"Modern Family" The Storm (TV Episode 2016) Poster

(TV Series)

(2016)

User Reviews

Review this title
5 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
7/10
Phil learns his true purpose on a solid Modern Family
ryanjmorris12 April 2016
Warning: Spoilers
After a seriously lacking episode last week, Modern Family picked the ball up again with "The Storm". This wasn't the show at its best, but I'll take anything over the mess we were given last week.

This episode benefited from the fact that the whole family gathered at one house, giving a handful of fun character pairings that we haven't seen in a while. Claire and Manny's subplot was slight and inconsequential, but I really enjoyed it. It was simple, but it was effective. This is the kind of comedy that Modern Family always excels at, the kind of low- stakes-big-laughs humour, and this subplot nailed it. Mitch and Cam fared just as well with a story that didn't really lead anywhere, but packed a solid number of laughs in the small amount of screen time it was given. Cameron discussing his "butter churning arm" was perhaps the comedic highlight of the episode.

Where things don't work as well is with Haley and Andy. Haley is my favourite character on this show, and probably the most consistently written and well developed one too. So it's a real shame that the writers are ploughing through her first real adult relationship with such a carelessness as to what this means to her. We haven't seen or even heard of Andy since they officially got together, and now we're expected to believe that Andy is serious enough about them to hold back on the physical sides of their relationship to focus on the emotional aspects. The two actors try their hardest (and give naturally great performances) but they can't make up for the script's dodgy attempts at fleshing out their relationship.

Luckily, Phil and Jay were on hand to save the episode. When Jay reveals that he lost another old Navy pal and won't make it to the Irish pub for his traditional silent toast to the fallen, Phil wordlessly pours Jay a drink and places a four leaf clover decoration alongside it. This comes after a scene in which Phil is bothered by the fact that he "can't fix things like a real man", to which Gloria tells him his gift is making other people comfortable around him. The scene is based on tropes of these characters that we all love and care about it, and it works fantastically well. As Jay calls Phil back, pours him a drink and invites him to share this personal moment with him, it's genuinely touching.

"The Storm" is far from Modern Family firing on all cylinders, but hopefully it represents an uptick that the show can keep moving as we head further into the season's second half.

Grade: B
11 out of 14 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
8/10
The Storm
studioAT15 November 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Well I liked this episode, I can't agree with the flak it seems to be getting here.

It's the 7th series, every long-running show struggles to be on top form by that point.

I thought this had all the ingredients of a great episode, with some lovely moments of heart and humour.

It is hard to watch the Haley/Andy stuff here though and not feel sad for how it would be treated further down the line of the shows run.
3 out of 5 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
The most perfect episode of this season.
piyushmittal7025 February 2016
This was the most filled and perfect episode in a long time.None of the story lines felt unnecessary and they gave me a lot more than chuckles which this show has only been able to give for some time.Although I did feel the Claire and Manny storyline to be unnecessary but heck it was one of the funniest ones. And Phil what can I say about that guy.He is certainly the best and the funniest character in the show without a doubt and any episode about him or focused on him are the best. I also liked the emotional stuff between Andy and Haley and the last speech by Jay. The editing on this episode was phenomenal and all the characters got ample time and there was never a dull moment anywhere.Hell Joe had some really funny scenes.... This episode was certainly a huge improvement over the last train-wreck of an episode(with the terrible and pathetic storyline of Phil and Claire).
19 out of 24 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
A joke or two isn't worth foregoing logic in storytelling
Fry-TheMovieReviewer23 June 2019
The story presented in this episode of Modern Family is extremely disjointed. Problems in the story's timeline are so happenstance for the sake of presenting a "funny" scenario that the overall story becomes disjointed, confusing, and distracting. First, the Dunphy family - in the early morning hours of that day, the Dunphy family celebrates with their neighboring residents at the annual block party. Phil decides to dress up as a clown for the enjoyment of the neighborhood children, only to find himself scared in front of a hall of mirrors and passes out from seeing himself as clown. Phil has a phobia of clowns (i.e., coulrophobia). He (Phil) thought that dressing up as clown would not make him scared, as he states, similar to "Not being able to tickle yourself, so how could you scare yourself". Cameron typically does the clown for these events, but Claire states that he was busy with Lilly's birthday party. This is where several "what" or "where are these people" moments come into play. Lilly's birthday party was not until later in the afternoon. So why wasn't Cameron helping the family with their block party, as they typically do according to Claire? Additionally, Mitchell, Cameron, and Lily, are shown at home resting at the same time (early morning hours, before the party) as the Dunphy block party. This was the moment Lily received confirmation that a popular student in her class was going to be in attendance at her party later in the afternoon. Furthermore, the family (Dunphy) is already at home resting and enjoying their company, while Cameron and Mitchell are shown at Lily's birthday party. Additionally, where was everybody for Lilly's birthday party? Why wasn't anyone in attendance at her party? She may be adopted, but she still is family.

When I first saw this episode, I thought Mitchell and Cameron were hosting their daughter's sleepover party with fellow classmates and not Lily's actual birthday. What is made worst is the fact that no one in her family is even acknowledging Lilly's birthday. I didn't hear one character in this story mention "birthday" and "Lilly" in a sentence, much less the phase "happy birthday".

While enjoyable to watch, this episode of Modern Family was disjointed and confusing, with odd plot devices used for the sake of one or two jokes about a man dressed up as a clown and scaring himself to the point of passing out. That seemed to be the only joke the writers of this show wanted to tell, and the only plot point in the story worthy, ostensively, of dismissing all other characters and their relation to the story or fully actualized scenarios that could have worked for us to watch 30 seconds of Phil dressed up as a clown and scaring himself. For the record, building a story around one or two jokes can work.

A story built around one or two jokes that does work is exemplified in season 5, episode 21 of Modern Family titled, Sleeper. In that episode, Phil buys a record of a song that reminds him of his teenage years, only to later realize he was listening to the exact song that played when he first had sex, and there therefore felt as if he was cheating on his wife. In the end, Modern Family can indeed produce good stories with funny and interesting plot devices without sacrificing continuity, story logic, and character development, but that was not seen in The Storm.

-CDM
5 out of 17 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Wow. This was really really REALLY bad
jpapanone13 March 2021
The show has at this point officially stopped being actually naturally funny and is trying way too hard and failing miserably.

A bad episode that doesn't need to be rewatched.

Not even Adam Devine can save this train wreck
2 out of 27 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed