"Masters of Sex" Pilot (TV Episode 2013) Poster

(TV Series)

(2013)

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8/10
Masters of Sex's premiere isn't so appealing that it will be something, on its own, to make you get Showtime but, as a show, it does seem to have potential.
Amari-Sali3 October 2013
Warning: Spoilers
The discovery of Masters of Sex came from wondering what happened to Lizzy Caplan after her stint on New Girl. The answer was: she is now part of this show which has a focus on the study of human sexuality. Alongside her is the familiar face of Michael Sheen, who plays the lead role in William Masters, and Lizzy Caplan plays the female lead in Virginia Johnson. Together, they make a formidable duo with Sheen coming off like Bruce Wayne, if he decided to go into medicine instead of fight crime, and Caplan finds herself a nice role which I can't quickly draw a comparison to.

For the pilot, the focus is on establishing the oddness of Dr. Masters who, at times, seems so reserved and methodical that it seems he lacks passion outside of his work. I would even say, at this point, his marriage seems like it is out of convenience and, at times, it feels like he could even be a closeted man putting on all the air and graces of a heterosexual man. After all, it was the 1950s so he wouldn't have the ability to be out and proud. As for Virginia, her story is, she is a woman who you could consider to be a part of the sexual revolution perhaps. She is twice divorced and seemingly, all marriage gave her was a pause on life and two children. Despite the hardships of now being a single mother though, she plans to work, go to school and assists Dr. Masters with his work. But, even with all these tasks at hand, momma finds a way to get some play from Dr. Ethan Haas (played by Nicholas D'Agosto).

Now, mind you, William Masters and Virginia Johnson are real people. So, with that, looking them up on various sites will probably ruin the story for you. But, who is to say what liberties the writers may make since both Virginia and William are currently dead and may not have family to contest, and cause issue with, their depictions.

As a series though, I feel the main draw maybe Lizzy Caplan since she, thus far, is given more to work with. She has a bit of sass, has a well laid background, and with her trying to be supermom while still tending to the occasional physical need, she is far more compelling than the sometimes stoic, and sort of dull, Michael Sheen. Also, while I doubt it is really going to get into the nitty gritty of the research of Masters and Johnson, the show's focus of trying to understand the female orgasm is interesting, and we already have seen quite a bit of drama due to Masters wanting to study it, as well as Johnson's intimate life. So, while I wouldn't buy a Showtime subscription for this, I think it is worth seeing. However, this would probably be next day viewing since there are so many other better shows on during its time-slot.
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9/10
Masters of Sex - Pilot
Scarecrow-8828 December 2014
Warning: Spoilers
John Madden (Shakespeare in Love) directed this pilot episode for the adults-only Showtime series about the birth of the advanced study of human sexuality (how to achieve orgasm, the methodology of the beginnings and eventual conclusion of sexual activity, what it takes for two people (or one person by her/himself) to "do the deed") thanks to a brilliant obstetrician/gynecologist/surgeon, Dr. William Masters (Michael Sheen) and his single mother-of-two assistant, Virginia (Lizzy Caplan, in a daring performance that includes nudity which allows us to see her magnificent body). Masters is rather clinical and cold, every bit the scientist while Virginia (although also very sincere in her desire to see the science in sex taken seriously) embraces the free spirited nature of great sex. Virginia has been carrying on a sexual relationship with Masters' young surgical assistant, Dr. Ethan Haas (Nicholas D'Agosto), and sees their coupling as a friends-with-benefits situation while he loves her deeply. Eventually Haas is angry and frustrated by her inability to love him beyond the sex while she sees their union as strictly physical…this results in a bad exchange where Haas slaps her and she returns the favor. Masters' sperm count is no good although his devoted wife, Libby (Caitlin Fitzgerald), believes she is barren and a failure to their marriage in bringing a child into their lives. Libby and Virginia strike up a friendship and bond which could be fractured when Masters tells his assistant that they need to begin a sexual affair (it's science not passion) so that there is no "interference" in the study between "test subjects" (he believes Virginia may have caused a subject (a doctor with a history of bedding nurses) to become aroused). So the episode ends with Virginia "having to consider over the weekend" whether she would be willing to accept Masters' "proposal" involving entering a "scientific sexual union" in order to keep either of them from arousing future patients! The show is very explicit in dialogue and sexual presentation (softcore even, as we see when Caplan and D'Agosto are in sexual embrace, and the final sexual encounter studied would fit right into something you could see on Cinemax late at night), with the creation of a dildo device used to help Masters gain support from his boss (played by Beau Bridges, realistically portraying his character as someone dismayed and discouraged by a study that might render his finest doc a pervert).

While the pilot features nudity and is all about sex, the plot doesn't dole this out just for the sake of gaining an audience that would use it as masturbation material (although seeing Caplan nude did arouse me aplenty), but the point is to take us to a period where discussion of the subject and confrontation of details regarding human sexuality was considered immoral and wrong. Approaching a show about this will require viewers who are interested in the back story of when human sexuality was hush-hush and the study of it was not exactly embraced by a scientific community. Masters' determination in seeing the study credited and addressed certainly gains significance when he threatens to quit his job, while Virginia is so nonjudgmental and carefree regarding her sexual way of life which explains why she is the perfect partner to him. Seeing Masters so scientific in everything he does perhaps doesn't ingratiate himself to the viewer but his mission is an interesting one. Virginia will be our emotional center…we'll need to turn to her in order to feel anything for the project she is so passionate about.
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10/10
The beginning of a beautiful partnership
Mr-Fusion9 November 2016
If I can confess an immature mentality for a moment, I approached "Masters of Sex" with the promise of titillation (c'mon, it's right there in the show's title), which it does, in ways I didn't really expect. This is the story of an esteemed obstetrician who's consumed with the uncharted waters of human sexuality. And to proceed, he needs a woman's perspective, which he finds in an extremely modern receptionist who brings her own enlightened experience to the table. That's where this pilot really excels, their promising relationship. I think Michael Sheen is perfectly cast as Dr. Masters, bringing light to his severe personality. But I really like Lizzy Caplan's character - yes, she's magnetic, but her character is just a progressive shot in the arm of '50s orthodoxy. She's fascinating.

I don't have a clue where this show will really go from here (outside of Masters' and Virginia's obvious future eventual hookup), but this is a phenomenal opener; polished, well-written and above all, exciting.

10/10
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