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Showing posts with label The Mandalorian. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Mandalorian. Show all posts

June 1, 2024

Static Age #27: The Changes (1975)

Victoria Williams in The Changes (1975)

This Static Age’s spotlight goes to the influential British fantasy TV series The Changes (1975), originally broadcasted by BBC. Based on Peter Dickinson’s sci-fi trilogy and directed by John Prowse, the ten-episode children show is told from the point of view of a young girl (Victoria Williams) and is about a strange occurrence that involves an unworldly noise that causes the collapse of society via its members newfound revolt against technology and machinery.

 

And now, let’s switch our focus towards some recent series…

 

The Haunting of Bly Manor - Season 1

The sole season of Netflix’s mini-series The Haunting of Bly Manor (2020), is about two orphan kids that live in the titular secluded mansion and are soon about to be introduced to their new nanny (Victoria Perdetti), who in turn will face a variety of horrors that lurk in the mirrors. Created by Mike Flanagan, this is a masterful and important event for the small screen format, and horror entertainment at its best. Atmospheric and eerie, it comes highly recommended.

 

The 2nd season of Marvel Studios’ Loki (2021 – 2023) finds the titular superhero (a gorgeous Tom Hiddleston) lost in time and space as is so common these days with similar output, but here the whole prospect is presented charmingly with the precise amount of humor needed, therefore resulting in an enjoyable 6 episodes.

 

Yellowjackets - Season 1

The 1st season of Yellowjackets (2021 – present) is about the titular 1990s high school team of female soccer players, whose plane crushes, leaving many dead but also several survivors. The lengths the survivors went in order to stay alive and the things they did are a mystery to the rest of the world, but this past may haunt them now, several decades later, as the now middle-aged protagonists lead troubled lives separately from each other and far away from their former friendships as students. Featuring breathtaking performances by all involved, and especially Juliette Lewis and Christina Ricci, this is a surprise horror hit that combines the survival genre with that of gruesome terror which goes as far as depicting cannibalism and outright slaughter. It is also one of the very few series to have managed to intelligibly employ flashbacks and ‘back and forth’ editing.

 

The 3rd season of The Mandalorian (2019 – present) has the titular warrior (Pedro Pascal, playing mostly with his voice and under a helmet) on a new journey with his cute companion baby yoda, in what has to be the best thing that happened in the Star Wars franchise in ages, let alone Disney.

 

The Punisher - Season 1

The 1st season of Netflix’s The Punisher (2017 – 2019) is about the titular vigilante anti-hero (a perfectly cast Jon Bernthal) who after avenging the murder of his family (with army-like force, as he is a veteran), now lives in the fringes of society. Bleak, violent, and dark, this is the most mature material to ever see the light of the day under the Marvel Television banner, and as such it should be cherished.

 

The 3rd season of American Gods (2017 – 2021) ends the series based on Neil Gaiman’s same-titled lengthy novel with an all-out war between gods. Boasting a rocking soundtrack (that includes The Rolling Stones and Marilyn Manson) as well as a phantasmagoric depiction of rural America, this is a very welcome addition to strange television.

 

And now, please allow me a word on some recent mainstream film releases…

 

King on Screen (2022)

There is literally nothing left to say about Stephen King’s beloved novels, nor about their several film and book adaptations (there are even a couple of studies on that subject available), so director Daphne Baiwir’s King on Screen (2022) documentary expectedly adds nothing to expand our knowledge, but its bigger sin is how formulaic it is, managing to barely scratch the surface and waste interesting talking heads such as Mick Garris and Frank Darabont without allowing them to go deep and steering clear of any attempt for an angle. The end result is entertaining enough, but it also a waste of time.

 

Leonardo DiCaprio, Robert De Niro, and Brendan Fraser, are among the key players of the stellar cast that leads Martin Scorsese’s three and a half hour epic Killers of the Flower Moon (2023), a story about a series of murders in a small Indian town, and the small-time operation that was mechanized in order to cover them up, motivated both by racism and profit. However, this is not – as it so often mistakenly stated – a commentary on capitalism, but rather a thesis on humanity and death, with a very intelligent angle on grief. Simply put, it is a masterful cinematic experience.

 

Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom

Ignoring all laws of physics and common sense via the aid of the most terrible CGI you could possibly ask for from a $215 million-budgeted disaster, director James Wan’s Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom (2023) is as awful as these things can get, proving once again that DC is beating a dead horse with the superhero genre that is facing a horrible decline in recent years. Avoid at all cost.

