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Malcolm in the Middle was a five-time Emmy, Grammy-winning and three time-nominated Golden Globe American situation comedy created by Linwood Boomer for the Fox Network. The show starred Frankie Muniz as Malcolm, the third-oldest of four, later five, children in the family. The oldest child, Francis, was shipped off to military school, leaving the three boys: Reese, Malcolm, and Dewey living at home, Malcolm being the second oldest of the three (hence the title of the show). The situation centered on Malcolm and his dysfunctional family's life.
Broadcast historyThe series first aired on January 9, 2000, and ended its six-and-a-half-year run on May 14, 2006. Recent rumors that a reunion is in effect have not received full confirmation yet. The show has entered syndication, with YTV having begun broadcasting it in September 2006. FOX shuffled the show's air time repeatedly to make room for other shows.
It aired in Canada on Global and is airing on YTV, September 14, 2006 Monday (12:05am) through Thursday at Midnight & 7:30pm E/P, same episode twice a day, and can also be viewed on the FOX network. It is also shown in the Republic of Ireland and the United Kingdom on Sky One and then, a few months later, on BBC Two (UK) and TV3 (ROI). In France it is aired by M6 and Paris Première, in Australia it was aired by Nine Network and reruns are to air on Arena starting April, 2007. In New Zealand it is aired by TV3. In Mexico it is aired in Spanish on Channel Five (XHGC) of Televisa. In Ecuador it is aired in Spanish on channel four Teleamazonas. In Israel it is aired on Bip Channel. In Germany it is aired on Pro 7 (German title: Malcolm Mittendrin), in Austria on ORF 1. In Italy on Italia 1. In Denmark on TV2 Zulu and TV3+, in Norway on TV2 and in Sweden on TV4. The series is also aired on one of Malaysia's free TV stations, NTV7. In the Middle East, the series is aired on MBC 4 (earlier MBC 2) and Showtime Arabia's Paramount Comedy Channel. In Spain it is aired on Antena 3, in Portugal on SIC-Radical, a cable network owned by SIC and on M-Net in South Africa. In the Netherlands it is aired on Veronica. In Belgium it is aired on Kanaal 2. In Hong Kong, the series finished after the finale was aired on TVB Pearl on January 14, 2007. It can be watched on Star World around Asia. FX Networks plans to carry the show on cable in 2007. In Poland the show (Polish title: Zwariowany świat Malcolma) is aired on Polsat.
CharactersSpoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.
Image:Malcolm3.jpg Malcolm in the Middle family. From left to right: Francis, Lois, Jamie (infant in Lois's arms), Malcolm, Dewey, Hal, and Reese. Image:MITMJamie.jpg The youngest member of the family, Jamie. Image:MITMStilts.jpg From the sixth season episode "Stilts", with Malcolm taking on the role of Uncle Sam at the Lucky Aide. Originally there were only four children (although Malcolm's oldest brother attended a military school away from home, so he was still the middle child left at home). The fifth child, a new baby, was introduced in the show's fourth season but his gender was not mentioned until Season 5. The boys are, from eldest to youngest: Francis, Reese, Malcolm, Dewey, and Jamie. On the last episode Lois discovered she was, once again, pregnant with a sixth child. Bryan Cranston (Hal), Justin Berfield (Reese) and Erik Per Sullivan (Dewey) are the only actors to appear in every episode. Francis(Christopher Masterson) The oldest of the brothers, Francis is a regular character on the show, though he has lived outside of the house since before season 1 began. Lois was in labour with Francis in the middle of her and Hal's wedding, Lois apparently resented Francis for being born a footling breech and exiled him to a military academy in Alabama. He disobeyed Lois' rules and got his nose pierced and crashed a car, which proceeded to burn up and resulted in him leaving the house. After the second season, at only 16 years old, he legally emancipates himself with the help of an unscrupulous Alabama lawyer, leaves the academy and heads to Alaska to find work as a logger. While in Alaska, he marries a local woman, Piama, whom he had dated for three weeks. By season 4 he and Piama have left Alaska and Francis has begun working as a farmhand at a New Mexican ranch/hotel owned by a German couple. (They are Danish in the German-dubbed version of the series). A little over two years after he begins working at the ranch, he is fired because the ATM he used to deposit funds wasn't actually an ATM. For the remainder of seasons six and seven, Francis makes only occasional appearances, yet he is still credited in each episode. Later, we find that for some time he has been living in a cheap apartment and has failed at getting a job. He briefly took a job as the agent for his friend's band and recently started his own business. In the final episode, it is revealed that he has