Showing posts with label catch up. Show all posts
Showing posts with label catch up. Show all posts

Saturday, November 15, 2008

news: catching up

I've gotten desperately behind in my newsiness, as well as everything else up in here, but this is part one of an attempt to get back on the ball.

So here goes:

I'm still all broken up that My Future Husband David Tennant is leaving the Whoniverse. (though I'm excited to see who's next, and there's always the alternate reality doctorclone hanging out and making babies with Rose, so he can come back without it even being a cross-time storyline or anything...). This points out the River Song issues, too, because she recognized him, and now she can't happen-- except that my roomie came up with the beautiful idea that maybe she sees him, not the form he's in, so it won't really matter who he looks like and she can still be there! Are you listening Steven?

Den of Geek is still working its way through X-Files, one episode at a time for the next six million years. Here's S01E11 - Eve (the one with all the Eves, and the first appearance of the clones), and S01E12 - Fire (the one with the English family, Mulder's ex blonde, and the dude who controls fire), and S01E13 - Beyond the Sea (the one where we find out that Scully's dad is General Hammond, and she has issues with his death while a psychic makes them switch roles), and S01E14 - Gender Bender (the one with the amish aliens), S01E15 - Lazarus (the one where Scully's ex partner and lover gets posessed).

Tom Baker hosted an interview show on the Beeb recently. I'll find it, watch it, and get back to you.

Two of Heroes' writers / executive producers have been fired because the network doesn't like where the show is going, they've been consistently over budget, and ratings are still dropping. And yet, they're still planning season 4.

Using math and crazy fandom, Den of Geek determines who the next Doctor will be and when they'll take over and how long they'll last. Chee!

My Future Husband David Tennant talks about leaving and being the Doctor and how he was almsot convinced to stay.

A reminder that Stevel Moffet likes an older, weirder actor for playing the Doctor... which leaves Bill Nighy and makes me happy. Though the articles comments remind everyone that that statement was ages ago, and things have changed.

More about who will be Doctor 11. I'm still backing my roomate. He's ginger and not mean.

Another new character on Lost: Amy

Knight Rider is getting rebooted after the 13th ep, and they're leaving all the fun side characters in the dust. And the boring ones. And getting rid of the terrorist-of-the-week idea so it's more like the old guy-does-good-on-his-own deal. So... is he stealing KITT and going solo? That might be fun. And I like asian chick and wimpy geek.

Life On Mars US gets a full season. Even though I haven't seen a single aired episode. (I had to bump it to the summer-catchup list) So it's up to 22 eps, when the brittish version is, like 6? 8? That's alot of new story to come up with, not to mention the fact that the UK one is closed, whereas the US one is open-ended like all US shows.

Lost is moving to Wednesday and conflicting with more of the shows I watch. But I'm still excited that we're on the downslope and everything is getting wrapped up.

More of who might be the Doctor: this time, Colin Salmon
, who played Dr Moon. Is it just me, or are all the suggestions getting a little inbred by sticking with people who have already been on the show?

Den of Geek offers up the Ten Worst Dalek Stories Ever! And I'm kind of surprised that there's only the ten. Which points out many of the problems I have with daleks. But does not include Daleks in Manhattan??

And that catches us up with Den Of Geek. i09 Will take much longer...

Monday, October 27, 2008

catching up - week 6 (mostly):

sanctuary: folding men
Sanctuary goes up against Folding Men and finds a story about minority rights and drug addiction. Who'd have thunk it? Well, having watched the previous episodes, I'd say I would, actually.

They catch a guy wanted for robbery and accessory to murder, and Wil's doing his best to get through to him as he goes through withdrawal, and they get little snippets of info off of him that lead to Folding Men parents with missing children, a crumpled up body in a washingmachine, and false leads on drug processing, not to mention that Wil proves to be very easily manipulated when he thinks he's helping people, which will hopefully be really interesting in the future. There wasn't nearly as much running and shooting as before, so I guess they're finding their groove, and it's a pretty sweet groove at that. It's a really interesting show. Even if I do sometimes get distracted by the fact that all the CGI environments kind of look too open and spacious, like no one in this weird city can afford enough furniture. Or when I take twenty minutes off in the middle of the show to see if I know the actor behind some of the prosthetics-- I do know the one who plays Jack the Ripper from the pilot, as he played both Halling and Todd the Wraith on Atlantis, but I was looking for the Bigfoot, who doesn't get a billing on IMDB or the official website yet.



supernatural: monster movie
Inexplicably, one of the episodes I missed was a perfect little horror movie aware that it was a horror movie! Meta fiction! I love it! They show up in Pennsylvania in time for Oktoberfest in a little town that looks like a European village, following a reported vampire attack-- that has all the movie monster cliches. When they're just about to write it off as a loony, a wolfman attacks a kid in lover's lane, and a mummy kills a guard at the museum. A bar wench gets kidnapped by Dracula and he insists on calling her Mina and the boys Harker and Van Helsing, and crazy ensues. Turns out it's a shapeshifter who was born like this, beaten alot, chased away alot, and went batty in such a way that he wanted to be a classy movie monster instead of a regular beat up monster.

