(This review is rated PMS for Possible Minor Spoilers.)
The Beloved Spouse and I watched the Amazon series Bosch over the past week, with mixed
emotions and responses. Not mixed between us. We agree on pretty much
everything. We have mixed feelings about the show.
First, full disclosure: I am not a huge fan of Michael
Connelly’s writing. I like his books, and I like him personally. (Never met
him, but everything I’ve seen and heard of him implies he’s a mensch.) No one tells better stories, or
weaves two unrelated stories together better than he. His characters are solid,
and Harry Bosch has become damn near an archetype, and deservedly so. It’s the
writing itself that doesn’t move me, and that’s on me. My tastes run toward
dialog in the style of Elmore Leonard and George V. Higgins, and narration
that’s terse yet stylish. (Think Ed McBain or James Ellroy, for two disparate
examples.) Connelly strikes me as too down the middle, too rarely writing
something I want to turn to The Beloved Spouse and say, “Listen to this.”
We both wanted to like Bosch.
We’ve loved Titus Welliver since his mother fucked that monkey on Deadwood. The other casting is, by and
large, excellent. The production values are first rate. The problem is, the TV
show seems to overplay Connelly’s weaknesses and underplay his strengths. There
are too many subplots that don’t go anywhere. Why bother telling us Harry’s
boss is having a lesbian affair with another detective who works for her?
There’s a workable subplot there, but they didn’t do anything with it.
The political aspects also seemed more like decals than
infrastructure. Connelly’s books do not shyThe Wire did
politics very well in a cop context. We ought to do that, too.” There are
multiple problems with this, not the least of which are 1.) The Wire wasn’t really a cop show, and
b.) The Wire invested the time and
effort to do it very well. (Comparisons to The
Wire may not be fair, but they can’t be helped when the most political cop
is not only the Deputy Chief for Operations, but he’s played by Lance Reddick,
whose character who was both made and unmade by politics in The Wire.)
The plots weren’t up to Connelly’s usual standards, either.
The serial killer thread served to hit all the usual serial killer angles,
including—but not limited to—the young woman in distress and lots of seemingly
disjointed plot development that could be rationalized as, “Well, he’s a serial
killer. He’s nuts.” (Jason Gedrick was superb as said serial killer, which made
this element much more watchable.)
The other main story, about solving a twenty-year-old murder,
was better, but still had weaknesses. Everyone knew the reformed child molester
was going to be innocent, and that he would kill himself. Bosch also had a bad case of House
syndrome, where Harry had to be sure, yet wrong, half a dozen times before they
actually got the right guy.
It may seem unfair to crush Bosch for some plotting issues when I just gave Justified a pass, but Justified
made up for its plotting weaknesses in so many other ways. It was a fun show to
watch, engrossing on many levels. Bosch
lacked that, so it had nothing to fall back on when the plot came up short.
The Bosch character is a prime example. In the books he’s
driven and always in trouble, but he’s presented as someone who’s sincerely
trying to the right thing as he sees it, confounded by bureaucracy or
ineptitude. The bureaucracy and ineptitude are there in the TV show, too, but
Harry is less the gallant warrior beset on all sides than an asshole. He’s a
terrible father, and his motions toward concern don’t play when viewed against
his actions. (Which are also too predictable. Everyone knows when he tells his
daughter he’ll be back for Christmas, he won’t be, and that he’ll ditch her at
some point when she comes to LA.) Even when other cops have the cold case
killer under control, Harry has to be there for the finale. Yes, the medium
demands that one, but more effort should have been made to set it up.
There are a lot of things to like about Bosch. Harry comes off as an asshole because of how he’s written,
but through any failure in Welliver’s performance. The show just needs to pick
its spots better, and play more to Connelly’s strengths. Amazon has already
committed to a second season, so there’s hope.
So much to watch so little time. We can afford to be very choosy now. Ten years ago, we would have jumped right in.
ReplyDeleteThat's pretty much the way I felt about it. I wanted so, so much to love this series and came away merely liking it. Titus Welliver (who I think was the absolute perfect choice) and the production values stood out, but the plotting needed work. Lots of work. It was done too much by the numbers. Rather at times, it felt like a network TV formula cop show from the 80s.
ReplyDeleteLike you, Dana, I've got my fingers crossed for season 2.
I actually really do like the Harry Bosch novels, particularly the early ones which were a little bit crazier. But I just didn't see Welliver as Bosch--not any comment on his acting--so I wasn't interested in this one.
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