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[personal profile] deird_lj
But before we get to all the reasons, I’d better explain what the show is.
After all, the only people who really know about it are obsessive fans who looked up what all the actors moved on to after Buffy finished.

Personally, I bought the series on a whim, because
a) it starred Eliza Dushku
and
b) it was cancelled by Fox (and therefore must be worth watching)


Anyway…
The show’s premise is fairly simple. Basically, the main character (Tru Davies) has a superpower that allows her to relive days. In typical Groundhog Day fashion, she can go back and do things differently so that the world turns out better.

She can’t actually control this superpower, though. It kicks in, without warning, when she’s at work.
You see, Tru works in a morgue. And occasionally, when a body is brought in, the dead person will turn to Tru and ask for help. THEN the day will restart. Immediately.

So, as Tru sees it, her job is to find out how the person died, and make sure that, this time, they stay alive.

It’s pretty much your typical sci-fi-in-normal-life, chick-with-superpowers-trying-to-save-people-and-deal-with-everyday-stuff, set-inside-a-morgue, fox-cancelled drama.


On to my fabulous list of reasons why Tru Calling is awesome…

1) It’s CSI – without the evidence.
A fairly essential element of trying to stop people dying is figuring out how they died. Which is easy in your standard cop show. After all, the evidence is sitting right there.

In Tru Calling, though, it’s much trickier.
Once the day restarts, there isn’t a body. There isn’t a crime scene, or a murder weapon, or any witnesses. There’s just Tru, her memory, and some stuff that might be about to happen.

And it’s not like she gets much time to gather evidence the first time. After all, she has no idea who’s going to die until they do, and no opportunity for further investigation after they ask for help. Occasionally, she actually has to go and save someone without knowing their name, address, or anything.

2) She can’t save everyone.
Most weeks she does, but from time to time, Tru’s best efforts just won’t be enough. The person she sets out to save will die anyway.

Which is extremely helpful, because from a tv-watching perspective, it creates a fair bit of suspense. After all – they probably won’t die, but they might.

3) She’s not supposed to save everyone.
The typical dead body requesting Tru’s help will turn to her and say “Save me!” before the whole day-rewinding kicks in.
There are, however, atypical dead bodies.

Sometimes, the request will be “Help me!”
And while that can mean “Help me not to die!”, it can also mean “Help me to save someone else!”, or “Help me to see my mother one last time!”, or “Help me to fulfil my dying wish!”.

The show isn’t afraid to mess with the formula.

Actually, that holds true for the cause of death, too. After all, she’s stopping people from dying, which doesn’t necessarily mean murder. It can also mean accidental drowning, suicide, or being hit by a bus.

4) Eliza Dushku’s hair.
Seriously. The woman has awesome hair. It’s at its finest in this show, and I just sit there watching its fabulousness and wishing my hair would do that too…

5) Tru really has no idea how to talk to people.
Well, not quite. She’s fine with your everyday, standard conversations.
What she’s not good at is, for instance, walking up to people and saying “You’re going to die today – unless you do exactly what I say.” Or saying “I know you’re planning to kill your girlfriend – now stop it, or I’ll tell the police.”

Most people think she’s kinda crazy.

6) There are interesting moral dilemmas.
If the man who asked for help is a murderer, should you help him, or let him die?
What if your attempt to help someone means that someone else gets killed?
Is it appropriate to use your superpowers to win the lottery?
Should your quest to make the day better include stopping your friend from getting food poisoning?
And is it okay to date the guy who works upstairs?

7) There are superpowers that can’t be proved.
After all, if Peter Parker wants to prove that he’s Spiderman, he can just hop onto the ceiling and walk around for a while. And if Clark Kent wants to, a bit of flying followed by melting things with heat vision will probably do the trick.

Tru, however, can’t prove it – not easily. If she explains the reliving days thing, and someone says “Okay – what’s going to happen on tv tonight?”, she’s probably going to end up saying “Well, I have no idea. Because I haven’t lived today over…”
Proving her superpowers is pretty tricky.

8) The good guys aren’t all committed to Truth, Justice, And Other Nice Stuff.
Out of the few people who know about her “rewind days”, one of her main support guys is her brother Harrison – who is much more interested in getting Tru to tell him the upcoming sports scores so that he can win big.

As much as they’re all in favour of people not dying, they’re also very in favour of bad dates going well this time, and getting a better deal on the new car than the one they got when they bought it yesterday, and moving this really nice ornament before it’s broken again…

9) The villains think they’re the good guys.
While I enjoy villains who walk around plotting evilly and Mwahaha-ing at the world, I also like the villains on this show – because they don’t.
The bad guys are actually pretty convinced that they’re the good ones, and that Tru is the evil one.

It makes things interesting.

10) Tru has no legal authority.
The thing is, most cop shows involve, well, cops. With badges, and handcuffs, and an entire legal system willing to back them to the hilt. And if anyone questions the importance of the situation, they can just point at the extremely dead body lying on the floor, and say “I think it’s pretty important, don’t you?”

Tru, on the other hand, has none of this.
She has no legal authority for anything she does, and even though the situation is incredibly important (being ‘life or death’ – literally), she’ll have a pretty tough time convincing people that it is, because nothing bad has happened yet.

11) Good days can go bad, and bad days can go good.
Being a Spiderman fan, a Buffy fan, and so on, I’m fairly used to the typical ‘my life would be so easy if I didn’t have to save people’ idea. And Tru Calling follows the formula – sometimes.
A day that was perfect the first time around will be horrible the next time – because she’s busy saving someone’s life, and doesn’t really have a chance to focus on her own.

On the other hand, they also do it the other way.

There is nothing more fun than seeing Tru have a disastrous day of badness, miss lunch, fight with her boyfriend, flood her kitchen, and flunk an exam… and then to rewind, wake up that morning, and go “YES! Another chance!” and proceed to have a ball doing it right.


In conclusion? This show is awesome. Go watch it.

Date: 2008-11-21 02:12 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] http://users.livejournal.com/_sabik_/
Hmm, winning the lottery, perhaps once. As with casinos, I suspect it's against the rules to really win. Still, that gives you a nice bootstrap. After that, I'm sure your broker could cope with random phone calls with stock market predictions.

That'd make you more Bruce Wayne than Clark Kent, but that's not in itself a bad thing. It'd also probably help with the "no authority" aspect... money can't buy everything, but it sure can help.


η

Date: 2008-11-21 04:33 am (UTC)
deird1: Fred looking pretty and thoughful (Default)
From: [personal profile] deird1
Definitely. I'd say winning the lottery once or twice would be perfectly acceptable if you were using it to fund your life of saving people...

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