Wed 25 Mar 2015
CROSSING JORDAN. “Pilot Episode.” NBC. 24 September 2001 (Season 1, Episode 1). Jill Hennessy, Miguel Ferrer, Ken Howard, Lois Nettleton, plus a large ensemble cast. Creator/screenwriter: Tim Kring. Director: Allan Arkush.
Please forgive the lack of screen credits. This is the only episode of Crossing Jordan I’ve seen so far, and I haven’t yet placed names with faces, nor do I know how long some of the faces will last. I didn’t include any names in the guest cast, either, since most of this first episode was devoted to introducing the characters, not the story itself.
Which was OK, or maybe even more than that, but if you’ll allow me, I’ll get to that in a minute. The series was on for six years, and I won’t lie to you: I’d barely heard of it before buying a box set of DVDs of the first season. I can’t tell you why it’s been under my radar all this time.
Or maybe I can. (A) A lack of time to follow everything that’s on TV, even crime-solving shows, and (B) an assumption that new shows won’t last, so why start watching them, but missing one like this one that does catch on, and it’s too late to catch up with the story line, or so I think.
Dr. Jordan Cavanaugh (Jill Hennessy) is a medical examiner who insists on helping the police solve the cases her dead bodies involve her in, against all of their wishes. She’s beautiful, smart-talking, feisty, has a problem with anger management, and as a direct result, she has run out of places to work until her former boss, Dr. Garret Macy (Miguel Ferrer), convinces his superiorss to hire her back at the Massachusetts Office of the Chief Medical Examiner.
I gather her father (Ken Howard) doesn’t stick around for the entire series, but at least during the first season he’s an ex-homicide detective who helps Jordan solve her cases by playing a version of killer/victim to re-enact the crime given the facts as she has them. He’s glad to see her again, but Jordan has problems, in the pilot, at least, with the fact that there is a new woman in his life, Jordan’s mother having been murdered when she was a child. This may explain some of the chips on her shoulder.
There are quite few others in the ensemble cast, as I said earlier, all of whom get a brief introduction and some exposure in this first episode. The story itself is interesting without being overly memorable. It turns out that a young prostitute, found dead in an alley and suspected of dying of a drug overdose, is actually a virgin. It is then discovered that she came to Boston looking for her father, and — well, I needn’t tell you everything, need I?
I do like the characters, and so did the general viewing public, given that the series lasted for so long. It’s one I’ll keep watching, at least through the first season, which is all that’s been officially released on DVD. (The problem being rights to the music played in the back ground.)
March 26th, 2015 at 2:53 pm
The series eventually added Jerry O’Connell as a slow boil love interest, and improved a great deal. Jordan was a complex characters, and odd for a television series, not always right or likable. In some ways she was the most attractive self destructive heroine on television.
Just about everyone grew and developed as characters more than most series ever allow, and her relationship with her father gets much more complicated.
Mel Ferrer has a much better role here than his current one on NCIS LA. Overall an interesting series with more complex characters than usual.
March 26th, 2015 at 6:59 pm
I’ve seen three more episodes since I wrote this review — it’s been in the hopper for three or four weeks — and I’ve enjoyed them all. I get the feeling that the writers are only now getting their footing, as I suspect is the case with most TV series, once they actually get on the air.
I continue to be impressed with the acting ability of Jill Hennessy in the leading role. I think it’s difficult to play a role in which she has to be both sexy (no one wears the outfits she does in a real medical examiner’s lab) and have anger management issues too.
It’s also a pleasure to see Ken Howard in action again. I don’t think I’ve seen much of him since WHITE SHADOW was on, and that was over 30 years ago. I remember looking a while ago for DVDs of THE MANHUNTER, another TV series he starred in, even before SHADOW, and not finding any.
So I went looking today, and lo and behold, yes!
March 26th, 2015 at 8:12 pm
Although Howard remains with the show for much of the run his role is reduced later in that season and in following ones.
I couldn’t agree more about Hennessy who manages to pull off the neat trick of being sexy, intelligent, and really screwed up.
Unlike many series she isn’t always 100% right when she goes out on a limb and has to apologize for it.
I don’t want to over sell it, but it was a consistently entertaining and intelligent series that I stuck with all the way to the end. They seemed to put more effort into this one than many series.
March 26th, 2015 at 9:04 pm
I agree with David on this one completely (except it’s Miguel Ferrer not Mel Ferrer in this.) Shame that only season 1 has been released on DVD.
March 27th, 2015 at 1:31 pm
Alan Feinstein, a particular friend of mine, played the character Blackie Conroy, a sympathetic gangster along the lines of Blackie Norton, and I will let you guys figure out who played that part, was brought in 2001 and 2002. This might have developed into something special for the series but the day was done. A missed opportunity all around.
March 27th, 2015 at 4:05 pm
Rick, obviously I know better. As with any really stupid mistake I’m blaming it on spellcheck.
March 31st, 2015 at 11:49 am
I will suggest that over the run of this series, it had brilliant and atrocious episodes, and hit every level in between, though the cast was consistently good. I’m not sure I can think of a more inconsistent series than this one, though I did watch most of them.
May 24th, 2015 at 8:00 pm
Oh please. By season 6 the lead character Jordan was essentially a bipolar criminal who’s only speed is to scream and browbeat people, commit crimes and everyone, literally everyone loves her. She doesn’t do any actual work of an ME but so what. Every dead person is Boston is a child and everything is a cover-up.
May 24th, 2015 at 9:30 pm
I’ll have to take your word for it. I’m still in season one, and season six is a long way off. You do make it sound as though they ran out of story material, though.