Three years after the series finale of Ellen aired, Ellen DeGeneres
gave sitcoms another shot with the genial The Ellen Show, which
made its debut in 2001 on CBS. This time around, DeGeneres plays Ellen
Richmond, a Los Angeles career woman who moves back to her hometown after
her dot-com business goes under. She moves back home to live with her appropriately
named mother, Dot (Cloris Leachman), and insecure younger sister Catherine
(Emily Rutherfurd), who both idolizes and resents her. Clark is a small
town where no one ever moves away. So when Ellen returns to her high school,
eventually landing a job as its guidance counselor (she had conveniently
earned a teaching degree prior to her L.A. move), she finds it to be pretty
much the same place she left. Mr. Munn (a wry Martin Mull) is still the
sarcastic principal. Her lunk of a high school boyfriend, Rusty (Jim Gaffigan),
is now a teacher there and he doesn't see why her being a lesbian has to
get in the way of a relationship. He simply stares blankly when Munn says,
"Newsflash, Rusty. She's hopped the net and is swinging a new racquet."
Unlike Ellen, which moved at a faster pace, The Ellen Show
takes its sweet time setting up each gag and waiting for the laughs, which
are sometimes undeserved. With her chatty, friendly way, DeGeneres is a
likeable focal point but the storylines are often unfocused. The series
ultimately didn't pack enough oomph to last a full season. Its last episode
aired 3-1/2 months after it premiered. This two-disc, 18-episode set includes
the handful of shows that never made it on television. Guest stars include
Betty White and Mary Tyler Moore, who do a nice job chewing up the scenery.
But it's a tiny Dakota Fanning (War of the Worlds) who steals the
show, playing a chatty school-age version of Ellen. |
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