Wow, S3 is really a giant middle finger to S2And Q is back
Wow, S3 is really a giant middle finger to S2And Q is back
Yeah. Yeah pretty much. Not that anything is wrong with that. Season 2 was kinda shit, despite my love of Q.Wow, S3 is really a giant middle finger to S2
I would say the common factor between the "good" MCU shows is that they fit perfectly into the episodic format, instead of feeling like a movie stretched out into a TV show. Moon Knight takes the time to explore Marc's character, which would have never worked in a two hour movie. Wandavision is literally a TV show, and She-Hulk is a parody of a legal drama.Moon Knight (4/5)
Tarawet is best hippo.
If you've seen this series, you'll understand the reference. If you haven't, you won't understand the reference unless you're up to snuff with Egyptian mythology. If you've seen the series and don't agree that Tarawet is best hippo, then you're in deNile.
Talk of hippos aside, this was pretty neat. I wouldn't really be able to tell you anything about Moon Knight before watching this, and after watching it, I can't tell you that much more. I'm going to cut to the chase, the main reason this is 4/5 rather than 5/5 is because the action sequences just bore me. The titular character is nearly invincible, and even then, you can't make people beating the shit out of each other interesting if you've done it a million times before. Also, the main impetus for the plot has been explored better in stuff like Minority Report (if a person's going to commit a crime, are they guilty before the crime is comitted?), whereas here, it's just lip service. Instead, I'm going to list what the series does really well and move from there. So on that note:
-Oscar Isaacs is the GOAT. No, really - the guy needs to play two versions of the same character via personality disorder, and his acting is brilliant in this. Obviously this kind of thing has been done before, but that doesn't really detract from how excellent his acting is here. Not onyl does he have to play his two versions, but often has to play them off each other. From a guy who I only knew previously from Poe Dameron (space jocks r us), his acting chops are on full display.
-The directing, by extension, is excellent. Said conversations are often framed in the context of mirrors, where Marc Spector/Steven Grant will often see/address their counterpart when seeing a reflection. Again, this isn't new, but the directing techniques here are excellent.
-Its handling of Egyptian mythology is well done. To be clear, I can hardly call myself an expert on Egyptian mythology, but of what's on display here, it feels true to the myth, or at least, true enough that it feels authentic even if liberties are taken.
-The series's penultimate episode, "The Asylum." Just, everythign about this episode. I mean, wow. Just wow. It encapsulates what I mean when I say (and I'm saying this now) that this show is at its best when it's a psychological thriller. Action? Boring. Psychological weirdness? Gimme!
-Also helps that the show's actually quite funny too, and not in the MCU quippy way, but genuine humour.
-Speaking of the MCU, YMMV, but the show feels completely isolated from the rest of the setting. There's one blink and you'll miss it reference to Black Panther, and I think that's it. Whether that's good or bad is something that I leave up to you.
-I wondered if it was best to address this, since identity politics debates often go off the rails, but I remember when this show was released/about to be released, and there was the usual hubbub of Moon Knight being Jewish, and representation, and all that, and a hundred other things that I have no horse with, but since it's established that Marc Spector is/was Jewish in the show, I'm going to bring up that there might have been a missed oppotunity here based on what the identitarians said, namely that Khonsu (an Egyptian deity) has basically enslaved a Jewish man (Marc Spector) to do his bidding, which may or may not be a parallel to Egypt's enslavement of the Israelites, depending on how much stock you put in Biblical accounts. To be clear, this is a minor issue, but it's something the show could have done if it wanted to.
So, yeah. Pretty neat. Really, this is the best MCU TV show there is (of what I've seen, which isn't that much). Nice job.
I thought Ms. Marvel was great personally, but it needed more time in Pakistan.I would say the common factor between the "good" MCU shows is that they fit perfectly into the episodic format, instead of feeling like a movie stretched out into a TV show. Moon Knight takes the time to explore Marc's character, which would have never worked in a two hour movie. Wandavision is literally a TV show, and She-Hulk is a parody of a legal drama.
Whereas something like Hawkeye or Miss Marvel would have benefitted from being much shorter, and with much better production value.
