Frasier is off to a different city with new challenges to face, new relationships to forge, and an old dream or two to finally fulfill. Frasier has re-entered the building.Frasier is off to a different city with new challenges to face, new relationships to forge, and an old dream or two to finally fulfill. Frasier has re-entered the building.Frasier is off to a different city with new challenges to face, new relationships to forge, and an old dream or two to finally fulfill. Frasier has re-entered the building.
- Nominated for 4 Primetime Emmys
- 4 wins & 8 nominations total
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Featured reviews
He picks up his character and doesn't skip a beat! Just the rest of the cast can't keep up with him.
He keeps me coming back or I wouldn't have made it past the first episode.
First, the laugh track. Make it stop, can we do a real audience?
Secondly, the entire new cast of the show is meh...at best.
The original was a really tough act to follow and knowing that, casting could have stepped it up.
The new cast/writing goes for the standard and prescribed laughs, which have become common in newer sitcoms.
The actor delivery becomes formulaic. It's as if they wandered off a Disney set and found themselves on this show; confused and insecure.
There isn't anything much unique about the new show Frasier, other than it taking place in Boston and reuniting with his son.
What made Cheers and Frasier (the original) interesting, each show was character/actor/story driven. This reboot seemed rushed and disorganized.
Lastly, locations and sets arent very dynamic. Cheers and Frasier (the original) took had more interesting set location; The bar in Cheers, the apartment (original Frasier), cafe nervosa, the radio station...the sets became a character in and of themselves.
After episode 6, it does start to pick up. The scripts are more tightly written with Frazier's antics. There are cameo performances from Lilith and Roz.
I'm just not in love with it, like the original. I'm hoping the show can recast or at least find its rhythm.
He keeps me coming back or I wouldn't have made it past the first episode.
First, the laugh track. Make it stop, can we do a real audience?
Secondly, the entire new cast of the show is meh...at best.
The original was a really tough act to follow and knowing that, casting could have stepped it up.
The new cast/writing goes for the standard and prescribed laughs, which have become common in newer sitcoms.
The actor delivery becomes formulaic. It's as if they wandered off a Disney set and found themselves on this show; confused and insecure.
There isn't anything much unique about the new show Frasier, other than it taking place in Boston and reuniting with his son.
What made Cheers and Frasier (the original) interesting, each show was character/actor/story driven. This reboot seemed rushed and disorganized.
Lastly, locations and sets arent very dynamic. Cheers and Frasier (the original) took had more interesting set location; The bar in Cheers, the apartment (original Frasier), cafe nervosa, the radio station...the sets became a character in and of themselves.
After episode 6, it does start to pick up. The scripts are more tightly written with Frazier's antics. There are cameo performances from Lilith and Roz.
I'm just not in love with it, like the original. I'm hoping the show can recast or at least find its rhythm.
I'm an enormous fan of the original Frazier, it is one of the finest sit-coms ever, the writing and acting was second to none.
Admittedly only 2 episodes of this sequel have aired so far and I'll give it the benefit of the doubt for a few more but thus far I'm not impressed at all.
Things that need to improve, fast:
Cheers and Frazier had an edge to them, they were that sharp, slightly mean. This feels like an ABC early evening overly sanitised American 'comedy' that people may like but never really laugh at. So far this is very 2020s, there's nothing to laugh at.
Admittedly only 2 episodes of this sequel have aired so far and I'll give it the benefit of the doubt for a few more but thus far I'm not impressed at all.
Things that need to improve, fast:
- Niles and Daphne's son isn't a character, he's a poor pastiche.
- the Dean of the school is a cliche and in this instance is neither used to deliver comedy or as a straight-man to bounce jokes off.
- the character played by Nicholas Lyndhurst has very few jokes and is again another lazy cliché.
- the premise of Frazier taking a job and buying a building feels forced and is a regurgitation of the original premise.
- the son character immediately jumped into "feelings" with zero comedy value.
- Frazier has lost his angst, his blundering despite best efforts, his effete snobbery has been removed. All the stuff that made him funny.
Cheers and Frazier had an edge to them, they were that sharp, slightly mean. This feels like an ABC early evening overly sanitised American 'comedy' that people may like but never really laugh at. So far this is very 2020s, there's nothing to laugh at.
Is this as good as the best seasons of the original series? Of course not. Expecting that would be a fools errand. But does it have its charms? Sure.
The inversion of the original plot is a nice way to both complete Frasier's character arc, while maintaining a generally familiar dynamic.
