San Francisco Chronicle

‘Space Force’ launch fails to truly lift off

- By G. Allen Johnson

Imagine Michael Scott of “The Office” running a topsecret military branch, and you have an idea of the vibe of “Space Force,” the Netflix comedy series that reunites actor Steve Carell with the NBC series’ original showrunner, Greg Daniels.

Not that the narcissist­ic nincompoop who headed Dunder Mifflin would be out of place in the Trump administra­tion. One of the weirdest ideas of the current regime that has become reality is the creation of the Space Force, a new armed services branch apparently aimed at the militariza­tion of space (we already have a space program, called NASA, but whatever).

It’s a situation ripe with comic possibilit­ies, but “Space Force,” which debuts on Friday, May 29, barely gets off the launch pad during its 10episode first season.

Carell is Gen. Mark R. Naird, a career military man who is tapped to head the topsecret agency’s rural Colorado complex with the directive from POTUS to have “boots on the moon by 2024.” He is the brass and bluster (“I am what used to be known in America as a man,” he declares), while Dr. Adrian Mallory ( John Malkovich), Naird’s eccentric chief scientist, is the brains and thus

makes the scienceadv­erse Naird a little nervous.

Asked why he doesn’t like scientists, Naird says, “Because you say eat carbs one day, and don’t eat carbs the next!”

Together they try to make the agency succeed in their mission despite tight timetables and often conflictin­g directives from Washington. Naird gets some of his orders directly from the unnamed president, on Twitter, of course, and others in video briefings with the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who include, in what is barely more than a series of cameos, Jane Lynch, Noah Emmerich and Patrick Warburton.

In a hilarious touch, Naird’s budget is questioned by a congresswo­man known as AYC (Ginger Gonzaga, in a spoton imitation of Alexandria OcasioCort­ez).

Naird’s team in Colorado includes Dr. Chan (comedian Jimmy O. Yang, whose first standup special dropped on Amazon Prime this month), Mallory’s No. 2; Brad (Don Lake), Naird’s incompeten­t assistant; slimy media consultant Anthony Scaramucci — wait, sorry, I meant Tony Scarapiduc­ci (Ben Schwartz); and Naird’s personal helicopter pilot

Angela Ali (Tawny Newsome).

Naird’s messy domestic life includes wife Maggie (an underused Lisa Kudrow), teenage daughter Erin (Diana Silvers) and a dementiari­dden father (the late Fred Willard).

It’s all very watchable — an appealing cast, eyepleasin­g production design and decent story lines. The only thing missing: laughter. Most of the gags are overthetop and predictabl­e — such as in one episode when Naird is sequestere­d for a week in a simulation chamber with other scientists. The characters and situations are so broad, there’s no grounding in reality.

To be fair, the series gets better as it goes along. “The Office,” originally a midseason replacemen­t for NBC in 2005, didn’t start out so hot either but over nine seasons became a beloved comedy.

In “Space Force,” you can feel Carell, Malkovich and the cast gain confidence and rhythm in the later episodes, finding their characters nicely in a way that, despite the overall upanddown quality of Season 1, suggests that a season two might be better.

 ?? Netflix ?? Gen. Mark R. Naird (Steve Carell) is put in command of the U.S. Space Force in the new Netflix comedy series.
Netflix Gen. Mark R. Naird (Steve Carell) is put in command of the U.S. Space Force in the new Netflix comedy series.
 ?? Netflix ?? Adrian Mallory (John Malkovich) is a scientist in “Space Force.”
Netflix Adrian Mallory (John Malkovich) is a scientist in “Space Force.”

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