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  • Category Archives comedy
  • First impressions: "Suburgatory"

    There is hell, and then, as this show posits, there is Suburgatory.

    It is a name so perfectly apt, I desperately wish I had come up with myself. Along with the overly-manicured setting, Stepford Wives-like personalities, and the preternaturally clever teens who trade sophisticated witty lines like they imbibed dictionaries, not milk, as babies.

    It is the most witty, spot on look at the suffocating bonds of conformity at all costs that I have seen in some time and laugh-out-loud funny into the bargain (the scene where everyone is watering their lawns in unison in exactly the same way is comedy gold, and also deeply unsettling at the same time). But somehow in the midst of all the razor sharp satire, and dialogue so sharp you may cut yourself on it if you lean too close to the TV, they manage to retain little touches of humanity that stop the show from descending into one-joke parody.

    The relationship between the protagonist, Tessa Altman (Jane Levy), who is uprooted to the weirdness of suburban life by her single dad, George Altman (Jeremy Sisto), is a case in point. While it’s fraught at times, it is ultimately warm and affirming, without being cloying and sentimental. It’s a nice balance, and one of the most believable father-daughter relationships I have seen portrayed in an American sitcom for some time.

    Underwhelmed. Tessa expects a car and gets a… bike. Hmm…

    Sure, they have their differences – in this episode their argument, as witty and clever as any other discussion they had in the episode, centred on how much Tessa should confirm to the plastic ideal around her. She was resisting mightily while her dad, out of concern for her acceptance in her new community, wanted her to try harder. In the end they compromised somewhat but it wasn’t some mushy harps-and-strings touching moment but a frank and honest recognition of what mattered to each of them.

    Way to go Emily Kapnek, creator and writer of the show. It is refreshing to have humour spring from reasonably authentic relationships especially given the setting, by necessity given it’s a satire, is hyper real. The colours are super bright. The lawns cut precisely and luminescent green. Everyone is coiffed and tailored like newly minted store mannequins on Rodeo Drive. It’s eerily perfect and this is what unsettles Tessa, uprooted from the gritty imperfection of cacophonous Manhattan, so much.

    And it’s why her attempts to make some sort of peace with her new home don’t go smoothly at all. It’s partly her reluctance to given an inch and partly the suspicion on behalf of everyone she meets that she’s a lesbian (she wears non-heterosexual shoes, according to her school “buddy”, Dalia Royce – Carly Chaikin – the most popular girl in school, and Tessa’s rival). That perception, which isn’t accurate by the way – her school counsellor by contrast, Mr Wolfe (Rex Lee) is as gay as they come – is a fun recurring joke through the episode and serves to underline that even the tiniest difference doesn’t go unnoticed by the good folk of Suburgatory, and is immediately seized upon as some sign of extremist behaviour. (It explains the current race for the Republican nomination for President and why extremism is more the currency of debate than good reasoned common sense.)

    The cast (including Alan Tudyk, far left, as George’s dyed blond, spray tanned friend from college days)

    The episode finishes off though with Tessa making a small but important accommodation with the new paradigms around her. She accepts, with much reluctance, a pink frilly bra from Dalia’s mum, Dallas (Cheryl Hines), only to admit to herself that “it is by far the prettiest thing I own.” It is one tiny step but a significant one. I don’t expect Tessa will yield much of what makes her distinctive because that’s not who she is, and we need her outsider’s view of things to stay undiminished.

    But for her to survive in this brave heavily-produced land, she needs to cede some ground, and given she doesn’t have a mum, it makes sense it would be to Dallas, who, again refreshingly, isn’t some plastic cliche but a fully fleshed out human being.

    This show is extremely promising – it is funny, so cleverly written, with actors who know how to deliver the lines perfectly, and a setting begging for more and more satire. I can’t wait to see what is pilloried next and I have no doubt that I will be laughing all the way.

    Suburban hell has never looked more inviting.

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  • Glee done got its mojo back….mostly

    Have you ever become fast and firm friends with someone who has charmed and delighted you every step of the way till one day they make an almost insulting remark, or appear disinterested in what you have to say, before bouncing back the next day as if nothing ever happened?

    Sure you have. It isn’t something any of us enjoy, but people being the contrary beasties that they are, can often send mixed signals when what we crave is caring consistency. Still, you hope and pray that those who you truly madly deeply care for will be there staunchly the same day in and day out, come what may.

    The same thing applies, let’s be honest to the media we consume. Yes we want our music artists to grow and change, and our TV shows to experiment and boldly go place no TV show has gone before, but we want to stay consistently mind-blowingly good while they do it.

