Review #16 – Grimm

On May 10, 2012, in Podcasting, Reviews, by SciFiJunkie

This is a review of this weeks May 4 episode of Grimm, Happily Ever Aftermath. Another pretty good show.

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This is a review of the first part of A New World. Fringe Continues to bring one strong show after another. Leonard Nimoy is back on Fringe as William Bell, and I must say awesomeness!

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Distaste for Thrones

On April 10, 2012, in Books, General, TV Shows, by Black Adam/Big Dog

For a lot of fans, old and new alike, we all know that Winter has Come with the return of Game of Thrones.

I specifically picked up the HBO stations for the simple pleasure of watching this magnificent series return so I could keep up-to-date with it from week to week. Mind you, I was starved for the next episode the moment the season opener ended. Unlike the last time where I got to watch in marathon, I’ve got to wait week to week for the next nine hours to play itself out. And how awesome an experience it will be. Already, I’ve watched the screen and knew what a character had been thinking at the moment something happened. Noticing the changes from the book to the show. In no uncertain terms, I’m an eager fan awaiting each installment.

Last week, and thanks to io9, I’ve become aware that (as to be expected) some aren’t as thrilled to see the return of the show as so many had been. Neil Genzlinger, in an article for the New York Times, decided to flay the series for every stereotype. Now, let me be honest, I don’t read a ton of reviews. At the very least, I try not to due to the fact that I want to go in with as much an open honest opinion of what I’ve seen on the screen and not just randomly copying someone else’s words. However, there are times when regardless of how much we try to avoid things, we come across one or two reviews that tend to catch the eye. Then there are also the times we have to look for them because something seems scary of atrocious that I want the warning going in. In this case it was a review of a review, which I applaud if only to agree that the intrepid New York Times reporter was criticizing something as broadly and unfair as possible.

Let me break down some of the issues I have with Genzlinger’s article:

“Midway through Season 1 of “Game of Thrones,” viewers were treated to a particularly gruesome scene that showed a lovely princess named Daenerys Targaryen eating the raw heart of a horse.

Turns out it was something of a metaphor for the series itself. In the second-to-last episode last season, “Game of Thrones” in effect ate its own heart by killing off its main and most noble character, Ned Stark, who was played by Sean Bean, perhaps the best-known actor in this cast-of-thousands extravaganza.

So the question for HBO as Season 2 begins on Sunday is this: Who is going to replace Ned as the focus of the series?

The answer, at least four episodes in: no one.”

These are the three opening paragraphs to the article, in case you didn’t read it. Okay, let’s break this down into the simplest terms possible, Ned’s death was a necessary cog in the series. I won’t go through all the details of the story. I suggest watching season one of the show or picking up the book. Even listen to our somewhat detailed (if not disjointed) podcast on the matter. To get back to why his death was necessary, it’s because it proves one man’s worth to a kingdom. People died protecting secrets, murder plots were being hatched, and the most honorable man in all of Westeros fell trying to do an honorable thing. His son and Ned’s people went to war to fight for a man whose only goal was to do his duty to his king and lands. If Ned Stark had lived, he may have subverted so many different fights. Instead a war between kings was waged. If this is a lot to handle in a show, then I’d say go with something a little more lightweight in viewing. Although, now that I’ve said it, Sesame Street might still have too many characters to follow…

Okay, after that one, I’ll dispense with the cheap shots. The truth is that complex storylines are what make good show go ’round. Some shows kick off with a very simplistic story that becomes a mainstay of a series. Then as people watch, they get tired of the same formula day in and day out, so they have to spice it up. Though many cop shows stay on the air for long periods of time, it’s often the fact that they didn’t just maintain the ‘guy gets killed and we solve how’ method. Sometimes they twist up how the crime happened or involve some personal life issues in the background of the story. Not all things like that impress me, but it’s to be pointed out that after awhile, the same show with different names gets old. With Game of Thrones, it’s a show that’s delivering a highly regarded fantasy series in a big screen fashion to the small screen. They’re not trying to keep it simple, because the books didn’t. Each part has a lot of different people that weaves a complex tapestry. Some bits haven’t full come to fruition, but those that have started to show their true purpose are grand in design. To pull that off on camera is to be commended.

Now, I’m not going to go over every little point in the article, but there is a paragraph or three I want to bring up:

“Some people love this kind of stuff, of course, and presumably those addicted to the George R.R. Martin books on which the series is based will immerse themselves in Season 2, just as they did in Season 1. Will anyone else? You have to have a fair amount of free time on your hands to stick with “Game of Thrones,” and a fairly low reward threshold. If decapitations and regular helpings of bare breasts and buttocks are all you require of your television, step right up.

