Author Topic: The Riches  (Read 1831 times)

kosmo vinyl

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The Riches
« on: March 15, 2007, 09:42:00 am »
Has anyone seen The Riches staring Eddie Izzard and Minnie Driver on FX yet  based on the first episode it's top shelf entertainment, well written, acted and very engaging.  the characters are carrying some serious baggage...  It about a family of travellers,   who are the modern day equivalent of gypsies, who go from small scams to attempting to take on the identity of a dead couple.  Eddie is perfect for playing the part of a con man...
T.Rex

TheDirector217

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Re: The Riches
« Reply #1 on: March 15, 2007, 10:44:00 am »
It was pretty tight.  Well-acted & written show. The high school reunion where Eddie Izzard & his kids robbed all those cats was some classic shit. Plus for some reason I simply can't explain, Minnie Driver kinda turns me on.

Re: The Riches
« Reply #2 on: March 15, 2007, 11:15:00 am »
Maybe because you are heterosexual after all?
 
 
Quote
Originally posted by TheDirector217:
  It was pretty tight.  Well-acted & written show. The high school reunion where Eddie Izzard & his kids robbed all those cats was some classic shit. Plus for some reason I simply can't explain, Minnie Driver kinda turns me on.

TheDirector217

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Re: The Riches
« Reply #3 on: March 15, 2007, 12:21:00 pm »
Quote
Originally posted by Charlie Nakatestes,Japanese Golfer:
  Maybe because you are heterosexual after all?
 
   
Quote
Originally posted by TheDirector217:
  It was pretty tight.  Well-acted & written show. The high school reunion where Eddie Izzard & his kids robbed all those cats was some classic shit. Plus for some reason I simply can't explain, Minnie Driver kinda turns me on.
[/b]
You may just wanna chill with all that bullshit of challenging people's sexuality.  That's NOT a good look.  It's a music board, little man.  Grow the fuck up.  It's easy to jump out there & be an "e-gangster" from the comforts of the area behind a keyboard, ain't it??? Now proceed to crawl back under your little rock & lead your otherwise unimportant existence.  Thanks for coming. Exit stage left, fucker . . .  :cool:

vansmack

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Re: The Riches
« Reply #4 on: March 15, 2007, 12:23:00 pm »
It's on the TiVo, but we've been busy.  Looking forward to seeing it!
27>34

TheDirector217

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Re: The Riches
« Reply #5 on: March 15, 2007, 12:28:00 pm »
Quote
Originally posted by vansmack:
  It's on the TiVo, but we've been busy.  Looking forward to seeing it!
It's good TV, man. I'm sure you'll enjoy it. And I don't watch a lot of TV. One of those "funny, but it's not supposed to be" shows with a dark twist to it. Lemme know what you think . . .

vansmack

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Re: The Riches
« Reply #6 on: March 21, 2007, 02:16:00 pm »
Saw the Pilot last night - totally bizarre, but great television.  It's a storyline like nothing I've ever seen.  FX is doing some great things these days.  30 days, Starved (now cancelled), Nip/Tuck, Dirt, Always Sunny in Philadelphia, The Shield, Rescue Me and now The Riches...Dark Stuff, but brilliant.
27>34

Bombay Chutney

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Re: The Riches
« Reply #7 on: March 21, 2007, 02:34:00 pm »
Quote
Originally posted by vansmack:
   Starved (now cancelled),
That one didn't last very long.  Good show.

Re: The Riches
« Reply #8 on: March 21, 2007, 02:47:00 pm »
Don't be such a defensive prick. It's very unbecoming of you. I was just wondering why you had difficulty explaining to yourself why Minnie Driver would turn you on? Isn't it obvious why she would turn anyone on?
 
  :cool:  [/b][/quote]

TheDirector217

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Re: The Riches
« Reply #9 on: March 21, 2007, 03:32:00 pm »
Quote
Originally posted by Charlie Nakatestes,Japanese Golfer:
  Don't be such a defensive prick. It's very unbecoming of you. I was just wondering why you had difficulty explaining to yourself why Minnie Driver would turn you on? Isn't it obvious why she would turn anyone on?
 
   :D  
 
 On another note, yeah. I wholeheartedly agree.  Minnie Driver can get it.  THRICE.
 
  <img src="http://aycu15.webshots.com/image/13534/2002273643980920116_rs.jpg" alt=" - " />

Re: The Riches
« Reply #10 on: March 21, 2007, 03:38:00 pm »
No problemo! I'll have to look at that at home. Work blocks my seeing it.

TheDirector217

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Re: The Riches
« Reply #11 on: March 21, 2007, 03:43:00 pm »
Quote
Originally posted by vansmack:
  Saw the Pilot last night - totally bizarre, but great television.  It's a storyline like nothing I've ever seen.  FX is doing some great things these days.  30 days, Starved (now cancelled), Nip/Tuck, Dirt, Always Sunny in Philadelphia, The Shield, Rescue Me and now The Riches...Dark Stuff, but brilliant.
I was hoping you'd dig it. Dark indeed, but my mind state tends to toe the line of fucked up so it's cool.  I actually like Dirt as well.  I never found Courtney Cox all that hot until this show.  Go figure.  She plays a chick devoid of morals or feelings and NOW I think she's kinda hot . . . .

TheDirector217

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Re: The Riches
« Reply #12 on: March 21, 2007, 03:51:00 pm »
Quote
Originally posted by Charlie Nakatestes,Japanese Golfer:
  No problemo! I'll have to look at that at home. Work blocks my seeing it.
No doubt. Beer on me if you're coming to The Stooges. We'll be merry & make jokes about the surrounding humannoids.  
 
