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patricia

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Everything posted by patricia

  1. I haven't watched Dexter since season 4. I read a spoiler-heavy review of the finale that said it was so bad it invalidated the entire series -- and that they now regretted watching any Dexter episodes at all. Harsh... ... but true (except for regretting watching seasons 1 through 4). The last three seasons have been contrary to the Dexter character from the early seasons. Season 5 was a disappointment, but from season 6 on it was an entirely different show. Also, they didn't have a clue what to do with any of the supporting cast. ---- Now watching Citizen Khan. I agree that "Dexter" had an unsatifying ending, unlike the amazingly effective "Breaking Bad" finale.
  2. The thing I find most interesting about those who are amazed that many very successful people didn't finish highschool is their assumption that doing so is a passport to success. Intelligence and ingenuity cannot be measured soley by how many years one spends pursuing a diploma, whether it's from a highschool, college or university. It's true that most highschool drop-outs are hobbled out of the gate. This is, IMO, because few prospective employers will give them even an initial interview. But, in the arts, creativity and talent are the measure. Commercially exploitable ideas are also valued much more than a piece of paper that tells us, really, not much more than that the person spent the time, not that they learned anything. The examples are, for sure, exceptions, but they certainly contradict the rule that without a diploma one is doomed to failure. Without intelligence, tenacity and a goal there is no success for anyone, regardless of how many years they spent in the educational system. None of the people on the list [You forgot Michael J. Fox, who dropped out of tenth grade, years later getting his GED] actually stopped reading, learning and paying attention to current affairs.
  3. Just a suggestion, but I found a book that might be worth your checking out. It's "More Than Night - film noir and it's contexts", a history of the film noir genre. It discusses the inception of the genre, from the forties to the present and is really interesting, if you like dark themes, as I do.
  4. My record has the bottom picture, same track list, but on the London label. Thanks for giving me the options.
  5. The dog figures in the plot, erwbol. Yes, there are some violent images, kind of like in real life. The series doesn't show them gratuitously, but if there were none, it wouldn't be an honest depiction of what the characters live with every day. Not for the squeamish or kids parked in front of the TV with no supervision, for sure. It is very realistic, unlike many police dramas on the air. No beautiful, buxom characters, with no discernable reason to have them there. No impossible action or feats of strength or impossible in real-life scenes that require a double, no special effects, etc. etc. etc. So, fasten your seatbelt.
  6. Goodness! I do remember her as having twelve fingers on each of her nine hands. She always seemed too nice on TV in the late fifties. When is this stuff from, Patricia? MG I'm looking at the soft-cover, [London label] in surprisingly good shape and judging by the clothes she's wearing and the liner notes, I would say mid-1950s.
  7. Double 7 with Winifred Atwell. Rags til Hell wouldn't have them on side 1 and Boogie Woodies til the cows come home on side 2. Winifred owns her piano!!!
  8. Good plan. Even though there are only 3 seasons, so far, I hope that they continue to explore this character. It would be a shame if this is it. However, he's still alive, as are most of the main characters, especially Alice, at the end of the last episode, so I'm keeping my fingers crossed. Hope that wasn't a spoiler for you.
  9. I've probably mentioned this British series before, but................... "Luther" IMO, is right up there, for quality, with "Breaking Bad." Stellar performances from every member of the cast, both main and supporting. Clever, involving plots that keep you watching each scene and caring about the characters. If you liked Idris Elba in "Wired", you will love him as John Luther. I recommend that you start at the beginning, with Season 1 and follow that with Season 2, ending with Season 3. Important to get to know all the recurring roles. Don't stop when they start showing the end credits because much of the summing up is done with short scenes, between the credits. Again, this, IMO, is one of the very best crime series I've seen for years, along, of course, with "Breaking Bad." See if I'm not right.
  10. My favourite Bob and Ray was the interview that Wally Ballou did with the farmer selling baskets of cranberries from a roadside stand. When Wally commented that everybody would be pleased to buy some to make jelly, jam, and other things, the farmer didn't know you could do that with them. His customers just ate them out of the baskets and, yes, they were "bitter as anything." Delivered straight, like all Ballou's interviews were, this was hilarious.
  11. I'll see your beat-up jacket copy of Tubby the Tenor and raise you my guaranteed more beat-up jacket copy of Clifford Brown Ensemble featuring Zoot Sims recorded on Vogue in 1954 in Hollywood. How beat-up, you ask? There is a HUGE bite out of the front of the jacket and the entire thing is totally scotch-taped. I was not as lucky as you were with the record though. The last cut on Side2, "Blueberry Hill" is unplayable. HOWEVER, the rest of the record plays fine. Sometimes we just have to take a chance. $5 at Recordland in Calgary.