It needed less whatever the fuck the villains were and more focus on everything that made the show unique. So yes, Pakistan, South Asian-American culture, hell even the whole "I'm a nerd in high school" shtick.I thought Ms. Marvel was great personally, but it needed more time in Pakistan.
That’s fair, having the dickheads from Damage Control would have been sufficient as antagonistic forces go.It needed less whatever the fuck the villains were and more focus on everything that made the show unique. So yes, Pakistan, South Asian-American culture, hell even the whole "I'm a nerd in high school" shtick.
I wanted to like this show but given 50% was so disconnected from the rest, and was pretty awful, it's a disappointment in my book. Especially when the character meant so much to a lot of people.
Oscar Isaac almost completely carried this show. It was either going to succeed or fail depending on how well he did. Holy shit, did it succeed. The entire episode where we find out why he developed the split personality in the first place, and the events that led to the full-on DID...easily one of the best single things that Marvel has done, and it was all Oscar Isaac carrying it.Moon Knight (4/5)
Tarawet is best hippo.
If you've seen this series, you'll understand the reference. If you haven't, you won't understand the reference unless you're up to snuff with Egyptian mythology. If you've seen the series and don't agree that Tarawet is best hippo, then you're in deNile.
Talk of hippos aside, this was pretty neat. I wouldn't really be able to tell you anything about Moon Knight before watching this, and after watching it, I can't tell you that much more. I'm going to cut to the chase, the main reason this is 4/5 rather than 5/5 is because the action sequences just bore me. The titular character is nearly invincible, and even then, you can't make people beating the shit out of each other interesting if you've done it a million times before. Also, the main impetus for the plot has been explored better in stuff like Minority Report (if a person's going to commit a crime, are they guilty before the crime is comitted?), whereas here, it's just lip service. Instead, I'm going to list what the series does really well and move from there. So on that note:
-Oscar Isaacs is the GOAT. No, really - the guy needs to play two versions of the same character via personality disorder, and his acting is brilliant in this. Obviously this kind of thing has been done before, but that doesn't really detract from how excellent his acting is here. Not onyl does he have to play his two versions, but often has to play them off each other. From a guy who I only knew previously from Poe Dameron (space jocks r us), his acting chops are on full display.
-The directing, by extension, is excellent. Said conversations are often framed in the context of mirrors, where Marc Spector/Steven Grant will often see/address their counterpart when seeing a reflection. Again, this isn't new, but the directing techniques here are excellent.
-Its handling of Egyptian mythology is well done. To be clear, I can hardly call myself an expert on Egyptian mythology, but of what's on display here, it feels true to the myth, or at least, true enough that it feels authentic even if liberties are taken.
-The series's penultimate episode, "The Asylum." Just, everythign about this episode. I mean, wow. Just wow. It encapsulates what I mean when I say (and I'm saying this now) that this show is at its best when it's a psychological thriller. Action? Boring. Psychological weirdness? Gimme!
-Also helps that the show's actually quite funny too, and not in the MCU quippy way, but genuine humour.
-Speaking of the MCU, YMMV, but the show feels completely isolated from the rest of the setting. There's one blink and you'll miss it reference to Black Panther, and I think that's it. Whether that's good or bad is something that I leave up to you.
-I wondered if it was best to address this, since identity politics debates often go off the rails, but I remember when this show was released/about to be released, and there was the usual hubbub of Moon Knight being Jewish, and representation, and all that, and a hundred other things that I have no horse with, but since it's established that Marc Spector is/was Jewish in the show, I'm going to bring up that there might have been a missed oppotunity here based on what the identitarians said, namely that Khonsu (an Egyptian deity) has basically enslaved a Jewish man (Marc Spector) to do his bidding, which may or may not be a parallel to Egypt's enslavement of the Israelites, depending on how much stock you put in Biblical accounts. To be clear, this is a minor issue, but it's something the show could have done if it wanted to.
So, yeah. Pretty neat. Really, this is the best MCU TV show there is (of what I've seen, which isn't that much). Nice job.
