The Michigan Daily - Monday, September 20, 1999 - 9A 'Harbor' eel goo ara Stillman r the Daily Look out Capeside, the WB has a 1 ew port to dock in. Continuing the tradition of naming watery melodra- ipas after waterways (the successful "Dawson's Creek" and UPN's repre- hensible "Hyperion Bay"), this sea- son presents "Safe Harbor." Created by B r e n d a Hampton, also the creator and Safe executive pro- Harbor ducer of the *** WB's highest The wB rated series, "7th Mondays at 9 p.m. Heaven," "Safe Harbor" is fami- ly oriented, light-hearted and entertaining. Te I e v i s i o n melodrama vet- eran Gregory Harrison plays a caring and generous sheriff to whom the town Safe Harbor undoubtedly owes its name. He is the single father of three ado- lescent boys, Jeremy Lelliott, Christopher Khayman Lee and Jamie Williams, who are pretty enough to acquire H anson status. Harrison Law & C Newsday Call it "Law & Order Lite." Or "Law & ;Order Heavy." NBC's new spinoff series is two, two shows in one, in a man- ner much different than its split-person- ality predecessor. "Law & Order: Special Victims Unit" li htens up the workaholic resolve of its l arent by delving into the personal lixs of its New York cops. But "SVU" als& darkens the mood with its focus on a sex-crimes unit that investigates the sickest and most flagrant of sordid mis- deeds. Case in point: Monday's premiere, where this "elite squad" is assigned the grisly multi-stab murder of a cabbie whercathe perpetrator(s) also "sliced off his4igar and took it with 'em." Yuck. *you can stomach the details - and keep the kids away from the set at this The Leads Send Voic Without docks 'Heaven' offers d'lves divides his time between keeping the Beaver Cleaver-esque town in more than perfect order and giving golden advice to his less than troubled sons. The family, which consists of the three boys, their father and their grandmother (Rue McClanahan), owns and lives in a motel. Each son occupies his own room, an unusual predicament which allows the boys unlimited privacy. For three teenage boys discovering the unusual species of girls, this provides much room for comic relief. Their father's greatest concern, "girls in the room," is often sneakily disobeyed. Their father's generosity is bound- less, however. He takes custody of a beautiful, blond teenage runaway, played by Chyler Leigh. Also present in the conglomeration of characters which create the 21st century version of a nuclear family is the youngest son's best friend, played by Orlando Brown. McClanahan is responsible for most of the humor of "Safe Harbor," as she holds on to the sexy grand- mother persona created in "The Golden Girls." She is the family's pseudo-mother, due to the unfortu- nate death of the real mother, whom the audience never meets. Irder: SVI early hour (be aware "L&O" creator Dick Wolf has publicly blasted NBC for not scheduling his adult show at 10 o'clock) - you'll be rewarded with the usual spellbinding piecing together of tales even more twisted than in the orig- inal "L&O." We need the relief of a light moment every now and then, perhaps to be sup- plied in the future by Richard Belzer's John Munch character, transplanted from "Homicide's" Baltimore to this Manhattan setting. But he's ill-used in the first episode after a nice introductory how-do-you-do ("Do you think that your conclusional pole vaults are personality- or gender-based?" he queries a female detective), even after returned Dann Florek (of "L&O's" 1990-1993 seasons) promises to tap Munch's "vast puncture- wound experience" We have to settle season of family q t By Heather Riedy for the Daily If you like to feel warm all over and need to revive your faith in fam- ily values, the season premiere of "7th Heaven" may be just where you want to turn. The successful show is based on the Camden family and how all nine members pull together to get through the day to day trials of life. In the last season, Eric and Anne f h Courtesy of The WB Gregory Harrison and his family in the WB's post-Columbine "Safe Harbor." "Safe Harbor" hurls the tradition- such as sexual abuse, pregnancy and alism of the 1950s into the new mil- broken families. lennium. This "feel good" series is Unlike many of the series on tele- set in a land of fantasy with a facade vision today, "Safe Harbor" refuses Camden received 7th The WB Mondays at 8 p.m. a blessed gift of twins, turning their already large family of five children into yet an even bigger bunch of