Having seen seven or eight of the Rescue Me epispodes on Cable's FX channel, in various orders, I was blown away by the gritty, comic, tragic stories linking the all too human dysfunctional lives of seven "crew" members of an upper Manhattan FDNY Ladder Company. Viewing all 13 episodes in chronological order yesterday in the recently released Season One DVD collection, in one sitting, was an experience I will not soon forget.
Leary's comedic and dramatic career has always been a seeming grab for the brass ring, with spotty commercial success. His last two efforts, the hilariously politically incorrect ABC mid season replacement series "The Job", and now, Rescue Me, put him in a very exclusive company of talent who can take a concept, and bring it to artistic life, and deliver a grand slam.
The opening scene of episode one, finds Leary's character, Tommy Gavin, trapped in his smoke filled bathroom at home while a fire rages outside the door. Poof. It is a dream. Jump Cut to Gavin addressing a graduating class of "Probies", fresh new firemen awaiting assignnment.
"Want to know how big my balls are? My balls are bigger than any of your two heads duct taped together" Informing them that the process of probation is not to making "heroes", but discovering cowards, (he refers to them as "Pussies") he brags "There ain't no medals on my chest".
Gavin then startlingly, and touchingly recounts to the new graduates the stories of four lost firemen that perished at Ground Zero on 9/11. The camera pans back to a shot, showing the probational firemen standing at attention in military formation, the trainees teacher commanding them to "SAY THANK YOU FIREFIGHTING CLASS!" as Leary salutes them with a middle finger. Climbing into his Ford Pickup, (fire engine red, of course), he is greeted by his dead cousin and best friend Jimmy Keefe, who thanks him for the touching eulogy, but counters by adding, "Those Probies wouldn't think you were such a tough guy if they knew you were talking to a dead guy, but......."
Leary reveals his character immediately , stumbling over words to answer his dead cousin, he looks over, to find him disappeared as fast as he appeared. What does one say to a nagging ghost? "A**hole!"
Over the next 13 episodes this documentary style shot series feeds us real life views of the ladder company's crew members takes on life, marriage, sex, homosexuality, honor, dating and family.
We are introduced to an endless stream of characters, insightfully portrayed. Adorable children, vengeful ex girlfriends, bookies, bartenders, crackheads, lecherous uncles, gamblers, horny widows, violent monkeys, defecating poodles, as well as the ghosts of dead fireman and deceased "10-45's", people that Tommy Gavin was unable to "grab" before their death, all spun into Gavin's "Secret Evil Plan" to regain the love of his soon to be ex wife, Janet.
This is not so much a review, but an open letter to Denis Leary, thanking him for the joy of allowing me to be enchanted by his dis-enchanted world. By seeing the world through his dysfunctional Irish American eyes, I was overwhelmed by a sense of nostalgia (literally "reliving the pain")of my own life, and am profoundly grateful for every laugh and smile this televised comedic, and dramatic work of genius brought to me.