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Mike Olshansky (Hack)

Created by David Koepp

“Could we just leave my soul out of this… for once?”
— Mike warns Grizz in “Domestic Disturbance”

Get the angst-meter a-running…

In Hack, possibly the most downbeat new drama of the Fall 2002 TV season, David Morse starred as MIKE OLSHANSKY, a disgraced ex-cop from Philadelphia (“I took a bullet in the shoulder for this city”) turned cabbie who “seeks redemption by fighting for and righting the wrongs of others.”

Uh-huh.

Once a decorated police detective, Mike is caught taking eight thousand dollars from a crime scene. Rather than rat out his partner, Marcellus Washington (Andre Braugher), Mike stands mute, and takes his licks. It costs him his job, his marriage and, most hurtful of all, the love of his son, who now views his dad not as a hero, but a loser.

Frustrated, hurt, at times seething with rage and prone to violence, Mike turns to his new life as a cabbie, working long shifts, living on coffee and eye drops. In the first episode, Mike rescues one of his passengers from a severe beating by a gang of thugs, and helps another track down his missing daughter.

The realization that he can still make a difference and help people comes as a revelation to Mike, and offers him a way out of his hell. He enlists the aid of the guilt-ridden Marcellus, who feels obliged to his former partner for keeping silent, and thereby saving his own police career. In return, Mike helps him by doing the work a cop can’t do. Mike’s also aided, albeit sometimes reluctantly, by Father Tom “Grizz” Grzelak, a drinking buddy and friend. Meanwhile, on the homefront, Mike tries to win back his ex-wife, Heather, and son, Michael.

Yeah, there were plausibility problems eventually with this one and that angst-meter was almost always in the red, but it was a swell ride in the mean time. Forget about atoning for his sins–that’s something that should be a subtle context buried beneath the action, an underlying theme the writers should have trusted the viewers to pick up on (and let the excellent cast play it that way), instead of hitting them over the head with it.  What Morse’s character should have been was just a cabbie, scrounging for a living, taking odd P.I.-like jobs and occasionally helping out people, but always with the notion there might be something in it for him.

The milieu of a late night cabbie was rife with possibilities, what with the sort of people a night hack deals with: hookers, drunks, loners, strippers, other cabbies, couples out celebrating, the lost, the lonely, etc… in fact, there’s often an almost surrealistic tone to the show reminiscent at times of such classic film noir as Orson Welles’ Touch of Evil.

At its best, it was an almost noirish version of the old sitcom Taxi or a kick-ass update of Steve Midnight, the old pulp series by John K. Butler. The talent involved certainly was up to the task–so far, this has to have been one of the best-looking and decidedly adult network shows during its run, the direction was razor-sharp, and Morse and Braugher were two of the most compelling actors around.

Which is why its absence from streaming or even DVD (save a suspiciously expensive set, available only through Amazon.com) is so mystifying. And frustrating.

FURTHER EVIDENCE

UNDER OATH

TELEVISION

FURTHER INVESTIGATION

Respectfully submitted by Kevin Burton Smith.

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