Today's TV Tuesday focuses on another new show this season, Limitless. Like Blindspot,
this is one that our college son likes so much that he comes home to
watch it with us on Sundays (it airs on Tuesdays, but we watch it On
Demand).
CBS's new show Limitless
is based on the 2011 movie of the same name, starring Bradley Cooper.
In fact, Bradley Cooper is on the TV show, though he plays a character
who doesn't appear in every episode (the same character from the movie).
In case you missed the movie (which is a fast-paced thriller), the
concept is that a new drug called NZT allows a person to use all of
their brain's capacity, instead of only a fraction of it.
Jake
McDorman plays the adorably scruffy Brian Finch, a struggling musician
whose siblings think he should settle down and get a real job. In the
first episode, Brian comes across NZT and is amazed by its power. He
uses it to figure out what kind of mysterious medical condition has
affected his father. When the FBI thinks he is involved in an
NZT-related murder, Brian stays on the drug in order to find the real
killer and clear his name. He then also learns that coming off the drug
has some serious and painful side effects.
Bradley
Cooper's character, Senator Edward Morra, approaches Brian and gives him
an injection that allows him to take NZT without side effects, but
Brian's not sure what the senator and his team want in return. The FBI
is impressed with the way that Brian solved the case and hires him as a
consultant, understanding that he needs the NZT to function at such a
high level. They have been investigating NZT themselves and think that
Brian has a genetic anomaly that allows him to take it without the usual
- often fatal - side effects. They assign him to work with Agent
Rebecca Harris, played by Jennifer Carpenter (from Dexter).
From
then on, the show is like a traditional crime show, with a
sci-fi/thrillerish twist. Each episode features a new crime that Rebecca
and Brian try to solve, and Brian uses his super-brain power in unique
ways to help solve the crimes. Lurking along the edges is the Senator
and his henchmen, who occasionally ask Brian to do things for them that
he doesn't want to do, using his father's health as a way to blackmail
him...though neither Brian nor the audience knows exactly what they are
up to.
All three of us are enjoying the show. It's fun -
and often amusing - to see the ways that Brian uses his high-powered
brain, and being Brian, he often gets into trouble. There is good
chemistry between Brian and Rebecca, and the show has a good sense of
humor. So, it has a lot of different elements - crime-solving, humor,
mysterious shadow organization, a hint of romance - all wrapped up in a
unique concept.
Limitless airs on CBS Tuesdays at 10 pm. All of its episodes (#8 airs tonight) are still available On Demand or on the CBS website (the last 5 episodes free) and also through Netflix.
Which of the new TV shows have you been enjoying?
I have had Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS) since March 2002. Both of my sons also got ME/CFS at ages 6 and 10. Our younger son fully recovered after 10 years of mild illness. Our older son still has ME/CFS and also has Lyme disease plus two other tick infections. This blog is about how our family lives with chronic illness, with a focus on improving our conditions and enjoying our lives in spite of these challenges.
Tuesday, November 10, 2015
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