42 reviews
The Malloys might seem like your average suburban family but things are far from normal. Jack and Jennie hardly speak to each other and their kids present a unique set of challenges. In addition, Jack hates his job. For advice and solitude Jack heads to the basement and turns to the only thing he trusts: Mr Floppy, a talking stuffed rabbit.
An obvious, unashamed rip-off of Married With Children, down to the character alignment. It's also not as cynical, edgy or funny as Married With Children. Yet it works, wonderfully well. Very funny with some great plots, skits and one-liners.
The most original part of this series - Mr. Floppy the talking stuffed rabbit - is great and is the main thing that prevents this from being an absolute copy-and-paste. Having Bobcat Goldthwaite voice the rabbit is also a stroke of genius as he is a perfect depiction of Jack's state of mind.
An obvious, unashamed rip-off of Married With Children, down to the character alignment. It's also not as cynical, edgy or funny as Married With Children. Yet it works, wonderfully well. Very funny with some great plots, skits and one-liners.
The most original part of this series - Mr. Floppy the talking stuffed rabbit - is great and is the main thing that prevents this from being an absolute copy-and-paste. Having Bobcat Goldthwaite voice the rabbit is also a stroke of genius as he is a perfect depiction of Jack's state of mind.
Since this show was made by the same people that made "Married With Children", i'm not sure if it can be called a "ripoff". However, with some minor adjustments to to the phrase - you could call this show: "a blatant, and failed attempt to repackage an original classic with some very slight changes to format"
Most of the older sitcoms (80's, early 90's) use virtually identical formats as one another. While each show is be based on an original idea, the format of the show usually stays the same. Next time you're watching a sitcom from the aforementioned eras, pay extra attention to the credits- most of them will contain something like: " 'Based on a format by' (insert name)"
Without getting to off track - basically people like to see the same thing they've seen before. A TV shows popularity determines the success of the show, because money comes from ads and the cost of advertisements is directly influenced by the popularity of the show. Therefore, as producers, you want to stay in somewhat of a 'safe zone' when it comes to introducing an new idea. Sort of like "don't fix what isn't broken" kind of thinking. Which leads to a lot of shows with original ideas being recreated.
With such a large amount of money in the balance, networks and producers would rather not take the chance introducing an original idea and format. With the economy in the gutter, I feel the industry has began taking even less risks (which is noteworthy, considering the minimal risk taking in general). I believe this is why we've seen an unprecedented number of remakes in the last decade. Nothing wrong with retelling an age old classic... however, not -every- single classic needs to be remade for the 21st Century.
It's been a long time since I saw a movie, or a TV show that I couldn't guess the ending to. Some Americans might enjoy seeing the same exact show reproduced over and over... I however, do not. When every show on every channel, and every movie in every theater just seems to meld together... Can't really blame people for illegally pirating such mediocre, uninspired, redundant, and unoriginal productions.
There is of course a very select few of wonderfully brilliant, and original made movies over the past 10 years. However, the bulk does not even come close to something worth paying what they ask. If you want people to spend the amount of money you claim your work is worth - try actually making something worth watching. The 3 Stooges remake was the last straw.
Most of the older sitcoms (80's, early 90's) use virtually identical formats as one another. While each show is be based on an original idea, the format of the show usually stays the same. Next time you're watching a sitcom from the aforementioned eras, pay extra attention to the credits- most of them will contain something like: " 'Based on a format by' (insert name)"
Without getting to off track - basically people like to see the same thing they've seen before. A TV shows popularity determines the success of the show, because money comes from ads and the cost of advertisements is directly influenced by the popularity of the show. Therefore, as producers, you want to stay in somewhat of a 'safe zone' when it comes to introducing an new idea. Sort of like "don't fix what isn't broken" kind of thinking. Which leads to a lot of shows with original ideas being recreated.
With such a large amount of money in the balance, networks and producers would rather not take the chance introducing an original idea and format. With the economy in the gutter, I feel the industry has began taking even less risks (which is noteworthy, considering the minimal risk taking in general). I believe this is why we've seen an unprecedented number of remakes in the last decade. Nothing wrong with retelling an age old classic... however, not -every- single classic needs to be remade for the 21st Century.