Sure, it’s possible to make a decent no-character-is-safe show; a series needn’t have a sympathetic major figure if its evil ones somehow shed light on the human condition or the wages of sin. And there may be illuminating episodes ahead in “Game of Thrones.” But in the early going Season 2 seems mostly to be presenting vileness for voyeurism’s sake. You wince every time Joffrey, a sadist, comes on the screen, and not in an “Ooh, I wonder what nasty thing he’ll do next” sort of way. If you find yourself looking forward to Joffrey’s scenes, there’s something wrong with you.

What “Game of Thrones” needs if it is to expand its fan base beyond Dungeons & Dragons types is what most of the United States didn’t get this year: a hard winter. Life in this particular fantasy land consists of seasons of indeterminate length, and since the series began there have been references to an impending winter of fearsome power.”

The sweeping generalizations that are made here is astounding! First, yes, there is a lot of nudity and violence. It’s on HBO and not network TV for a reason. Everyone freakin’ knows that! Secondly, and most importantly, I say that you’ve skipped the complexities for the T&A bits. I haven’t been a huge fan of stuff like that in the past, and I can say the T&A visuals have had a lot to do with my dislike for certain shows. Too many choose it over solid character and story. The story aspect has to stand through that. The visuals, that aren’t violent or gratuitous in this, are astounding from my stand point. It has a very medieval feel with some truly cruel bits of scenery. If we look at many other series in a time period drama, it does a damn good job at conveying a world that horrid things happen in, in spite of all its beauty. In so many past shows, there have been a score of cheesy bits that have run through it. With Hercules and Xena, it was an intentional thing. It was a show that winked at itself, but still tried for a serious tone. Some effects and the like came out looking over the top. I’m not sure if it was just a budget thing or intentional. If I had to take my guess, it was both. Then you have some of the others like Legend of the Seeker which was a serious show, and to me seemed cheesy just due to the acting. I’ll let you decided whether or not that’s a justified critique. Regardless, this doesn’t try to be some overacted filler. It has a point and it does what it can to make it.

Now I want to address the Dungeons & Dragons comment… I am a far bigger sci-fi fan than I am fantasy. I did enjoy the Lord of the Rings movies, but I tried to read the book and I put it back down. It’s because what I got on screen was paced, but the visuals were cued perfectly. Tolkein was wordy beyond belief, not that I’m knocking that. I’m not so foolish to pull that stunt. What I am saying is that I enjoyed the movies a lot, but I just wasn’t dedicated enough for the series as a whole. I’m willing to admit that. Now let’s take that example and break into Game of Thrones. I, sir, am not a D&D player by nature. I do play RPG’s, I’m not going to lie. However, D&D proper has bored me stiff. The reason? It takes a skilled storyteller to keep me entertained. No offense, but most people take the storylines of popular fiction and try to run me through it. That’s all fine and well, but I want to do more. This goes back into the fact that I’m a bigger sci-fi fan, I generally see a ton of fantasy novels out there that tend to bore the absolute crap out of me because they take the same basic story and replay it. This, again, goes back to the example I used about the cop shows. When I first heard of Game of Thrones, it was as a TV series. I knew nothing of the books at all until the same friend who introduced me to it pointed out that it was also a printed series. I’ve told this story; I was very reluctant. I heard the details of the story and all I got was a show bogged down to politics and severed heads. So one day, my friend sat me down and we watched the first episode. He was dedicated to the idea I needed to see this and would really want to continue. Generally, this technique usually meets with bullheaded resistance. If I don’t want to see something; I won’t! However, after the first episode ended I was so severely impressed by what I saw I burned through the other nine episodes in no time. I had to see where this was going. By the end, I was enthralled by a series that told a really awesome story, kept subplot threading through, and managed to give some of the finest characters I’d ever had the pleasure to lay eyes on. So what next? Well, I eagerly waited for season 2! Except that was a long time off, and I wanted to know how close the series was to the books. I picked up the books as a means to know what happened next and find out what details I missed by just watching. So you see, much like many others, I became a fan of something through the small screen and it translated. Many people find themselves in that position. Though dread by my friends, and many fanboys alike, many people I knew became fans of Twilight due to the movie. They burned through the books shortly after. Lord of the Rings, Harry Potter, the Hunger Games, the Da Vinci Code, the list goes on… Yes, they had a ton of fans to begin with, I’m not going to argue that point, but the magic of the moving picture made so many go to the source material to keep in touch with the characters they missed severely. It doesn’t take a D&D fan to appreciate the power of a good story, it just takes a person.