It's all in black and white with the camara going in and out of focus at random times, with a soundtrack every bit as melodramatic as you'd think, with mist and storms and a big castle that's made of foam and fiberboard, and a nod to both Frankenstein and Phantom of the Opera. Best of all, this ep has some really truly funny parts, and it's a welcome respite from the heaviness of the coming actual Apocalypse in the previous episodes. Dean gets the girl, the bad guy gets defeated, and they drive off triumphant-- but I like Jamie, and I think these boys could use a girl in their team. Keep them honest. Give them something to look after and someone to look after them. I vote that she comes back and joins up-- or, better, that she starts hunting baddies on her own and they run across her later. I mean really, could you survive that and then go back to pouring beer for a living?

On a side note, the CW viewer is crap. Clunky, full of ads, jittery, and when it runs comercials, it drops out of full screen mode and doesn't go back. Suck. Hulu is so much better.


supernatural: metamorphosis
Aw. Looks like last week never actually happened. Bummer.

So apparently monsterism runs in families, and this ordinary guy is coming into his inheritance. That he didn't know about. Because a Hunter killed his dad ages ago and he was put up for adoption. He's about to turn into a Rugeru-- something Dean keeps pointing out sounds like it's made up. Sam wants to see if he can get the guy to fight it, to appease it with alot of raw meat, and never eat human (which completes the transformation), and live like a recovering alcoholic instead. Travis, an old Hunter friend, wants them to flame it and get it before it kills. Of course, this old Hunter gets himself killed almost immediately, and it's a wonder there are any Hunters left the way they all get killed off around the Winchesters-- it's like they're Angela Fletcher or something. And the guy turns and loses everything and gets flamed, because this show seems to be mostly about fighting fate and fate getting you anyway.

So of course, this all leads to an arguement between the boys over whether or not Sam feels kinship with this guy who has evil inside him but is a good person, and whether or not Dean is a jerk and that's why Sam never told him about the demon blood or his experiments with turning the bad he's been given into something good-- and whether Heaven is jumping the gun a little on this whole issue. In the end, Sam decides to give up creepy powers, but there's the whole issue of how long and you keep from killing people when you have the ability to save them... and then, how long before the Wrath comes down again?


valentine: pilot
There's these old Gods, see, and they are about to become irrelevant in the modern world, so they have to find a new way to fit in as things change. Irrelevant Gods turn mortal and die off, and they're getting fewer and fewer clients every year, so they want to avoid the bad and stay in the good, and they take on a romance writer to tell them about modern love and get them back in the game.

Kate takes the knowledge that there are gods very well-- especially after Aphrodite gives her a screaming orgasm of pure love. Which was funny-- and jumps right in with helping a boy and a girl find eachother, when the Gods have almost messed it up.

The first episode is funny and sweet and charming, and like a little bitty rom com, which is my not-so-secret vice. And I get to watch people be in love every week! It's a hopeful, if not terribly delicate message: there's someone out there for everyone, and there are people making sure we get the chance to find them. Yay!



valentine: daddy's home
The god of war stops by to check on his family that he's usually too busy causing war to bother with. Ares is trying to take over the love business, saying that something's going down where they'll be in danger and he wants to protect them-- the only way he can, which is to get them all to help him start wars. Danny / Eros distracts him by love-shooting Kate and sending them home together, on the excuse of giving Ray / Hephaestus a chance to secure Aphrodite's heart, now that she claims to love her first husband and despise her second.

Meanwhile, a perfume chemist and a good Indian girl need to get married. The girls pose as wedding photographers as the parents plan an arranged marriage for her, and the boys try to convince the chemist to declare his love and demand her hand in marriage so the arranged one can't go through. When he finally does, the groom is as relieved as she is, and it's her mother that okays it! Yay!

