plays Emma) and  Feldman.  Amy (Ferrera)  is looking after the jewelry counter, where Emma can hide when Glenn (Mark McKinney) calls her away.  Jonah (Feldman)  is asked to look after the counter, in the interim. 

Amy and Jonah’s exchange, where jewelry is used as an euphemism for Emma and kids is hysterical:

Amy: “I don’t think, um, Jonah has very much experience. With… jewelry.”

Jonah: “I don’t have any jewelry of my own, but my brothers have some jewelry…That I’ve played with.”

Amy: “Well, I’ll be right back. don’t go anywhere. Stay here, and, uh, whatever you do, don’t bring attention to the jewelry.”

Jonah: “Trust me, no one will know the jewelry is here.”

Glenn: (Bewildered) “There is so much I don’t understand about sales.

Of course seconds after Amy leaves, and Jonah reveals that he is as interested in The Maze Runner book as Emma’s mother is, the girl announces she needs the restroom.  After a long wait Jonah goes to see if the girl is okay and learns that Emma is having her first period.

Amy has been grabbed by Dina to help force a suspected shoplifter to confess, so Jonah tries to help Emma on his own.

Meanwhile,  Cheyenne and Mateo are competing to get the couch that the old man died on. “Judge Garrett” has set up a competition between the two; whoever sits on the couch the longest can get it.

Superstore may not hit every nail on the head in terms of comedy, some things just feel a little forced, such as  store manager Glenn wanting to hold a service for the dead guy, but even these tend to be amusing. The “viking” style funeral,  i.e. the burning of the blue display couch, was funny to a certain extent.

Dina and the shoplifter interchange was worth a giggle or two and did go to set up a “connection” between uber religious Glenn and Dina later on.  (Via a “placed” Barney DVD.)

After Amy finally returns from her busy day away from Emma, she finds her daughter and Jonah playing an age inappropriate video game (where Jonah has just instructed the girl to kill the family on the platform) and she learns that the two got on fine.

Of course just as Amy relaxes, Emma drops her bombshell:

 “Jonah taught me how to use a maxi pad.”

In terms of casting, Isabella Day was the perfect choice to play America Ferrera’s daughter, the child actor exuded the aura of a “mini” Amy with the dry and matter-of-fact manner of her “mother.”

Standout Moments:

Jonah in the ladies room covered with maxi pads “Emma, look through the crack. I’m a mummy! Ahh!” This just as another customer comes in…

Garrett screaming that Jonah touched a “dead guy!”

The jewelry counter conversation.

Conclusion:

Superstore is one of the best comedies on television at the moment. Sure there are things that do not “gel,” like the whole “ceremony” for the old guy  found dead on the couch, but the show generates a lot of laughs. As mentioned previously, the chemistry between Ferrera and Feldman is just perfect and it is these two who bring  comic cohesion to the this series.

Superstore - Season 1
Viking funeral…for the couch…

Superstore  airs Mondays on NBC. Tune in and catch the comedy.

 

Superstore: The Office with America Ferrera

The fact that the new NBC comedy Superstore is basically The Office, but with America Ferrera and set in a “big box” outlet is not surprising.

Superstore - Season 1

The fact that the new NBC comedy Superstore is basically The Office, but with America Ferrera and set in a “big box” outlet is not surprising. The show’s creator Justin Spritzer worked on the 2005 American version of Ricky Gervais’ awkward comedic show as story editor and producer.  The Gervais original was brilliant at those awkward interactions between the weird and wonderful colleagues in that workplace environment.

According to all reports the American The Office was equally adept at provoking those “cringe-worthy” moments that Gervais did so well.  While Superstore is not quite as unique, it is funny.  Not looking through your fingers while laughing guiltily, and more than a bit hysterically funny, but close.

Having missed the beginning of the series, a brief spot of binge watching was required to catch up on the Superstore.  Each of the half-hour episodes were chuckle-worthy, even without a live audience, or thankfully a laugh-track, and by the fourth one the series was outright hysterical.

Episode four also had that first “cringe” moment. When Justin buys a sex-doll that he thinks looks like Amy.

Superstore - Season Pilot
Mannequin Justin and the real Justin (Ben Feldman)

America Ferrera proves that she does not need “Ugly Betty” to be funny.  She stars as floor supervisor Amy who new employee Justin (Ben Feldman) manages to annoy on his very first day.  These two have a great chemistry together with the series immediately putting them into a “will they/won’t they” dynamic.

Later in the fourth episode, disabled employee Garrett (Colton Dunn), aka the “cool one” points out that Amy is having a “work flirt” with Justin, and when she believes that Justin has worked this out, she gets flustered. 

Essentially The Office set in the world of K-Mart, WalMart, Target, et al, the “shenanigans” of a discount shopping store, aka Superstore do not really match up to the intricacies of the white collar comedy set up by Gervais originally, and then adapted for the American market later.

