Thursday, March 31, 2022

March 2022 TV

Live-action.

 

- Dear White People, season 4. Sometimes stumbling, sometimes brilliant; a good ending for a still fascinating tv series overall. Worth several discussions. 

- Pieces of her. So-so thriller that becomes increasingly implausible as it goes on.

- One day at a time, season 3. Excellent sitcom, or rather excellent tv show in general, quite recommended.

 

Other

 

- Housamo: Shoggoth's memories. Peculiar, sometimes head-scatching yet often fascinating exploration of the concept of time loops and alternative history of sorts.

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Golden Kamuy, vol. 15

 


- Golden Kamuy, vol. 15. Satoru Noda.


A journey to the hostile region of Karafuto, a region of wild animals, extreme cold --and Russian combats. Wherein the cast will face certain revelations about themselves...

The extraordinary saga of Golden Kamuy continues with the characters spread into smaller groups and facing several twists of fate that will also force them to confront painful truths. Be it Sugimoto and his perceived failure to protect his loved ones, or Ashirpa seeing the terrible conditions in which her people are forced to live, or Tsukishima reckoning with the numerous times he was lied to and manipulated in the past...

But GK always knows its audience, and so homoerotism is never in short supply. A love for male bodies, or combat as a special kind of art therapy, say.

We shall watch these fascinating characters evolve through a chain of harsh adventures.

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Wednesday, March 23, 2022

Beastars, vol. 16

 


- Beastars, vol. 16. Paru Itagaki


After a few months' pause, I’m re-taking the notes for each Beastar volume. Let’s see…


C. 134


One detail about Leano’s mutation that a lot of people missed: Besides the scales in her back and part of her arms, one of her eyes becomes reptilian (pinprick pupil) and the other remains canine (big pupils). 



135 


The Deep Night festival, or just plain full moon party. I really like the street fair atmosphere it has. 



136 


This entire chapter pretty much confirms that Louis is a Sub —which is not the same thing as a Bottom, mind you! A lot of straight people make this mistake. Either way it stands to reason that both girls, Juno and Azuki, reason that Louis would rather be seduced and dominated. They are not that far off…



137 


We see with increasing clarity how obsessed society is with pureblood and the discrimination that hybrids live under. Same-species couples, preferably same-breed, are well regarded in society, receive government subsidiaries and even get threats from business places. Then there’s the tv crew people requesting that interviewees keep their language tame and harmless, for the privileged majority audience. 


It’s not too different from our world…


138 


The origin of the 500 mice, Yafya’s allies. Notice that as they are so small, their life expectancy is about 43 years. 


Notice, too, the police corruption: They openly torture the mice and threaten to make them “disappear”, as no one will care about dead outcasts. 


Terrifying.  



139 


We know that Melon is a killer, but the fast food employee thinks he’s creepy merely for being an hybrid and for not eating what he’s expected to. The banality of evil, if you will. 


Then there is the sexual theme —notice Melon’s sadomasochist relationship with his tattoo artist, Holger. 



140 


And speaking of sexual themes: Legosi often gets physically intimate with his own opponents. Here, he goes so far as to fantasize about Melon hugging him from behind, both of them shirtless. 


Now: Pity can be deceitful, too. Here, it’s what makes Legosi fall into Melon’s trap, and so again he’s nearly killed by the same murderer. 



141 


Nevertheless, Legosi represents hope, as much as he often pays dearly for it. Here, against all odds, he survives and makes allies out of both friend and foe. 



142 


Finally, it is emphasized that for hybrids, from children to adults, life is constant peril. So much so there is an actual fascist organization that wishes to exterminate them. 



EXTRAS


I think it’s very interesting how Itagaki will sometimes draw on personal anecdotes and make them the basis for powerful scenes, as good writers will. Here, her somewhat silly moment in the subway, as a teen, later evolved into a crucial moment for one of her characters. 


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Wednesday, March 16, 2022

Winnie-the-Pooh



 
- Winnie-the-pooh. A. A. Milne. Illustrated by Ernest H. Shepard. 