Genzlinger’s review, by my estimation, was completely unfair. I understand it’s just his opinion and it’s my right to ignore it. However, I want to point out that such things are often times read by potential fans who turn away from it without so much as a blink. I give bad reviews to things all the time, but I also want to point out that it’s a to each their own affair. In joking with people, I might give an offhanded comment about what sort of viewship something may get. In honesty, I don’t care what it is you like. If I don’t like it, then it’s my loss. Obviously you found something to latch on to and that’s great in my book! However, I’m not going to automatically lump you as a Magic: The Gathering card game player because you liked to watch Harry Potter. That’s ludicrous at best.

I hope the fans out there have enjoyed the first episode of season two. If it’s anything more like the books, it’s only ramping up from here! If you’re not a fan, I encourage the watch or the read. I think you’ll enjoy it and if not, let me know why. I’d love to hear from you!

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Another pretty good showing from Terra Nova – Now You See Me. It would appear they are heading in a good direction with this show, I was a little worried about it a few shows back hoping they did not get into the character drama too much. But they seem to have found a pretty good balance in recent episodes. Enjoy the attached Review Podcast and we will see you again next time

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This week we give our opinions on some of the new SciFi/Fantasy shows that have started up this season.  Then we have an interview with a Real Life Superhero, Death’s Head Moth!

Terra Nova: Fox’s new SciFi Dinosaur show.
http://www.scififx.com/2011/10/terra-nova-borrows-from-many-scifi-franchises/
http://www.fox.com/terranova/

Death Valley: MTV’s quirky Zombie, Vampire, Werewolf, comedy.
http://www.mtv.com/shows/death_valley/series.jhtml

Once Upon A Time: ABC’s Fantasy characters stuck in the real world drama.
http://beta.abc.go.com/shows/once-upon-a-time

Grimm: NBC’s Fantasy Police Procedural.
http://www.nbc.com/grimm/about/

Interview: Death’s Head Moth
http://www.reallifesuperheroes.com/2010/10/06/deaths-head-moth/

Follow @SaveDWC on twitter or like them on Facebook at
http://www.facebook.com/SaveDoctorWhoConfidential

Follow Us on Twitter @SciFiFX
Like us on Facebook: www.facebook.com/scififx
Follow The Fellowship of the Geeks on Twitter @FellowshipGeeks
Follow TrooperTrek on Twitter @TrooperTrek

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This podcast is all about Real Life SuperHeros, what they are, who they are, and what they stand for. We also have a special guest Purr Kayla that tried out for Season Two of Who Whats to be a Superhero. This is just the start of our series of interview with other Real Life SuperHeroes. We hope you enjoy. Find show links below:

DC’s Guardian

http://www.reallifesuperheroes.com/2010/11/17/dcs-guardian/

DCsGuardian@SkiffytownHeroes.org

Deaths Head Moth

http://www.reallifesuperheroes.com/2010/10/06/deaths-head-moth/

dhmoth@hotmail.com

Here are some links for the RLSH movement

http://www.reallifesuperheroes.org/

http://www.reallifesuperheroes.com/

http://www.worldsuperheroregistry.com/world_superhero_registry_gallery.htm

An article that brought this discussion point about

http://abcnews.go.com/US/citizen-superhero-phoenix-jones-arrested-seattle/story?id=14704985

And the Wiki page on Phoenix Jones

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phoenix_Jones
 
PurrKayla

http://purrkayla.com/

 

Follow @SaveDWC on twitter or like them on Facebook at
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Follow TrooperTrek on Twitter @TrooperTrek

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In the most recent edition of Doctor Who Magazine, Steven Moffat has given his opinion on the controversial cancellation of Doctor Who Confidential.

“It seems hard to grasp. All shows have their time, and all shows end, but not, in all sanity, while people still watch and love them.   And going by the numbers and the outcry, this show was watched and loved everywhere.”

“I’m not supposed to say it, but I’m going to anyway: bad day, bad decision. I know these are straitened times. I know we’re all at sea and the night is colder – but you don’t start burning the lifeboats to keep warm.”

“Or to put it another way, you might want to think about the future if you’re planning to live there.”

