TMC
05-21-2024, 05:22 AM
https://jacksonupperco.com/2024/05/15/the-four-best-curb-your-enthusiasm-episodes-of-season-one/
When I decided to start covering shows that premiered in the 2000s, Curb Your Enthusiasm’s inclusion was inevitable, for I not only think it’s one of the funniest sitcoms from the 21st century, I also consider it among the most influential – extending the ideals of Seinfeld into this new millennium, but with an updated single-camera aesthetic that was both of the moment and indicative of where the genre was heading. I’ve written about this in the past few weeks for my “reruns” of Seinfeld and The Larry Sanders Show – two sitcoms that are relevant when discussing Curb and its big-picture sensibilities. The Seinfeld association is obvious – Curb is helmed by and stars Larry David, the co-creator and guiding influence of Jerry Seinfeld’s ‘90s classic. And he’s playing a version of himself here, just as Jerry Seinfeld did – making Curb similarly semi-autobiographical, rooted in some of its lead’s reality but with artificial constructs (like supporting players, etc.). We’ll be talking a lot about Seinfeld throughout this coverage, for Curb constantly positions itself in relation to that well-known reference point, both via the Larry David character, who is defined in the 1999 special that inspired this series as the real-life George Costanza (even though David clearly fed all the characters on Seinfeld), and the eventual show’s regular storytelling.
https://jacksonupperco.com/2024/05/21/the-four-best-curb-your-enthusiasm-episodes-of-season-two/
Season Two sees Curb continuing to refine its projection of self. Although this idea-driven show has always had funny ideas, it’s getting better at performing and applying them in story. For one, the cast is more adept now at “retroscripting” — a type of improvisational comedy that works within a narrative outline — for they’re more reliably able to accomplish plot-wise what needs to be accomplished in scenes, with less of the disorienting nervous tension that made Season One feel like it was trying too hard to be off the cuff, which actually emphasized artifice by calling attention to the show’s produced nature, challenging the behind-the-fourth-wall premise that’s vital to its overall ethos. Oh yes, there’s still room for more refinement, but since Curb demands a performance style that only comes from material that doesn’t sound like pre-written text yet nevertheless is focused by characters with purpose, a move closer to this ideal calibration — which I believe exists in Seasons Three and Four — is worth celebrating.
When I decided to start covering shows that premiered in the 2000s, Curb Your Enthusiasm’s inclusion was inevitable, for I not only think it’s one of the funniest sitcoms from the 21st century, I also consider it among the most influential – extending the ideals of Seinfeld into this new millennium, but with an updated single-camera aesthetic that was both of the moment and indicative of where the genre was heading. I’ve written about this in the past few weeks for my “reruns” of Seinfeld and The Larry Sanders Show – two sitcoms that are relevant when discussing Curb and its big-picture sensibilities. The Seinfeld association is obvious – Curb is helmed by and stars Larry David, the co-creator and guiding influence of Jerry Seinfeld’s ‘90s classic. And he’s playing a version of himself here, just as Jerry Seinfeld did – making Curb similarly semi-autobiographical, rooted in some of its lead’s reality but with artificial constructs (like supporting players, etc.). We’ll be talking a lot about Seinfeld throughout this coverage, for Curb constantly positions itself in relation to that well-known reference point, both via the Larry David character, who is defined in the 1999 special that inspired this series as the real-life George Costanza (even though David clearly fed all the characters on Seinfeld), and the eventual show’s regular storytelling.
https://jacksonupperco.com/2024/05/21/the-four-best-curb-your-enthusiasm-episodes-of-season-two/
Season Two sees Curb continuing to refine its projection of self. Although this idea-driven show has always had funny ideas, it’s getting better at performing and applying them in story. For one, the cast is more adept now at “retroscripting” — a type of improvisational comedy that works within a narrative outline — for they’re more reliably able to accomplish plot-wise what needs to be accomplished in scenes, with less of the disorienting nervous tension that made Season One feel like it was trying too hard to be off the cuff, which actually emphasized artifice by calling attention to the show’s produced nature, challenging the behind-the-fourth-wall premise that’s vital to its overall ethos. Oh yes, there’s still room for more refinement, but since Curb demands a performance style that only comes from material that doesn’t sound like pre-written text yet nevertheless is focused by characters with purpose, a move closer to this ideal calibration — which I believe exists in Seasons Three and Four — is worth celebrating.