Let’s Chat 2 > Likes and Comments
Killers Anonymous, this could be fun.https://youtu.be/zPMzOshvqw8
Maleficent 2! https://youtu.be/_w_47Jm6XOA
I went out to see Avengers: Endgame this past weekend, in part because it was becoming increasingly difficult to avoid spoilery talk in the entertainment media. I’ve only been a so-so fan of the MCU films and, perhaps reflecting that bias, walked away from the experience thinking this most recent entry was a so-so viewing experience. (view spoiler)✭✭✭½
I’m caught up now with Season 8 of Game of Thrones, having watched Episodes 3, 4, and 5 on Sunday. Just one more to go. I found interesting the on-line fan backlash to script decisions made by Benioff and Weiss, particularly those unveiled in the most recent episode, “The Bells”. (view spoiler)
I spent a fair amount of time in New York this past month, affording me the opportunity to see a number of Broadway shows. All My Sons , Arthur Miller
A revival of Miller’s 1947 play in which the American Dream is juxtaposed with concerns about social and moral responsibility. It was Miller’s first hit. This revival features a strong performance by Annette Bening.
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The Ferryman , Jez Butterworth
Set during The Troubles, the play tells the story of the family of a former IRA activist, living in their farmhouse in rural County Armagh, Northern Ireland in 1981. It’s a trifle clichéd and long (at around 3 hours), but pretty compelling stuff. Oddsmakers currently are picking it to win in the best play category.
✭✭✭✭½
Kiss Me, Kate , Cole Porter
Kiss Me, Kate (1948) was Porter’s response to the Rodgers and Hammerstein’s ground-breaking Oklahoma! , one the first musicals to more tightly integrate story and song. Ironically, Oklahoma is the other big musical revival this season. Kate involves one of those show-within-a-show tropes that showbiz folks seem to particularly enjoy. This revival (with Will Chase and Kelli O’Hara as the leads) features some nice choreography, particularly during the “Too Darn Hot” Number.
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The Prom , Chad Beguelin & Matthew Sklar
This is a musical comedy about four C-List Broadway actors who seek to revive their flagging careers by supporting a politically correct cause in a fictitious conservative Indiana town. It’s charming and amusing, but it’s up against a crowded field in the new musical category this season; Hadestown is the predicted winner in, although I’d like to see Beth Leavel from The Prom win in the best actress in a musical category.
✭✭✭✭½
Hillary and Clinton , Lucas Hnath
Ostensibly about Hillary’s run for the presidency in 2008, Hnath’s play is more an odd family psychodrama with minimal cast and set. The play is directed by Joe Mantello and stars Laurie Metcalf as Hillary Clinton and John Lithgow as Bill Clinton.
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Ink , James Graham
Graham’s play is indirectly about the devolution of journalistic ethics in the last part of the 20th century as it recounts the purchase of The Sun by Rupert Murdoch, who, along with editor Larry Lamb, transformed it into a tabloid monstrosity that for a time enjoyed the largest circulation of any daily newspaper in the United Kingdom. Depressing, but well acted with a great set design. The cast includes Bertie Carvel as Murdoch.
✭✭✭½
That’s a lot of theater time for vacation! Still, John Lithgow is one of the greats, I can’t think of any other actor than can be the bad guy (Cliffhanger) as convincingly as the good guy (Harry and the Hendersons).
Corinne asked:WOW that looks like a widely successful Broadway experience. That is amazing.
I've only ever done day trips. (I live about 3 hours away) Did you sleep in NYC also? For a month?
I’m usually in NYC two or maybe three times a year. This time it was for a week, so we saw a show nearly every night (along with a couple of matinees).
Lena said, in part:John Lithgow is one of the greats, I can’t think of any other actor than can be the bad guy (Cliffhanger) as convincingly as the good guy (Harry and the Hendersons).
Lithgow was positively chilling as the bad guy in Season 4 of Dexter. It may have been the best season of that Showtime series.
Still, I think Hillary and Clinton was really Metcalf’s show. I’ve seen her on stage in a couple of other things and she is very good.
I will grant that the show's pace having been drastically accelerated, and the anticimax that was the battle for the dawn have left fans feeling cheated. However, (view spoiler)
All caught up with game of thrones I must say I'm happy and also disappointed with the final season.
Corinne wrote: "Great post. I agree with all you said. Here is something regarding your last paragraph:
His recent blog "... no, THE WINDS OF WINTER and A DREAM OF SPRING are not finished. DREAM is not even beg..."
Yeah, I knew it had to be all lies, I was just holding out the last shred of hope. I've pretty much abandoned hope of the series ever actually getting finished at this point.
Herman Wouk died on Friday, 17 May, at the age of 103. I can easily imagine that younger readers might not be familiar with Wouk, but I fondly recall reading a number of his books in my late teens and 20s. Looking forward in time, I suspect that critical opinion might be less than kind when considering Wouk’s oeuvre. But he wrote at least one novel I would consider to be great, the 1951 Pulitzer Prize-winning
The Caine Mutiny
. Set largely in WW II’s Pacific Theatre, it’s a combination Bildungsroman, character study of men operating under stress, and courtroom drama. Perhaps his most popular books were the two featuring WW II naval officer “Pug” Henry,
The Winds of War
(1971) and
War and Remembrance
(1978).
