Showing posts with label TV. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TV. Show all posts

July 4, 2011

Weeds Episode 7x02 Review


Overall Season Rating: B-
Episode Rating: B-
Episode Title: 7x02 From Trauma Cometh Something

Weeds answered a lot of the questions from last week, and while I wasn't expecting some of the events, I'm not really that impressed with them either. A friend mentioned to me that he didn't think last week's episode was very funny at all. While I don't totally agree, I would say that the show has been lacking in jokes quite a bit this season so far. There's been very a serious air about the show, and when it looks like they are trying to tell a joke it falls flat. This might be caused by the subject matter, or maybe we are so familiar with these characters that no matter what they do or say we just take it at face value.

I'll get into more detail in the spoilers section about what I liked and didn't like, but I am starting to worry about the show. As I said last week, I haven't been pleased with it since they left Agrestic, and I think those feelings will continue. New York City does offer some new opportunities but so far they have not explored that at all. In this episode for example none of the characters did anything that they could not do anywhere else. Aside from a modeling agency rep saying New York is the land of hard chizzled gods. Which is certainly is.

Spoilers below the fold.

Falling Skies Episode 1x04 Review


Overall Season Rating: B
Episode Rating: B-

Tonight's episode was titled "Grace", and the moral was  "prayer makes everything okay".  Yes, that's right, religion has shoved it's way into an otherwise very well done science fiction survival story. More on this later in the spoiler section. Other than religion, this episode gives us more information about the Skidders. I'm liking the way they're revealing things about them. Instead of some cliche'd exposition we are learning who they are through experience. To put it another way, we are learning about them just as our characters learn. This keeps the tension and the mystery exciting. The dark nature of the show continued as well, and like I've said this will be the strength of the show.

I also continue to be impressed with the special effects. We get a very close up view of a Skidder throughout this episode, and for a cable TV show it looked excellent. There are some negative aspects though. For one, the show seems to be falling into old troupes and devices used in these types of stories. The battle over how you learn more about the Skidders would be much more interesting I think if the characters involved were more developed. Since it's only the fourth hour we know very little about them, making their arguments seem completely one-dimensional. For the most part I think the acting has been good, but we can't have a deep argument about morality when we don't have enough information to know the motivations for these people.

Another good episode, but certain events lead me to believe they may not have the guts I hoped they did.

Spoilers below the fold


June 30, 2011

What's new for July?


It's officially Summer and TV is about to get crazy. There are a lot of shows starting in July that we'll be covering here on The Flashbacks Podcast Blog. There also are a few big movies that I've been looking forward to for a long time. Let's get started shall we?

Television: 


Torchwood: Miracle Day(July 8 on Starz): The epic Doctor Who spin-off series returns for its fourth season. Now taking place in the United States, and airing Starz. I love Doctor Who, and I LOVE John Barrowman as Captain Jack Harkness! All I know about the season is that due to some craziness no one on Earth can die. Welcome to Miracle Day! I will be doing regular reviews of this show, and it will hopefully keep me happy while I wait for the 2nd half of Series 6 of Doctor Who to start.

Curb Your Enthusiasm(July 10 on HBO): Larry David is back as everyone's favorite neurotic for an incredible 8th season.. I have no idea how they are going to top last season's "Seinfeld Reunion" arc, but we shall see. I love this show, and if you were a Seinfeld fan you will too. Unlike most shows on TV you can pretty much jump into this show whenever you want. Much like Seinfeld none of the characters have a very long memory, and each episode is just about Larry getting into trouble, and then freaking out. The show also proves that the real comic genius at Seinfeld was in fact Larry David.

Alphas(July 11 on Syfy): This is a new show that is exactly like Heroes, except they actually team up as superheroes instead of "trying to fit in". I might be totally wrong, but the commercials make it seem like there is more of a centralized mission of both the good guys, and the bad. Super hero shows have not been successful over the past few years, but I hope this one changes that trend. Syfy did an outstanding job with Being Human, hopefully the same will be true for Alphas.

