Semi-Critical Reviews: Glee Glee Glee…

June 9th, 2010 by Brianna

Having just watched the season finale, I’m really confused about Glee. It’s supposed to be one of those show, you know, ‘On the surface, it’s all song and dance, but deeper inside lies a heartwarming story about growing up, family, et cetera’ With added campiness, of course.

Or something.

I’m beginning to think it’s just the opposite. On the surface, it’s trying to be slightly revolutionary – the first musical show that’s really made it big, a ‘realistic’ portrayal of teenage pregnancy, a gay kid with a supportive jockish dad, Idina Menzel as a surrogate mother for two gay dads.

Wait a second…
Read full post »

Last Word

March 9th, 2009 by Brianna

Okay, Okay, Okay. I’m going to totally go against popular opinion here. Please don’t kill me! (ha, ha…)

I loved the last episode of the L Word.

Well, maybe not quite loved – really, really, really liked. Lived, perhaps. (Get it? Liked + Loved? I’ll stop now. I usually don’t make horrible puns, but somehow it feels okay here. I think I’m high on L Word juice, or something)

Warning: This going to be super long – I have a lot of feelings at the moment.

Quick summary: I liked the Alice/Tasha/Jamie resolution. Sure, it was a bit artificial in the beginning, but it worked here. And I liked Helena and Dylan’s fight. It never made sense that they would make up so quickly. And I was sure that Jenny had screwed up the impersonation of Nikki’s manager. I felt relieved that Shane found Molly’s letter and the negatives. I loved nearly every scene with Tina and Bette. And I especially liked the last five minutes. (I’ll get to that in a minute.)
Read full post »

Legend of the Seeker Reviews: Episode 13 – Revenant

March 7th, 2009 by Brianna

This episode seemed very short and simple. I’m sure it was just as long as the others, but not much happened, so it seemed short. That’s okay, though. Simple is good.

Anyway, the ghost story thing. Couple was estranged in death, so they possess the bodies of the nearest handy living people to be reunited. Yes, this has been done before. But they did it pretty well, and I happen to have a soft spot for that sort of thing – so I really liked it. There’s really not much to say about the main plot, though.

Two things: First, isn’t it interesting how the wizards are obviously stronger than both the seeker and confessor combined? It’s as if the seeker is only important because of the prophecies. It’s an interesting concept, really. I tend to be a bit obsessed with free will, myself, and the idea that there might not be any bothers me. That said, there is a sort of romantic thrill to this idea of determinism, though – especially when it’s wrapped up in a prophecy. We know Richard is going to kill the bad guy, but does it matter how much or little of a hero he is otherwise?  They need to explore this more.

Second, I loved the ending bit. “Oh, look, a tracking cloud.” “I’ll cast a simple spell to get rid of it.” There’s <i>got</i> to be more to this than that!

Much better than last week’s!

More Sugar Rush Thoughts

March 3rd, 2009 by Brianna

At some point, I’m going to have to write a full comparison of Sugar Rush and South of Nowhere.

On further watching – Sugar Rush really is SoN on acid. I still don’t feel like rooting for any particular couple, but Kim is much more identifiable than I thought, and I do want her to find love. But the really interesting bit comes at the end of season 1, when they decide to run away from home. SoN did the same thing, only… not.

In SoN they ran away, the car ran out of gas, they hid in a restaurant, called the dad, and were threatened by a conveniently placed pervert (or was it an imaginary pervert?). It was all very after-school-specially.

Moral: Don’t run away from home.

In Sugar Rush, they run away, drive like idiots with no apparent repercussions, rent an obscenely expensive hotel room with the mom’s credit card, and have sex all night before the police manage to track them down.

Moral: Uhh…. Credit card theft rocks?

Yeah.

Honestly, I wouldn’t want my kids (should I ever have them) to watch Sugar Rush before they turn at least 17 or so. SoN is obviously more teen-appropriate. Still – there’s no denying that Sugar Rush is more realisticish (relatively speaking), and much more exciting.

Moral: British People are Crazy (and mildly cool).

Dollhouse, Episode 3

March 2nd, 2009 by Brianna

Yay! I really liked this one! According to those who have watched lots of movies (not me), the whole obsessed-fan-wants-to-kill-star plot has been done too much before, but I didn’t notice. It seemed more original than the last one, too. Plus, it was actually fun. Echo telling the singer off was great, some of the intra-handler lines were funny, and it was generally nice to get away from the sex slavery theme for just a minute.

