dolorosa_12: (jessica jones)
[personal profile] dolorosa_12
I finished six TV shows this month, covering a fairly broad range of tones and genres.


  • Karen Pyrie, a mystery miniseries about a police officer in St Andrews in Scotland reopening a cold case from the 1990s — along with the incompetence, corruption, and possible police complicity that led to the murder being unsolved in the first place. It does a good job of capturing the atmosphere of small, insular university towns — the tensions between town and gown, the stifling knowledge that everyone knows everyone else's history and business, the various painful secrets that come to light when an event of such rupture as a murder takes place. The characters all felt a bit like stock figures, but it was still pretty well done.


  • She-Hulk, Disney+'s latest Marvel adaptation. Orphan Black is one of my favourite TV shows, in large part due to the wonder that is Tatiana Maslany, so I had high hopes for this series, which attempted to tackle themes of misogyny, revenge porn and incel culture through the lens of a legal comedy with superheroes. When reading this description, you probably get an idea of the potential problems — all this is a lot, and it's a challenge to get all the parts fitting together in a coherent way. There were some funny moments, and fun cameos, and Maslany did her best with fairly one-note material, but the whole thing felt a bit unsubtle. At this point, I think it's unlikely that we'll ever get a Marvel TV adaptation of the quality of the shows we got on Netflix.


  • Rings of Power, the Lord of the Rings 'prequel' was a surprising hit with me. I need to preface this by saying that I am basically the furthest thing you could get from a Tolkien purist, and I tend to treat the film adaptations as their own separate thing, like fanfic of the written work, and assess them on their own merits. With this adaptation, I was completely swept away by the sheer lavish beauty of the whole thing — the gorgeous landscapes and sets, the costuming and design, and the massive scale and stakes of the story. I liked the sense of different peoples having different understanding of the passage of time, and how this played into their very different responses to the thorny in which they found themselves, and their painful, tentative steps towards making common cause in the face of destruction. I went into the show expecting it to be an over-the-top expensive folly, and ended up enjoying it a lot and looking forward to the next season.


  • Borgen, the revival of the early 2010s Danish political drama, was something I'd really been looking forward to, since the original was basically a love letter to my own values — politics as coalition-building and compromise, rather than dramatics and demagoguery. The revived series takes place around a decade after the previous one ended, and instead of tackling a single political issue per episode, it focuses on a larger issue — the discovery of oil in Greenland — over the course of the whole series. The series was made last year, but a lot of it is remarkably prescient to our current times: covert Russian and Chinese military activity in the Artic, the weaponisation of fossil fuels, formerly colonised countries having little patience with the pieties about democratic values being spouted by their former colonists, the dependence of European NATO countries on the US (and the things that are demanded of them in return) — all play a role. In addition, as in the previous series, there are subplots about Birgitte's family, and about the difficulties of providing good quality political journalism in the twenty-first century. I really, really enjoyed the elements focusing on the geopolitical and diplomatic headaches being solved, and on Denmark's relationship with Greenland (although I assume it was somewhat simplified), but I really could have done without the show's insistence on having Birgitte relearn what she already exemplified in the previous series: that politics involving compromise, collaboration and rational discussion will always produce better results than larger-than-life individuals going it alone.


  • Only Murders in the Building, the second season of the show which pokes gentle fun at true crime podcast culture (and New Yorkers). Our intrepid trio of neighbouring misfits find themselves falsely accused of another murder in their apartment block, and get to work trying to clear their name, digging up various scandals and secrets. It's the cast that makes this show, and it remains a delight.


  • Heartbreak High, a Netflix remake of a popular Australian teen soap opera from my own childhood. I never saw the original (although it was definitely something watched by a lot of my high school friends), so I have nothing to compare it with, but the revived version sees a bunch of awkward teenagers deal with all the trials and tribulations experienced as they navigate their romantic and sexual lives. One thing the original emphasised heavily was Australian multiculturalism, and the new version certainly keeps that focus, but I imagine that it does a much better job than its predecessor of depicting a broader range of sexualities and genders — many of the characters are gay or bisexual, there's a nonbinary character and an asexual character, and in general all the characters (with a handful of obvious exceptions who are immediately called out for it) are extremely, enthusiastically accepting of queerness. Based on the musical choices, and a lot of blink-and-you'll-miss-them throwaway references to 1990s pop culture, I suspect the intended audience is the Gen Y nostalgia crowd, rather than current teenagers of the age of the characters in the show — which is my impression of a lot of media with teenage characters at the moment. For me, I have to admit the highlight of the show was playing spot-the-Sydney-location — it had a really strong sense of place, and if you know Sydney well you will recognise a lot of familiar places.

  • Date: 2022-10-31 07:34 pm (UTC)
    oracne: turtle (Default)
    From: [personal profile] oracne
    Borgen sounds good!

