I've been on a vikings binge lately, having watched Vikings: Valhalla, the Lost Kingdom season 5, the 13th Warrior and read Eaters of the Dead. Skol.
Same way they have to do a US Kath and Kim, or the Office, or an attempt at Red Dwarf, or 3-4 attempts at Faulty Towers,or...Should warn, however, that there's allegedly an American adaptation. An adaptation I am confidently willing to assume is the least good version so have no interest in watching to ethically compare the two. And cannot see the point in existing anyway, I mean like at least with foreign language entertainment there's an intended audience who just can't handle reading, or different cultures, or, dare I say it, a different melanin level to pander to. But this is Australian....they're still talking English! And mostly white! And rich! Whhhhhhhhhhhhy???
Agree, although admittedly the bar isn't set so high. WandaVision and Hawkeye didn't really have first episodes, can't remember what happened in FATWS, Loki was entertaining but had that "hey let's watch all the old MCU movies!" moment.It is, in my opinion, the best first episode of any Marvel show, including the Netflix shows. The soundtrack was great,
There's...there's an American version of Red Dwarf?Same way they have to do a US Kath and Kim, or the Office, or an attempt at Red Dwarf, or 3-4 attempts at Faulty Towers,or...
I think there was just a pilot episode that worked about as well as you'd expect, and someone sensibly decided not to pursue it further.There's...there's an American version of Red Dwarf?
Nonono, you may try to tempt my morbid curiosity, but I will resist all urges to peek at this eldritch horror to the bitter end!
Whoever that person was, they deserves a bloody Nobel peace prize for their contribution to humanity.I think there was just a pilot episode that worked about as well as you'd expect, and someone sensibly decided not to pursue it further.
Only thing I know about The Slap is this amazing video from Youtube;The Slap (Prime)
Australian darkish comedy about a wealthy group of friends at a birthday BBQ that ends abruptly after one adult slaps another person's kid. Each episode is shown through the perspective of a different character, so it's rather pleasantly contained to a mini-series. Not read the novel it's based on, but I rather enjoyed this. Everyone's messy, full of flaws and selfish desires, all of which start unraveling once the kid gets it.
Should warn, however, that there's allegedly an American adaptation. An adaptation I am confidently willing to assume is the least good version so have no interest in watching to ethically compare the two. And cannot see the point in existing anyway, I mean like at least with foreign language entertainment there's an intended audience who just can't handle reading, or different cultures, or, dare I say it, a different melanin level to pander to. But this is Australian....they're still talking English! And mostly white! And rich! Whhhhhhhhhhhhy???
Anyway, avoid the American one cause I said so, the Australian one's right there. Just. Right. There. A single click to the left. I don't care that it has modern Spock in it!
Alright, I'll bite. How? Bear in mind that every time I hear the "house elves are slaves!" claim I lose a brain cell.But yeah, on reflection the concept of house elves as presented in the books is fucked up, the way Rowling presents wizard racism is fucked up, a lot of the characterization becomes fucked up as the series progresses etc.
Completely disagree.Like with the Fantastic Beasts movies, I'm left thinking that Rowling wanted to have two conflicting stories in one: one is a whimsical children's wish fulfilment story about learning magic in a wizard school and dealing with bullies and the mean teacher. The other is a grim fable about prejudice, fascism, responsibility, abusive institutions, regret, generational trauma and all that fun stuff. If you dropped the entire "boy who lived" angle and just made Harry a normal orphan, and had all the Voldemort stuff in a separate, more adult series it might have worked way better.
As someone who's written HP fanfiction...um, because it's insanely popular? Look at the top ten IPs on FFN based on no. of entries, and I don't really see anything out of the ordinary.And now I'm starting to understand why people write so much HP fan fiction.