(no subject)
Jun. 9th, 2013 09:34 pm1. oh dear, the Tony's are boring. And I really don't know why Matilda the Musical and Bring it On were nominated, except there isn't much in new musicals on Broadway at the moment. The only one I have any interest in is the Pippin revival.
That said, I rather like the acts from Motown the Musical - which is saying something because I usually despise jukebox musicals. Although they can be a lot of fun at times.
2. Finished watching the season finale of Revolution today and...this series is really bad. After watching the far superior Falling Skies - I can see what they are doing wrong. Falling Skies builds the characters organically, and when a character does something crazy - you know why, they've built it up and set-it up, while on Revolution when a characters does something crazy, we get a flashback that drops in out of nowhere, with no transition to explain it. And it doesn't always. The plot is all over the place, the plot-twists jarring, and it is difficult to care about anyone.
This is a shame. This series is tailor made to hit my story kinks and hard.
1) It allegedly has a kick-ass heroine in Charlie, who wears cropped shirts, jeans, and fires a sling shot or the easy to fire version of a bow and arrow (can't recall what it is called). Except Charlie is portrayed by an actress who has all the screen chemistry of a cardboard cut-out. Imagine Sansa Stark in the role of Katniss Everdeen. 2) Star-crossed lovers. Two of them. An YA version and an Adult Version. The young version is Charlie and Miles (whose father murdered hers), and the adult version is Rachel (played by Elizabeth Mitchell - who admittedly is amongst the reasons I watched this) and Miles (Charlie King), who is the brother of her late hubby Ben, and clearly had a romantic past with Rachel that Ben didn't know about. The adults have chemistry, the kids do not. But even though the adults have chemistry - we don't know why. They haven't shown us. We are told. And get an occasional flashback with Miles torturing Rachel - which doesn't exactly explain it either - actually the opposite. 3) the brother relationship between Miles and Sebastian Monroe, which the guy who used to play Gus on Breaking Bad and is now playing a delicious villain role here, aptly states is a borderline erotic fixation. And the actors are good and do have chemistry. But their back story is all over the place, told in a jarring fashion, and we never get enough of them together in present day to understand it. You can do flashbacks and make them work which Falling Skies and Arrow demonstrate - but you need to do it chronologically and have a reason for it. Not willy-nilly whenever you want to explain why a character is making googly eyes at another one. This results in emotional distance. 4) A non-linear narrative structure - we start in the middle of the story, and over time the past is explained and not always in order. I love creative narrative structures but this one is hard to follow. OUAT does this right - they focus on specific characters and have a complete story in the flashbacks, which are used as the B storyline. Revolution jumps around too much. Falling Skies also did it right - with an episode in which Tom remembers in flashes and nightmares being on the spaceship and how he escaped. The flashbacks are told chronolically and reinforce the present story. They serve a greater purpose than explaining a romance. There's more to them. 5) It's a world where civilization has broken down, no electricity, and people have to find a way to survive. Except again in Revolution this isn't consistent nor is the science. They have running water, plumbing, and everyone is clean. Apparently the power is only off for half the population, because little gadgets can turn it on. And the power was turned off by microscopic nanonites that were introduced into the air as a weapon - they keep people with cancer and diseases alive, but make electricity impossible. (okkkay). Everyone fights with swords, because apparently guns are in short supply? Or you can't fire them without electricity? Since when? Unlike Falling Skies which discusses American History and deals with the day to day struggle of finding supplies and survival, Revolution conveniently finds things available when it needs to.
I'd summarize or explain the plot...but it didn't make sense. The goal was to go to the tower to turn back on the power. But assorted parties were attempting to prevent it - one group because they feared the end of the world or worse people using nasty weapons again, the other because they liked the status quo - where they had the power and no one else did. The group, our heroes, who are trying to turn it on - are to ensure the bad guy isn't the only one with the power. To turn it on they've killed all the people trying to keep it off to save the world, while the bad boy militia who they are fighting has staged a coup and change in leadership. They do succeed in turning it on. But Randal - portrayed by an actor who always plays these types of villains - decides to fire missiles on Georgia and Philadelphia, so the US President who is hiding out in Guantamo Bay, Cuba can return. I feel like I read a very cheesy and confusing comic book.
Eh..don't wast your time. Trust me, this baby is skippable. Watch BSG, Caprica, Falling Skies or Defiance instead. Or just rent the Hungar Games.
