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What TV are you watching and how would you rate it? [Revive from FRDB]

Over the last couple days I've been re-watching the Battlestar Galactica reboot. Kinda hard to believe it has been a decade since it was on TV.

My gods it was so dark. And so good. It got wonky at the end, but in the middle of season 3 where I am, it still holds up as the best series on television.
I somehow managed to miss the very end of the last episode of Season 2, saw most of the episode, just somehow not the ending... and was absolutely confused at the start of Season 3 wondering... when the hell did that happen?!

I'd have to go back and check that episode. Most of it is on Amazon Prime and I skipped ahead to the "exodus" from New Caprica. I don't know why I waited so long to watch it again. I've got almost the whole thing on DVD.
 
Death Note. Highly dramatized cartoon version of Sherlock versus Moriarty, only with death gods and Japanese people. Meh. I don't get the hype from the fans. Some of it is so irrational even when considering it is a cartoon in the way they develop the investigations and such that it's kinda boring now. But I'm only on episode 7 or so and there's a couple dozen left so I'll give it a few more.

What I enjoyed about it was the narrative.

They broke the shit out of the "show, don't tell" rule of movies & TV, yet the show was still engaging.

For the record, breaking the "show, don't tell" rule is a pet peeve of mine. I couldn't watch more than an episode and a half of House of Cards because of that very thing. Death Note is almost nothing but exposition. By rights, I should hate it. Also, both the protagonist and antagonist believe themselves to be champions of justice when in fact they're amoral as [bad word]. The moral grey is interesting, as is the fact that the antagonist is less evil than the protagonist, and the show does manage to raise a few interesting questions about the nature of morality if you're inclined to read between the lines.

Lastly, the antagonist is incredibly quirky (OK, insane), which I found endearing. The protagonist would have been boring as hell if not for the fact that he was a mass murderer.

But that's just what I found interesting about it. I'm not saying there's anything wrong with someone else not liking it.
 
The Toys That Made Us: 9/10

Interesting Netflix series about the business of the toys that we grew up with. 4 episodes out, with another 4 coming. The first one was about Star Wars, which had many fun tidbits, like how that first christmas they didn't have action figures out yet, so they basically sold IOU's. Kenner's original contract had George Lucas & Co. only getting 5% of the toy sales, on the condition they sold at least $10,000 a year, or handed over a check for that amount. When Hasbro bought out Kenner, they must have missed that part of the contract, so missed the $10,000 payment, and had to renegotiate, letting Lucas get a much bigger share. Other episodes s far covered Barbie, G.I.Joe, and He-Man.
 
Death Note. Highly dramatized cartoon version of Sherlock versus Moriarty, only with death gods and Japanese people. Meh. I don't get the hype from the fans. Some of it is so irrational even when considering it is a cartoon in the way they develop the investigations and such that it's kinda boring now. But I'm only on episode 7 or so and there's a couple dozen left so I'll give it a few more.

What I enjoyed about it was the narrative.

They broke the shit out of the "show, don't tell" rule of movies & TV, yet the show was still engaging.

For the record, breaking the "show, don't tell" rule is a pet peeve of mine. I couldn't watch more than an episode and a half of House of Cards because of that very thing. Death Note is almost nothing but exposition. By rights, I should hate it. Also, both the protagonist and antagonist believe themselves to be champions of justice when in fact they're amoral as [bad word]. The moral grey is interesting, as is the fact that the antagonist is less evil than the protagonist, and the show does manage to raise a few interesting questions about the nature of morality if you're inclined to read between the lines.

Lastly, the antagonist is incredibly quirky (OK, insane), which I found endearing. The protagonist would have been boring as hell if not for the fact that he was a mass murderer.

But that's just what I found interesting about it. I'm not saying there's anything wrong with someone else not liking it.

Hmmm . . . I've a hard time with certain tropes when they worked fine in original form, but since we keep striving to re-"invent" them they can get stilted and dry.

I liked BBCs live action reimagining of the Sherlock archetype because there was more showing how he got there, less of him just explaining it to the gathered so-often thought of as complete fools detective archetypes.

