Ian Fitzsimmons
Ian Fitzsimmons
The point of the trope, I suppose.
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
...
The fly in the mini-series ointment, though, is that commercial considerations predispose producers to persist beyond the point where a given series eventually jumps the shark.
originally posted by VLM:
I have a few issues with Season 5, but there are maybe 10 weak minutes out of ~3000 total.
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons: I've been anti-tv for a long time
originally posted by VLM:
The Wire
One of my favorite topics.
I would put forth The Wire not only as the best narrative fiction even on screen, but maybe the best IN ANY FORMAT of the last 25 years. Now, I'm no encyclopedia of narrative fiction, but I'm decently read, FWIW. It's gritty, tragic, beautiful, funny, heartbreaking, deep, and so incredibly well acted that it is hard to lift yourself out of the story when an episode is over. That's probably why I've never met anyone who watched it on DVD that can watch just one episode.
I have a few issues with Season 5, but there are maybe 10 weak minutes out of ~3000 total.
I'd sure love to hear Levi's comments on the Parusso. And The Wire, but I think he and I have discussed it.
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
Sookie rules.
originally posted by Oswaldo Costa:
Don't forget the gap between her front teeth. It speaks volumes.
originally posted by Ian Fitzsimmons:
What the mini-series format allows on the creative side, though, is sufficient depth of time for writers to fully develop characters and side plots, and actors/-resses to execute them, that the audio-visual presentation can assume scope and complexity on a scale comparable to that offered by a good book. You hardly ever find this in movies; and movies based on books are almost invariably disappointing.
Anyway, my two $.01.
origine poste VLM?
WTF, who fucking knew?
Bite that tongue, ratboy.points*
Speaking for yourself, of course.This was certainly a very pleasant surprise.
Kane.right motherfuckers