Monthly Archives: January 2015

Breaking Bad: What is Walter White’s Master?

breaking-bad_cdcfbfThis write-up was written under the assumption that the reader has watched all of Breaking Bad. Please be aware that there are spoilers from the entire series within, and proceed with caution.

There’s a great scene towards the end of Paul Thomas Anderson’s film The Master in which the film’s title comes to light. After Joaquin Phoenix’s Freddie Quell returns to Philip Seymour Hoffman’s Lancaster Dodd following a long absence, Dodd explains that we’re all slaves to our “masters,” the drives and motivations that inform every decision that we make. The speech explains a lot about about Freddie, who has spent his life substituting his love for a woman with extreme alcohol abuse, followed by religion, and eventually a renewed appetite for women. Whenever he felt the need to give up one “master,” a hole was left in his being that he needed to fill with a new one.

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Why Lost Works, Why Under the Dome Doesn’t, and How It Really Is “the Characters, Stupid”

lost_5df2f0[Regarding spoilers: I do talk about a few plot points below, but the majority of them are in broad strokes. I mention some of the mysterious elements in the first season of Lost, and the general plot descriptions of a few episodes of Under the Dome. There are also a couple of relatively specific plot points from the show Flashforward. None of these are particularly explicit, and I certainly would not expect them to ruin the shows in question for anybody. However, if you are concerned about knowing anything AT ALL about Lost or Under the Dome (the show, not the book), you may want to avoid reading this article. I would consider this article spoiler safe, though]

The most traditional, popular form for a TV drama is the procedural. Usually, a procedural follows a professional team of some sort (cops, or investigators, or doctors, or lawyers) as they take on a new case every week. It’s a simple, solid formula that is still abundant in network programming because it’s effective. Since each episode is a new story, new viewers can easily jump in and start watching at any moment, and they don’t have to worry about missing an episode from time to time. However, because procedurals follow the same team week-to-week, the viewer starts to feel familiar with the characters on the show. A good procedural is the epitome of “hang-out” television: there’s little commitment on the part of the viewer, but watching the show starts to feel like dropping in on old friends.

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The Last of Us: One of the Best Arcs in Gaming

The-Last-of-Us1Spoiler-Free General Review:

Gaming as a medium is much less evolved than the other visual mediums. I’ve often likened gaming’s current state to the early days of film, when many of the most-respected pieces were simply pre-existing plays, recorded from a vantage point not far removed from the audience and presented as-is. This was before montage, close-ups, and many of the devices we now utilize as the primary tools of filmmaking.

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Hannibal Reborn: New Life For An Exhausted Franchise

hannibal_b6417eSpoiler-Free General Review: 

I’d be hard-pressed to think of a concept more preemptively played out than a Hannibal Lecter TV series. For one, the Hannibal character has been exhausted in two mediums already. While the franchise peaked tremendously in 1991’s Silence of the Lambs, even Anthony Hopkins’ electric performance as Hannibal Lector could not sustain the subpar plotting of Hannibal or the pedestrian Red Dragon. Even worse, they gave the notoriously mysterious character an absurd origin story in Hannibal Rising, explaining away elements of the character that nobody wanted or needed to know in the first place.

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Man of Steel: A Gorgeous Film Brought To Its Knees By Poorly Structured Storytelling

man-of-steel_82c9dcSpoiler-Free General Review:

 

Man of Steel has so much going for it. The cast is across-the-board excellent, from Michael Shannon’s righteously-angry Zod to Kevin Costner’s loving and protective Pa Kent to Amy Adams’s intelligent and self-sufficient Lois Lane.The movie is stunningly gorgeous and absolutely nails the iconography of Superman (if there are any doubters as to the latter, just rewatch this trailer, which is more powerful than the film itself and arguably tells a better story http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T6DJcgm3wNY). The score is incredible, evoking the loneliness and melancholy of Kal-El along with the hope for a better tomorrow represented by Superman. The sound work and visual effects are stunningly brilliant, and the action sequences demonstrate what may be the best example of a super-powered brawl in film to date.

It’s just a shame that the narrative structure is so shoddy. Long scenes are presented before we have any context for them. Way too much time is spent on exposition. There is a poorly explained and uninteresting Macguffin device that serves as the villain’s primary motivation. Most unfortunate of all, the film has no center, and a protagonist who still feels alien to the viewers by the end of the film.

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