 Funny, my work network blocked MY picture as well but not yours with Minnie Driver.  Not that I'm bitching or nothing . . . . I usually don't sweat "famous" chicks, but she just does somthing to me.  Damn, she can get it.  
 
 THRICE . . . .
 
 Post-workout or at the _________ Awards After-Show.

Bags

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Re: The Riches
« Reply #13 on: March 22, 2007, 04:33:00 pm »
I've got both episodes Tivo'd, but haven't had a chance to watch.
 
 March 12, 2007
 TV Review | 'The Riches'
 For This Family of Pros, the Con Is Everything
 By ALESSANDRA STANLEY
 The New York Times
 
 So much research is devoted to studying whether violence on television desensitizes children. Yet nobody seems to worry that adults are becoming inured to excellence.
 
 ??The Riches,? a new series that begins tonight on FX, could serve as the control in a much-needed experiment. It??s so compelling it deserves to be a hit, generating as much media attention and Internet chatter as ??Deadwood,? ??Nip/Tuck? or ??24.? (It would be blasphemy to invoke ??The Sopranos,? since no show is that good, not even ??The Sopranos.?)
 
 So if ??The Riches? does poorly, then it can only mean that there is too much high-quality television driving away the bad.
 
 Some of the danger signs include the ho-hum, seen-it-before syndrome. A synopsis of ??The Riches? ?? a family of Southern grifters con their way into a wealthy gated community ?? sounds vaguely familiar. Some might shrug it off as a cross between ??Weeds,? the Showtime series about a pot-dealing soccer mom and an R-rated ??Beverly Hillbillies.? It??s not the first cable drama centered on an endearing career criminal and his family.
 
 But ??The Riches? has a voice and peculiar style all its own, the comedy always offset by a lurking sense of sadness and menace. The Malloys are Travelers, Gypsy-like nomads who in the United States, most often in the South, live in tight, hierarchical communities. Many survive on thievery and petty scams. After a dispute with the would-be head of their clan, the Malloys steal the community bank and run away.
 
 More through bad luck than serendipity, they assume the identity of a dead couple, Doug and Cherien Rich, and masquerade as a lawyer and a homemaker with three children in private school.
 
 The father, Wayne Malloy, is played by Eddie Izzard, a beloved stand-up comedian and sketch artist in Britain. Minnie Driver plays his wife, Dahlia, a princess of the blood in the realm of the Travelers but in the outside world a woman who has just emerged from a two-year stint in jail with an addiction to cough syrup.
 
 Together, they are superb in ??The Riches,? a couple alternately loving and alienated, winning and disturbing, artful and doomed.
 
 Trading in their battered RV and Louisiana swamplands for a sumptuous pink mansionette with swimming pool, the Malloys pull off their ruse with skill and also childish naïveté. The children do not go to school but are well educated in the arts of forgery, car theft and flimflam. ??Buffer? is the Travelers?? term for civilians, and the Malloys are at first bewildered by and slightly contemptuous of buffer luxuries like the garbage disposal and flat-screen TV.
 
 Slowly the lure of affluence and ease pulls them in. ??This American dream, they don??t just give it to you with a big old ribbon and a bow,? Dahlia scolds her husband. ??If we want it, we have take it, do whatever it takes to hold on to it till they rip it out of our cold dead hands.?
 
 Wayne, who never went beyond the seventh grade, talks his way into a highly-paid job as a corporate lawyer. When her children are summarily rejected by a snooty private school, Dahlia pulls off an elaborate con on the head mistress and succeeds in enrolling them.
 
 Tipsy with their new life, the Malloys come to believe in their own finesse and good fortune, unaware that Dale Malloy (Todd Stashwick), a cousin and the brutal leader of the Travelers, is determined to hunt them down.
 
 Cael, 17 (Noel Fisher), who left a girlfriend back at the camp, is the wariest in the group, worried that his silver-tongued father and erratic, strong-willed mother have no idea what they are in for and no strategy to get out. Dehliah, 16 (Shannon Woodward), is more trusting, but she is quickly charmed by the boy next door. The youngest, Sam (Aidan Mitchell), is brainy, artistic and prefers to dress as a girl, a choice his family accepts but that he must conceal to the outside world.
 
 Wayne finds a way into the world of business meetings and country-club golf through Hugh Panetta (Gregg Henry), a self-made tycoon with Ted Turner panache and an Enronian honor code. He invites Wayne to his mansion, boasting, ??Its modeled on Hermann Göring??s summer place.? His hobby is to sit on his patio and fire a gun at targets covered with the faces of people who get on his nerves, from Rush Limbaugh to Alan Dershowitz.
 
 When Hugh offers Wayne a job as a lawyer in his real-estate empire, Wayne isn??t sure what ??in house,? means and repeats the words thoughtfully until Hugh supplies the rest, ??in-house counsel.? But Wayne cements the deal with a con man??s bluff, taming the bullying Hugh with a game of Russian roulette.
 
 ??A good lawyer makes you believe the truth,? Wayne says after aiming a gun at his future employer??s head. ??But Hugh, you know what a great lawyer does? He makes you believe the lie.?
 
 Hugh gives him the job, telling Doug that he??s a sick fellow, ??and I like that in a liar.?
 
 Viewers will also learn to like these liars.
 
 ??The Riches? is that rare thing, a dark, sophisticated series that speaks to our most childlike natures. Just as little boys and girls dress up as the Little Mermaid or pretend they are enrolled at Hogwarts, the Malloys tempt even stand-up adults to assume a new identity and live it to the fullest ?? on someone else??s MasterCard.