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The premise of "Face" is that the Devil (Matt Servitto) relies on a workforce of demons to help him claim fresh souls. One of those demons is Gary (Henry Zebrowski), whose numbers are low but whose ego remains inflated, despite a total lack of evidence that he has anything to brag about. In the pilot episode, he welcomes Claude (Craig Rowin) to the job, trying to show him the ropes, but before the day is even over, Claude has proven himself more adept at the job than Gary, for little other reason than Claude is willing to read the employee manual. Gary also spends time "haunting" his former roommate Lucas (Dana Snyder), who seems generally unfazed at the prospect of being visited by a demon. Despite a first season spanning only six episodes, which only span about 11 and a half minutes each, "Face" is short on inspiration, mining "office drone" territory that Office Space and two iterations of "The Office" have already milked dry, with little on top of that but treating the absurd aspects of Hell as equally mundane (such as a tiny "break room" that looks like a crawlspace and is filled with whirring saw blades, or urinals that the demons have to take shifts in, their heads peering up from the bottom of the bowl). Each episode essentially consists of Gary being given a task, which he fails at, while Claude catches on more quickly, and accomplishes more. Gary and Claude are also often joined by the series' primary damned soul, played by Eddie Pepitone, who remains a generally cheerful demeanor despite being a whipping boy forced to shovel endless amounts of coal. Still, even flat characters and a familiar story might've been forgivable if the show's jokes landed, but most of them are predictable, stemming from either Gary's selfishness or the desire to play the extreme with a straight face. In one episode, the characters go to a meeting where the "chairs" are flaming spikes that go up each employee's butt, and Claude is later seen walking around with one still jammed in his rectum. Not only is this a fairly lame joke to begin with, the fact that the characters take it in stride doesn't really one-up or add anything to it. In another, Gary discovers The Devil is boning his ex-girlfriend, which predictably causes Gary to both fail his assignment and unsuccessfully attempt to win her back. It doesn't help that all three primary characters (Gary, Claude, and The Devil) project the same smarmy comedic tone, which makes the show feel pretty one-note. The only bright spots here include a couple of guest stars. In "Take Life By the Horns", Matt Besser plays a hiker with a broken leg who Gary ends up stranded with on a mission to nab the soul of a sleazy senator. With both of them nursing broken legs, unable to escape, Gary starts complaining about his gig, which eventually leads the hiker to create a self-help book spilling a number of the Devil's secrets. Besser's mix of conniving yet weak-willed takes a minor role and elevates it. Later, in "Devil in the Details", Gary convinces a high school drama teacher (Geneva Carr) who is sleeping with one of her students to put on a play glorifying Satan. Her willingness to go along with whatever Gary suggests for another fifteen minutes of fame gives the episode a minor boost of energy. The DVD The Video and Audio The Extras Each episode also includes its own selection of deleted scenes (9:56, 14:17, 8:30, 1:25, 14:01, 11:03). Many of these are fairly minor extensions, and obviously, those who don't find the series very funny (like myself) aren't going to get much mileage out of the material the creators didn't think was worth including. Moving over to the special features menu, first up is the original short (12:06), which has the same name and also features the Devil, but is significantly different from the series. It features Dana Snyder (who plays Lucas on the show), Mike Schatz, and Hugh Davidson as three guys who attend a seminar and cut off their heads in order to be transported to a paradise filled with virgins and trees that sprout pizza slices, then discover that even good things become boring after a million years or so. It's actually funnier than the finished show, despite its' aimless quality. The short includes an audio commentary by Kelly and Willis, which is kind of amusing, although the short's soundtrack is mixed too high at times. Seven promos (2:58) are short, kind of amusing riffs on those famous motivational posters, each one starting with a single word. These are followed by six short behind-the-scenes clips (4:40). The first two are brief opportunities for Casper Kelly and Eddie Pepitone to riff, but some of the other are actually fairly informative for being so brief, touching on costume, production, and prop design. Finally, four screen tests (20:36), for Zebrowski, Rowin, Servitto, and Pepitone. Conclusion |