 

Another film from the superhero front that is equally awful is the light-hearted and comedic The Marvels (2023) from the competing Marvel Studios, directed by Nia DaCosta, who is wasting her previously-proven talent on the altar of massive budgets. There is even singing and dancing here, in a desperate attempt to penetrate the Indian market, while all it achieves is ridiculing itself further.

 

Dario Argento: Panico (2023)

Released by Shudder, director Simone Scafidi’s Dario Argento: Panico (2023) documentary on the titular Italian master of the macabre and suspense, offers an interesting angle in going deep into some of the psychological issues projected on the films and the making of them, even as it opts for a linear and chronological narrative. Therefore, it remains conventional, but also becomes original, and as such it is enjoyable and welcome. Talking heads include Asia Argento, Michele Soavi, Lamberto Bava, Luigi Cozzi, Gaspar Noe, Guillermo del Toro, and Dario Argento himself.

 

Yorgos Lanthimos’ Academy Award darling Poor Things (2023) is about Bella Baxter (Emma Stone in a stunning performance), a dead woman rescued by the brain transplant of her baby, thanks to advanced surgery by Godwin Baxter (Willem Dafoe). She appears to have a personality that echoes autism and schizophrenia, failing to absorb polite society rules, but as she embarks on a journey of self discovery, she also sees the world and men for what they truly are. Gorgeous set and wardrobe design aside (this clearly the most artistic picture to have made it in the Oscars in years), this is a masterful creation with the signature of its author stamped clearly (look no further for the most creative use of the wide lens and the zoom ever committed on celluloid). This is an important work and a feminist manifesto, a thoughtful piece of art and the most fascinating art film since the 1960s.

 

Madame Web (2024)

Directed by S.J. Clarkson, Marvel Studios’ Madame Web (2024) starring the stunning Dakota Johnson in the titular role, is not as torturous viewing experience as the critics have told you – it is just an average superhero film, or a mediocre one – but is suffering from the same banality of the genre’s recent output which is lack of any sense of importance. Superhero films of the past decades, including the works of Tim Burton or Sam Raimi were highly re-watchable, while routine CGI-packed efforts like this are forgotten as soon as you leave the theater.

 

Directed by Gil Kenan, Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire (2024) is channeling the franchise’s original duo of films (by having most of the original cast return and echoing several other references in the form of Easter eggs) with the recent reboot efforts, maintaining a perfectly decent balance most of the time. The first half may be lacking as it takes forever to set-up the antagonist ghost, but the second half is rewarding, spectacular, fun, and overall entertaining.

 

And finally, I enriched my bookshelf with the following additions…

 

Nicolas Winding Refn Presents Jimmy McDonough’s last book The Exotic Ones (2023, FAB Press, Surrey, U.K.) which is a massive tome that you need two hands to lift it and it is about the wild world of the Ormond family which delved from exploitation oddities to religious blockbusters that thrived at your local church. Knowledgeable and researched to death, while also stunningly designed and presented, this is a fine and fun read, and ranks among the five best film books I’ve ever read. It also comes with a bonus shorter book called ‘The Most Exotic One: Georgette Dante’, which is also a joy to read.

 

Edited by Emma Westwood and featuring some of the most current and original voices of the field, the Midnight Movie Monographs: Bride of Frankenstein (2023, PS Publishing, Hornsea, U.K.) brief tome includes some fine essays on the legendary sequel, and gets quite original in its approach, as aside from tackling a variety of aspects including the stunning make-up work, it also gives space to some serious but fun queer analysis.

 

Based upon a story penned by Edward D. Wood Jr. and originally turned into a screenplay format by Fred Olen Ray for a film that unfortunately never got made, and in turn recently finding itself taking the pulp novel format by the latter ‘best selling author’, Deep Red (2022, Retromedia Press, U.S.A.) is definitely not a great literary event by any means, but it is fun and entertaining.


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December 1, 2023

Static Age #26: Beasts (1976)

Beasts (1976) DVD box art.

This Static Age’s spotlight goes to Beasts (1976), the fascinating 6-episode British horror series from acclaimed writer Nigel Kneale that was made by ATV for the ITV Network. Each standalone episode tackles a bestial themed horror subject. ‘Special Offer’ is about a paranormal revenge. ‘During Barty’s Party’ is about rat infestation. ‘Buddyboy’ is about a haunting from a dolphin. ‘Baby’ is about ancient witchcraft getting in the way of a pregnancy. ‘What Big Eyes’ is about a man who is keenly interested in becoming a wolf and my comment is that it takes all kinds. ‘The Dummy’ is the best and goriest episode, and it is about a horror movie star burned-out from playing monsters.

