Article first published as TV Review: KIDDING on Seat42F.
Jim Carrey returns to television in the new Showtime
series, KIDDING, which has thus far aired two episodes. Carrey plays
Jeff, who is a very successful children’s television host known as Mr.
Pickles. Sort of a Mr. Rogers-type with the marketing reach of Disney,
Mr. Pickles is not just a person, he’s a brand. But when one of his twin
sons dies in a tragic car accident and his family falls apart, Jeff
fights with his boss to take the show a little darker and deal with his
loss on-air.
Carrey is a fantastic
actor who hasn’t always done projects worthy of his talent. KIDDING is
not a dumb comedy by any stretch; it’s a smart, complex look at grief
and different ways of dealing with it. Jeff is a very odd person, his
on-screen persona his true personality, not an act, and he has a unique
viewpoint on the world. Carrey is a rare actor who can make that seem
sincere while also allowing the pain to peek through. It’s a really
excellent performance.
KIDDING would
be fine as a one-man showcase, and indeed, Carrey has earned such a
series. However, he is surrounded by a fantastic ensemble that really
enriches the story being told. Frank Langella (The Americans) plays
Sebastian, Jeff’s boss who is also his father, making that relationship a
lot more layered than it would otherwise be. Puppeteer Deirdre
(Catherine Keener, Being John Malkovich) that works on the show is also
Jeff’s sister. His estranged wife, Jill (Judy Greer, Arrested
Development), is a nurse at the Mr. Pickles Cancer Wing. This blurring
of the personal and professional really informs on Jeff as a character,
and they all carry their own weight rather effectively, more than just
there to serve him, though they do that, too.
The
series is both grounded and slightly fantastical, mostly in the way it
applies to its lead character. Jeff doesn’t have a firm grasp on reality
because he always sees and assumes the best. His show can exist in a
place like that, and he’s been able to get away with it because of the
lucky life he’s led. But when issues crash down on him, it’s very
interesting to see how someone like Jeff weathers the storm.
I
love that this is a very dark drama, but that it has room for small
bits of comedy. And I do mean small. The opening sequence of episode
two, which involves a car theft, is the funniest thing in the initial
pair of installments, and no main characters are really part of it. It’s
telling that the story has to step away from its leads to find
something so hilarious, because their lives are not equipped to handle
it currently.
And yet, there’s
something about this show that I’m just not sure about yet. Partly it’s
because Jeff’s viewpoint, which the audience is mainly guided by, is
definitely not the true telling. Partly because we’re still missing key
pieces of the emotional story. Partly because Jeff might very well be a
powder keg that is going to explode before long. And partly because
there are small hanging threads from episode to episode that beg to be
resolved. KIDDING seems like something you’d have to make it through a
whole season of before you could properly judge it.
I
like this show a lot, mainly because of the actors and the basic
premise. In the details, sometimes it can be a little slow, sometimes a
little obtuse, but overall, it’s interesting and feels unique. I am very
curious to see where it goes and if Carrey can keep his performance
reigned in, as the subtlety is very much working for him.
KIDDING airs Sundays at 10PM on Showtime.
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