The Riches (styled as the Ri¢hes) is an American television drama which was originally broadcast from March 12, 2007, to April 29, 2008, on FX. The series stars Eddie Izzard and Minnie Driver as members of a family of Irish Travellers who "steal the American dream" by stealing the home and identities of a wealthy dead couple. The series received positive reviews but was cancelled after two seasons.
The Riches | |
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Genre | Serial drama |
Created by | Dmitry Lipkin |
Starring |
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Theme music composer | Toby Chu |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 2 |
No. of episodes | 20 (list of episodes) |
Production | |
Executive producers |
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Producers | Paul Kurta Sara E. Morrow |
Production locations | Marrero, Louisiana New Orleans, Louisiana Santa Clarita, California |
Camera setup | Single-camera setup |
Running time |
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Production companies | Maverick Television Fox Television Studios FX Productions |
Distributor | 20th Television |
Release | |
Original network | FX |
Picture format | 720p (HDTV) |
Original release | March 12, 2007 (2007-03-12) – April 29, 2008 (2008-04-29) |
Originally named Low Life, the show was created and head written by Dmitry Lipkin for Maverick Films and FX Networks. The one-hour pilot was written by Lipkin and Eddie Izzard, and directed by Carl Franklin. The pilot was then rethought and reshot over 10 days by Peter O'Fallon. It first aired on March 12, 2007, followed by a further 12 episodes.[1] Additionally, the first two episodes were made available on the Internet prior to their television air dates. FX announced on May 8, 2007, that The Riches would return for a second season,[2] the first episode of which aired on March 18, 2008.[3] The second season ran for 7 episodes. FX President John Landgraf described The Riches as a "family show", albeit one featuring "a family unlike any television viewers have seen before".[4]
The second season was affected by the 2007–08 Writers Guild of America strike and was abruptly cut short.[5] Several months after the season ended, the show was cancelled,[6][7] with FX blaming a drop in ratings.[8] In 2019, Minnie Driver lamented the cancellation, and wrote that the show was "cancelled in the wake of punitive measures taken against writers who were vocal in the writers strike".[9]
The show features Izzard and Driver as Wayne and Dahlia Malloy who, along with their family, are Irish Traveller con artists and thieves. They travel with their children Di Di (Delilah), Cael, and Sam.
As the series begins, Dahlia has just been paroled from prison. During her 2-year sentence, she has developed various drug addictions. In her absence, Wayne and the children have been continuing to act as con artists across the U.S. After a brief reunion with their Traveller clan, the family flees to avoid an arranged marriage for Di Di. Wayne steals a large amount from the clan's hoard of cash, and the family runs off. After getting into an altercation and RV chase with another Traveller family, the Malloys are involved in a car accident that kills a very wealthy couple, the eponymous Riches. In the hopes of pursuing a "better life", they decide to "steal the American dream"[10] and adopt the Riches' identities in an affluent gated community in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. They struggle to adjust to their new lives as buffers, as they call people who are not Travellers.
The first season's episodes began airing on March 12, 2007. The pilot episode and episode 1.2 ("Believe the Lie") were made available early for online viewing at MSN, Yahoo!, and TV.com at various times.[12]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
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1 | 1 | "Pilot" | Carl Franklin Peter O'Fallon | Story by : Dmitry Lipkin & Eddie Izzard Teleplay by : Dmitry Lipkin | March 12, 2007 (2007-03-12) | |
After Dahlia Malloy is paroled, her Irish Traveller con artist family finds themselves on the run from their relatives after avoiding an arranged marriage for their daughter and stealing the clan's money. When they're accidentally involved in the death of the Riches, the Malloys decide to adopt the Riches' identity in suburban Baton Rouge, Louisiana. At the end of the episode, Wayne recites a passage from William Stafford's A Story That Could Be True | ||||||
