Television right now is in a
vastly different space than it was when the 1990’s ended. Thanks to
shows like Oz and The Sopranos on HBO to House of Cards and Orange Is The New Black on Netflix, T.V. has gone through a drastic
revolution. The Golden Age of Television and the spark and cause of this
revolution is detailed in the incredible book The Revolution Was Televised
by Hitfix.com’s TV critic Alan Sepinwall. I recently wrote about the shows responsible for television’s second revolution in this current Silver Age of Television. However, during the past 16-20 years or so, television has given us
some incredible shows that haven’t risen to the level of transcendent. Mr.
Sepinwall discusses shows like Lost, The Shield, and Deadwood and I discussed shows like Game of Thrones and True
Detective. Shows that are both incredible on their own and helped define a
generation of programs. But in a tier underneath those programs are a handful of shows
that are excellent in their own right, but didn’t quite rise to the level of
revolutionary. These are the shows that we would be speaking more about if it
weren’t for the Golden and Silver Age shows. These shows deserve a lot more respect
than they’ve gotten so far, and I’m going to give them their just due.
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Wednesday, September 28, 2016
Thursday, September 22, 2016
The Lobster Movie Review
“What’s worse: to die of cold and
hunger in the woods, to become an animal that will be killed and eaten by some
bigger animal, or to have a nosebleed from time to time?”
This is a question posed by The
Limping Man, played by Ben Winshaw, to the main protagonist David, played by
Colin Ferrell in the Indie film The
Lobster. The film itself, written and directed by Greek film maker Yorgos
Lanthimos (Dogtooth), is an odd,
satirical take on relationships, and is summed up perfectly by the question
posed by The Limping Man. It’s weird, it doesn’t quite make sense, yet it’s
truthful to how we should view courtship and love.
In the film, all adults must be
in a committed relationship, and if you’re not, you are sent to a hotel where
you have 45 days to find a mate. If you fail to do so, you get turned into an
animal of your choice. Some people refuse this model, and live as loners in the
woods, only to be hunted by the people in the hotel in an attempt to earn extra
days staying at the hotel. Desperate to find a mate, The Limping Man gives
himself nosebleeds in order to connect to a young woman who naturally gets
nosebleeds often. Based upon this physical attribute, the two are set up as a
match to be paired together forever. When questioned about his lie by David,
The Limping Man gives the aforementioned response.
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