Eureka(July 11 on Syfy): Everyone's favorite town of geniuses returns for the 2nd half of its 4th season. I've always been a fan of this show. Every week they take real scientific principles and tweak them just a bit to make it fun, and work in the fictional world they've created. Since I've always been interested in all kinds of sciences, that aspect gets my geeky blood pumping. Plus, who doesn't love Colin Ferguson as Sheriff Jack Carter, and Twitter beast Neil Grayston as Dr. Douglas Fargo. It might be too silly at times, but I love it.

Breaking Bad(July 17 on AMC): The best show on Television finally returns after more than a year for its 4th season. The season 3 finale ended with a spectacular cliffhanger, and I cannot wait to see how it turned out, and what the repercussions will be. I won't be spoilery here at all, but if you are not watching Breaking Bad you are missing out on the best show on TV, period.

If there is a show you want us to cover, just put it in the comments, and we will seriously consider it.

Movies: 


Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2(July 15): What else is there to say? The EPIC finale of the decade long film series based on the best selling series by J. K. Rowling. I will be watching this at a midnight showing with many many people. Not sure at all when I'll get home, but I'll have the review up sometime early on Friday. Expecto Patronum!!!

Captain America(July 22): Chris Evans(who already played Human Torch in the Fantastic Four) plays Steve Rogers. A skinny and small kid who wants to fight for his nation in World War Two is asked to participate in an experiment. It works, and turns him into one of Marvel's most popular, and well known super heroes, Captain America! Captain America is pretty much the Marvel version of Superman sans all the super human alien powers. The trailers for this movie look outstanding, and I'm a big fan of Chris Evans. This movie is also the main one leading into next year's The Avengers. Can't wait.

Cowboys and Aliens(July 29): It's directed by Jon Favreau, and stars Harrison Ford, Daniel Craig, and Olivia Wilde. What else is there to say? This movie looks insane, and I'm not even sure there's a plot. All we know is that aliens attack a group of cowboys, and they fight back. I imagine they were just pulling words out of a hat, and then decided they had to come up with a story. Favreau directed both Iron Mans so we know he can do this type of movie very well. I am definitely looking forward to this silly popcorn movie with a dream cast.


Podcast: 
Due to the influx of TV shows on Monday, the podcast recording is being moved to Tuesdays.

July 5 - The X-Files: Dark of the Moon: On this show we'll discuss the new Transformers movie. Probably make fun of it, and comment on the amazing cameos. Then the main part of the show will be about The X-Files. I'll give a little history lesson, talk about the seasons with as few spoilers as I can, and talk about the two movies. Then maybe talk about the impact it had on the genre, which was fairly large.

July 19 - The Deathly Flashbacks - This show will be almost exclusively about the new Harry Potter movie. Except for the beginning, it will be quite spoilery. This show should have quite a group since several friends of the show are big fans.


Once again, if there is anything you think we should add to the blog, or the podcast please post it in the comments.

June 27, 2011

Weeds Season 7 Premiere Review



Overall Season Rating: B
Episode Rating: B


Weeds, the story of a suburban mom turned pot dealer, turned drug lord's wife, turned murderer's mom, turned prisoner. This premiere reaffirmed that Weeds is one of the most peculiar shows on television, sometimes too peculiar. I haven't been totally in love with the show since the family left Agrestic. It lost something when that happened, most notably it lost one of the best theme songs ever. I miss "Little Boxes" so much. With that said, season 7 begins differently than the others. Usually Weeds would end on a cliffhanger, and the next season would pick up basically right where the last one ended. That is not the case this year. There is also another change of location, two of them. I also was very pleased with the direction the characters had taken in the missing time. It's both hilarious, and just the right amount of believable. Weeds after all is a comedy, and a pretty dark comedy at that. We don't want it getting too realistic, and there are characters in this show that are so over the top it would be disappointing if they were not in silly and weird situations. I have high hopes for this season, and while I don't think it's the final season, I think I'm going to start hoping it is. With that, on to the review.

Spoilers below the fold.

