This Static Age’s spotlight
goes to Twin Peaks (1990 – 1991), the
series created by Mark Frost and David Lynch that lasted two seasons. The first
season consists of 8 episodes and the second of 22, and they concern the
mysterious murder of a teenage girl in Small-town, U.S.A. and the attempts of
the local police to solve the case amidst a backdrop that is so weird that
makes everything more complicated. There are enough moments of cinematic
brilliance here, as well as a tone of wonderful dread, to justify the many
people that are obsessed with this show. Also starring David Duchovny (in drag),
Don Davis, Billy Zane, the great Russ Tamblyn, and David Lynch himself.
And now, let’s switch our focus towards some recent series…
|
The Boys - Season 2 poster art |
The 2nd season of The
Boys (2019 – present), created by Eric Kripke, is offering more action and
gross comedy for the fans (or even haters) of superheroes. The series continue
from where they had left us, with Billy Butcher (Karl Urban) missing and his
team now essentially a bunch of fugitives, and with the other camp regaining
power despite having lost a member of its team. The end result is edgy and the
kind of television in which you see heads exploding and hands amputated; once
upon a time we had to rely to the films of Lucio Fulci and David Cronenberg for
such imagery but now it is part of the prime time mainstream. Thematically the
series are a satire of not just the republicans and the Trump administration,
but also so much more in general and hypocrisy in particular. Actually, this is
so meta that the ‘terrorists’ are (kind of) the good guys and the ‘superheroes’
are (absolutely) the bad guys. Highly recommended intelligent fun (not for the
whole family though).
The 1st season of American
Crime Story (2016 – present) is about the famous case of the double
homicide attributed to O.J. Simpson (Cuba Gooding Jr.), and it is a perfect
10-episode journey to this fascinating true crime story. Featuring excellent
and show-stealing performances from John Travolta as Robert Shapiro and David
Schwimmer as Robert Kardashian, these series are a modern masterpiece.
Absolutely the best courtroom drama since a certain Al Pacino classic.
|
The Alienist - Season 1 promotional art |
Set in 19th century New York, the 1st season of The Alienist (2018 – 2020) is about a
series of gruesome murders of underage transvestite prostitute boys, and the
grouping of alienist (or what one would call a criminal psychologist today) Dr.
Laszio Kreizier (Daniel Bruhl) and crime scene illustrator John Moore (Luke
Evans), who will try to crack the bizarre case. Also starring Dakota Fanning in
the mandatory feminist role and Michael Ironside, the series combines top-notch
set and costume design with all-out horrors, and as such it is a winner. It is
amazing to think that only three or four decades ago you could get to see such
dark subject matter tackled only in edge exploitation films that were difficult
to find whereas now it is readily available for streaming on Netflix.
|
Chilling Adventures of Sabrina - Season 4 |
I am very glad that the 4th season of Chilling Adventures of Sabrina (2018 – 2020) is also the last
because by this stage the series have lost its steam. The titular witch (the
always gorgeous Kiernan Shipka) will once again have to face Lovecraft’s
Eldrich and teenage angst on her journey towards empowerment and self-awareness
before the tired Netflix show concludes. The soundtrack is great and it
includes Queen’s ‘Radio Ga Ga’, Billy Idol’s ‘Dancing with Myself’, Bonnie
Tyler’s ‘Total Eclipse of the Heart’, Guns N’ Roses’ ‘Sweet Child ‘O Mine’, and
a little bit of ‘Down with the Sickness’ by the Disturbed; most of them may be
covers from the on-screen band the Fright Club, they are still awesome.
|
Doctor Who - Season 7 art |
The 7th season of Doctor
Who (2005 – present) is offering further adventures of the titular alien
(returning Matt Smith) and his friendly couple Amy Pond (Karen Gillan) and Rory
Williams (Arthur Darvill). In ‘Asylum of the Daleks’, the titular trashcan-like
foes return and kidnap the heroic trio, while we are also introduced to the
absolutely gorgeous Oswin (Jenna Coleman). ‘Dinosaurs on a Spaceship’ is
featuring – well! – dinosaurs on a spaceship, as well as robots. ‘A Town Called
Mercy’ is an homage to Westworld
(1973). ‘The Power of Three’ is about mysterious black cubes that invade earth
and become part of humanity’s everyday life. ‘The Angels Take Manhattan’ is
another creepy episode featuring its titular entities. ‘The Snowmen’ is the
episode in which Clara’s part (Jenna Coleman) becomes more prominent and a
perfect sidekick for the good Doctor. ‘The Rings of Akhaten’ takes us to the
titular planet where a weird religious ceremony is about to unfold, which is
the case here on Earth as well, I would like to add. ‘Cold War’ is set during
the – you guessed it! – Cold War, and finds the Doctor and Clara on a Russian
submarine where a Martian warrior monster is also abroad. In ‘Hide’, Clara and
the Doctor meet a very similar couple to them, albeit one that is searching
ghosts, this time in a haunted mansion. ‘Journey to the Centre of the TARDIS’
has Clara lost inside the iconic spaceship, where she is confused by the
Doctor’s past. ‘The Crimson Horror’ employs visuals that look like 16mm film
(and could well not be for all I know and the illusion be the work of
post-production) in order to take us back in time, but the coverage shots don’t
not match the era, a very common mistake among modern filmmakers. ‘The Name of
the Doctor’ includes the answers to the mystery behind Clara’s own nature.
