HollywoodJesus.com: Pop Culture From A Spiritual Point of View
Movies DVDs Music Books Comix TV Games Sports The Hit List Weekly Sweeps at HJ HWJ Blogs
In Stores | Top Sales | Index | DVD/Movie Archive

Title Search: Advanced Search
 
Share This!
         
now_playingAboutHeader

Wilfred (TV)
Release Date:
Tuesday, June 19, 2012

MPAA Rating:
NR

Genre:
TV Series, Comedy

Starring:
Elijah Wood, Jason Gann, Fiona Gubelmann, Dorian Brown, Chris Klein, Ethan Suplee, Gerry Bednob, J. P. Manoux

Director:


Synopsis:
You'll sit up and beg for more of Wilfred, the most hilarious and daringly original new comedy on TV. Elijah Wood stars as Ryan, a down-on-his-luck lawyer who forms a unique friendship with his sexy neighbor's pet pooch "Wilfred." Everyone else sees a dog, but Ryan sees a bong-ripping, beer-chugging, foul-mouthed Australian bloke in a furry suit (played by the outrageously funny Jason Gann.) By unleashing the surly, sweet and always adventurous Wilfred, Ryan may just learn to stand on his own hind legs and embrace the insanity of real life.

Wilfred (TV) | Review

The Complete First Season Blu-ray
Jacob Sahms

Content Image
Ryan Newman (Elijah Wood) finds that his life has no meaning for him anymore. He tries to commit suicide but he doesn't succeed at that (reminding me of Orlando Bloom in Elizabethtown). Then, his neighbor (Fiona Gubelmann) leaves her dog with him for the day, and suddenly, he's experiencing a different perspective.

His neighbor's dog looks like a dog to everyone else, but appears to Newman as an Australian man in a giant dog suit (Jasan Gann, co-creator). Weird, right? Somehow, the longer you watch this, the more it makes sense. And yes, maybe you'll also want to tune in for the Mark Wahlberg vehicle Ted later this summer for animal/inanimate objects that speak to humans and provide them perspective.

What happens when a smoking dog starts speaking to you, whether you're high like the dog or not? In Newman's case, life starts to get better. He recognizes that life might actually be worth living, that happiness isn't necessarily what society thinks it means, and that maybe he should change his perspective on what he thinks he should be following. It's about changing directions, finding purpose, and listening to your inner dog. (Sorry, I couldn't help it.)

This Blu-ray collection brings all thirteen episodes of the first season together, along with deleted scenes, and a few featurettes, like the Fox Movie Channel look at "Life After Film School" with Gann. The FX original show uses Ethan Suplee as a motorcycle-riding neighbor and Chris Klein as Wilfred's owner's boyfriend to bring out some funny dog moments, but the focus is on a boy and his dog, or vice versa.

Wilfred didn't knock me out (it was a little different) but it certainly highlights that society-driven falsehood that pursuing happiness will actually make us happy. I believe we're called to seek joy, the joy of the Lord, and when we have that joy in our hearts, we'll be at peace even amidst unhappy times. Happiness itself is pretty fleeting. Just ask Newman.

Copyright © 2012 Hollywood Jesus. All rights reserved.