Overall rating? D-
UGh...working on a contract this weekend has apparently ruined me for this sort of thing. Chockful of typos. And no interest in fixing at the moment.
That said, I rather like the acts from Motown the Musical - which is saying something because I usually despise jukebox musicals. Although they can be a lot of fun at times.
2. Finished watching the season finale of Revolution today and...this series is really bad. After watching the far superior Falling Skies - I can see what they are doing wrong. Falling Skies builds the characters organically, and when a character does something crazy - you know why, they've built it up and set-it up, while on Revolution when a characters does something crazy, we get a flashback that drops in out of nowhere, with no transition to explain it. And it doesn't always. The plot is all over the place, the plot-twists jarring, and it is difficult to care about anyone.
This is a shame. This series is tailor made to hit my story kinks and hard.
1) It allegedly has a kick-ass heroine in Charlie, who wears cropped shirts, jeans, and fires a sling shot or the easy to fire version of a bow and arrow (can't recall what it is called). Except Charlie is portrayed by an actress who has all the screen chemistry of a cardboard cut-out. Imagine Sansa Stark in the role of Katniss Everdeen. 2) Star-crossed lovers. Two of them. An YA version and an Adult Version. The young version is Charlie and Miles (whose father murdered hers), and the adult version is Rachel (played by Elizabeth Mitchell - who admittedly is amongst the reasons I watched this) and Miles (Charlie King), who is the brother of her late hubby Ben, and clearly had a romantic past with Rachel that Ben didn't know about. The adults have chemistry, the kids do not. But even though the adults have chemistry - we don't know why. They haven't shown us. We are told. And get an occasional flashback with Miles torturing Rachel - which doesn't exactly explain it either - actually the opposite. 3) the brother relationship between Miles and Sebastian Monroe, which the guy who used to play Gus on Breaking Bad and is now playing a delicious villain role here, aptly states is a borderline erotic fixation. And the actors are good and do have chemistry. But their back story is all over the place, told in a jarring fashion, and we never get enough of them together in present day to understand it. You can do flashbacks and make them work which Falling Skies and Arrow demonstrate - but you need to do it chronologically and have a reason for it. Not willy-nilly whenever you want to explain why a character is making googly eyes at another one. This results in emotional distance. 4) A non-linear narrative structure - we start in the middle of the story, and over time the past is explained and not always in order. I love creative narrative structures but this one is hard to follow. OUAT does this right - they focus on specific characters and have a complete story in the flashbacks, which are used as the B storyline. Revolution jumps around too much. Falling Skies also did it right - with an episode in which Tom remembers in flashes and nightmares being on the spaceship and how he escaped. The flashbacks are told chronolically and reinforce the present story. They serve a greater purpose than explaining a romance. There's more to them. 5) It's a world where civilization has broken down, no electricity, and people have to find a way to survive. Except again in Revolution this isn't consistent nor is the science. They have running water, plumbing, and everyone is clean. Apparently the power is only off for half the population, because little gadgets can turn it on. And the power was turned off by microscopic nanonites that were introduced into the air as a weapon - they keep people with cancer and diseases alive, but make electricity impossible. (okkkay). Everyone fights with swords, because apparently guns are in short supply? Or you can't fire them without electricity? Since when? Unlike Falling Skies which discusses American History and deals with the day to day struggle of finding supplies and survival, Revolution conveniently finds things available when it needs to.
I'd summarize or explain the plot...but it didn't make sense. The goal was to go to the tower to turn back on the power. But assorted parties were attempting to prevent it - one group because they feared the end of the world or worse people using nasty weapons again, the other because they liked the status quo - where they had the power and no one else did. The group, our heroes, who are trying to turn it on - are to ensure the bad guy isn't the only one with the power. To turn it on they've killed all the people trying to keep it off to save the world, while the bad boy militia who they are fighting has staged a coup and change in leadership. They do succeed in turning it on. But Randal - portrayed by an actor who always plays these types of villains - decides to fire missiles on Georgia and Philadelphia, so the US President who is hiding out in Guantamo Bay, Cuba can return. I feel like I read a very cheesy and confusing comic book.
Eh..don't wast your time. Trust me, this baby is skippable. Watch BSG, Caprica, Falling Skies or Defiance instead. Or just rent the Hungar Games.
Overall rating? D-
UGh...working on a contract this weekend has apparently ruined me for this sort of thing. Chockful of typos. And no interest in fixing at the moment.