Hip Mission
A high school girl further increases God's prime-time exposure.
Reviewed by Douglas Leblanc | posted 4/01/2004 12:00AM
JOAN OF ARCADIA
8 p.m. Fridays (Eastern)
CBS
It's tempting to imagine the first Joan of Arcadia story pitch to network executives: "Think Joan of Arc meets Rock & Roll High School! The Supreme Being—sometimes disguised as a slab of adolescent beefcake—drops in for heart-to-heart chats! Every TV-loving teenager will love it!"
It's a pity the show airs on Friday nights, when few self-respecting arbiters of teenage cool would be anywhere near home or the family television set. Nevertheless, Joan is garnering healthy enough ratings to attract some glowing coverage from entertainment magazines, and is likely to win renewal into a new season.
Don't be fooled by the lovely and befuddled Joan Girardi (Amber Tamblyn): Joan of Arcadia uses many teen-friendly elements in its recipe, but it's a show adults may watch without shame.
There are no gauzy images of angels on this show. Instead, God visits Joan directly, appearing as a stranger on a bus, a sassy server in the high school cafeteria, an overly frank guest speaker on teenage sexual hygiene. After the first such visitor convinces Joan he is the Almighty in a non-distressing disguise, she soon learns to recognize God in whatever form comes next.
The God we worship, the God Scripture describes at great length, sometimes does use extraordinary means to call people into his kingdom. In our own day, we see it in Muslims who inexplicably encounter Jesus in their dreams and set off in search of him, or in countercultural heroine Anne Lamott's saying that Jesus simply appeared in her bedroom one night, thus making her possibly the most reluctant convert in Western Civilization since C. S. Lewis.
Then again, Joan requires that Christians check their credulity at the door. God's instructions to Joan often are so mysterious—try out for the cheerleading squad, despite your pronounced lack of perkiness; destroy a meticulous sculpture by your best friend and would-be heartthrob, Adam (Christopher Marquette)—that Joan does not dare say to anyone, "God told me to do this."
God's seemingly nonstop continuing revelations to Joan are tailor-made for this adolescent girl in a city based on Arcadia, Maryland. These revelations are not specific enough to withstand a testing by Scripture, by any historic creed, or even by messages Joan might hear in church. Though Joan sometimes wanders into an empty church, her family has not yet worshiped together and doesn't seem to know any Christians to whom church means anything. Joan simply attracts God's guidance day after day—maybe because she listens and, even after resisting his most perplexing orders, like destroying Adam's sculpture, she eventually obeys.
Though Joan is the character receiving visits from God throughout each day, much of the show's most satisfying dramatic tension centers on her older brother, Kevin (Jason Ritter). Kevin was a star athlete until an auto accident left his legs paralyzed.
As Robert J. Thompson, director of Syracuse University's Center for the Study of Popular Television, said in an interview with TV Guide, Kevin's condition sets Joan apart from other shows about God's involvement in our world.
"On Joan of Arcadia, there's a character in a wheelchair who doesn't get to walk again," Thompson said. "If that guy was on Highway to Heaven, by the end of the episode he'd be doing a jig."
Kevin began Joan's premiere season as an embittered, depressed victim, frequently bemoaning his life in a wheelchair and all the lost dreams his paralysis represented. God's earliest tasks for Joan, such as taking a job with a curmudgeonly bookshop owner or building a small boat in the family garage, helped Kevin break through the fog of his despair. In the episodes of early 2004, Kevin was playing basketball in a wheelchair league and rising from researcher to budding essayist at Arcadia's small daily newspaper.
April 2004, Vol. 48, No. 4