Arrested Development (TV series)
From Freepedia
| Arrested Development | |
| Image:Adlogo.png Arrested Development Logo | |
| Format | Comedy |
| Run time | 21 Minutes |
| Creator | Mitchell Hurwitz |
| Starring | Jason Bateman Portia de Rossi Will Arnett Michael Cera Alia Shawkat Tony Hale David Cross Jeffrey Tambor Jessica Walter |
| Country | USA |
| Network | FOX |
| Original run | November 2, 2003 – present |
| No. of episodes | 43 (3 seasons) |
Arrested Development is a character-driven comedy television series about a wealthy and dysfunctional family. The show is presented like a documentary, complete with narration, archival photos, and historical footage. Although set in Newport Beach, California and Balboa Island, it is primarily filmed on location around Culver City and Marina Del Rey.
The show, which is low-rated but critically acclaimed, was created by Mitchell Hurwitz (The Ellen Show, The John Larroquette Show, and The Golden Girls). TV veteran Ron Howard is an executive producer and the uncredited narrator. It airs on broadcast networks around the world. It debuted on November 2, 2003.
Contents |
Brief outline
The plot of Arrested Development revolves around the Bluth family. The patriarch of the clan, George Bluth Sr. is founder and former C.E.O. of the Bluth Company, which builds homes, among other things. George Sr. was arrested by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission for defrauding customers and spending too much of the company's money on "personal expenses". He was convicted and sent to Orange County Prison that, ironically, his company had built in 1983.
Meanwhile, his wife, Lucille became C.E.O. and immediately named her youngest son Buster as the new president, but he was not prepared for the rigors of the job. Michael, the middle son and twin to the Bluths' only girl, Lindsay, then was awarded control. He maintained control until he himself became the target of the ongoing investigation into the company's financial records and various dealings. At that point, eldest son George Oscar Bluth (G.O.B.) was named president.
The show focuses on the tension that developed between the members of the Bluth family due primarily to their diminished spending power. Sibling rivalries, unresolved oedipal conflicts, sexual incompatibilities, personal identity crises, adolescent trauma, aging, pride, miscommunication, lying, guilt, subterfuge, determination, manipulation, mutilation, social status anxiety, and countless other themes weave serpentine throughout Arrested Development.
Much like other dysfunctional family comedies such as Malcolm in the Middle, The Simpsons, Roseanne, and Married... with Children, the family unit is depicted as necessary for the survival of the individual. Much of the comedy comes from the quirks of the characters and the patterns that developed within the family structure. The show is considered by some as a faster-paced variant of the series Soap.
The show is highly intertexual and self-reflexive. Doubtless these characteristics, in addition to its fast pace and layered humor, contribute to fans' habit of watching each episode over and over in an effort to catch every single joke and reference. For example, Arrested Development often alludes to the past work of its cast and crew through the restaging of familiar scenarios (e.g., Barry Zuckerkorn is seen jumping the shark a la the Fonz) and by casting former collaborators in small bit parts (e.g., Bob Odenkirk, Henry Winkler, Scott Baio, etc.). The frequent appearance of guest stars from other lauded television comedies such as Saturday Night Live, SCTV, The Daily Show, Seinfeld, Curb Your Enthusiasm, and The Simpsons is another form of intertextuality. While most of the show's intertextual references come from television culture, the famous falling wall stunt from Buster Keaton's silent feature Steamboat Bill Jr. is reenacted by Buster Bluth in the episode "The One Where They Build a House."
The show's self-reflexivity can be quite literal--with the narrator Ron Howard acknowledging the fact that he is a narrator telling a story--but it can also be subtly ingenious. In the episode "The British Bombshell," Michael tells George Sr., whom he believes is trying to convince him of a lie, "You're a regular Brad Garrett." (George Sr. is played by Jeffrey Tambor, who had lost the Emmy for "Best Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series" to Brad Garrett not a week before the episode aired.) The show has acknowledged its competition (Desperate Housewives), its commercial sponsor (Burger King), its struggle to go after an "idiot demographic," its use of dramatic moments as act breaks, and Fox's cutback of season two to 18 episodes.
