Wednesday, November 29, 2017

experimentation: Mindhunter (2017), The Librarians (2014)

Trying new shows, sometimes by recommendation, sometimes just if the summary sounds interesting. The first few minutes are usually rough, but you try to withhold judgement, give it some time to develop. A little bit of choppy acting is OK; it takes time even for good actors to really find the character.

Think of the first season of Babylon 5 or even Star Trek TNG. Everything was so new, but they found their way and your investment paid off.

Mindhunter promises the early days of police forensics and profiling, but the dialogue is so jarring I feel like I'm watching Twin Peaks.

The Librarian offers fantasy and adventure, but seems to be kludged together out of old worn building blocks.

Both seem formulaic, but different recipes. Librarian is on TNT, and seems to be made out of extremely worn Hollywood cliches of mainstream TV. Mindhunter is made out of the new cliches being created by Netflix. Not as easy to pin down, but increasingly recognizable. The stodgy main characters who's actually kind of a perv, the overly self-aware dialogue, the bending-over-backwards strain to tag whatever cultural space-time point they've chosen to set the show in, and the occasional idiom that contradicts it.

Saturday, November 4, 2017

Guardians of the Galaxy 2 (2017)

I liked the first one, I liked this one at least as much.

Very annoying that one of the best scenes was ruined because defective disc. I reported it and got some credit from RedBox, but who cares, the moment is gone. At least I was able to watch that exact two minutes on YouTube.

It can't be that nostalgia is just a thing now, some ingredient you add to the sauce to give it that little bit extra. This caters to the generation slightly before mine, but its close enough that I can feel it. It's not that I don't think nostalgia has been used to move product through the ages, but now I'm wondering if its always been an ingredient, and I'm just of the age to be really noticing it now.