  12. My favourite David Frost bit was the spoof on a political campaign speech. He went on for a good 15 minutes and, as my mother would have said, "there wasn't one word you could take away with you." But, his cultured diction and his sincere delivery fooled the listener for the first few minutes, until you realized he hadn't actually said anything worthwhile. It was hilarious!! He was one of my favourite Brits. RIP Sir David.
  13. And nobody wept. I'm against capitol punishment. His life sentence + 1000 years would have been just punishment for Castro to have spent the rest of his natural life alone with his thoughts. But, he apparently chose to go early and who are we to deny him?
  14. Absolutely agree Patricia. Ken Finkleman is a national treasure (Airplane II, Grease 2, Good God and a Fellini obsession notwithstanding!) Did you see his Good Dog - same character different environment? Different but I really really liked it. Then Good God - so over the top and (sadly, considering the topic) stunningly obvious. Shockingly awful. Yes, I did see "Good Dog" and it carries on with Finkleman's personality as a self-absorbed, picky narcissist. I loved it. The actress who plays his much younger girlfriend [Lauren Lee Smith] is also in another Canadian series, "The Listener, " which is into it's fourth season. The humor in "Good Dog" as in "The Newsroom is typically Canadian, understated and witty. My friend in NY was thrown off a little bit when there was no laughtrack on "The Newsroom", but laughed anyway. I agree with your assessment of "Good God."
  15. I'm not sure how it did at the box office, but there was certainly a lot of publicity about it both before, and after it's release. Having Daniel Day Lewis play the title role couldn't have hurt it's chances. Usually, when he's on the screen, you can't take your eyes off him. I still remember his role as "Bill the Butcher" in Gangs of New York. Scorcese cast him in a role tailor-made for broad gestures in a film that was meant to elevate Leonardo di Caprio to adult roles. With Day Lewis chewing up the scenery, good luck with that.
  16. Exactly. There does seem to be a lot of unseemly self-congratulations when talking about Lincoln freeing the slaves in America. Africans wouldn't have been slaves if they hadn't been taken from their homes and shipped off to the West to build the wealth that resulted. Similarly, I find myself being amazed at BP's ads, patting themselves on the back, touting the millions of dollars they are investing in the Gulf. They created the circumstances in which the obscene destruction happened and they only did something having been pressured to make restitution. Unbelievable chutzpah, IMO.
  17. Me too, Chuck. Here's the weird part for me. I have all three films and yet, I watch it when it's on AMC because it's been re-cut and includes much of the film edited from the original three. What can I tell you? It's a classic.
  18. Seasons 2 and 3 of a Canadian series, "The Newsroom" and the follow-up series, "Escape From The Newsroom." This series ran in the U.S. some years ago as well, I think on PBS and it is excellent. Ken Finkleman, who wrote and starred in the ongoing story of the most dysfunctional news organization imaginable chose to have no laughtrack and have the whole cast play their roles totally straight. It's hilarious, once you get into the rhythm of the utter madness. I sent a copy of the first year of the series to a friend in New York and he was intrigued as well as amused by it's originality. Highly recommended.
  19. Watched the finale of "Luther" the other night and it was really good. It tied up all the loose ends. What's interesting to me is the relationship between the "Alice" character and Luther. He knows that she killed her parents AND their dog in Season 1, but they have developed a kind of partnership of sorts, which has benefitted Luther. I don't think he's totally easy with that, but there's no denying that [spoiler for those who haven't seen the finale] he would have come out the other side without her. I think that there is a Season 4 in the offing, but it's hard to say what direction it will take. Luther has indicated that he's "no longer a policeman" and I must have missed the reason he would say that. So, where does he go from here?
  20. I tivoed the first episode, but haven't watched it yet. Looking forward to it. Just finished watching "Arrested Development" on Netflix and quite enjoyed it. Managed to find both the "Forsyte Saga" dramatizations, both by the BBC, the first from 1967 and the recent one, featuring Damien Lewis [Homeland] from 2002. I watched the original back in the sixties and am curious as to how the later one compares.
  21. "Luther" Seasons 1 and 2 with the always fabulous Idris Elba. If you can accustom your ear to the various London dialects, this is really great cop drama, set in London and the surrounding area.
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