The first six episodes were pretty good, and I enjoyed them. There was a suitable amount of creepiness (but not too much suspense and certainly no gore outside of the operating rooms). What I liked best about Kingdom Hospital was the focus on the characters. What sometimes frustrates me about movies/series/books that are based on a format where the story has scattered protagonists is how they don't communicate and *get together*!

That doesn't happen in Kingdom Hospital.\ The characters in this short series actually start *working together* and *sharing information* in a timely manner! It's a simple thing that for some reason, doesn't seem to happen often enough, or satisfyingly enough. I didn't mind the tangents that the series went into with story-lines and characters because, please, tell me how other series have, as King says, endless middles and often, no ending at all?

Okay...the final six episodes. I liked the introduction of the seismologist who was also clued in to the happenings. It's interesting how, even though he's clued in, like another character (the black man at the church) he's a neutral party, willing to give Stegman vital information without qualification.

Heartless is one of those straightforward be-careful-what-you-wish-for stories based on those icky old EC horror comics King draws so much of his inspiration from. It's really the B story in this episode (chapter?) and it does serve to show Antubis' nature. He makes bargains. He keeps his deals; but you have to be careful, especially if, unlike Peter the artist, you don't have what he needs to forward his ends. He's ruthless.

Butterfingers, the one about the New England Robin's first base man who fumbles an easy ball and causes his team to lose the World Series in 1987 establishes that Mary has powers that haven't been plumbed yet. There's no telling how many times she has or hasn't helped someone out by taking them back to a point in time that holds a single instant that changes their live, but those previous times don't matter; here's a clue about the ending. Meanwhile, Hook, Stegman, and Mrs. Druse are all plotting to break into Records to find what they need by sending in their proxies. It's amusing, but felt like it took too long to get that plot moving.

On the Third Day: I'm not quite sure how the miracles with the death of the priest fit in, exactly, except to show that in this reality, miracles, and anti-miracles, can happen at or near Kingdom Hospital at any time. Either way, the inner natures of the characters aren't changed, but perhaps their faith is confirmed. If there is such gruesome evil in Kingdom Hospital, then its opposite exists across the street where the old Mill used to be (KH is built on the site of the original torture hospital when the MIll was in operation).

The final three hours: the viewer gets a put-together story of what happened to Mary and how she got those scars above her eyes (which make her look like an ancient Japanese theater figure, probably not a coincidence) and how exactly the events of the fateful Mill fire happened. There's some resemblance to Insomnia here, where the goal the entire time was to save one child. Paul played less of a part than I expected, and there wasn't a lot of explanation for why Paul and the human form of Antubis/Anubis are the same except to illustrate again that where there's Dark, there is also Light, but the Light needs a hell of a lot more defense. The conclusion was too short-all the central characters gather together, share their parts of the story, and then go back in time in a ghostly form. The reason Peter the artist was forcibly drawn to the hospital becomes clear, but the surprise that *should* have been foreshadowed somehow, was that Chris and (the other character) who know everything going on in the Hospital are able to make things real. The ending was too abrupt and too *easy* in my opinion. There was Stegman, but he's an ineffectual bad guy. Paul and Dr. Gottfried are wiped out easily by Antubis/Anubis, which makes me wonder why the heck he didn't do it a long time before.

There are some loose ends. In the second episode, Mrs. Druse is shown to have a lesion on her own brain after having an MRI. But it's not dealt with later, that I can recall.

Overall, even with some loose threads hanging, I like the show, and my daughter, who joined me while I watched episodes Butterfingers and Heartless, got caught up in it, too, and has asked if I'll watch it from the beginning with her. That shouldn't be a problem! So yes, KH has its problems, which are King's long-standing problems with plotting, but overall, a good work. Production values were constant, the CGI team did a decent job, especially with Antubis. I've no idea if folks know how difficult it is to animate an animal with a lot of hair, but believe me, it's HARD, and they did a great job especially on a TV budget. It was fun, a neat haunted house story, and that's all I need: a good few hours of entertainment.


Per Twilight? I think the kid who played Paul, the evil ghost in KH, would have made a *fantastic* Edward in the movies. He looks good in ghoulish make-up.



I'm about half-way through the series now (watched three episodes yesterday, and am watching through to the sixth episode).

Wow, I'm impressed. The style of the show gels together, and although the story is slowly unfolding, the very beginning of the series gave me just enough background of the site the hospital rests on that it's okay if I wait a while more to find out exactly what the earthquakes are about, or where that evil ghost boy Paul comes from. I do wonder where Mary, the little girl ghost with the bell who is looking for her doll, got those two wounds above her eyes.

