Up and Coming Weekly is a weekly publication in Fayetteville, NC and Fort Bragg, NC area offering local news, views, arts, entertainment and community event and business information.
Issue link: https://www.epageflip.net/i/88084
Spy Versus Spy Versus Spy You can't trust anyone in the brilliant thriller Hunted TV by DEAN ROBBINS Forget the overrated Homeland. If you're looking for an inter- national spy thriller on premium cable, Hunted (Friday, 10 p.m., Cinemax) is the one to watch. The pilot messes with your head so skill- fully that you're woozy by the 30-minute mark. And thoroughly intrigued. It takes a while, but you come to see that Sam Hunter (Melissa George) is an operative for a shadowy private company specializing in espionage. In the middle of setting up a mark, she's set up her- self, possibly by the colleague she's in love with. She's left for dead but mys- teriously returns to work a year later, not knowing whom trust. They don't trust her anymore, either — nor should they. George is model-beautiful, but also believable as a bad-ass who can dis- patch several beefy opponents at once. For all the thrilling action, though, Hunted is most notable for George's ability to pull you into Sam's private pain. She's damaged goods, and the production evokes her state of mind with fragmented imagery and disorienting music. The arty filmmaking pres- ents a wonderful paradox: It keeps you glued to the screen even as you won- der, "What is this thing?" Got Droopy Eyelids? Get Cosmetic Eyelid Rejuvenation! What is this thing? It's one of the best new shows of 2012-13. Guys with Kids Wednesday, 8:30 pm (NBC) The title says it all: Three guys (Anthony Anderson, Jesse Bradford, Zach Cregger)raise their kids, with help from wives, ex-wives and each other. The series whips up a nice sense of panic, as the young parents slowly go mad from their new responsibilities. Expect no peace for 30 minutes. I admit the premise is ancient, but the sharp script makes Guys with Kids feel contemporary. Amazingly, it does so without resorting to the mindless raunchiness that passes for cutting edge on many new sitcoms. The cast has chemistry galore — and with so many kids and parents running around, the comic possibilities are endless. Peace? Who needs peace? Thursday, 9 pm (HBO) There are times when you want to dig into Kennedy history to examine the Democratic dynasty's more unsavory aspects. And there are other times when you just want to wallow in their best qualities of leadership and empa- thy. Ethel, directed by Robert F. Kennedy's daughter Rory, provides a fabu- lous opportunity for wallowing. Ethel !BrvEvrDv!t I!brvWxx T!C! R!C! X!XtXrv R!C!XyvvA!Urv R!C! Rvb!byrv R!C!ByrYy R!C! AvrtvAvx R!C!ByruYurv T!C! DuruPvyt I! T!C!IyPvvt T!C! $0%)RvRvutrC! Ervvv $)%2TvC! Ervvv $1$)CtC! Xrwu $2#%S!XruyAu! @svuvv DvvtvdBrY 20 UCW OCTOBER 17-23, 2012 No one can blame Rory (born after her father's 1968 assassination) for emphasizing the best sides of RFK, including his relationship with her 10 siblings and her mother, Ethel. In interviews with Rory, this thoughtful, playful, likable clan paints a por- trait of an extraordinary man, concerned with the plight of workers, poor folks, people of color and soldiers in Vietnam. Even a hardhearted journalist like me is susceptible to the documentary's poignant footage: Bobby playing touch football with the kids, comforting a crowd after Martin Luther King's death, communing with the most downtrodden American citizens. Frankly, I was a wreck as the chronology moved closer to the murder. The screen goes black, and Ethel — who had been the picture of strength and eloquence in her interviews with Rory — simply says, "Let's talk about something else." I agree. Can we just watch the touch-football scenes again? (And again?) WWW.UPANDCOMINGWEEKLY.COM

