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	<title>The HeldenFiles Online &#187; Barry Corbin</title>
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	<link>http://www.ohiomm.com/blogs/heldenfiles</link>
	<description>Movies, TV and Popular Culture with Rich Heldenfels</description>
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		<title>Weekend Notebooks, Part 1 &amp; 2</title>
		<link>http://www.ohiomm.com/blogs/heldenfiles/2007/08/weekend-notebook-part-1/</link>
		<comments>http://www.ohiomm.com/blogs/heldenfiles/2007/08/weekend-notebook-part-1/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 18 Aug 2007 13:57:28 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Rich Heldenfels</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Barry Corbin]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Damages]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[High School Musical]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[House]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[LiLo]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Mad Men]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Media]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Rescue Me]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Superbad]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Closer]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[My review of &#034;High School Musical 2&#034; is here. My review of &#034;Superbad&#034; is here.
After the jump, Barry Corbin, and the perils of magazine deadlines &#8230; and a new part 2, with &#034;Damages,&#034; &#034;Mad Men,&#034; &#034;Rescue Me&#034; (so beware of spoilers if you haven&#039;t caught up)&#8230; 

Barry Corbin finally appear as Brenda&#039;s father on &#034;The [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p></p><p>My review of &#034;High School Musical 2&#034; is <a href="http://www.ohio.com/entertainment/9211956.html">here.</a> My review of &#034;Superbad&#034; is<a href="http://www.ohio.com/entertainment/movies/9211951.html"> here</a>.</p>
<p>After the jump, Barry Corbin, and the perils of magazine deadlines &#8230; and a new part 2, with &#034;Damages,&#034; &#034;Mad Men,&#034; &#034;Rescue Me&#034; (so beware of spoilers if you haven&#039;t caught up)&#8230; </p>
<p><span id="more-1253"></span></p>
<p>Barry Corbin finally appear as Brenda&#039;s father on &#034;The Closer,&#034; and what fun it was. He is such a solid actor, able to play the comedy and drama in a character, sometimes within the same scene. He can, as he did on &#034;The Closer,&#034; intimidate another character (in this case, Fritz), then make it a joke &#8212; and still make you remember the intimidation even as he is smiling. All that, and him playing off both Kyra Sedgwick and Frances Sternhagen. TV heaven, dropped in a sturdy episode. (The elevator scene!)</p>
<p>Talking to some of the &#034;Closer&#034; fans around my office, though, reminded me of the varieties of viewing habits. They were surprised to see Corbin&#039;s bald head, since they remembered him in the main from &#034;Northern Exposure,&#034; where he had hair. But I;m sure there are other viewers &#8212; like my bride &#8211; who think of him the way he looked on &#034;The Closer,&#034; because it is close to the way he looks on &#034;One Tree Hill.&#034;</p>
<p>I made a magazine run last night, mainly to check on the Allure and OK! pieces about Britney Spears. (This is, after all, part of my pop culture mandate.) And while doing so, I began thinking about an item for tomorrow&#039;s HeldenFiles, probably to be called &#034;Fun at the Newsstand.&#034;</p>
<p>And what was that fun? Well, there was Lindsay Lohan on the cover of the September issue of Elle, with the quote &#034;I&#039;m glad I went to rehab.&#034; But, as the magazine notes in the article, it&#039;s from an interview done just before her Memorial Day disaster, and the ensuing trip to rehab (which are at least described in the text with the interview) &#8212; and therefore well before her most recent troubles and her current reported stint in a Utah facility.</p>
<p>Then there&#039;s the Summer 2007 issue of In Style Weddings. Jennifer Morrison of &#034;House&#034; on the cover. Lovey-dovey pictures inside of Morrison and co-star/fiance Jesse Spencer. Description of wedding plans, discussion of The Dress.</p>
<p>They called off the engagement this week.</p>
<p>Part 2: I&#039;ve been doing some catchup this weekend, for the past week&#039;s &#034;Damages,&#034; &#034;Rescue Me&#034; and &#034;Mad Men.&#034; I also have a couple of upcoming &#034;Mad Men&#034; I may get so, although our Viewing Of The Day is the forthcoming DVD of &#034;Heroes.&#034;</p>
<p>I&#039;m still watching &#034;Damages&#034; because I keep expecting it to get better. And every now and then there&#039;s something I like a great deal, like the look on Ted Danson&#039;s face when he talks about the cost of shipping a grenade. But I still think it&#039;s mainly implausible melodrama, and a clunky one at that. The time shifts from the present day (post killing) to the past (case in progress) and even to the deeper past (Florida) are just distracting; once the killing was established in the first episode, it should have settled for a more linear narrative from the case to the present day. The everybody&#039;s-got-secrets subtext is overworked, too, mainly because the secrets so far just aren&#039;t that interesting. But Glenn Close is growing on me, her behavioral tics seeming more understandable &#8212; at least, if we accept the idea that she is crazy as a bedbug. &#034;Damages&#034; has come one of those big potboiler novels that I&#039;m determined to finish, even if doing so isn&#039;t all that enjoyable.</p>
<p>&#034;Mad Men,&#034; in contrast, is just plain terrific. It also involves a world full of secrets, in particular those of Don Draper (the superb Jon Hamm), who has changed his name and abandoned his old life &#8212; including, we now know, an adoring younger brother. The story of Don and his wife Betty (January Jones) by itself is enough to carry a pretty good show, but the weaving in of other characters and stories remains strong. And unlike &#034;Damages,&#034; where I feel as if I&#039;m constantly having to fit someone new into the fabric, &#034;Mad Men&#034; does not overburden us in a given week by trying to tell too many stories.</p>
<p>Then there&#039;s &#034;Rescue Me.&#034; For a moment this week, it had me &#8212; in the scene where Tommy is sitting on the rooftop and talking about what it means to bury your child. coming after we&#039;ve gotten to the depth of Mike the ex-probie&#039;s pain. There was also the sheer amusement of the looks on Lou and Franco when they finally see what the new chief has been rumored to have. But I&#039;m still not feeling that great old &#034;Rescue Me&#034; vibe. The intervention scene never quite worked. The baby-kidnapping &#8212; or was it a baby-un-kidnapping? &#8212; felt fake. The Gina Gershon scene, pointless. More and more this seems like one of those shows that had a season or two of greatness and now just can&#039;t figure out how to quit.</p>
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