actually had a job with a large corporation titled Amerisys for two months, which he is enjoying immensely (although he equally enjoys telling his mother that he's unemployed.) Reese(Justin Berfield) Reese is the second oldest. He bullies the "Krelboynes" in Malcolm's class, and his younger brothers. He is unintelligent because at an early age he learned how to get rid of his troubles by turning his brain off, or singing the "Minty Mint Song" in his head (Season 4, Episode "Stupid Girl," Original air date 11/24/2002). He is a skilled chef and enjoys cooking, and banning him from the kitchen has become Hal and Lois's only effective punishment against him. As a baby he called Hal "Phone." He finds success in meat packing, but is fired after setting all the cows free to impress a girl. He once got married to a girl that Ida had introduced him to. She dominated the marriage and constantly shouted at him. Later in the same episode, Reese and Lois enter the garage and find her cheating on Reese with a man she had told Reese was her brother. He joins the US Army under a fake name after his girlfriend dumps him for Malcolm, where he learns to turn his brain off and do what his Drill Sergeant tells him. Although this gets him through most of Basic Training, he realizes the error of this during war games, when his squad is captured by the opposing team. He "turns his brain back on" and earns himself a reward: a tour of duty in Afghanistan. He runs away, and after getting lost in the desert and married to a man who thought he was a woman, is found by his mother and brought back home. After graduating high school, Reese moves in with Craig and finally finds success, as a janitor in his former high school. Malcolm(Frankie Muniz) Malcolm is the middle child of the family (Thus the title Malcolm in the Middle) and is the central character in the show. At the beginning of the series, Malcolm's teacher recognizes him as a gifted student, and places him in an accelerated learning class. Much to his dismay, the move brands him as a "Krelboyne" (the name "Krelboyne" comes from the surname of one of the characters in the movie The Little Shop of Horrors, Seymour Krelboyne). Many episodes revolve around Malcolm's attempts to reconcile his genius-level IQ (165) with his desire to lead a "normal" social life. In the final episode it is revealed that his parents did not plan for him to be happy in life. They found that every time they set a goal for Malcolm, he would exceed their expectations due to his personality and abilities. Instead of letting him take an easy six figure job out of high school, they force him to go to Harvard University. They explained that since he grew up poor, he would have to work for everything. With his resentment for not being liked, and his skills, he would be a natural politician. He would start off running a foundation, or as a District Attorney, but will graduate to mayor, then governor of a midsize state before becoming President of the United States. Lois and Hal envision that he would then become one of the greatest Presidents ever. Malcolm has had three jobs in the series. His first was as a babysitter for a rich family to earn money to buy a robotics kit, but he quit after learning the parents were spying on him. Later, in the middle of the series, Lois forced Malcolm to take a job with her at the Lucky Aide to have him under her control. He hated the job and had tried to quit many times but Lois wouldn't let him. He finally quit at approximately the time he graduated. In the final episode he gets a job as a janitor at Harvard to help with his tuition, as he needs to come up with $8000. While at the same time his brother Reese is also working as a janitor in their old high school. Dewey(Erik Per Sullivan) Dewey is portrayed as quieter and more inclined to the arts than his brothers. He hides his intellect from Malcolm and Reese, in many cases cleverly taking advantage of them. In one episode he fools Reese into believing he is forwarding instructions from their mother when in fact he is making them up while talking to a telemarketer, Francis, a time and temperature lady, or even no one on the phone ("Hal's Friend"). In the fourth season, Dewey begins to exhibit a high degree of intelligence, seen mainly in his talent of playing the piano. Dewey is about to follow his brother into the gifted class, only to have Malcolm help him stay in normal classes. Malcolm has Reese complete Dewey's test, which accidentally gets Dewey thrown into the "Special" class, full of kids considered lost causes (the class is known as the "Buseys", an apparent reference to actor Gary Busey, or perhaps a reference to the New York special education program BOCES). Dewey has since organized the class to want to be all they can be, and is teaching them standard lessons. He has been trying to show that they are just as capable as others, and has organized them to do things such as performing an opera