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Shrinking Season 3 Review

Shrinking is back for another funny, sweet, and emotional season – one that also very much feels like a final season, whether it ends up actually being that way or not.

The characters remain as likeable and engaging as ever, with creators Bill Lawrence, Jason Segel, and Brett Goldstein all understanding that the key to a show of this sort is making sure that the people seen hanging out together feel like people you’d want to hang out with too. The first two seasons understandably put a lot of the show’s emotional focus on Segel’s Jimmy, as he tried to move forward with his life in the wake of his wife’s death in a car accident. On a show that centers the importance of taking care of your mental health, it’s made clear that Jimmy’s issues are not all magically solved forever now, but his storylines are a bit less centered and dramatic this time out. The stakes are still important on a personal level – can he finally begin having a healthy dating life again, like say, with Cobie Smulders’ Sofi? – but not as intense as trying to make peace with the remorseful man who caused your wife’s death.

Other characters are dealing with a ticking clock, however, in ways that will most certainly affect Jim, beginning with his daughter Alice (Lukita Maxwell) nearing her high school graduation and potentially moving across the country. Then there’s Paul (Harrison Ford), whose Parkinson’s disease is worsening, leading him to have to finally face the question of how much longer he’s able to continue to work as a therapist in a way he’s tried to put off until now.

Ford has been absolutely fantastic in Shrinking, with one of our most beloved old-school movie stars getting to tap into aspects of his talent he rarely had to before as the classically curmudgeonly yet deeply thoughtful and empathetic Paul. In Season 3, Paul makes friends with a fellow Parkinson’s patient, Gerry, played by none other than Michael J. Fox. Fox isn’t in as much of the season as one might hope, but it’s still obviously a huge deal that he’s in it at all, given this is his first live-action acting role in several years. His scenes with Ford are very impactful for a couple of reasons. First off, it’s freaking Harrison Ford and Michael J. Fox sharing the screen together! These two men have wildly different on-screen personas, but are both incredibly iconic parts of cinematic history, cemented forever as the faces of beloved franchises.

Then there’s the fact that, yes, Fox is now notably physically impaired by the real-life Parkinson’s he was diagnosed with decades ago, and there’s a strange mixture of sympathy and selfishness in wishing he didn’t have to go through that, and could still move and speak in the way we remember as fans of the man and his work. Yet, as he’s proved over and over in interviews and appearances, and again does here in his performance as Gerry, Fox remains as filled with intelligence and wit as ever, still able to deliver a comedy punchline like he was born to do so. Gerry’s and Paul’s mantra, one clearly shared by everyone else working on Shrinking – including Spin City co-creator Lawrence, reuniting with Fox – is one that is easy to embrace as well: “Fuck Parkinson’s.” Ford and Fox have a terrific, warm on-screen rapport, and the scenes they share with Neil Flynn as Paul’s buddy, Ray, make it easy to imagine a spin-off about this trio.

There are some moments early on in Shrinking Season 3 that feel like the show is in danger of repeating itself. Yes, it makes sense that Gaby (Jessica Williams) would have her own anger towards Louis (played by co-creator Goldstein) for being the drunk driver who caused the death of Jimmy’s wife, Tia. But on a TV show level, we already went through storylines about both Alice’s and Jimmy’s anger towards Louis, so it can’t help but feel redundant. Thankfully, as the season progresses, plotlines develop about Gaby’s dynamic with a new patient (Sherry Cola), along with her thoughts on where she wants her career to go, that feel more unique.

As Season 3 continues, it begins to feel more and more like a final season.

Even by sitcom standards (and this is far more of a comedy-drama hybrid), Shrinking pushes credibility as far as the specific dynamics of its central friend group and their found family dynamics to the point that there are occasional meta jokes about it. Jimmy is the connective tissue for everyone, but yes, it is weird if you take a step back and think about your college best friend hanging out with your next door neighbors and your therapy-patient-turned-pseudo-roomate without you. But the show’s writing and cast make it all work, and it’s easy to be invested in storylines like Sean (Luke Tennie) trying to navigate his relationship with his dad and his own career aspirations, or Brian (Michael Urie) preparing for both the reality of being a dad and what the long-term dynamic is supposed to be with the woman whose baby he and his husband (Devin Kawaoka) are adopting. The show can lean a bit too casually saccharine at times, but then it has a dramatic scene involving someone really tapping into their inner pain or their inner joy, and it is undeniably impactful and heartfelt…and yes, dang it, it can make you cry, or at least it sure has made me cry.

