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The premise is certainly appealing. Eliza Dushku (Buffy) plays a young woman referred to as Echo, one of many "actives" in the titular Dollhouse; a person whose mind can be imbued with personalities and knowledge to suit specific "engagements". The opening episode, "Ghost", starts with Echo in the middle of her latest mission – to be the perfect date for a millionaire. This involves riding alongside her date in an expensive superbike, and dancing the night away to Lady GaGa's "Just Dance" in a tight white dress.
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Meanwhile, a hard-faced FBI Agent called Paul Ballard (Tahmoh Penikett) has made it his sole purpose to find and expose the "Dollhouse" (revealed to be a secret, illegal, almost-mythical operation), because the company are essentially erasing the memories and personalities of innocent people, making them malleable for the process.
Dollhouse definitely has a lot of potential. The premise sounds like great fun, although it doesn't make too much sense when you start picking it apart -- although it's not as swiss-cheesed as the similarly-themed My Own Worst Enemy. But still, a big problem is trying to explain why "actives" are actually required. There doesn't seem to be any persuadable reason why you'd hire a negotiator from an illegal agency like Dollhouse, when there are genuine negotiators that exist in the world...
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Still, it's a concept that gives its star Eliza Dushku an enviable chance to flex her acting muscles, as she effectively becomes a different person each week. I do worry that default-Echo is so intentionally emotionless and bland, though –- because, if the series is going to be about Echo slowly realizing what her life has become, then we need to feel invested in the real girl's plight. If she just takes communal showers and drifts placidly around the spa-like Dollhouse facility, then that will become very boring. Of course, the alternative would be making Echo fully-aware of her lifestyle and willing to have her mind altered before going on missions –- which would work fine (a show built around The Matrix's "I know kung fu" scene) –- but it would drastically shifts the series into Alias-meets-Joe 90 territory.
A excellent cast are a definite plus point, though -- particularly Lennix as Echo's handler, Amy Acker as Dr. Claire Saunders (why is she scarred?), Penikett as the investigating Fed, and Olivia Williams as the Dollhouse's CEO. I'm not convinced Dushku is the acting-chameleon she'll need to be for this role, though. The "actives" themselves don't change physically -- so, while Echo makes a plausible party-girl at a birthday bash, she looks a bit silly in a pencil skirt with spectacles as a go-getting negotiator. I mean, wouldn't a real Dollhouse have "actives" of various ages so the disparity between the physical and the mental isn't noticeable?
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Overall, I have enough confidence in Joss Whedon to give this pilot a free pass. The characters and ideas were set up quite well, the cast are very appealing, and the dialogue was generally very smart. Story-wise, it just felt like a very poor introduction to this universe, and nothing grabbed my attention as tightly as I'd hoped. Still, it's very early days. If Whedon can overcome the obvious flaws in Dollhouse's concept, and Dushku can convince us of her weekly identities, this has potential to become something very good.
13 February 2009
Fox, 9/8c
Writer & Director: Joss Whedon
Cast: Eliza Dushku (Echo), Tahmoh Penikett (Paul Ballard), Olivia Williams (Adelle DeWitt), Fran Kranz (Topher Brink), Harry J. Lennix (Boyd Langton), Enver Gjokaj (Lubov), Dichen Lachman (Sierra), Amy Acker (Dr. Claire Saunders), Reed Diamond (Laurence Dominic), Brett Claywell (Matt), Kurt Caceres (Gabriel Crestejo), Haley Pullos (Davina Crestejo), Oscar Orlando-Torres (Chui), David Doty (Dir. Sam Zimmerman), Vincent Laresca (Mr. Sunshine) & Tim Kelleher (Detmer)