However…

Superstore is funny, despite relying a bit too much on stereotypes. Example: Store manager is a social inept and overly religious buffoon – Glenn (played with toe-curling sincerity by Mark McKinney) , another floor supervisor with an immediate crush on Justin, Dina (brought to brilliant life by the superb Lauren Ash) and the other new employee, Mateo; an annoying sycophant wannabe (played annoyingly by Nico Santos).

Superstore - Season 1
Justin and Dina (Ben Feldman and Lauren Ash)

Superstore is, if anything, more applicable to a wider audience demographic. While The Office did pander to office white collar workers the world over, this version, set in the “big box store” world that many have passed through as employees, or indeed customers, should tickle even more funny bones.

Each episode thus far has managed to look at the minefield that makes up the workplace of the new millennium.  Ben Feldman is brilliant as the new guy who just does not quite fit. His Justin already realizes that he can have fun, check out the trolley (shopping cart) race with the manager Glenn and Garrett, and that he really likes Amy, but he misses on the group dynamic.

It may well be that Superstore does use stereotypes a great deal, as did The Office, but both shows do so go great comedic effect.  So far, at four episodes in, Ferrera is proving that comedy is her forte and that she and Feldman have a great give and take as Amy and Justin.

This new comedy does have an “almost” ensemble feel, with a core set of characters; the pregnant teen, the Latina floor supervisor, the ineffectual outlet manager, the two new employees, one a nebbish yes man and the other the good looking younger man and the store “crush.”  Not to  forget the cool employee Garrett.

Superstore does  utilize stereotypes, but there has been an attempt to give a little depth to the characters. Ferrera’s “responsible” supervisor takes off her wedding ring when at work and was a teen mother.  In one episode Amy  speaks about the sameness of her days; 10 year’s worth, while looking at glow-in-the-dark sticky stars. Justin, in an attempt to prove his “American Beauty” quote, placed them on the ceiling.

The payoff comes when the very pregnant Cheyenne (Nichole Bloom) is serenaded by her “thug” boyfriend and Dina turns off the store’s lights.  A little gem, hidden in the comedic offering of Spritzer and co. 

Superstore - Season 1
America Ferrera, Mark McKinney and Nico Santos

Superstore airs Mondays on NBC and is splendid comedy of the “more normal” absurd. A world populated with mannequins that look like employees and a store manager who is not above racing his employees in a shopping cart. Tune in and marvel at the comedic talents of the cast and have a giggle at the storylines and gags.

 

How to Train Your Dragon 2 (2014): A Winning Sequel

Toothless and Hiccup from How to Train Your Dragon 2
How to Train Your Dragon 2, is a winning sequel to the 2010 hit from DreamWorks, where Jay Baruchel plays Hiccup again only this time around he is not fighting against his “heritage” or his father; Chieftain Stoic (Gerard Butler). He has changed Viking history and the village of Berk are at one with dragons and Hiccup is now searching for something outside the boundaries of his father’s world. Although he will soon replace Stoic the Vast as chief of the people he wants more.

This animated film goes beyond the reach of Berk as Hiccup discovers a foe who wants to control all the dragons so he can control the people. Djimon Hounsou plays Drago, a dragon master who has an Alpha male that he commands. Hiccup also finds his mother, Valka (Cate Blanchett) as well as learning just how far he and Toothless can go together.

This second journey in the world of Berk and Hiccup sees, or more accurately, hears some familiar voices as America Ferrera, Kristen Wiig, Craig Ferguson, Jonah Hill and Christopher Mintz-Plasse return to reprise their roles. Cate Blanchett is a new addition as is Kit Harington who plays Eret, “Son of Eret.”

How to Train Your Dragon 2 works well even for those who have not watched the first film. The franchise, a second sequel is projected for release in 2018, has done very well and proven popular with the targeted audience. There is enough action and humor to keep everyone in the family happy and this is entertainment that the entire clan can watch and enjoy.

How can lines like “I grew facial hair for you,” fail to garner a laugh. Rich characterization, the right actors voicing the right parts and some epic dragon battles all equal a brilliant experience for the viewer. High caliber performers like Cate Blanchett turning up shows that the studios took this sequel as seriously as the first installment.

If there is any qualm with the film at all, it is that Jay Baruchel sounds like a young Christian Slater clone. His delivery, tone and pacing are pure Slater, albeit a very high pitched one. This does not hurt either film but it is a bit disconcerting.

For all the battles and a couple of deaths, the film is clear of actual animated bloodshed. How to Train Your Dragon 2 is streaming on Netflix and for fans of these types of movies should not be missed. A real 5 out of 5 stars for great fun, epic fights and some great gags.