I was a college freshman when NCIS first launched and I never dreamed that not only would it still being chugging along 21 years later, much less that it would launch a million spinoffs. With Origins we get something a little different. Actually, it's a lot different. And I'm not sure I'm on board with it.
We open with Mark Harmon's Leroy Jethro Gibbs starting a campfire, intoning sage and ominous things in voiceover. Then we flashback to 1991 when young Gibbs (Austin Stowell) started his first day at NIS (the precursor to NCIS). Stowell looks and comes across more like the off-brand Jack Reacher than a young Mark Harmon, but you can't blame CBS for trying to cash in on that.
Gibbs, the probie, is introduced to his new coworkers in a way that isn't too piloty. But it doesn't really feel like part of the NCIS formula. Leader Mike Franks (Kyle Schmid) isn't a withdrawn, stoic leader. Which is fine, since we know that he's always been a loose cannon. There's no playboy. All the women are strong, but hardly as defined as Kate, Ziva, or Ellie. Honestly, except for Gibbs and Franks, the only character who has any, well, character, is their boss SAC Cliff Wheeler, and most of that credit goes to great character actor Patrick Fischler.
The whole show, thus far, is just as drab. The colors of the original series popped with life, and even LA and New Orleans had a vibrancy. But Origins' color scheme is muddy. There's no sense of fun, either. Gibbs is still tortured by the murder of his wife and daughter, and we're seeing the world through his eyes. And apparently the old man still carries many regrets about his first case, which begs the question why he'd stay with the agency for over 30 years.
There aren't too many callbacks or Easter eggs, but Origins does take every opportunity to remind us that this is the 90s. How many needle drops, shots of pagers, or instances of taboo behavior do we need? All of them. The answer is all of them. Maybe things will lighten up when we get into the Clinton years. We can only hope.
The casting for the legacy characters is pretty good. Stowell is a convincing enough Gibbs and Schmid is unmistakably Franks. Special recognition has to go to Robert Taylor of Longmire fame as Jackson Gibbs. It's eerie how well he channels Ralph Waite in his brief scene. Hopefully we see more of him.
So I'll stick with it for now.