And the cool thing is, I didn't realize that HRG (Noah) from Heroes is a central character in this. Well, sort of central. He's spending most of his time helpless in his hospital bed.

All the descriptions that I've read of KH don't do it justice. I mean, c'mon, if you read that there was an invisible talking toothy anteater ghost-god? wandering around the halls of a hospital, wouldn't you wonder what the heck was going on? I really like the characters, and Peter Davidson, who plays a incompetent doctor, does a terrific job with the role. Of course, I love Stephen King's novels, even when they're flawed, and I'm enjoying the references to Castle Rock, Nozz-a-la and other things that the production staff sprinkled through the series.

I really like it, but I can see how there are folks who couldn't get into it for the weirdness. I only cringe a little when the doctors and nurses break out into spontaneous song in the ER when they get someone's heart beating again. Oh, and the surgery scenes with the blood? FF right through them. Hmm. Maybe if I can take this show, I can handle Supernatural; but that's actually a harder edged horror type of show. Maybe I'll tackle that next.
I turned on the TV (which I rarely do during the day), and Tales From the Darkside was on SciFi Channel. So, off I went to Wikipedia, and another TV website, to get the skinny on this series. It was produced from 1984 to 1987, and had several well-known horror writers and directors contribute to its production, including George Romero and Stephen King and others.

One of the 'top episodes' is Anniversary Dinner. I had to hunt down the details on this one and found this excellent post on X-Entertainment. I'm not sure who wrote it, exactly, but if you scroll down a few paragraphs, you'll hit screencaps from the episode and the blogger's tale of when and how this episode imprinted on his mind when he (or she) was a young kid.

It's an excellent example of how the ordinary is truly frightening:  "Anniversary Dinner" really had an impact on me. I think a lot of it had to do with how, even after we saw what they were up to, Henry and Elinor act just the same as they always did. They don't start laughing manically, or spitting, or stabbing people.

And isn't that the true definition of horror? How the abnormal can appear normal, not breaking its stride of appearing normal, and yet...*bam*!

The article is a fascinating read (to me, at least!) of how a certain story, or type of story, can impact itself into one's mind, at any age.

Life on Mars US is turning out to be a good adaptation. I like how the writing is tight enough to keep the story going. The episodes also follow (generally) the sense of the original episodes, but with added or changed roles. I'm not so sure I like the Gene Hunt on the US show. He isn't in it nearly enough...but it would be hard to top the Gene Hunt in the BBC original. He ended up taking over the original LoM!

I'm surprised I'm liking it as much as I am.
It's all over my flist--Atlantis cancelled. After a five year run with a turnstile for the actors and halfway through a new set of producers, it was finally officially canned by SciFi.

Did you really want to continue twisting in the wind with the pallid story-lines, revolving cast, and improbable romantic relationships? Would it *really* be desirable to have it spiral down in quality even *more*?

Chowder

Aug. 13th, 2008 11:31 am
My new favorite cartoon (well not *favorite* favorite!) is Chowder. At first it annoyed the heck out of me until I sat down with my kids and watched it with them. It's hysterical, and the jokes and storylines are imaginative and goofy. My favorite character on the show is Shnitzel, who ONLY says, "Radda radda" with varying voice permutations. He's possibly the funniest character on the show. I also like Mung the Chef, who employs Shnitzel and Chowder in his catering business. It's a very inventive show. It has some cliche relationships and storylines, but now, with the first seasons well underway, I think the writers have gotten totally used to the weird, stuck-in-someone's-head world that Chowder and the other characters live in. It keeps getting wilder and wilder, and sometimes I wonder what they're smoking in the writer's room!
 Three TV Reviews:

The Seed--Atlantis

Psych--Premiere Episode, 3rd season
Psych )


The Avatar--Nickelodean/Cartoon Network
The Guy came home a few nights ago with the first season of Starblazers (Battleship Yamato to purists) on DVD, borrowed from a friend of his at work.

OMG, this show is as good as I remembered it being in the late seventies. Battlestar Galactica owes a LOT of it's characterization and plotting to this show. So does Star Wars, for that matter. It's a seminal show, with a terrific story arc that carried it through the entire season.

The animation isn't all that bad, either, and the design is awesome. But best of all is how the characters grow and learn, and the action keeps your attention while they struggle for their own and earth's survival.

StarBlazer's first season lyrics
We're off to outer space
We're leaving Mother Earth
To save the human race
Our Star Blazers

Searching for a distant star
Heading off to Iscandar
Leaving all we love behind
Who knows what danger we'll find?

We must be strong and brave
Our home we've got to save
If we don't in just one year
Mother Earth will disappear

Fighting with the Gamilons
We won't stop until we've won
Then we'll return and when we arrive
The Earth will survive
With our Star Blazers
I should be doing something else, but what the hell, I stayed up late enough to finish watching it, so why not write about it? I'm a few years late, but it's like new to me.