 

And now, let’s switch our focus towards some recent series…

 

Locke & Key - Season 3

The 3rd (and final) season of Netflix’s Locke & Key (2020 – 2022) finds its protagonists with more trouble at the Keyhouse, but who’s holding the key to solve the mystery in the series finale? Fairy-tale like and owning a big portion of its inspirations to Stephen King, this is well-made but ultimately forgettable.

 

The narcotics trafficking action goes to Mexico in the 1st season of the aptly named Narcos: Mexico (2018 – 2021) – available on Netflix – and is about the rise of the Guadalajara cartel and the war that the newly-formed DEA had to perform in order to sedate the drug distribution and countless killings. Well-made and with thorough research of its subject matter as well as the historical backdrop, this is gangster television at its best.

 

Black Mirror - Season 6

Upsetting and more relevant than ever, the 6th season of Netflix’s Black Mirror (2011 – present) is set to scare the shit out of technophobes the world over, with its brilliant five episodes that include ‘Joan is Awful’ in which a start up company’s well-paid employee (Annie Murphy) is seeing her life getting hijacked by a streaming platform that uses it as the template for a series starring Salma Hayek; ‘Loch Henry’ which is about a young couple (Samuel Blenkin and Myha’la Herrold) who study filmmaking and abandons its weak-sounding project about an egg man, in favor of a true crime story that seems to have more bread to it; the feature-length ‘Beyond the Sea’ that is a demented love story and the weakest entry in this season, but at least it is perfectly tuned with the entire ‘identity theft’ thematic concept; ‘Mazey Day’ in which the titular movie star is suffering from an undisclosed condition and seeks isolation, but the obstacle of the Hollywood paparazzi appears to be hard to overcome; the feature-length ‘Demon 79’ takes us to late 1970s England but only merely touches the cinematic aesthetics of the era and tells the story of a woman with brief violent visions who gets approached by genie that gives her motive to perform a series of murders.

 

Carnival Row - Season 2

Set in Victorian-era England, the 2nd season of Amazon Studios’ Carnival Row (2019 – 2023) employs the fantasy world of fairies in order to raise questions about racism and constitutional power abuse. This final season is much more violent and gritty than the first (a welcome twist) and also benefits from great performances (Orlando Bloom and Cara Delevingne star) and stunning set & costume design. It is not without its faults though, as the main CGI monster is horribly laughable and the final episode’s queer twist came out of nowhere.

 

The 2nd season of Netflix’s Russian Doll (2019 – present) has the attractive chain-smoking stereotypical New Yorker Nadia Vulvokov (Natasha Lyonne) in another time-travelling adventure that takes her back to 1982, and the show with some of the most adorable dialogues in recent TV history, as well as a lovely rock and new wave soundtrack is an absolute winner.

 

The 2nd season of Marvel Studios’ I Am Groot (2022 – present) is offering five more short stories of the titular tree kid getting involved in hilarious and cute adventures, all featuring stunning animation work.

 

The Haunting of Hill House - Season 1

The sole season of Netflix’s The Haunting of Hill House (2018), created and directed by Mike Flanagan (who also wrote many of its episodes, based on Shirley Jackson’s classic horror novel) is about the titular residence that spooks a family’s past and present. Well-made, genuinely scary, and engaging throughout its mere 10 episodes, this is modern horror television at its best – a masterful event for the small screen that its eeriness will be cherished for years to come.

 

The Mandalorian

Set in the Star Wars universe, Disney’s 2nd season of The Mandalorian (2019 – present) is offering further adventures of the titular bounty hunter (Pedro Pascal) as he protects an overwhelmingly cute baby Yoda and gets mixed-up in all sorts of action-packed situations, but the real riches of the series lie in its gorgeous and spot-on spaghetti western aesthetics.

 

And now, please allow me a word on some recent mainstream film releases…

 

Writer/director James Gunn with his wild cinema influences that combine humor (often of the Meta kind) and PG-13 violence seems ideal at this stage of superhero movie overkill, and he expectedly delivers the goods in Marvel Studios’ Guardians of the Galaxy Vol.3 (2023), an epic 2 and a half hour spectacle that perfectly gels action with emotion, showcasing the importance of heroics in a universe that goes bananas, not very unlike the current state of affairs.

