Drive -- new Fox show

I think it starts tomorrow – Sunday. I wasn’t going to watch but I just found out that Nathan Fillion stars, and Tim Minear is involved too.

The bio of Fillion’s character has this:

Alex Tully chose landscaping because working with soil and plants struck him as a simple, contemplative profession. He created a serene life for himself and his adoring wife, Kathryn, which all came to a screeching halt when Kathryn suddenly went missing. Desperate to get her back, Alex was coerced into the race. He doesn’t know where Kathryn is, who has her, or whether she’s been harmed. But he does know that if wants to see her alive again, he must win the race.

Does that sound to you like the show has an underlying mystery, like Lost and Heroes and Jericho? I’m not sure that’s a good thing. Fox is just as bad as the rest of the networks for cancelling low-rated shows, so if there is a mystery, we might never find the answer.

Yeah, well… I think I’m interested enough to give it a try, especiall for Nathan’s sake. One sound bite from the promos sounded rather Mal-ish:

Some woman: Cheat? How do you plan to cheat in a race with no rules??

Nathan: I dunno, okay? Gimme a moment, I missed the damn orientation.

(Quotes approximate.)

I’m going to give it a shot. We’ll see.

– IG

Melanie Lynskey and Nathan Fillion are in it. How bad could it be?

Another one that gave me the happy wiggies:

"Which situation do you think is gonna have a better outcome…

The one where you come out and face me…

Or the one where I come find you?" :smiley:

The Sun Times reviewer hated it as ridiculous, he didn’t really seem like a Nathan Fillion fan. The other reviews I’ve read took it as escapist fun – an impossible premise (how could this super secret cross country race have remained super secret for so long with so many incidents surrounding it) - but fun nonetheless, especially if you like watching fast cars. I saw a quote from Fillion himself saying this will be his introduction to NASCAR fans.

Saw it last night.

I enjoyed it. There were some funny moments (like the orientation line) and plenty of tension. I’ll keep watching for sure, even if just for Nathan.

My wife and I just finished watching it.

Well, it’s okay. Nowhere near as good as Firefly, but as good as Wonderfalls. It seems like it may have more mass appeal than either of those shows.

I think Amy Acker should have been the lady with the baby instead of Fillion’s wife.

[spoiler]

When they revealed the truck driver had his wife in the back, I cried out, “Lame!” Then again, when the daughter comented on, “blasting off into the unknown,” both I and the show cried out, “Lame!”

I really should have seen the connection between Corrina(sp.) and the girl at the start of part two. [/spoiler]

We liked it. We’ll keep watching, but they can’t expect us to wait 7 years to see who wins? Can they?

I love Nathan Fillion, but… it’s going to die. I just have a feeling…

So… the feeling that you have about this… on a scale of good to bad, how would you describe it? :smiley:

I realize it’s almost certainly doomed, but it’s not like that’ll make me do anything as drastic as not watch it.

The show is also the project of Tim Minear, who helped develop it and write it. That was enough for me to try it and stick with it for several episodes at least. For those who don’t know, Minear was one of the creative forces behind ‘Firefly’, “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” and “Wonderfalls”. I’ve yet to see anything he’s done that I didn’t love.

The reviewers who panned it because the premise is ‘silly’ just don’t get it. Is it any sillier than a high school girl who fights vampires? Or cowboys in space? Or a worker in a gift shop where the figurines start talking to her?

It’s not the premise that matters - the premise is just the backdrop for telling interesting stories and painting interesting characters. ‘Drive’ has a premise that allows the writers to be extremely creative. It’s basically a road picture - each week, the contestants will be visiting a new place, solving a new puzzle, and interacting with each other. It’s a very loose structure. They can do stories about the people they meet along the way. Because there’s a big mystery behind it all, they can explore that. Because many of the characters are mysterious, they can do backstory episodes. The race just pulls it all together.

There’s a similarity to ‘Lost’ in that regard. Lost has the big mystery, but a big part of the show is the backstory behind the characters - who they really are, what they did in their ‘other’ life, etc.

Anyway, I watched the first two episodes and liked them. Some good wit, some likeable characters, an interesting premise.

Here’s a non-spoilered summary of what the show is about: Nathan Fillion is a gardener who’s wife has been mysteriiously abducted. He finds a cell phone which rings, and he’s told that he must drive to a certain location if he wants to ‘get back what he lost’. So he gets there, and finds all kinds of other people there. Turns out, they’re all in a secret race across the country. The winner gets 32 million dollars. Losers get…something else. Some of the people are coerced to be there, others are in it for the adventure or the money. But all were specifically chosen for the race. We don’t know why. There are hints that Nathan Fillion’s character is perhaps something a little more interesting than a gardener - he has a past that’s only hinted at. Other characters also seem to have issues.

Anyway, they have to race to a certain place based on clues that are text-messaged to them. When they get there, they are given the next clue and have to head to the next place. The race isn’t just speed, although it’s advantageous to get to each checkpoint before others do. But it’s also a battle of wits and strategy. Directives can be misleading. Simple clues turn out to be more complex. You have to think.

That’s the setup. The first two episodes focus on the mechanics of the race, the introduction of the characters, enough backstory for the characters to get you caring a bit about them, etc.

Sam, thanks for the summary. It sounds fascinating. I’m putting it on the TiVo before I forget.

I am looking forward to it.

Tivo is set, and away we go. I’ll waTch anything Nathan Fillion does.

Wait, Amy Acker is in it? Count me in! More ex-Whedonverse goodness!

Brian

A question for all the Fillion-bots: do you just block out *Two Guys, a Girl, and a Pizza Place * or did you really think it was a good show?!?

That said, I’ll be watching *Drive * tomorrow.

Dude, that show was like, the greatest thing ever until Water’s Edge :smiley:

Seriously, I was amused to see him show up in a movie on the Lifetime channel, almost as amused as I was about 30 seconds later when I saw a gunfight in a movie on the Lifetime channel. It was just like watching Firefly, but without the horses and spaceships and good music and excellent writing and… :stuck_out_tongue:

I was a Two Guys & a Girl fan. I hated Nathan as a bad guy in Buffy.

Never mind Fillion. Melanie Lynskey is in this (so Two & a Half Men is dead to me), & Kristen Lehman (whom I’ve loved since seeing her in an Outer Limits.) I have to give it a chance.

Heh, I rather liked him as a bad guy, to be honest. After his first appearance, I was able to separate Mal from Caleb pretty easily, which I think says a lot either for his execution of the two roles, or at least for my ability to suspend disbelief.