2 | 2 | "Believe the Lie" | Peter O'Fallon | Story by : Dmitry Lipkin and Nicole Yorkin & Dawn Prestwich Teleplay by : Nicole Yorkin & Dawn Prestwich | March 19, 2007 (2007-03-19) | |
Wayne attends a job interview with a law firm, but ends up bluffing his way into a job as in-house counsel for Hugh Panetta instead. Dahlia, still struggling with her drug issues and their new 'buffer' lifestyle, hides the clan's money, but forgets where she buried it when the family RV is towed. Di Di and Cael try to adjust to their new life, helping Wayne find out information about the dead Riches; Cael still misses his girlfriend back at the camp. Dale Malloy and Ginny Dannegan have several altercations. | ||||||
3 | 3 | "Operation Education" | Peter O'Fallon | Dmitry Lipkin | March 26, 2007 (2007-03-26) | |
Wayne begins work at his new job as a lawyer for Panco, one of Hugh Panetta's companies. One of his first duties, assigned to him by Hugh, is to fire his predecessor. Meanwhile, Wayne and Dahlia decide the kids should go to school, so they get them social security cards and attend an interview at Rosemere Academy, an exclusive private school. When they are rejected, Dahlia's pride is hurt, and she cooks up an elaborate scheme to win over the school's headmistress. Back at the Traveller camp, Dale is pressuring Cael's girlfriend Tammy to help him find out where the family has fled. | ||||||
4 | 4 | "Been There, Done That" | Gwyneth Horder-Payton | Nicole Yorkin & Dawn Prestwich | April 2, 2007 (2007-04-02) | |
Wayne continues his new job at Panco, where he learns that Hugh Panetta has developed real estate on old military sites containing unexploded ordnance. Doug Rich's ex-wife Jolinda tracks down Wayne (posing as Doug) because Doug owes her $75,000 in back alimony. Wayne and Dahlia work a complicated con involving Jolinda's lawyer and the sale of one of Jim Burns' alpacas in order to pay her off. Dahlia continues to struggle with drug issues, and gets stoned with Nina. It is revealed that one of Wayne's scams went wrong and caused Dahlia's jail sentence; Wayne and Dahlia finally discuss the situation and Dahlia's resulting drug use, and have a reconciliation of sorts. At Rosemere Academy, Cael helps some classmates break in after hours to alter grade records, and Di Di appears to be striking up a romance with local stoner and musician Erick. Finally, Hugh Panetta catches Dahlia stealing a pill bottle in the bathroom of the Burns' house. | ||||||
5 | 5 | "The Big Floss" | Brian Kirk | Lydia Woodward | April 9, 2007 (2007-04-09) | |
While Wayne must deal with legal arcana in an eminent-domain case, Dahlia gets a job for which she is equally unqualified: a dental hygienist. Meanwhile, Ginny Dannegan has tracked down the Malloys at their new home, and apparently blackmails Wayne and Dahlia into going through with the arranged marriage between Di Di and Ken. | ||||||
6 | 6 | "Reckless Gardening" | Guy Ferland | Ellen Herman | April 16, 2007 (2007-04-16) | |
The Riches have trouble dealing with Ken, while Dahlia becomes Hugh's Personal Assistant. The family must rely on Dahlia's skills to save them when Di Di takes a fall for Ken when her classmates plant cannabis on him. Dale Malloy takes brutal action when he learns that his father, Earl Malloy, has planned for Wayne to lead the Malloy clan upon his death. Dale then leaves Earl in the woods to die before he can proclaim Wayne the leader. | ||||||
7 | 7 | "Virgin Territory" | Brian Kirk | Wendy Riss | April 23, 2007 (2007-04-23) | |
Wayne, Dahlia, Cael, Di Di and Sam go back to the camp for Earl's funeral. Traveller tradition dictates that after a funeral comes a wedding (something dies, something is born), so Di Di prepares to marry Ken until Wayne can think of a way out. Meanwhile, Dale gives a nervous and guilty confession to Dahlia regarding Earl's death. She forces him at gunpoint to write a letter to his mother and the rest of the clan revealing what he's done. Wayne fails to come through for Di Di and the wedding ceremony goes on as planned, that is until Di Di ultimately refuses to marry Ken. Afterwards, in her RV, Ginny again threatens Di Di, making her agree to sleep with Ken. She leaves and Ken comes in, and when Di Di refuses to sleep with him, she explains that she only went as far as she did with the wedding because of Ginny's threats. Ken assures Di Di that she is safe from Ginny because he'll always love her and protect her. | ||||||
