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selenak: (Jimmy and Kim)
First, re: yesterdays ships-as-emoticons meme, the two which no one has identified were Quark/Dax from Star Trek: DS9, and, as the bonus ship, from Penny Dreadful, Vanessa Ives (refered to as "my little scorpion" by Joan the witch all through her flashbacks) and Malcom Murray (deconstructed Victorian explorer, hence the map).

Secondly, along with primary sources transcribing, excerpting and debating, my two Frederician buddies & self have been engaging in such classical fannish endeavours as Hogwarts House sorting, "who tops/bottoms" debates and, most recently, the assembling of a playlist. Click on the links and enjoy the song mix, if you don't know anything about the history; if you do know something about the history, we hope you'll be into the character arc they form as well.

Now, on to the Better Call Saul review.

In which Lalo is a cat, Nacho is a dog, and Kim is the best lawyer in Albuquerque, our titular antihero included.

Spoilers are in the game )
selenak: (Breaking Bad by Wicked Signs)
In which the New Mexican landscape is used to great effect, to put as unspoilery as possible.

Spoilers want to know where their money is )
selenak: (Chiana by Ruuger)
Spoilers choose to play the cards they were dealt with )



Moving to another fandom: I saw by chance that German Amazon Prime at least has put up Farscape, all four seasons of it. It's been sooooo long since I watched it. Would anyone be up for a rewatch? (Of the highlights of each season. No Jeremiah Crichton for yours truly!)
selenak: (Jimmy and Kim)
Spoilers are biting their nails and tearing their hair by now )

In unrelated rl news, Uderzo, co-parent to Asterix, has died. He was in his 90s, so he's had a good life, but still, yet another person who's made a mark with their creativity has left us. Due to the occasion, the London Review of Books has put up an old essay of Mary Beard's about the Asterix comics up, here.
selenak: (Jimmy and Kim)
Which was fun except for the part where you can see where it's going, and my days of fretting for Kim has definitely arrived in a middle.

Read more... )
selenak: (Breaking Bad by Wicked Signs)
As one great example of how much character thought goes into the details in this show, take the business with the broken glass.

Spoilers say a lot about Jimmy and Kim )
selenak: (Jimmy and Kim)
Aka, it's time to fret about Kim Wexler and her not-coverd-by-Breaking-Bad fate again.

Spoilers will deal with it on their own )

In conclusion: welcome back, spin-off of my heart!
selenak: (Breaking Bad by Wicked Signs)
Did Better Call Saul change my perception of Breaking Bad?


In a way. Starting, of course, with the titular character. In Breaking Bad, Saul Goodman had been an excellent comic relief character, with the occasional unexpected pathos moment (read: in s5). At times, he was a great blackly humorous Greek Chorus commenting on the main characters. But I had never been curious about his background, or what would happen to him post-show. I hadn't seen the need for the spin-off, in short. The reason why I tuned in was because after five seasons of Breaking Bad, I trusted Vince Gilligan & Co. enough to do so.

This turned out to be a good decision, because Better Call Saul rocks. For several reasons, one of which that yes, it did indeed change my perception of the main character. As has been observed by many people, you start out the show expecting and wanting to see Saul Goodman, and then script and Bob Odenkirk's performance make Jimmy McGill so endearing that you start to dread every sign he's getting closer to his Breaking Bad self. It also means I'm thinking of him now as Jimmy, not Saul, with Saul being a deliberately created persona that reflects some, but not all actual traits. (BTW, one thing both shows share is that while there are external circumstances co-sharing responsibility why the main character turns out the way he does - Walt's cancer, the lousy health care system, Jimmy's relationship with his brother and said brother - in both bases, the main responsibility lies with the main character, and there are several points in the story where he could have made different choices than the ones he makes.

This, btw, did not work in the same way for me when it comes to the second character from Breaking Bad that Better Call Saul delivers backstory for, to wit, Mike. I didn't feel the emotional need for more Mike starting the show. I still don't, and it's gotten to the point where I actively resent the Mike (and Gus) interludes because to me, it feels like they take screen time away from the original Better Call Saul characters like Kim, in past seasons Chuck and Howard. The one original character who gains from the existence of that plot line is Nando, so any scenes with him in it are okay by me, but otherwise: look, after four seasons, I don't feel the Mike storyline has told me anything about Mike I didn't already know when Breaking Bad was broadcast. It feels like it's there so the viewers who tuned into Breaking Bad solely for the action scenes get their bit, and also because Jonathan Banks is cool. (Which he is, I'm not disputing that.) And don't get me started on Kaylee the most unaging kid since the Vorenus offsprings in Rome.

