In the fourth season of Home Improvement, the Taylor family faces
some important milestones. Tim (Tim Allen) turns 40. Jill (Patricia Richardson)
is laid off from work and pursues her master's degree. And youngest son
Mark (Taran Noah Smith) slowly begins to outgrow precocious middle brother
Randy (Jonathan Taylor Thomas). (Oldest sibling Brad, played by Zachery
Ty Bryan, remains pretty much the same confident kid he always was.) As
for their inner circle, Tim's Tool Time buddy Al (Richard Karn) gets an
ego boost when he's named one of Detroit's hottest bachelors, and little
seen but often heard neighbor Wilson (Earl Hindman) goes on his first date
in two decades. Add Debbe Dunning, who replaces Pamela Anderson as the
new Tool Time girl, and you've got the makings of another solid season.
When the ABC sitcom aired during the 1994-1995 TV season, it did well enough
to place in the Top 5 for the fourth consecutive year. And aside from some
pop culture giveaways (Jill's clothes; Randy's use of a floppy disc to
backup his computer), the warmth and humor exuded in this 25-episode, 3-disc
set hold up remarkably well.
Like Everybody Loves Raymond minus the screeching mother-in-law,
Home Improvement is driven by the classic combination of a sensible
wife married to a silly man-child husband who thinks about himself first,
even when he doesn't intend to. When Jill wants to go back to school so
she can become a therapist, Tim isn't supportive. At first it appears he
just doesn't want any changes. But he later confesses he's worried she'll
lose interest in him if she returns to school. After she reassures him
that this would never be the case, he says, "If your dream is to work with
nuts, you should go back to the world of macadamia." Look for an appearance
from a very young Michelle Williams (Brokeback Mountain, Dawson's
Creek), guest starring as Brad's makeup-savvy girlfriend who advises
him on how to cover up his pimple. As for Lucy Liu (Charlie's Angels,
Ally McBeal), her blink-and-you'll-miss-her spot as a woman interested
in Al is little more than a glorified cameo. |
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