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Sunday 4 December 2011

The Misfits Series 3 review.







Review: 2.5 out of 5.






Back again with a vengeance, reviewing one of the most infamous shows to ever stalk our TV screens. Said to be a program that is dark but with sharp humour, its Heroes meets Skins. For those who don't know what Misfits is, get on track here and quit living under a rock. Its about a rag tag group of young offenders on ASBO who end up during their community service, getting struck by an electric storm and discover the five of them have super powers. Kind of sweet, don't you think? Well, not if you have limited control and your special abilities are crap to the bone. Now in its Third Season, the ASBO 5; Simon Bellamy (Iwan Rhoen), Curtis Donovan (Nathan Stewart-Jarrett), Nathan Young (Robert Sheehan) Kelly Bailey (Lauren Socha) and Alisha Bailey (Antonia Thomas) spent the first two series in community service avoiding suspicion from authority and getting leaked to the public about the missing probation workers they accidentally killed whilst they deal with people who have also been affected by the storm.

On the E4 network, Misfits, created by Howard Overman is now in the penultimate episode to its conclusion. With the absence of Sheehan, I feared this series would fall short, as Nathan's character, let's face it, is the star of the show. The 7th episode before the finale is here. After Series 2 ended with a Priest who masqueraded as Jesus caused pain in the group, they gave their powers away to a dealer named Seth (Matthew McNulty), who has the ability to remove an individual's powers and transfer them to someone else, a cliffhanger left all of them with a possibility of getting new powers. In Series 3, the ASBO 5 (except for Nathan) is joined by Rudy Wade (Joseph Gilgun), an obnoxious yet insecure pain-in-the-butt who got the power to create a duplicate with a separate personality. They return to community service thanks to Rudy and the show has gotten weirder ever since. With a lot more fanatics and mayhem involved, it becomes freaky central as many have the opportunity to sell or buy abilities.

Good:

This episode had Curtis claim a new power called Resurrection from Seth after his old power of changing gender forced him to become a woman permanently (I prefer time manipulation he used to have). In return, Seth wants a favour to bring his deceased girlfriend back to life. Unfortunately, all hail breaks loose as the rebirth has unforeseen side effects, which results in total damnation in a zombie onslaught. Not a bad episode and the punchlines cracked in the right places. Gilgun as Rudy was great to watch. His performance was well conducted and had fit his character spot on.

Story was not great, it fell too much into Shaun of the Dead fields but Overman did correct in measuring the drama and comedy aspect of the TV show. Gore was blown out and gross, laying out the supernatural aspect of the show. The lines were fairly descent and not too out of place but I did feel Simon's knowledge is based on a particular Capcom game and him admittedly stating the zombies are "Gonna keep us until we're trapped in a shopping centre" as the basis and reason for killing all the zombies as opposed to "Keeping off the grid" was quite forced. Although, I did appreciate the irony of cheerleaders in the mix. Mr. Miggles was one of the great additions to this episode. Just the name itself and what he did to that poor old woman is tongue-in-cheek laughter at it's best.

Directed by Will Sinclair, the person who did the 3rd and 5th episode of this Season really knew how to not let the rest go low key. This was just a "filler" as such, but more-so a good attempt to put Kelly's relationship with Seth to the test. I thank Sinclair and Overman for a gritty but fun installment of utter blood-lust and throttling escapades. The majority of the cast did well to react to zombie cheerleaders and their acting was pretty good. Special effects were not so fluid but its not terrible either. I felt Seth's girlfriend was not given much justice character wise and in performance as well but I'll get on to that later.

Bad:

I have watched every single episode of Misfits and this Season lacked a certain balance and focus, which the last two had. Enough of the "Nathan come back charade", Sheehan isn't coming back and not for awhile. In regular TV, it often happens, get used to it. Even if Sheehan was to come back, what makes you think his character would be able to maintain his cheeky gags with a new role as a father? Overman had some ingenious concepts that now reshaped his setting within his universe but the story now adopts this "story arc" way of writing than "character arc". I guess what I'm trying to say is as a whole, this episode and the entire series could have done better with more clear themes that doesn't allow it to go way off. You can tell other writers "chipped in" as the style is different.

The problem I had with this episode save for the creator finding new ways to kill probation workers (only kidding) is it's not that it was not entertaining but it's just that there's nothing here that benefits the series and was really just fun. Silly, but practically a good run. What didn't help is Seth's girlfriend being turned from a likable supporting character that could bust Seth's chops into another "villain of the week" role. Worse off is her urges, although well put on, is pretty flat. Her character wasn't developed enough. Nothing much was going on save for cheerleaders doing their practice on the site, Simon's fetish of dress up, Rudy's inferior fear of cheerleaders and Kelly's temporary break up. I was dissatisfied with the special effects usage on Seth's old flame's Resurrection but the editing and production weren't too bad.

Overall:

A zombie love fest at it's worst, it can beat Lesbian Vampires without swinging a bat. Overman didn't do too bad on script-writing duty, but it could of been done better. I really liked the final showdown with the zombie-cheerleaders even though I haven't got the slightest clue why they're at the centre. The Misfits themselves were bad as hell; Simon as the leader is smooth, Curtis I'm glad is over that shape-shifting mess, Kelly says it like it is, Rudy is just a prat and Alisha I wish had more clout. The visuals was clear-cut, gory and in your face with poor effects, okay-ish acting but nice directing, screams and humour I laughed my arse off. The next and final episode looks promising and I hope I see more Super Hoodie. Next post is back to films.

- Written by Kbon.