Another distinguishing characteristic of Arrested Development is it topicality. The show fearlessly addresses the most divisive, controversial social and political issues of the day. Writers have managed to turn references to the Abu Ghraib prison scandal, the U.S. Army's recruiting crisis, the non-existence of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, and George W. Bush's "Mission Accomplished" photo-op into running jokes. It has also poked fun at the decadence of American white collar criminals (a party once thrown by George Sr. bears a striking resemblance to Dennis Kozlowski's extravagant party on the island of Sardinia), the radical religious right's various protest campaigns, controversy over public display of the Ten Commandments, and the restriction of protesters to "free speech zones." But not all topical references are so weighty, as evidenced by jokes about "Girls with Low Self-esteem" and low-carb diets.
Characters
- Main article: Characters from Arrested Development
| Character | Description | Played by |
|---|---|---|
| George Bluth Sr. | Patriarch of Bluth family; escaped prisoner; married to Lucille | Jeffrey Tambor |
| Oscar Bluth | Identical twin brother to George; ex-hippie and recreational marijuana user; had a gorgeous head of hair; had an affair with Lucille years ago that may have produced Buster | Jeffrey Tambor |
| Lucille Bluth | Neglectful lush; mother to Bluth brood; CEO of Bluth Company | Jessica Walter |
| George Oscar "G.O.B" Bluth II | Struggling, incompetent magician; creator of "Bananagrabber"; appears in "Girls with Low Self-Esteem" videos, created a CD with his black puppet named Franklin. He also helped create the Allliance of Magicians- a society that removes magicians who reveal their tricks, only to be black balled by it later. | Will Arnett |
| Michael Bluth | Middle Bluth son; twin of Lindsay; father of George Michael; savior of the Bluth Empire; hopes to bring company back from the dead, while putting up with the rest of the family. | Jason Bateman |
| George Michael Bluth | Son of Michael; loves his bike; loved his teacher and lusts after his cousin, Maeby; terrified of prisons and midgets; always on time; has new girlfriend, Ann (aka Egg, Hog, Plant), a plain-Jane type with extremely religious parents | Michael Cera |
| Byron "Buster" Bluth | Oedipally disturbed biological baby boy; loves juice; career student; scared of sheep, sex, girls, and so on. Formally an archeologist student, he signed on to the United States Army by his mother on a dare from a Michael Moore impersonator; had his left hand bitten off by an escaped trained seal, which he replaced with a hook (ala Captain Hook) | Tony Hale |
| Lindsay Bluth Fünke | Twin of Michael; unhappily married to Tobias, who she married to spite her parents; mother of Maeby; pseudo-liberal; loves to cage dance, protest various causes, shop, and flirt | Portia de Rossi |
| Tobias Fünke | Sort-of husband to Lindsay; former psychiatrist; perpetual loser; "never-nude"; has turned to acting; student of Carl Weathers; may be gay; worlds first "analrapist" (analyst/therapist); aspiring member of the Blue Man Group; briefly became Mrs. Featherbottom, an amalgam of Mary Poppins and Mrs. Doubtfire, to spend more time with his daughter | David Cross |
| Maeby Fünke | Daughter of Tobias and Lindsay; possible product of artificial insemination; created fake charity for rare disease B.S.; created a false persona named Surely who was dying of disease; currently a major movie executive at the age of 15, also admits having a crush on George Michael | Alia Shawkat |
Episode guide
Season 1 (2003-2004)
22 episodes.
| Designation | Title | Airdate |
|---|---|---|
| ARR-101 | Pilot | November 2, 2003 |
| ARR-102 | Top Banana | November 9, 2003 |
| ARR-103 | Bringing Up Buster | November 16, 2003 |
| ARR-105 | Key Decisions | November 23, 2003 |
| ARR-106 | Charity Drive | November 30, 2003 |
| ARR-104 | Visiting Ours | December 7, 2003 |
| ARR-107 | In God We Trust | December 14, 2003 |
| ARR-108 | My Mother, My Car | December 21, 2003 |
| ARR-109 | Storming The Castle | January 4, 2004 |
| ARR-110 | Pier Pressure | January 11, 2004 |
| ARR-111 | Public Relations | January 25, 2004 |
| ARR-112 | Marta Complex | February 8, 2004 |
| ARR-113 | Beef Consomme | February 15, 2004 |
| ARR-114 | Shock And Aww | March 7, 2004 |
| ARR-115 | Staff Infection | March 14, 2004 |
| ARR-117 | Altar Egos | March 17, 2004 |
| ARR-118 | Justice Is Blind | March 21, 2004 |
| ARR-116 | Missing Kitty | March 28, 2004 |
| ARR-119 | Best Man for the Gob | April 4, 2004 |
| ARR-120 | Whistler's Mother | April 11, 2004 |
| ARR-121 | Not Without My Daughter | April 25, 2004 |
| ARR-122 | Let 'Em Eat Cake | June 6, 2004 |
Season 2 (2004-2005)
18 episodes.