Another thing about Breaking Bad which the existence of Better Call Saul changed for me is that I won't be able to rewatch Breaking Bad without mentally going "I wonder what Kim was doing at that point?" during the seasons. (Because Kim better be alive and well in BB, is what I'm saying.) She's my favourite character on this show, and I love that the narrative doesn't treat her just as there for Jimmy's delelopment but gives her a parallel story in her own right. Kim Wexler: heroine of my heart.

The Other Days
selenak: (Equations by Such_Heights)
Doctor Who:

[personal profile] ruuger has written a love declaration to the Twelfth Doctor and his era in the form of a rec list, which I adored.

Better Call Saul:

And Afterwards: there have been a number of post Breaking Bad takes on Saul Goodman/Jimmy McGill/Gene over the years, and if they were posted under the "Better Call Saul" label yet featured exclusively Breaking Bad characters and characterisation, I usually end up highly irritated. Not this one, though, in which the law catches up with our criminal lawyer, and Kim ends up representing him. Just the right amount of bittersweet, and a credible take on Kim years hence.

Star Trek: Discovery: Sacrifice. As you know, faithful reader, I have, err, mixed feelings about the Disco s2 finale, but I really loved this brief vignette by [personal profile] 4thofeleven which offers a great destillation of the themes and emotional notes they were going for.

Multifandom:

Michael Sheen interviewed by David Tennant, dealing with ghastly photo shoots, being Welsh, stage fright, playing Tony Blair and Brian Claugh, Neil Gaiman and "the love story of the 21st century". Meaning Aziphraele and Crowley from Good Omens, the upcoming tv version of the book. Mind you, I was more amused to learn that Stephen Frears' casting agent's pitch to Michael Sheen about playing Tony Blair in The Deal (which ended up in him playing Tony Blair in two more movies and becoming Peter Morgan's muse) was phrased as: "Stephen Frears is doing a love story between Gordon Brown and Tony Blair and you're Blair" after having watched him perform Caligula on stage. I mean, I've watched The Deal, and that's not exactly how I'd phrase it, though it's true that in all three installments of his Blair trilogy - "The Deal", "The Queen", "The Special Relationship" - Peter Morgan quite knowingly uses rom com tropes, though The Queen is the only one of the three where the central pair actually ends up on sort of friendly terms instead of a fallout. Anyway,the Tennnant-interviewing-Sheen hour is immensely entertaining, and people who know Sheen not for his award nominated RPF movies but because of him being in the Underworld and Twilight movies will be delighted to know that one of the stories he tells is about his irration with reporters who interview you with an "we both know this icky horror and fantasy stuff is beneath you, don't we?" attitude, towards which Michael Sheen says he responded with a rant about how between Ursula Le Guin, Philip K. Dick and Neil Gaiman, sci fi and fantasy produced some of the best writing of the later 20th century. (Which rant, when published, resulted in Gaiman writing to him, and thus a relationship was born.)
selenak: (The Americans by Tinny)
Which isn't the same as a list of personal favourite episodes - slightly different category - , and of course limited to media I actually watched, so if your own pick for "great episode of 2018" isn't in it, it might be simply for this reason. Also, there's no particular order of quality among the episodes themselves.



The other days


Star Trek: Discovery: Despite Yourself: this kicked off the second half of Discovery's first season and had the daunting task of reintroducing the Mirrorverse to Star Trek in a way that on the one hand kept the parts beloved by fandom (opportunity for the regular cast to play evil selves, sexy costumes, aura of menace) while not falling into what the last DS9 Mirrorverse episodes had become, i.e. a camp costume party without any emotional stakes on either the audience's or the characters' parts. The episode managed this was aplomp, and then some. Despite Yourself and the following episodes were the first Mirrorverse tales since Kira originally met the Intendant in Crossover which actually used the concept to explore something about our regular characters that's meant to be disturbing to them, both on a Doylist and Watsonian level. It took the fascist universe concept seriously while still delivering on the "regular actors enjoying themselves" front (standout in this episode: Tilly!). It didn't waste time by making the characters wonder endlessly where they were when the audience knew this already while still providing in-universe explanation as to why they realised this so quickly. The costumes - for the first time in ST history created by a female, not a male costume maker - managed to be sexy while still being believable and functional for a military dictatorship. It was both connnected to the season's themes - who are we, who could we become, who do we choose to be? - and a good episode in itself. The one downside was the spoilery event that's still one of the downsides of the first season in general, but even so: I do regard this as one of the greats of 2018.