A series of tales told to one Christopher Robin and his teddy bear —originally Rupert Bear, then Winnie-TheR-Pooh, and finally just Pooh Bear —about themselves and several others in a forest. Be it easily spooked Piglet, bossy Rabbit, depressed (and sometimes passive-aggressive) Eeyore, chatty (and sometimes arrogant) Owl, motherly Kanga, very young Roo, and quite a few others more. Tales of adventure and friendship for young readers, with something of gentler fairy tales and wonder. 


Super-famous classic of children’s literature, almost as beloved as seemingly resented (usually by ‘edgy’ adults, ahem! But also, history has it, by the author, the illustrator and even the real Christopher themselves). While it’s much more known for the numerous animated adaptations, it’s the original text and illustrations that truly made it a perennial tale.


And like virtually all tales better known by adaptations (animated but also movies in general, or tv shows), readers are often surprised to see how different the original version is. In this case, with a charming propensity for clever, seemingly nonsensical poetry woven in, and a certain dose of dry British humor. Also the illustrations —Shepard gives the tales a certain whimsical spark that makes it all work so well. 


Followed by a sequel and two somewhat-related poetry collections, all usually presented as a single pack. 


Quite recommended for all ages. 


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Wednesday, March 9, 2022

A streetcar named Desire.

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- A streetcar named Desire. Tennessee Williams


The New Orleans French Quarter. Stanley Kowalski and his wife Stella (formerly DuBois). Into their lives of squalor, intense poker nights, wild lovemaking (currently expecting a child) and brutal fights —comes Stella’s older sister, Blanche. A once-glamorous but now fading Southern Belle, Blanche’s pretensions of glamour catch the eye of one of Stanley’s poker buddies, sensitive Mitch. But delusion and bigotry will prove no match for harsh revenge, leading to a memorably tragic finale. 


A multi-prized stage-play by Williams, adapted numerous times to television and cinema (as well as to stage, including musical and even ballet variations) —even presented in an infamous episode of the perennial pop culture product ‘The Simpsons’. It remains as powerful today as yesterday —if some of our sympathies have since shifted and others have acquired a certain nuance (but this IS a deeply nuanced stage-play). The raw exhibition of prejudice (racism, homophobia, classicism) on the part of Blanche can make her hard to like —yet she is such a complex character it is hard not to pity her eventual doom. Or to rage against the abuse she ultimately suffers. But the other characters have plenty to discuss about, all as well being sympathetic one moment and loathsome the next. They feel like, wonder of wonders —real people. People who as often fight and gleefully betray each other —and as often make up and genuinely love each other. 


A very thought-provoking play, then, more than worth a read. Is it a deservedly true Classic? Without  a doubt, but even more important is to read for ourselves and find out. To discuss amongst us and discover what we can see of ourselves in it. 


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Tuesday, March 1, 2022

February 2022 TV

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IN ENGLISH:


- Kevin can F himself. 


A put-upon housewife has had more than enough of her moronic husband and decides to off him. Intriguing fusion of braindead sitcoms and darkly comedic crime shows, which thus gleefully tear each other down. While it doesn’t go quite as far as the premise would have surely allowed for, it’s nevertheless a highly original concept that merits watching. 



- Yellowjackets. 


In the 90’s, a girls’ soccer team crashed in the Canadian wilderness. More than ten years later, the few survivors are determined to bury the truth about what happened during their ordeal —no one may find out the many horrible things they committed just to stay alive. Essentially a more exploitative version of “The wilds”. Far-fetched but pretty entertaining. 


- Unwell. 


Docu-series about assorted health fads, from essential oils to bee poison. While more ‘exploitainment’ than information, it’s nevertheless worth a look and a few follow-up discussions. 


- Inventing Anna. 


Dramatization of the real-life notorious con-woman who scammed many of New York’s wealthiest and naivest. Gleefully black humored, though it lasts a touch too long. At its best moments it plays almost like a Ryan Murphy show, with the mandatory camp that entails. 



IN OTHER LANGUAGES:


- Magia Record (season 2). 


- La divina gula. 


Literally “divine gluttony”, a docu-series about some of the wildest, most elaborate concepts in Mexican street food —as liable to make you hungry as to make you sick, but more than worth a look. 



MOVIES


- The Eternals. 


A very rare case of a movie that is at once too ambitious and too short-sighted for what it winds up being —the lastest MCU movie entry, and by now showing exactly why mega-conglomerates like Disney + Marvel + Tons more —are not the right people for high-concept productions. 


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