It's been a long time since I saw a movie, or a TV show that I couldn't guess the ending to. Some Americans might enjoy seeing the same exact show reproduced over and over... I however, do not. When every show on every channel, and every movie in every theater just seems to meld together... Can't really blame people for illegally pirating such mediocre, uninspired, redundant, and unoriginal productions.
There is of course a very select few of wonderfully brilliant, and original made movies over the past 10 years. However, the bulk does not even come close to something worth paying what they ask. If you want people to spend the amount of money you claim your work is worth - try actually making something worth watching. The 3 Stooges remake was the last straw.
I really loved this show for the first couple seasons.While most people seem to think it's just a Married With Children rip-off, it's really very different considering it was created by the same person.For some reason they decided to start making changes and never explained anything.It wasn't so bad at first but when the stories started to get weaker the cast changes became very evident.The biggest mistake they made was having the grandmother leave and they didn't even bother to mention it, although they later joked about her going away.She was the funniest character on the show and the laughs got farther apart when she left.The show really started to suffer when they made it center around Tiffany.Somehow the smartest girl in school and her idiot brother ended up at the same college, very unbelievable, but the stories were just not good in general.Of course a show that could make so many major changes didn't care much about continuity and would often change or ignore history, something I have never cared for in sitcoms.Fortunately they make up for it by breaking the fourth wall and acknowledging they are on a TV show many times.The first three seasons are a must watch, be careful after that.
I'll admit, when I first started watching this show in 1995, I thought that this would be the new MWC once the old MWC went off the air. I mean, look at the similarities......the deadbeat, minimum-wage earning father; the wise-cracking, undersexed mother; a son who dreams of scoring but never does, and a totally hot daughter. There's a few differences, however:
1. The hot daughter is smarter than the boys. She's the straight-A student here. Of course, that doesn't stop her from wiggling around in the shortest skirts possible.
2. There's 2 sons. One combines the undersexed part of MWC's "Bud" character and the dumb part of MWC's "Kelly" character, the other is used primarily for comic relief.
3. Mr. Floppy. The talking bunny is Mr. Malloy's alter ego, and only he can talk to him. Of course, his family thinks he's crazy when he spends all that time in the basement.
4. Tiffany, the hot, short-skirted daughter, is a virgin. When I first heard this, I thought it was the biggest contradiction of the show. Here's a girl that looks this good, with all these guys drooling over her, and she's a VIRGIN? Oh please. As we all know, Kelly Bundy of MWC's favorite spot was the back seat of a car. We didn't see it on camera, but she was understood to be very promiscuous.
After the behind-the-scenes people seen who was watching the show, and who on the show they were watching, first the grandma was let go (after the first season!) and then Stephanie Hodge (who played the mother) was booted off the show. "Unhappily" was restructured around Nikki Cox's character, Tiffany. The show then became an exercise in watching Tiffany and her best friend glide across the screen in the shortest, skimpiest dresses allowed on TV-14 television. I thoroughly enjoyed watching this show, and when it went off the air I was pretty disappointed. The reruns are still around, and I really like watching those! I give this show a solid A.
1. The hot daughter is smarter than the boys. She's the straight-A student here. Of course, that doesn't stop her from wiggling around in the shortest skirts possible.
2. There's 2 sons. One combines the undersexed part of MWC's "Bud" character and the dumb part of MWC's "Kelly" character, the other is used primarily for comic relief.
3. Mr. Floppy. The talking bunny is Mr. Malloy's alter ego, and only he can talk to him. Of course, his family thinks he's crazy when he spends all that time in the basement.
4. Tiffany, the hot, short-skirted daughter, is a virgin. When I first heard this, I thought it was the biggest contradiction of the show. Here's a girl that looks this good, with all these guys drooling over her, and she's a VIRGIN? Oh please. As we all know, Kelly Bundy of MWC's favorite spot was the back seat of a car. We didn't see it on camera, but she was understood to be very promiscuous.
After the behind-the-scenes people seen who was watching the show, and who on the show they were watching, first the grandma was let go (after the first season!) and then Stephanie Hodge (who played the mother) was booted off the show. "Unhappily" was restructured around Nikki Cox's character, Tiffany. The show then became an exercise in watching Tiffany and her best friend glide across the screen in the shortest, skimpiest dresses allowed on TV-14 television. I thoroughly enjoyed watching this show, and when it went off the air I was pretty disappointed. The reruns are still around, and I really like watching those! I give this show a solid A.