    I would like to say that Glee managed to do this during their sophomore season but alas they didn’t and while I watched every episode, I found a number of them  disappointing to watch to the extent that it took a lot of effort to complete the season. Characters didn’t play true to type or became discordant one-joke caricatures (thinking Sue Sylvester), romantic entanglements approached almost Melrose Place levels of silliness (by the end of the season everyone had pretty much dated everyone it seemed) and the story lines were often pointless, or just plain mean-spirited and aimless. I just didn’t enjoy watching it any more, a horrifying realisation at the time since I had adored this show almost from the first frame of the pilot.

    Apparently I was not alone, and the creators of Glee, Ryan Murphy and Brad Falchuk realised that they have lost their way somewhat and to their credit admitted as much. In fairness to them, it must be exhausting producing 24 hours of television a season and making sure that you stay right on course though all of it. But I think the basis of the criticism was that they didn’t just veer off a little bit, but they went careering off over the fields, threw away the map and hoped they would eventually find the road again.

    Well fortunately they have not just found the road, but are screaming down the freeway, and Glee is back doing what it does so well – telling stories about a bunch of musically-inclined misfits in a high school trying to find their way in life, and singing as they do it. Yes it does have a slight air of been-there-done-that but that is inevitable to some extent, and hardly detracts from the freshly reclaimed vibe the show has in spades. Yes Sue is still a tad too one-joke for my liking, but then they have tried to broaden her character out on occasion which has worked well, and I guess they are counting on viewers remembering those moments she displayed a humanity other that wasn’t verging on the cartoonish. But Rachel and Kurt are still dreaming of the bright lights of Broadway, Finn is back with Rachel, and Kurt and Blaine are closer than ever.

    So frankly what’s t complain about? They are singing and dancing and back to being the bright shiny friends we know and love, and it’s great to have them back!

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  • Husbands (web series)

    Zing! Pow!
    How can something so hilarously funny, with one liners I am going to have to memorise if my life is to be worth anything, be simultaneously so insightful, articulate and warm-hearted? I have no idea, but the team responsible for this gem, including the very talented Jane Espenson (Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Firefly among others) have succeeded in crafting just such a clever piece of visual pop culture, and then some!
    The series, with each episode roughly about two minutes long (perfect for a short commute – trust me, it lifted mine out of its usual humdrum-ness this morning – or for gainfully occupying those pesky ad breaks), stars Brad Bell (co-writer and creator) as Cheeks, an out and proud gay man of long standing who has spent many years daring America to like him, and Sean Hemeon as Brad Kelly, a more conservative pro-baseball player who only walked out of the closet a scant year before, as boyfriends of only six weeks standing, who end up getting married in Las Vegas one drunken night on the day that federal same sex marriage laws are enacted in USA. (There is also a cameo by the wonderful Nathan Fillion, geek god, and my first choice as a news reader too.)
    Horrified at first at their predicament, they quickly decide that they must stay married for the sake of gaydom generally, not wanting to be the poster boys for gay divorce, a noble commitment that morphs into the dawning realisation that staying together might be the greatest adventure of them all, laudable social goals aside. The duo, who come across as totally believable in every facet of their personalities, and lives, are aided in this giant leap into the gay unknown by Cheeks’ best friend, Haley (Alessandra Torresani) who’s outrageously funny and over the top without being a parody, loves Scotch O’Clock, and commits herself in one scene of pure comic gold to being their life coach, writing her plan for the happy but nervous couple with mascara on a taco chip.
    The absolutely inspired one liners aside, what sets this wonderful series up on a pedestal all of its very own, is the way it explores what it means to be a gay man in a decidedly straight world, in a way that doesn’t seem patronising or contrived in any way (no mean feat given how easy it is to portray gay characters in any show as vapid, fluffy balls of glittery silliness with no real humanity to speak of), which is accomplished primarily by focusing on the fact that here are two people, in a situation neither expected, grappling with the sorts of issues any new couple would. After all, what do you do after saying ‘I Do’, drunkenly slurred or otherwise? Yes the series uses perfectly executed comedy to explore this territory – the perfect cast deliver an inspired script without a single misstep that I could see – but it is never at the expense of some profound observations, and it hits the mark pretty much every time.
    I cannot wait for future episodes – episode 9 went live on the web site http://husbandstheseries.com/ today Australian time (Tuesday and Thursday US time) – from a series that promise to keep being whippet smart, funny and packed full of wry social commentary. You can’t miss this people! 
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  • The Big C

