Scaling the Walls of Jericho: An Early Look at the Winter Premiere

Skeet Ulrich as Jake Green in CBS' "Jericho"
CBS
Jace at Televisionary

One show that I am constantly getting emails about is CBS' post-nuclear drama Jericho, which always prompts the question as to why I don't ever seem to mention the series. (For the record: I did watch the pilot last May and caught the second episode when it premiered last fall, but never fell under its spell.)

So when CBS offered me the opportunity to take a look at Jericho's winter premiere (airing February 21st), I knew just who to turn to: Televisionary reader Brock (an LA insider himself), who has been hounding me via email about how I keep neglecting the show. I invited Brock over to Televisionary HQ to watch the Jericho screener and here's what he had to say. (There are some spoilers lurking below, so be forewarned.)

Since we last left off, eight weeks have gone by and Jericho is isolated from the rest of the world. Prodigal son Jake (Skeet Ulrich) was about to make a move on his ex-girlfriend Emily (Ashley Scott), when her thought-to-be-dead husband arrived back in town, towing a crew of nuked survivors. As the mysterious FBI Director Hawkins (Lennie James) corresponds on his laptop to an unknown person, he discovers he is being tracked by satellite … But more on that later, as most of its spring premiere takes place during the 36 hours leading up to the attack, covering most of its important characters (though Jake-obsessed school teacher Sprague Grayden seems to have vanished from the cast). The final act of the show is back in the present, mostly concerning Emily’s husband and his whereabouts over the last eight weeks.

The most interesting parts of the spring premiere concern the most intriguing characters: Jake and Hawkins. Unfortunately, the episode seems to devote a lot of wasted effort to the mundane storylines of Jericho residents, most of which just provide additional back-story to information we already know. April gets divorce papers from her lawyer, while her husband Eric (Jake’s brother) continues his affair with barmaid Mary Bailey. Stan flirts with a rude woman at Mary’s bar, only to find out later that she has flown in from DC to audit his farm (and we all know that the flirtation built to a real romance after the bombs). Jake’s father, Mayor Johnston Green (Gerald McRainey), decides to retire and go to Paris with his wife, and hopes that Eric will take his place in his re-election campaign.

Meanwhile, Gail is worried about Johnston’s health, which obviously foreshadows his near-death-bed experience during the middle of the fall season. Emily and her husband argue about his job interview in Chicago; Emily wants to stay in Jericho and raise her family there, giving him an ultimatum. He takes off and heads to Chicago, but by the episode’s end, we listen to his voicemail to Emily where he has turned the job down and is on his ill-fated plane trip back to Jericho. This information spoils nothing and barely even fills in the blanks. It’s just filler and minor character development, meant as pacing between the scenes of Jake and Hawkins. Too bad.

We finally learn where Jake had been for the last five years (though we still don’t know where he learned how to do a tracheotomy with a juice box straw). Jake spent fourteen months in Iraq and six months in Afghanistan working as an independent contractor, often running cargo to and from some scary, dangerous places. Thirty-six hours before the bombs went off, Jake was broke, trying to get a job piloting charter jets for executives and celebrities. Apparently he was a better pilot than driver. (Hmmm, I can foresee a crop duster action sequence coming up). Apparently he was flagged by the Justice Department as a “person of interest” (which we learned from Hawkins’ computer search of Justice Department files a few episodes back). But though Hawkins believes it could be related to the terrorist attacks, Jake claims his government status stems from an incident that happened when he and a buddy were driving trucks through enemy lines and some innocent people were killed. These incidents seem to follow Jake around .…

Of course, the most interesting story concerns Hawkins, who is at the center of the terrorist attacks. All we knew about Hawkins so far was that he was the FBI Director, had gone undercover and discovered the terrorist plans, and brought his estranged family with him to Jericho to escape the attacks. Hawkins has been in communication with some mysterious people ... perhaps some of his allies, or perhaps the enemy he had infiltrated.

At the end of the fall finale, Hawkins was being tracked by the enemy, all the way back to Jericho. But in the spring premiere, we learn more about Hawkins and his intentions. We learn how deep Hawkins was undercover in the conspiracy and possibly that he possesses something far more dangerous than his special electromagnetic pulse bomb resistant laptop (no, it’s not an Apple, but Jack Bauer would be jealous), something the enemy may want back at all costs. We also learn that just like his ex-wife, Hawkins had someone special in his life too, and a whopper of an ending may yet disturb the sleepy suburban dress-up game he’s been playing with his family over the last eight weeks. The lengths Hawkins took to get his family to Jericho may also surprise audiences as well.

The violent paramilitary group Ravenwood (who battled Jake and Eric several episodes ago, as well as half of the Jericho townspeople) pops back up again in Jake’s pre-bomb life, and is a major catalyst of why he returned to Jericho. Something tells me that their involvement in the terrorist attack is more than just securing America in place of the National Guard. There is also a startling revelation about the leaders of the attack, how widespread their group is, and a glimpse of their target list. Did the Chinese orchestrate the attack or is it another sinister force? My bet is on Ravenwood, attempting to take control of the government, and a way for Jake and Hawkins’ story to converge.

It’s a fun, surprising, and revelatory episode, answering just enough questions. I would rather the show focus on the conspiracy than the Eric/Mary/April love triangle, or at the very least, more of how the town as a whole will cope with the dangerous new world its characters are living in. Still, it’s full of action to rival FOX’s Monday lineup, soap twists and relationship turns to match ABC’s serialized fare, and enough answers to old questions and new questions to move the plot along. Jericho can take the crown of one of the most underrated shows of the current season.

So there you have it, Jericho fans. The winter premiere of Jericho, reviewed by an avid watcher of Jericho. Ah, what a warm and fuzzy feeling I have now. Sometimes it feels good to make some TV-related magic happen.

Jericho returns to CBS on February 21st at 8 pm ET/PT.

p>* * *

Jace is an LA-based television development and acquisitions junior exec who watches way too much television for his own good and would love a TiVo for every room in the house. (He’s halfway there.) His blog, Televisionary, can be found at televisionary.blogspot.com.


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