With “The Ghost of Bobby Smallwood,” Resident Alien Showcases Both Its Humor and Emotional Complexity
Photo Courtesy of Syfy
There are a lot of television shows we’re all missing right now because there’s just too much TV to keep up with all of it. But there’s a good chance in the last year and a half, someone in your trusted circle of taste has recommended that really funny Alan Tudyk show where he plays an alien. They may, or may not have remembered it’s called Resident Alien and probably forgot where it airs (SYFY), so you likely filed it away in that overstuffed “I gotta watch that” corner of your brain. Which would be a shame, because Alan Tudyk’s funny alien show is absolutely that but also a whole lot more, as evidenced in the latest Season 2 episode, “The Ghost of Bobby Smallwood.”
In the relatively compact span of 20-hours, Resident Alien has managed to actualize quite a few of the fundamental elements seen in some of the greatest ensemble dramedies on TV. Yes, it’s still too early to rank the series amongst all-time, found family classics like The Mary Tyler Moore Show, Scrubs, or Parks and Recreation, but Resident Alien already exhibits the kind of ambitious, emotion-based writing from creator/executive producer Chris Sheridan and his writers’ room, paired with the sublime versatile acting chops of its ensemble cast, that portends well for its potential legacy.
If you haven’t watched the series, Resident Alien is adapted from the Dark Horse comic of the same name by Peter Hogan and Steve Parkhouse. The premise of both are relatively similar: an alien intending to destroy Earth instead crash lands his spaceship in the remote wilderness and hides his presence by replicating the guise and identity of rural physician, Dr. Harry Vanderspeigle. In the series, Harry (Tudyk) the alien learns English by mainlining episodes of Law & Order and then awkwardly tries to commingle, begrudgingly, amongst the eccentric townspeople of Patience, Colorado. It’s a high concept premise that could easily have been played entirely for laughs, with Tudyk’s genius (but often underappreciated) skills at improv and physical comedy carrying the show.
However, from the pilot, Sheridan has made it clear he’s not interested in just crafting a story that relies on fish-out-of-water comedy to make its mark. Instead, he’s expanded the town of Patience to be an integral catalyst in Harry’s personal journey on our confusing rock. This town of oddballs isn’t just a collection of “wacky neighbors” playing straight men to Harry’s antics. Instead, they are a melting pot of disparate outsiders including Indigenous characters, local lifers, and outsider transplants all happy to disappear into their little corner of existence. And that doesn’t make them backwards, or hicks from the sticks. Rather, they’re a relatively worldly bunch of eclectic souls who all have a multitude of layers.
Sheriff Mike (Corey Reynolds) is a former cop from D.C. who returned home to care for his dad and avoid the PTSD triggered by his partner’s death. Deputy Liv (Elizabeth Bowen) is his extremely competent, but taken-for-granted current partner. D’Arcy (Alice Wetterlund) is a local, former Olympian whose bright future was doused by a career-ending injury, so now she runs the local bar and avoids connections of any note. Mayor Ben (Levi Fiehler) is the town’s young mayor, married to a non-local, Kate (Meredith Garretson), who finds himself jostling with her for control of just about everything, including their internal marriage dynamics. And Asta (Sara Tomko) is the old soul medical assistant who becomes Harry’s first friend and confidante and now knows the truth about his origins. There’s a smorgasbord of other support characters from kids to barflys who all add color and conundrums to Harry’s ultimate goal to finally go home, without his kind wiping out Planet Earth.