Falling Skies Episode 1x03 Review


Overall Season Rating: B
Episode 1x01/02: B+
Episode 1x03: B

Ok, two things before this review starts. You'll notice there is a new rating system with TV shows. Up until now I have thought that rating the shows on a per episode basis was not a good idea. That was until I got a very nice e-mail with a great suggestion. That suggestion is what you see above. Two sets of ratings. The Overall Season Rating will be a sliding scale based on the average of scores I give each episode. For those like me that were not great at math, that means if there are two episodes and one gets an A, and the other gets a C, the Overall rating is B. The second thing is to admit that I'm an idiot. But it's not all my fault. Last week I said I didn't know the name of the actor who plays their leader, but he looked familiar. That's because he's been in a ton of movies, and his name is WILL PATTON! His name in the show also is NOT Clayton, but Weaver. I blame IMDb totally for this since as I said he wasn't listed. I apologize to you, to Mr. Patton, and anyone else who likes facts.

Spoilers Below

This episode was called "Prisoner of War" and with good reason . Sad to say while watching the cable skipped a couple times and I missed some important bits, but I think I understand what I missed. The first of these moments was right at the beginning. We see Tom and his crew doing recon on the Skidders and try to see Ben. This is where it skipped and I missed a bit cause next thing I saw they were running away. I don't think I missed anything huge, but we learn he saw a lot of the kids, and plans to go back to get Ben, again. We then get a very BSG style moment of people asking if he saw their kids, and they start putting pictures up on the wall. On the same wall we saw very brief newspaper clippings of the alien arrival. I would like to go back and see if there is a better image of that. Last week I talked about flashbacks, but maybe we won't get that. We'll get very brief looks at newspapers to give us the info we need. That would be bold, and a wonderful usage of the realism of the world to give us that info.


June 20, 2011

Falling Skies Pilot Review


Well the 2-hour premiere of Falling Skies is over. What's the verdict? It's a good show, but not great. It has a lot of potential if they focus on the struggle of humanity to survive, and fight back, and less on the cliched archetypes that appear in every single post-apocalyptic vision. Since this was the pilot episode I thought I would do this review by simply talking about what I liked, and what I didn't like. That way I avoid assuming things, or theorizing about things we simply don't have enough information about. After that, I'll talk about where I hope the show goes. I plan to review this show every week whether I enjoy it or not.

Before I get into the like/dislike section I want give a brief description of the show for those who don't know. In the first few moments we learn that an alien race we call the "skidders" attacked Earth. At first humans allowed them to place ships around the planet to avoid starting a war ID4 Style. This quickly turned bad as the aliens destroyed all the electronics, then all the military bases, and finally started eliminating cities. The show is about the aftermath of this destruction. Imagine the movie Independence Day, but instead of a rousing speech, and an impossibly stupid winning solution, we don't beat the aliens within a couple days. The aliens won, and now only a few humans survive, and begin to slowly fight back.

Spoilers below the fold.


June 13, 2011

The Killing, Day 12 Review



MAJOR SPOILERS BELOW!

Well everyone, it seems we have our KILLER! Right off the bat I want to say that while I'm not 100% cool with the answer, the way it was revealed was amazing. It was definitely a "WOW" moment. I'll get back to this though because I do have more to say about it.

The episode begins in a way that's really interesting. During construction they find a skull in the area where they a building the Mayor's Water Front Revitalization Project. It would turn out that this was only a way for them to kill the Mayor's campaign, since we found out nothing about the person who once used that skull for a head. I was confused by the reaction to this. I understood why it would be an issue for the project, but why was everyone jumping ship like the Mayor did something wrong? Did the Governor really switch to Richmond based solely on the idea that the the skull would cause the Mayor to lose? I dunno maybe I'm dense, but I thought they all overreacted to this. What I think though is kind of moot since that's what the show is doing. After this Richmond gets endorsements, and seems to have the election in the bag. This causes the Mayor to drop off some pictures to his campaign. We find out at the end what the pictures are in what I'm calling "The RICHMOND IS THE KILLER Montage". More on that later.