Better Call Saul: Winner: The season 4 finale, which in the way it delivers on one of the show's central premises both awes and kicks you in the gut. Character development that's been building up through four seasons comes to a key point, the opening flashback is both a brilliant preparation for the final scene and a layered look at a central relationship, and in a season where the balance between the Jimmy and the Mike storylines was often uneven, here they both come with a satisfying narrative weight and conclusion. 'Twas brilliant, both as a season finale and an episode by itself.


The Last Kingdom: Episode 6 (of the third season): in which the season takes a breath midst intrigues and fight scenes, puts its various other subplots on hold and simply focuses, for an hour, on two central characters working their way through grief for a third in a way that also examines their relationship, who they were, are and will be to each other. And I realise that one of my favourite tropes - two former friends still deeply emotionally connected but for good and solid reasons (i.e. because of their own convictions and choices, not because a villain misled them or anything like that) opposed to each other in the present - actually is used here (as opposed to the book material) in Brida and Uthred. I'm pretty fond of the show in general, but I wouldn't call it brilliant otherwise. This episode, however, is.

A Very English Scandal: Episode 3: The entire three parter, written by Russell T. Davies and directed by Stephen Frears, is great, but this last episode has to pull off the daunting task of delivering something at least a part of the audience already knows the ending of (i.e. the Jeremy Thorpe trial), and where historically, no one wins (the party in whose favour the case is decided never gets their old life back). There's also the tricky way the miniseries balances humor with very dark stuff. And we have a big ensemble, added to which is a new character of importance, Thorpe's lawyer. All those balls are kept in the air beautifully. Frears' last few movies went into a sedate direction, but this miniseries has the combination of wit and genuine anger expressed via satire from his 80s stuff. RTD, whose script manages that, also has his flaws as a scriptwriter in general, but here he displays only his skills and virtues: everyone (other than the judge, and since said judge doesn't do anything the historical original didn't do or say, infamously, this is hardly Rusty being mean) is depicted three dimensionally, the pace feels fast despite offering plenty of quiet character moments, the dialogue is razor sharp (though one outstanding scene, between Thorpe and his second wife, actually depends on silence on his part for the effect it has). Hugh Grant and Ben Wishaw are fantastisc in the central roles. It short: great episode, great conclusion to a great miniseries.


Legion: I have mixed feelings about the second season overall, but in its middle, it delivered a trio of truly great episodes between I can't decide. 2.04. is Syd's big character examination and showcase, providing David and the audience with her backstory in a very inventive - and, as always with this show, visually stylish - way. 2.06., otoh, is the big acting showcase for our leading man, as we see various versions of David through the timelines, both actual ones, might have beens and could still be's, and foreshadows/plants some of the finale's emotional motivations. (It also examines David's relationship with his sister Amy through all timelines, which is important because of what the previous episode revealed and because the audience hadn't seen Amy since the last season.) But I think I'm going with 2.05, which is more of an ensemble piece (prominent roles for Lenny, Clark, Ptonemy and David on the one hand, Oliver and Faroukh on the other), working its way up to the big, horrifying reveal at the end via three interrogation set pieces while the parallel flashbacks finally provide the audience with some (needed) information as to how Oliver feels about his "relationship" with the Shadow King and their actions.


The Americans: START (season and series finale): show finales are even trickier than season finales to do well: they have to wrap up central relationships not just of the season but of the show, have to do justice to the general themes of the series and its tone (not to be underestimated, that last -something like, say, the famous Blake's 7 finale feels just right for B7, but if it had happened in, say, Farscape, I'd have hated it, despite Farscape having plenty of darkness). START managed all of this - imo, as always -, and, as an added bonus, made a somewhat overplayed song like Within You, Without You feel fresh and perfect for the scene in question. And to the end, it trusted its actors with silences as much as with dialogue, leaving this viewer a fan happy with a rich, layered story well ended.