seven. With more mouths to feed the pressure of how to care for the family grows. At the same time, however, the strength and love of each member proves checking to make sure that each of her seven children: Matt, Mary, Lucy, Simon, Ruthie and the twins, are as happy and on the right path. As the oldest, Matt is faced with big decisions in his passage to adult- hood. He wants to be a good role model for his younger siblings. Mary and Lucy continue their roles as the good-hearted, yet trying teens. Simon is in the throws of puberty and shocks the family with an impul- sive change in his appearance while Ruthie is just reaching the "big girl" stage. Although the twins add pressure to the family's financial situation, their roles are not yet clearly developed. However, they are soon to receive their own room which will finally give their exhausted parents a little bit of privacy since their birth. Somehow this large family com- bats all the odds and still comes out on top. There are moments of ten- sion and doubt but with faith every- thing works out. The season premiere is a great test of the Camden Family. It deals with the immediate Camden family as well as the stress of Eric's family. His parents return from an around the world adventure, in addition to, the revelation of his sister's big secret. the show is a must see if you, are missing some family togetherness time in your college lifestyle. The premiere is a good lead into another season of happy endings. mimicking reality. It combines the innocence of "Lassie" with the unavoidable issues of harsh reality to let go of the "happily-ever-after" theme. J' slices with grt that the family is going to make it no matter what. Eric Camden is a father to his fam- ily as well as to the community. His role as local minister tends to acd stress, while at the same time installing a greater sense of selfless- ness to the character. Mrs. Anne Camden continues her loving role as a concerned mother, mostly for his conspiracy theories and an occasional "slice and dice" aside. Luckily, we're quickly swept into the emotional orbit of Mariska Hargitay as an SVU detective who takes her job way too personally, for reasons revealed late in the game by mom Elizabeth Ashley. Hargitay is starting to cement herself as one of the more magnetic performers on the tube; she had us transfixed during her "ER" stint as Anthony Edwards' unstable girlfriend, who ultimately proved herself more mentally together than her guy. Here, she's a heartbreaker, not roman- tically but spiritually, acting tough to camouflage a fundamental tenderness. There's so much ferment in her simmer- ing soul, she seems about to burst through the screen. If only she would, and we could give her the hug she covets. That task is figuratively left up to Christopher Meloni (Chris Keller on HBO's "Oz"), her rock of a partner, him- self a family man with four kids, jug- gling school visits with case calls. "There's no crying in baseball," he cau- tions Hargitay, who's on "thin ice" with FHorek for her subjective behavior. They're supported by stimulating guest stars and gritty locations, two key strengths of Wolfs New York-shot series. Though Monday night's "SVU" pre- miere starts slowly, it soon picks up steam, as we discover secret identities, tangled motives, red herrings. It'd spoil the show to give away much more, but for a while the cops aren't even sure who the victim truly is. It's a heady start for a series that could quickly become the kind of keeper its predecessor has proven to be. Aliright. You may have missed the mass meetings last Tues. and Thurs. There's one more left this semester. Tonight at 7:30 p.m. Call 763-0379 if you have any questions. ,. , a . , t, .., .. . . NOR" Stu .ommen nent A Spe . ;_..; t . a ,,, I - i er k "1 1 for En dies 11 The Office of the Vice President for Communications is issuing a Call for Entries for a Student Speaker at Winter Commencement. Sunday, December 19, 1999 2:00 p.m. Crisler Arena or in Multimedia Email. S Voice The student speaker bach degree from Summer rm al 1999. Submit " Resume or Curt lumit scholarship andsc min' " Typed draft of speec i i length), focusing academic pursuits experiences uniqu oU-M " Audiocassette tap f author reading th speech my Emm'ai e Email Messages Anywhere Long Distance Charges. l.erm 4s in d 71 ail, I, ' 4 ' EarthLink7 =i-" sliat. Questions * Contact Beth Moceri bmoceri@umich.edu Please submit entries to: 615-0520 or by I I i I n~m~~ ,4 ~ X,-.c P f, ( I