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Posts Tagged: TV Recap

Doctor Who: Season 5, Episode 7: "Amy's Choice"

Amy's Choice

"Hold on tight. This is going to be a tricky one." With those words, the delightfully twisty "Amy's Choice" kicks off a high-concept mindbender of an episode which also provides a crucial turning point in the journey our three regular characters—the Doctor (Matt Smith), Amy (Karen Gillan), and Rory (Arthur Darvill)—are taking over the course of this season. After the problems some earlier stories (e.g. "Victory of the Daleks" and "The Vampires of Venice") have had with fitting into the 45-minute running time of a single episode, "Amy's Choice" is an object lesson in how to get it right. Like a well crafted prose short story, it sets up a self-contained situation for our heroes, follows the logic of that situation through to its end, and leaves the characters definitely changed from where they were at the start. Continue Reading »




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Doctor Who: Season 5, Episode 5: "Flesh and Stone"

Flesh and Stone

"Flesh and Stone" maintains the high quality displayed by the first half of this two-parter, "The Time of Angels". To start with, it's a straightforward, satisfying continuation and conclusion, as the story of the Doctor (Matt Smith) and Amy (Karen Gillan), with River Song (Alex Kingston) and her party of solder-clerics, being pursued by Weeping Angels through the crashed spaceship Byzantium makes for an exciting, action-packed roller coaster. But as the episode progresses, more and more elements of what is obviously a much larger, season-spanning arc come to the fore, and although the story ends with the immediate threat defeated, many questions remain unanswered. Continue Reading »




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Doctor Who: Season 5, Episode 4: "The Time of Angels"

The Time of Angels

Now that's more like it. After a couple of lesser episodes over the last two weeks that failed to match the level reached by "The Eleventh Hour," showrunner Steven Moffat returns with the kind of story he used to provide once a year for the Russell T Davies era—virtuoso plotting, brilliant dialogue, and an emphasis on scares and surprises. Indeed, this one builds directly on two of those previous high points: 2007's "Blink" and 2008's two-parter consisting of "Silence in the Library" and "Forest of the Dead." With a top-quality script from Moffat, combined with excellent production values, "The Time of Angels" is the highlight of the season so far. Continue Reading »




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Doctor Who: Season 5, Episode 2, "The Beast Below"

The Beast Below

"The Beast Below" is an episode which surprised me. It starts out as a futuristic "romp" that seems to have no particular deeper purpose, but at the climax suddenly turns its focus onto the relationship between Amy Pond and the Doctor, and how she proves herself to be a worthy companion. Not as polished and coherent as "The Eleventh Hour", with some unusually exposed plot holes by Steven Moffat's standards, I nevertheless found it to be quite moving by the end.

Doctor Who episodes are nominally forty-five minutes or so long, but given 2009's series of specials, this is actually the first standard-length installment since "The Stolen Earth" nearly two years ago. With it following on closely from the previous episode, and the next one gatecrashing the ending as well, the actual story is told in not much more than half an hour. It feels not so much like a story in its own right as a brief interlude in a continuing journey. Continue Reading »




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Last Lost: Season 6, Episode 11, "Everybody Loves Hugo"

Everybody Loves Hugo

[Editor and Author's Note: These weekly recaps will be cross-posted over at Vinyl is Heavy. We encourage comments at either joint.]

This episode was worth my time, I'll tell you what. Consistently hilarious, somewhat surprising, an all around good time with three beers in my belly. Things started out great with that goofy (but not quite goofy enough) video celebrating Hurley for his generosity, but things got kicked up a notch when he said he had an event the next night at "The Human Fund," nodding at Constanza's fake charity, and signaling just how "false" these sideline stories may in fact be. Or, perhaps, that this idea of charity, this vision of a more perfect universe, is in fact a lie. No surprise there, I suppose. But funny to think it's a nod to the best sitcom ever that does this for us (for me!) here.

