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Monk (TV series)

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Monk is a television show about an obsessive-compulsive detective named Adrian Monk (played by actor Tony Shalhoub). The show, which has just entered its fifth season, debuted in 2002 and is produced by the USA Network. Created by Andy Breckman, writer of Rat Race, the critically acclaimed basic cable series has been a popular hit and won several major awards (see below). The show is also credited with significantly raising USA Network's profile. Monk airs Friday nights at 9 p.m. EST.

Series overview

Adrian Monk, graduate of University of California, Berkeley, was originally a brilliant homicide detective of the San Francisco Police Department. Due to an unusual upbringing (the scope of which is being slowly revealed both in flashbacks and the present), Monk grew up with a variety of quirks and tics. After the murder of his wife, Trudy, and his inability to solve it (the only case in his career Monk has never been able to solve), Monk suffered a nervous breakdown, and his eccentricities manifested as an extreme case of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). Although he suffered from OCD his whole life, while Trudy was still living, his symptoms were largely under control.

After Trudy's death, Monk's life spun out of control and he ended up losing his badge. He refused to leave his house for three years. After these three years in seclusion, Monk began to perform consulting work for the police department, helping the police solve difficult cases. Police Captain Leland Stottlemeyer (Ted Levine) and Lieutenant Randall "Randy" Disher (Jason Gray-Stanford), call on and spar with Monk when they have a case they can't crack. Stottlemeyer is often infuriated with Monk's disorder, but respects Monk's amazing observational abilities, as does Disher, and Stottlemeyer has slowly become one of Monk's closest friends. Monk continues to search for information about his wife's death as he works on other cases with both Leland and Randy aiding him.

Monk's personal nurse, Sharona Fleming (Bitty Schram), helped get him back on his feet. Once, Sharona's son Benjy (Kane Ritchotte) helped Monk with a case, albeit unintentionally. Bitty Schram left the show during the third season due to a contract dispute. Traylor Howard plays Monk's new assistant, Natalie Teeger. Much like Sharona, Natalie is a single mother and has a daughter about the same age as Benjy named Julie (Emmy Clarke), and she has the patience to deal with Monk, and the confidence to keep in on a straight path.

Monk's truly obsessive attention to detail allows him to spot tiny discrepancies, find patterns, and make connections that everyone else in the investigations miss. He notices things such as the absence of a red pen (the color used to write a purported suicide note) in a victim's apartment, which tells him that someone else wrote the note. The pilot episode, "Mr. Monk and the Candidate", contains a prime example of Monk's photographic memory: He glances at a board with hundreds of colored pins, and after accidentally knocking them out, places them all back perfectly within five minutes. However, it is not necessary for him to see evidence to solve a murder. One such example of this is the time that he solved a murder in Paris that was reported in a newspaper article, in which the wife of a caretaker for a museum exhibit that contained some of the world's first handcuffs is found murdered with her hands cut off. Monk deduces that the caretaker had restrained her with the handcuffs, but because the keys for the handcuffs were missing, had to cut her hands off to return the handcuffs to the exhibit as not to raise suspicion.

While Monk does conduct talk therapy with his psychiatrist, the doctor is not much help with his OCD. For example, SSRI medication, which is commonly used by psychiatrists to treat OCD, is never prescribed. This is partially due to Monk's aversion to medication, covered in "Mr. Monk Takes His Medicine". Upon taking the drugs, Monk's personality begins to change so drastically that he eventually becomes an egotistical annoyance instead of a competent detective. After realizing what Trudy would have thought of him if she were still alive, he throws out the drugs and has not taken medication since.

Monk's mental and emotional problems extend beyond the boundaries of obsessive-compulsive disorder; he also suffers from a variety of crippling phobias, such as acrophobia (fear of heights), claustrophobia (fear of confined spaces), lactophobia (fear of milk), ophidiophobia (fear of snakes), mysophobia (fear of dirt), mycophobia (fear of mushrooms), and germophobia (fear of germs). One of his worst traits is that he has difficulty relating to other people. One view is that this is primarily because of eccentricities stemming from his upbringing, however some hold the view that he may have Asperger's syndrome or high functioning autism. #redirect But as the show progresses, Monk has learned to relate more to people like Leland and Natalie.

In "Mr. Monk and the Three Pies", the viewers are introduced to Monk's brother Ambrose (John Turturro), who is both as brilliant and as troubled as Adrian, but in different ways. His principal personality disorder is his need to be confined to his house for many years due to crippling agoraphobia. Rather than being a brilliant detective, Ambrose is fluent in many different languages and writes appliance instruction booklets for a living. This job is perfect for him as it does not require Ambrose to ever leave his house. The character is based on Mycroft Holmes, the older and smarter brother of Sherlock Holmes. He does, however, share Adrian's remarkable photographic memory. Ambrose also is waiting for his and Adrian's father to return, making their father dinner every night and saving every single bit of mail delivered to the house. When Ambrose is first introduced Adrian is still holding a grudge against him for not attending Trudy's funeral or even calling after Trudy died. Later it is revealed that Ambrose blames himself for Trudy's death.

Trudy was murdered with a car bomb in 1997 after leaving a drug store where she bought cough syrup for Ambrose. She was a journalist, who brought down a large company by exposing secrets. This may or may not have something to do with her murder. The viewer learns at the end of the second season that the bomb was built by a New York criminal named Warrick Tennyson. Dale "the Whale" Beiderbeck (Tim Curry,Adam Arkin), a 800-pound white-collar criminal whom Monk had previously incarcerated for his involvement in a murder plot, tells him about Tennyson in "Mr. Monk Goes to Jail" in exchange for Monk negotiating to get Dale a window in his prison cell. The episode was the final episode of the second season and resulted in the series' only cliffhanger thus far.