GLOW: Mother of all Matches: this female-centric wrestling dramedy won my not-a-wrestling-fan heart and kept it, not least by the way it manages complicated characters in its half an hour format, provides them with development and lets them take turns re: audience sympathy. She who is a jerk at one point can be a heroine at another, and vice versa. Also, minor characters from last season can get the spot light this season (and again, the reverse.) The season why this particular episode stood out for me more than, say, the later Nothing Shattered (where our two main characters have it out in a blistering scene) is that Mother of all Matches skillfully intertwines the stories of two very different characters, Tammé (this is her big episode, not just of the season but the show so far) and Debbie (on an emotional downward spiral) in a way that works and reflects on each other. There are some incredibly funny scenes (Debbie selling all her furniture to spite her husband) that still work as a metaphor for what's going on with Debbie inside, and some incredible painful ones (Tammés face when her son witnesses her character's humiliation in the ring is one of the outstanding acting moments of the entire show, and still makes me want to cry) which also make a comment about the society they're taking place in. And while it's doing all of that, the episode also includes a great show case for Ruth's quick improvisational storytelling skills at the end. In conclusion, it's a great one.


The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel: Midnight at the Concord: the mid-s2 turning point, a showcase of Midge's comedy talent, charm and egocentricity (Susie's acid comment as to Midge's rush to NY is well earned) at the same time while also providing us with some genuinely touching moments (one of them, suprisingly, between Joel and his mother - Joel's parents as opposed to Midge's more often than not come across as broadly written stereotypes, but the tenderness of the "you look nice in your coat, Ma" scene is anything but). The episode in itself includes its own mini rom com (Midge and Benjamin going from non-speaking to romantic couple within it, and yet it feels completely belieavable), and the return of a favourite, Lenny Bruce (whom the show uses just rightly, never too often, so each of his appearances are a highlight), but the true emotional climax it works towards is Midge's gig at the end which turns into an outing scene managing to be funny and painful at the same time. Incredibly well donen, Amy Sherman-Palladino.


The Haunting of Hill House: Two Storms: The first five episodes of this tv version were each focused on a different Crain sibling, both in flashbacks and present day action, introducing not just the characters and their relationships from different angles but the two time lines. The question from the pilot - "what exactly happened in the night the Crain family left Hill House, and why?" - has been gaining fragments of an answer. It won't be answered in this episode, either, and yet this is where all the emotional complexity build up in the previous episodes both in the flashback timeline and in the present day time line gets its first big pay off, as all the main characters are in the same room again and forced to interact with each other and all their pent up issues. It's an elegant Aristotelian nightmare (the three unities are kept in both timelines, but how!) of a drama, and in terms of writing, acting and visualisation to me the highlight of the season.

Doctor Who: Demons of the Punjab: I was wavering between this one and "Rosa", both well done self contained historicals with minimum sci fi content but good character moments for our regulars. Demons of the Punjab wins out for moving me that tiny bit more in how it deals with how differently the memory of the dead can be used, offers both radicalisation (Manesh) and killers actually changing (the aliens), which in a year where you had the WWI anniversary on the one hand and current day vicious nationalism winning in so many places in the world on the other felt like a very timely tale indeed. The guest stars are excellent and the cinematography is gorgeous.
selenak: (Vulcan)
Special Yuletide Madness Edition, aka: the shorties.

Better Call Saul

Always something smoldering somewhere: post season 3 AU with terrific Jimmy and Chuck interaction

The Princess Bride:

MorgenCon: William Goldman's novel worked with the literary conceit of being only an very much abridged edition of a grand satiric and historical ouevre by Simon Morgenstern. This author ran with the concept and gives us the programm for a convention of Simon Morgenstern fans. Readers, I'm still on the floor with laughter. Also I want to attend this convention.

Star Trek:Discovery:

A Vulcan Christmas: what it says on the tin. Every now and then, even messed up Vulcan-human families enjoy a fluffy holiday experience. The Sarek/Amanda dynamic is golden. :)

The Haunting of Hill House (tv)

Hidden: Theo character portrait through the years, sharp and poetic.

