A gifted young teen tries to survive life with his dimwitted, dysfunctional family.A gifted young teen tries to survive life with his dimwitted, dysfunctional family.A gifted young teen tries to survive life with his dimwitted, dysfunctional family.
- Won 7 Primetime Emmys
- 46 wins & 120 nominations total
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Did you know
- TriviaBryan Cranston did several of his own stunts. Besides the cartwheel and the headstand, he did his own roller disco skating, spending all the free time he had in the 1-1/2 weeks he had to learn how to skate. After one of the show's writers asked jokingly whether Cranston would be willing to wear a suit of live bees, he said he would, so they wrote a script around the idea (The Bots and the Bees (2000)). He ended up covered in 10,000 bees, and only got stung once.
- GoofsThroughout his appearances in seasons 1-3, Commandant Edwin Spangler wears decorations that absolutely make no sense. While his uniform is clearly that of an USAF general, he nonetheless wears both the Pistol Expert and Rifle Expert badges of the USMC, while also sporting the ribbons for several decorations available solely to personnel of the US Army - the Army Distinguished Service Medal, the Soldier's Medal, the Army Commendation Medal, the Army Achievement Medal, the Army Overseas Service Ribbon, and the Army Service Ribbon (the latter two worn in the wrong order of precedence). Also, while claiming to have never served in combat, Spangler is shown sporting several decorations solely available for combat duty - a Bronze Star ribbon (with cluster) and a Purple Heart ribbon. The South Vietnamese Parachutist Badge, Vietnam Service Medal (with three Service Stars), and RVN Campaign Medal with 1960- device also point at a long deployment in Vietnam, while the Southwest Asia Service Medal and Saudi Arabian Kuwait Liberation Medal would make him a Gulf War veteran. Neither deployment, however, is ever mentioned in the series, making his mismatched decorations likely an error of the wardrobe department.
- Quotes
opening theme song: Yes, no, maybe, I don't know, can you repeat the question? You're not the boss of me now, You're not the boss of me now, You're not the boss of me now, and you're not so big. You're not the boss of me now, You're not the boss of me now, You're not the boss of me now, and you're not so big. Life is unfair...
- Crazy creditsFor the first 3 minutes of the Episode "Living Will" (3/6/2005), the bottom of the screen pages through a long list of fourteen alleged "producers". This was the first episode to air after the Academy Awards controversy over limiting to three, the number of "producers" who could win a best film Oscar.
- Alternate versionsAn extended version of the pilot episode was released with the 'Complete First Season' DVD boxset.
- ConnectionsEdited from The Brain from Planet Arous (1957)
Featured review
Are you a fan of "Malcolm"? Yes? No? Maybe? You don't know?
Can you repeat the question? You're not the boss of me, now etc.
I guess everybody remembers "I'll be there for you" from "Friends", but how about that catchy intro made of clips from the show and inter-cut with other excerpts of Manga and TV/movies gems, as if it foresaw that the show itself was going to evolve to the same cult-status, after having ensured a qualified transition between "Married with Children" and "Modern Family".
"Malcolm in the Middle", a creation of Linwood Boomer, is one of the first sitcoms to set itself apart from the usual family-friendly clichés and feature a totally irredeemable, dysfunctional family, and in the process, get rid (for the first time?) of that annoying laugh-track. indeed, the show is so confident on its comedic quality that it doesn't need to tell you when to laugh. And as far as laughs go, this is one of the funniest and most entertaining family series that is not "The Simpsons", and coincidentally, the closest live-action series to "The Simpsons" goofiness without that meaning the material isn't any fresh or original.
Indeed, if I had to nominate a show that is totally devoid of clichés, well, "Malcolm" is the one, starting with its titular character, played by blue-eyed Frankie Muniz: a genius and the middle-child of four bratty siblings. Boys of his intellectual condition are called Krelboynes, in homage to Moranis' character in "Little Shop of Horrors", but this is where the comparison stops. There have been eggheads or misunderstood middle- children in the past, but Malcolm is as mischievous as his brothers and he's a genius who hates his intelligence, or at least its social repercussion on the field of school popularity.