June 6, 2011

The Killing, Day 11 Review


Last week we learned a lot about the night Rosie died, but this week we learned about the two detectives trying to find her killer. This was the long awaited "character" episode. Where the two main characters stop being clichéd cops, and start being real people. I was amazed, and pleased that Linden and Holder were pretty much the only two people in the episode. The only other person who has appeared before was Linden's son Jack, and that was at the very end. That, and the arc of the episode gave both Mireille Enos and Joel Kinnaman time to shine as actors.

This episode begins following the events of last week. Linden has tracked Rosie to an Indian Casino. As expected they are will not let the police look at their cameras, or interview anyone. I wondered why Linden didn't want to release this information to the press, or at least threaten to do so. I imagine it would hurt business if people thought the casino was covering up something about the death of Rosie Larsen. While I'm sure the people that run the casino are innocent, I still think a threat like that would have helped a little bit. Linden however notices ATMs, and decides to use those cameras to try and find an image of Rosie.

But this, is the end of the Rosie Larsen case until the last few minutes of the episode. We find out that Linden's son has not been at school for the past three days, and he is not at the motel. In fact, he left his cell phone at the motel. I'm sure tracking down murderers every day has left her a bit paranoid, so she's understandably worried. Holder, is doing his best to keep her calm, and by best, I mean not a very good job. At first anyway, he improves considerably. We also find out that Holder has what I am guessing is a son. If we knew this already I had forgotten it. There is some parade he had promised to go to, and calls them to say he'll be there. This is a promise he will have to back out of due to disappearance of Jack, but it was interesting to see that Holder has an actual life, and it was good to see him get more of a story than junkie cop.

The search then begins. Linden gets a call from the mother of Jack's best friend. She says that Jack has been a sort of "ring leader" and is getting everyone to hang out somewhere called The Tunnel. While it has a creepy name, it's just a small tunnel overpass where middle school kids go to smoke, and make out. On the way to track him down, Holder asks about Regi, and mentions his own mom was never around. He was raised by his sister. I always assumed Regi was a close friend, or a sister. I placed her far to young to be Linden's mother, or social worker, but whatever. When Linden said that Regi was her social worker, we got more information than we have in the entire season so far about Linden's life outside of the case and her fiancée, and there was more to come.

Holder and Linden then stop off for some food. It was some fast food place, and Holder orders a hamburger with no burger. He's a vegetarian, but only some of the time. I really liked his explanation of his strange diet, and it goes well with his personality. This scene in the restaurant was one of the best of the season in my opinion. These two have been partners for a week and a half, and this really is the first time they have sat down and talked. Not about the work, but about themselves. Holder talks about when he was addicted to meth, and I could only think of Breaking Bad. I know neither show is big on jokes, but I would love if there was some connection.

We then learn that Jack has been receiving strange texts from someone with a restricted number. He is being told where he can meet someone. We later find out that it's probably his father, but this was definitely creepy. Jack may have been acting like a punk, but he's not stupid enough to get in the car with a stranger. I would have been very upset if that was a the case. Now, just because it was a restricted number didn't mean it was a stranger to him, but it certainly was creepy and troubling. Linden now is clearly past concern, and she's imaging the worst. During the next car ride to the next possible hiding place she tells Holder that she was a foster child until the end of High School, and had moved many times. She says the worst part was not knowing the bed room, they always were different. I wonder if that had anything to do with her becoming a detective. In her line of work, every new case is like a dark room, and she has to find the metaphorical light switch. That's a bit deep for the hour I'm writing this, so I'll stop there.

Another excellent scene takes place when Linden and Holder are checking a park for Jack. She tells a story about when Jack was small, and it's another shining moment for Enos. They then get a call that the body of the young boy has been found. Linden worries that it's Jack, and they race to the scene. I was worried too, but more so because I thought it would be a very poor decision to kill off her son. It's not her son of course, and we leave the scene. I assume all the ordinary police work will be done, but since they have one unsolved murder, I wonder if they will even consider a connection. I'm sure there is none, but still. When they get back to the motel, Jack is there. Linden asks where he's been and he says he doesn't want her to get mad, but he's been with his father. For some reason I thought the father was dead, but I guess not. I know her fiancée mentioned something about a hospital in the last episode. Maybe the husband beat her while they were together, and sent her to the hospital. That would be a very good reason why she wouldn't want her son going to see him, and why it didn't even occur to her to contact him.

