My new personalised doormat arrived today. Hands up who gets the reference?
Thursday, 19 September 2013
Monday, 9 September 2013
Rediscovery
One of the many things I had to replace with my separation was my XBox - after all my Kinect was pretty useless without it! But I couldn't replace it before I moved and with the XBox only allowing you to transfer things to a storage device of more than 32G I lost all my save games.
In some cases, it's a real irritation. So close to 100%ing Lego: LotR and now I have to start from scratch. But in some cases it's given me a chance to enjoy replaying some things from the start.
Typically, when something is not readily available that is what you want to have. Not having played it for ages, I wanted nothing more than to play LA Noire. And having picked it up again, I wonder why I never finished playing it the first time around.
I had forgotten how inovative the gameplay is. How fun it was to guess at whether someone is lying or telling the truth. How much I enjoyed chasing the bad guys committing street crimes. How satisfying it is to get a confession.
So I've found another positive of my separation. That's got to be a good thing, right?
Tuesday, 3 September 2013
Kidnapping, Arson and Murder
That seems to be the order of the day in Chester's Mill. All of that occurs in the 48 hours following the arrival of the Dome.
The second and third episodes of Under the Dome mostly seem to be concerned with setting up the future conflicts that will escalate within the confines of the Dome. There are very few alliances formed (though city-kid Norrie and geeky Joe seem to have made a connection that results in synchronised fitting), but lots of suspicion and aggravation.
Reality and prejudice make themselves known fairly clearly. When Norrie disappears from her Moms' sight overnight, several people at the bar make comments including "how does that work" (on how the black Carolyn can be the white Norrie's mum) and "did you think they would posh the gay out of her?" (when told that they were on their way to drop Norrie off at a prestigious boarding school). As much as I'd hate to admit it, that attitude probably can still be found in some places in small town America. And it is great to see a same-sex couple with a teenage kid being depicted on prime-time TV. And Norrie herself acknowledges the possibility of prejudice in her total denial of it. She isn't afraid to stand up to the local bully, but covers up any possibility of her parents both being female.
Barbie also suffers from a different kind of prejudice: the outsider in a small town. Carolyn, Alice and Norrie are spared this - partly because they have a good reason for being stuck in the town and partly because they are just considered freaks. But Barbie is more mysterious. His "just passing through" doesn't seem to hold much water with folk. His taking down of an armed man is much commented on (though no one gives him credit for organising people to fight the fire). And both Big Jim and Julia seem inclined to believe the psychotic Junior's acusations of an unprovoked assault.
We get no further on in discovering what Big Jim was doing with so many propane tanks and why the Sheriff was covering for him, though we get another conspiritor in the strung out reverend (who doubles as the town undertaker). And even though Big Jim tells Barbie the story of how he got the nickname "Big", a story which much be well known in the town, only Barbie and Junior (who gets the brunt of his fathers malice at home) seem to see past the upstanding citizen act to the untrustworthy and potentially violent man beneath.
I usually like character development episodes, and this early in they really are necessary to establish the people the audience need to bond with if the series is to survive. But, other than seeing the dynamic between Big Jim and Junior which may explain why Junior is such a psychopath, we don't really learn any more about the characters than we did in the pilot. And the story isn't moved forward at all either. The fire seems to be a big set piece hangover from the pilot, but other than that there isn't much real drama in either episode.
I've been told that after a few slow character episodes, the show picks back up. I hope that happens soon - it is only a 13 episode season.
Monday, 2 September 2013
I couldn't resist...
Saturday, 24 August 2013
Pink Stars are falling!
I’m writing this a little late, having seen the
show at the beginning of the week, but I wanted some time to let this show sink
in and to have a think about it.
I remember when the Stephen King book Under
the Dome first came out, picking it up in a bookshop and thinking I’d have
to get it when it came out in paperback. I never did but I think I will now
since the concept is so fascinating. And I do enjoy seeing the differences between TV shows and the books they're based on.
I actually first heard about the series because some colleagues were discussing it. My boss saw a taped copy, passed it onto someone else and they ended up enthusiastically discussing it over lunch several times. When I saw C5 was airing it, even though I'm not usually a fan of their output, I thought I'd give it a go.
It's definitely a show I'll be sticking with. I wasn't as instantly "OMG this is fantastic" as my colleagues, but hearing them chat about the first episode had spoiled a couple of the big setpiece moments so I was waiting for the cow chopped in half, the concertinaed truck and the exploding pacemaker. But it's still intreguing. I can already see that there's going to be a lot of interpersonal conflict that could lead to interesting places. And it looks like it will be quite dark. Junior Rennie and his dad "Big" Jim seem to be people to watch. And what will happen to the spark between Julia and Barbie when she finds out what he was doing pre-titles.
It was a bit gorer than I was expecting. They showed a lot more blood and nastiness, but I suppose you'd expect a few nasty injuries if I giant invisible dome suddenly dropped over a town. And they have to create some major excitement in the pilot to keep people coming back from the pilot.
