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Dollhouse
(Series; Fox, Fri. Feb. 13, 9 p.m.)
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Echo - Eliza Dushku
Boyd Langton - Harry Lennix
Adelle DeWitt - Olivia Williams
Topher Brink - Fran Kranz
Paul Ballard - Tahmoh Penikett
Sierra - Dichen Lachman
Lubov - Enver Gjokaj
Dr. Claire Saunders - Amy Acker
Laurence Dominic - Reed Diamond
Trying to explain the first hour required a bit of cribbing off Fox's website, but here goes: Eliza Dushku plays Echo, a young woman who either volunteers or is drafted into an illicit organization that provides exclusive services to the mega-rich, using people that can be programmed for any occasion. Between tasks, these near-perfect specimens stagger around dreamily in something called the "dollhouse," where -- with their memories wiped -- they speak in monosyllabic sentences, kind of like Tarzan. Dushku first appears in a micromini dress, showcasing her most formidable assets. This triggers an obvious thought: If you had the equivalent of a human blow-up doll resembling Dushku, one suspects her assignments would primarily be more of the indoor variety than action-adventure.
Ah, but where's the fun in that, unless you're producing the show for Cinemax? So the premiere involves Echo serving as a bespectacled hostage negotiator, before complications arise as her programming starts going awry -- a development also found in "Worst Enemy," the "Bourne" movies and "Total Recall"to name just a few --which all hinge on this notion that imprinting memories on the brain can have unintended consequences. Is poor Echo, too, remembering things that she shouldn't?
Meanwhile -- and there are a lot of meanwhiles in the debut installment -- a tough, rule-bending fed ("Battlestar Galactica's" Tahmoh Penikett) is investigating the dollhouse, an operation so shadowy that Echo's taciturn handler (Harry Lennix) mutters to a co-worker, "We'd spend our lives in jail if anyone ever found this place."
Viewing a second hour, which dribbles out a bit more of the backstory, helps matters only marginally. Dushku (who co-starred in Whedon's "Buffy the Vampire Slayer," followed by Fox's short-lived "Tru Calling") does wonderful things to a tank top, but her grasp of this vague, personality-changing character is a bit of a muddle. What's left, then, is a series with a hollow center that doesn't initially make you care about its mentally malleable protagonist.
Nor do the technical elements particularly impress -- beginning with the dollhouse itself, whose design isn't as creepy as it should be, instead resembling a cross between a Silicon Valley office and a children's playroom, a la Gymboree.
So is there a series here? Frankly, two hours in, it's still impossible to say -- which is why the low-risk timeslot is an expectations-lowering godsend. Even so, attempting to unravel this convoluted package suggests that by the time "Dollhouse" finds itself, there won't be anybody but hard-core Whedon worshippers left to play with.
Camera, Ross Berryman; production designer, Stuart Blatt; editor, Peter Basinski; music, Mychael Danna, Rob Simonsen; casting, Amy McIntyre Britt, Anya Colloff. 60 MIN.
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