Also, please allow me to speak a word or two about some recent
mainstream films…
|
Wonder Woman 1984 (2020) |
Director Patty Jenkins’ Wonder
Woman 1984 (2020) is set in – you guessed it – the 1980s and focused on
Donald Trump-like businessman and con artist Maxwell Lord (Pedro Pascal) who
takes the powers of an ancient wishing stone. By granting wishes left, right,
and center, not to mention his own greedy capitalist ones for professional
success, he of course creates chaos and misery. The titular superhero (played
again by the talentless Gal Gadot) steps in to save the day, but the
super-villain now has an ally in the form of The Cheetah (Kristen Wiig), another
predictable outcast that turned her anger into evilness (you can tell what will
happen next from miles away, every page of the script is so by-the-numbers and
uninspired). If you’re looking for unethical neoliberal propaganda that is
preaching that the world is a beautiful place and you should not wish for
change because you may lose what you already have, then this movie should be
perfectly spoon-fed to you; but if you have even a little bit of humanity left
in you, you should absolutely denounce this corrupt piece of shit. Either way,
at two and a half hours this excrement is desperately boring. As a choice, 1984
should not surprise you, as this is a case study on how to perform Orwell in
real life (conservatives know that 1984
is supposed to be fiction, right?).
Train to Busan Presents: Peninsula |
Train to Busan Presents... |
(2020) is the sequel to the 2016 ‘zombies on a train’
epic, and is about a bunch of people that have nothing to lose and accept an
offer from some seedy gangsters to go on a mission in the zombie-infected city
of Peninsula, grab a few million dollars and come back rich. As difficult as
the original plan was, everything goes to hell and the situation becomes much
worse. Written by Sang-ho Yeon (who also directed) and Ryu Yong-jae, this may
not be this year’s most original horror, it is however a very well-calculated
work that keeps you excited throughout its 2-hour running time, and as such it
should not be missed.
And finally, this past couple of months my bookshelf had a preference
towards fiction (a rare occurrence, as I’m mostly into film books or true crime,
etc.) and I tackled the following…
Stephen King’s The Bachman Books
(2012, Hodder), a 978 pages tome that collects The Long Walk (1979), Roadwork
(1981), and The Running Man (1982),
three books that the horror legend penned under his Richard Bachman pseudonym,
bored me to tears and failed to captivate me.
Stephen King’s 1325 pages epic The
Stand (1978, 2011, Hodder) is about an epidemic and therefore the most
appropriate thriller I could read during the current Covid-19 worldwide crisis.
Believed by most of his fans to be King’s best novel, it comes complete with
references to American International programmers and Charles Band quickies.
Stephen King’s ‘chilling classic’ The
Dead Zone (1979, 2011, Hodder) is about a man’s charisma and curse that
enables him to see people’s past and future upon touching them. At 595 pages
long it is considerably shorter from the author’s previous opus, albeit still
of epic proportions. However, I think the movie was better.
‘The first collection of short stories by Stephen King’, Night Shift (1976, 1977, 1978, 2019, Κλειδάριθμος) is by far the author’s most engaging book as the
short story format fits his terrors like a globe. An eerie compilation of 20
masterworks, this book reignited my interest for the author.
In the non-fiction front, I had the pleasure of reading Jimmy
McDonough’s massive and stunning The Ghastly
One: The 42nd Street Netherworld of Director Andy Milligan
(2019, FAB Press), which took me on a breathtaking journey of 1960s and 1970s
underground that included everything, from drugs to group sex and from suicides
to prostitution, all in the beautiful backdrop of filthy theater and cinema.
When it comes to New York, I say Andy Warhol my ass – Andy Milligan was the
real deal; a true misanthrope and a great artist. This edition came with a
bonus book called Andy Milligan’s Scripts,
which I am sure you guessed what it contains.
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