8 | 8 | "X Spots the Mark" | Dan Lerner | Aaron Blitzstein | April 30, 2007 (2007-04-30) | |
The Malloys return from the funeral to find Hugh Panetta is having a fit; $40,000 is missing from his safe, and he is forcing all the employees to undergo lie detector tests and searches. Hugh attacks Wayne, accusing him of taking the money (which he is not certain of), and disappearing for two days (which is provable). Wayne concocts a story about a potential Panco investor, who is possibly going to invest a half-million dollars in the company. After mollifying Hugh with this lie, Wayne and Dahlia then need to find a mark who can actually be conned into doing just that. With the help of some recent acquaintances from a nearby trailer park, they proceed to lay in a plan to get Rudy Blue (Clancy Brown), a former baseball star with a known sex addiction, to invest the money. | ||||||
9 | 9 | "Cinderella" | Matt Shakman | Colette Burson | May 7, 2007 (2007-05-07) | |
While at the liquor store shopping for a dinner party, Dahlia runs into her best friend from prison, Chunky K. After some reservations about not revealing herself to Chunky, Dahlia, who is becoming increasingly isolated, takes her home, and hires her to be the maid during the dinner party. Chunky, however, is a more common criminal, and is not up to the high-stakes level of deceit the Malloys are engaging in. | ||||||
10 | 10 | "This Is Your Brain On Drugs" | Jeremy Podeswa | Ellen Herman | May 14, 2007 (2007-05-14) | |
Wayne suspects that Dahlia still has a drug addiction and takes meth himself as a way of showing her how much her drug use hurts their family. Meanwhile, when things at Panco go crazy, it is up to Dahlia to keep everything and everyone together. Finally, Dale shows up at Edenfalls and befriends the family's neighbor, Hartley. | ||||||
11 | 11 | "Anything Hugh Can Do, I Can Do Better" | Adam Arkin | Story by : Ellen Herman Teleplay by : Nicole Yorkin & Dawn Prestwich | May 21, 2007 (2007-05-21) | |
Wayne takes over Panco when Hugh goes missing, and Dahlia struggles to repair her relationship with Di Di. Dale tells Hartley why he's at Edenfalls. Guest Star: Jonathan Goldstein as Wes | ||||||
12 | 12 | "It's a Wonderful Lie" | Peter O'Fallon | Story by : Lydia Woodward Teleplay by : Nicole Yorkin & Dawn Prestwich | May 28, 2007 (2007-05-28) | |
When Doug's friend Pete visits, the Malloys must keep him in the dark about what they have done. The family cons Pete into thinking that Doug is avoiding him by giving him the wrong address, which causes Pete to come close to a nervous breakdown. Wayne pretends to be a psychologist when Pete is on vacation. Nina comes across the Malloys deceiving Pete and she becomes convinced that the family is in the Witness Protection Program. Dahlia is heartbroken that she must deceive her friend. Meanwhile, Hugh returns with a new wife whom he met during his relapse and subsequent disappearance. However, Hugh demands a post-nuptial agreement which leads the girl to question his love for her. | ||||||
13 | 13 | "Waiting For Dogot" | Jamie Babbit | Dmitry Lipkin | June 4, 2007 (2007-06-04) | |
Pete figures out the Malloys are impersonating the Riches and wants to know why. Doug spins a new lie, claiming to be Gene and that he was hired by Doug, who is in hiding. After pretending to leave a coded message for Doug (by singing Amazing Grace), Wayne takes Pete to the woods and threatens him with a gun. Wayne explains that Doug and Cherien are in hiding, having witnessed a murder, and Cael fakes a text message from Doug to tell Wayne that Pete is not a threat. Pete begins to believe Wayne's farce, but when he realizes the gun is a water pistol, Wayne is forced to knock Pete out. Dale shows up at the house, while Wayne is gone, and Dahlia convinces him to leave, but the jig is up. Drugging Pete with rohypnol, the Malloys bolt for the RV. Dale comes back to the house and finds Pete, whom he beats up and threatens with a hammer. Meanwhile, the Malloys are unable to flee Edenfalls, as Dale secretly sabotaged their RV engine. |
A second season of 13 episodes was announced on May 8, 2007, by FX for broadcast in the first half of 2008. It premiered on March 18, 2008. Due to a long writer's strike, only 7 episodes were produced.