I also liked that they managed to show some of the previous personalities, without resorting to sledgehammer tactics (flashbacks, groaning and falling down, etc) It all felt very clean and natural.

Could have done without so much of the dancing in lingerie, though. And the FBI dude is still boring.

Getting better!

Legend of the Seeker Reviews: Episode 12 – Home

February 24th, 2009 by Brianna

It’s bottle show time! I was really interested to see how this one would turn out. If Xena did anything at all right, it was the exceptional bottle shows. (‘The Xena Scrolls’, etc). I’d hoped LotS would continue this tradition. It didn’t.

The whole trick to bottle shows is to find an excuse to show a bunch of flashbacks. “Tell us the story of your dream!” is not a good excuse. Rahl’s assistant provided boring and useless commentary. And where did Anna come from? He seemed awfully in love to never mention her.

I did like the opening bit. It felt like it was poking fun at the “and he woke up. It had all been a dream.” But the teaser went on for almost a quarter of the episode. Boring!

The middle was – even more boring. And the ending didn’t make any sense. It all happened too fast, for one thing. It also seemed like a bit of a ripoff of the last scene in the Matrix. A longer buildup would have helped, I think.

Yay! for true love, I guess.

Question: If they could get to the box so fast, why didn’t Zedd and Kahlan just go move it without Richard?

Oh, well. You can’t expect too much from a bottle show.

Dollhouse, Episode 2 – The Target

February 21st, 2009 by Brianna

I cannot believe they did “The Most Dangerous Game”. Stupid, stupid, stupid! Look – everyone tries to do that. Yes, it’s classic. Yes, it’s powerful. It’s also boring. They didn’t even bother to put a different twist on the ending! (The ‘game’ gets an unexpected advantage to turn the tables.) Mr. DeKnight is a pretty good writer – he wrote ‘Dead Things’ (Buffy), after all, but this was just moronic. I thought Whedon knew better than this.

See, here’s the thing: ripping off a famous story only works when your characters are so established or unique that they can make it fun and fresh, put their own twist on it. Take, for example Xena. They ripped off Groundhog Day with ‘Been There, Done That’. The original was an exploration of human goodness. But Xena… bulldozed, for lack of a better word, right through the plot with her usual reckless abandon. It’s the same for all of Xena’s ripoffs of Greek myth. Or, say the Charmed ‘fairy tale’ episode. In that case, they are all completely pissed about having to deal with the whole fairy tale mess, and it’s completely hilarious. There are dozen of other examples – but they’re almost all a bit campy, and all of them depend on the characters to provide a fresh feel.

Dollhouse just can’t do that. Not while Echo is still a blank slate. And Dollhouse is possibly the least campy show I’ve ever seen. It simply doesn’t work.

More problems: The FBI guy is still boring. And is Caroline really sending him clues, like the dead father in that other short story? (Or was it a novel? I can’t remember the name… can anybody else?)

Anyway, to not be completely negative – I did like the last quarter or so, where Echo starts to remember her true identity. I was pleased to note that they seem to be going with the ‘the real self can’t be destroyed, only suppressed’ concept. And the escaped active could be very interesting. If you think about it, he is actually the good guy, on the audience’s side. He may be reacting violently, but he’s got a pretty good excuse!

And the scenes where Echo meets her handler for the first time were well done. I can’t help be wish they had waited a few episodes to reverse the “You can trust me” concept, though. Give us some time to internalize it first!

I’m not going to give up on Dollhouse quite yet, but the plot really needs to improve.

Thinking About Internet Media Again…

February 18th, 2009 by Brianna

I find the subject quite fascinating! First, a little story you already know:

Once there were ordinary websites (okay, there were other things first, but that’s beside the point). After a while, the media people caught on, and made sites about their products. But by this time, media pioneers and bored teenagers had started blogging. Blogging was different for a while, but soon many of biggest blogs were written by corporations. So the bored teenagers et al moved to myspace and facebook, but the media companies followed them there, too. Around this time (roughly), online video caught on, and the line between producer and consumer began to blur.

