Welcome Tim Allen again to the land of multicamera sitcom, for a 3rd run in a kind that has handled him properly. “Home Improvement” ran for eight seasons on ABC and is arguably what allowed him to turn out to be a movie star; “Last Man Standing,” which returned him to tv after a decade within the films, completed a nine-season run (six on ABC, three on Fox) in 2021. And right here he’s once more, as soon as extra on ABC, with “Shifting Gears,” premiering Wednesday, which, if previous is prelude, ought to nearly see Allen — a match 71, his tight T-shirt would really like you to know — into his 80s.
Allen performs Matt, who — importing Allen’s personal automotive pursuits — runs a storage specializing in classic and customized vehicles. (Working right here we discover Daryl Mitchell as Sew, a clever wisecracker, and Seann William Scott as Gabriel, good-looking, amiable, a bit dim.) Actually driving again into Matt’s life, in a grimy Pontiac GTO she stole from him 15 years earlier than, when taking off pregnant with a musician boyfriend, is his daughter Riley (Kat Dennings). She’s getting divorced, musicians being what they’re, and wishes a spot to land along with her two children, moony teenager Carter (Maxwell Simkins) and cheerful little Georgia (Barrett Margolis), who has a factor for inventor and “Shark Tank” panelist Lori Greiner and goals of changing into a billionaire. (The children are wonderful.)
“Well, good luck finding a man who’s OK with his wife making more money than him,” says Matt, an old style kind of fellow.
“I don’t need a man to feel complete,” replies Georgia.
“You want to kill a spider, a man’s going to look pretty darn good.”
“I have a shoe.”
Father and daughter have been estranged, kind of — the children do know their grandfather — for the reason that loss of life of Riley’s mom some indefinite years earlier than; she was the bridge that allowed them to have a relationship. Riley, a former wild baby, voted “Mean for No Reason” by her highschool class, is making an attempt to boost her children with a sensitivity that Matt, who’s all “in my day we were,” regards as coddling. And they also should study to get alongside beneath the identical roof. You get the image.
Allen performs Matt, a widowed proprietor of a traditional automotive restoration store, whose estranged daughter, Riley (Dennings), and her kids come again into his life. Dennings, left, Maxwell Simkins, Barrett Margolis, Allen and Seann William Scott.
(Raymond Liu / Disney)
Allen and Dennings do rapidly strike a satisfying mixture of antagonism and affection. Each know their method round a filmed-before-a-live-audience sitcom. (Dennings spent six seasons on “2 Broke Girls.”) They’re superb speaking over each other, and superb not realizing precisely what to say. In a single tender second, aspect by aspect on a sofa, not sure the right way to attain out, he touches her … foot. To the extent that there’s a brand new Tim Allen right here, it’s the one who, considering of his late spouse, and the flour sifter he has taken care to not clear, he cries, nearly, kind of. However there has all the time been a comfortable heart to his self-important characters. (And who, actually, wants a brand new Tim Allen?)
“Yeah, it’s annoying the way she’s trying to save democracy.”
The sequence was created by Mike Scully and Julie Thacker Scully, “Simpsons” writers and co-creators with Amy Poehler of the animated sequence “Duncanville.” They reportedly left after the pilot (directed by John Pasquin, who directed a couple of fifth of “Home Improvement” and greater than a 3rd of “Last Man Standing” episodes), which is maybe why the second episode — solely two have been out there to observe — feels much less centered.
That there’s nothing new to see right here is just not within the sequence’ disfavor. Political variations amongst close-quartered sitcom households return no less than so far as “All in the Family,” which had been off the air almost a decade when Dennings was born; grownup kids shifting in with mother and father or mother and father shifting in with kids (see “Lopez vs Lopez,” presently in its third season on NBC) is an previous theme on tv, which likes to pack as many generations right into a three-walled set as doable. Formulation are formulation as a result of they offer constant, dependable, unsurprising outcomes.