    Date: 2022-10-31 09:24 pm (UTC)
    kore: (Default)
    From: [personal profile] kore
    (JESSICA ICON)

    Yes on the LOTR show! which I was calling The Galadriel Show, lol. I've been on the other end of the "how dare you do this to my canon" feeling so often, it was nice to just enjoy an adaptation as the billion-dollar fanfic it was. The lead actress was great, so were a lot of other actors, and it was a gorgeous lavish spectacle. I think the audience in general got hung up on the "oooh who could he be" attempted twist (given TV conventions, it was pretty obvious who he was) and it'll be interesting to watch it again knowing the reveal. A friend of mine only watched it after she was spoiled, and she really enjoyed it that way.

    Date: 2022-11-01 02:43 pm (UTC)
    kore: (Jessica Jones - fucking bubbles)
    From: [personal profile] kore
    Yeah, I think I said this elsewhere today, so apologies if you saw it already, but it seemed a lot more faithful to the spirit of LOTR than the Jackson films did -- Jackson really loves his battle scenes (and awful jokes), and the feeling of the slow journey and buildup to the battles was lost, and also Tolkien's plotting and even his prose style favour this slow buildup to an action scene and then aftermath (IIRC). The show had that in spades. Of course that's in large part due to them having eight hours and Jackson only getting one movie per book, even if they were long movies, but Tolkien in particular seems well-suited to a series format, not discrete movies.

    I feel like "fucking bubbles" sums up a lot of my life recently.

    Date: 2022-11-01 10:58 pm (UTC)
    kore: (Default)
    From: [personal profile] kore
    they were very much forced into a kind of standard Hollywood action movie blockbuster form of pacing, and a lot of the weirdness and slowness was lost.

    Oh yes, that's a really good way of putting it. They were very....normalized, in a way? And like, I know Hollywood would never keep in all the singing and Tom Bombadil and the somewhat archaic language but that was a big part of what I loved about the books. I think that's partly why they were so popular in the sixties in the US, they fit right into the rising folk music movement.

    Poor T actually likes the films and enjoys rewatching them around Xmastime and I always crack wise until glared into silence, lol. Altho he thinks the first movie is great, the second movie is ehh and the third movie is no good, which might be the general critical consensus now, idk. Frodo and Sam really held up. (I confess a giant part of my problem with the films is Gollum. They made him WAY too OTT and I find something about the CGI disgusting. He just looks wronggg. I know Gollum is supposed to look wronggg but it's not even uncanny valley, it's just....ack.)

    Date: 2022-11-01 03:37 am (UTC)
    thawrecka: (Default)
    From: [personal profile] thawrecka
    Rings of Power was great! I loved the sense of scale, and the way the themes could be dealt with multiple different ways. I also felt all the relationships between characters were written and acted with a lot of heart.

    Date: 2022-11-01 02:47 pm (UTC)
    kore: (Default)
    From: [personal profile] kore
    I thiiink they have a five-year deal, which might be a ten-year commitment with a long shooting schedule? I don't think we're getting season two for maybe a couple of years? :-/

    Date: 2022-11-01 12:37 pm (UTC)
    lirazel: A close up of Marta from Knives Out wearing a red scarf ([film] my house my rules)
    From: [personal profile] lirazel
    Based on the musical choices, and a lot of blink-and-you'll-miss-them throwaway references to 1990s pop culture, I suspect the intended audience is the Gen Y nostalgia crowd, rather than current teenagers of the age of the characters in the show — which is my impression of a lot of media with teenage characters at the moment.
    Yeah, I find this really interesting. What are the teenagers watching, if all the shows-about-teenagers are actually for adults?

    Date: 2022-11-01 02:44 pm (UTC)
    kore: (Default)
    From: [personal profile] kore
    BZUH.

    Yeah I heard Friends was big during the pandemic, and I was just like....why? (I never liked it, lol.) But episodic small-stakes TV can be very comforting.

    Date: 2022-11-01 10:53 pm (UTC)
    kore: (Default)
    From: [personal profile] kore
    Yeah, my impression of it when it was actually airing was - not that funny; very heterornormative; WEIRDNESS about Ross's wife leaving him for a woman and omfg transphobia out the wazoo; many, many fat jokes; everyone was very white. But I never liked Seinfeld or the Simpsons either so there's just something skewed in my responses to US sitcoms.

    Matthew Perry (Chandler) recently said in a tour for his addiction memoir "Why did River Phoenix die and Keanu Reeves still walks this earth?" and the internet CAME FOR HIM, which was satisfying. Just, my God, what a thing to say.

    Date: 2022-11-01 11:15 pm (UTC)
    kore: (Default)
    From: [personal profile] kore
    (Altho really, to go completely off on a tangent ((who moi?)), what baffles me re nostalgia these days is fucking TOP GUN. I mean, usually I'm all let ship and let ship, people love whatever and it doesn't reflect on them morally, &c &c, but this is ACTUAL US MILITARY PROPAGANDA helmed by a FREAKING SCIENTOLOGIST! Why, fandom why? Why you do this?)

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    dolorosa_12: (Default)
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