This is an OK show about an stressed-out father whom just deal with a lousy job, sex-starved wife, a skimpily dressing daughter and a clueless son. Jack also has schizophrenia, in the form of Mr, Floppy, a chain-smoking stuffed gray rabbit.
From what I remember, it's a somewhat interesting show with some adult situations in it. The humor was just so-so and the acting was OK at best. Average writing and lesser entertainment from this sit-com. But, at least it's tolerable than much of the forced-humor and tasteless sitcoms dished out nowadays.
Grade C
From what I remember, it's a somewhat interesting show with some adult situations in it. The humor was just so-so and the acting was OK at best. Average writing and lesser entertainment from this sit-com. But, at least it's tolerable than much of the forced-humor and tasteless sitcoms dished out nowadays.
Grade C
- OllieSuave-007
- Apr 7, 2017
- Permalink
This was one of the greatest t.v. shows of all time. Nikki Cox was brilliant in the show. The father and the sons were very entertaining as well with their wild and crazy antics. I loved every episode. It was very funny for sure. It also had plenty of eye candy. Someone needs to put this show to DVD ASAP. Does anyone have any idea if there are plans to do this? Maybe one day the television gods will come down from the heavens and bless the whole world with this show on DVD sometime within my lifetime. Every day seems like an endless eternity waiting for the day i might finally be able to buy this great television show on DVD. Thank you to anyone who takes the time to read this.
- drivecrasher
- May 16, 2006
- Permalink
Ever since the film Harvey came out the six foot talking rabbit was left to our imaginations. I do wonder though did Mary Chase writing Harvey ever in our wildest dreams think that Harvey would be something on the order of Bobcat Goldthwaite.
There's no doubt that the Malloys of Unhappily Ever After were modeled somewhat on the Bundys of Married With Children. Nikki Cox was as gorgeous as Kelly Bundy, but as Tiffany Malloy she was a straight-A student who never gave it up, but loved seeing the male of the species drooling when she wore those short tight skirts. Kevin Connolly who later was part of Entourage took out a patent on playing socially inept young men. Ross Berfield who later was one of Frankie Muniz's brothers in Malcolm In The Middle got a few zingers in.
The comedy centered around Geoff Pierson who I thought was wonderful as the cynical Jack Malloy. He made Al Bundy look as optimistic as Mary Poppins. It was he who went down to the basement to use Mr. Floppy the rabbit as his sounding board on the issues of life. And Bobcat Goldthwaite told him as only Bobcat could.
Inexplicably they wrote out the mother Stephanie Hodge in the last season. They never really developed her character so it wasn't really missed in that last season.
It was Pierson and Mr. Floppy that really made the show. Would that Al Bundy had a pal like him.
There's no doubt that the Malloys of Unhappily Ever After were modeled somewhat on the Bundys of Married With Children. Nikki Cox was as gorgeous as Kelly Bundy, but as Tiffany Malloy she was a straight-A student who never gave it up, but loved seeing the male of the species drooling when she wore those short tight skirts. Kevin Connolly who later was part of Entourage took out a patent on playing socially inept young men. Ross Berfield who later was one of Frankie Muniz's brothers in Malcolm In The Middle got a few zingers in.
The comedy centered around Geoff Pierson who I thought was wonderful as the cynical Jack Malloy. He made Al Bundy look as optimistic as Mary Poppins. It was he who went down to the basement to use Mr. Floppy the rabbit as his sounding board on the issues of life. And Bobcat Goldthwaite told him as only Bobcat could.
Inexplicably they wrote out the mother Stephanie Hodge in the last season. They never really developed her character so it wasn't really missed in that last season.
It was Pierson and Mr. Floppy that really made the show. Would that Al Bundy had a pal like him.
- bkoganbing
- Jun 19, 2017
- Permalink
This show is great. A lot of people call it a Rip off but for gods sake!This show is done by the same people that done Married with children. So the shows are similar but thats the Joke. With a smart daughter and a stupid son and so on. But Mr. Floppy is the best Alter Ego ever and the scenes where Jack talks to Floppy with other people around are the best. This sitcom is damm the best ever and who dont understand the jokes on MWC is a jackass.