    The Big C is one of the standouts in that relatively new crop of HBO-quality shows – even when the shows aren’t from that stable of quality, they are invariably tagged as such – which also includes Hung, Breaking Bad,  United States of Tara, and the much longer running Weeds, which feature a protagonist from the squeaky clean side of the street who is forced by dire circumstance of one kind or another, into making compromises and decisions that lead far across the lines onto the wrong side of the tracks, or at least into almost unrecognisable territory where few in society wish to tread. While they are shocked at first at the things they say and do in the interests of survival, they reach an accommodation of sorts with their new life because they usually have no choice but to do so. They could rail and rant, and scream about their misfortune, but in a society like America, with it’s less than generous welfare net, and resulting dog-eat-dog survival mentality, especially for the lower socio-economic classes, this achieves nothing, and the first of order of the day, of each and every day, is simply to do what it takes to survive.

    In the case of the Big C, which stars the supremely talented Laura Linney as Cathy Jamison, a middle class teacher with stage 4 cancer, this means doing whatever it takes to ensure she survives her battle with melanoma in the midst of a broken medical system that too often penalises the very people it is supposed to be helping. She does have allies in her fight – among them, her loving husband Paul (played by the awesomely good, Oliver Platt, who has yet, I suspect, to ever find a role that doesn’t agree with him), and her son, Adam (Gabriel Basso), who plays a teenager torn by wanting to spend time with his mum, but simultaneously wanting to fleeing the reality of her possible death, and a high school student in her class, Andrea (Gabourey Sidibe of Precious) who is perhaps the only person she knows, besides her husband, who doesn’t try to sugar coat the harsh reality of Cathy’s present situation.

    Oliver Platt and Laura Linney as Paul and Cathy Jamison
    Gabriel Basso as Adam

    Gabourey Sidibe as Andrea Jackson

    But many of the people who should be a source of support end up being very much more than hindrances. Her mentally ill brother Sean (John Benjamin Hickey) who veers between support and antagonism, his girlfriend, Rebecca (Cynthia Nixon, late of Sex in the City) who styles herself as Cathy’s very best friend but often doesn’t have a clue what’s required to be supportive, and her neighbour, Marlene (Phyllis Somerville), who’s dementia-fuelled acerbic observations of life ultimately lead her to kill herself with a bullet to the brain, which doesn’t end her role in the show at all – she appears thereafter to Cathy as an apparition, usually at the worst possible times.

    John Benjamin Hickey and Cynthia Nixon as Sean Tolkey, Cathy’s brother, and Rebecca respectively

    Phyllis Somerville as Marlene

    But despite all this, Cathy battles on, doing what she must to get appointments with specialists – leading to an hilarious scene where she sneaks into an elite oncologist’s surgery as a saleswoman from a drug company and makes a scene demanding an appointment just as the receptionist is calling her to confirm one – battling everyone’s well intentioned but suffocating sympathy, and trying to hold on to a semblance of a normal life while it breaks apart with gusto around her. 

    What is wonderfully refreshing is that she manages to create a new life, full of contradictions, and breaks with her well ordered previous middle class existence, and make it work with a mix of saintliness, screaming frustration, and a heapin’ helpin’ dose of black humour laden one-liners. Her life may have changed beyond all recognition but it is her life, and she will fight to retain it with everything she has in her arsenal, regardless of where it takes her, and for the audience at least, discomforting though it may be at times, where her unexpected journey takes us is entertaining indeed.
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  • I Love the Emmys

    I am a TV junkie.

    I could say I have tried 12 step programs, detox units, and literary clubs to wean me off my habit but to no avail, and frankly I am not even slightly disappointed. Mainly because, these days, and it is increasingly so, TV is where all the real visual creativity is happening; it’s where many of the true visionaries are plying their trade and creating TV so powerful, clever or funny that you wonder why the movies, now reduced largely to remaking the same tired, dumb movies over and over, don’t just give up, hand their big screens over to TV, and let us all move in and watch wall to wall true creativity writ large. (Of course trying to clean up in of those cineplex bathrooms would require the patience of a saint, and the dexterity of a gymnast, but you get the idea.)





    Jane Lynch hits the stage at The Emmys after her opening previously filmed piece of liquid crystal fabulousness.


    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G7C50iY04M8 (such a fun opening piece!)

