Current:Home > Contact'Moonlighting,' a weird, wonderful '80s detective romcom, is now streaming on Hulu -Thrive Financial Network
'Moonlighting,' a weird, wonderful '80s detective romcom, is now streaming on Hulu
View
Date:2025-04-18 02:13:27
For years, Moonlighting, the late-'80s detective/romcom starring Bruce Willis and Cybill Shepherd, has been on a lot of people's lists of shows that weren't on streaming and should be on streaming. Well, now it's on streaming. Specifically, it's on Hulu. All five seasons are there, from the splashy TV movie that served as the pilot to the fourth and fifth rounds when the show was huffing and puffing and rarely delivering the way it did in the beginning. (Sometimes people say this is because they "got together" as a couple and it ruined the show; this is factually incorrect.)
But oh, those first three seasons. Even back in the 1980s, when network television is often too-simply remembered as having been formulaic and desperately in need of the reinvention cable would bring, Moonlighting was sharp and strange and experimental.
One reason was the stars. It's immediately obvious why this show shot Bruce Willis, probably then best known as the guy who sang in a commercial for Seagrams wine coolers — speaking of the 1980s — directly to superstar status. He plays David Addison as cocky but insecure, his fast-talking slickness both a method of survival and a lubricant that lets him slide through life without working too hard. Cybill Shepherd plays Maddie Hayes, a wealthy and cool-toned former model (like Shepherd herself) who is scammed out of all her money and discovers that she's the owner of a ragtag detective agency that was being maintained as a tax writeoff. And so, Maddie and David become partners.
On the surface, it's such a classic pairing that it borders on cliché: He's a vulgar and wisecracking man-child, she's a classy tough broad horrified by his shenanigans. But it turns out that he is quite soft-hearted, and that she is whip-smart and fearless, and this part, you and I have both heard before.
But the execution, led by creator Glenn Gordon Caron, took an unfamiliar shape. The most obvious precursors to this show were probably Hart to Hart, about a glamorous married couple who solve crimes, and Remington Steele, which is about a woman who invents a fake male partner to lend her detective agency credibility. (The latter, by the way, did for Pierce Brosnan what Moonlighting did for Bruce Willis.) The difference is that both of those, while certainly wryly funny, had a tone that remained largely tethered to reality.
Moonlighting, on the other hand, went fully farcical, particularly late in each episode when the climactic action sequences came along. They include four identically dressed people running through a hotel to the William Tell Overture, a pie-throwing scene, and a chase in a hearse where the whole funeral procession gets involved. ("David, we're being followed. By a lot of people.") The dialogue was dense with jokes and wordplay; check out this rhyming sequence, which is thrown in with no explanation at all, and which is only funnier when you watch the bloopers of the poor actor in the scene with Shepherd and Willis trying to wrap his mouth around it.
And, too, there were the format-breakers. "The Dream Sequence Always Rings Twice," a black-and-white episode introduced by Orson Welles, was shot on real black-and-white film rather than being simply decolorized, and it's absolutely gorgeous to look at. The Shakespeare riff "Atomic Shakespeare" is playful and silly, but also clever. Stanley Donen (who directed Singin' in the Rain) even choreographed a dream ballet to a Billy Joel song for the episode "Big Man on Mulberry Street."
But for all the fast talk (this is the show that made me a fan of banter) and all the experimentation, and for all the production delays and rumored on-set drama, what surprises me when I look back at these episodes is how effectively Willis and Shepherd could turn on a dime and play true, touching, often very simple emotional scenes together that co-existed with that farce and that experimentation. They're both great in "Every Daughter's Father Is a Virgin," a deeply bittersweet episode about a visit from Maddie's parents, played by Robert Webber and Eva Marie Saint. They're both great in "Big Man on Mulberry Street," in which they deal with a previously un-discussed episode in David's past. And they're both great in "Witness for the Execution," which is about a difficult case they can't agree on (and which includes a milestone moment for their relationship).
Some things do not age well over a period of nearly 40 years; in particular, David's unabashed horniness is played for laughs even though it happens at work and amounts to sexual harassment of his boss/partner. But the pleasures of this show that burned very brightly and very chaotically remain well worth revisiting.
This piece also appeared in NPR's Pop Culture Happy Hour newsletter. Sign up for the newsletter so you don't miss the next one, plus get weekly recommendations about what's making us happy.
Listen to Pop Culture Happy Hour on Apple Podcasts and Spotify.
veryGood! (1)
Related
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- Online database launched to track missing and murdered Indigenous people
- AP Top 25 Takeaways: Separation weekend in Big 12, SEC becomes survive-and-advance day around nation
- AP Top 25 Takeaways: Separation weekend in Big 12, SEC becomes survive-and-advance day around nation
- 'Squid Game' without subtitles? Duolingo, Netflix encourage fans to learn Korean
- Large carnivore ecologist Dr. Rae Wynn-Grant talks black bears and gummy bears
- What’s streaming now: Annette Bening, Jason Aldean, ‘Planet Earth,’ NKOTB and ‘Blue Eye Samurai’
- Off-duty Los Angeles police officer, passenger killed by suspected drunken driver, authorities say
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- Japan’s prime minister tours Philippine patrol ship and boosts alliances amid maritime tensions
Ranking
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Pentagon pauses support for congressional travel to Israel
- Iowa vs. Northwestern at Wrigley Field produced fewer points than 6 Cubs games there this year
- Proof Kourtney Kardashian and Travis Barker's Family of 9 Is the Most Interesting to Look At
- The White House is cracking down on overdraft fees
- Biden spent weeks of auto strike talks building ties to UAW leader that have yet to fully pay off
- We knew Tommy Tuberville was incompetent, but insulting leader of the Marines is galling
- Mahomes throws 2 TDs and Chiefs hang on to beat Dolphins 21-14 in Germany
Recommendation
A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
Supreme Court agrees to hear case over ban on bump stocks for firearms
China Premier Li seeks to bolster his country’s economic outlook at the Shanghai export fair
Is love in the air? Travis Kelce asked if he's in love with Taylor Swift. Here's what he said.
US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
Joey Votto out as Reds decline 2024 option on franchise icon's contract
Pentagon pauses support for congressional travel to Israel
Chiefs vs. Dolphins highlights: Catch up on the big moments from KC's win in Germany