Tuesday, March 31, 2020

The Borgias

Another show whose first season I watched many years ago that I've decided to finally watch to the end. I would actually revise the grade I gave it down to a 7, but still, not bad.

Season 2 starts with Pope Alexander enjoying having been spared the fury of the French army, now en route to Naples, where an unexpected surprise turns the tables on King Charles.

Alexander wastes no time in trying to rehabilitate his image and that of Rome, spending with largess. When word reaches the Vatican that Charles has left Naples for Rome to take his revenge on the Pope's deception, it is Cesare, the Pope's elder son, who saves the city from assured destruction.

He's then sent on a diplomatic mission, but things don't go as expected. His brother Juan is then sent on a military mission, but he fails even more miserably.

Meanwhile, poor heartbroken Lucrezia is pushed by the Pope to re-marry in order to ensure the Borgia family's future and expand their alliances.

Alexander, however, has many enemies, and some are unknowingly getting too close for comfort.

The plot does have more holes than it did in the first season, but it's overall still enjoyable.

Maybe the worst thing is a feeling of storylines being rushed through in order to advance the story, but that could also be caused by me binging on it rather than watching one episode per week as it was originally intended (not all shows work the same in the era of streaming, or do they?).

Grade - Season 2: 7

In Case of Emergency



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Monday, March 30, 2020

Divorce

I've always liked Sarah Jessica Parker a lot. I think she has a very particular kind of magnetism that makes her very relatable and enjoyable.

After having immensely loved HBO's Sex and the City, I decided to check out her new show, Divorce.

Season 1 introduces us to Frances and Robert and their two adolescent kids, Lila and Tom. When a shocking accident ends a party the couple is attending, Frances realizes and tells Robert that she wants a divorce. He doesn't take it well.

Their separation is not amicable, especially after Robert discovers some unsettling facts. How to deal with their kids, how to handle their common friends, how to separate their finances and possessions, everything is cause for more turmoil, fights, and heartbreak.

They try couples' therapy but, given the show's title, it's easy to guess they end up getting lawyers...

Grade - Season 1: 7

Season 2 starts out with Frances and Robert newly single and anticipating their new lives' opportunities.

After several initial hiccups, Robert's work (flipping houses) seems to have finally turned a corner. He also meets a real estate agent who might help him with his sales, and maybe something else...

Meanwhile, Frances decides to give her dream of opening her own gallery a go. She even stumbles upon a struggling artist with little self-confidence whom she convinces to create more pieces in order to be showcased in said gallery.

Both their sex lives get interesting, both their growing kids give them more headaches, and both their friends' lives get more complicated. Oh, and their futures' fortunes seem to take very diverging paths.

Grade - Season 2: 7

The final season, I think, was something of an afterthought. Season 2 was supposed to have 10 episodes, like the first, but only 8 episodes aired. Months later, with rumors swirling of a cancellation, an abbreviated third season was produced, but it was probably made more in order to keep Ms. Parker in HBO's good graces (they have a development deal together) than to give the show some closure.

Anyway, Frances' and Robert's new relationships are evolving faster and more unexpectedly than they had imagined, especially Robert's. They try to make the best of it all, even relying on each other's support, albeit just tentatively.

When the short season ends, our divorced couple seems to have found an equilibrium to make it work between them and with their kids, which given the situation is no small feat.

Grade - Season 3: 6

The Old Tree


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Friday, March 27, 2020

Homeland

Claire Danes' Carrie Mathison is always a cool spy to catch up with!

Season 5 jumps forward in time a couple years. Carrie is now living in Germany, working for a wealthy philanthropist whose company tries to help the less fortunate.

Unfortunately for Carrie, her past is not easily left behind, and so she gets pulled into intelligence operations run by the Germans and the Americans against a local threat centered around hacktivists.

Will Carrie be able to help her friends without getting pulled back into the world of espionage?

Grade - Season 5: 9

Season 6 sees Carrie return to the US after another bruising experience abroad.