"Unhappily Ever After" TV Series 1995-1999 - ABC does a brazzen, unabashed, unapologetic rip-off of "Married With Children". How sad. Every nuance of Unhappily is straight out of Married. They don't even try to disguise it! The characters are pathetically exactly the same. Older daughter that acts just like Kelly Bundy, only she has bigger tah tahs. Younger brother that acts just like Bud Bundy. Dad is supposed to be like Al Bundy. Oddly, Dad, Geoff Pierson, looks and sounds just like Ed O'Neill! They even brought in a stuffed talking rabbit that looks like a stuffed dog that only talks to Jack Malloy (Dad) because it is his alter-ego speaking. The rabbit dog, played by Bobcat Goldthwait, is funny as heck with Geoff Pierson.
I do have to say, Unhappily comes off pretty good with some snappy jokes and decent writing. I even laughed a few times. But my problem is, it all comes off as being satirical. Not towards Married, but towards everything that liberals hate about America. Oddly, it's never clear if they are trying to appeal to rednecks, or if they are making fun of rednecks. I get the feeling it is the latter, and it is a slap in the face. I never got that feeling about Married With Children. I always felt that Al Bundy really is a redneck. I get the feeling that ABC was just trying to outdo SNL with their liberal, leftist, aren't-we-the-wise-ones, BS. Sorry ABC . . huge miss.
And no big surprise, Noflix doesn't carry "Unhappily . . "
The Bushwacker 12/16/2021.
I do have to say, Unhappily comes off pretty good with some snappy jokes and decent writing. I even laughed a few times. But my problem is, it all comes off as being satirical. Not towards Married, but towards everything that liberals hate about America. Oddly, it's never clear if they are trying to appeal to rednecks, or if they are making fun of rednecks. I get the feeling it is the latter, and it is a slap in the face. I never got that feeling about Married With Children. I always felt that Al Bundy really is a redneck. I get the feeling that ABC was just trying to outdo SNL with their liberal, leftist, aren't-we-the-wise-ones, BS. Sorry ABC . . huge miss.
And no big surprise, Noflix doesn't carry "Unhappily . . "
The Bushwacker 12/16/2021.
- thebushwacker
- Dec 15, 2021
- Permalink
- RavenGlamDVDCollector
- Mar 15, 2014
- Permalink
"Unhappily Ever After" TV Series 1995-1999 - ABC does a brazzen, unabashed, unapologetic rip-off of "Married With Children". How sad. Every nuance of Unhappily is straight out of Married. They don't even try to disguise it! The characters are pathetically exactly the same. Older daughter that acts just like Kelly Bundy, only she has bigger tah tahs. Younger brother that acts just like Bud Bundy. Dad is supposed to be like Al Bundy. Oddly, Dad, Geoff Pierson, looks and sounds just like Ed O'Neill! They even brought in a stuffed talking rabbit that looks like a stuffed dog that only talks to Jack Malloy (Dad) because it is his alter-ego speaking. The dog, played by Bobcat Goldthwait, is funny as heck. // I do have to say, Unhappily comes off pretty good with some snappy jokes and decent writing. I even laughed a few times. But my problem is, it all comes off as being satirical. Not towards Married, but towards everything that liberals hate about America. Oddly, it's never clear if they are trying to appeal to rednecks, or if they are making fun of rednecks. I get the feeling it is the latter, and it is a slap in the face. I never got that feeling about Married With Children. I always felt that Al Bundy really is a redneck. I get the feeling that ABC was just trying to outdo SNL with their liberal, leftist, aren't-we-the-wise-ones, BS. Sorry ABC . . huge miss. // The Bushwacker 12/16/2021.
- thebushwacker
- Dec 15, 2021
- Permalink
Unhappily Ever After is in syndication where I live, and watching it these days, it's clear that while it based itself on Married...With Children, it was also trying to be innovative in how it told its story, how its actors interrelated, and how it treated the show itself.
Obstensibly, the show was about a family of five: a divorced couple, a sexpot daughter, one idiot kid, and one not-so-much an idiot kid. The show however also tended to treat the fourth wall as their urinal, frequently breaking out of character to be themselves, talking to the audience, bringing in studio executives, etc.
This was one of the good points of the show: in one episode, Nikki Cox and Kevin Connolly are faced with having to get rid of the actor who plays Ryan, because he wasn't written into the script and refuses to go away.