All this means that Morgan and Nisha are happy and there's a great Bollywood dance scene, and that Ray's in trouble with Grace / Aphrodite for fixing Danny's gun (what was once arrows), and Ari is not at all happy with getting turned down. And right at the end, Phoebe drops some of Kate's hair in the Oracle, looking for some dirt, and gets an image of Grace literally under the axe. Spooky, and who knows what that means? Let's see what the next episode says, shall we?



valentine: act naturally
This week: celebutant trainwreck and small-time theatre owner. She's had a few flops that made her doubt her talent, and he's about to go out of business until she's forced to work with him for community service-- thanks to the Valentine crew. Add in a manager who seems to be intentionally running her into the ground, and you've got yourself a sweet little rediscovering who you really are sort of story.

On the home front, Phoebe gets Leo to work with her to steal something of Kate's to prove she's wrong, and they manage to burn down her house, which leaves her homeless, with most of her stuff gone. Danny softens up a bit and lets down his guard enough to awkwardly try to cheer her in a sweet little scene that ends with her moving into the mansion with a box of stuff and a cat. Phoebe goes through the box and finds books about Greek Gods, and takes it to mean the worst-- though she's probably just writing a story and doesn't want to embarass herself by mentioning it. And someone-- a girl-- sneaks in and poisons the Oracle, and we can't be sure if the clarification of the Grace-dead oracle is the truth or the poison, or if this is, say, Eris, Queen of Discord, or if it's whoever Ares mentioned was going against the Old Gods. Oooh, plot!

Three episodes in, there's what we know about the characters: Danny is erotic love embodied, which makes him kind of a rockstar and means he knows nothing about real love and can't see how it's different from lust (which likely means he'll fall in love himself before the season is up); Leo / Hercules stalled out somewhere around the 70s fashion-wise, but is sweet, if somewhat simple on occasion; Grace / Aphrodite is old-fashioned and somewhat over-sure of herself; Kate means well, but is either going to go bad or is going to be framed; Pheobe has trust issues and is pretty immature; and Ray / Hephaestus is jealous and swayable.

Thursday, October 23, 2008

side projects: catching up:

sanctuary: folding men
Sanctuary goes up against Folding Men and finds a story about minority rights and drug
addiction. Who'd have thunk it? Well, having watched the previous episodes, I'd say I would,
actually.

They catch a guy wanted for robbery and accessory to murder, and Wil's doing his best to
get through to him as he goes through withdrawal, and they get little snippets of info off of
him that lead to Folding Men parents with missing children, a crumpled up body in a
washingmachine, and false leads on drug processing, not to mention that Wil proves to be
very easily manipulated when he thinks he's helping people, which will hopefully be really
interesting in the future. There wasn't nearly as much running and shooting as before, so I
guess they're finding their groove, and it's a pretty sweet groove at that. It's a really
interesting show. Even if I do sometimes get distracted by the fact that all the CGI
environments kind of look too open and spacious, like no one in this weird city can afford
enough furniture. Or when I take twenty minutes off in the middle of the show to see if I
know the actor behind some of the prosthetics-- I do know the one who plays Jack the
Ripper from the pilot, as he played both Halling and Todd the Wraith on Atlantis, but I was
looking for the Bigfoot, who doesn't get a billing on IMDB or the official website yet.


supernatural: monster movie
Inexplicably, one of the episodes I missed was a perfect little horror movie aware that it was
a horror movie! Meta fiction! I love it! They show up in Pennsylvania in time for Oktoberfest in
a little town that looks like a European village, following a reported vampire attack-- that has
all the movie monster cliches. When they're just about to write it off as a loony, a wolfman
attacks a kid in lover's lane, and a mummy kills a guard at the museum. A bar wench gets
kidnapped by Dracula and he insists on calling her Mina and the boys Harker and Van
Helsing, and crazy ensues. Turns out it's a shapeshifter who was born like this, beaten alot,
chased away alot, and went batty in such a way that he wanted to be a classy movie
monster instead of a regular beat up monster.

It's all in black and white with the camara going in and out of focus at random times, with a
soundtrack every bit as melodramatic as you'd think, with mist and storms and a big castle
that's made of foam and fiberboard, and a nod to both Frankenstein and Phantom of the
Opera. Best of all, this ep has some really truly funny parts, and it's a welcome respite from
the heaviness of the coming actual Apocalypse in the previous episodes. Dean gets the girl,
the bad guy gets defeated, and they drive off triumphant-- but I like Jamie, and I think these
boys could use a girl in their team. Keep them honest. Give them something to look after
and someone to look after them. I vote that she comes back and joins up-- or, better, that
she starts hunting baddies on her own and they run across her later. I mean really, could
you survive that and then go back to pouring beer for a living?