No.♫ Who would have though after a thousand years it would end like this?
Oh whoa oh
Arya, I just died in your arms tonight
It must have been my army of dead... ♫
Yes, still enjoyable.On the other hand, I just read the BS ending of GOT and am really really glad I passed on that after book three or four. Jesus.
I may be in the extreme minority in that I am actually OK with most of the Game of Thrones ending having watched the finale last night. There are things I’m not happy about certainly but most of the characters ended in places that I was pretty pleased with.
D said:I may be in the extreme minority in that I am actually OK with most of the Game of Thrones ending having watched the finale last night. There are things I’m not happy about certainly but most of the characters ended in places that I was pretty pleased with.
I was fine with most of the decisions on how the various characters ended their journey. But (and I hate to keep harping on this point) I often found myself disappointed by the execution. (view spoiler) Let me be clear — at the end of the day I still think that Game of Thrones was better than the vast majority of television series, but I think during its last three seasons the creative team fumbled the ball a bit and missed out on an opportunity to be truly great.
I found myself laughing at so much of the finale that my sides are still sore this morning.In no particular order: (view spoiler)
The best four minutes of erudite ranting over Game of Thrones!https://youtu.be/B4zGTD6Pa6Q
Go South China Post!
Lena said (in part):The best four minutes of erudite ranting over Game of Thrones!
Boy, I hate to be that guy who is out of step with popular critical opinion, but all of this ultra-angry venting about Game of Thrones seems to me a little out of proportion. Were the last few seasons perfect? By no means. Were events and character arcs needlessly rushed? Certainly. But this idea that the show quality declined to the point where it was utter dreck seems less an assessment grounded in objective reality and more another instance of toxic fan reaction run amok. The South China Post critic repeatedly seems to liken the show’s declining quality to a catastrophe of epic proportions (“Oh, the humanity!” he declaims.) And I found his ad hominem attacks, particularly those aimed at George R. R. Martin, offensive and cruel.
I don’t mean to belittle the opinions of those who were (in my view, justifiably) disappointed with the way the series stumbled to its conclusion. But I just want to push back a bit on what I see as the sometimes unfair and decidedly personal nature of some of that criticism.
I like the part where he says he was “bound by honor” to bitch because of all the previous seasons where he was a loyal and supportive fan. I laughed quite a bit. My nightmare for the show was that they would drag down whatever woman they chose to build up and then put a man on the throne. Guess what happened?
Lena said (in part):My nightmare for the show was that they would drag down whatever woman they chose to build up and then put a man on the throne. Guess what happened?
Oops. My apologies. Shoulda used some spoiler tags here...
I was never really all that invested in any of the fan theories about who was going to “win” the game of thrones as long as the end result more or less made sense. (view spoiler)
I’m trying to think back over TV shows I was into that ended well and to my satisfaction, not always the same thing. The only one I can think of is Justified. “We dug coal together.”
"Never assign to malice that which can be satisfactorily explained by incompetence."HBO was backing up the money truck for a ninth and tenth season of ten episodes each, but D&D said no. I think that it's likely that D&D were eager to start their Star Wars movies, and had lost interest in GoT.
I’ve heard this, their self imposed deadline. I was surprised that Martin did not finish the books to go with the show but King took almost thirty years to get to the Tower.On different note, anyone have $14,000? I’ve heard these are damn good. https://camelotbooks.com/books/detail...-
Lena said:I’m trying to think back over TV shows I was into that ended well and to my satisfaction, not always the same thing. The only one I can think of is Justified.
“We dug coal together.”
That’s a very good point.
As an aside, the line that you cite was a direct lift from the Elmore Leonard story that served as a starting point for the series, “Fire in the Hole”.
Lena said (in part):I was surprised that Martin did not finish the books to go with the show
So was Martin. As you probably know, when the idea of an HBO series was initially pitched, Martin was confident he could stay ahead of the show’s writing. Ah, hubris. But it wasn’t as though Martin didn’t try. This quote from an interview last November: “I’ve had dark nights of the soul where I’ve pounded my head against the keyboard and said, ‘God, will I ever finish this? The show is going further and further forward and I’m falling further and further behind.’”
That must have been hell. Of all the times to get writers block. On the other hand he has the chance JK Rowling did not, to take a step back and decide after seeing the work on screen. I’ve seen so many little snippets of her realizing things that she should/could have changed. Or not. You’re never going to make everyone happy but he has the chance to make himself happy with the work. Time certainly does not matter now.
Just finished. I had read several of the books listed but other than maybe Oryx and Crake I had not thought of them as clifi. I ended up doing a write in - one of the two clifi books I have in my Read list. I will have to reconsider my definition.
Corinne said:*scratches head* hmmmm Because the book had climate? I only read game of thrones from that list and it had zero impact on my feelings about climate. I don't get it.
George R. R. Martin made this connection explicit in a New York Times interview. Excerpts from that interview were published by Esquire and can be read online here.



NEVER STOP CHATTING