I'm not putting spoiler cuts on this because, duh, it's a few years old now, and I proclaim it is past the spoilage zone. If you feel like complaining to me about it, hold your tongue and move along.

Battlestar Galactica the Miniseries

The Guy went out and bought season 1 yesterday, to my astonishment. It sat there on his desk all shiny and reflective in its foil covered box with a sexy Six in a red dress on the cover (with two other characters in the background). He started the first disc up around 11pm just after I'd fallen asleep on the couch with The World Without Us on my tummy (closed and bookmarked). I woke up a few minutes later somewhere at the twenty minute mark - at least, past the scene where the Caprican Six murders the infant in its goofy looking carriage. "Yeah," admitted the Guy this morning, "I fast forwarded through that scene and the through the unnecessary introduction part where the Six makes out with the human guy, and allows the other Cylons to blast her and the space station to bits."

I'd like to make a note here that when the miniseries came out, I was excited and wanted to watch it BUT that baby-murder scene right at the beginning put me off like nothing else, and I only sporadically watched (and remember watching) the rest of the miniseries.

That Scene aside, and once the plot really got moving, once the Cylons attack (look ma! All those pretty mushroom clouds!) it was pretty good. It was even better watching it now, with hindsight 20/20 and all that. I think once the series ends, it'll be fun for BSG fans to look back at the series in its entirety (er...with the exception of that stupid romance quadrangle) and see if there were any clues set into the script. I'm sure there are die-hard fans who do that now anyway, but with the airing of the fourth and final season, I'm sure it's going gang-busters right now.

Characterization was raw - the actors and writers were feeling out where they were, and it shows here and there. Olmos and McDonnell were terrific. Of course, there's even more depth to the President once the series truly gets underway, like the Galactica on it's hide-and-seek egg hunt. It owes a lot to earlier movies (Alien, Bladerunner, Star Wars) for its Lived In look. Unlike the Millenium Falcon, of course, the Galactica isn't the family minivan with wrappers under the seat. Although there's likely to be a lot wet spots on the upholstery in THIS version of BSG!

The first scene between Boomer and Tyrol (oh, we thought we knew you well, Chief!) felt by-the-numbers and farcicial, like it should have been edited into another movie: perhaps Spaceballs. Moore and company had to get sketch out in shorthand, often cliche, their character's character building scenes and get a lot of exposition in there to ground the audience in the world(s) of the Twelve Colonies. There are moments here and there where it feels like the dialogue is going to lapse into "As You Know, Bob" infodumps, but fortunately, Moore and the writers are a shade smarter than that. After all, these are smart characters who sometimes act dumb, or make bad decisions based on the little they understand and are under tremendous pressure to keep the species alive.

As nutty as I think Mormonism is, Glen Larson believed it had a good story behind it. I agree with that: the best stories feature people struggling to survive, making it against a superior force (The Ten Commandments, The Prince of Egypt and other biblical tales come to mind) and winning. What's not clear in BSG, even in the beginning, is if these people are going to win. Are they going to "win" in their personal lives? Are they going to survive?

What I fear is, based on what I saw in the miniseries, that Moore won't or won't be able to go to the edge of that. It's a topic broached in a recent interview with Katee Sackoff, who plays Starbuck in the series. She has an excellent grasp and awareness of *story*. I only hope that SciFi Channel, with its incompetent executives allows Moore & Co. to not wrap up the storylines in neat little boxes with bows on top. The Galactica is not the Good Ship Lollipop - but then, neither was Farscape, and although that show ended on a postive note, it gave enough for closure (at least for this fan).

More impressions as I plow through the rest of the season. It may not be steady, though, because, well, Life. You know?
The Guy tells me has the final three episodes for it on his hard drive, and he'll DL them onto my thumbdrive as soon as we have some free TV time to actually watch them! 

Unlike with Torchwood, I am totally unspoiled for it, and hope to remain that way. I've sort-of given up on Torchwood since...well, most of my reasons are listed on my reviews. I'm a jaded SF media show watcher, I guess. But, Ashes to Ashese/Life on Mars gave the premise enough of a twist that it was enjoyable. That and Dr Who. Still have lots of love for Dr Who. I hope Martha joins the Torchwood team, I would LOVE that. I might even start watching it with more than cursory curiousity.
I just read an article that said LoM was just bought by a Spanish commercial station, and they're going to remake it (like the American version) it's going to be reset in Spain in 1978, three years after Franco's death in 1975. They'll "shadow" the origina series' scripts, but adapt it to their own culture and so forth. Very cool.  

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