Malcolm is like Lisa Simpson trying to act like Bart. But no matter how hard he tries to pretend having nothing to do with his Krelboyne friends, composed of so many natural misfits (his best friend is a wheelchair-bound one-lunged kid), he's inevitably branded as so and has no other choice than keeping the lowest profile. The film uses a fourth-wall breaking device allowing him to share his fears, concerns and comments on the peculiar habits that inhabits his family's house. The character strikes for his self-centered nature, but as the show progresses, he became more of an occasional Greek Chorus and the foil for his brothers or father's funnier antics.
Meanwhile, Malcolm's blessing (or curse, depending on how you look at it) is the source of his funny interactions with the normal world, and I'm not sure I want to include his mother in. Because he might be the titular and central character according to the title, he's got a great competitor in Lois, played by Jane Kaczmarek. She's a TV mom like no other TV mom, maybe the fact that each of her four boys, and a fifth one over the course of the show, is as ill-behaved as his predecessor and/or follower, have to do with it. Still, calling her strict is an understatement as the woman is the ringmaster of a real menagerie-like family, and who can blame her? she's in a position that can't afford any sign of weakness.
There's a scene where Reese, probably the worst of all, says he wishes she was dead, which is something you'd never hear in a sitcom. A shocked Lois leaves the room, which astonishes Reese who's used to hear "I'll take you with me". And that's very typical of the show, just when you think it rings the same emotional notes than your typical soppy sitcom episodes, it delivers a line that reminds you this is "Malcolm". In another episode, Lois admitted to her husband, Hal, that she didn't feel any love toward her newborn child Jamie, to which Hal stoically answers that she never loved any of her sons as babies, and that's what helped her.
And before you're shocked, remember they're all boys, no girls for love or gender equity issues. The oldest one, Francis (Christopher Masterson) is an irresponsible and immature teenager who keeps blaming every failure on her and seems incapable to transition into a normal adult, Reese (Justin Berfield) makes Bart Simpson feel like Milhouse, Dewey (Erik Per Sullivan) is the eternal punching ball and perhaps the most immune to sadistic mistreatment, if he doesn't strike for a malevolent spirit, his behavior is sometimes enough to drive anyone crazy. And I must also count an infatuated loser and colleague named Craig and of course, Hal, the goofy but lovable father who picked the option of never interfering with his wife's methods.
Hal, played by Bryan Cranston, as a time where Walter White wasn't even a concept on a piece of paper, is the good cop to Lois' bad one, and when you see that Lois is surrounded by such specimens, you gotta give her credit for not letting the house fall apart. She might have taken that from her Polish mother, Grandma Ida, who's nothing like the usual grandma you see on TV (boy, do I feel like a broken record) and whose portrayal by Cloris Leachman is absolutely priceless. This is one of the great delights of the show, to provide some memorable supporting characters, from a sadistic army trainer to a sweet ranch owner played by the late Kenneth Mars (my only complaint from the show is the way he was written off).
Each character, each situation is like an inexhaustible source of gags, yet the show ended after 6 years while it was doing well. And this is another great thing about it, it never had to jump the shark, it was nice the time it lasyed, it grabbed many Golden Globe and Emmy Nominations (mostly Muniz and Kaczmarek) and it launched Bryan Cranston's career.
Indeed, without Hal, there would probably be no Walter White... another (of the several) reason to love the show.
I guess everybody remembers "I'll be there for you" from "Friends", but how about that catchy intro made of clips from the show and inter-cut with other excerpts of Manga and TV/movies gems, as if it foresaw that the show itself was going to evolve to the same cult-status, after having ensured a qualified transition between "Married with Children" and "Modern Family".
"Malcolm in the Middle", a creation of Linwood Boomer, is one of the first sitcoms to set itself apart from the usual family-friendly clichés and feature a totally irredeemable, dysfunctional family, and in the process, get rid (for the first time?) of that annoying laugh-track. indeed, the show is so confident on its comedic quality that it doesn't need to tell you when to laugh. And as far as laughs go, this is one of the funniest and most entertaining family series that is not "The Simpsons", and coincidentally, the closest live-action series to "The Simpsons" goofiness without that meaning the material isn't any fresh or original.