Season 2 was originally supposed to run 22 episodes, but the order for the last four were cut by the network, reportedly due to low ratings. The network claimed it was strategy to "protect" the show from cancellation since the last four episodes (were they to have been produced) would have aired during sweeps. The writers made light of this reduction by having an order for a tract of houses the Bluth company was supposed to build cut from 22 houses to 18.
| Designation | Title | Airdate |
|---|---|---|
| ARR-201 | The One Where Michael Leaves | November 7, 2004 |
| ARR-202 | The One Where They Build a House | November 14, 2004 |
| ARR-203 | Amigos | November 21, 2004 |
| ARR-204 | Good Grief! | December 5, 2004 |
| ARR-205 | Sad Sack | December 12, 2004 |
| ARR-206 | Afternoon Delight | December 19, 2004 |
| ARR-207 | Switch Hitter | January 16, 2005 |
| ARR-208 | Queen for a Day | January 23, 2005 |
| ARR-209 | Burning Love | January 30, 2005 |
| ARR-210 | Ready, Aim, Marry Me | February 13, 2005 |
| ARR-211 | Out on a Limb | March 6, 2005 |
| ARR-212 | My Hand to God | March 6, 2005 |
| ARR-213 | Motherboy XXX | March 13, 2005 |
| ARR-214 | The Immaculate Election | March 20, 2005 |
| ARR-217 | The Sword of Destiny | March 27, 2005 |
| ARR-215 | Meet the Veals | April 3, 2005 |
| ARR-216 | Spring Breakout | April 10, 2005 |
| ARR-218 | Righteous Brothers | April 17, 2005 |
Season 3 (2005-2006)
This season of the show is currently in progress.
| Designation | Title | Airdate |
|---|---|---|
| ARR-301 | The Cabin Show | September 19, 2005 |
| ARR-302 | The British Bombshell | September 26, 2005 |
| ARR-303 | Forget Me Now | October 3, 2005 |
| ARR-304 | Notapusy | November 7, 2005 |
| ARR-305 | Mr. F | November 7, 2005 |
| ARR-306 | The Ocean Walker | November 14, 2005 |
| ARR-307 | Lesson | November 21, 2005 |
Trivia
- Michael Bluth's (Jason Bateman) first name is a sly reference to Michael Corleone (Al Pacino) of The Godfather movies. Like Corleone, Michael Bluth is the son of a wealthy and powerful family who is (somewhat reluctantly) forced to take over the family business due to the incapacity of the family's patriarch. However, after assuming power, both are subsequently surrounded by brothers and sisters who constantly ask for money or scheme behind their backs. There is even a scene in which the eldest Bluth son GOB confronts Michael, claiming that, because he is older, he should have control of the company and is tired of not getting respect, a dialog nearly identical to Fredo's conversation with Michael Corleone over the same thing in The Godfather Part II. Equivocation is a recurring theme throughout the series.
- The name Bluth may be a contraction of the words blurred truth, as lies and the truth are a common theme in the show. In episode "Spring Breakout", Tobias's show ScandalMakers' episode about the Bluth Scandal is called "Blurred Truth: The Bluth Family Scandal".
- In "The Immaculate Election," it is revealed that Steve Holt is GOB's son. This means that both of the men that Maeby is interested in are her cousins. She may have a third cousin in the works as well, since her uncle Michael was intimate with the compulsively-lying shyster Maggie Lizer (Julia Louis-Dreyfus), who first feigned blindness, then pretended to be pregnant by him, later confessed after her ruse was exposed, and then learned she had actually concieved a child and Michael may be the father.
- Alia Shawkat and Mae Whitman play Mae 'Maeby' Fünke and Ann Veal respectively. George Michael Bluth is attracted to both characters. Shawkat and Witman are friends in real life and played friends in the short lived show State of Grace.
