THE ILLUSTRATED MAN
Prison Break is, as nearly every reviewer has said, filled with ridiculous logic leaps, stock characters and by-the-numbers dialogue, yet it's also a lot of fun, and Wentworth Miller, as head prison-breaker Michael Scofield, is that rare pretty-boy action-show lead who's actually able to project intelligence and cunning (as well as, in the second half of the two-part pilot, genuine fear). It's not Oz--it's not even 24--but it'll hold my interest for a few more weeks, at least.
I do have one big problem with the show, however, and that's the full-torso tattoo that Scofield uses to execute his plan. It's a really clever idea (most likely inspired by Memento): every piece of information he needs to escape is encoded in the tattoo. So far that info has included the name of a cell toilet manufacturer and an allen wrench size, though, to be honest, that information really didn't need to be permanently etched onto his skin. (The main narrative reason seems to have been to make a C.O. suspicious.) Anyway, the main feature of the tattoo is that it's made up of the prison's blueprints, which Scofield reveals to his brother Lincoln at the premiere's halfway point. He takes off his shirt and shows Lincoln the tattoo, which looks like this:

Lincoln, of course, doesn't know what he's supposed to be looking at. "Look closer," says Scofield, and as Lincoln does, a CGI blueprint starts to form itself on Scofield's body. That looks like this:

Cool idea, right? Sure. Except that the lines of the blueprint bear no resemblance whatsoever to the tattoo, except for the sword that big demon guy is holding. It's not that after closely looking at the tattoo, the blueprints pop out at you--they're just drawn over the tattoo. I guess if you don't have TiVo it's easier to accept this, but when you can pause and slo-mo, it becomes painfuly obvious that this cool idea is poorly executed. How hard would it have been for the tattoo designer to design a blueprint-hiding tattoo that would hold up to ten seconds of scrutiny? Or is there something here that I'm just not seeing?
Prison Break is, as nearly every reviewer has said, filled with ridiculous logic leaps, stock characters and by-the-numbers dialogue, yet it's also a lot of fun, and Wentworth Miller, as head prison-breaker Michael Scofield, is that rare pretty-boy action-show lead who's actually able to project intelligence and cunning (as well as, in the second half of the two-part pilot, genuine fear). It's not Oz--it's not even 24--but it'll hold my interest for a few more weeks, at least.
I do have one big problem with the show, however, and that's the full-torso tattoo that Scofield uses to execute his plan. It's a really clever idea (most likely inspired by Memento): every piece of information he needs to escape is encoded in the tattoo. So far that info has included the name of a cell toilet manufacturer and an allen wrench size, though, to be honest, that information really didn't need to be permanently etched onto his skin. (The main narrative reason seems to have been to make a C.O. suspicious.) Anyway, the main feature of the tattoo is that it's made up of the prison's blueprints, which Scofield reveals to his brother Lincoln at the premiere's halfway point. He takes off his shirt and shows Lincoln the tattoo, which looks like this:

Lincoln, of course, doesn't know what he's supposed to be looking at. "Look closer," says Scofield, and as Lincoln does, a CGI blueprint starts to form itself on Scofield's body. That looks like this:

Cool idea, right? Sure. Except that the lines of the blueprint bear no resemblance whatsoever to the tattoo, except for the sword that big demon guy is holding. It's not that after closely looking at the tattoo, the blueprints pop out at you--they're just drawn over the tattoo. I guess if you don't have TiVo it's easier to accept this, but when you can pause and slo-mo, it becomes painfuly obvious that this cool idea is poorly executed. How hard would it have been for the tattoo designer to design a blueprint-hiding tattoo that would hold up to ten seconds of scrutiny? Or is there something here that I'm just not seeing?