Anyway, myspace wasn’t so cool anymore, or at least was too much trouble. So the bored teenagers moved to text messages and twitter. And now, twitter is being adopted by online and offline mediaish personalities. And the president. Not to mention every celebrity ever. Since I thoroughly hate twitter, this makes me sad… but I guess I’ll have to get used to it.

The latest twist: Anyone but Me, the best web series yet is twittering live from the set. And I’ll bet others are doing it too. Which is… cool, I guess, but I can’t help but feel we’re a long, long way from those ‘making of’ segments on the tail end of VHS movies. Or even from, say, Lord of the Rings special features. Where will it end? How close will the media get to the consumer?

I can see it now:

autowin: @MamaC: thefarmmakeup just said Betty showed up on set. Make them leave!

MamaC: what does everyone else think?

The Entire World: DO IT!!!

Okay, maybe that would be rather awesome…

Dollhouse

February 16th, 2009 by Brianna

Dollhouse, the new Joss Whedon show, is finally here. I’m honestly not sure what what to think.

Positives:

  1. Eliza Dushku is an awesome actress. She even makes ‘completely spaced out’ entertaining.
  2. Amy Acker is only slightly less awesome
  3. The lady in charge is really creepy. If she’s really at the top on the ladder, she’ll be really interesting.
  4. The evil geek was even creepier – I really, really hated him!
  5. Eliza Dushku can really kick ass. (I’m shallow).
  6. Eliza Dushku is really hot. (Yes, that shallow)
  7. Negatives:

    1. There’s no plot. I was going to write a review of the episode, but nothing actually happened beyond introductions! It wasn’t even a realistic nothing.
    2. The FBI investigator is boring. Boring, boring, boring, and I don’t care.
    3. Echo needs an identifying personality stat!
    4. Even more, there aren’t any sympathetic characters, except perhaps the ‘handler’.
    5. The story of the episode doesn’t have any resonant meaning, since the character (the hostage negotiator) involved disappears at the end.
    6. The loss of agency theme makes me feel sick. More on this later.

    Jaclyn at Bitch Ph. D. wrote a list of questions, and Aviva at Fourth Wave added some others, so I’m going to answer them:

    From B PhD:
    2) Were you as psyched as I was to see that Mutant Enemy tag at the end?
    No. I hardly noticed it in Buffy, etc.!

    3) How did you feel about Eliza D as Faith in Buffy? How have you felt about everything she’s done since Buffy? What did you think about her performance as Echo?
    Love, love, loved Faith. I hope that the character Echo develops into is somewhat Faith-like. Tru calling was a terrible show, but Dushku was still really good in it. Echo was performed as well as could be.

    4) Why the hell did Joss agree to work with Fox again? Or ever?
    They gave him money. Nobody else would. He decided that making a show with Fox was better than no show at all. Corporate America sucks.

    5) Um… are there still no people of color who want good roles in Hollywood? It’s a real problem, isn’t it? How on earth can we fix it, so that all the producers and directors aren’t forced to only cast white people all the time? (Yes, there’s Harry Lennix as Echo’s handler, but a) that just makes him the token and b) Driving Miss Daisy, anyone?)
    I have no idea why this is so hard. Corporate America sucks. I suppose we can help it by supporting show with POC, but I’m guessing that the current bunch of executives/directors/producers/establishment will have to retire, at the very least, if we are ever to fix it.

    6) Ditto fat people, people with physical disabilities, people who aren’t freakishly pretty, etc.?
    I don’t think people who are freakishly pretty are going anywhere. I think we can redefine ‘freakishly pretty’ somewhat (both disabled and fat people can be very pretty, for instance), but I know that I’d far rather look at a pretty person on TV than one who, say, looks like me! (See positive #6 above…) Does this make me a horrible person?

    7) Did they really have to start with the girl-is-broken-due-to-sex-abuse-and-requires-the-intervention-of-a-kind-man-to-seek-redemption plotline? Why is that never the secret weak spot for male action stars, huh?
    Yes, of course they did. Because every strong woman has a history of abuse. The abuse makes them strong! Didn’t you know that? Women who have happy, un-abusive lives end up as boring housewives. (Yes, I’m very angry about this.)