And "the pink stars are falling. The pink stars are falling in lines". Stated by two characters I'm pretty sure have never met. What does that mean?
I guess I'll stay tuned to find out.
Monday, 12 August 2013
Doctor Who and the Daleks: Book Review
This is a cross-post from my Goodreads page. I know it's the second DW book I've reviewed in two days, but holidays and long train journeys give an excellent opportunity to read and these books are never terribly long. I promise it won't usually be such a regular occurance.
Well, this is different. Most Target novelisations
are direct adaptations of the script for the TV series. They might add in what
a character thought to explain their motivations, include a scene that was in
one of the original scripts but was cut for time, or fill in a plot hole, but
in the main they are straight adaptations with little room for creativity from
the author.
David Whitaker’s adaptation was, according to his
Wikipedia page, based on Terry Nation’s original notes for the story. But the
first 20% is completely different to what occurs in the episode (I have seen
the serial several times, most recently towards the beginning of this year so I
am pretty familiar with it). It would not have been out of place as the
introductory episode of the series, except it is also different from the
beginning of An Unearthly Child. Ian
Chesterton is a bored school teacher who has just been rejected for a job at a
science research centre. Lost on Barnes Common in the fog, he is stumbled upon
by an injured Barbara Wright who has just come out of a car wreck. She is a
bored secretary who has taken up tutoring a private pupil for extra cash. She
was driving that student, Susan English (not Foreman?), home when their car
crashed. They go back for the badly injured Susan, but are unable to find her.
From there the story is familiar to people who have seen An Unearthly Child – they meet an old man who is suspiciously
evasive and a locked, out-of-place Police Box, they fight their way inside to
discover it is a space ship. There is anger, resentment and disbelief, and then
acceptance of what has happened. Then the book finally gets into the same
territory as the originally screened episode.
In another departure, the book is not written in
the omniscient third person that is usual for the Target novelisations.
Instead, everything is from the direct POV of Ian Chesterton. Things that he
couldn’t have seen, like Susan’s trip back to the TARDIS for the medication
necessary to save them from radiation poisoning, is relayed back to him by
someone who was there. This change makes the most of the altered beginning, as
we get Ian’s internal reactions to his situation and surroundings. We can read
his thoughts as he moves from scepticism to belief at his being in a Time/Space
machine and it is a delight to discover the marvels of the TARDIS through his
eyes – the shower is definitely something I’d like to try out. I would have
preferred less of the animosity that was shoehorned into the Ian/Barbara
relationship and leads to a very obvious place at the book’s conclusion.
The other addition, not normally present in the
Target books but found in my copy, were the illustrations. These line drawings
correspond more to the TV series than the book – for example the first drawing
Susan appears in shows her in the blouse and tight fitting cropped trousers of the
TV show, rather than the bright jumper and ski trousers she’s described as
wearing on the previous page. The drawings themselves are actually quite nice
little sketches, though the artist clearly had some trouble with accurately rendering
the faces.
All in all, this is a curious little piece, quite
different from the normal Doctor Who
novelisation, or even most TV tie-ins. This was written before Whitaker did any
of his script writing for the actual series and may have been, in a way, an
audition piece. An interesting little curiosity for fans of the series.
Sunday, 11 August 2013
The Eight Doctors: Book Review
This is a cross-post from my Goodreads page and was the 62nd book I've read this year. I did say I read a lot, right?
I last read this book shortly after the Doctor Who TV movie was first released.
A big fan and an impressionable tween, I read it with delight – simply happy
that there was a new Who book out,
featuring the rather attractive new doctor, that I hadn’t read yet, having
devoured all the Target novelisations owned by my local library several years
earlier.
Reading it now, sixteen year on, while I am still a
fan, I can look at it more objectively. It’s still a fun romp through all of
the Doctor’s seven previous incarnations. Only the First and Seventh Doctor
meetings are brief. The others tend to either add flavour to the conclusion of
a story (as in the Second Doctor meeting), or show a coda to the events of an
adventure (as in the Third and Fourth Doctor meetings). There is a side plot of
President Flavia watching procedures in confusion and facing a minor conspiracy
on Gallifrey, and the Sixth Doctor gets a massive role when the Eighth
interferes in his trial.
It’s Terrance Dicks at his best – rattling along
nice and quick, fixing a few minor plot holes or adding reasonable explanations
for phenomena seen in televised stories as he goes. The language is simple and
easy to follow, Dicks always remembering that children might be reading. It did
lead to some laughably tame language from a 1990’s drug dealer and his gang,
chasing the girl who is to become the Eighth Doctor’s companion in the series
of books that follows. My copy also had several glaring typos that a good proof
reader should have picked up on.
A pleasant little Sunday afternoon read for a fan
of the series. Each Doctor has his little moment, made all the more enjoyable
as a retrospective on them in the show’s 50th anniversary year.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)