"Brothers"
Bottom Line: A winning combination.
From Fred Dryer to Merlin Olsen, the small screen always has loved
former pro football players. So it's no surprise that charismatic,
gap-toothed former New York Giants star Michael Strahan is looking
to score with a sitcom vehicle. What is surprising, though, is just
how watchable and amusing "Brothers" is, even if it doesn't break
new ground.
Strahan is Michael Trainor, a former pro football player forced to
move home when his manager absconds with his money. But home is the
mansion he bought his parents (a snappy CCH Pounder, raising the
bar as usual, and fellow former pro Carl Weathers), where his
resentful and paralyzed brother Chill (Daryl "Chill" Mitchell)
lives. Chill's Michael-themed restaurant is circling the bowl, and
the bickering brothers are going to have to learn to get along if
they want to save it.
All fairly standard stuff on the surface, but Strahan knows to
surround himself with a good team. Creator Don Reo ("Everybody
Hates Chris") and executive producer Mitchell Hurwitz ("Arrested
Development") guarantee a certain level of class; Pounder and
Weathers are delightful as a mom in denial (she prods her
wheelchair-bound son with a fork, convinced he's faking -- for the
record, Mitchell is paralyzed in real life) and a father who pops
out nonsequiturs like hoping Michael never gets attacked by a
cheetah.
As for the brothers, there's a disparity. Mitchell is excellent,
his humor tinged with bitterness at being left out. His fights with
Michael have a delicious sense of the absurd, as when it becomes
clear that "skinny legs" Michael believes he could get beaten up.
But Strahan is outclassed in this division; he's personable and
watchable but comes across flat compared with his teammates.
Beneath it all, though, the brothers love each other, the parents
are affectionate and there's an undercurrent of topicality: This is
a family that has to pull together during hard economic times.
Sure, it's TV, which means they get to suffer under the same
mansion's roof, but the message should tweak virtually every viewer
out there. "Brothers" fields a team worth rooting for.
Airdate: 8 p.m. Friday, Sept. 25 (Fox)
Production: Impact Zone, Tantamount Studios, Sony Pictures
Television.
Cast: Michael Strahan, Daryl "Chill" Mitchell, Carl Weathers, CCH
Pounder
Executive producers: Eric Tannenbaum, Kim Tannenbaum, Mitchell
Hurwitz, Don Reo.
Creator: Don Reo
Writer: Rodney Barnes
Co-executive producer: Meg DeLoatch, Dean Lorey, Annette Sahakian
Davis
Consulting producers: Rodney Barnes, Kevin Rooney, J.J. Wall,
Alyson Fouse, Frank Sebastiano, Jim Vallely
Supervising producers: Adrienne Carter
Producers: Daryl "Chill" Mitchell, Michael Strahan, Ted Wass
Director: Ted Wass
Director of photography: Jim Roberson
Production designer: Michael Hynes
Costume designer: Lori Eskowitz-Carter
Casting: Susan Vash, Brady Smith
Brothers -- TV Review
By Randee Dawn, September 24, 2009 04:50 ET
"Brothers"
Bottom Line: A winning combination.
From Fred Dryer to Merlin Olsen, the small screen always has loved former pro football players. So it's no surprise that charismatic, gap-toothed former New York Giants star Michael Strahan is looking to score with a sitcom vehicle. What is surprising, though, is just how watchable and amusing "Brothers" is, even if it doesn't break new ground.
Strahan is Michael Trainor, a former pro football player forced to move home when his manager absconds with his money. But home is the mansion he bought his parents (a snappy CCH Pounder, raising the bar as usual, and fellow former pro Carl Weathers), where his resentful and paralyzed brother Chill (Daryl "Chill" Mitchell) lives. Chill's Michael-themed restaurant is circling the bowl, and the bickering brothers are going to have to learn to get along if they want to save it.
All fairly standard stuff on the surface, but Strahan knows to surround himself with a good team. Creator Don Reo ("Everybody Hates Chris") and executive producer Mitchell Hurwitz ("Arrested Development") guarantee a certain level of class; Pounder and Weathers are delightful as a mom in denial (she prods her wheelchair-bound son with a fork, convinced he's faking -- for the record, Mitchell is paralyzed in real life) and a father who pops out nonsequiturs like hoping Michael never gets attacked by a cheetah.
As for the brothers, there's a disparity. Mitchell is excellent, his humor tinged with bitterness at being left out. His fights with Michael have a delicious sense of the absurd, as when it becomes clear that "skinny legs" Michael believes he could get beaten up. But Strahan is outclassed in this division; he's personable and watchable but comes across flat compared with his teammates.
Beneath it all, though, the brothers love each other, the parents are affectionate and there's an undercurrent of topicality: This is a family that has to pull together during hard economic times. Sure, it's TV, which means they get to suffer under the same mansion's roof, but the message should tweak virtually every viewer out there. "Brothers" fields a team worth rooting for.
Airdate: 8 p.m. Friday, Sept. 25 (Fox)
Production: Impact Zone, Tantamount Studios, Sony Pictures Television.
Cast: Michael Strahan, Daryl "Chill" Mitchell, Carl Weathers, CCH Pounder
Executive producers: Eric Tannenbaum, Kim Tannenbaum, Mitchell Hurwitz, Don Reo.
Creator: Don Reo
Writer: Rodney Barnes
Co-executive producer: Meg DeLoatch, Dean Lorey, Annette Sahakian Davis
Consulting producers: Rodney Barnes, Kevin Rooney, J.J. Wall, Alyson Fouse, Frank Sebastiano, Jim Vallely
Supervising producers: Adrienne Carter
Producers: Daryl "Chill" Mitchell, Michael Strahan, Ted Wass
Director: Ted Wass
Director of photography: Jim Roberson
Production designer: Michael Hynes
Costume designer: Lori Eskowitz-Carter
Casting: Susan Vash, Brady Smith