Poster: Clint Eastwood Fan
(see this users gallery) Home Court aired from September 1995 until June 1996 on NBC.
Hey kids would you like to have a tough-cookie family-court judge as your mom? Thats what the Solomon siblings had, and were they frustrated! Sydney ( Pamela Reed), was the judge, a single mom who was hard-bitten in her Chicago courtroom and only slightly more lenient at home. Mike ( Breckin Meyer), was her slacker eldest, a reluctant college student trying to " find himself"; Neal ( Meghann Haldeman), her self-centered teenage daughter; Marshall ( Robert Gorman), a computer nerd oblivious to the rest of the world; and Ellis ( Phillip Glenn Van Dyke), a hyper 11 year old. Greer ( Meagan Fay), was Sydney's wealthy sister, a trophy wife content to grow herbs, and Gil ( Charles Rocket), a wisecracking, single fellow judge.
A Review from Variety
The Home Court
((Sat. (30), 9:30-10 p.m., NBC))
By JOHN P. MCCARTHY
Filmed in Hollywood by Paramount Network Television. Executive producers-creators-writers, Sy Dukane, Denise Moss; producer, Bruce Johnson; director, Andrew D. Weyman; camera, Nick McLean Sr.; editor, Tucker Wiard; art director, Greg Richman; sound, Michael Ballin; music, Bruce Miller, Merry Clayton, Curtis Amy. #Cast: Pamela Reed, Meagen Fay, Breckin Meyer, Meghann Haldeman, Robert Hy Gorman, Phillip Van Dyke, Charles Rocket, Donna Magnani, William Hubbard Knight, Charmin Lee, Larry Dorn Jr. Despite the considerable verve of Pamela Reed's performance and a handful of wickedly funny lines, "The Home Court" is likely to be sentenced to death by lethal neglect. The NBC schedulingdepartment has cast its vote. By Saturday night, viewers will have had their fill of courtrooms. On the other hand, the competition isn't too stiff, and this sitcom is more akin to "One Day at a Time" than "Night Court," let alone all the legal dramas being played out on the air this fall. Reed is Sydney J. Solomon, a juvenile court judge in Chicago who's so tough she frightens guard dogs. Her vulnerable, feminine side is tested in the pilot when she squares off with her son (Breckin Meyer).
He drops out of college and she kicks him out of the apartment.
The rest of her brood, her sister Greer (Meagen Fay) and her colleagues think she's being too hard. Life as a single, working mom isn't getting any easier. The main chink in this stubborn gal's armor is her need for male companionship. The contrast between disciplinarian and needy woman is nearly exhausted in debut seg.
The good lines in Sy Dukane and Denise Moss' script are outnumbered by off-the-wall quips and non-starters. Material runs the gamut from toilet humor to references to Medea. Half seems written by a gifted adolescent, the other half by a Ph.D.
One kid surfs the Internet, but the quartet of children are otherwise unremarkable. There's not enough of Fay as the jaded, self-indulgent sister -- a character inspired, perhaps, by "Absolutely Fabulous." Charles Rocket portrays an incredibly immature jurist.
Andrew Weyman's direction can't be faulted, and the title song and music have the requisite moxie.
Like its lead character, "The Home Court" is both determined and desperate -- and destined to get lost on Saturday night.
For a history of Sitcom Lawyers go to http://tarlton.law.utexas.edu/lpop/etext/ptl/jarvis.htm
For a website dedicated to Breckin Meyer go to http://www.geocities.com/hollywood/7739/breckin.html
For another Breckin Meyer website go to http://the-grand-panjandrum.tripod.com/breckin.html |
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· Date: Sat July 22, 2006 · Views: 1204 · Dimensions: 422 x 480 ·
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Keywords: Home Court: Cast Photo
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