Neighbors Liz (Christa Miller) and Derek (Ted McGinley) get some strong material as well, as Derek’s accidental ingestion of some drugs – a comedic highlight of the season – leads to new revelations. And after youngest son Connor (Gavin Lewis) got the focus in earlier seasons, Season 3 shifts to Liz and Derek’s oldest son, Matthew (Markus Silbiger), showing up with problems of his own to navigate. Alongside the series regulars, recurring cast on Shrinking like Lewis and Silbiger continue to shine, with the likes of Rachel Stubington, Wendie Malick, Lily Rabe, and Damon Wayans Jr. all fitting in seamlessly whenever they appear, joined this season by more heavy hitters via appearances by Jeff Daniels and Candice Bergen. Daniels is very good as Jimmy’s dad, a guy who’s able to perform the role of Fun Grandpa way more than he’s capable of being emotionally available for his family in the way they’ve needed due to their loss.

As Season 3 continues, it begins to feel more and more like a final season, as not only Alice’s and Paul’s storylines, but multiple others, begin to coalesce into the idea of great change on the horizon. This feeling of impending finality is so notable, I did what I suspect other viewers will do, and searched online to see if I’d missed an announcement that Season 3 was intended to end the series. Instead, I found an interview Lawrence did at the end of Season 2 where he did state he had a specific three-season story planned, with the idea of then moving into a different three-season story (like two trilogies in TV form?).

As it happens, Shrinking Season 3 does work perfectly well as a conclusion to the entire series, perhaps intentionally so, to protect themselves should the show actually end up here. In fact, it works well enough that it makes me a bit hesitant if I’d even want more seasons, given that it feels like a very satisfying story in this form.

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Mercy Review

Mercy opens in IMAX and 3D theaters on January 23.

The screenlife genre gets a buggy update in Timur Bekmambetov’s Mercy, a rapid-action thriller in which a man accused of murder must prove his innocence to an AI judge within 90 minutes or be put to death. This clockwork setting has potential, but what it lacks, ironically, is execution. It’s often hilariously slapdash despite its conceptual prowess, and a prime example of great ideas being squished together and squandered…not to mention, made entirely headache-inducing if you watch it in 3D.

Right from the get-go, Mercy takes a strange approach to explaining its futuristic setting, beginning with a neatly edited “previously on” montage that lays out how the crime-ridden, poverty-stricken Los Angeles of 2029 came to adopt AI-driven capital punishment. Hilariously, it turns out this trailer for the film’s own premise is being shown to an accused killer, Detective Chris Raven (Chris Pratt), who ought to be more than familiar with the imposing AI entity Judge Maddox (Rebecca Ferguson) since he pioneered the “Mercy” project that gives the film its name. Still, this exposition is somewhat forgivable, if only because it sets up the film’s parameters with the efficiency of LED screens lining the queue for a ride at Disneyland. Raven, who’s just regained consciousness in an enormous, empty room, is strapped to a lethal chair set to give off a fatal electrical pulse unless he can prove he didn’t murder his wife Nicole (Anabelle Wallis) earlier that day.

Before the restrained detective stands an enormous screen from which the imposing Maddox – her face silhouetted and cast in shadow – makes stern proclamations, deeming him “guilty until proven innocent,” and granting Mercy a not altogether uninteresting legal conundrum. Maddox also has unlimited access to the digital and GPS data of everyone in LA thanks to a communal cloud, which Raven can also sift through in order to prove his innocence. As either the judge or the accused bring up dueling evidence (courtesy of texts, doorbell videos, and countless other digital sources), iOS windows pop up in the space around Raven’s head like nifty 3D holograms. The case seems watertight: Raven arrived home during the work day, got into a fight with Nicole, and left, only for their teenage daughter Britt (Kylie Rogers) to find her stabbed minutes later.

