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What was the last TV show you watched?

MisterCairo

I'll Lock Up
Messages
7,005
Location
Gads Hill, Ontario
I came across "The Night Manager" on Prime, a series from 2016 based on the John LeCarre book. A cracking good spy thriller with a great cast. Finish it tonight and tomorrow watch the Brit lead in this one star in the biopic of Hank Williams. I am skeptical but willing to be wrong.

Wife and I loved the Night Manager.
 

MisterCairo

I'll Lock Up
Messages
7,005
Location
Gads Hill, Ontario
Arriving August 3rd.

Arrived early:

20210729_103531.jpg
 

EngProf

Practically Family
Messages
608
You and the kitty made a wise purchase. I watched an episode on late-night TV last night and it's still funny.
Good casting, good acting, good writing, and good directing...
Speaking of directing, one of the directors who worked on a lot of the Barney Miller episodes was Noam Pitlik, who was one of the "nuts/patients" on the first Bob Newhart show.
 

Doctor Strange

I'll Lock Up
Messages
5,252
Location
Hudson Valley, NY
Loki on Disney+. I liked it more than The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, but less than WandaVision. Tom Hiddleston is always a hoot in the role, and he gets able support from Owen Wilson, etc. (Of particular interest to old-school Marvel fans like myself, we also get the great Richard E. Grant as "Old Loki" at one point, portrayed in the original-appearance Kirby costume and wrinkled, skinny, old man conception.) Like all these series, it has ups and downs and not everything works, but it makes a bold stab to take the story in new directions.

However, what this means for the larger MCU has me fairly confused. This series' conception of timelines and the multiverse doesn't really fit with how these things were previously treated in Doctor Strange and Endgame. Even Thanos and the Infinity Stones are downgraded to being merely pesky problems in individual timelines and multiverses, as far as the bureaucracy policing the timelines is concerned. (They have drawers full of Infinity Stones!)

I mean, I know the MCU is soon going to get bigger and more complicated, especially by The Eternals, and it's not like 60 years of comic books haven't had conflicting ideas and retcons aplenty all along. Still, I'm confused.
 

Edward

Bartender
Messages
25,081
Location
London, UK
Spent the last couple of days of my leave binging American Horror Story. I saw the first series years ago on DVD, but the rest is new to me. Current on the Freakshow series, which so far is by far my favourite, not least because it looks so beautiful, wardrobe especially. Also enjoying some of the themes they explore, in particular the difficult position many of the 'freaks' found themselves in as the shows disappeared, but without increased alternative options for employment for the 'different'.

I mean, I know the MCU is soon going to get bigger and more complicated, especially by The Eternals, and it's not like 60 years of comic books haven't had conflicting ideas and retcons aplenty all along. Still, I'm confused.

I just hope (probably in vain) that Disney don't go down the road the source material sometimes did, i.e. spreading the same story across so many titles that you either commit financially to it in a much bigger way, or get 'shut out' of the whole story. There's a chance we might take up a Disney+ subscription if it came up on a sale deal for a brief period at some future point, but tbh the more they seek to monopolise certain content, the less likely I become to actually engage with their content. Not a conscious choice, just something I've noticed happen subconsciously.
 

Edward

Bartender
Messages
25,081
Location
London, UK
Last week I watched Mrs Biggs, an ITV drama telling the story of Charmaine Biggs from meeting Ronnie Biggs in 1957, through their marriage, the Great Train Robbery, on the run and beyond. Very well written, with excellent performances in the leads by Sheridan Smith as the eponymous Mrs Biggs and Danny Mays as Ronnie. Fascinating as that robbery was, this piece brings a different angle to it by focussing on the impact on the most famous of the robbers' family life, particularly his escape and the on the run years. The irony that Biggs had gone straight until being sucked into the train job for want of the deposit to buy the house he was renting- only to win the money on the horses, but be unable to pull out of the job by that stage - is mentioned. The whole ends with their divorce in the early 70s - thus the end of "Mrs Biggs". A very human story, worth seeing. The sense of period (at least in England; it looks good for Aus and Rio to me, though I can't claim the same knowledge re those locations) is well done.
 

Ernest P Shackleton

One Too Many
Messages
1,247
Location
Midwest
Kevin Can F**k Himself. AMC. This came from the Lodge 49 people, and I liked that show enough. Not enough to justify watching them every week though. Youtube cooking vlogs would be just as well worth my time. As I sit through these, not entirely engaged and thoughts wandering, I can't help but wonder what is their target audience. Idiots like me willing to waste their time? Odd, entirely average quality in every sense shows, and it's good this one is over. If I come back to this one if it gets another season, I'm going to look into therapy.

The Beast Must Die. AMC. If PBS had a shot at this one, I understand why they passed on it. A main storyline that is so-so and that I really don't care about, and sub-plots that can't be anything more than filler because they don't bother to explain them well enough to compliment the program. It's too bad Jared Harris is involved, because he is so much better than this.

AMC is advertising for an upcoming mini-series that might appeal to those who liked The Terror. The North Water.
 

Julian Shellhammer

Practically Family
Messages
894
The Blake Mysteries: Ghost Stories (2018), via Amazon Prime. A tv movie in which Mrs. Blake, wife of the missing Dr. Lucien Blake, continues solving crimes for the Ballarat PD. We enjoyed it, with one exception: the regularly level-headed and insightful Jean Beazley is now portrayed as a snoopy busybody, investigating crimes while police and friends tell her to stay out of it. Nonetheless, we hope for a return of the program, even without the Doctor.
 

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