Strip Tease
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NBC's drama Las Vegas hits a hotstreak with a perfect combination of
hams and cheese.
Sometimes it takes a little while for a show to hit its stride, and
watching Las Vegas for the first half of its first season was a
crapshoot. About the only reliable diversions were seeing the Montecito
Resort & Casino big shot James Caan (The the Godfather icon, star of
great small films like 1981's Thief and, most to the point, 1974's The
Gambler) interact with his right-hand man, former All My Children cast
member Josh Duhamel. The doe-eyed Duhamel and craggy Caan quickly
developed an easy, light-comic rapport that's been fun to take in.
Oh, and so is Nikki Cox's Mary Connell, whose business wardrobe forces
her to enter rooms about seven inches behind her chest, thus giving an
inadvertent double meaning to her job title, "director of special
events." In its early episodes, Las Vegas was mighty soapy. Caan is "Big
Ed" Deline, who runs surveillance and security for the fictional
Montecito. Duhamel's Danny was monkeying around with Big Ed's daughter,
the is-that-your-porn-name Delinda Deline (MTV grad Molly Sims). But
Danny was also not immune to the allure of the joint's pit boss, Nessa
(Marsha Thomason), or casino host Sam (Vanessa Marcil).
Soon enough, however, creator Gary Scott Thompson and his writers
realized they needed to make Las Vegas' hustlers, visitors, and Elvis
impersonators more than background noise for Duhamel's trysts. So the
series pumped up the guest-star quotient.
That's when the fun began, around the turn of this year, when people as
diverse as Paris Hilton, Sean Astin, Dennis Hopper, Sugar Ray's Mark
Mc¬Grath began showing up, either as themselves or as thinly dis¬guised
versions of themselves (promos touted Hilton as playing "the ultimate
gold digger" -we're not exactly talking Paris tackling Helen Keller
here). I particularly enjoyed the Sugar Ray: Not only did we see McGrath
and his band do a primo Vegas-schlock version of "Every Morning," but
produc¬ers worked the singer into an ab¬surd subplot that found Big Ed
suspicious that McGrath was cheating with his wife. If I add that Mrs.
Big Ed is played by a middle-aged-bodacious Cheryl Ladd and that, in a
jealous rage, Ed barked at Danny, "Whaddya got on this Mark McGrath?" as
if the rocker were a thug lothario, you'll understand why this series
has become such a campy hoot.
Las Vegas borrows its flash and amiable-tough-guy tone from the 1978-81
Robert Urich show Vega$. And since CSI became a hit with swooping
microscopic camera moves, Las Vegas does the same; it doesn't matter
that on the two CSI shows, those shots (mostly into dead bodies)
serve a purpose. On Las Vegas, a camera zooms in on one bead of sweat
running down the sideburn of a gambler; the globule expands to fill the
screen, then spins and reflects the action in the casino before plopping
away. The point of this? Urn, none. It just looks fancy. Which, you
might say, is a metaphor for the glitz of Vegas. Creator Thompson, the
guy who wrote The Fast and the Furious and Tirrwcop 2, and writer
Gard¬ner Stern (everything from Law & Order to the Fox flop John Doe)
have come up with a winning mix of narrative speediness-every subplot
introduced in the first 15 minutes; every outcome foreseen in the first
16-and embraceable cheese. When you cast 90210's Brian Austin Green ('scuse
me, "Brian Green" these days) as Paris Hilton's leering lover, you know
you've got a series that's increasingly confident it can make you stick
around for its no-brainer stories.
I mean, any episode that offers up June Lockhart as Big Ed's meddling
mother and permits Caan to refer to Lassie's TV mom as "a hundred pounds
of pain in the ass" is evidence of a series whose simple pleasures bode
well for hitting the syndication jackpot. At the very least, Jimmy Caan
has earned a nice retirement package, and maybe by season 2, Las Vegas
will be so relaxed by success, the producers will release Nikki Cox from
her harness and put her into a frumpy jumpsuit. That poor girl is havin'
to work it way too hard. Grade: B