he wrote based on his family. Unlike Malcolm, his parents intend for Dewey to be rich and happy later in life. He spends much effort making sure his brother Jamie doesn't feel neglected like he did. Lois(Jane Kaczmarek) Lois is Malcolm's ever tempestuous, tough mother and is a huge control freak. Lois is obviously a genius herself, but having too many children too soon has left her embittered at her position in life. Lois doesn't believe in an afterlife, but allows Hal to think that she does believe in heaven for his own peace of mind. She works as a clerk at Lucky Aide, a local drugstore. She has many unconventional ways of disciplining her children, such as having them stand on their heads next to a wall or making them do dizzy izzies (making them spin in circles with their foreheads on baseball bats). She also has an unhealthy obsession with winning every conceivable argument that may or may not arise. Her mother is still alive, much to the family's dismay. Lois also has a sister called Susan with whom she is on uneven ground (Hal was her sister's boyfriend, but he and Lois had sex on top of her car, on her prom night). The sister is now a middle-aged single lady with counseling, who had kidney failure and was going to leave Malcolm and Reese her car in her will, but Lois donated one of her kidneys and had it transplanted into her sister. Lois' co-worker, the domineering but socially inept Craig Feldspar, has romantic feelings for her, which he makes known in several episodes. Lois is thought to be of Polish or Eastern European descent. This is implied by her love of Polish baseball players and her mother's culture. Lois and Hal continue to be sexually attracted to one another; according to Hal in the season three episode Poker II he and Lois have sex twice a day. In the final episode, it is revealed that Lois has once again gotten pregnant. Hal(Bryan Cranston) Hal, Malcolm's father, is more relaxed in his parenting than Lois, mainly because he is afraid to make the wrong choice. Several episodes refer to him as a former rebel and troublemaker, much like his sons. Lois religiously shaves his body and throws the hair outside where it is used by birds to make nests. His indecisiveness supposedly stems from a childhood incident in which he accidentally caused a clown to get attacked by a snake (both of which he is now afraid of). Hal is one of the more endearing characters in the show, being a man who is utterly devoted to his wife and children - though he is also terrified of the former. He knows better than to cross Lois. When Lois is away, he quickly loses self-control and indulges in his baser enjoyments, such as smoking, gambling, loud music, and building "killer robots" (as explored in one episode). He has fits of rage over petty annoyances, frequently engaging in self-destructive vendettas against those who cross him, such as a co-worker he believes stole an idea from him, or a garbage man who wouldn't take a certain piece of large trash, or a mini-golf manager who wouldn't give Dewey a free game, or the recurrence of a speeding motorist, or a bothersome bee, or even his own sons. Once Francis asked Lois, "Where's Dad?" She replies, "He's fighting his worst enemy again." Francis then asks, "What? The squirrel's back?" Hal keeps encyclopedias with certain letters filled in with pencil, a sort of secret self-therapy, which has occupied many years and many books. This is possibly a harbinger of obsessive-compulsive disorder. He is arguably the biggest dreamer of the family, usually fantasizing about enjoyable situations, and is seen to display child-like passions for activities such as roller-skating, pirate radio and race walking. He comes from a large and rich family, all members of which have some (repressed) problem or another. They rarely visit because of the intense friction between Hal's relatives and Lois. Hal's family believes that Hal deserved a high class woman, instead of Lois, who has a lower-class background. His Father (Christopher Lloyd) never listens to Hal, and so he always makes jokes or tickles Hal before they both can speak about Lois. Hal works as a low level, cubicle bound, white collar worker in a large but scandal ridden corporation. He stated in one episode that he works in systems-management. Hal hasn't worked a Friday in 15 years. Victor and IdaLois's father, Victor (Robert Loggia) and mother, Ida (Cloris Leachman), are the most dysfunctional. They were introduced in the episode "The Grandparents." Victor got off to a bad start by giving Reese a hand grenade, which he accidentally set off. Malcolm prevented the house from blowing up by shoving the grenade in the new steel-reinforced refrigerator. Ida was given more airtime then Victor, and she has been depicted as greedy, alcoholic, ignorant, cruel, rude, and manipulative. She is quick to offend someone for little or no reason, and isn't above fighting dirty. She keeps a hidden closet filled with