 

The Flash (2023)

DC’s The Flash (2023), directed by Andy Muschietti, is about the titular superhero (Ezra Miller) who accidentally tampers with time and creates a mix-up with parallel universes, resulting in several versions of friends and enemies (including an aged Michael Keaton return as Batman) to come up forward with different agendas, while he also takes the opportunity to try and correct some wrongs from his past. This is not really a movie but more of a CGI showcase, as there is barely any shots, let alone scenes that are not enhanced by this technology, and had me wondering if the filmmakers shot anything else other than a few known actors against green screen backgrounds. This is a terrible example of cinema (if it even qualifies as that) that says a lot about the awful state of pop culture.

 

Indiana Jones and...

Indiana Jones (Harrison Ford) goes back and forth in time in director James Mangold’s Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny (2023) thanks to the powers of the Antikythera mechanism and the newfound de-aging CGI techniques, only to fight Nazis again, this time led by Jurgen Voller (Mads Mikkelsen). Expectedly bombastic with its outrageous $300 million budget, this feels like an endless chase sequence, and while it is entertaining enough (if a bit too long at two and a half hours long), it didn’t really gel with blockbuster audiences (most people who grew up with Indy’s adventures are now beyond their forties, me included).

 

Barely directed by Steven Caple Jr., Transformers: Rise of the Beasts (2023) seems mostly like the work of a committee – Michael Bay is a producer, and Steven Spielberg is an executive producer – and its barebones scenario takes us back to a long time ago, namely the 1990s when the Maximals join the Autobots on a fight with the usual high stakes: saving the world once again! Featuring human-like robots, animal-looking robots (all of them speaking with a variety of stereotypical accents), that are adequate at transforming into cars and vice versa, and only a handful of human actors, this lifeless CGI charade will have you wondering why $400 was spent for its making, and even more so why enough people went to see it in theaters to gross $439 million.

 

Mission: Impossible - Dead Reckoning Part One

Produced by Tom Cruise (the film’s star) and Christopher McQuarrie (the film’s director) on a massive $291 million budget, the bombastic Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One (2023) is about the hunt for a two-part key that can give the ultimate power to whoever gets to own it. All of the franchise’s standard tropes are here including facial recognition-avoiding masks and self-destructed messages, as well as James Bond-like travelogue footage of pretty much every tourist location in the world and beyond, but as per usual where the film really shines is during Cruise’s epic stunts (that he performs sans the aid of a stunt man) that reveal his obsession on becoming the western Jackie Chan. Sure, plenty of CGI is involved, but you’ll be in awe to witness how much of the action was actually shot in real sets. Suspenseful and entertaining throughout its 2 and a half hour running time, this is current action cinema at its best, and well-worthy of the $576.5 million it grossed.

 

Blue Beetle (2023)

Barely resembling a real movie, let alone anything that you could call remotely ‘good’ or even ‘watchable’, DC’s Blue Beetle (2023) directed by Angel Manuel Soto is a piece of excrement that was seemingly made by an algorithm programmed by market metrics, rather than humans, as it is so predictable you could guess where every plot decision is going from miles away and the CGI are remarkably video game-like. Oh, yes, and the titular superhero is of Latin American background (Xolo Mariduena), because you know, you have to tick those ‘diversity’ boxes. The genre has run its course and considering this grossed a mere $129.3 million on an outrageous $104 million budget, the big studios should soon receive the message sane audiences has been sending them for a couple of years now.

 

And unlikely for me, this time I enriched my bookshelf with the following fiction book additions: Stephen King’s The Dark Tower: The Gunslinger (1978), Thomas Harris’ Hannibal box-set [Red Dragon (1981), The Silence of the Lambs (1988), Hannibal (1999), and Hannibal Rising (2006)], Patrick McGrath’s Spider (1990), William Landay’s Defending Jacob (2012), Don Winslow’s The Cartel (2015), and Burn (2014) by James Patterson & Michael Ledwidge.


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June 2, 2020

Static Age #10: Ultraman (1966 – 1967) [Complete Series 02]

Ultraman (1966 - 1967) [Complete Series 02] BD box art.
This Static Age is focusing on Ultraman (1966 – 1967), ‘Protector of the universe’ as per the front cover tagline of Mill Creek Entertainment’s excellent Region A Blu-ray box-set [Complete Series 02], which contains of all 39 episodes in their original Japanese (DTS-HD Master Audio 2.0) with optional English subtitles and a stunning 1080p High-Definition 1.33:1 transfer. The set also comes with a gorgeous booklet that is featuring the ‘The Birth of Ultraman’ and ‘Series History’ articles, both excellent introductory pieces to the series, and several guides (episode, monster, character, and key technology).