The cheesecake factor here is high -- but the cheesecake remembers to laugh at itself quite frequently. The acting for the most part is wooden on Nikki's part, but the actor who plays Jack manages to get the Al Bundy down without all those annoying characteristics Ed O'Neill slowly added to the role.
It's a stupid show, but it's supposed to be stupid, and there are some genuinely funny, and occasionally vicious moments in the show.
Obstensibly, the show was about a family of five: a divorced couple, a sexpot daughter, one idiot kid, and one not-so-much an idiot kid. The show however also tended to treat the fourth wall as their urinal, frequently breaking out of character to be themselves, talking to the audience, bringing in studio executives, etc.
This was one of the good points of the show: in one episode, Nikki Cox and Kevin Connolly are faced with having to get rid of the actor who plays Ryan, because he wasn't written into the script and refuses to go away.
The cheesecake factor here is high -- but the cheesecake remembers to laugh at itself quite frequently. The acting for the most part is wooden on Nikki's part, but the actor who plays Jack manages to get the Al Bundy down without all those annoying characteristics Ed O'Neill slowly added to the role.
It's a stupid show, but it's supposed to be stupid, and there are some genuinely funny, and occasionally vicious moments in the show.
I've just started Season 3.and miss Joyce Van Patten
as Maureen Slattery. She was a good laugh and I enjoyed the funny depiction of a woman trying everything to escape reality by any means necessary. I wish she would have stayed on, as short as her bits were I saw a bit of my mother there. Not to take away from Mr. Floppy it was just an added bonus. It's a little better than Married.with children as the daughter is not so dumb she may forget to breathe at any moment. Working at a dealership with a used car department the father is the type of guy you'd actually find there. Just making a living and not really happy and just enough crazy there where I think a couple of them may have had their own Mr. Floppy..
- webmaster-86003
- Sep 13, 2021
- Permalink
So many knock offs, especially sitcoms, try to make a pretense that they are not. This is certainly not the case here. Just the fact that Geoff Pierson and Ed O'Neill look enough alike to be brothers can be no accident. The constant trading of insults, The hot daughter, dad portrayed as a loser etc. The one thing that kept me watching was Mr. Floppy. Bobcat is brilliant in this role and provides the biggest laughs. Without him I don't think this show would have ever seen a second season. After watching so many years of Married With Children I probably wouldn't have made it past the pilot. I thought the pill popping grandmother was also pretty funny at times.
- OldGeezer916
- Nov 16, 2012
- Permalink
I see that people think this show was imitating Married with Children, it was making fun of MWC and a lot of other shows of the time. I really enjoyed it when it was current and, I enjoy it during the 2020 pandemic lockdown.
- floridatow
- Jun 27, 2020
- Permalink
I loved this show. It was kind of a takeoff of Married with Children, but it struck me as a smarter version of said show. As Al Bundy's life was complicated in a simple way, Jack Malloy's was complicated in a complicated way. Bundy was just a man's idiot living a very cynical life, but Jack was a raging alcoholic suffering from Schizophrenia embodied in a child's toy. The intelligence of the children was reversed (the hot girl was smart and the boy was the stupid one). While the episodes about the kids were semi-funny, Jack was indeed the key character, and when the story revolved around him, the show tended to be hilarious. Sure, Tiffany's competition with her schoolmate came off as funny, especially because she took her world a little too seriously, but finding out that Jack was the founding member of the band that eventually became Aerosmith was hilarious.
This show NEEDS to come out on DVD. It would be the first set I'd buy. Someone petition the WB for episodes!
This show NEEDS to come out on DVD. It would be the first set I'd buy. Someone petition the WB for episodes!
- vykk_draygo4000
- Jul 25, 2005
- Permalink
- Original_Caffeinator
- May 13, 2022
- Permalink
This series 100% inspired Seth MacFarlane to create TED. And he only wishes Ted could be this funny!
Big clue: Seth stole Kevin Connolly's line but instead of saying high school girls were all lesbians for not dating his character, Seth more pathetically applies it to college girls, saying they are lesbians because they had the good taste not to date him. Which makes it much less funny and downright sad, to be ripping off such an old joke all the time with zero credit given to the source. On this show, the line is actually funny!
Big second clue: the family name is Malloy on the show. This is the same last name Seth uses for the Orville sidekick played by his friend Scott Grimes - Gordon MALLOY.