And unlike the original, which hit the ground running from the very first episode (perhaps more so than any other show), this one does have some room for improvement. The cast is inconsistent, most notably in the questionable casting of Freddy and David. That said, Eve & Alan are both excellent.
This is television comfort food. It's not meant to be anything more than this. Some of the jokes fall flat, some don't. There is an excellent joke in the fifth episode where Alan accentuates the punchline by cracking a chestnut with a gauntlet he's accidentally gotten his hand stuck in. Moments like this have flashes of the original's brilliance, but for the most part this is a show full of smiles but not full of laughs.
If you just want to see Kelsey Grammar back in the role of Fraiser, and can stomach the idea that nothing will ever match the original, then the show is well worth a watch.
The inversion of the original plot is a nice way to both complete Frasier's character arc, while maintaining a generally familiar dynamic.
And unlike the original, which hit the ground running from the very first episode (perhaps more so than any other show), this one does have some room for improvement. The cast is inconsistent, most notably in the questionable casting of Freddy and David. That said, Eve & Alan are both excellent.
This is television comfort food. It's not meant to be anything more than this. Some of the jokes fall flat, some don't. There is an excellent joke in the fifth episode where Alan accentuates the punchline by cracking a chestnut with a gauntlet he's accidentally gotten his hand stuck in. Moments like this have flashes of the original's brilliance, but for the most part this is a show full of smiles but not full of laughs.
If you just want to see Kelsey Grammar back in the role of Fraiser, and can stomach the idea that nothing will ever match the original, then the show is well worth a watch.
I was not expecting a duplicate of the first act but I had high hopes of seeing the continuation of the "loveably pompous" Frasier Crane. Unfortunately, it seems like most of what was at the Dr.'s core was removed in this reboot or was never really there in the last. Wearing sneakers, settling to live in an average apartment, patronizing a run-of-mill bar (Cheers was different). Are we to believe he went from national celebrity to teaching and no longer wants the finer things in life or that he no longer wants to help people through psychiatry ... to many things the doctor we know, would not suscribe to. Without the uptight, buttoned up, picky, elitist, notoriety status grabbing snob...what do you have? You have my next door neighbor's story of his rocky relationship with his kid...I don't need tv for that!
I'm my opinion, tv stardom should have been the present, not the past. Think of how many crazy sit-in guests he could have had and the potential for drama and characters behind the scenes of a tv show. Not to mention what great apartments with a fantastic view he could have had in Chicago. Additionally, keeping intact his pseudo-aristocratic nature would have made his relationship with his son more challenging and exciting.
I'm my opinion, tv stardom should have been the present, not the past. Think of how many crazy sit-in guests he could have had and the potential for drama and characters behind the scenes of a tv show. Not to mention what great apartments with a fantastic view he could have had in Chicago. Additionally, keeping intact his pseudo-aristocratic nature would have made his relationship with his son more challenging and exciting.
It's a slightly shaky seven-out-of-ten for the Frasier re-boot. The new concept seems solid, the writing is clever enough and Kelsey Grammar has still got it. The other positives are Jack Cutmore-Scott as Frasier's son, Freddy, and Anders Keith as Niles' son, David. Each instantly clicks in the roles and each can deliver both comedy and pathos. I'm less sure about Nicholas Lyndhurst as Frasier's friend, Alan. I can't see Lyndhurst and Grammar being as hilarious a pairing a Grammar and David Hyde Pierce. But time will tell. And for me Toks Olagundoye just didn't really gel as Olivia, and she certainly couldn't handle the zingers written for her. There was also some rather forced plotting (even for a sitcom) - like every character turning up for Frasier's dinner with Freddy. It was the kind of contrived development that the original Frasier would either have avoided or handled with considerably more aplomb. Overall, though, not a bad start. Fingers crossed.
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Did you know
- TriviaThe bar frequented by Frasier and his friends is named Mahoney's as a tribute to the late John Mahoney.
- GoofsIn a season 2 trailer, Freddie tells Bulldog that he listened to his show all the time as a kid. This would be impossible as Bulldog's Gonzo Sports Show was, at most, a regionally syndicated radio program, and Freddie lived full-time with his mother, Lilith, in Boston which is roughly 2,500 miles away.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Project: Episode dated 6 December 2023 (2023)
- How many seasons does Frasier have?Powered by Alexa
- Why hasn't Paramount+ provided an up-front guide to turning on Captions and/or Audio Descriptions ?
Details
- Runtime27 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
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