Historical Fiction:

A.D.1504 in which celebrated master painter Albrecht Dürer and bff Willibald Pirckheimer enjoy more than a bath together. An endearing mixture of humor, angst and overall comfortableness with each other, and I think you can read it even if you don't know much or anything about the German Renaissance.
selenak: (BambergerReiter by Ningloreth)
I'm not nearly half through the archive, but here are some recs already.

The Americans

The show being over and the finale inspired a lot of great fanfiction this year. Honestly, I could rec the lot, but for now, here are some particular favourites, each imagining the aftermath of the finale and the choices the characters in question make somewhat differently, each feeling plausible:

Gifts Henry's and Paige's first Christmas after.


And you give yourself away: this one focuses on Paige and Philip in two timelines, post finale on the one hand, through her childhood and adolescence on the other.

Walk of Life: Stan and Henry in the immediate aftermath of the finale. Devastating.

Childish Things: sibling-focused story about Paige and Henry until the fall of the wall.

Better Call Saul:

Organized Lightning: how Howard experienced Chuck's backstory breakdown.

Call the Midwife

A way in the wilderness: Shelagh through the years.

The Charioteer

One for the Christmas card list: Reg was my favourite character in this novel, but he hardly shows up in fanfiction. I was delighted to discover this gem which gives us his pov and presents him (and various other of the novel characters) some years into the future. The Alec cameo in particular is great.

Class

Craptastic Beasts: April and Ram in their awkward, tender, PTDS-ridden glory. Loved it.

Historical Fiction

Ascension (There is no I in coup d'etat): Empresses Z'hian and Cixi, survival, and changing Chinese history.

We'll burn that barn when we come to it: this one is hilarious crack AU, Harold/William the Conquerer, and since it's present day a far less lethal ending.


The Lion in Winter:

Lion Rampant, Contourné: Eleanor and Richard. How she created her heir.

When the fall is all there is: this one single-handedly changed my mind about coffeeshop AUs. Eleanor the coffee empress is a hoot, the narrative voice has all of the play's elegant viciousness and affection in it ("One of Henry's sterling qualities is his ability to provide unstinting admiration, even when in the midst of a towering rage. He respects his enemies and his friends, and sometimes even his lovers"), and all the analogues (Henry installing a boutique café "Rosa Mundi" in Lyon!) are a riot. Simply divine.
selenak: (Jessica & Matt)
Daredevil:

Exile Vilify: post season 3 fanfiction which follows up on what happened to the terrified woman Fisk had on monitoring duty and provides me with the Matt Murdock & Jessica Jones interaction I’ve been craving.

Better Call Saul

The Winner Takes It All: neat meta about why that particular ABBA song was such a good choice for the s4 finale, and to which of our main characters it applies.

Beatles:

Making People Happy: which is a love declaration to Paul McCartney by one James Parker, Atlantic journalist. Given who my favourite Beatle is, I’m all for it.
selenak: (Jimmy and Kim)
It’s Frankfurt Book Fair time, and that means I’m on my feet from morning till late at night, but I did finally manage to catch the Better Call Saul finale.

Read more... )

Briefly

Oct. 3rd, 2018 08:13 pm
selenak: (Sternennacht - Lefaym)
A PS to the Better Call Saul review: two interviews with Gennifer Hutchinson, who wrote the episode, one here and another one here.

Also, I never met the man, but I did read his memoirs, as he was the chief recording engineer at several of the Beatles' most important albums, so it was definitely with a sense of sadness I learned today that Geoff Emerick has died.
selenak: (Jimmy and Kim)
In which the other shoe drops, in a lot of ways.

You're always... )
selenak: (Jimmy and Kim)
In which we find out what Kim’s plan was, and I’m back to worrying about her, while also having an unholy (new) suspicion about where the Mike tale is going.

Read more... )
selenak: (Jimmy and Kim)
Which is heartbreaking in a very well done way. Also, Mike is learning German.

Read more... )
selenak: (Jimmy and Kim)
Which inspired me to a new guess as how this show will end, and was another lawyers centric one, so I'm happy.

In an impending doom way that is )
selenak: (Jimmy and Kim)
In which we finally get a lawyers-centric episode again, Mike-Gus have only two scenes, and yours truly is happy.

Read more... )

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