Big third clue: the hilarious bunny Mr Floppy - voiced perfectly by Bobcat Goldwaith - has a huge crush on Drew Barrymore, and was filmed in the mid to late 1990's. Ted, based in the 1980's, has a crush on Rebecca Romin.
Note: THIS SHOW WILL MAKE YOU SAD THAT TED EVER GOT MADE, as Ted is a very very very VERY pale and unfunny copy of this show, Unhappily Ever After. I wish Seth would have hired some of the original writers of this show and rebooted it instead.
Seth - it's much funnier if we DON'T know if the talking animals are real or a product of a demented mind. The pill popping grandma played beautifully by Joan Van Ark? At least Seth was smart enough to know he'd never be able to write anything approaching the humor level this show rises to. Joan's character was fabulously funny and it's a shame they wrote her out later.
It is on youtube, I HIGHly recommend looking for it!
Big clue: Seth stole Kevin Connolly's line but instead of saying high school girls were all lesbians for not dating his character, Seth more pathetically applies it to college girls, saying they are lesbians because they had the good taste not to date him. Which makes it much less funny and downright sad, to be ripping off such an old joke all the time with zero credit given to the source. On this show, the line is actually funny!
Big second clue: the family name is Malloy on the show. This is the same last name Seth uses for the Orville sidekick played by his friend Scott Grimes - Gordon MALLOY.
Big third clue: the hilarious bunny Mr Floppy - voiced perfectly by Bobcat Goldwaith - has a huge crush on Drew Barrymore, and was filmed in the mid to late 1990's. Ted, based in the 1980's, has a crush on Rebecca Romin.
Note: THIS SHOW WILL MAKE YOU SAD THAT TED EVER GOT MADE, as Ted is a very very very VERY pale and unfunny copy of this show, Unhappily Ever After. I wish Seth would have hired some of the original writers of this show and rebooted it instead.
Seth - it's much funnier if we DON'T know if the talking animals are real or a product of a demented mind. The pill popping grandma played beautifully by Joan Van Ark? At least Seth was smart enough to know he'd never be able to write anything approaching the humor level this show rises to. Joan's character was fabulously funny and it's a shame they wrote her out later.
It is on youtube, I HIGHly recommend looking for it!
- alvin_b_18
- Mar 30, 2004
- Permalink
"Unhappily Ever After" is the best trashy sitcom ever to be shown on TV. I mean, how funny are sitcoms nowadays? The humor was just different and the actors didn't take themselves too serious. Mr.Floppy's one of the best characters, where else can you watch a bunny that makes fun of celebrities and politics in almost every episode?
The first two seasons were much better, because.. 1.) Tiffany and Ryan seemed like young kids 2.) The writers just did what they wanted to do. Soon every episode will seem the same. 3.) Jack never got out of the house. 4.) Tiffany's character became perfect in the later seasons, the writers even gave her the best speeches.
This show was about to become really good, but somehow went down the hill. If you are a fan of "Married.. with Children" and "Malcolm in the Middle" you'll definitely like it.
The first two seasons were much better, because.. 1.) Tiffany and Ryan seemed like young kids 2.) The writers just did what they wanted to do. Soon every episode will seem the same. 3.) Jack never got out of the house. 4.) Tiffany's character became perfect in the later seasons, the writers even gave her the best speeches.
This show was about to become really good, but somehow went down the hill. If you are a fan of "Married.. with Children" and "Malcolm in the Middle" you'll definitely like it.
At first glance, this show would appear to be nothing more than a cheap "Married with Children" rip-off, and to be honest, that's not entirely untrue. Yes, the characters and situations are basically the same as "Married": The pathetic working-class Dad; the hormone-enraged loser son; the not-too-bright sexpot daughter; the horrid living conditions...but there are enough differences in this show to make it enjoyable in it's own right. First off, there's Floppy, the stuffed bunny who's the father's imaginary friend (conjured up in the first show to help him overcome a nervous breakdown, I think), played by Bobcat Goldthwait. Since Floppy is only in the father's imagination, of course nobody is aware of his existence but the dad, and the conversations they have about what's going on are some of the funniest in the show. Then there are what could be called, "surface" changes, little things that differentiate it from "Married": There being two sons instead of only one; the daughter being smarter than the boys, them having two sexy female teen leads (the daughter and her rival) instead of just one, and of course, Floppy. This show is obviously derived from Married with Children (and they've acknowledged it at least once with an on-camera Ed O'Neill reference), but it's different enough from the original that it's actually quite funny on it's own --to me, VERY funny. When "Married" was still on the air I watched both of these shows; after "Married" got canceled I looked forward to "Unhappily" even more. Watching this show and comparing it to "Married" can be kind of like when you want a Coke but the machine only has Pepsi, you'll go with the Pepsi because they're essentially the same...and in fact, some days you *want* a different cola drink. If you haven't given this show a chance because it looks like a cheapo knock-off of "Married", you should reconsider. I was saddened when this show got canned, it was one of the few WB programs I actually watched. This show had a lot of the same things that made "Married" such a great show, plus a few surprises. Try to catch the reruns on WB before they pull them off completely.