Harry is his name, yes. Voga isn't technically a planet anymore, true, it's now a moon of Jupiter, but was a planet before it was attacked and presumed totally destroyed in the last cyber war or something, whereas in reality it was just knocked over into orbit around Jupiter. Don't think too much about that.Doctor Who: Revenge of the Cybermen (3/5)
It wasn't actually intentional that I ended up going from Tenth Planet to Revenge, just happened to be the DVDs available at the time. Anyway, this is better than Tenth Planet, but it's still OldWho, so that means the usual glut of wonky effects combined with wonky writing.
Anyway, Four, Sarah, and Harry (think that's what he's called?) end up on a space station where a plague is steadily doing a number on the crew. Only it's not a plague, it's cybermats, which are devices used by the cybermen. Cybermen who, in this serial, look better than just people in suits. Anyway, they want to destroy Vega, the planet (shouldn't it be an asteroid?) of gold, as gold is the one thing that can stop them as it clogs up their breathing aperatuses. Meanwhile, Vega is in the middle of a power struggle.
I'm only 3 or 4 episodes in right now but I honestly don't find Yeun's character very likeable (not that he's not good in the role or entertaining), most of his problems are his own fault honestly. I feel like I'd have the same view of him if I personally met him in real life as the one guy and his wife have (that Yeun overhears where he extends the job to trim the tree), he's annoying and just basically get rid of him as he doesn't come off as genuine at all and I very much don't like that in people. I find Amy more likeable as her character feels legit in a bad place personally because of the people around her. I get that she has a well off life money-wise and all but she's obviously not happy and it isn't too much of her fault at least.My only problem with the show is that none of the characters besides him seem very likable. Yeun’s character is cleary the underdog trying to do right, buy his parents some land, etc. but fuck if he isn’t frustrating to watch in action. And the bloody douchnozzle miscreants he has for company really doesn’t help matters.
Another struggle would be feeling an ounce of anything for Amy. It’s like there could be more depth to excavate from her childhood that would go a long way, but more than half way through the season the writers refuse to go there. All we have are characters treading water at best, while others like Amy’s husband and Danny’s bros are complete toolbags.
After the sixth episode it’s starting to feel like the show is coasting up a very gradual slope. Something needs to happen to any of these people soon. It wouldn’t surprise me if the church leader also has some skeletons or hidden motives. He just seems way too nice to be true.
I just loved Jamie teaching Roy to ride a bike.Ted Lasso’s latest episode was uniquely good in that it ventured outside of its usual comfort zone as a show, and so did many of its characters. It was both broad strokes and intimate, switching gears in a way that may just be enough to revitalize a pathetic team. Love the reference to Bulls’ triangle offense, which would really be neat to see actually allied to soccer. Hoping they follow through with it.
Was curious about this one, but thanks for the heads up.Dead Ringers S1E1
The feminist, serialized version of Cronenberg's 1988 movie. Rachel Weisz plays the twins, which were already helpfully named Beverly and Elliot when Jeremy Irons played then, so no change there, although one of them is gay now. I don't remember which is which but Weisz wears her hair down for the Alpha Twin and up in a knot for the Beta Twin. It's when the twins change their hair that you realize what a great actress she is, playing two characters pretending to be each other.
So the feminist angle. This isn't like in Silence of the Lambs where men adjust their behavior around Clarice due to their sexism, then deny it. It's the cartoon Gillete version of what sexism looks like, with the sisters rejecting some repulsive horndog in the first scene, then telling another who says Hi at a disco to fuck off, then a third dude can't help but masturbate in front of one of them at her office, etc.
I don't really like anybody in this. Everyone is angry, swearing and snapping at each other all the time. Everything seems to be coming from a place of bitterness.
The movie barely had a plot, replicated here with the gay twin dating an actress (whom the Alpha Twin seduces for her). They're adding more subplots, like looking for private funding for a new birthing center, and also the gay twin wants to get pregnant but can't. Now Weisz is 53 and looks fabulous but I don't think she's playing someone significantly younger than that. Isn't getting pregnant in your 50s somewhere between incredibly dangerous and a freak of nature? Wouldn't an OBGYN know better?
EDIT: Weisz herself got pregnant at 48, so hush my mouth.