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On The Tube

Brotherhood of the bedpan

9/17/2014

Red Band SocietyExecutive produced by Steven Spielberg, “Red Band Society”is the first masterpiece of the fall TV season (Wednesday, 8 p.m., Fox). Nevertheless, it features a premise that practically screams “don’t watch this.” A half-dozen very sick kids live together in a hospital. If that sounds off-putting, wait till you meet Charlie (Griffin Gluck), a boy who narrates the story while unconscious. “Yeah, this is me talking to you from a coma,” he says. “Deal with it.”

Given plot points about cancer and cystic fibrosis, “Red Band Society”might have been too sad or too sentimental. Instead, the series hits the sweet spot: It’s moving without being manipulative. Part of the secret is a sense of humor. The kids tease and taunt one another, and they’re in turn teased and taunted by a no-nonsense nurse (Octavia Spencer). But what really set “Red Band Society”apart are the characters and their relationships. The actors burrow deep into their roles, finding nuances in such types as a cruel cheerleader (Zoe Levin), a sharp-tongued anorexic (Ciara Bravo) and a jock facing an amputation (Nolan Sotillo).

“Gotham”

Monday, 7 p.m. (Fox)

This new series delves into Batman mythology in a novel way. The pilot is less pretentiously dark and ugly than the last three decades of Batman movies, with stronger storytelling. It doesn’t gloss over Bruce Wayne’s traumatic childhood, but instead dwells on the experiences that turn him into a masked vigilante. When Bruce’s parents are killed, a rookie cop named Jim Gordon (Ben McKenzie) tries to solve the crime while wading through the moral morass of the Gotham Police Department.

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The series has just the right proportion of realistic motivations to comic-book exaggeration. We meet embryonic versions of Catwoman (Camren Bicondova), the Penguin (Robin Lord Taylor), Two-Face (Donal Logue) and the Riddler (Cory Michael Smith), all ready for the psychological jolt that will turn them into criminal freaks. The cinematography’s admixture of neon and grime does justice to comic-book graphics — the ink practically comes off on your fingers.

Oddly, Bruce himself (David Mazouz) is only a minor part of the pilot, and Batman doesn’t show up at all. But that’s OK — it just makes you all the more eager for next week’s exciting episode.

“Forever”

Tuesday, 9 p.m. (ABC)

For some reason, Dr. Henry Morgan (Ioan Gruffudd) cannot die. After, say, a catastrophic New York subway crash, he merely reappears in the river, stark naked, and resumes his puzzling life. This has been going on for 200 years, starting with the time he got pushed off a ship for defending a slave while wearing a puffy-sleeved shirt. In our own day and age, Henry tries to figure out the secret of his immortality with his gruff yet lovable sidekick (Judd Hirsch).

Given the nutty premise, “Forever” could have been interesting. But it’s way too concerned with fitting into a prime-time formula. Of course Henry is a male-model type, and of course he begins a flirtation with glamorous detective (Alana De La Garza). He acquires a diabolical antagonist (yawn), has a tragic love in his past (natch) and ends the pilot as a dashing action hero (who’d have seen that coming?). CV 

Dean Robbins is a syndicated TV columnist from Madison, Wis. He graduated from Grinnell College. See more of his work at www.thedailypage.com.

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