My problem with Death Note so far, I think, is that there's far too much of both the protagonist and the antagonist over-analyzing tiny details that could not possibly lead to the conclusions they make from what little they are gleaning as a way to explain the behaviors from each one.

But it might be more that the showrunners seemingly developed it with an omniscient narrator viewpoint, which carries its own issues.

Of course, I'd say I'm guilty of the same over-analysis at times, so maybe that's why I'll give it a better go than just a few episodes.

I still don't understand the hype but then that's true of pretty much any genre of any individual sample of any art-form I've explored.

Bah, at least the art style is doable, and of course in keeping it in Japanese the voice actors seem to actually care about the finished product and the over-arcing storyline.

I'll revisit my earlier conclusions when I finish it to see if there are changes.
 
Death Note. Highly dramatized cartoon version of Sherlock versus Moriarty, only with death gods and Japanese people. Meh. I don't get the hype from the fans. Some of it is so irrational even when considering it is a cartoon in the way they develop the investigations and such that it's kinda boring now. But I'm only on episode 7 or so and there's a couple dozen left so I'll give it a few more.

What I enjoyed about it was the narrative.

They broke the shit out of the "show, don't tell" rule of movies & TV, yet the show was still engaging.

For the record, breaking the "show, don't tell" rule is a pet peeve of mine. I couldn't watch more than an episode and a half of House of Cards because of that very thing. Death Note is almost nothing but exposition. By rights, I should hate it. Also, both the protagonist and antagonist believe themselves to be champions of justice when in fact they're amoral as [bad word]. The moral grey is interesting, as is the fact that the antagonist is less evil than the protagonist, and the show does manage to raise a few interesting questions about the nature of morality if you're inclined to read between the lines.

Lastly, the antagonist is incredibly quirky (OK, insane), which I found endearing. The protagonist would have been boring as hell if not for the fact that he was a mass murderer.

But that's just what I found interesting about it. I'm not saying there's anything wrong with someone else not liking it.

Hmmm . . . I've a hard time with certain tropes when they worked fine in original form, but since we keep striving to re-"invent" them they can get stilted and dry.

I liked BBCs live action reimagining of the Sherlock archetype because there was more showing how he got there, less of him just explaining it to the gathered so-often thought of as complete fools detective archetypes.

My problem with Death Note so far, I think, is that there's far too much of both the protagonist and the antagonist over-analyzing tiny details that could not possibly lead to the conclusions they make from what little they are gleaning as a way to explain the behaviors from each one.

But it might be more that the showrunners seemingly developed it with an omniscient narrator viewpoint, which carries its own issues.

Of course, I'd say I'm guilty of the same over-analysis at times, so maybe that's why I'll give it a better go than just a few episodes.

I still don't understand the hype but then that's true of pretty much any genre of any individual sample of any art-form I've explored.

Bah, at least the art style is doable, and of course in keeping it in Japanese the voice actors seem to actually care about the finished product and the over-arcing storyline.

I'll revisit my earlier conclusions when I finish it to see if there are changes.

When an anime gets hyped by anime fans, that doesn't mean diddly-squat.

I already spelled out what I liked about the show. Whether or not anime fans are obsessed with it doesn't matter much. Everyone raved about Attack on Titan, but I found it just another Shonen with a larger than normal body count among the "good guys."
 
Dark Matter. I'm only on episode 2, but so far it's a fairly trite yawn fest. 4/10. Maybe 3/10.
 
Devilman Crybaby (on Netflix)
2/10

Devilman-Crybaby-Header-240x180.jpg

Ooh, a new anime and[ent]hellip[/ent] ick. Gore porn really isn't my thing. I made it for a whole 18 minutes into the first episode before giving up.
 
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Devilman Crybaby (on Netflix)
2/10

View attachment 13970

Ooh, a new anime and[ent]hellip[/ent] ick. Gore porn really isn't my thing. I made it for a whole 18 minutes into the first episode before giving up.