Frankly Unhappily Ever After can be considered a guilty pleasure. The show esstentially played out on a trashy level (i.e. in terms of its seemingly inane storytelling) and perhaps the acting had a tendecy of being relatively amateurish. Unhappily Ever After tried to coast as far as it could in terms of references to popular culture and to a certain degree the show benefited from it. Perhaps that was the only thing the show had to fall back on but the references managed to come out on a frequent basis and were fairly interesting never the less. Perhaps Unhappily Ever After can considerably be labled as "low-rent satire." You're viewing something that's can be juvenile on a frequent basis but at the same time will make a fun out of numerous things in popular culture.
I have watched a few episodes of this show on late night syndication, and I found myself in the odd position of being intrigued and disappointed at the same time.
The show revolves around the type of family that inhabited pre-"Ally McBeal" Fox Channel shows. We have the stereotypical wife who loves to shop and think illogically. We have the son who can only rely on his hand to console him. We have the daughter who inspires the laugh track to go nuts with wolf whistles just by stepping out onto the stage.
When these characters are around, the show has two modes: predictable and offensive. We see that the son is going to get slapped in the face by the popular girl at school, and we wonder where the humor is in him accidentally killing the mailman (who we find out later is his actual father).
The show takes a slightly more interesting turn, though, in its central character. The father. In other shows, the father has been the most logical figure of the household. He is the one that holds the insanity together. In "Unhappily Ever After", however, the twist is that the father is the crazy one. A couple of times each episode, he sits down on the couch and gets half-assed advice from Mr. Floppy, a hallucination of a stuffed bunny that he had in his childhood.
This part of the show is where I get intrigued. This is an interesting and original idea, with numerous possibilities. Unfortunately, the writers don't know what to do with it, and consequently let the idea become the joke. Mr. Floppy (who is given life thanks to voice-over king Bobcat Goldthwait) has no other purpose in the show than to tell crude jokes and brag about his charm.
It is a shame to see such an idea go to waste. "Unhappily Ever After" had the potential to be one of the most original comedies of the 90's, and instead turned into a cheap and predictable retread of the "Married With Children" formula.
The show revolves around the type of family that inhabited pre-"Ally McBeal" Fox Channel shows. We have the stereotypical wife who loves to shop and think illogically. We have the son who can only rely on his hand to console him. We have the daughter who inspires the laugh track to go nuts with wolf whistles just by stepping out onto the stage.
When these characters are around, the show has two modes: predictable and offensive. We see that the son is going to get slapped in the face by the popular girl at school, and we wonder where the humor is in him accidentally killing the mailman (who we find out later is his actual father).
The show takes a slightly more interesting turn, though, in its central character. The father. In other shows, the father has been the most logical figure of the household. He is the one that holds the insanity together. In "Unhappily Ever After", however, the twist is that the father is the crazy one. A couple of times each episode, he sits down on the couch and gets half-assed advice from Mr. Floppy, a hallucination of a stuffed bunny that he had in his childhood.
This part of the show is where I get intrigued. This is an interesting and original idea, with numerous possibilities. Unfortunately, the writers don't know what to do with it, and consequently let the idea become the joke. Mr. Floppy (who is given life thanks to voice-over king Bobcat Goldthwait) has no other purpose in the show than to tell crude jokes and brag about his charm.
It is a shame to see such an idea go to waste. "Unhappily Ever After" had the potential to be one of the most original comedies of the 90's, and instead turned into a cheap and predictable retread of the "Married With Children" formula.
- Cinema Buff
- Feb 25, 2002
- Permalink