Anyone else getting into the changes on Medium this year?

Medium: Terrifying, Not Unlike Your Real Life

ASIDE from some of the more banal horrors of reality programming, "Medium"
has nothing to rival it as the most frightful hour on television. The
series, which stars Patricia Arquette
<http://movies.nytimes.com/person/530843/Patricia-Arquette?inline=nyt-per>
as an earnest telepath (Allison Dubois) who lends her powers of premonition
to Phoenix law enforcement, has been a quiet success on NBC for four
seasons, receiving some of its highest ratings in recent months as the show
has delved further into the human capacity for selfishness and intimate
depravities.

"Medium" creates a mood of gothic foreboding from the first few seconds of
its opening credits. Its score recalls the tense chords of a Bernard Hermann
soundtrack, and the accompanying graphics look like the dark and
unequivocally right answers to a Rorschach test - mutating hands and faces
and evocations of dripping blood. 

Life in the 21st century provides so many opportunities to terrify us that
popular culture has generally seemed enfeebled in its efforts to compete.
Over the past decade, as movies have been less frequently consumed in the
vulnerable territory of public space, the idea that they might possess the
power to scare and undo us has become something of joke, rolfing the horror
genre almost entirely into a satire of itself. And if television has been
increasingly adept at producing anxiety ("24," "Lost," "Jericho"), it has
rarely elicited anything resembling sensory fear. 

Created by Glen Gordon Caron (and existing at a significant tonal distance
from "Moonlighting," his other great contribution to television), "Medium"
can be genuinely hard to endure, especially at home, alone, late at night
(it is shown at 10 p.m. on Mondays), without wondering whether you should
check behind the bedposts for sadists and other wack jobs.

Something terrible has always just happened, or is about to, and the viewer
bears the apprehensive weight of Allison's foreknowledge, having witnessed
the violently detailed dreams that disrupt her sleep almost every other
nocturnal hour. (No one has ever needed a regular prescription of Ambien
more.) Sometimes Allison's forecasts can keep a rape or a killing from
occurring. Mostly, though, Allison receives random images in the night - a
woman, for example, fighting with her husband in a hotel room in France -
only to learn, usually the next day, that someone who looks like the person
she dreamt about has disappeared, which propels her toward the evidence that
allows the authorities to solve the case. The woman in France, Allison
intuited, had been abducted by her embittered ex-husband and then
psychologically tortured in a re-creation of the honeymoon suite in Paris
that the couple had stayed in years before.

"Medium" borrows from the conventions of classic horror the idea that real
nightmares result from arbitrary or misplaced trust. The camera lingers on
the faces of victims in waiting as they put their faith in attackers whose
malevolence they cannot yet see. An episode early this year revolved around
the killing of a little boy, supplying the single most chilling moment on
television in quite a long while: a smiling child watched as a man, shot
from the waist down, slowly kicked off his shoes and danced to "Rapper's
Delight" in front of him. The little boy had followed his kidnapper out of a
toy store, lured by a marionette slung over the man's back and lost to his
father's distracting business call on his cellphone.

Work, on "Medium," has been implicated as a distinctly dangerous pastime
more than once. At the end of last season Allison's husband, Joe (Jake
Weber), an aerospace engineer, and his colleagues were held hostage at
gunpoint by a fired employee who, dying of cancer, demanded millions of
dollars in compensation for the loss of his health insurance and other
benefits. "Medium" is so committed to the grim realities of middle-class
life that it is a paranormal show that very often doesn't feel like one.
This season Joe has no job at all: it's a tough economy, and he has found it
impossible to find another. Allison's credit cards are declined at a grocery
store; her eldest daughter hasn't gotten her allowance in weeks. Indian call
centers operating on behalf of lenders phone the Dubois household
constantly, and the bills keep falling, one on top of the other.

When "Medium" isn't terrifying us with images of children about to be
sodomized and killed, it is unsettling us with its belief that all of our
systems and institutions essentially fail us. Families are fragile, and sons
kill fathers. Charitable organizations are bilked by greedy maniacs.
Journalists are sleazy and operate on falsehoods. (Last season Allison
befriended a woman she thought was an out-of-towner looking for company,
only to discover, after it was too late, that the woman was a reporter
seeking to expose the Phoenix district attorney's reliance on her unorthodox
services.) 

And, of course, what does it say about the skills of the show's police
officers and prosecutors that they depend so heavily on the musings of a
psychic mother of three? It says that they just cannot hack it with their
blood samples and clues and shoe leather. Allison's notions are almost
always infallible, but information isn't. The scariest message from "Medium"
is that we only have our instincts to guide us.

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/05/04/arts/television/04gini.html?_r=2&ref=telev
ision&oref=slogin&oref=slogin



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