"Shameless" Simple Pleasures (TV Episode 2014) Poster

(TV Series)

(2014)

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10/10
What Makes This Show Great
BorednButter29 September 2019
You learn every character's motivations, mindset, and relatability in each scene, either directly or through the use of music and cinematography, with many especially creative, purposeful scenes to emphasize all the character building. Each character starts being built upon a very deliberate character arc, with very deliberate character flaws, which leads to them being well-developed characters. Everyone becomes distinctly deplorable AND innocent, and it's that dichotomy that makes this show so damn great.
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6/10
Maybe finally moving beyond Fiona
laniparker12 January 2014
Warning: Spoilers
Shameless is a bit of an odd show. Sure, there are plenty of over the top white trash moments throughout the first three seasons and enough baby daddy drama to satisfy anyone's guilty pleasures, but the oddness is in how the show continues to maintain one's attention when the plot becomes rather hollow.

Entering this fourth season, many visceral conflicts that characterized past seasons are settled and in their stead is a premier episode that feels a bit Shameless-lite. Sure, there is the serious decline of Frank's health after a lifetime of alcoholism, Debbie's rushed transition into adolescence, more baby mama drama from Kev and V and Mickey learning to live with Ian's absence, but this episode doesn't hit with the same urgency like the previous season premiers. And yet there are major improvements already over last season.

With the departure of Jimmy and the attainment of financial stability, the focus of the show is finally not to Fiona. Debbie, Carl, Mickey and Kevin all get more time in the limelight and more to do. For what seems to be the first time, we see Mickey in the bar talking with Kevin and while it does seem out of place at first, it is a welcome evolution. Kevin gets two big concurrent problems within the episode, also another first. And, while the memory of her attempted murder and psychotic episodes haven't quite faded, Debbie behaves more like a normal girl her age-she shirks her responsibilities, goes out of her way to hook up with boys and shows no interest in her deadbeat father.

I am quite torn. Nothing truly big seems to be coming at the moment, at least not in comparison to what we have already seen, but if this less insane installment in the overarching narrative drifts away from the fixation on Fiona-Frank-Lip-Ian it has been nailed, bolted and riveted to,it could be a refreshing if odd change of pace.

"Frank is a cockroach, you can stomp on him, spray him... but he always comes crawling back up out the toilet bowl."-Kev Ball, 2014
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