- The episode "The Immaculate Election" pays homage to the movie Star Wars in several ways: When George Michael tapes his lightsaber moves, he is paying homage to/mocking the internet fad Star Wars Kid in which he emulates the awkward lightsaber combat. Steve Holt is revealed as being GOB's son, and in Buster's footage, which foreshadowed his missing hand.
- In the episode "Motherboy XXX," Barry Zuckerkorn (Henry Winkler, the Fonz on Happy Days) hops over a dead shark, in a reference to the now-infamous jumping of the shark from Happy Days. In the third season, the role of the Bluth family lawyer was taken over by Scott Baio, who costarred with Winkler on Happy Days. This parody's the fact Baio was brought into Happy Days to bring even younger audiences, they even make the jab "Look, this is not the first time I’ve been brought in to replace Barry Zuckerkorn. I think I can do for you everything he did. Plus, skew younger. With juries and so forth."
- In the episode "Altar Egos", Barry Zuckerkorn does the Fonz pose in the bathroom mirror.
- The program has aspects of a documentary (tripping cameramen, not filming inside a courtroom), but it isn't confirmed as a mockumentary.
- Since the show airs on network television and aims to resemble a documentary, all swearing must be bleeped out. However, the producers must find ways to obscure the mouths of the characters who are swearing so that their mouths don't also have to be blurred out. This is often accomplished by cutting to a shot of another character reacting to the swearing, or by blocking the mouths with objects. Sometimes the characters resort to just covering their mouths with their hands. However, it is usually obvious from the context what the characters are saying, making the whole exercise pointless.
- George Sr. and Tobias were never meant to be regulars, but positive test responses kept them in the cast.
- David Cross improvises a large percentage of his character's dialogue.
- Lindsay's cell phone ringtone is the Arrested Development theme.
- GOB's cell phone ringtone is Europe's "The Final Countdown", his magic act song.
- As the narrator, Ron Howard makes several references to both The Andy Griffith Show and Happy Days (on which he played Opie and Richie Cunningham, respectively).
- In the episode "Public Relations", Jessie calls George Michael "Opie." The Narrator says "Jessie had gone too far and had best watch her mouth."
- In the episode "The British Bombshell", George Bluth schemes to get Andy Griffith to appear with him at his trial, hoping that his role as Matlock might sway the jury. Griffith never shows up at the court, because he believed they were making fun of him. The narrator adds, "No one was making fun of Andy Griffith. I can’t emphasize that enough."
- As a reference to Tobias' membership of the Blue Man Group, blue handmarks can occasionally be seen around the 'model home' as well as in another scene in which Michael meets Rita in Episode "The British Bombshell". Her hand is covered with blue paint and the different meanings of the word blue lead to misunderstandings - Tobias also initially thought of the blue men group as a group of depressed men.
Continuity
One fact about the show that particularly pleases fans is its constant and complex use of continuity. It will regularly feature callbacks to previous episodes, both in the form of references and when scenes will often parody scenes in early episodes.
Similarly, the show will often use what creator Mitch Hurwitz termed a "call-forward", wherein plots or events will be foreshadowed, for example: there are several references to the loss of hands in the first and second seasons, even before Buster actually loses his hand.
Oftentimes these running gags, such as none of the characters knowing the Spanish word for brother or each family member having their own "chicken dance" (that looks and sounds nothing like a chicken), or background jokes (like a Cornballer machine shown in Maggie Lizer's apartment) will be lost on new viewers, and sometimes even missed by regular viewers until repeated viewing. These jokes now are regularly discussed on internet forums.
Response
The show is a hit with critics but has not yet gained a sizeable audience. Despite its low ratings, the series has been renewed by Fox and has returned for a third season during 2005-06.
Due to low audience turnout and to promote their highly anticipated re-broadcast of the animated series Family Guy, Fox announced that it would halt the production of the second season at 18 episodes, 4 episodes short of the planned season. (This cutback was satirized in the episode "The Sword of Destiny", in which the Bluth Company had an order to build 22 houses reduced to 18.) Despite fears that this was a prelude to cancellation, the network defended its actions claiming that the show would fare poorly during network sweeps period, and that it was simply a procedural matter.