Christmas gifts she doesn't think her relatives deserve which she does when they annoy her or don't do as she tells them. She even tried to drug a rich Chinese man into marrying her, but he snapped out of it before it was offical. The one good deed Ida has ever done (on the show) was save Dewey from getting run over by a truck at the cost of her leg. Victor and Ida's exact origins are unknown, but it has been referred to as "The Old Country," which has been hinted to be somewhere in Eastern Europe. Ida said she had been through a "camp", and would have been old enough to have lived through the displaced person experience after World War II. Both characters speak with noticeably Slavic accents. Their country of origin is never specified, and may be intended to be fictional. Some details are suggestive of the Ukraine, for example some episodes mentioned the grandparents had lived in Manitoba, which has a large Ukrainian Canadian community. One episode centers on a fictitious "St. Grotus Day" celebration, which featured embroidered costumes similar to traditional Ukrainian dress. St. Grotus was said to burn down "enemy churches", suggestive of countries with competing Catholic and Orthodox churches. However, in the same episode Lois says "Noroc" (Romanian for "cheers") to her mother, before they both down their drinks. The interesting thing however is that the St. Grotus Day Celebrations are being held in a Croatian community centre. A Flag of Croatia is seen briefly in many shots, there is a Croatian national emblem on the wall of the club and you can clearly see Zagreb's Cathedral on a big poster, also on the wall of the club. While Lois and her mother dance, the costumes they wear resemble Croatian folk costumes of Northern Croatia. The priest at the dance appears Catholic further implying Croatian heritage as very few Eastern European countries (with that kind of accent) are Catholic (with the exception of Poland). All the references to being taken away in the night and the various wars and the hardships of life, could all refer to Croatian hardships under communism for 40 years, and about the UDBA (Yugoslavian secret service) taking people away. Many Croatians fled Yugoslavia in the 1960's for American shores. There are quite a few different hints (other than the obvious ones at the club) that they could be of Croatian descent. However, in another episode, Lois becomes extremely excited over the prospect of meeting a famous Polish-American baseball player, possibly giving some hints as to her family's ethnic origins, though it might just as well be a reference to actress Jane Kaczmarek's own ethnicity. Victor later runs off and marries a Canadian woman. In the episode "Victor's Other Family", it is also revealed that Victor is not Lois' biological father. This is the episode where he is revealed to have died.[1] Not much is known about Victor, except that he left his home at a young age and that he was in the war. Victor had another family, but kept it a secret from Ida. Character age information
Note: Francis's age and birthday are unclear. According to several episodes he was born during Lois and Hal's wedding ceremony but his birthday is different from their anniversary and he is described as 16 before either their 16th anniversary or his birthday occur on the show. Some fans have theorized that his birth interrupted the wedding ceremony and that Hal and Lois were not actually married on that day, making them move their legal wedding (and thus anniversary) to Jan 16th. In the episode "Lois's sister", it is revealed that Hal had dated Lois's sister first, and that this had somehow created secrecy and deception about Francis' real age among the characters themselves. In a flashback, we see that Francis was about one or two in the mid-'80s (Tears for Fears' "Everybody Wants to Rule the World", which came out in 1985, plays in the background at the beginning of the scene). EpisodesMysteriesThe family's last nameThe last name of the family has been revealed only once in the show, in the pilot episode, where Francis wears the name tag "Wilkerson" on his school uniform. Also, though unaired, it appears in a joke from the original pilot script. In that script, Malcolm was walking to school when a neighborhood kid came running up shouting, "Malcolm, Malcolm, Malcolm. I was talking to my parents last night - I was listening to them talk, and what's your last name?" "Wilkerson, why?" Malcolm replied. "Oh. Who are the Pariahs?" said the other kid. The joke was eventually cut. One theory of why their last name has been played down is that the producers did not want them to be typecast as any particular ethnicity. A special feature on the series 1 DVD stated also that their surname was Wilkerson. A trailer on the UK channel in Early 2006 advised the viewers to spend time with "The Simpsons" and "The Wilkersons", advertising Sunday night new episodes of both series. Another trailer was released