The show is about the titular giant alien that arrives on Earth from the Land of Light in Nebula M78 when he was hunting a monster. However, when Ultraman comes in contact with Science Special Search Party he comes to the understanding that he must stay on our planet in order to assist us with the threats of more giant monsters and the like. This is Tsuburaya Production’s first series in color and its remarkable success both in its homeland Japan and abroad in the U.S. spawned a franchise unlike no other, one that is churning up good product to this day.

It’s funny how the voice-over takes Ultraman’s side, sounding a bit like a speaker of a sports match that supports one of the competing teams. The episodes were shot in three blocks (each shooting block responsible for turning up with 13 episodes), and Ultraman had a slightly different costume for each block. ‘Ultra Operation No. 1’ is the origin story in which Ultraman arrives at Lake Ryugamori where he will also fight his first enemy, the monstrous Bemular. In ‘Shoot the Invader’, the Baltan monsters spread terror by freezing humans but as it is to be expected Ultraman is on the rescue. In ‘Science Patrol, Move Out’ the monster Neronga that was buried by a samurai in a well is apparently still alive and also has the power to make itself invisible! In ‘Five Seconds Before the Explosion’ an atomic bomb brings to life a mutated monster called Ragon, and now Ultraman must destroy it and also prevent the detonation of further atomic bombs.The Secret of the Miroganda’ is about the titular flower that is protected by the Greenmons monster which looks like a combination of a plant and a green blob. Guesra, the amphibious Brazilian monster attacks the coast of Tokyo in ‘The Coast Guard Command’. ‘The Blue Stone of Baradhi’ is featuring an overtly ambitious plot that takes its action from Turkey to France, only to settle in the titular ancient city where an Ultraman statue has kept the Antlar monster buried in the sand; that is until now, when the aforementioned monster that resembles a beetle with a mouth that looks like a vagina and is guarded by two claws, essentially creating an overall uncomfortable ‘vagina dentata’ situation. As its title suggests, ‘The Monster Anarchy Zone’ is about a mash-up of many monsters, the most terrifying of them being Red King. It is in this episode that the series, despite how children-friendly they are, started employing the occasional gore scene and the monsters bleed. ‘Lightning Operation’ is an unremarkable episode starring a Gabora monster. ‘The Mysterious Dinosaur Base’ is about a mad scientist (is there any other kind?) that fascinated with his experiments goes as far as to create dinosaurs; it is now up to Ultraman to put things back to order but he will also find time to detach part of a monster and to utilize it as a provocation in the style of Spanish bullfighters. In the comedic but thoroughly entertaining ‘The Rascal from Outer Space’ a shooting star stone that took liquid form managed to create the Gango monster. The first half of ‘Cry of the Mummy’ is fascinating because it is actually about a mummy-like monster, but the second half is introducing us to the ridiculous Dodongo creature that Ultraman gets to ride rodeo-style and the entire thing falls apart. ‘Oil S.O.S.’ is about the titular monster Pestar that consumes great amounts of – you guessed it – oil, and sets miniature facilities on fire; that is until Ultra man employs his (literally) handy Ultra Water Stream power and extinguishes the fires. ‘The Pearl Defense Directive’ is about the Gamakugira monster that has an appetite for expensive pearls. In ‘Terrifying Cosmic Rays’ the pathetic Gavadon monster comes to life thanks to a kid’s drawing. In the amazing ‘Science Patrol Into Space’ episode, a whole lot of Baltans (the awesome bipedal monsters with claws) attack and it is now up to Ultraman to save us, but he will need to employ his teleportation power, something that drains a lot of his life level as shown in the light on his chest. ‘Passport to Infinity’ is featuring the laughable Bullton monster. In ‘Brother from Another Planet’, the Zarab monsters transforms into an evil Ultraman (essentially the same suit, but with modified and differently colored eyes) who will of course fight the good Ultraman; the episode is particularly well-lit, especially during the foggy scenes in the shadows that play like a thriller. In ‘Demons Rise Again’ the Banila and Aboras monsters fight each other in a spectacular battle. ‘Terror on Route 87’ is suffering by the employment of some very awkward-looking stock footage with which the main actors interact sans proper eye-line matching. ‘Breach the Wall of Smoke’ is featuring some of the most spectacular scenes of (miniature) destruction in the series, courtesy of the turtle-like creature Kemular, or as is also known the Poison Gas Monster. ‘Overthrow the Surface’ is atmospheric and creepy, featuring the eerie Underground people that have no eyes and that unleash the Telesdon monster. ‘My Home is Earth’ is featuring the spectacular Jamila monster that throws flames from its mouth! The fascinating ‘The Undersea Science Center’ is featuring a shark-like monster (before they were cool) with a driller-like nose that can dig a hole in the ground and cause destruction as well; it is of course up to Ultraman to save the day again, but the episode is mostly memorable due to its brief but breathtaking underwater sequences. Three monsters, Guigass, Dorako, and Red King II show up in ‘The Mysterious Comet Tsuifon’ and it is up to Ultraman to bring things back to order. ‘The Monster Highness: (Part 1)’ and ‘The Monster Highness: (Part 2)’ feature the Gomora creature, not to be confused with the same-titled Italian gangster series.

