Article first published as BULL Review on Seat42F.
CBS
has a new hour-long procedural called BULL. The titular character runs a
company that takes studying jury composition and manipulation to a
whole new level. They analyze who is serving the court, create and test
their own scenarios in the lab, and then apply them to real-world (well,
fictional-real-world) cases that are being tried right now.
Michael Weatherly (NCIS) stars as Dr. Jason Bull,
the head of the organization, who cannot stop evaluating people, making
for kind of a lonely existence. He may be emotionally detached, but his
office is very busy, with team members including Benny Colon (Freddy
Rodriguez, Six Feet Under), Marissa Morgan (Geneva Carr, Law &
Order: Criminal Intent), Danny James (Jaime Lee Kirchner, Mercy), Cable
McCrory (Annabelle Attanasio, The Knick), and Chunk Palmer (Christopher
Jackson, Oz), most of whom are familiar, forgettable types.
The concept itself sounds novel, right?
We’ve got plenty of police and legal procedurals, but how many of them
pay any attention to the jury, even for a single hour? In this, BULL is
taking an entirely new approach to a tried-and-true formula.
But it’s going a little too
tried-and-true. It’s very clear from the onset that this series will be
case-of-the-week. Several good actors are brought in for the pilot, but
while or two have recurring potential, for the most part, everything is
over by the end of the hour. It’s a repetitive tact that has gotten very
boring on dozens of other shows before this point, so I am more than a
little disappointed that BULL follows that exact same, far-too-familiar
pattern.
Not only that, it doesn’t even really
stick to its concept. The soul of this is working with the juries and
the lawyers, and that’s completely understandable. But the pilot leaves
time not to just to tie up the court case, but to reveal the truth
behind the case and follow it through to its end. There’s really no
realistic way for Bull
to be involved in that, similar to shows like Castle where a non-cop
hero is somehow integrated onto the force, and because it’s a tag at the
end of the installment, it feels super forced and hokey. If you’re
looking for a grounded, realistic take on the judicial system, this
program is not that.
All of it feels very scripted. From the techniques and technology Bull’s
company uses, to the twist in their client’s story, to the attitudes of
most of the characters, there is nothing fresh present. It’s a mishmash
of what other series have done, poorly strewn together as if by someone
who is familiar with this type of show, but who hasn’t made anything
like it in the past.
Which may make sense when you learn that BULL was created by Phil McGraw. Yep, the
Dr. Phil of daytime television fame. True, he had help from House
executive producer Paul Attanasio. But BULL is based on Phil’s early
career (presumably with a lot of liberties taken) and is from the brain
of the former psychologist. Whether you approve of him or not, Phil has
obviously had great success with one television program, but that does
not translate into this new project, which is a totally different beast.
What strikes me is that, in spite of all
the flaws, Weatherly is still good. He has embodied an interesting,
complex character (only talking about the character, no judgment one way
or the other on the real Phil), and it isn’t just a mimicry of the
celebrity the show is based on. Unfortunately, that is not nearly enough
to save the series, especially when his leading role is forced to
exceed the bounds he should be constrained by. This series is absolutely
one to skip.
BULL airs Tuesdays at 9/8c on CBS beginning this week.
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