And that was just the beginning. That was before Ilana got blowed up, before Dark Locke threw Desmond down a well, before Desmond RAN OVER LOCKE WITH HIS CAR! Seems like we could go around these interwebs talking in all caps about Lost for the rest of its run. It holds that much promise—to spin wacky events and characters into one another—in my heart. Things just keep getting sillier, and funnier, and that's never a bad thing on a show this convoluted and, by most lights, all too self-serious. So good for them for making fun of themselves so much this episode. (Also, Ben's little reflection on what the island will do to them, the remaining principles, once its done with them, smacks of last week's winks at the audience.) Continue Reading »




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Last Lost: Season 6, Episode 10, "Happily Ever After"

Happily Ever After

[Editor and Author's Note: These weekly recaps will be cross-posted over at Vinyl is Heavy. We encourage comments at either joint.]

Well, I suppose the last two episodes have raised the stakes some as we wind down the series, but I cannot quite stomach all the overt, to say wall-to-wall, sentimentality that drives a lot of these twists and turns. Or, as my friend Eric put it, Jeremy Davies is the last person you want playing sentimental. Don't get me wrong, I'm all for the Desmond-Penny connection. But, good grief, give me more people in electric chairs, or chambers, or between two coils of light.

There was plenty of fun to be had in the 2004' plot given its fits of stupidity and the literal plunge into a new future it takes midway through. It was great to have it framed as a way of seeing, too, with that damned Eloise Hawking-Widmore-Whatever (why can't we get more Alexandra Krosney?) getting all haughty as usual and telling us, through Desmond, that we're not ready to see why things are the way things are in this primed world because, well, there are more episodes to come. It's kind of great just how much Cuse and Lindelof talk at the audience, but it's equally forever infuriating. Nobody likes a tease unless things really cut loose later. And there's millions of us hoping, some probably praying, that we get a great consummation in the end, a real happy ending. Continue Reading »




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Caprica: Season 1, Episode 7, "Ghosts in the Machine"

Ghosts in the Machine

Yesterday's mid-season finale could prove to be a make or break moment for the remaining fans that have hung in there for Caprica. The penultimate episode, "Ghosts in the Machine," embodies much of what is wrong with this series. Everytime one gets caught up in a given plotline, the episode cuts away to another less interesting one. I would have bet early on in this show's run that Esai Morales would have held my interest more than Eric Stoltz. But that's not how it's worked out.

The "A" story continues to follow Joseph's Orpheic search for his daughter Tamara's avatar in the virtual (under)world of New Cap City. The mysterious Emmanuelle, introduced at the climax of "The Imperfections of Memory," continues to guide him, revealing that she was paid to help him. Emmanuelle's most important contribution involves a virtual "drug" called Amp, a hack that heightens one's senses while in the game in order to enhance performance. An Amp junkie tells Joseph he can find Tamara-A (known in New Cap as the "dead girl") in a burlesque club called Mysteries. The club is presided over by a crossdresser known as Cerberus (Dmitry Chepovetsky), who asks Joseph a riddle that hearkens back to a speech his son made on Battlestar Galactica, "As the Gods overthrew the Titans, so has Man overthrown the Gods. But when Man visits his sins upon his children, how shall he be repaid?" Joseph is unable to solve it (in hindsight, of course, the clear answer would be "the Cylons"), so he doesn't get an answer regarding Tamara-A's whereabouts, but he does find some distinctive graffiti on the walls outside the club indicating she was there. Continue Reading »




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Last Lost: Season 6, Episode 8, "Ab Aeterno"

Ab Aeterno

[Editor and Author's Note: These weekly recaps will be cross-posted over at Vinyl is Heavy. We encourage comments at either joint.]

Easily the most "stylish" episode of the season, what with its longish takes and lowish angles, this Richard mythology is also not too great a reveal. How could Richard's "this is hell" thing be true? How could it not be misdirection? How come I kinda bought it at first, for a blip of a second, and then a few segments later almost bought it again? Must be because I've given up hope to a certain degree, and also because I've given up trying to outguess this shit. Must be because I was having fun with the mythology. After all, despite confirming my suspicions about what's really went down in that little love triangle, it was certainly entertaining to see Nestor Carbonell cry and squirm and play pawn. Continue Reading »




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Last Lost: Season 6, Episode 7, "Recon"

Recon

[Editor and Author's Note: These weekly recaps will be cross-posted over at Vinyl is Heavy. We encourage comments at either joint.]