Nominations and awards
It won five Emmy Awards in 2004, including "Outstanding Comedy Series", "Outstanding Casting for a Comedy Series", and "Outstanding Writing for a Comedy Series" for the pilot episode.
It also won the Television Critics Association Award for "Best Comedy" and "Outstanding New Series"
It won the TV Land award for "Future Classic".
It won the Golden Satellite Award for "Best Comedy". Jessica Walter (Lucille Bluth) and Jeffrey Tambor (George Bluth Sr.) also won Golden Satellites for their performances.
In 2005 it was nominated for eleven Emmys in seven categories and won one, "Outstanding Writing in a Comedy Series", by Mitchell Hurwitz and Jim Vallely for the season two finale "Righteous Brothers".
Jason Bateman also won the Golden Globe Award for "Best Performance by an Actor in a Television Series - Musical or Comedy" in 2005.
Celebrity guests on Arrested Development
The show frequently brings in celebrity guests. A partial list is included below.
- Dave Attell -- as himself
- Scott Baio -- as "Bob Loblaw"
- John F. Beard -- as himself
- Ed Begley Jr.
- Zach Braff -- as "Phillip Litt" in episode "The Sword of Destiny"
- Dan Castellaneta -- "Dr. Stein" in episode "The Sword of Destiny"
- Marc Cherry -- Himself in episode "Righteous Brothers"
- Rob Corddry -- as "Frank Wrench"
- Jim Cramer -- Himself in episode "The Cabin Show"
- Chris Fernandes -- as the "Warrior"
- Jeff Garlin -- as "Studio Exec"
- Ricky Gervais --unknown
- Heather Graham -- "Beth Baerly"
- Judy Greer -- as "Kitty"
- Ed Helms -- as "Real Estate Investor"
- John Michael Higgins -- "Wayne Jarvis"
- Clint Howard -- as "Johnny Bark"
- Thomas Jane -- as himself
- Jamie Kennedy
- Justin Lee -- as "Annyong Bluth"
- James Lipton -- as "New Prison Ward"
- Julia Louis-Dreyfus -- as "Maggie Lizer"
- Liza Minnelli -- as "Lucille Austero"
- Frankie Muniz -- himself in episode "Mr. F"
- Martin Mull -- as "Gene Parmesan"
- Super Dave Osborne -- as "Larry Mittlemen"
- Bob Odenkirk -- as "Marriage Counselor"
- Amy Poehler -- as "Wife of G.O.B"
- Andy Richter -- as himself
- Martin Short -- as "Uncle Jack"
- Ione Skye -- as "Mrs. Veal"
- Ben Stiller -- as "Tony Wonder"
- Christine Taylor -- as "Sally Sitwell"
- Dave Thomas -- as himself
- Charlize Theron -- as "Rita"
- Alan Tudyk -- "Pastor Veal"
- Patricia Velasquez -- as " Marta Estrella"
- Justin Grant Wade -- as "Steve Holt"
- Carl Weathers -- as himself
- Mae Whitman -- as "Anne"
- Henry Winkler -- as "Barry Zuckerkorn"
See also IMDB for more guest listings.
Broadcasters
- US: Fox Television
- Canada: Global Television Network
- Australia: The Comedy Channel and Seven Network
- UK: BBC 2 and 4
- Sweden: TV4
- Ireland: TV3
- Arab World: One TV
- Philippines: Entertainment Central (ETC)
- Asia: Star World
- Italy: SKY Italia
External links
- Fox's Official Arrested Development Site
- Official Forums
- Fox's Official Arrested Development Merchandise Site
- FreeAnnyong.com
- TonyWonder.com
- Never-Nude.com
- ImOscar.com, mentioned in "The Cabin Show" episode.
- Get Arrested: Official Online Petition Site
- *The* 3rd Season Online Petition
- Arrested Development Fanwear
- Balboa Observer-Picayune: Detailed Fan Site with Transcripts, Quotes, Video, Images, Commentary, and more
- The Banana Stand - An Arrested Development Fansite with Quotes, Images, Character information and Episode summaries
- Arrested Development at TV.com
- Arrested Development at the Internet Movie Database
- Arrested Development at Yahoo! TV
- Arrested Development Drinking Game
- The Arrested Development Drinking Game
- Brief clips from the show
Categories: Comedy television series | Arrested Development (TV series) | 2000s TV shows in the United States