The only problem is that Raven has no memory of the events depicted, an idea that seems intriguing until it’s quickly handwaved. From that point on, as the on-screen clock counts down, the story switches gears at breakneck speed and introduces a multitude of supporting characters via FaceTime calls, from Raven’s fiery police partner, Jacqueline “Jaq” Dialo (Kali Reis), to his diligent AA sponsor, Rob Nelson (Chris Sullivan), among many others. The mystery is unraveled practically backwards, with clues being explained or exposed in the very same moment they’re first discovered, while Raven uses Jaq as his proxy to revisit the crime scene and even chase down other suspects, viewing the world through her body cam, then a series of drones, then digital renderings of real spaces, then insert-new-idea-here without nearly enough time for us to adjust, let alone reflect. The movie switches focus just as haphazardly, going from tech conspiracy to domestic drama to some errant mixture of drugs-and-terrorism thriller that becomes impossible to invest in given the sheer flurry of images and pop-up windows flying at you at once. These are also never in the same plane of focus, forcing your eyes to adjust faster than you can process information, which becomes even more physically demanding in 3D.

It’s hard not to be perturbed by what Bekmambetov is selling.

However, what is perhaps strangest about Mercy is what it has to say – and often, what it doesn’t say – about technology. Its setting involves an omniscient state apparatus that uses bare-bones facts to make snap judgements before sending people to their deaths. And yet, this instant access to all facets of people’s lives doesn’t end up remotely framed as a dilemma or inspire any hesitation (the way it does in, say, the climax of The Dark Knight). The neutral approach to all-encompassing surveillance isn’t a bad thing in and of itself – after all, it’s the foundation of Mercy’s mystery setting – but paired with the film’s eventual pro-AI bent, despite depicting AI as a fascistic entity, it’s hard not to be perturbed by what Bekmambetov is selling.

Screenlife has been one of the more interesting filmic byproducts of the internet age, dating back to webcam experiments like the French comedy, Thomas in Love (2000), and the American supernatural horror film, The Collingswood Story (2002), and culminating in perhaps the ultimate example of the concept just last year: the reviled Ice Cube vehicle, War of the Worlds. Bekmambetov has produced a number of screenlife films: the Unfriended series; the father-daughter mystery, Searching (2018); and the modern Shakespeare adaptation, R#J (2021). He knows better than anyone that the challenge of screenlife is the self-imposed limitations of telling a story as it plays out within the confines of a computer screen.

But with Mercy, Bekmambetov pushes the concept past its limits until it breaks and becomes uninteresting in the process. Sure, we see digital evidence through Raven’s eyes, but half the time, the camera is focused on Pratt’s aggressive close-ups as the story reveals his character to be an unpleasant, borderline irredeemable husband and policeman whose innocence becomes hard to root for. Ferguson’s shadowy AI magistrate, by comparison, comes off as far more human…which is an incredibly strange outcome. There’s no emotional challenge or cognitive dissonance in wanting Raven to break free – the film’s approach to morality is dispiritingly flat – and Pratt often fails to imbue the character with realistic emotions or even the kind of showiness that might make Mercy an operatic romp. If nothing else, watching Pratt struggle with the material is at least a reminder of the flawed human artistry on display.

When the story eventually departs from its courtroom confines in its final act, the question of whose perspective – or cameras – we’re seeing the world through, and why, is just as nagging as the movie’s tonal inconsistencies and sloppy action scenes that cut between too many visual sources. The promise of unfurling a screenlife story into three-dimensional space around a character forced to interact with it is an alluring concept, especially when it concerns the wealth of information at Maddox’s and Raven’s fingertips. And yet, Bekmambetov never goes beyond simply introducing these ideas, casting them into the ether without a second thought. In a world that’s as radically changed as the one we see here, and as theoretically dangerous, you need a story that engages with its own premise on at least some level, and allows its doomed protagonist to wrestle with notions of morality and his own culpability in creating this status quo. Mercy is not only not that movie, but it also seems to salivate at the thought of a world where punitive justice and invasions of privacy are possible and easy, and the only downside is rogue actors who might misuse these technologies, which is a conclusion the film practically narrates to the camera.

Perhaps the screenlife genre, or this particular rapid version of it, isn’t the right venue for the material to begin with. On one hand, the images represent a kind of voyeuristic invasion and a ceding of liberty, which might have been interesting to explore. On the other hand, the sheer flurry of these invasive pop-up windows is also how the movie conjures its few moments of intrigue and excitement. Watching Mercy, it’s hard not to wonder: Why even make a futuristic sci-fi movie set in a dystopia if your fawning aesthetic framing makes the setting feel utopic? At that point, Bekmambetov may as well just invest in a generative AI company instead; oh, wait...

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