Sawyer episodes are usually a lot of fun because he usually gets into a lot of mischief. This one proved no different. And, for once, I was totally into the sideways story where Sawyer's Jim, an LAPD detective working with Miles, for the simple fact that it played like a parody of the buddy cop genre. Sure, it was kind of cool to see Charlotte show up undamaged, and the final chase to throw Kate against a fence was lively, but mostly it was hilarious to see these two dudes play these roles. Only problem with it is that is that Ken Leung is a better actor than Josh Holloway and seems in on the joke a bit more. Not to say Holloway's no good, but he mostly scowls through the episode. Continue Reading »




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Caprica: Season 1, Episode 6, "The Imperfections of Memory"

Caprica Imperfections

"The Imperfections of Memory" is a brief quiet moment before the next two episodes, what I expect shall be a far noisier wrap-up to the first half of Caprica's season. It will return this fall to complete its first series, and the good news according to The Hollywood Reporter is that the show looks likely to be renewed. The even better news for the disenfranchised Battlestar Galactica fans who like a little "space" with their soap opera is that Syfy is hoping to get executive producer Ronald Moore to develop yet another BSG spinoff.

With Caprica's fate currently looking somewhat safe, I guess I don't have to fret that this last episode breaks the momentum which has been building. I can just enjoy some of the unusual ways this entry ventures outside some of the familiar territory it has comfortably settled in.

As the Graystone's grief over Zoe's death recedes just a bit (if not from their consciousness then from the show's and its Caprican population), Amanda starts having visions of her dead brother, Darius. These hallucinations spur some desperate, wonderful dreamlike images that run counter to the crisp, concrete world established on the series so far, even in V-world. After Clarice runs into Amanda at the MagLev memorial, she learns of Amanda's visions. This prompts Clarice to theorize that since Amanda can see the dead—and is mother to the messianic Zoe—God speaks through her the same way He speaks through her daughter. Clarice gives a rare bottle of Scorpion Ambrosia to Amanda in order to ingratiate herself, hoping to glean something from the oracular Graystone matriarch. Continue Reading »




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Catching Up with Caprica: Season 1, Episodes 4 and 5, "There Is Another Sky" and "Know Thy Enemy"

Caprica

No, I didn't give up after my misgivings with "Gravedancing." Family and work obligations simply got in the way of writing up the subsequent episodes. But these last two—which in having Caprica move away from the overt Battlestar Galactica references inch the series closer to the spirit of its predecessor—were a vast improvement. Now is a great time to catch up with the series, which seems on the verge of turning a corner in terms of standing on its own. Syfy ran a marathon on Friday of the first season thus far, leading up to the newest episode, "The Imperfections of Memory," which I'll review here sometime between now and Monday. In the meantime, let's play catch-up with my quick takes on the last two episodes. Continue Reading »




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Last Lost: Season 6, Episode 6, "Dr. Linus"

Dr. Linus

[Editor and Author's Note: These weekly recaps will be cross-posted over at Vinyl is Heavy. We encourage comments at either joint.]

This week's episode would be nothing but cheese were it not for Michael Emerson as Ben, or Dr. Linus, and his skills to invest every little gesture with character. I'm sure our history with the character plays a part in his performance (we know how his face has changed, or what happens when we watch it change), but there's a lot going on in Ben in this episode. Emerson gets to flex all kinds of adjectives: plain sad, indignant, obsequious, desperate, dismay, righteous, sorrow, shame, and sheepish. It's just the right amount of showy to get all kinds of attention. And it's deserved. After all, it's a redemption episode that hinges on a confession. Continue Reading »




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Last Lost: Season 6, Episode 5, "Sundown"

Lost Sundown

[Editor and Author's Note: These weekly recaps will be cross-posted over at Vinyl is Heavy. We encourage comments at either joint.]