Is this like a second rendering of the Devilman from the late 80s early 90s? Cuz the art and story in the original were shit.

I'd rather go for AoT, which is just another "oooh the world is ending what'll we do, I know, let's war" apocalyptic nightmare feast for lovers of the End Times tropes.

Sigh.

Maybe I should just stick to music and drop everything else.
 
Devilman Crybaby (on Netflix)
2/10

View attachment 13970

Ooh, a new anime and[ent]hellip[/ent] ick. Gore porn really isn't my thing. I made it for a whole 18 minutes into the first episode before giving up.

Is this like a second rendering of the Devilman from the late 80s early 90s? Cuz the art and story in the original were shit.

I'd rather go for AoT, which is just another "oooh the world is ending what'll we do, I know, let's war" apocalyptic nightmare feast for lovers of the End Times tropes.

Sigh.

Maybe I should just stick to music and drop everything else.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sturgeon's_law
 
Devilman Crybaby (on Netflix)
2/10

View attachment 13970

Ooh, a new anime and[ent]hellip[/ent] ick. Gore porn really isn't my thing. I made it for a whole 18 minutes into the first episode before giving up.

Is this like a second rendering of the Devilman from the late 80s early 90s? Cuz the art and story in the original were shit.

I'd rather go for AoT, which is just another "oooh the world is ending what'll we do, I know, let's war" apocalyptic nightmare feast for lovers of the End Times tropes.

Sigh.

Maybe I should just stick to music and drop everything else.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sturgeon's_law

Eh? But I think more than 90% of anything is crap, because it's all there is unless somebody took some heat time, thought and effort and then put that into what they make. Like The Lovely Bones, or the Dragon Lance series, or 35mm per Second if we're still talking anime. I wonder if that makes me a cynic or just depressive?

Meh. I don't care. (ok so maybe more depressive than cynic?)

I maintain that Aot is still an apocalyptic nightmare End Times epic made for people who love and want an apocalypse to watch on TV in an animated rendering, but with hollow dolls that have teeth and are 20 feet tall or so.

I can't watch it cuz dolls or doll like creatures freak me out, even before I watched the Dolls Poliphany piece in Akira. Freaky human lie with the empty eyed expressions I've also actually seen on real humans that say they could kill with that same frozen smile on their faces. <shudder> No.
 

Eh? But I think more than 90% of anything is crap, because it's all there is unless somebody took some heat time, thought and effort and then put that into what they make. Like The Lovely Bones, or the Dragon Lance series, or 35mm per Second if we're still talking anime. I wonder if that makes me a cynic or just depressive?

Meh. I don't care. (ok so maybe more depressive than cynic?)

I maintain that Aot is still an apocalyptic nightmare End Times epic made for people who love and want an apocalypse to watch on TV in an animated rendering, but with hollow dolls that have teeth and are 20 feet tall or so.

I can't watch it cuz dolls or doll like creatures freak me out, even before I watched the Dolls Poliphany piece in Akira. Freaky human lie with the empty eyed expressions I've also actually seen on real humans that say they could kill with that same frozen smile on their faces. <shudder> No.

If it makes you a cynic, the existence of Sturgeon's law suggests that you have a lot of company.
 

Eh? But I think more than 90% of anything is crap, because it's all there is unless somebody took some heat time, thought and effort and then put that into what they make. Like The Lovely Bones, or the Dragon Lance series, or 35mm per Second if we're still talking anime. I wonder if that makes me a cynic or just depressive?

Meh. I don't care. (ok so maybe more depressive than cynic?)

I maintain that Aot is still an apocalyptic nightmare End Times epic made for people who love and want an apocalypse to watch on TV in an animated rendering, but with hollow dolls that have teeth and are 20 feet tall or so.

I can't watch it cuz dolls or doll like creatures freak me out, even before I watched the Dolls Poliphany piece in Akira. Freaky human lie with the empty eyed expressions I've also actually seen on real humans that say they could kill with that same frozen smile on their faces. <shudder> No.

If it makes you a cynic, the existence of Sturgeon's law suggests that you have a lot of company.

