Recently devoured:
- Trapped (AAA)
- Bosch (A)
- Taboo (Don't miss the opportunity of watching Locke)
- Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency
- Sherlock
- Black Mirror (San Junipero is amazing)
- Spotless
- Happy Valley
Now I'm watching:
- Santa Clarita Diet
- Black Sails
- The Get Down
luis prado alonso
The Young Pope
Another vote for Broadchurch in the "British-crime-procedural" category.
Stranger Things was great. I wanted the OA to be as good, but it wasn't.
I've been enjoying Billions on showtime.
If you have HBO, the options open up dramatically. The recent stuff like Game of Thrones, but don't miss the Wire. Best show ever. You have to stick with it though, can get slow at times, but it pays off.
We watched Game of Thrones for the third time the whole way through but then...
The Killing- first season was better, but great all around crime show
Stranger Things-awesome!
The OA- not as good as Stranger Things, but interesting
Freaks and Geeks- wife really likes it. I like Apatow's stuff, so I don't mind rewatching.
Watched all the episodes while under the weather yesterday. One of those series where headphones really help keep all the characters sorted and allow you to catch the well-crafted slip-ups by key characters as they try to wiggle out of things. And the relationships between the characters are so complicated and tightly wound. I highly recommend watching this series.
I am couch bound again today, so I plan to watch the other BBC series, Smiley's People, which is part 3 of the 3 part Karla Triology by Le Carré. BBC never did part 2, The Honorable Schoolboy. They did do a version of A Perfect Spy, and it is on YouTube, but episode one has been locked by the BBC and other episodes are strangely crippled by small image size, high pitched voices, and an undulating background.
So, I started watching Bletchley Park.
Excellent. And the best part is Rachael Sterling. Reminded me of all those childhood fantasies involving her mother ....
I'm watching Broadchurch on the recommentions, I would suggest Wallender.
Jorn...There's a scene in TTSS, where Sir Alec is carefully rummaging through an individual's personal belongings. Not a word is spoken for what seems like an eternity and you feel like you're in Smiley's head in trying to imagine the significance of the items that he is reviewing.
Also, I finished John LeCarre's autobiography over Christmas...The Pigeon Tunnel. Well worth the read if you like his work and there are many stories in the book that give insight into his life, books and movies alike. Feel welcome drop a line and RW's library will loan it to you.
rw saunders
hey, how lucky can one man get.
Wallander is best (I think) in the Swedish version. Kenneth Branagh is good, but the original versions on Swedish television were slightly sweeter but each worked script-wise like a clockwork diorama. There was a theme for each show - immigrants for example - that was woven into each and every character's relationship to the main plot and each other. For a writer, at least, they are great studies in how much topical information could be almost invisibly inserted into an episode. You know, the anti-immigrant politician finds that he was adopted, his mother was a Holocaust survivor, the person killed was an immigrant but he actually was not an innocent, the killing was retribution for acts in a foreign country, etc. No one is quite who they appear to be and everyone has their subject position eroded by events and revelations through the process of each episode.
Not blood and gore deep dark depression and excessive misery like the Branagh version, but better I think in the quality of its nuanced construction.
That's a great scene. I heard an interview with Le Carré (can't remember his real name just now) where he said there was a way to tear apart a room that was not neat and tidy but would not arouse the suspicion of its owner like actually destroying everything. Seemed like the scene you mentioned captured that description pretty well.
I saw one other mention of Taboo, I'll strongly second that.
I'll be incredibly disappointed if there isn't a second, third...season.
Thanks Jorn. I'll have to give the Swedish version of Wallander a viewing.
Midway thru season 2 of Broadchurch, and I must say that there are way too many ridiculous beach/cliff scenes without any purpose other than tourism? Lawyers do not contemplate cases on the high cliffs with beautiful cliffs - do they? Good drama? Perhaps, but...........Everyone has a big butt.
Luke Cage is great, but it is only one season so far.
Detectorists is really good.
IT Crowd is hilarious
It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia. But just jump to season 3.
Black Books is a hilarious how.
Merlin is good.
Doc Martin is another good british show, sort of a northern exposure in an english beach town.
A guilty pleasure is Trailer Park Boys. The first 7 seasons are really fun, the characters are endearing. But the last two or three have just been boring with mean and dumb humor.
-Joe
+ for Fleabag, Sherlock and Santa Clarita Diet.
I'm watching The Fall with Gillian Anderson. It's reminiscent of Dexter in a good way.
On recommend here I'll give Broad Church a shot.
Josh Simonds
www.nixfrixshun.com
www.facebook.com/NFSspeedshop
www.bicycle-coach.com
Vsalon Fromage De Tête
Bookmarks