Pushing Daisies: Pie-lette (2007)
Season 1, Episode 1
10/10
You can't start off better than this...it keeps you wanting more.
25 May 2011
Warning: Spoilers
"Pushing Daisies" was a marvelously original show--so much so that it had to fail. After all, good television is like the sentiment 'no good deed goes unpunished'! And, like a wonderful show, it manages to start off with a real bang--with an episode that keeps you wanting more.

Apparently, the idea for "Pushing Daisies" was originally a plot idea for "Dead Like Me"--another show so good that it quickly failed. In the show, they had planned to have the reapers learn that some of their victims had mysteriously returned to life--the result of a guy with magical life-giving powers. Well, the idea was re-tooled for this ABC series and was done independently of "Dead Like Me". However, unlike "Dead Like Me" the atmosphere, costumes and set design had a much more other-worldly appearance--like it was filmed in a magical fictional land--full of LOTS of primary and secondary colors! I could try to explain the series, but frankly it defies explanations. Plus, IMDb has a summary. Instead, lets' focus specifically on what they got right...other than everything (which is true but a bit vague). The characters are exquisitely written and easy to love...very easy to love. The dialog is even better--very, very snappy, intelligently written and clever. And the plots generally very good--specifically so in this pilot. In this case the entire lore of Ned's magical powers is explained as well as the set-up for the series--his partner Emerson (my favorite character), how he accidentally brought Chuck (a girl) back to life as well as his strange but lovable employee (Olive).

In this first episode, like the subsequent ones, there is a murder mystery to solve. After all, Emerson and Ned make their fortunes by solving murder crimes by having Ned revive and QUICKLY cross-examine the victims! In this case, it begins with Chuck's death. But because Ned grew up with her and was infatuated with her, he cannot bring himself to return her to death! And the mystery is not easily solved, as Chuck never saw her perpetrator AND the killer isn't content to stop with one victim! Funny, dark and yet romantic and sweet--a great plot and great start for the show.
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