She tries once again to work in the private sector, but a new threat emerges when entrenched powerful elements are not happy with the new President-Elect, who turns to Carrie because of her expertise.

Carrie also tries to care for a dangerously down-spiraling Quinn, while her trusted Saul is never more than a phone call away.

Grade - Season 6: 8

Season 7 picks up right where the previous left off. Carrie has grown disillusioned with the new President, but must try to use her connections and know-how to prevent the closest thing to a new Civil War in the country.

Her biggest problem is that as time goes by her relationships with her most trusted friends, foremost among them Saul, get more and more complicated.

Grade - Season 7: 8

Thursday, March 26, 2020

Feud: Bette and Joan

For a longtime admirer of Bette Davis such as myself, a show about her time working with another cinematic icon like Joan Crawford on the set of a cornerstone of American cinema like Whatever Happened to Baby Jane? was a cannot-miss.

Additionally, the two icons were played by the always great Susan Sarandon and my beloved Jessica Lange respectively, compounding the must-see elements.

And that's only the top billing! The cast includes Judy Davis, Jackie Hoffman, Alfred Molina, Stanley Tucci, Catherine Zeta-Jones, Dominic Burgess, Kathy Bates, John Waters, Sarah Paulson, and Dylan Wittrock!

The production values, this being a Ryan Murphy creation, are incredible too. The costumes, the sets, the cinematography, the makeup... everything is top notch and wholly encompassing, making you feel like you're in the late 50s-early 60s era.

Feud is meant to be an anthology series à la American Horror Story, but for now there are no plans for a second season. That's too bad; I pined to see whose feud Murphy might have decided to tackle next...

Grade: 9

The Gifted

I've always been a huge fan of the X-Men universe, so when a new show centered around an ad hoc batch of mutants was announced I decided to check it out.

Season 1 introduces us to the Strucker family, whose kids, Lauren and Andy, turn out to be both mutants. Unfortunately for them, their parents are not just scared like most of the world of their powers, but their father, Reed, is a lawyer working with Sentinel Services to capture and jail all mutants.

Andy is just finding out about his abilities and has a hard time controlling his powers, so things go south and his sister has to step in to protect him. When Sentinel Services target them, their mother, Kate, flees with them. Reed now has to find them in order to reunite, but his job means he's considered the enemy by the Mutant Underground, a lose group of mutants fighting for their survival, and he's not trusted anymore by Sentinel Services given he's now involved with the mutants.

Overall, this season is pretty good. The visual effects are well done, the plots are fairly solid, and it's easy to get invested in the mutants' struggle for their future in a world that sees them as a threat.

Grade - Season 1: 7

Season 2 ups the stakes by introducing the Inner Circle, a mutant group more interested in taking the fight to the humans rather than just trying to survive in the dark. The group is led by Reeva Payge, considered one of the most powerful mutants, who seems willing to stop at nothing to get what she wants. Unfortunately, Andy Strucker decides to join the Inner Circle, putting strain on his family once again.

The Mutant Underground is squeezed by Sentinel Services while it tries its best to stop the Inner Circle from provoking all out war with the humans.

While the addition of a competing mutant group might work on some level, the arc of the stories becomes more strained and outlandish, lowering the overall quality of the show. Some characters, like Jace Turner, also turn into caricatures and strident plot devices.

The show was canceled after this season, so it's unknown what the showrunners had in mind for our heroes, but the last episode hints to more to come, so clearly they didn't know and therefore couldn't close out the storylines.

Grade - Season 2: 6

Wildflower


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Wednesday, March 25, 2020

Transparent

Many years after watching the first season of this Amazon Original show I finally caught up with the Pfefferman clan, and I'm happy to report that the more I know these characters the more I want to be their friend or strangle them, depending on what they're up to, and that's a good thing, because it means they make you care.

Season 2 starts out with Sarah's big wedding, but is this newfound love really what she pines after? Or was she better off with Len?