The last few minutes of the episode get back to Rosie Larsen. Remember her? Holder gets word that they got the ATM footage, and he finds that Rosie was indeed there. I hope there won't be any crap next week about Holder not telling Linden right away. I mean the worst thing she could have done at that moment was run off to watch camera footage, and leave her son alone again. Next week, I'm guess we'll be back to the Rosie case, and perhaps will learn more about Jack's father. There are only two episodes left, so that kind of narrows down what they'll be able to do. I'm also going to go ahead and guess that next week we will advance the Rosie case almost to its conclusion, but I've certainly been wrong before.

Any comments are, as always welcomed.

May 31, 2011

What's new for June?

It's almost June and that means 2 things. It gets very hot here in New Jersey, and there's new content for us to geek out about.

Here are some of the things we will be covering during the month of June. We will try to post reviews of these TV shows, and movies so check those out.

TV Shows:
Falling Skies on TNT starts June 19. For those who don't know, this is a pretty big new show from the folks who know drama. Falling Skies takes place after an alien invasion apocalypse. Looks like it'll be pretty dark, and the cast looks good too. This will be one of the few American sci-fi shows on TV so I hope it does well.
Falling Skies website

Futurama on Comedy Central on June 23. This epic series returns for the 2nd half of its 6th season. Since this is not a serialized show I'm not sure if we'll do reviews for them. I personally love the series, so I promise I will try.

Weeds on Showtime on June 27. Everyone's favorite show about a pot selling mom returns for its 7th season. While I have not been totally happy with the direction the show has taken the past couple seasons, I still love it for being one of the strangest series on TV. I'm hearing that a lot has changed since the end of season 6, so I'm looking forward to this one very much. Since it's on Showtime it does include nudity and profanity, and of course drug use.

Movies:
X-Men: First Class opens June 3. I was a bit concerned for this one, but the trailers look AMAZING. It really could be the best comic book movie of the year. I'm a big X-Men fan, and I'm putting a lot of my continuity and canon issues aside. I plan to see this with a big group on Friday, so expect a review either that night, or Saturday morning.

Super 8 opens June 10. This is my pick for the movie of the summer. J.J. Abrams and Steven Spielberg! I cannot wait for this movie, and love how mysterious the plot still is. I hope it's more than a monster movie because that seems to easy. I know that will be an aspect of it, but I just hope there's a lot more.

Green Lantern opens June 17. This is DC's shot at some of the comic book movie love this summer. Picking Ryan Reynolds was a smart move, but lets see how the movie turns out. Green Lantern is not a funny, happy go-lucky story like Spiderman can be. It's dark, and a bit scary. I hope they got that right. The trailers do look excellent though, so I'm hopeful.

The Flashbacks Podcast:
Episode 2 on June 6: This is our 4th anniversary and we'll be discussing a lot of things. Check out our talkshoe page for more info.

Episode 3 on June 20: Most likely this show will cover the various movies that opened during the off week. We also will begin our our single show flashback discussions. Don't know the show yet, but tune in for more info.


May 29, 2011

The Killing, Day 10 Review


The tenth episode of the Killing gave us a lot of information about the night Rosie died. It starts out with the aftereffects of Stan's actions. While Stan did a very bad thing of course, it remains clear why Mitch loves him, and why he's a good father. He apparently called 911 to alert the police of Ahmed's condition. He then turns himself in, and is willing to not just plead guilty, but he openly admits guilt in court. This is a strength of the AMC shows. The lengths to which someone is willing to go doesn't give the whole portrait of who that person truly is. It was good to see it in The Killing since I feel the show has lacked in any kind of character development. In its defense that lack is due to the story telling method. Advancing day-by-day makes it very hard to give us moments of true character building.

During all this, Linden continues to have issues with her personal life. Her son is acting up, and her fiancée is still pissed. Nothing new there, but it's nice to know the show hasn't forgotten about those stories. Linden and Holder discover that Rosie took a cab when she left Ahmed's house, and surprisingly it took her home! This leads our detective duo to suspect the lowly and pathetic helper, Belko Royce. It was clear from early on that Royce was not a bright man, and knew more than he was letting on. Him being the killer seemed way to obvious, and uninteresting. I felt the same when we were led to believe it was Ahmed.