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original air date | |
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14 | 1 | "The Last Temptation of Wayne" | Guy Ferland | Dmitry Lipkin | March 18, 2008 (2008-03-18) | |
Wayne sends Dahlia, the kids, and Cherien's mother away while he stays to deal with Pete Mincey, which Dale has continued to screw up. However, things look up when Hugh offers Wayne a piece of a land deal. Meanwhile, Nina decides to leave Eden Falls with Dahlia. | ||||||
15 | 2 | "Friday Night Lights" | Guy Ferland | Ellen Herman & Dmitry Lipkin | March 25, 2008 (2008-03-25) | |
Wayne deals with Dale and Pete while Dahlia and the kids get held up in Blunt, Texas where they have to rescue Nina who is being held hostage by a local couple. | ||||||
16 | 3 | "Field of Dreams" | Peter O'Fallon | Dawn Prestwich & Nicole Yorkin | April 1, 2008 (2008-04-01) | |
Wayne is forced to deal with the Eden Falls elite after Cael is caught tampering with the school's computer. Meanwhile, Hugh is deemed psychologically inept to handle the Bayou Hills deal due to depression. Also, Dale demands a job at Panco, and nobody is happy that a traveler named Quinn arrives after spending 20 years in prison. | ||||||
17 | 4 | "Slums of Bayou Hills" | Seith Mann | Ellen Herman | April 8, 2008 (2008-04-08) | |
Living honestly isn't as easy as Dahlia had hoped. Wayne runs into trouble when Doug's past creeps up on him in an important investors meeting. Cael and Didi try to recapture the spirit of their Traveller childhood. | ||||||
18 | 5 | "Trust Never Sleeps" | Peter O'Fallon | Timothy J. Lea | April 15, 2008 (2008-04-15) | |
Dahlia continues to struggle to live an honest life while Wayne is surprised by a visitor at work. Meanwhile, Cael meets another group of Travelers. | ||||||
19 | 6 | "Dead Calm" | Michael Spiller | Wendy Riss | April 22, 2008 (2008-04-22) | |
Wayne struggles to regain Dahlia's trust while also attempting to keep Dale and the other Travellers away. Meanwhile, Cael and Rosaleen become closer, and Nina throws a party for Jim. | ||||||
20 | 7 | "The Lying King" | Peter O'Fallon | Alexander Cary | April 29, 2008 (2008-04-29) | |
The rift in Wayne and Dahlia's relationship continues to widen while Nina becomes sick of Dahlia's lies. The Bayou Hills deal is put at risk because of treacherous behavior at the construction site. Meanwhile, a relationship between Di Di and Ike blossoms, and Cael decides to stay at Rosaleen's camp, which is exactly what Quinn wants. |
The pilot episode of The Riches drew 3.8 million viewers.[13] With 2.5 million of those viewers in the 18–49 demographic, The Riches scored second only to the premiere of The Shield, thus beating out the premieres of other FX dramas such as Rescue Me, Over There, and Dirt. The pilot was also FX's first-ever Sunday night premiere of an original series, and more than doubled the channel's highest-ever ratings for the Sunday 10pm slot.[14] The show averaged 5.9 million cumulative viewers per week in the US, sufficient for FX to commission a second season.[15] The Riches has gained popularity through online resources, such as Hulu and iTunes' "What We Are Watching" for April 2008.
Television critics gave The Riches enthusiastic reviews.[16] The Baltimore Sun described it as "the kind of TV drama that makes one think while being entertained".[17] and The Boston Globe lauded a "layered drama" full of "unexpectedly soulful pleasures".[18] The New York Times wrote that "together, [Izzard and Driver] are superb".[19] Meanwhile, The Los Angeles Times complained that the show lacked originality.[20]
Time magazine's James Poniewozik named it one of the Top 10 New TV Series of 2006, ranking it at #7,[21] while Minnie Driver was nominated for a Primetime Emmy Award and a Golden Globe Award for her performance.
In a review of the second season, The Hollywood Reporter said that "Izzard and Driver remain a joy to watch in this odd but fascinating series that is derivative of nothing on TV",[22] while the San Francisco Chronicle described the second season as "gloriously inventive, daring and provocative".[23]
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In 2008, Eddie Izzard said that a low-budget Riches movie was being developed, and added "We'll shoot it guerilla-style, using gorillas to actually shoot it. We're going to give them cameras...No, we're going to just get in there and maybe not have permission to do things, but just film it."[27] But the film never materialized.
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