In the third season premiere, Monk finds Tennyson, who is dying in a hospital of heart disease. Monk is permitted to interrogate Tennyson, who admitted at the end of "Mr. Monk Takes Manhattan" that he was paid $2000 to build the bomb by an unknown six-fingered man who he met once in a parking garage. After learning this, Monk, in a rare instance of showing emotions other than fear or anxiety, turns off Tennyson's morphine drip so that he will die in agony. After a few moments, Monk relents and turns it back on, not because he wants to, but because he knows that his actions, however justified they may have been, would have disappointed Trudy because they would have caused pain.

The show is widely acclaimed for its excellent guest stars, which in addition to Turturro have included Kevin Nealon, Malcolm McDowell, Joy Giovanni, Olek Krupa, Sarah Silverman, Tim Daly, Willie Nelson, Carmen Electra, Jason Alexander, KoЯn, James Brolin, Jon Favreau, Danny Bonaduce, Tim Curry, Bob Gunton, Nicole Sullivan, Brooke Burke, Andrew McCarthy, Fred Ewanuick, Janet Wright, Stanley Tucci, Alice Cooper, and Chi McBride.

Although set in San Francisco and its area, Monk is actually for the most part shot outside San Francisco, with the exceptions of occasional exteriors featuring city landmarks. The pilot episode was shot in Vancouver, British Columbia, and the subsequent 1st Season episodes have been shot in the Toronto, Ontario area. Most of the episodes in subsequent seasons have been filmed in the Los Angeles, California area.

Series history

The original two hour pilot was commissioned by ABC, originally as a vehicle for comic actor Michael Richards, who dropped out after reading the script for the pilot. Afterward, they weren't certain about the series and handed it off to USA Network. As part of the deal, ABC got the right to air repeats of the series after the episodes ran on USA. ABC used some episodes to fill in its summer schedule and got respectable ratings. Technically, the deal is still in place, but with USA Network being bought by NBC/Universal, the odds of episodes showing up on ABC again are very slim.

On January 12, 2006, USA Network announced that the show had been picked up through at least season six as one of the "[highest-rated series in cable history]."

Season 5 premiered Friday, July 7, 2006 at 9 p.m. Eastern time. This marked the first official time change for the program, having aired at 10 p.m. its first 4 seasons. The change is due to its popularity and to work as a lead-in to the new USA Network series Psych, another offbeat detective program.

The show has followed a consistent format of airing half of its 16 episodes in the summer, followed by the second half in the winter.

Characters

Main characters

Secondary characters

Monk's phobias

Monk's phobias change their order of priority from episode to episode. In one of the third season episodes, he cited 'The Miracle of Birth' (Mr. Monk and the Red Herring) as his top phobia, but in other episodes, it's been snakes, germs, or whatever applies best to the plot.

Some of those cited repeatedly in his 'top ten' over the seasons include:

His other fears include:

Oddly enough, he is not usually afraid of blood.

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DVD releases

DVD Name
Release dates
Region 1
Region 2
Region 4
The Complete 1st Season June 15 2004 December 27 2004 January 20 2005
The Complete 2nd Season January 11 2005 July 18 2005 September 19 2005
The Complete 3rd Season July 5 2005 February 27 2006 March 7 2006
The Complete 4th Season June 27 2006 N/A N/A

Awards and nominations

  • 2003 award for outstanding lead actor in a comedy series (Tony Shalhoub)
  • 2003 award for outstanding main title theme music (Jeff Beal) (WHOAW)
  • 2004 nomination for outstanding lead actor in a comedy series (Tony Shalhoub)
  • 2004 award for outstanding guest actor in a comedy series (John Turturro)
  • 2004 award for outstanding main title theme music ("It's a Jungle Out There" by Randy Newman)
  • 2004 nomination for outstanding casting for a comedy series
  • 2005 nomination for outstanding directing for a comedy series
  • 2005 award for outstanding lead actor in a comedy series (Tony Shalhoub)
  • 2006 nomination for outstanding lead actor in a comedy series (Tony Shalhoub)
  • 2006 nomination for outstanding guest actress in a comedy series (Laurie Metcalf as Cora)

  • 2003 nomination for outstanding performance by a male actor in a comedy series (Tony Shalhoub)
  • 2004 award for outstanding performance by a male actor in a comedy series (Tony Shalhoub)
  • 2005 award for outstanding performance by a male actor in a comedy series (Tony Shalhoub)

  • 2003 nomination for best television episode teleplay ("Mr. Monk Takes a Vacation", Teleplay by Hy Conrad)
  • 2004 nomination for best television episode teleplay ("Mr. Monk and the 12th Man", Teleplay by Michael Angeli)
  • 2004 nomination for best television episode teleplay ("Mr. Monk and the Very, Very Old Man", Teleplay by Daniel Dratch)
  • 2005 nomination for best television episode teleplay ("Mr. Monk and the Girl Who Cried Wolf", Teleplay by Hy Conrad)

Monk in other countries

The series has been exported to and dubbed in many countries, including:

Reruns and syndication

Trivia

See also

References

External links

MONK
Current Main Characters Adrian Monk | Natalie Teeger | Captain Leland Stottlemeyer | Lieutenant Randy Disher | Dr. Charles Kroger
Secondary Characters Trudy Monk | Ambrose Monk | Dale "The Whale" Biederbeck
Former Characters Sharona Fleming
Related Articles Episode List | Monk soundtrack | Mr. Monk Goes to the Firehouse
Official Website [http://www.usanetwork.com/series/monk/index.html]

 


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