On a side note, the CW viewer is crap. Clunky, full of ads, jittery, and when it runs
comercials, it drops out of full screen mode and doesn't go back. Suck. Hulu is so much
better.



supernatural: metamorphosis
Aw. Looks like last week never actually happened. Bummer.
So apparently monsterism runs in families, and this ordinary guy is coming into his
inheritance. That he didn't know about. Because a Hunter killed his dad ages ago and he
was put up for adoption. He's about to turn into a Rugeru-- something Dean keeps pointing
out sounds like it's made up. Sam wants to see if he can get the guy to fight it, to appease
it with alot of raw meat, and never eat human (which completes the transformation), and live
like a recovering alcoholic instead. Travis, an old Hunter friend, wants them to flame it and
get it before it kills. Of course, this old Hunter gets himself killed almost immediately, and
it's a wonder there are any Hunters left the way they all get killed off around the
Winchesters-- it's like they're Angela Fletcher or something. And the guy turns and loses
everything and gets flamed, because this show seems to be mostly about fighting fate and
fate getting you anyway.

So of course, this all leads to an arguement between the boys over whether or not Sam
feels kinship with this guy who has evil inside him but is a good person, and whether or not
Dean is a jerk and that's why Sam never told him about the demon blood or his experiments
with turning the bad he's been given into something good-- and whether Heaven is jumping
the gun a little on this whole issue. In the end, Sam decides to give up creepy powers, but
there's the whole issue of how long and you keep from killing people when you have the
ability to save them... and then, how long before the Wrath comes down again?



valentine: pilot
There's these old Gods, see, and they are about to become irrelevant in the modern world, so they have to find a new way to fit in as things change. Irrelevant Gods turn mortal and die off, and they're getting fewer and fewer clients every year, so they want to avoid the bad and stay in the good, and they take on a romance writer to tell them about modern love and get them back in the game.

Kate takes the knowledge that there are gods very well-- especially after Aphrodite gives her
a screaming orgasm of pure love. Which was funny-- and jumps right in with helping a boy
and a girl find eachother, when the Gods have almost messed it up.

The first episode is funny and sweet and charming, and like a little bitty rom com, which is
my not-so-secret vice. And I get to watch people be in love every week! It's a hopeful, if not
terribly delicate message: there's someone out there for everyone, and there are people
making sure we get the chance to find them. Yay!



valentine: daddy's home
The god of war stops by to check on his family that he's usually too busy causing war to
bother with. Ares is trying to take over the love business, saying that something's going
down where they'll be in danger and he wants to protect them-- the only way he can, which
is to get them all to help him start wars. Danny / Eros distracts him by love-shooting Kate
and sending them home together, on the excuse of giving Ray / Hephaestus a chance to
secure Aphrodite's heart, now that she claims to love her first husband and despise her
second.

Meanwhile, a perfume chemist and a good Indian girl need to get married. The girls pose as
wedding photographers as the parents plan an arranged marriage for her, and the boys try
to convince the chemist to declare his love and demand her hand in marriage so the
arranged one can't go through. When he finally does, the groom is as relieved as she is,
and it's her mother that okays it! Yay!

All this means that Morgan and Nisha are happy and there's a great Bollywood dance
scene, and that Ray's in trouble with Grace / Aphrodite for fixing Danny's gun (what was
once arrows), and Ari is not at all happy with getting turned down. And right at the end,
Phoebe drops some of Kate's hair in the Oracle, looking for some dirt, and gets an image of
Grace literally under the axe. Spooky, and who knows what that means? Let's see what the
next episode says, shall we?


valentine: act naturally
This week: celebutant trainwreck and small-time theatre owner. She's had a few flops that
made her doubt her talent, and he's about to go out of business until she's forced to work
with him for community service-- thanks to the Valentine crew. Add in a manager who
seems to be intentionally running her into the ground, and you've got yourself a sweet little
rediscovering who you really are sort of story.

On the home front, Phoebe gets Leo to work with her to steal something of Kate's to prove
she's wrong, and they manage to burn down her house, which leaves her homeless, with
most of her stuff gone. Danny softens up a bit and lets down his guard enough to awkwardly
try to cheer her in a sweet little scene that ends with her moving into the mansion with a
box of stuff and a cat. Phoebe goes through the box and finds books about Greek Gods,
and takes it to mean the worst-- though she's probably just writing a story and doesn't want
to embarass herself by mentioning it. And someone-- a girl-- sneaks in and poisons the
Oracle, and we can't be sure if the clarification of the Grace-dead oracle is the truth or the
poison, or if this is, say, Eris, Queen of Discord, or if it's whoever Ares mentioned was
going against the Old Gods. Oooh, plot!