    So what is any TV junkie worth his or her remote doing tonight? Well they’re glued to their set watched TV’s night of nights unfold. Well, truth be told, as I write this, the Emmys have ended, the red carpet has been trod, surprise guests unleashed (no more so than Charlie Sheen popping up to present Best Actor in a Comedy Series), and Jane Lynch has performed her magic, managing to be oh-so-clever and funny all at the same time, and having a bundle of fun with an opening piece that features hilarious interactions with the cast of Big Bang Theory and Mad Men, among others, all based on the conceit that all the characters in every TV show live in the same building. What follows is not an exhaustive roll call of winners but rather my run down of what matters to me and a few choice photos to make it all visual and pretty (even so, a full list of winners and losers follows at the end of the blog since I am nothing if not a completist…. at times.)


    First up, I am thrilled that Jim Parsons aka Sheldon Cooper of Big Bang Theory has won the Emmy for Best Actor in a Comedy Series. He is such a supremely talented actor, and while BBT is a true ensemble relying on all its characters to bring on the laughs, it is Jim Parsons gift for comic timing and nuance that holds it all together, and is the focal point for the show. Well done Jim!

    Keeping in the comedy vein, and who wouldn’t want to in a world as grim as ours is at the moment, Modern Family got the gong for Best Comedy Series (second win for them in this category), and it is richly deserved too. What could have been just another family-based sitcom, is instead richly nuanced, an accurate reflection of family life, and society generally in the 21st Century, and agent for social change – two gay fathers? Will civilisation survive this?! Of course it will, dear right wing poppets – all wrapped up in a heartwarming (but thankfully for those wanting to avoid pixal-caused pop culture diabetes, not corny) hilarious half hour that is a treat to watch each and every week.

    They also walked away with wins for Julie Bowen, Outstanding Supporting Actress, Comedy (with a dress that must have drawn the heterosexual male demographic to the screen like moths to the proverbial) and TyBurrell, Outstanding Supporting Actor, Comedy (who wowed the crowd with a very funny stand up routine in lieu of thanking everyone, and his dog.)


    And finally in amongst Martin Scorsese deservedly winning for directing Boardwalk Empire, and my one of my favourite comediennes around, Melissa McCarthy, who I have loved and adored since her days on The Gilmore Girls, winning for Outstanding Lead Actress, comedy in Mike and Molly, the English period soap, Downton Abbey with it’s exquisite portrayal of British aristocracy just prior to World War 1 when everything changed forever, romped home with four awards and proved that quality everything can triumph in a sea of mediocre reality TV shows, and poorly written scripted shows. 



    I wouldn’t call this year’s ceremony a massive surprise, especially with shows like Amazing Race winning the Reality Show category again (less an indictment on the show itself, which I love, but more a reflection of the paucity of true genius in the category generally) and  Daily Show winning for the ninth straight year (mainly because it is awesomely fantastically hilarious and deserves to just be automatically given the Emmy for as long as it’s on air), but Jane Lynch was fun and refreshing, the genuine joy of many of the winners contagious (Melissa McCarthy’s teary speech was touching), and it managed to celebrate all that’s good about TV without overstaying it’s welcome. 


    Melissa McCarthy holding her Emmy statuette aloft

    Here are the night’s winners:

    Outstanding comedy series: Modern Family
    Outstanding drama series: Mad Men
    Outstanding miniseries or movie: 
    Downton Abbey
    Outstanding lead actress, miniseries or movie: Kate Winslet, Mildred Pierce
    Outstanding supporting actor in a miniseries or movie: 
    Guy Pearce, Mildred Pierce
    Outstanding directing for a miniseries, movie or dramatic special: Brian Percival, Downton Abbey
    Outstanding lead actor in a miniseries or movie: 
    Barry Pepper, The Kennedys
    Outstanding supporting actress, miniseries or movie: Maggie Smith, Downton Abbey
    Outstanding writing for a miniseries or movie: 
    Julian Fellowes, Downton Abbey
    Outstanding lead actor, drama: 
    Kyle Chandler, Friday Night Lights
    Outstanding lead actress, drama: 
    Julianna Margulies, The Good Wife
    Outstanding supporting actor, drama: Peter Dinklage, Game of Thrones
    Outstanding directing, drama: 
    Martin Scorsese, Boardwalk Empire 
    Outstanding supporting actress, drama: 
    Margo Martindale, Justified
    Outstanding writing, drama series: 
    Jason Katims, Friday Night Lights
    Outstanding variety, music or comedy series: 
    The Daily Show with Jon Stewart
    Outstanding directing for a variety, music or comedy series: Don Roy King, Saturday Night Live (host: Justin Timberlake)
    Outstanding writing for a variety, music or comedy series: The Daily Show with Jon Stewart
    Outstanding reality competition: The Amazing Race
    Outstanding lead actress, comedy: 
    Melissa McCarthy (Mike & Molly)
    Outstanding lead actor, comedy series: Jim Parsons, The Big Bang Theory
    Outstanding writing for a comedy: Steve Levitan, Jeffrey Richman (“Caught in the Act”), Modern Family
    Outstanding director, comedy: 
    Michael Alan Spiller (“Halloween”),  Modern Family
    Outstanding supporting actor, comedy:
     