    8) If Person A is desperate and out of options, and is coerced into fully giving up her agency and identity, and if, after making that one decision, Person A no longer has any meaningful ability to consent to anything, nor does she have the ability to withdraw her consent from the original agreement — under those circumstances, if Person C pays Person B money to have sex with Person A, is that really prostitution, as Joss and Eliza have said it is? Or is that sexual slavery?
    I had the impression that ‘Caroline’ was some sort of violent criminal, and they were giving her a way to avoid the electric chair. Or something. So, it somehow didn’t bother me, as a principle (Humane treatment of criminals is another issue). I am probably completely misreading this, though! Anyway, I also got the impression that Caroline was tricked – she didn’t understand what she was really signing up for. Presumably, when Echo figures it out, she’ll be pretty mad. Also, when Caroline agrees to be wiped, does she cease to exist? Echo seems to be a different person – she didn’t agree to anything! If so, she is definitely in slavery. This brings a bit of AI/existence (What defines a person? Can a person be duplicated? Transferred?) related stuff into the equation.

    In other words: Insufficient information.

    9) Can someone tell me that Joss is going somewhere good with this? I want to believe…
    We’ll he hasn’t really done anything bad yet (Dr. Horrible excluded on grounds of extreme campyness), plus the network screwed with the pilot big time, so I think that it has a chance.

    Now for Aviva’s questions:
    a) Can a disturbing premise be mitigated by the subjugated character developing agency and control over her oppressors? If so, to what degree? Does she need to escape? Seek retribution? Take over?
    It all depends on how it’s handled. I’m not a big fan of ‘vengeance stories’ – I’d like to see something bigger happen. Taking over might qualify (a la Alice in Resident Evil). Or perhaps something else.

    b) How long can a show like Dollhouse continue on with this same “she can be anything you want her to be” shtick before something has to give?

    One episode. If they don’t start making me fall in love with Echo herself in the next episode, I’m going to really dislike it. Characters make a story. They’re all that matter.

    c) Is it possible to maintain narrative interest if Echo escapes or if Dollhouse (the place, not the show) is shut down? If so, how? If not, then doesn’t the continued need for the Dollhouse as an element of narrative interest necessitate the continued exploitation of the “actives” for our viewing pleasure?

    I think they could do anything they want to. One caveat: see my answer to b) – we have to care about the characters. If Echo develops a personality, falls in love with Sierra, and they blow the Dollhouse, move to Mars and open a coffee house for pilgrims from Pluto, I’ll be happy – as long as I care about Echo! If I don’t care, whatever happens in the Dollhouse doesn’t interest me now.

    One last thing:

    Back to Negative #6:

    I can’t really explain why, but the whole concept of loss of agency absolutely terrifies me. This is true even in lesser contexts. People who are addicted to substances or gambling or sex, mob groupthink, people who are unable to perceive the societal influences that they are acting on, people who only react to their current whim, people who don’t care about the effect of their actions, etc., etc. I could never, never, never accept the idea of determinism. Belief in free will is absolutely necessary for me to function. It’s central to my morality, religion, feminism, sexuality, relationships – not to mention boring, everyday life. It was even the primary influence for the name of this blog!

    Echo doesn’t have agency, doesn’t have free will. If it was simple coercion, I wouldn’t like it, but I could live with it. Instead, she doesn’t even know she doesn’t have a choice. That makes me feel sick. Perhaps the show will explore this subject somewhat. But if they end up on the side of determinism, I’m going to be very, very angry.

Sugar Rush

February 13th, 2009 by Brianna

I should probably rename this blog, “Brianna talks about TV”. Or something. But writing about politics makes me depressed and bored, writing about music or computer stuff takes too much effort, and all my other writing ideas are being taken up by a class I’m taking. Beside, [insert random mumbling about how TV is a primary culture-shaping force, thus engaging it is important]

I’ve been watching Sugar Rush, since it just got imported into the US. In many way, it’s everything South of Nowhere refused to be. It’s trashy, explicit (perhaps a bit too much!) and generally crazy. But as much sense as the show makes, I just can’t seem to fall in love with the characters like I did on SON. I think it’s all the fault of ‘Sugar’ – she’s just such a mess. As a result, there’s no reason to really want them to get together. I keep thinking, “Kim, find a different girl to obsess over.” On the other hand, her accent is really cute, and the show is rather funny at times.

So, it’s worth seeing, at least if you need something to help you procrastinate!