Maura continues her self-discovery journey, which brings her to confront parts of her past she had closed off long ago. She also finds a new closeness to Shelly, which gives their kids whiplash.

Josh, having found out he fathered a son in his teens, gets to know him better and things aren't too easy, especially for his new relationship with Raquel.

Ali is the usual mess, trying her hand at a new career, new loves, and religion. Oy.

Grade - Season 2: 8

Season 3 starts out with Maura trying to make herself useful to the new community she now belongs to, but things don't work out too well for her. Nevertheless, she's excited about her future and its possibilities.

Sarah keeps dipping her toes in different shades of religion, with varying results.

Ali also keeps toying with religion, but also drugs, and ends up having to rescue Josh from spiraling out of control when he receives tragic news.

Shelley, meanwhile, gets into theater and solo performances, which she gets to test out on a very eventful family cruise.

This season's episode 8 is a rare treat as it goes back in time to show us the origins of Maura and Shelley.

Grade - Season 3: 8

Season 4 sees Maura travel to Israel for a job opportunity. Ali accompanies her and will unexpectedly have some wild experiences with the politics and religion of the region and its peoples.

Shelly deepens her involvement with the theater, while Sarah and Len come to an interesting agreement.

Josh, forced to grow by the recent events, goes through a life crisis.

The whole family reunites in Israel, but not all make the trip back home.

Grade - Season 4: 8

This is where the regular programming ends, unfortunately. Jeffrey Tambor, aka Maura Pfefferman, was accused of sexual harassment by someone on the Transparent set. An investigation found enough evidence to force him to quit the show, leaving the producers to struggle with whether and how to continue making a show where its main character, around whom all other stories gravitate, is now gone and cannot possibly be replaced.

While the characters of Maura's 3 children, her former wife, and her best friends were full-fledged and all richly developed, they were ostensibly supporting characters. Obviously, you cannot have a show called Transparent without the trans-parent at its helm.

So the decision was made to make a TV movie instead of a regular season, the go-to device of late for series with a devoted fan base that are canceled abruptly, depriving the showrunners of the chance to bring their story to a nice close.

Alas, the decision was also made to make it a musical, perhaps in an effort to keep it more lighthearted rather than exceedingly gloomy given that it centers around Maura's demise (Tambor wasn't part of the production, of course).

I would only recommend this to fans of the series who long for a measure of closure, as it comes across a bit forced and silly. Yet, it is nice to see these talented actors working off one another one more time.

Grade - Musical Finale: 5

Three Is Company!



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Monday, March 23, 2020

The Cosmic Calendar

If you like science and nature and space and have never watched Cosmos, I highly recommend it.

Here's a clip to help put our existences in the gargantuan perspective of time:

Blooming Flowers

Although it's technically springtime already, today it snowed most of the day. So why not watch a cool video of blooming flowers:

Diva Plavalaguna

You know who that is if you've watched the really cool movie The Fifth Element. She's a character who has a very small but impressive role.

Here's a video of the actress' full performance, which in the movie is obviously intercut with the larger storyline:

I HATE DST

I've come to really, really, really despise the absurd routine of changing our clocks twice a year for no logical reason whatsoever.

This video takes us through the reasons for DST's existence and what can be done to fix it (I wish...):

The Tree and the Door


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Thursday, March 19, 2020

Wholly Focused



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In Memoriam

Max von Sydow (April 10, 1929 - March 8, 2020)


Another legendary actor has passed away. Famous in Sweden long before he caught the attention of Hollywood with The Exorcist, he raked up 163 acting credits during his long and varied career!!

Three Days of the Condor, Flash Gordon, Conan the Barbarian, Never Say Never Again, Hannah and Her Sisters, Awakenings, Minority Report, Shutter Island, Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close, and Star Wars: Episode VII - The Force Awakens are only some of his most famous movies.

He also worked extensively in television, among others in The Tudors and more recently Game of Thrones.

He certainly had an amazing talent.