to advertise the last episodes, of 24 and Malcolm in the Middle, it claimed Say Goodbye to the Wilkersons. During the series finale, when Malcolm is being introduced for his graduation speech, his last name is not heard due to a squeak of the microphone. Just before Malcolm gives his graduation speech, Francis drops his employee ID on the ground and it clearly shows his name as "Francis Nolastname". This may be a joke or Francis may be simply embarrassed of his family. And in the episode "Future Malcolm" Hal's boss called Hal "Mr. Wilkerson". But, in Lois' Birthday, at about 6/8 of the show, when Francis is in the car with the radio on and right before he sees Lois in the batting cage, the radio mentioned "Here is a song for a very special person, Lois Rudrough* from Hal". (* Rudrough is only a ballpark of what it might be spelled. Even though it could've been the radio station's name, it's still a possibility.) Jamie's GenderThe show kept viewers in suspense regarding Jamie's gender for several episodes after his birth in season 4. In episode 421 "Baby part 2", after Jamie is born, Hal's friends ask Lois what gender the baby is. Lois's response is "It's a beautiful-," her speech getting cut off by the sound of ambulance sirens. In the following episode, the season finale, "Day Care," whenever Jamie's gender is mentioned, it is either interrupted, the subject is changed, or the question, which viewers thought would lead to inquiry about gender, ends in a different and often humorous way. This left Jamie's gender a mystery to viewers until the next season, which began over five months later. During the cold open for the next episode (season five's opener, "Vegas"), the mystery continues while Hal and Lois change Jamie's diaper. After numerous opportunities for revealing Jamie's gender are left unfulfilled, the sequence finally ends with Jamie urinating straight up at Hal who responds, "Nice try, mister." Later in this episode, Lois introduces herself, Malcolm and Jamie to some people at a concert, saying, "I'm Lois and these are my sons Malcolm and Jamie", thus confirming that the reference in the cold open to Jamie being a boy was intended literally. Other mysteries
SettingMuch like in The Simpsons, the setting of the show has never been revealed, though their street address - 12334 Maple Blvd. - was identified in episode 81 ("Reese's Party"). The locale doesn't appear to have noticeable seasons, and also appears not to be in a desert environment, so one could conjecture the setting is somewhere in suburban California. As well, throughout the run of the show, there were numerous sightings of vehicles clearly bearing California license plates, and San Diego sport team references. Whether this was intentional or not is unknown. Also, the schools that the children attend have the look and layout of a common California public school, with classes in many single story buildings, separated by open-air common areas, instead of a single multi-story building. The actual house is privately owned, and is situated in Studio City, California, at 12334 Cantura Street. Oklahoma is a possibility. In later seasons, license plates display "Cherokee State" which is another name for Oklahoma. In episode 313, Oklahoma Highway Police can be seen on the police car doors. However, in one episode, Hal comes to visit Francis at military school and upon seeing his father, Francis exclaims, "You drove eight hours just to see me!" The school is known to be located in Alabama, so Malcolm's family must live within an eight-hour drive of the state, perhaps in Florida. On the other hand, in episode 418, Reese is sent to Canada on a bus for at least 52 hours. Malcolm: "Reese, think about it. It takes 26 hours to get to Canada, and 26 hours to get back. Your bag is filled with food and nobody called Grandma!" In the series finale, Malcolm reveals that Harvard is 2,000 miles away. Triangulation using these distances puts the family's location somewhere in West Texas. In multiple episodes, various items with the New York Jets are seen in the family's living room, and Malcolm and his brothers' bedroom, although Malcolm's bedroom contains objects bearing the names of almost every NFL team. In episode 409 Hal is seen drinking from a Miami Dolphins mug. In episode 5 entitled Malcolm Babysits when Malcolm gets driven back by the father of the rich family to the trailer that the family is living in temporarily the viewers can see that the license plate on the father's Chrysler 300M was from California. In episode 112, on a desk in the brothers' room is what appears to be an In-N-Out Burger coffee mug. If this is true, its likely the show is in states such as California, Nevada, or Arizona as the In-N-Out food chain is only present in these three states. Although, because the show is filmed in California, it is possible that it was added there by a cast member or crew member. Another explanation is that they simply traveled