AKA
10-17-2004, 04:08 PM
Let me just start off by saying that Growing Pains was one of my favorite shows when I was a kid. I watched it religiously every week, and although I'd never buy it on DVD, I'll watch the occasional rerun.
That said, curiosity killed the cat. I had to watch the reunion. Now, I didn't have high hopes for it to begin with, but I didn't know it was going to be this bad.
First of all, let me address the house. I'll put aside for a moment the fact that they sold the house and moved to Washington, D.C. in the final episode.
It looks like they really tried to make the house they used look like the original set, but I couldn't suspend disbelief for a second. Alan Thicke's character alluded to a renovation. Must have been one hell of a remodel. Who did they hire? Ty Pennington and the cast of Extreme Makeover: Home Edition?
If they wanted viewers to believe this was the same house from the series, they really should have spent a couple of thousand dollars to build a replica of the set (assuming the original set is long gone). The Brady Bunch accomplished this fifteen years ago. Why couldn't GP succeed at it today?
I mentioned the move to Washington, D.C. above. I'm really not satisfied with the half-assed explanation we were given in the special as to why they were supposedly back where they started. Alan Thicke said something like "Unlike '92, we're going to sell it for real this time." Nice try, writers, but I need more than that.
As for the acting, it was pretty piss-poor. Jeremy Miller and Ashley Johnson seemed like cardboard cutouts, while most of the non-series regulars were horrible (especially the child actress who played Mike's oldest daughter; she needed a muzzle).
And the writing? So, so bad. A few groaners were the allusions to the fact that Growing Pains was a TV series. "...166 episodes...," "...every Tuesday night between 8:30 and 9...," and the Leonardo DiCaprio jab. The '80s references were a real drag, too.
Of course the plot has been done numerous times on various sitcoms.
I also wanted to mention that I almost wanted to vomit when the theme song was re-created at the end. Yuck.
I'm really sorry I'm trashing this. I wanted it to be better, but it wasn't.
That said, curiosity killed the cat. I had to watch the reunion. Now, I didn't have high hopes for it to begin with, but I didn't know it was going to be this bad.
First of all, let me address the house. I'll put aside for a moment the fact that they sold the house and moved to Washington, D.C. in the final episode.
It looks like they really tried to make the house they used look like the original set, but I couldn't suspend disbelief for a second. Alan Thicke's character alluded to a renovation. Must have been one hell of a remodel. Who did they hire? Ty Pennington and the cast of Extreme Makeover: Home Edition?
If they wanted viewers to believe this was the same house from the series, they really should have spent a couple of thousand dollars to build a replica of the set (assuming the original set is long gone). The Brady Bunch accomplished this fifteen years ago. Why couldn't GP succeed at it today?
I mentioned the move to Washington, D.C. above. I'm really not satisfied with the half-assed explanation we were given in the special as to why they were supposedly back where they started. Alan Thicke said something like "Unlike '92, we're going to sell it for real this time." Nice try, writers, but I need more than that.
As for the acting, it was pretty piss-poor. Jeremy Miller and Ashley Johnson seemed like cardboard cutouts, while most of the non-series regulars were horrible (especially the child actress who played Mike's oldest daughter; she needed a muzzle).
And the writing? So, so bad. A few groaners were the allusions to the fact that Growing Pains was a TV series. "...166 episodes...," "...every Tuesday night between 8:30 and 9...," and the Leonardo DiCaprio jab. The '80s references were a real drag, too.
Of course the plot has been done numerous times on various sitcoms.
I also wanted to mention that I almost wanted to vomit when the theme song was re-created at the end. Yuck.
I'm really sorry I'm trashing this. I wanted it to be better, but it wasn't.