Article first published as RECKLESS Review on Seat42F.
CBS has a new crime series, which
premiered tonight, called RECKLESS. Masquerading as a typical cop or
lawyer show, it’s a combination of both, mixed with a heavy dose of
soapy drama. There are short-run cases, such as the one in the pilot,
but there is also a bigger arc involving a departmental scandal which
will likely play out over the course of the summer. Everyone has
secrets, and the draw will be in wondering what twist will come next.
RECKLESS is not a high-quality show. You
won’t find many of those on the broadcast networks, and certainly not
during the summer. But it’s a smart move for CBS to move beyond standard
procedurals and try something more salacious, a la ABC, especially
during the warm months when many TVs are turned off. I do wonder why the
network chose Sundays to air it, though, since that’s the night of the
week with the most competition, and while RECKLESS is enjoyable, it’s
doubtful it can compete with the likes of True Blood and Falling Skies.
On most shows these days, the police are
the good guys. We might find a bad seed or two among the contingent,
but rarely is there a widespread issue within the force, unless it’s a
really meaty, intense drama, which this show is not. RECKLESS is
different in that most of the boys in blue in Charleston are not on the
up and up. Whether sleeping with fellow officers or covering up for
their buddies that do, there is much to loathe in this unit, and little
to admire.
The main thread kicks off when Lee Ann
Marcus (Georgina Haig, Fringe) decides to break up with her boyfriend,
fellow officer Terry McCandless (Shawn Hatosy, Southland). Terry isn’t
happy about this and shares some of Lee Ann’s dirty photos and such,
which were sent through departmental communications. Their boss, Holland
Knox (Michael Gladis, Mad Men), fires Lee Ann, but only lightly
reprimands Terry. Feeling discriminated against, Lee Ann seeks the
representation of lawyer Jamie Sawyer (Anna Wood, Deception).
Jamie is the main woman we’re supposed
to root for, but she’s not exactly pure. She thinks nothing of bending,
or even outright breaking, the rules in order to win her case. She may
have noble intentions, or so we’re left to assume, but that doesn’t mean
she can’t get in trouble, and perhaps she should. Even when she is
framed for a minor crime in this episode, one has to wonder if she’s
just serving time for something else she did but didn’t get caught.
There is room for some debate over
RECKLESS’s portrayal of women. Lee Ann steps across the line of her own
free will, and her punishment is justified. The problem at hand is that
the rules are not applied equally across the board. The good ol’ boys of
the south stick together and feel above the law. So in a situation
where no one has done right, can we blame one party more than the other?
Yes, but not completely, making it hard to really care about too many
of the players.
Of course, besides all the legal and cop
stuff, there’s plenty of room for romance. Jamie smolders whenever she
encounters city attorney Roy Rayder (Cam Gigandet, The O.C.), but she
also has regular hookups with Preston Cruz (Adam Rodriguez, CSI: Miami),
who dons the uniform. Jamie can’t help but shit where she eats, like
most TV characters, and so causes much of her own trouble.
If you’re looking for a sexy guilty
pleasure show that’s entertaining but doesn’t make you think too hard,
RECKLESS should fit that bill fine. That it’s a notch or two better than
CBS’s regular season fare, The Good Wife excepted, may surprise and
impress, but it still runs behind its cable counterparts.
RECKLESS airs Sundays at 9 p.m. ET on CBS.
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