This Show's Legacy
Launched with a HUGE amount of hype in the fall of 1984 and cancelled after 18 episodes with little fanfare less than a year later, this show was a vehicle for then-teen-heartthrob Jason Bateman, the one that was supposed to make him the next big name. But unlike the squeaky-clean morality plays then in vogue on COSBY, FAMILY TIES, et al, this show had BITE, and EDGE. Matthew Burton, Bateman's character, was a teenage J.R. Ewing, a con artist effortlessly dodging the video-game-villains that made up the adults in his world and equally seeing his fellow teenagers as more often shallow and facile than truly on his level (perhaps a comment on those same qualities in teens on most TV shows, then and now). Matthew often did the wrong things for the right reasons, but while both he and nemeis/neighbor Norman (an older version of Matthw played by David Garrison) had redeeming qualities, there was seldom if ever a "moral". It was just smart, mean and funny television.
The show is notable for a NUMBER of reasons. First and foremost, it's smart and FUNNY and holds up AMAZINGLY well, especially when compared to a lot of other TV fare of the era. Jason Bateman's performance is first-rate, and most of the supporting players are perfectly cast. (Disney fans should note that "The Lion King" voice actor Ernie Sabella was in this show!) Second, it was the last show created by Michael G. Moye and Ron Leavitt BEFORE they created Married With Children. And while the premises of the two shows are far apart, the mean-styled humour is common to both. IYM may seem soft in comparison to the sharpness of the early (first three seasons) MWC, but for prime-time, mainstream, network fare in the middle of the ultra-conservative Reagan era, IT'S YOUR MOVE was very much an outlaw show--as MWC was seen to be soon after. (It was also notable for the presence of MWC's David Garrison as Norman.) Finally, the show predated similar teen Terminators Ferris Bueller and Parker Lewis by several years.
Unfortunately, the mix was too sharp to survive the Network's care. Teenagers took Matthew Burton to heart as a hero, but parents saw him as a menace. The last 5 episodes were produced AFTER outraged parents wanted Matthew to get "caught" in one of his schemes, and the character made to "face the consequences", so that he would stop being a "bad influence" on kids. Sadly, this undercut the very premise of the show and took a great deal of the bite out of it. And those last 5 episodes, though they clearly have their moments, suffer in comparison--and sank the show for good rather than saved it.)
Even so, it thrived in reruns on cable in the early 1990s, and doubtless continued to influence lots of teenagers to aim at being smarter than the so-called adults around them. God Bless It for that! A comprehensive DVD release is certainly in order--I bet the creators and actors would LOVE the chance to expound on this forgotten gem of a show.
Matteo M. Yenkala
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www.AZROCKY.com