Doctor Who Magazine and Steven Moffat have both shown support for the Save Doctor Who Confidential campaign whose petition at writing of this article, is at 44,500 signatures.  If you haven’t done so already, show your support by signing the petition.  A count will be taken midnight Friday October 28th 2011 and sent to the BBC Trust.

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On this date, 45 years ago, television audiences first heard the immortal words “Space… the final frontier…”  And thus began the voyages of the starship Enterprise.  There are very few stories in pop culture that have the staying power of Star Trek.  Fewer still can claim to be have lasted so long.  Not bad for a little show that was rejected right from the beginning and got cancelled after each and every season in its initial 3-year run.  And even then, we walked on the moon less than 2 months later.  Then, just like today, NBC was a bit short sighted when it came to seeing potential.  It was renewed by fans.  Fans kept it going.  These fans grew up and passed it on to their children.  And all of those fans shaped the future.  The first space shuttle?  Enterprise.  And she was christened in front of the original bridge crew in 1976.  The profession most inspired by a single fictional character?  Engineering.  Scotty shaped the very future he showed us.  Look around.  The only things we haven’t achieved that Star Trek had are warp drive and transporters… and transporters have been in development for years.

45 years.  5 live action tv shows totalling 726 episodes.  1 animated series.  10 movies and a reboot with a sequel in the works.  More novels than you can probably read in your lifetime.  Comics published across nearly every publisher past and present since 1967.  Countless fanfics and fan films.  And all the merchandise you could ever want, up to and including your very own Tribble that is NOT actually born pregnant.  This is the legacy of Star Trek, made possible because the fans wouldn’t give up on it.  Why?  Simple.  In the years after the JFK assassination, little things like the civil rights movement and the Vietnam conflict shook our country to its foundations.  A generation was in the process of just giving up.  Star Trek gave the idea of hope.  It promoted the possibility that we might actually make it out of the 20th century alive and well.  It introduced people to the idea of multiracial harmony.  It tore down barriers.  And more than that, it proved what creator Gene Roddenberry had been saying all along, that TV audiences really did have a brain… a concept that the networks are still trying to figure out.

It’s easy to go on and on, extolling the virtues of Trekdom.  Every good sci-fi blogger does that on an important anniversary.  But I don’t want to do that today.  Instead, I’d like to call out to the fans because, as I pointed out already, Trek survived then and now because of fans.  What made you a fan?  What kept you involved in Trek?  What did Trek do to influence your life directly?  What’s your favorite Trek moment?  Speak up!  Comment to this and spread the Trek around.

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New Star Trek Series

On August 26, 2011, in Featured, General, Star Trek, TV Shows, by Carl

David Foster, a writer, producer, and the head of production company 1947 Entertainment, is planning a new series designed to take Star Trek back to its roots.  Foster says that the new show will include all the traditional Trek tropes – Klingons, Vulcans, and Ferengi – but will feature a much younger cast.

“The series concept is fully developed, subject to change of course,” Foster told Trek Web, “with a solid 5-7 year series plan, pilot script and a conceptualized finale that intends to define Star Trek for generations.”

Foster’s Star Trek series is still in the pitching stage.  It’s still too early to say if it will go beyond his proposal, but I for one want a regular Star Trek series back on my TV.

You can read the original interview at Trek Web.

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Doctor Who Full 7th Season

On August 24, 2011, in Dr Who, Featured, TV Shows, by Carl

Originally Reported on The Daily Beast
Jace Lacob interviewed Steven Moffat about the state of the Doctor Who Franchise and rumors about Season 7, for the full article click here.

The most important thing I found in the interview was when Steven Moffat was asked about Season 7 of Doctor Who being short in 2012, he responded:

Absolute nonsense. First of all, we are airing in 2012. The only thing that’s happening is that we’re moving a bit later…There’s lots of reasons for that that will become clear quite soon…It is certainly not a reduced episode count. Do you think the BBC would really let that happen? With an average audience of 10 million?…Doctor Who’s international profile is huge. It’s never been more successful. You’re not going to reduce a show like this. The opposite is going to happen, in fact.

What does this mean? It could mean that Doctor Who will return to it home in the schedules. The Classic series traditionally ran in the Winter. This would allow Doctor Who to air at a time of the year when it is dark outside when it’s on. This has two benefits.
1.  TV Ratings are generally higher in the when it’s cold out, and also when its dark.
2.  The creep factor of Doctor Who works much better when it is dark out.

The other thing we can take from this quote is, it sounds like they may be looking to expand Doctor Who’s seasons beyond 13 episodes plus a Christmas special.

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