Yay, company. -_- As long as you bring your own food and drink, and don't try and sell me some stupid, because I try not to do stupid, okay.
 
Better Things 9/10

Just watched the last episode of this season. Hopefully it is not the last ever just because Louis CK was involved as co-creator and writer. It's not only one of the best shows on TV, but if a show can be "feminist" this one does that better and funnier than almost any ever. Also, one of the best shows that focuses on parenting.

Adlon is a great actress who deserves recognition beyond her amazing role as the voice of Bobby Hill.








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Peaky Blinders, season 4, 6/10; Stars Cillian Murphy as the head of a dodgy crime family in post WWI England. The Shelby family are on the end of a New York mafia vendetta which is going to kill most of the Shelby family. Adrien Brody guests as the head of the Sicilian hit men and carries the menace very well. Tom Hardy appears again as Alfie Solomons, head of a jewish gang that deals with the Shelby family but is totally untrustworthy and unpredictable. Tom Hardy plays the part so well. I didn't enjoy the latest series as much as the previous, I think the plot lines are getting a bit too convoluted and implausible.
 
Black Mirror season 4
8/10

I think this was my favorite season. I loved the Callister episode despite the odd tone at the ending. The weakest one to me was the final one. I did appreciate the meta point of it, but there was too much narration and didn't like the shared consciousness story There is a lot of suspension of disbelief required for this show, but that one was too much. Unfortunately, the finale looked like a series finale. It's been one of the best. For real thought provoking.
 
Black Lightning

Only one episode out so far, so too early to rate, but overall this is very much on par with other CW superhero offerings, but overtly political in ways the other CW shows aren't. So far, I'm hooked.

Trigger Warning: Identitarians and other fragile snowflakes should not watch this, as the protagonist is not white and the subtext acknowledges that racism exists, which is sure to trigger the kind of people who use phrases like "social justice warrior."
 
Saw the season finale of Gifted. 7.5/10?

It's still just above average, but a hell of a lot better than the show was at the beginning. There was a major ideological split between various main characters.


The Mutant underground has now split in two as a result of an ideological dispute that mirrors the ideological dispute between Xavier and Magneto.

Lorna, the Strucker brother, and a variety of minor mutants from the underground are now preparing to start a war with humanity, while the remaining members of the underground now have to stop them while avoiding capture by the increasingly fascistic American government (which is starting to resemble Trump and other alt right Nazi-wannabes more and more with each episode).

The Hellfire club is aligned with the Brotherhood of Mutants in this TV show, probably because of the events in X-Men First Class.

The Stepford Cuckoos are deliciously creepy.

 
Bosch on Amazon Prime - 5/10 so far

about 4- episodes in - too many stock characters - I do like how they are letting the "City of Bones" case play out over the season - gives the show some breathing room, but the title character hasn't really shown any sort of detecting ability that puts him above the norm, just yet - Just seems your typical bend the rules detective that's been done before. One of the major points over the first few episodes is Bosch being on trial for shooting a possibly unarmed suspect. But knowing how police shooting cases have played out in real life, the degree to which the prosecutor is trying to stick it to Bosch just seem over the top ridiculous.
 
Big Love - 5/10

Show about a polygamist Mormon family living down in Utah. They are, for the most part, a normal group of folks who just happen to be in a polygamous relationship. It's quite interesting and well done, but it's hard to be on the protagonists' side at times because their religion is just so weird and creepy and when the plot points center around aspects of that, they just come across as freaks. The main family is differentiated from the child raping fundamentalist cult living on a compound which they come from, but there are just a lot of ways that they're not all that different.

They do have a prophet guy who talks to God by sticking his head into a hat and getting a revelation, so that's hilariously accurate.

Worth seeing, but doesn't need to be on any kind of must watch list.
 
The End of the F***ing World - 9/10

British/Netflix black comedy-drama about a damaged teenage couple who run away and go on a road-trip crime spree. Very Bonnie and Clyde/Natural Born Killers. Great performances all around.
 
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