Growing Up Fisher
Growing Up Fisher
TV-PG | 23 February 2014 (USA)
SEASON & EPISODES
  • 1
  • Reviews
    Inclubabu

    Plot so thin, it passes unnoticed.

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    GurlyIamBeach

    Instant Favorite.

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    Huievest

    Instead, you get a movie that's enjoyable enough, but leaves you feeling like it could have been much, much more.

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    Benas Mcloughlin

    Worth seeing just to witness how winsome it is.

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    katiesimpson321

    I absolutely love this show!I think it is very funny, interesting, engaging, and realistically family appropriate! I watched the whole season in 2 days. I am extremely disappointed that NBC cancelled it - that makes no sense. The critics seriously shouldn't have been that hard on this show - I think it is worth every penny and every effort NBC put into it. In fact, it was realistically the only thing I watched on NBC, so I guess with the discontinuation of this show, I won't be watching NBC anymore. I do think they should seriously consider bringing it back. GREAT SHOW! If you are looking for a new family show ( that might last you a week at max) or are just searching for new shows to watch, I highly, highly encourage you to look into this show. There may only be one season, but it will be well worth every minute you spend watching it.

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    FlushingCaps

    Now that they've had 8 episodes, I feel ready to review this series. I do not understand people who seem to start writing a review of a series during the second commercial break of the pilot episode.During the Winter Olympics, NBC aired no fewer than 1,834 promos for this series, and also the far-less-funny About a Boy. Many of the promos for "Fisher" made it seem like it would be a funny show. What I have learned over the last two months is that almost every funny scene or line was contained in those promos.The premise is that this family-style comedy has a blind attorney (J.K. Simmons, known for his Farmers Insurance ads) as the father. In the pilot episode, his wife Joyce (Jenna Elfman, Dharma & Greg) decides her life isn't as exciting as she'd hoped, so she moves out. Now I am always troubled by TV divorces when they don't give us any sort of decent recent for the break-up. This was certainly no exception. Hollywood writers seem to think of marriage as a temporary thing, where your commitment is no more permanent than your commitment to staying at a vacation resort. As soon as you feel bored, or want something different—you check out of the marriage. And of course, you remain good friends with the spouse you left behind, as there is no real argument, no big problem between you. I shudder at this portrayal because I believe most people think of marriage as something quite different. I certainly hope so.So in the pilot, Mel has to move out of his house even though he is blind and has been most of his life and knows where everything is in his own home. He finds a loft apartment and moves in, much to the delight of his 11-year-old son Henry, who finds a cute girl, Jenny, his age living down the hall. A series regular is Henry's friend, Runyen, who is supposed to be a geeky kid with great school grades, in the stereotype of a typical Asian. (Everyone knows they study relentlessly and get all A's, right?) The funny scenes in the promos showed him using a chain saw to cut down a tree and pulling up in a sports car, while we heard someone off camera exclaiming, "You test drove my car!"—obviously that person had just learned Mel is blind. When we got to that episode, there was nothing more than what was in the promo. Except for one brief scene, each episode has almost nothing to do with Mel's blindness. Otherwise, this is an ordinary family, except that Dad was forced to move out for no apparent reason. The four spend much of their time together as though there is no divorce, except it gets mentioned all the time.Henry's teenage sister, Katie, is rather manipulative. In the most recent episode, she hosted a party at her dad's apartment without either parent's knowledge, and there was no hint of punishment for this deed.The funniest episode was one that involved a carnival. There was a nice scene at the shooting gallery where Henry points the rifle for his dad, while Mel hits target after target. The best scenes involved Mel being misled about the type of ride he was on. They are, of course, not in any way making fun of being blind. Quite the opposite—they portray him as a successful attorney who does lots of remarkable things for someone who cannot see. Jason Bateman does narrating, as a grown-up Henry speaking from the future, but this adds nothing humorous to the show.The biggest drag on the comedy is Joyce. She seems to have been raised by hippie parents in San Francisco, and wants to act like she is still a teenager. (O.K., maybe I am thinking her character is too much like Dharma was.) But she has one cringe-worthy scene after another. She says things in front of her children's friends that no intelligent mother would say, because she should easily see how embarrassing these things are. She confronts people in the wrong places and says all the wrong things almost every time she's on camera. The mystery of the series is trying to figure how a good guy like Mel managed to not get driven nuts being married to her almost twenty years.Her worst episode was possibly one where she gets handed a job at Mel's law firm, where she quickly alienates Mel's secretary so that she quits because Joyce criticizes everything about her and accidentally insults her in many ways.I find myself smiling a bit at a couple of bits in each episode, laughing, maybe once, and being totally bored by the rest of this would-be comedy. They get into odd situations, but there is no payoff. One example: In last night's show where Katie has about a dozen friends over, her dad returns during the party. She gets everyone to be quiet. He comes in, talks to her briefly, avoids bumping into anyone else in the room and announces he is going to bed. He closes the partition to his bedroom area. (It is a loft without real rooms.) Just as Katie starts to smile thinking she got away with having a party without her folks knowing about it, Mel reopens the partition and says, calmly, "Tell your 10-15 friends to go home." Here there was no explanation, no way for him to have guessed how many were there, and not one hint at him feeling or hearing anything unusual while he was in the main room with everyone. We're supposed to just smile because "he IS good," as Katie says.

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    mbv-934-190763

    We were pleased to see that NBC has tried a couple of new family centered series of which this is one and the other being About A Boy.We think the star in this series will turn out to be young Henry (Eli Baker). He is a fresh young talent and we think he has great potential.J.K. Simmons as Mel Fisher the Dad is an enjoyable character. It was especially nice to see how Henry listens to everything Dad says and there are many large underlying "teachable moments" in this first episode. Mel is a good Dad.Jenna Elfman is someone we enjoy seeing anytime, and here in her role as Joyce she was true to type. We enjoyed this episode and will tune in again next week. Growing Up Fisher and About A Boy are a welcome relief from watching NCIS Los Angeles on that other network. That means it fills a time slot where the market is hungry for something new and in this case NBC did it.Keep up the good work and we may tune in to NBC for more than Grimm.

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    pensman

    I like Bateman's narrative voice, am a fan of J.K. Simmons, and enjoy the acting and banter of Eli Baker and Lance Lim; however, the premise is a bit thin and the show quickly overdoes the abilities of Mel Fisher the main character, a blind lawyer who could give Matt Murdock, aka Daredevil, a run for the money. He chops down trees with a chainsaw; he teaches his daughter to parallel park: and he leaps over other lawyers with a simple bound. And yet despite all of his abilities he somehow married Jenna Elfman who is playing the same character she did in Dharma & Greg. And I guess that might be believable given the 20 year difference in the age between Simmons and ELfman which would explain that his child bride has just always stayed a child. Why you ask? Because Simmons' character intimidates everyone with his accomplishments being blind and all thus sending his wife off to a divorce so she can find herself. Yawn.

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