AmateisGal
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 6,126
- Location
- Nebraska
Boyfriend and I started watching Mr. Robot last weekend. Intense but good.
Our version of Starz does not have Pennyworth or Doom Patrol. It has a lot of bad television from the seventies and eighties. They were bad shows in their day and have not gotten better with age. We watched Black Sails a few years ago and enjoyed it, overall, I would say that there is not much worth watching on Starz.We have Amazon Prime and getting Starz thru it is only $5.99 CAD a month, but it has for reasons I do not know, season two of Pennyworth, but not season one.
And it does not have the Eva Green show at all.
I must assume that national versions of this platform have different schedules.
Bummer!
We have Amazon Prime and getting Starz thru it is only $5.99 CAD a month, but it has for reasons I do not know, season two of Pennyworth, but not season one.
And it does not have the Eva Green show at all.
I must assume that national versions of this platform have different schedules.
Bummer!
Our version of Starz does not have Pennyworth or Doom Patrol. It has a lot of bad television from the seventies and eighties. They were bad shows in their day and have not gotten better with age. We watched Black Sails a few years ago and enjoyed it, overall, I would say that there is not much worth watching on Starz.
Once The Luminaries is over, we will leave Starz behind. Although I should give American Gods a chance. I barely remember the only episode that I have seen, but Ian McShane is in it so I figure I should give it a shot.Gah, that is a shame. FWIW, it would be ideal to see Season 1 of Pennyworth first, but while there are obviously events that go to character in the first series, the dramatic flow of the second is sufficiently contained (at least so far, three of ten episodes in) that I think you could still make perfect sense of it, then treat season one as a prequel of sorts. It's one show I'll be buying a BD box set of as soon as it is "complete", though I do hope it runs for some series yet. The one thing I can't find any information on yet is whether it's purely a television conceit (like Gotham), or whether there is a graphic novel source material to it. If the latter doesn't exist, it would be a perfect medium to flesh out further the Pennyworth universe. Clearly, as best as I can make out, WW2 wasn't quite the same Allied success (did Britain reach an uneasy truce with Hitler in 1940?), the Blackshirts (known instead as the Raven League) remained a significant threat, there's no Prince Phillip but a young and single Queen Liz on the throne in the version of the sixties in which this is set... Oh, and executions are publicly screened on television, and the gibbet is still a thing. There's huge room for a graphic novel backdrop to explain the wider universe in which the first series takes place, let alone the second, and the period in between. Cracking show, with so much room to keep it going for a long time.
Clearly a very different animal from the version we have in the UK. That's a real shame.
In general not a fan of French TV shows but have just begun to watch "Call my Agent"...a light comedy but character driven and I am enjoying it a lot.
I was a big "Goodnight Sweetheart" fan in the '90s, and in rewatching it recently I was struck by how -- well, shamelessly contemptible -- the lead character comes across as being. Gary Sparrow, for better or worse, points directly forward to the antiheroes of 2000s-2010s "quality television."
It was interesting also to see the one-shot revival-revisitation of the show that came out a few years ago -- which took the fish-out-of-water time-travel premise and doubled it back on itself.
A couple of episodes of The Lost Pirate Kingdom on Netflix last night. Entertaining enough, but I don’t know if I will watch another episode.