Wed 26 Aug 2020
A Sci-Fi PI TV Episode Review: HAUNTED “Pilot†(2002).
Posted by Steve under Reviews , TV mysteries , TV Science Fiction & Fantasy[10] Comments
HAUNTED “Pilot.†UPN, 60m. 24 September 2002. Matthew Fox as PI Frank Taylor, Russell Hornsby, John Mann, Lynn Collins, Michael Irby, Bree Michael Warner. Director: Michael Rymer. The complete series is available on DVD.
It’s been a couple of nights since I watched this, and to tell you the truth, it made such a little impression on me that other than Matthew Fox, the rest of the cast are only names to me. I’m going to take a very sad way out and use the Wikipedia description of the show: “Private detective Frank Taylor, whose marriage to Jessica Manning ended after their son was abducted, kills a pedophile, Simon Dunn, and almost dies himself. When he discovers he can now see the dead, he uses this ability to find a missing boy kidnapped by Simon, who now haunts him.â€
Part of the problem is that this is all claptrap to me. I watched this only because of the fact that Fox plays a private detective in this, not that that’s made very clear. The whole thing’s a muddle. Maybe it got better as time went on. Eleven episodes were aired before it disappeared for good. (A fact which is actually not so. Repeats have been shown on the Sci-Fi channel, Chiller, and Universal HD.)
PostScript: Kevin Burton Smith on his Thrilling Detective website liked the first episode better than did I, but he also goes on to say that the show would have been better if they’d played up the PI end of things, and that “the pop-up ghost gimmick was already annoying by the end of the show.â€
He also says, contrary to Wikipedia, that in the series’ first run on UPN, only seven of the eleven episodes were actually aired.

August 26th, 2020 at 8:29 pm
I found this amusing. Amazon remembers more than I do. They just informed me that I bought this series ten years ago. Just their way of warning me not to buy it again. (Asking price for a new set: $3.97.)
August 26th, 2020 at 8:48 pm
The premise of this series as described above, and I have never seen or even heard of the thing, reads like it might be fun if well handled.
August 26th, 2020 at 8:58 pm
You’re right. Even considering the fact that I think ghosts are hokum, there’s nothing wrong (or spookier) than a good ghost story.
August 27th, 2020 at 12:10 am
Ghosts as depicted, of course, but there is something ‘supernatural’ in the atmosphere following all of us, whether or not we accept the concept.
August 27th, 2020 at 6:35 am
Fantasy rather than SF, to be pedantic.
“The Sixth Sense” used a slightly different angle on the same theme.
August 27th, 2020 at 8:03 am
I cede your point, but I’d also like to note, with a smile, that I called the series Sci-Fi, not SF. I also wonder if the movie, released in 1999, had any input in the creation of this series (2002). Not that it’s a unique idea to begin with, by any means.
August 27th, 2020 at 6:58 am
Another one I’ve never heard of.
August 27th, 2020 at 8:09 am
The trash can of TV history is filled with shows like this one. They come and they go, sometimes even more quickly than this one. Who can keep up with them all? All I can say is that it’s fun trying.
August 27th, 2020 at 9:40 pm
Not a new concept by any means, though the idea of a tough private eye haunted by ghosts who want their cases solved would likely have been more welcome than this too tried and trite treatment of the idea.
I enjoy supernatural sleuths generally, and even some of the angst ridden ones played for straight chills can be fun, but this didn’t really find the needed atmosphere and mood to make it work as a serious drama.
What I remember about some UPN series is that they felt rushed into production under developed and lacking production money as if they were too eager to slap them on the air, and to willing to rush them onto the screen. This and a few others mentioned here felt slapdash by any standard, good ideas not followed through in the writing, acting, or direction.
August 27th, 2020 at 10:30 pm
David, your observation about the various UPN shows rushed into production seems to capture the spirit and soul of the network.