And now, let’s switch our focus towards some recent shows…

Freud - Season 1 poster art.
Set in 1880 in Vienna, the 1st season of Netflix’s Freud (2020 – ongoing), a German/Austrian co-production, is about the titular psychoanalyst (played par excellence by Robert Finster) and his input in the investigation of a series of gruesome murders, among the ridicule of his profession by fellow doctors. In the meanwhile, a mysterious and beautiful woman Fleur Salome (the immensely gorgeous Ella Rumpf) as well as her personal demon Taltos (from the Hungarian mythology) will become Freud’s first real patient and by working in this case he will be shaped into the professional and human being that he was. These series don’t really know what they want to be, as sometimes they bear the sensibilities of a gothic melodrama and others opt for gross-out gore, and what’s more sometimes they go for a supernatural and dreamy approach, while others they opt for violent realism, but whatever they do, they do it great.

Based upon a graphic novel, Netflix’s Locke & Key (2020 – ongoing) is about the Locke siblings that after the mysterious murder of their father, they move with their mother to a secluded house, in which they discover a number of magical keys that help them enhance the dimensions of their lost one’s world. This modern gothic melodrama is never tiresome at only 10 episodes long, and it is also good proof that comic books are nowadays much more intelligent than the basic super-heroic and comedic stuff that my generation was reading back when we were kids. The series’ cutest aspect is the Savini Squad which is basically a group of nerdy filmmakers that try to make a splatter/monster movie and while doing so they also offer tons of geeky horror movie references; what’s more, Tom Savini himself also provides a cameo. The season finale is genuinely creepy.

Unorthodox (2020) art featuring Shira Haas as Esty.
Based upon a real story, Netflix’s limited series Unorthodox (2020), consists of four episodes (about an hour long each), and it is about the story of young bride Esty (Shira Haas, delivering what has to be the most powerful performance in a television series of the last decade – I simply can’t imagine how she copped with its demands) who flees from an arranged marriage (I consider those to be forced marriages in one way or another) and her strict and orthodox Jewish community in New York, in order to find a new life in Berlin (the city and its culture are portrayed very realistically here) as a pianist where her lesbian mother also lives. Stressful and stomach-churning, this is important story-telling and these excellent series should be seen by all, if only in order for such dreadful cultures to be exposed. If you thought only Christians and Muslims are bananas, wait until you see this.

The Mandalorian - Season 1
The 1st season of Disney Plus’ The Mandalorian (2019 – ongoing), created by Jon Favreau and consisting of 8 episodes, is about the titular helmet-wearing and cape-boasting pistolero (Pedro Pascal) who comes to the rescue of baby Yoda, and as a result the internet breaks down, overwhelmed in cuteness. Owing more to spaghetti westerns of the 1960s and 1970s, rather than anything George Lucas ever directed, this is featuring a version of the New Republic that resembles the old west, rather than the space opera aesthetics that the franchise had us used to. It is only occasionally exciting and visually pleasing, but most of the times it is tedious and boring.


The 6th season of Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. (2013 – ongoing) finds the titular heroes where the last season left them, namely all around the galaxy looking for Phil Coulson (Clark Cregg) who this time returns as the mysterious Sarge and along with his team of aliens they have evil plans. The real villain of the season though is Izel (Karolina Wydra), who has already destroyed many planets and won’t hesitate to perform the dirty deeds again. The concept is tired at this stage, but the special effects keep getting better and better, and they do include anything imaginable, from spaceships to mummy-like baddies and from bat-like creatures to zombie-like abominations. The plot is all over the place, but strangely it works.

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