Three episodes in, there's what we know about the characters: Danny is erotic love
embodied, which makes him kind of a rockstar and means he knows nothing about real love
and can't see how it's different from lust (which likely means he'll fall in love himself before
the season is up); Leo / Hercules stalled out somewhere around the 70s fashion-wise, but
is sweet, if somewhat simple on occasion; Grace / Aphrodite is old-fashioned and
somewhat over-sure of herself; Kate means well, but is either going to go bad or is going to
be framed; Pheobe has trust issues and is pretty immature; and Ray / Hephaestus is
jealous and swayable.

Monday, October 20, 2008

side projects:wkk 5 catchup

Sanctuary certainly is a slow-burn isn't it? But I like the emphesis on story, so I won't argue.

This week (last week) they found the Morrigan, three women from 800-ish AD who have the power to kill people by releasing the souls from the bodies. Only sanctuary doesn't know that, and the women have amnesia. Wil won't believe they're 1200 years old, and thinks they have a group delusion stemming from being held hostage for too long. Until they start remembering and go all hovery and destructive, which leaves Sanctuary conveniently low on defenses and lets the new Big Bad in-- this Cabal that's been doing what they do for two and a half millenia, and do it with much bigger guns and in a much more militatistic way. And they're not happy that their 'property' has been taken. Wil manages to get through to them enough that they think they can eventually be free, but they understand that it has to be because they did it, and if they stay on the promise of freedom, Sanctuary will be taken down by the Cabal-- so they go, under the agreement that if they do, Cabal Leader 1 will leave everyone alone.

There's alot of shooting in the last act, and can I just tell you how great Amanda Tapping looks walking down a hallway, talking on a phone and shooting monsters without ruffling her hair? This is all the bad-assery of Carter with the added benefit of being able to wear heels and nice clothes, and being able to fight non-militarily. And the autopsy scene was totally Scully. I'm loving it.

This week's monsters were like giant vole skeletons, and that was pretty neat, too, and we got to meet an informant named Squid who may or may not be a giant bug-thing on a bridge that may or may not be the Brooklyn Bridge with the middle missing. There was an underground fight with Ashley and a Chamelon creature that served only to get her away from the Sanctuary when lockdown happened, and I think that could have been handled better-- so if it turns out the Chameleon is part of something better, I'm fine with it, but otherwise, it was pointless. And Wil has a girlfriend who was on Batterstar Galactica and thinks he's seeing someone else. Oh the trauma. This week had a really great Celtic Fusion soundtrack, and I'm great on that. But the accent... gets a little Australian sometimes...


Knight Rider explosion 1 at 12 minutes! Sexy misunderstanding at 22 minutes! Girls sitting on eachother's laps at 34! Not known for it's subtlety, this show.

It seems that Mike is up against surfing smugglers, and that the show thinks it's Point Break, but it's not even that. So Mike and Zoe go undercover, Sarah gets jealous, Billy hates being outside, and Kitt gets snarky. There's a bad actor surfer who wants to smuggle giant smart bombs and rocket launchers so he can blow up a nuclear power plant for no real reason, and there's a tech-a-mabob that jams the missile but making it return to sender. Yeah, I didn't think it makes much sense, either. All we really got out of this is that in Afganistan-what-Mike-doesn't remember, he was being the same self-righteous something or other that he is now. Huh?

The music was fun, all spanish rap and neo-surf rock, and the visuals made me want to move to the beach, but the plot was dumb, even for this show.



Mike's been poisoned and only making a delivery on time will get him the antidote! Whatever will team Knight Rider do?? Apparently, engage in multiple car chases and work with the FBI to fake a CEO's death so they can trace the culprits. Standard procedure, right?

Mike managed to actually die, like, twice, but was defibbed once and had an antidote synthesized by Kitt with Sarah's blood the other time. He's no Daniel Craig, though; he would have defibbed himself in that case. And he's not even Jason Strathan, who would have just kept himself hopped up on adrenaline to stay alive.

Not enough Zoe and Billy this time, though we did see Kerry, who I forgot existed because she wasn't even in last episode. No explosions, but Mike did keep going soft on Sarah when the poison started acting like a truth serum. Conveniently, however, he doesn't remember what he said. I give them shippy points for saying the L word (hint, not lesbian) in the fourth ep, but I take most of them away because of being lame and not remembering. That's so TV cliche, especially since they didn't even kiss or anything.

This week's fun tech-a-mabob: contacts that give you a heads-up display in your field of vision. Sweet.


Still more to come, as I'm now behind on Week 6, too.