through one of those states and acquired a mug. Also in episode 110, "Stock Car Races", when Hal and the boys are entering the track, the billboard behind the entrance displays the place as Irwindale Speedway (a real race track in Southern California). It is likely that there is no real-world location that is consistent with all the facts about Malcolm's location given in the show. It is known, however, that the area in which the family live is called Tri-County. This has been references several times; for example, in the "Carnival" episode, the sign to the fairgrounds reads "Tri-County"; and in the "Mrs. Tri-County" episode, Lois enters a local beauty pageant called Miss Tri-County. In an episode, Malcolm also visits Stevie, who was in the Tri-County hospital. In the episode in which Hal reveals to Dewey the origin of his fear of kites, we see a flashback to Hal's childhood. In the park, he crashes into a sign that shows a municipal code with the abbreviation RAPD. The PD almost certainly refers to "Park District," but the RA is not explained. Yet in the episode, "Vegas", Reese wears a shirt that says El Paso Longhorns. In the episode, "Water Park", the waterpark they go to is actually at Wild Rivers, located in Irvine, California, but within the show it was given a different name. In the episode, "Secret Boyfriend", Dewey is seen at the Sherman Oaks Castle Park, a mini golf course. Even though the name of the course is never revealed, its layout is very commonly associated with that of the park located in Sherman Oaks, California. In episode 322, a cop tells Reese that if there were more kids like him in the neighborhood, it would be a safer place. Being proud of that, Reese somehow obtains a hat that says MPD. It is obviously from a place thats starts with an "M", since the hat must belong to the M. Police Department. It is possible this letter was chosen because it was Malcolm's first initial. However, it could also be referring to "Milbrook," a city that is supposedly nearby and perhaps a part of the tri-county area. We first heard about Milbrook at the end of Reese Joins the Army 1, when Hal explained to the police officer that he is from the bomb squad in that city. Also, Erik Per Sullivan, who plays Dewey, was born and raised in a town called Milford, MA. In the Episode "Humilithon", when Malcolm hotwires Hal's Dodge Dynasty, it has a California license place. This is off and on though, in some episodes Hal's Dynasty has a plate on the front, and in others it only has a plate on the back. In Seasons 6 and 7, the license plates on the cars are from Oklahoma. This is seen more than once, as in the episode Hal's Christmas Gift, the license plate on the Mustang Lois is in the parking lot demolition derby with is from Oklahoma, as well as her Tempo. And later, in the episode Malcolm Defends Reese, Hal's Dodge Spirit has Oklahoma plates. In the episode Day Care a nearby city called Danville is mentioned. The only large city in the U.S. named Danville is in Virginia, although there is also a small town called Danville near the southern border of Kansas, which would support the theory that they live in Oklahoma. There is also a town named Danville in the Susquehanna Valley region of central Pennsylvania (24 miles east of Bucknell University), though the demographics and weather patterns of that area are not consistent with the community in which Malcolm's family lives. In the episode were Malcolm learns to drive, he pulls into a parking lot with a sign saying "Welcome to Drake University" which is located in Des Moines, Iowa. Clues leading to the setting of Malcolm In The Middle are deliberately misleading and confusing. Cast
Guest stars have included Andy Richter, Christopher Lloyd, Patrick Warburton, Stephen Root, Jason Alexander, Laurie Metcalf, Amy Bruckner, Beatrice Arthur, Hallee Hirsh, Lauren Storm, Dakota Fanning, Ashlee Simpson, Tom Green, Christina Ricci, Danielle Panabaker, Susan Sarandon, Heidi Klum and Bradley Whitford (Jane Kaczmarek's real life husband). Opening titles and musicThe opening titles feature short clips from cult icons or movies, edited together with clips from the early seasons of the TV series. These include, in order of appearance:
The show's theme song, "Boss of Me", was written and recorded by the alternative rock group They Might Be Giants, who also performed nearly all of the incidental music for the show in its first two seasons. Mood setting music is sprinkled throughout the series, in replacement of the laugh track, in a way that resembles feature film more than other TV sitcoms. Some examples of this highly varied music include ABBA, Basement Jaxx, Sum 41, Kenny Rogers, Lords Of Acid, En Vogue, Phil Collins, Quiet Riot, Queen, Sublime, and Citizen King, whose song "Better Days" is played at the end of both the pilot episode and the series finale. Awards
DVD ReleasesSeason Releases
Trivia
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