SyFy premiered a new show, Being Human, last night. Not that it's really all that new. Made in Canada, and also airing up there, the series is based on the British series of the same name, that is about to start a third series. As such, this isn't exactly an original, fresh show. However, for most of us residing here in the states, this will be our first taste of the show, and it left a happy flavor in my mouth.
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We first meet Josh (Sam Huntington, Superman Returns, Fanboys), a werewolf who ran away from his family after the change. We're told that because of his condition, he hasn't had sex in two years. I don't know why, since I thought werewolves only turned on the full moon. That still leaves plenty of free nights. But Josh is the soul of the piece, the one who voices the alienated feelings. He also seems to be a truly good person. He's a dear friend to the vamp, finding in him a kindred outcast, earnestly suggesting they get an apartment together. Within moments of the pilot starting, I was hooked on Josh's arc and character, completely identifying with his emotions, if not his monster-ness. A line about how most people get to wake up from their nightmares sealed the deal. Josh is the best.
Then there's Aidan (Sam Witwer Smallville, Battlestar Galactica), the vampire. The audience is led to believe that Aidan is also good, having been off of human blood and away from his kind for some time, not unlike most of the vampire heroes modern audiences root for. Yet, his behavior in the first episode tells a different story. First he kills a girl named Rebecca (Sarah Allen) while sleeping with her. Then he allows his sire, a vampire named Bishop (Mark Pellegrino, Lost, Dexter), who would like to bring Aidan back to his roots, to lead him to some sort of feeding club, where he drinks more human blood for the source. In case you didn't catch it, Bishop is a bad influence. I assume Aidan will turn out to be good, since he's billed as one of the main characters, and never portrayed in a dark, sinister light in advertisements, but I didn't see much to like about him this week.
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Sally is foisted on the guys more out of circumstance than want. In a personality swap from the rest of the episode, Aidan sticks up for her, while Josh wants her gone. Stuck in one place, Sally didn't figure much into the first episode, and it's hard to image she will truly ever be important unless she can leave the house and / or interact with her environment. As such, I predict she'll accomplish both soon.
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Overall, I am quite pleased, more so than I expected to be, with this pilot. SyFy more often than not makes lousy or cheesy shows and TV movies (Battlestar Galactica and Caprica excepted), so I'm glad to see some high quality programming. I can get past some of the corniness of other series on the network, but I think Being Human is already the best made, best acted, best written show on the network currently. I look forward to watching some more, and urge you to check it out.
Being Human airs Monday nights at 10 p.m. on SyFy.
Article first published as TV Review: Being Human Moves Into the Neighborhood on Blogcritics.
Being Human airs Monday nights at 10 p.m. on SyFy.
Article first published as TV Review: Being Human Moves Into the Neighborhood on Blogcritics.
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