
TV is the New Reading
‘In Plain Sight’ needs
USA’s unevenly comic drama “In
Plain Sight” is still developing its characters and finding its rhythm, but
there are a few things that seem clear enough.
Formula isn’t surefire. Big names do not equal satisfying performances and
summer cable series are hit and miss.
See, I like “In Plain Sight,” but it’s maybe about as good as Debra
Messing’s minisplash “The Starter Wife” last summer. So far, if TV is the new
reading, this show is like bland beach reading.
You have Mary McCormack as Mary Shannon, a U.S. marshall coordinating the
witness protection program. Between getting too emotionally involved with her
charges and her family’s wacky hijinks, she is barely holding her personal and
professional life together.
Her partner is the far-too-polished Marshall Mann, played by Frederick Weller.
The character development on him seems to be that he knows a vast number of
random facts. And her boss, Stan, is about as charismatic as a wet paper bag.
And you might assume that someone whose job it is to protect people from
criminals would have an exciting life, but it’s not, really. It falls a little
flat. Sure, keeping witnesses safe takes savvy and chutzpah, but there’s a
sitting-around factor in her job that’s hard to completely ignore.
Enter the wacky family.
Hijinks
and Hi, Jinx
If you are a fan of hers, do not tune in to see Lesley Ann Warren as Shannon’s
mother, Jinx. She’s better in your memory of her. She’s better in everything
else she’s ever been in.
And the sad thing is, she’s working her butt off to be as flaky and awful as
her character is in the show.
Jinx moved into Shannon’s New Mexico home at about the same time as Shannon’s
sister, Brandi, played by Nichole Hintz, for reasons that haven’t been
explained perfectly, and they’re worse than underfoot. Brandi, who is meant to
be from New Jersey, is helping facilitate some sort of deal for her
drug-dealing boyfriend from under Shannon’s roof.
Meanwhile, Jinx is living up to her name, screwing up every job opportunity she
lands because she’s some sort of drunken tramp. After borrowing $2,500 from
Shannon for a door-to-door cosmetics venture, she sells $7.50 of product and
spends the rest of the day with her most recent fling, whose dog eats all of
her makeup samples. Oh, Jinx.
Formula
I had about the same reaction to Sharon Gless as Jeffrey Donovan’s mom in last
summer’s USA debut of “Burn Notice.” Here you have a reasonably talented
actress with some range and ability, and they’re cast in such goofy side roles
that it’s hard to take them seriously.
In fact, “In Plain Sight” – the name, incidentally, refers to relocating
Witness Protection program participants and hiding them in plain sight – feels
like the flip side of Donovan’s downsized spy project. Shannon coordinates the
little plot-point tasks involved in keeping her charges happy and cared for
while her family’s story arcs trace a wide, largely unrelated loop. With “Burn
Notice,” the action comes from the wacky hijinks he gets into with his friends
in trying to get his job back.
For whatever reason, “Burn Notice” – which premieres its second season next
month – seems to have more immediacy and a stronger draw. Sure, McCormack turns
in some butt-kicking cleverness, but it’s usually in aid of getting groceries
to a witness she’s hiding or something equally dry.
For now, it is what it is – a mildly entertaining show on basic cable with
basic characters. It has potential, but so far it hasn’t explored it. It’s
basically a good enough show until something more interesting comes on.
“In Plain Sight” airs Sundays at 9 p.m. on USA.
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©2008 The Minot
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