Agent X: The Devil and John Case (Review)

Agent X: The Devil and John Case continues to suffer from the same lethargic pacing that this TNT action/drama has exhibited since its pilot debut. Jeff Hephner as John Case, aka Agent X, still manages to deliver the goods.

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Agent X: The Devil and John Case continues to suffer from  the same lethargic pacing that this TNT action/drama has exhibited since its pilot debut. Jeff Hephner as John Case, aka “Agent X,” still manages to deliver the goods, although his dialogue had been halved this week.   Thus far the new series seems to take itself far too seriously with a tendency to manufacture gravitas and Sharon Stone as the vice president, who has a secret agent all to herself, is almost glum in her portrayal of the widowed right-hand of the president. 

The show, despite its creeping delivery,  has enough plot devices to sink a stereotypical trope ship.  Agent X does have  a dearth of talent available, Stone and  Gerald McRaney represent the big and small screen in terms of acting talent and the guest stars as well as recurring role “fillers” are not small potatoes either.

The “Jack in the box” villain, who shoots the captive man and woman at the end of the episode, who also appeared in the Agent X pilot, is a regular on another “Agent” show. Andrew Howard, who plays Banks on the opposing team to Phil Coulson’s gang on Joss Whedon’s small screen Marvel series, Agents of SHIELD. This Welsh actor proves here that he can be menacing in just about any scenario.

It was also nice to see Carlos Gómez (Gang Related, The Glades) in a cameo role as the corrupt local police chief. The plot of this episode of Agent X takes Case down south of the border to take on a Santeria type cartel boss who is terrorizing the locals and responsible for the death of a undercover DEA agent.

Arturo Del Puerto plays El Diablo, a Bruja (Or Brujo?)  leader of the cartel who seems omnipresent until he faces Case at the end of the episode.  The drugs lord is searching for a ledger which can incriminate him and his gang.  Case has to, find the ledger, stop the cartel and look good while saving the day.

Sadly,  the entire episode, with its subplot of the vice president trying to find out if her late husband the senator was having a affair, feels like one long cliche with worn out tropes being shuffled into the plot. With all the reliances on stereotypes it was a little surprising  not to see Danny Trejo on board as an aging enforcer…

On a positive note, it was very nice to see that the cancellation of Constantine did not keep Angelica Celaya (she played Zed Martin on the short-lived NBC series) from doing an impressive job as Luna, the local cop who befriends John Case and later fights El Diablo in the dusty street.

In the area of vice presidential subterfuge, the “dead husband having an affair” subplot indicates that there are some governmental things going on that  may need Natalie Maccabee’s “Man X” to step in do some bad guy bashing.

Sadly, Olga Fonda as Olga Petrovka, was missing this week and because of this sinful omission, the show felt a bit flat as she is the only performer who seems capable of chewing up bits of scenery, while everyone one else underplays their parts so much they appear comatose.

Energy is needed in this new TNT offering and if the viewer’s interest is to be piqued, then adrenaline needs to be forcefully injected…Stat. Agent X airs Sundays on TNT. Tune in and see just how well film star Sharon Stone translates to the small screen.

 

Dr Ken: Kevin O’Connell Episode Another Win

TISHA CAMPBELL MARTIN, WILL YUN LEE, KATE SIMSES, KEN JEONG

The news that ABC has ordered a full season of Dr Ken is not surprising. Despite the naysayers who do not “get it” the show is funny. Kevin O’Connell is a perfect case in point. The episode has Ken coming to grips with the fact that his wife’s old boyfriend is not a “pasty-faced” Irishman but the hunky Will Yun Lee (Wolverine, Total Recall) who was adopted by Irish parents.

Not only is Kevin good looking and athletic, but he is a generous humanitarian and, from the look of it, an all around nice chap.  Ken is beside himself with jealousy and annoyance that his wife lied to him about O’Connell.  Everyone seemingly prefers this plastic surgeon to Ken, his son and daughter are instantly drawn to the man as are Dr Ken’s coworkers.

At the hospital ball, where Ken does a stand up “satire” of all the staff in the place, he re-writes his material at the last minute, poking fun at Kevin to assuage his wounded ego.

As usual Dr Ken hits the funny bone just right. Each gag revolves around Ken Jeong’s comic delivery and his costars also prove that they can deliver. Each actor has a chance to shine and Kate Simses continues to be the queen of comedic timing in this show.

TISHA CAMPBELL MARTIN, JONATHAN SLAVIN, KEN JEONG, KATE SIMSES

Co-creator  and show star Jeong has wisely surrounded himself with performers who are adept at comedy and this makes the show work on more than one level.  There cannot be many who do not find Ken funny as his delivery and timing are spot on.

ABC have ordered a full season for the show, congratulations to the entire cast and crew and the writers, and it is nice to see the network recognizing that they have a hit on their hands. While IMDb rankings are still lower than Fresh Off the Boat (to be fair, IMDb contributors seem to have in it for Dr Ken and most of its cast, the message boards pertaining to  the series are all quite nasty and derogatory) the show is funny and all the cast members shine, unlike the Huang family comedy. (Many of the younger actors are “lacking” in the delivery department on Fresh Off the Boat.)

Kudos to the whole cast are in order for this sixth episode. Tisha Campbell-MartinDave Foley (who feels like he is channelling his inner Terry Thomas sans the English accent), Suzy Nakamura,  Jonathan SlavinKrista Marie YuAlbert Tsai and, of course, Ken Jeong all turn in tour de force performances.

Guest star Lee is brilliant as the “nice guy” who actually supports Ken, while he is slowly dying on stage, and the San Andreas actor shows just why he works so steadily.  Another great episode for Dr Ken and proof that,  despite best efforts from other unfunny shows, the sitcom as television genre  is not dead and that filming before a life audience still works well.

Dr Ken airs Fridays on ABC, tune in and hold on to your sides.