    Ty Burrell (Modern Family)
    Outstanding supporting actress, comedy: Julie Bowen (Modern Family)

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  • Beginners

    What would you do if your 75 year old father, just one week after the death of his wife, and your mother, announced to you, and the world that he was gay, always had been, and wanted to explore as fully and richly as he could before he too slipped off this mortal coil?

    If you’re Mike Mills, who lived through exactly this scenario, you write a powerful yet quirky script, get Ewan McGregor to play a fictionalised version of you called Oliver Fields, entrust the talented Christopher Plummer (Hal Fields) with the role of your father, throw in an unconventional love affair between the movie version of you and a left of centre Frenchwoman, Anna (played by the lovely Melanie Laurent), and set everyone off on a voyage of discovery the likes of which you never foresaw being taken when life was ordered, and unsurprising. What the movie explores, in a less than conventional but ultimately rewarding narrative, that picks up after his father’s death from cancer five years after his coming out, is what happens when the life you thought you were leading is not at all the life you actually had.

    Oliver and Hal exploring a father and son relationship that grew into being just before it was too late

    In short order, Oliver’s safe but dissatisfying existence, is shaken up by his father’s coming out, his new life as a gay man (which includes a passionate open relationship with the somewhat juvenile and emotionally stunted Andy, played by Goran Visnjic) which actually draws father and son closer together in ways Oliver never would have imagined growing up as the parents of two people who knew the marriage was a well-meaning sham but played along anyway, and the events following his father’s death when Oliver realises that he must let go of what he knew and plunge into the terrifying, but far more satisfying unknown. 

    Andy (Goran Visnjic) and Hal enjoy an unusual open relationship that somehow works

    Anna, Oliver and the adorable Arthur

    It moves back and forth between the past and the present, uses conversations Oliver has with his father’s terrier Arthur who comes to live with Oliver post his father’s death and can’t bear being left alone, and flashbacks to Oliver’s childhood with his utterly unconventional mother, and his distant father. Through it all, we see Oliver gradually come to terms with the effects his growing up had on him, and the realisation that if he is to ever have a life of any note, that it must be lived with the same joie de vivre and passion that his father displayed in his new life as a gay man. 

    Though it is not the conventional movie the trailer would have you believe, it is one of those wonderful movies that moves effortlessly between quirky, funny and moving, with characters you grow to care deeply about it, who reinforce the notion, without hammering you over the head with it, that life must be lived with authenticity, richness and passion if it is to have any real worth at all.
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  • Community season 3 On its Way…

    Season 3 kicks off in the USA on September 22 and it looks awesome. All the crazy off-the-wall humour looks to be there in abundance, and plus John Goodman is in the mix! While we have a while to wait for it’s arrival in Australia – please don’t sit on this for 6 months whichever channel is lucky enough to have the rights – I have no doubt it will be worth it!

    http://community101.tumblr.com/post/9644715597/community-is-back-check-out-a-sneak-peek-of-the

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  • Crackle Me a TV Show! GAY TOWN

    I have been reading for years about web-based TV shows that are typically 5-10 minutes in length per episode, usually appeal to a very narrow niche fan base (which they can do since ratings aren’t a concern) and are usually creatively fast and loose, pushing boundaries in terms of content and story line, in ways they could never do on TV.

    Finally, a few weeks after discussing some of the better web-based shows with a friend of mine at work, Lisa (who is a pop culture queen par excellence, often making me feel like I watch so very little, so broad is her consumption of pop treasures) such as The Guild, and The Mercury Men, and week or so after downloading an iPhone app called Crackle (again at Lisa’s suggestion), I finally opened up the app up, and found a treasure trove of one-of-a-kind shows. 

