Genre: | Sitcom Black comedyPsychologicalComedy-Drama |
Based On: | Wilfred |
Developer: | David Zuckerman |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Num Seasons: | 4 |
Num Episodes: | 49 |
List Episodes: | List of Wilfred (American TV series) episodes |
Location: | California |
Runtime: | 20-26 minutes |
Company: | Zook, Inc. Prospect Park Renegade Australia SBS Australia FX Productions |
Network: | FX |
Network2: | FXX |
Wilfred is an American sitcom that aired from June 23, 2011, to August 13, 2014, for a total of four seasons. Based on the Australian SBS One series of the same name, it stars Elijah Wood and series co-creator Jason Gann, reprising his role of the eponymous dog. The series was adapted for the American television channel FX by Family Guy veteran David Zuckerman, and moved to FXX for its fourth and final season.[1]
The series follows Ryan, a depressed ex-lawyer who is the only one able to see his neighbor Jenna's pet dog Wilfred as a man in a dog suit. Throughout the show, Ryan and Wilfred become close, spending nearly every day together. Wilfred is vulgar, a bad influence, pushy and often mean. Wilfred pressures Ryan to learn life lessons, reveal memories, admit shortcomings, and do things he would otherwise not do through strange and sometimes abusive methods.
See main article: List of Wilfred (American TV series) episodes. The show follows a young man named Ryan (Elijah Wood) and his neighbor's dog Wilfred (Jason Gann). In the opening episode, Ryan concocts a drug cocktail to die by suicide. After this failed attempt, Ryan's neighbor Jenna (Fiona Gubelmann) knocks on his door to ask him to look after Wilfred, whom Ryan sees and hears as a man in a dog costume.
Wilfred is based on the critically acclaimed Australian series of the same name and was adapted for FX by Family Guy veteran David Zuckerman.[2] Wilfred is produced by FX Productions, and the executive producers include Zuckerman,[3] [4] [5] Rich and Paul Frank, Jeff Kwatinetz, and Joe and Ken Connor from the original Australian series. Wilfred co-creator Jason Gann and Randall Einhorn serve as co-executive producers. Einhorn directed ten episodes of the first season and Victor Nelli, Jr. directed three. The pilot episode was filmed in summer 2010, written by Zuckerman and directed by Einhorn.
Unlike the Australian version—which concentrated equally on Wilfred, his owner and her boyfriend—the American version is presented as a buddy comedy between Wilfred and Ryan.[6]
There was interest in continuing the series on SBS, including talk about a possible film.[7] However, Renegade Film, the company that produced the original Australian series, was unable to sell it in its original version to any other countries.[8] Gann departed to create an entirely new series for the U.S. that used the format of the original, and additional Australian seasons were not pursued. Gann was initially hesitant to make a U.S. series, stating, "I had no interest in making the same show again, just surrounded by people with different accents."[7] However, the show in the U.S. differed greatly from the original series.
When the show moved to the U.S., head writer and show creator Jason Gann took a more advisory role in the writers room, writing only six episodes of the show's four-season run.[9] Gann has noted that writing the U.S. version was more taxing than writing the Australian version. His pitches often got rejected, and ultimately in the transition, he gave up a lot of creative control.[7] This resulted in departing from the Australian series in several ways.
