Article first published as THE GOOD FIGHT Review on Seat42F.
If you’re a fan of The Good Wife, as I
am, you’ve likely eagerly been awaiting the spin-off, THE GOOD FIGHT,
which finally premieres this Sunday on CBS. The series, which will only
be available via CBS’s All Access streaming service after the pilot
airs, is set one year after last spring’s series finale. While much of
the show is the same, including plenty of returning faces, it also feels
wholly different in both positive and negative ways.
I’m not going to lie, I was unpleasantly
jarred when THE GOOD FIGHT fights first catches up with Diane Lockhart
(Christine Baranski), whose firm is now called Lockhart, Decker,
Gussman, Lee, Lyman, Gilbert-Lurie, Tannebaum, & Associates. Try
saying that a few times fast. Not only has the name changed, but so have
the sets. Gone are the familiar law offices we saw over seven seasons,
and even Diane’s recognizable corner space. Instead, after merging with
two other organizations, the digs are brand-new.
I can’t help but feel that change was
unnecessary. While it makes for an easier separation between Diane and
her practice, plot-wise, the same story could be accomplished without
blowing up what came before. Given how much THE GOOD FIGHT keeps
reminding us that this is set in the same universe, it feels very wrong
to begin with the off-putting setting.
To play devil’s advocate, maybe this is
done on purpose so that viewers aren’t sad when Diane does find the
exit. Rather than hoping for some last-minute save that gets her back
where we’ve come to think she belongs, by not having that home to return
to any more, there’s no compelling reason to want her to go back. In
that sense, it makes for a clean break.
In the first two episodes, Diane shares
the central limelight with Maia Rindell (Rose Leslie, Game of Thrones,
Downton Abbey), her goddaughter. Having just passed the bar, Maia is
excited to go to work for Diane and the rest. But she barely gets
settled in before her father, Henry (Paul Guilfoyle, CSI), is arrested
for stealing millions of dollars from wealthy clients, including Diane.
With her girlfriend and lawyer telling her to stay away from her mother,
Lenore (Bernadette Peters, Mozart in the Jungle), until things get
settled, which could take years, Maia is suddenly left with no job or
family to speak of.
In a way, Maia is kind of like the new
Alicia. Diane is somewhat of a mentor to her, but they aren’t super
close friends. Maia is going through rough scandal because of what a
loved one did, which makes her presence in a court room a distraction,
welcome or not. She is young and strong and building her life, like
Alicia was doing for the second time when The Good Wife started.
However, there are some very stark
differences in THE GOOD FIGHT, too. The firm for which Diane and Maia go
to work, where Lucca (Cush Jumbo) has already relocated prior to the
series begins, is quite different from any seen on The Good Wife. THE
GOOD FIGHT has different music, different lighting, and different
direction, too, making it feel like its own thing right away. Plus, it’s
hard not to mention the cursing, which feels natural to the characters,
more so than avoiding it did in certain parts of The Good Wife.
Once THE GOOD FIGHT settles in to what
it is, getting past the initial event, it quickly gets very good. It has
solid cases and interesting ongoing narrative arcs. It isn’t a copy of
its predecessor, but there are a LOT of returning characters, including
Sarah Steel in a welcome lead role as Marissa. It also has a lot of new
roles, such as Adrian Boseman (Delroy Lindo, Blood & Oil) and
Barbara Kolstad (Erica Tazel, Justified), partners at Diane’s new job.
It has something to say, as The Good Wife did, but is fresh in its
approach to it. This balance of continuation and completely new is
effective, and I wish I’d had more than two episodes to watch ahead of
time.
Of course, the big question is whether
to shell out for CBS All Access. As someone who canceled cable, I went
ahead and got my subscription. It’s how I’ve continued to watch CBS
shows. However, were I still getting a strong cable signal into the
house (my antenna is unreliable), I’m not sure I’d want to pay $10 for a
single show. (As someone who’s had a DVR since 2005, the cheaper
subscription that includes commercials is not even something I’d
consider.) The network doesn’t have enough offerings to fully justify
the expense, even for someone who has cut the cord, but I do it
begrudgingly for now, especially with Star Trek: Discovery joining THE
GOOD FIGHT later this year. While I want people to subscribe and watch
this show so it can continue, I can’t blame anyone who doesn’t, as the
network has not made a compelling case for its ridiculously high fee. So
I won’t recommend signing up, though I selfishly hope lots of people
do.
THE GOOD FIGHT begins this Sunday on CBS and CBS All Access, continuing only on the latter from week two onward.
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