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What TV SHOWS are you watching?
hotseatgames wrote: The only thing that bugs me about it is that everyone, including his best friend and ex-wife, calls him by his last name. His first name is Sam, which is not only worlds better than the horrible name Loudermilk, it's two less syllables. Then again, he is usually being a dick, so perhaps they do it to irritate him.
My family was good friends with a Loudermilk family. But you're right, nobody used the Loudermilk name except when referring to them collectively. They even encouraged kids to call them by first name even back when kids were supposed to address adults more formally, like Mister Loudermilk. Anyway, just wanted to note that Loudermilk is a real name.
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It is okay, like 3.75 out of 5. It is upsetting nerds who want it to be exactly like the animated series. That is not the point. The effects are great. The casting is stellar, like legitimately top-notch. They really seem to inhabit the characters and bring them to life. The pacing is breakneck, and that's my biggest gripe. One of the nice things about the show is that there was room to breathe, and sometimes you'd have slice-of-life episodes where the characters were just being people trying to figure stuff, and themselves, out. Here, everything is an emergency and everyone is racing from one end of the world to the other.
But the broad strokes are correct. It's close enough that it doesn't really need to exist -- the cartoon is better, and widely available -- but since we live in a world where everything will be remade, this is a pretty good treatment of the remakes.
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Also watching Delicious in Dungeon, which is a funny take on the D&D mindset. When exploring the deeper levels of the dungeon, why worry about food? You can just eat what you've killed. The one that usually has the "I'M NOT EATING THAT!" is the Elf Mage, but once she tries the Dwarf's cooking, she scarfs it down.
Lastly, started House of Ninjas, where modern times still have ninjas, the main protagonist group of ninjas just want to live normal lives after a family loss, and a big threat coming to loom over them. Just started it, but I'm hooked.
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The haiku:
"The band was a bust.
Met a girl and fucked it up.
It's a job, I guess."
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The show has become less predictable and even more interesting in the second season. A couple more survivors have been revealed. An apparent master villain surfaced, but subsequent revelations indicate that she is no more in control of the situation than anybody else. Elijah Woods has joined the cast, in a role that leans into previous flashes of dark humor on the show. At the same time, the scarier aspects of the show have also been ramping up. There was a nice chilling scene where a character with dissociative identity disorder is staring in the mirror. She turns away, facing completely away from the mirror, but her reflection is now glaring at the back of her head. Music selections still range from good to great, in terms of emphasizing whatever is happening on screen.
The only thing holding me back from recommending Yellowjackets to everyone is that it is planned to run for five seasons, and season three won't land until 2025. Might be better to wait a couple years before jumping on board.
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Pondering the various Captains across the whole franchise, I have been striving to capture the distinction between each Captain with a single noun:
Archer, the diplomat
Georgiou, the pragmatist
Lorca, the opportunist
Pike, the idealist
Kirk, the adventurer
Picard, the intellectual
Janeway, the ???
Sisko, the realist
I posed this to my Trek trivia team last night, and one of them said Janeway, the iguana, in reference to a notorious episode of Voyager.
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Shellhead wrote: 40% of the way into season 2, I am still loving Yellowjackets. In first season, I often anticipated significant plot developments, not because the show is cliched and predictable, but because my dark sense of humor seems to operate on the same wavelength as the writers of the show. And more importantly, they are playing fair with the storytelling by setting up key scenes in advance instead of just going for a cheap blindside of the viewers. When the camera lingers on a small detail, there is a possibility that it will be important later.
The show has become less predictable and even more interesting in the second season. A couple more survivors have been revealed. An apparent master villain surfaced, but subsequent revelations indicate that she is no more in control of the situation than anybody else. Elijah Woods has joined the cast, in a role that leans into previous flashes of dark humor on the show. At the same time, the scarier aspects of the show have also been ramping up. There was a nice chilling scene where a character with dissociative identity disorder is staring in the mirror. She turns away, facing completely away from the mirror, but her reflection is now glaring at the back of her head. Music selections still range from good to great, in terms of emphasizing whatever is happening on screen.
The only thing holding me back from recommending Yellowjackets to everyone is that it is planned to run for five seasons, and season three won't land until 2025. Might be better to wait a couple years before jumping on board.
I'm close to the end of the second season, and I share a lot of your opinions. I appreciate how the show plays around a bit with the telegraphs.
The writing isn't... great. It’s serviceable, but sometimes TV-stilted in a "no one in this situation would speak or behave like this" plot-bot manner. Some of the plotting itself is overly contrived, but damn if it doesn't keep you glued to the screen.
I think whoever was responsible for the music selection deserves some sort of award. I'm probably biased, since I experienced my late teens / early twenties in the 90's era, but some of the establishing shots & scenes are impeccably paired with the tracks (e.g. the use of Nirvana's "Something In The Way", or more obscure MTV era ephemera like Live’s “Lightning Crashes”) and their pre-credit roll selection nailed it every time, Mad Men style. They really amped it up with the use of "Street Spirit" (Radiohead) and "Killing Moon" (Echo & The Bunnymen) in the penultimate and final scenes of the second season, though some unfortunate covers were used earlier in the episode.
The big name stars like Juliette Lewis, Christina Ricci, Elijah Wood, have some good performances although they tend to be one-note. Ricci seems to be the only one who fully stepped into character while Wood and Lewis kinda played their typical personas (to good effect, but we’ve seen them before). I think the "teen" actors have carried the bulk of the show so far. The two Sophies, Sophie Nelisse (teen Shauna) and Sophie Thatcher (teen Nat) in particular, absolutely crushed it.
The show plays around with Lord of the Flies dynamics, namely the ambiguity of evil/divinity occupying some liminal space between communal construction and external places of power/danger, & then blends it with the conceit of Stephen King's IT, where the gang gradually regathers to confront whatever has been haunting them for 25 years and is angling for some sort of rebirth. The plot continually tip-toes around what "it" actually is. This haziness leans a bit heavily toward supernatural implications at times, but I'm not convinced that it's going to go all-in on this and I’ll be disappointed if it does (to me, this would tip the scale into Stranger Things territory, which doesn’t interest me). It doesn't exercise the same nuance or lyricism with this register as The Leftovers, but it sometimes approaches that vibe and I'm really curious to see where this goes in later seasons.
Overall, I think it has some really compelling ideas & execution, with a conspicuous layer of "industry TV" around it that I hope doesn't completely subsume it's more interesting elements.
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- hotseatgames
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If they can keep going then book 2 and 3 are gonna be EPIC.
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hotseatgames wrote: Season 2 of Tokyo Vice continues to delight, and I like it even better than season 1. Possibly because less time had to be spent introducing people. The most recent episode even finally revisits the opening scene of season 1. If you have Max and don't mind subtitles, or can speak Japanese, you should check this show out.
I've been hyping the show here and on the Discord channel. HBO/MAX really did the show dirty by burying it as a pure streaming release, available at midnight on Thursdays. They should be promoting it more ( even on the streaming app its somewhat hard to find ) and actually aired it in a dedicated time slot to pick up more viewers.
A third season seems unlikely but I'd be all over it if they renew it again.
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I read the book a few years ago and kind of bounced off it -- forced my way to the end but didn't remember much of it. I think (and this is on me, not the book's fault) my brain had trouble keeping all the Chinese characters' names distinct. Seeing characters on screen makes it a lot easier. Plus some of the characters have been switched from Chinese to other nationalities, which got criticism from the usual corners but whatever. The actors are all excellent.
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