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Hail and farewell

The OC , when it was good
By CHARLES TAYLOR  |  February 19, 2007

070216_oc_main1
NOT 90210: The OC never got the respect it deserved.
With its last episode scheduled to air February 22, The OC (Fox, Thursdays, 9 pm) has pulled the sort of desperate stunt that might have you considering the wisdom of taking the show behind the barn with a pistol. At the end of a recent episode, “The Shake-Up,” the big one hits So Cal, endangering the lives of the show’s three sets of lovers: Kirsten and Sandy Cohen (Kelly Rowan and Peter Gallagher), their son Seth and his girlfriend Summer (Adam Brody and the wonderful Rachel Bilson), and their adopted wrong-side-of-the-tracks kid Ryan and his girlfriend Taylor (Ben McKenzie and Autumn Reeser). It’s a cheap, desperate ploy for a show that’s lost its way.

And it pains me to write that because The OC never got the respect it deserved, dismissed instead as an updated 90210 or something for brainless teeny-boppers to sigh and weep over. Although you’d be hard pressed to find another prime-time show that name-checked Michiko Kakutani or Julius Rosenberg, that presented its brooding hunk hero relaxing by reading Shirley Hazzard’s The Great Fire, or had a character who decorated her bedroom with a poster for Douglas Sirk’s Imitation of Life. Granted, the show’s younger viewers probably didn’t get those references. But they were never thrown in to be superior to the material. The OC’s creator, Josh Schwartz, knew he was making melodrama, and for three seasons he and his writers and the exceptionally talented cast were terrific at it.

You could trace the premise back to The Prince and the Pauper, or just The Fresh Prince of Bel Air. Ryan Atwood, a smart, sensitive kid who’s had nothing but bad breaks, is brought home by his public defender, Sandy Cohen, to a sumptuous house in Orange County. He bonds with Sandy’s comic-geek son, Seth, wins over Sandy’s suspicious wife, Kirsten, and wins the heart of Marisa Cooper (Mischa Barton), the troubled golden girl next door. Ryan gives Seth the friend he never had and the confidence to win over Summer Roberts, the girl he’s pined for since grade school.

The show shadowed star-crossed lovers Ryan and Marisa with the livelier, more comic Seth and Summer (a relief when Ryan and Marisa’s soul gazing got a little wearying). Not that that relationship always went smoothly either. Since this was melodrama, there were break-ups and betrayals and other partners — Marisa in particular was a magnet for losers JDs and the chronically misunderstood. But the show evoked teen angst from just enough of a distance that you could be affected by it without ever feeling that you were wallowing in it. It helped that these were smart-alecky, self-aware kids spritzing ironic (though not emotionally detached) dialogue. And it helped that the central quartet of actors was so good.

The monosyllabism that Ben McKenzie avoided in his portrayal of Ryan has overtaken him this season, and given the general decline of the show, that may be the fault of the writers and directors. McKenzie could be counted on to convey what was going on beneath Ryan’s stoic tough-guy surface. Adam Brody and Rachel Bilson have been a consistent delight. Brody has played Seth’s neurotic, hyper-verbal, self-centered nerdiness off his own good looks and come up with something like a teen version of the hipster neuroses that, in his early comedies, made Woody Allen a culture hero. Bilson, who has the show’s best timing, makes Summer’s feelings for Seth felt beneath her eye-rolling sarcasm. Her work has embodied the calibration between sentiment and irony that marked The OC at its best.

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Related: Over Her Dead Body, Cross country trek, 37. John Mayer, More more >
  Topics: Television , Celebrity News, Entertainment, Woody Allen,  More more >
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Comments
Hail and farewell
You know you've really just got to love the Monday Moring Quarterback, now that it's the end of the show now comes the pontificating about how bad it is this season. It's great this season, Marissa's death didn't kill the show, Season 3 killed the show with it's lame story line. I'm a big fan of the show, just loved Marissa and Ryan together but Mischa without Ben, couldn't hold the show together, she's not that great an actress. She had no chemistry with the 12 year old they cast as Johnny and it just wasn't believeable and no one cared him whatsoever. Taking the spotlight and focus off of the Ryan character is what killed the show. Ben McKenzie is rocking his performance this season, which only goes to show that the show was always about his character and his perception of the people in the OC. This years late start combined with a killer time slot, bad night and zero support from Fox killed this show. Peter Liguori mis-handling of a really great show were the final nails in the coffin the writers built in Season 3.
By Cathy1426` on 02/14/2007 at 11:33:28
Hail and farewell
It is Marissa, not Marisa. Two 'ss'. Don't act like you watched the show enough to write critically about it, when you don't even know how to spell a main characters name. Idiot.
By parks586 on 02/14/2007 at 4:22:09
Hail and farewell
It always interests me that an incredibly vocal minority of OC fans (most of whom post on Televisionwithout pity board), think that by shouting the loudest and longest makes them right. Well spelling aside, this guy's analysis is not that far off. Schwartz has established himself as a "soap writer" par excellence, and, the demise of the show mostly reflects his poor managerial input in Season 3 and his overrated writing abilities in Season 4. Season 4 is a failure in just about everyone's eyes except the vocal minority. How can an average audience at 3.5 to 3.75 million viewers be construed otherwise. This is not Fox's fault and, Mischa Baqrton, like her not, pretty much sank the boat for them. Furthermore, I for one think, she has been remarkably gracious in refusing to comment after being unceremoniously dumped by Schwartz in an endevor to keep his sub-par production afloat.
By amused on 02/14/2007 at 8:25:21
Hail and farewell
James Levine the American, who happens to be of European descent, has recorded Ma Vlast with European orchestras. One of his mentors was the Czech conductor Raphael Kubelik who conducted the piece and recorded it with the BSO in 1971. Levine's current performance is amazingly close to Kubelik's. In fact, hearing the Moldau with the Czech Phil. under Kubelik on You Tube, I must say they do not have the quality wind section you find in Boston nor the lushness of sound and accuracy. Ma Vlast is great entertainment but certainly not Mahler's 9th. I don't go crazy for it as I did when I was 35 years younger. Under James Levine, the BSO on its best days ranks with any orchestra in the world. This is Jimmy's orchestra now and I love it.
By Dr. Marc on 11/28/2007 at 11:22:11

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