Los Angeles Times

Fox legal drama making its case

The new Fox legal prodedural needs to find its footing fast, as it follows a path blazed by ‘Serial.’

- ROBERT LLOYD TELEVISION CRITIC

A review of “Proven Innocent,” starring Rachelle Lefevre, Russell Hornsby and Kelsey Grammer.

“Proven Innocent,” which premieres Friday on Fox, focuses on Chicago attorney Madeline Scott (Rachelle Lefevre) and her Injustice Defense Group, a law firm dedicated to the issue of wrongful conviction­s — as we are told in the course of a podcast, rich in expository dialogue, emanating from the very heart of its brick-and-beam, open-plan headquarte­rs.

Indeed, how to translate the immensely popular podcast “Serial,” whose first season also involved a possible wrongful conviction, into a weekly legal procedural seems to be a question this show was constructe­d to answer.

Artificial and obvious, long on expository dialogue but somehow short on informatio­n, little in it feels convincing. Though just as you never know what crazy story a jury will decide to swallow, there are surely viewers who will be swayed by its arguments.

Like most legal procedural­s, the series is issue-oriented. Yet it’s all personal with Madeline, who spent 10 years behind bars, along with brother Levi (Riley Smith), for the murder of her high school best friend. She studied law in prison, went to Yale on her release — top of her class, naturally — and now has set up shop in Chicago with partner Easy Boudreau (Russell Hornsby), the lawyer who got their conviction­s overturned.

Just how Easy sprung them is not specified in the two episodes available to review; no other suspect has ever been identified, and you do smell a long arc in the offing. But perhaps the writers are saving that for a special episode. Or have not figured it out yet themselves.

Madeline’s work will pit her against the prosecutor on her own case, the hilariousl­y named States Attorney Gore Bellows (Kelsey Grammer, enjoying himself in a typical late-period Kelsey Grammer role, Decadent Frasier Crane). Bellows, whose work there was either flawed or corrupt, has his eye on becoming attorney general of Illinois and then, maybe, like Peter Florrick in “The Good Wife,” its governor. Madeline considers him a cancer that must be stopped; he still thinks she’s guilty.

Also on hand are communicat­ions director Violet Bell (Nikki M. James), who runs the podcast, and hyperactiv­e investigat­or Bodie Quick, played by Vincent Kartheiser, with neck tattoo, a million miles away from “Mad Men’s” Pete Campbell, but not so far from the part played variously by Archie Panjabi, Jeffrey Dean Morgan, Sarah Steele and Nyambi Nyami on “The Good Wife” — that show again! — and its ongoing sequel “The Good Fight,” whose playbook “Proven Innocent” seems to have studied, if not exactly copied.

Those series can be fantastic in their picture of legal procedure and politics and too convenient in their use of eleventh-hour discoverie­s, but they distract you with witty repartee on the one hand and an impression of naturalism on the other. Here the dialogue, weighted with explicit statements of thought and feeling rather than their sidelong evocation, is often too heavy for even these fine actors to successful­ly lift.

The supplied courtroom chuckling, a sort of dramatic canned laughter that accompanie­s Madeline’s courtroom quips, only goes so far. (Bellows: “We prosecutor­s are also human beings.” Madeline: “Objection — assumes facts not in evidence.”)

Like a judge in one episode who keeps insisting that what is highly, highly unlikely is neverthele­ss still possible, the willing viewer can invent reasons for behavior that seems … highly, highly unlikely.

As in the very first scene, when Madeline, in some sketchy neighborho­od, comes alone to the door of a person she knows to be a killer in order to ask him for a DNA sample — even after she sees that he’s holding a gun. (His reaction may surprise you — something that will happen infrequent­ly as the series goes on.) Or when Levi is called into court as a defendant after having been attacked with a baseball bat. Or when Bodie goes undercover as a recruit in the Chicago fire department to ask questions whose answers he might have found on Google.

But that work, ideally, should not rest upon your shoulders.

To be sure, even a weak television series can take on a patina of life as the show itself, its collaborat­ors and characters exist over time, weathering like leather, breaking in like boots. The fact that the second of the two episodes available for review does not follow immediatel­y upon the pilot, but comes a few episodes into the season, suggests that the producers are aware things might look better a little way down the road.

And things do improve, in a way, as the series becomes more sentimenta­l and sensationa­l — more tears, more sex, more turmoil.

Grammer’s character, who seems at least dedicated to his work in the pilot, sincere and even a little melancholy, lacks only a mustache to twirl in the later episode. But there will be cackling.

 ?? Fox ?? MADELINE SCOTT (Rachelle Lefevre) with series guest star Jason Woods, from left, and legal partner Easy Boudreau (Russell Hornsby) in “Proven Innocent.”
Fox MADELINE SCOTT (Rachelle Lefevre) with series guest star Jason Woods, from left, and legal partner Easy Boudreau (Russell Hornsby) in “Proven Innocent.”
 ?? Jean Whiteside FOX ?? KELSEY GRAMMER, here with guest star Laurie Holden, as ambitious States Attorney Gore Bellows.
Jean Whiteside FOX KELSEY GRAMMER, here with guest star Laurie Holden, as ambitious States Attorney Gore Bellows.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States