When David Zuckerman took over the series, he expressed that the show's lack of international appeal was due to a lack of clear rules that the fantasy elements of the show could follow. He made it a priority to set and follow certain rules in the new series. In reworking the character of Wilfred and his relationship with Ryan for the American audience, Gann used the film My Bodyguard as a reference point.[7] The show took on a lighthearted and hopeful tone, as the original series was often cited as being extremely cynical.[8] The show was pitched to Gann as a different vehicle for the same character that he played in the Australian version. Because the character was so crude, and because he would have to be in a dog suit, Gann originally did not want to play Wilfred.[7] However, he felt that the character was very different from the Australian version, having many more sides, and overall being "more fun".[7]
On more than one occasion, Gann suggested that part of the reason that the show had poor ratings in the U.S. was because it got bogged down in mythology and at times made comedy secondary. He stated, "Season Three, we really tried to steer it back closer to where we were Season One, and make it really comedically satisfying. I really felt we achieved that, but it wasn't enough, I guess."[10]
After the close of the final season in the U.S., Gann considered returning to do a third Australian season.[9]
The casting of Elijah Wood as Ryan was announced on June 29, 2010. Ryan is described as "an introverted and troubled young man struggling unsuccessfully to make his way in the world until he forms a unique friendship with Wilfred, his neighbor's canine pet".[11] Series co-creator Jason Gann also reprises his role of the eponymous dog Wilfred, a character described by Zuckerman as being a mixed-breed dog who is "part Labrador Retriever and part Russell Crowe on a bender". Fiona Gubelmann stars as Jenna, Wilfred's owner and Ryan's next-door neighbor, who works as a local news producer.[12] Dorian Brown was cast as Kristen, Ryan's controlling and condescending older sister.[13]
The first season of Wilfred was shot using a DSLR, the Canon 7D, with a three-camera setup.[14] The subsequent seasons were shot with a Nikon D800.[15]
Critical reception of the U.S. adaptation of Wilfred was comparable to that of the original Australian series, with generally positive reviews.
On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the first season holds a 78% score, based on 41 reviews, with an average rating of 6.8/10. The website's critical consensus reads, "Wilfred is proudly vulgar and offensive, but a sentimental undertone lends the show some pleasing poignancy." The second season holds a score of 69%, based on 13 reviews, with an average rating of 7.4/10. The critical consensus reads, "Wilfred continues to be scaldingly funny with a deft humanistic touch but, like its titular character, it may be getting too coy with its narrative mind games." The third season holds an 86% score, with an average rating of 7.6/10, based on 14 reviews. The critical consensus reads, "Wilfred returns to a lackadaisical groove as its third season leans heavily on the combustible chemistry of Jason Gann and Elijah Wood, who both bring a hangdog charm." The fourth season holds a score of 100%, with an average rating of 7.8/10, based on 10 reviews. The critical consensus reads, "Wilfred rewards patient viewers with answers to its labyrinthine mythology during a final season that is harrowing, mind-bending, and ultimately moving."[16]
Review aggregator website Metacritic gives Season 1 a weighted average score of 66 out of 100, based on reviews from 33 critics, indicating "generally favorable" reviews. Season 2 holds a score of 57 out of 100, based on five reviews, indicating "mixed or average" reviews.[17]
Curt Wagner, writing in Redeye (The Chicago Tribune), said, "Stuffed with absurd situations and piles of bad taste, Wilfred is the strangest new show on TV. And the funniest."[18]
David Wiegand of the San Francisco Chronicle wrote, "Wilfred works on many levels, something that may not become apparent until after you stop laughing."[19]
Some of the less positive reviews included Mike Hale, who wrote in The New York Times, "Some shows aspire to cult status; this one goes straight there, practically bypassing the need to be broadcast at all," but concluded, "Gann's bits of doggie business ... are reliably humorous, but beyond that the show doesn't offer a lot of bark or bite."[20]
Tom Gliatto of People magazine also gave a less positive review, calling the show "The Odd Couple redefined by psychosis and whimsy. I'm not wagging my tail."[21] [22]
The series premiere hit a positive note with viewers, and it became the highest-ranking debut sitcom in the history of FX Networks. It continued to remain in the top ten for Thursday night cable television shows throughout the first season. It was picked up for a second season on August 6, 2011.[23] The second season aired from June 21 to September 20, 2012. On October 31, 2012, Wilfred was renewed for Season 3,[24] which aired from June 20 to September 5, 2013. On October 2, Wilfred was renewed for a fourth season (its last),[25] which aired from June 25 to August 13, 2014.
In an October 2013 interview, Jason Gann noted that a possible film is out of his hands, but that if fans want it, he could see the show coming back in a streaming capacity, much like Arrested Development.[26] In a June 2014 interview, Gann stated that he and Elijah Wood would be interested in a Wilfred film "if the story is there...".[9] As of 2024, the status of the film remains unknown.
After winning awards at MIPCOM in 2013, Renegade Films sold the Wilfred concept to Russian producers. A third version is being created for Russian networks retitled Charlie.[37]