Indeed, if I had to nominate a show that is totally devoid of clichés, well, "Malcolm" is the one, starting with its titular character, played by blue-eyed Frankie Muniz: a genius and the middle-child of four bratty siblings. Boys of his intellectual condition are called Krelboynes, in homage to Moranis' character in "Little Shop of Horrors", but this is where the comparison stops. There have been eggheads or misunderstood middle- children in the past, but Malcolm is as mischievous as his brothers and he's a genius who hates his intelligence, or at least its social repercussion on the field of school popularity.
Malcolm is like Lisa Simpson trying to act like Bart. But no matter how hard he tries to pretend having nothing to do with his Krelboyne friends, composed of so many natural misfits (his best friend is a wheelchair-bound one-lunged kid), he's inevitably branded as so and has no other choice than keeping the lowest profile. The film uses a fourth-wall breaking device allowing him to share his fears, concerns and comments on the peculiar habits that inhabits his family's house. The character strikes for his self-centered nature, but as the show progresses, he became more of an occasional Greek Chorus and the foil for his brothers or father's funnier antics.
Meanwhile, Malcolm's blessing (or curse, depending on how you look at it) is the source of his funny interactions with the normal world, and I'm not sure I want to include his mother in. Because he might be the titular and central character according to the title, he's got a great competitor in Lois, played by Jane Kaczmarek. She's a TV mom like no other TV mom, maybe the fact that each of her four boys, and a fifth one over the course of the show, is as ill-behaved as his predecessor and/or follower, have to do with it. Still, calling her strict is an understatement as the woman is the ringmaster of a real menagerie-like family, and who can blame her? she's in a position that can't afford any sign of weakness.
There's a scene where Reese, probably the worst of all, says he wishes she was dead, which is something you'd never hear in a sitcom. A shocked Lois leaves the room, which astonishes Reese who's used to hear "I'll take you with me". And that's very typical of the show, just when you think it rings the same emotional notes than your typical soppy sitcom episodes, it delivers a line that reminds you this is "Malcolm". In another episode, Lois admitted to her husband, Hal, that she didn't feel any love toward her newborn child Jamie, to which Hal stoically answers that she never loved any of her sons as babies, and that's what helped her.
And before you're shocked, remember they're all boys, no girls for love or gender equity issues. The oldest one, Francis (Christopher Masterson) is an irresponsible and immature teenager who keeps blaming every failure on her and seems incapable to transition into a normal adult, Reese (Justin Berfield) makes Bart Simpson feel like Milhouse, Dewey (Erik Per Sullivan) is the eternal punching ball and perhaps the most immune to sadistic mistreatment, if he doesn't strike for a malevolent spirit, his behavior is sometimes enough to drive anyone crazy. And I must also count an infatuated loser and colleague named Craig and of course, Hal, the goofy but lovable father who picked the option of never interfering with his wife's methods.
Hal, played by Bryan Cranston, as a time where Walter White wasn't even a concept on a piece of paper, is the good cop to Lois' bad one, and when you see that Lois is surrounded by such specimens, you gotta give her credit for not letting the house fall apart. She might have taken that from her Polish mother, Grandma Ida, who's nothing like the usual grandma you see on TV (boy, do I feel like a broken record) and whose portrayal by Cloris Leachman is absolutely priceless. This is one of the great delights of the show, to provide some memorable supporting characters, from a sadistic army trainer to a sweet ranch owner played by the late Kenneth Mars (my only complaint from the show is the way he was written off).
Each character, each situation is like an inexhaustible source of gags, yet the show ended after 6 years while it was doing well. And this is another great thing about it, it never had to jump the shark, it was nice the time it lasyed, it grabbed many Golden Globe and Emmy Nominations (mostly Muniz and Kaczmarek) and it launched Bryan Cranston's career.
Indeed, without Hal, there would probably be no Walter White... another (of the several) reason to love the show.
helpful•181
- ElMaruecan82
- May 25, 2016
Funny Women of Television
Funny Women of Television
We salute the brilliant women behind all those unforgettable laughs on the small screen.
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- Also known as
- Fighting in Underpants
- Filming locations
- 12334 Cantura Street, Studio City, Los Angeles, California, USA(Malcolm's house, since demolished)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
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