The first season of Friday Night Lights accomplishes something that
few television dramas are able to do: It betters the 2004 film (starring
Billy Bob Thornton) on which the series is based.
Set in Dillon, Texas, where football--even on the high school level--is
everything, Friday Night Lights is a compelling drama with a football
subplot. Poignantly and effectively touching on racism, rape, steroids,
jealousy, infidelity, and life-changing injuries, the series presents the
inhabitants of Dillon as real people who are flawed, but remarkable in
their ordinariness.
Though the series struggled to find an audience during its inaugural year,
it was a critical favorite thanks to some fine acting by leads Kyle Chandler
(as Coach Eric Taylor) and Connie Britton (who portrays his wife, Tami).
Coach Taylor's career depends on his ability to get the Dillon Panthers
to the state championship. If the team suffers a losing streak, he knows
his family, which includes daughter Julie (Aimee Teegarden), will no longer
be welcome in Dillon. Britton, who also played the coach's wife in the
film version, is a phenomenal actress who shares simmering chemistry with
Chandler. Not content at just being the coach's wife, she lands a job as
a counselor at the local high school. That position plays a pivotal role
in the season finale, which leaves viewers wondering whether Eric will
leave Dillon to accept a coveted coaching job with a university.
Though the majority of the twentysomething actors appear too mature to
portray high school students, they have the mannerisms of teens down pat.
Gaius Charles is perfect as cocky running back Brian "Smash" Williams,
who'll risk his health to make sure he gets a football scholarship to college.
Local sweethearts Jason Street (Scott Porter) and Lyla Garrity (Minka Kelly)
are the high school's golden couple. When a football injury leaves him
paralyzed, he finds strength in what the future holds for him, but Lyla
finds herself in a short-lived affair with Jason's best friend Tim Riggins
(Taylor Kitsch). Once the relationship comes out in the open, their classmates'
reactions to the "traitors" show that sexual inequality is rampant even
in the teen set. Tim's teammates briefly ostracize him, but just as quickly
forgive him, especially since he's so valuable on the football field. But
Lyla becomes persona non grata to the girls at school who take too much
glee in calling the head cheerleader a slut. The hits she takes verbally
are no less lethal than the ones the boys take on the gridiron.
And the tentative relationship between Julie Taylor and Matt Saracen (Zach
Gilford) is the best depiction of teenage love since Angela Chase fell
for Jordan Catalano on My So-Called Life. The actors do a wonderful
job conveying the sweetness, pain, and hurt of falling in love without
really understanding all of its implications.
Peter Berg, who co-wrote and co-directed the film, has a strong presence
as a writer on the series and evenly distributes the storylines between
the kids and the adults. Friday Night Lights is a drama with teenage
characters at its core. But the stories are universal. |