    The best one so far is the hilarious Gay Town (each episode runs 4 – 4 1/2 minutes), written, directed and starring the very funny Owen Benjamin, which turns the usual sexual orientation balance on it’s head, and features, as expected by the title, a town where everyone is gay, and where it’s the straight people who are out of place. In this town it is a crime not to wear sequined fanny packs, straight men are fired for not being someone their male boss can have sex with, and where political sex scandals revolve around someone being found soliciting for sex with someone of the opposite gender. It is gently done, and does a wonderful job of showing up prejudices for the ignorant concoctions they are by removing them from the expected contexts and inverting them.

    It is also damn funny! One of my favourite lines is “Memo to self : Never get between a lesbian and her rickshaw”, a lesson learnt by the main straight character played by Owen, shortly after a lesbian couple have taken out three gay men who were competing with them for a rickshaw ride. Yes on one level it’s all very silly but that’s why a lot of social satire works well. As we’re laughing with learning, and all in compact bite-sized nuggets of fun.

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  • EUREKA! My new favourite quirky comedic drama!

    So usually I am an early adopter right? Not in terms of my use of technology, which usually runs along the lines of ‘I am aware of it but will wait for the no-bugs second generation thank you’; but in my eagerness to listen to the latest music, check out the latest movie releases, watch the latest weekly episodes of magic from TV land… and while it’s powered by one part instant gratification, one part insatiable cat-like curiosity, and one part pretty new shiny thing absorption, it has served me well…

    Witness tracking down in 2000 what felt like the only copy of Coldplay’s first album in Australia, which led to David Jones (a department store) Miranda, Sydney, and 18 months of me saying how wonderful this band was till everyone else jumped on the bandwagon; or Stargate SG1, which everyone seemed to ignore for a little bit while I watched it and thought ‘this is kind of cool….. so very cutting edge, ahead of the pack, with hopefully no wanky I got there first overtones (OK there may be wisps of that).. and then there’s…

    EUREKA

    It’s just been cancelled in the USA after five gloriously quirky comedy-overtoned dramatic seasons, and while I have had seasons 1 and 2 in my collection for a couple of years, I just never got around to watching them…. till now when I am hopelessly (well almost) behind the tide of history. So far, I have managed to watch 6 episodes of season 1 and while I am loving it’s offbeat take on the hilarious, and often, drama-laden intersection of technology, small town life, and the friendships & relationships made in that gold fish bowl, and I know there’s 5 whole seasons, plus a wrap up show to finish things off, I can help feeling like I have arrived late at a very cool, very hip party where everyone is putting their jackets, and stumbling out the door, just as I arrive with some fine wines, eagerness to burn, and a plethora of witty, occasionally insightful observations….

    So while I may have missed the boat somewhat (yes I have left the party behind thank you; please try to keep up), and have only just hauled myself onto it as it threatens to sink in an iceberg filled sea, at least I managed to find what is really a luxury liner in a vast ocean of very ordinary run-abouts, decaying paddle streamers, and badly neglected fishing trawling trawlers, and I am going to cast a line, and enjoy the catch for at least, oh, 5 seasons of viewing deliciousness.

    (Please note that no actual mixed metaphors were harmed in the writing of this blog.)

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  • Scream 4 (movie) – Monday 25 April 2011 @ Broadway (with Steve x 2 and Fahmi)

    I am not a fan of slasher flicks generally.

    It’s not the fear of what might happen next that truly bothers me, although I appreciate that is largely what draws most people to them. No, the reason I avoid them like a, um, serial killer, is that the thought of all those people losing their lives is horrific, and sad, and not something I want to spend two hours witnessing.

    But eleven years after watching all three Scream movies with my then house mate, Andrew, and getting absolutely smashed on Sangria – it is not cordial, people, trust me – I went along to see the fourth instalment when my current house mate couldn’t find anyone, including his boyfriend, to go with him. Surprisingly I enjoyed it! I’d forgotten that the original movies, while maintaining a high body count, also contained a great deal of humour, and post modern posturing, and some fun, witty dialogue, and this movie, had all that and more.

    Yes there was lots of blood and gore, but the script writers went to a lot of trouble to flash out the characters as best they could in what is, naturally, a fairly restrictive genre format, and fashion some sort of storyline, which was peppered with all sorts of wry observations of modern life, no more hilariously, and to deadly effect, that at the end, when the person who made everyone think they were innocent, ends up being anything but, is still being lauded as a hero even as the heros of the story dust themselves off after nearly dying. It is a clever dissection of the way modrn media doesn’t stop to check what is right and what isn’t, and simply runs with initial impressions or information to disasterous or ruinous effect.

    Yep, this slasher flick, replete with many bon mots and witticisms, manage to actually say something even as rivers of blood flow through it. Well done!


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