Well, cool. There were some risks taken, some serious crazy, and some killings. Brutal fucking murders, even. A ruthless episode that started slow and crescendoed somewhere beyond Apocalypse Now with this new Kurtz I'm calling Dark Locke not a raving nobody stuck in his temple of doom but heading out into the jungle, ready, smiling at his good fortune to gather a crowd and, it seems, pull the wool a little over a lot of eyes. That is, this week was a big step forward towards real consequence and conclusion. Not only that, we got to see the end of that goofy odd couple, Dogen and Lennon, and we didn't have to really deal with Jack. Bonus: Kate's looking a fool, and useless, a sheep forever and hardly clothed wolf-like.

But Locke's that reversed, and easy, or more: not just a wolf wrapped in a smile but a smoke monster aching to wreak havoc. And, like a good chess player, he parried and fell back and then struck from a new angle to topple the other side. Of course he chose the arrival of darkness as his deadline. Continue Reading »




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Last Lost: Season 6, Episode 4, "Lighthouse"

Lost LighthouseLost Lighthouse

[Editor and Author's Note: These weekly recaps will be cross-posted over at Vinyl is Heavy. We encourage comments at either joint.]

After seeing four by Dorsky (more later, non-Lost fans), helping my bud Brian haul some keyboards, and fixing a supremely late dinner sandwich, I settled into the couch with the DVR for what amounted to a pretty basic episode with very few answers. But I guess I can't expect the show to live up to the promos, cuz that's what promos do: They whet the whistle. In any case, this lighthouse was cool, but hardly a revelation. Just another component in Jacob's all seeing all knowing apparent benevolence. Okay, so Jacob's been watching these "losties"—in particular Jack—for a while now; not too big a surprise given we've seen Jacob alive (and seemingly well) in the days of man'o'wars and unstylish smocks. Nor should it surprise that Jacob wanted the lighthouse inoperable after all. No, the biggest scare was: Is Jack going to fuck up Hurley?

Of course Jack wouldn't hurt Hurley. Lindlelof and Cuse don't want to lose even more good will with their audience. Besides, Hurley's got to stick around to talk to Jacob's ghost or spirit or whatever. What made the scene shake, though, was how uncool Matthew Fox was: He really got wild eyed. He really sold Jack at the end of his rope. But you'd like to think a dude who was willing to admit he came back to the island because he was broken and was wrong about just about everything since that return (and knows it) had already hit rock bottom. But no. The pile-on continues. Jack's almost a Job. (I don't want to admit the links between Shepherd and who in the bible was a shepherd, or simply what a shepherd is, just yet—but, there, I gave the thought a thought.) And don't get me started on the off island junk of this episode, though there were wrinkles in the otherwise cornball "dad issues" plot. —The main wrinkle, of course, being not Jack's memory problems, and that mysterious scar on his torso, but Dogen showing up at the recital hall; but that was too vague to draw any conclusions from at this point. Continue Reading »




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Caprica: Season 1, Episode 3, "Gravedancing"

Gravedancing

"Gravedancing" squanders the dramatic potential set up by last episode's conclusion where Joseph Adama asks his brother Sam to avenge his wife and daughter's death by killing Amanda Graystone. In defusing (and diffusing) the threat over the course of an hour, with side trips into the customs and practices of the Capricans, the Taurons, the Global Defense Department (GDD), and the Soldiers of the One (STO), this week's entry of Caprica becomes little more than a lukewarm table-setter for future episodes of the series.

The problem is viewer patience is wearing thin. Newbies (like my wife) are wondering what the big deal is, unwilling to give Caprica a pass strictly based on its progenitor's reputation. Even veteran fans of Battlestar Galactica are wondering if Caprica will ever strike a chord of resonance the way the former seemed to do so deftly. For a moment, last episode's stunning conclusion (Joseph Adama whispering "Balance it out," implying Sam murder his nemesis' wife) seemed to complicate the emotional melodrama beyond its soapy roots. But "Gravedancing" and its awful dialogue, rooted in some filmic and racial stereotypes, is a setback for the fledgling series. The Taurons behave like cliched Mafia stand-ins, with even Joseph's mother-in-law, Ruth (Karen Austin), uttering such trite Godfather-lite bromides as, "You get the best things from enemies, because they're scared of you." Even the wonderfully complex Sam is reduced to a two-dimensional thug in this one, talking about "getting even" and so forth. Continue Reading »




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