Royce it turns out was there, and heard Rosie on the phone. She mentions someone named Adela, and that she would meet them there. Linden finds out at the end of the episode that Adela refers to a ship. Meaning she took this ship, and where? Seems like to a casino called "Wapi Eagle Casino". That sounds like a Native American casino so you know there will be all kinds of restrictions and such preventing them from investigating more. I hope that doesn't last long, cause with the elimination of both Ahmed and Royce as suspects, the show's minor characters are far less interesting.

Councilman Richmond had a much smaller role to play this week. With the news about Ahmed seeming to help him a ton, he wastes no time jumping on this issue. As he should. His opponent basically threw an innocent man under the bus, and destroyed that man's life. Then however, he has a strange plan to introduce a bill that lowers the pay of councilors. At first I thought it was one of those "I wanted to lower my salary" stunts, but I'm not sure. He didn't seem to care when his aide said it would cost jobs. If you ask people what they care about more "Salaries of City Councilors" or "Jobs" they would basically all say JOBS JOBS JOBS. I think it's as simple as he said it was. He just wants to screw those that didn't stand by him.

The important bit about Richmond though is that he had in fact met Rosie. I love that it was a very Monica Lewinski moment. How funny would it be if the reason Richmond was so adamant about Ahmed being innocent was because he did it!

My guess of the killer remains the Councilman's Male Aide; Jaime. Like Dwight K. Schrute says "It's never the person you most expect, or the person you least expect". I think Jaime falls right into that middle area. I'm almost sure that the killer, whoever it is, will not be some psycho killer. It's going to be like that Nolan movie Insomnia. She was with someone, they had a disagreement and the person just lost it. Started beating on her, then knew there was no going back. Boring? maybe. But The Killing is showing that it's willing to do realistic, over sensational.

I do hope we get more character development so we at least care a little about these people. I do have a feeling though that next season will not only be a totally new case, but a totally knew cast. I think that would be a VERY bold and exciting choice for AMC.

I'm new to these reviews, so any comments positive or negative would be welcomed.

May 24, 2011

House vs. house

This is the first of hopefully MANY Flashbacks reviews. These normally will not be very long, and only will contain certain things I noticed. This review is about the House Season 7 finale, "Moving On". As a Lost fan, that title certainly brings back memories. It was almost fate that it aired on the one year anniversary of the Lost Finale. That's the only connection though, this was a good episode, but not great.

House started to frustrate me in recent years. Mainly because the character of House(played brilliantly by Hugh Laurie) never ever changes. Every season ends with some event that makes us think "HEY, this could be the turning point for him". However, whether it's getting shot, going through detox, or finally dating Cuddy, it always ends the same. He's changed for a few episodes, until something else happens that forces him to revert back to the original House.

This finale was slightly different. Instead of a hopeful ending, it was the exact opposite. We knew from the start of the episode that he would do something so bad it forces Cuddy to announce "if he ever steps foot in my hospital again" he should be arrested. Turns out that something was to drive his car full speed into her house, destroying the dining room. The total shocking part about this was that he easily could have killed every one of them, including Cuddy's daughter. I think the show did a poor job showing this aspect. Yes he crashed through her house, and that's crazy, but House made the decision to possibly murder 5 people including Cuddy. To me that is totally shocking.

The problem? I fear they will do what they do every year. This will be a big issue for a few episodes next year, but then something will happen and House will be forgiven. I'm guessing it will be something like "huge health crisis, and only House can save the day". Personally, I think this should have been the final season of House. They have gone as far as they can with all the characters. So much so that Taub's story now is "my ex-wife and my new young girlfriend are both pregnant".

The writers of House are so lucky that they have such amazing actors in this show. If not, I would have given up a long time ago. I hope I'm wrong about the show, and next season is truly amazing. It's the only true procedural I watch.

Any thoughts? Post em.