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hexnessie
02 December 2010 @ 05:56 am
I had a conversation with [info]maggie33  about what is it about this season of Supernatural that I can’t grow to like and I realized I had trouble identifying the underlying reasons for my dissatisfaction. I know I don’t like the new, Decaf Dean, but why?

The easiest way to explain it, I guess, would be to remind everybody of Angel. You know, the show about tortured, dark, heartbroken, brooding, swooping, coat-swishing, did-I-mention-dark-and-tortured? vampire detective. Angel. If you watched, you probably remember the difference between the show’s mood and register in the first season and in the third season. Angel changed. Less brooding, more happy. Did that mean that the show was less interesting to watch? Did Angel really have to be unhappy and tormented by his past to be good entertainment?

Unfortunately, yes.

If you’re like me and you like your Friday evening show to be rich and simple, you won’t be happy when a previously angst-ridden and tormented character suddenly turns into soccer dad. Does that mean that Dean doesn’t deserve to be “normal”? Of course not. Unfortunately, it means he has no place on the show. It’s called Supernatural for a reason. Normalcy was a kind of a Holy Grail in the show for all the characters. If you have found the Holy Grail, game over. Mission accomplished. The end.

Obviously, the writers do realize that that and Dean’s normal family life was rather short-lived. Unfortunately, what the writers forgot was to put the old Dean back into the new show. Instead of fresh ground coffee with cream and loads of sugar, what I get is decaf with skimmed milk and Aspartame. Almost the same thing but not quite it.

Old Dean was, if you tried to describe him in one world, a paladin. A zealot. The soldier of good battling against evil because of absolute conviction that this is the way the world is: if it’s evil, you fight it. So, we have the archetypal figure of a paladin juxtaposed with today’s America, and it’s fascinating to watch him struggle against the God-ordained armor of “Daddy said so”, but always driven, always full of conviction, always with a sense of focused purpose. To find his father, to find the demon who killed his mother, to save his brother.

Then, in a greatly executed season, the paladin falls. The conviction is tainted, the focus wavers. Dean makes the deal. Dean dies, and falls. Suffers torture and becomes a torturer. When brought back, he’s expected to both be what he had been, unbroken and unfallen, and to use what he’s learned in hell to torture and interrogate. And this is also fascinating to watch, as is further disintegration of the zeal and conviction, culminating in Dean’s realization that he does not want to fight against the apocalypse.

What we had was a protagonist set apart from the “normal” world by his very upbringing, a modern day hero, struggling and angsty and suffering so beautifully.

What we have now is... decaf.

The new Dean is, simply put, absolutely bland. He’s no longer the protagonist, he’s the sidekick. Why? No explanation. He doesn’t fight very well anymore. Why? No explanation. He’s not very keen on winning Lisa back. He’s not very worried about his brother being a soulless monster. He’s not terribly worried about letting shapeshifters on the loose. He’s not ANYTHING. We had a hero, and now we have a character who spends more time being rescued than doing the rescuing. Why? No explanation.

So after all, my reasons for disliking the new Supernatural are simple – I want my cape-and-tights superhero back. Whole or broken or breaking or getting patched up, whatever works. What I don’t want is a support cast disillusioned good-for-nothing stepdad who got kicked to the curb by his ex. Not in this show. Please let it stay supernatural, and not mundane.
 
 
hexnessie
01 November 2010 @ 02:08 pm
Happy Halloween, which was yesterday, and happy Jay of the Dead, which is today, despite all organized religion's efforts to call it All Saints' Day. The graves are swiped, washed, and (in one horrible case) weeded out and smoothed over. The celebration proper may now begin.

Halloween has not taken such a hold here as other imported feasts of commerce (Valentine's day, fro example), but still, we did have one little girl knock to our door yesterday and ask for sweets. After some confused murmuring to ourselves on whether an apple would be appropriate, we sent her away with a bag of soft cakes.

On Supernatural: so that takes care of lisa. I'm surprised she lasted for this long, but not at all surprised the writers wrote her off. This isn't a show for young women characters, unless they're monsterfood.
 
 
hexnessie
26 October 2010 @ 06:33 pm
... that when you're 12, the Russian letter F looks like male genitals?
 
 
hexnessie
17 May 2010 @ 11:27 pm
Loved the meta in the final episode -- really, really loved it. Nice wrap-up, nice reflection of real-world fanbase vs. TPTB in terms of expectations and decisions. And nice vanishing act, too, because, really, there's God, and then there's Author, who is much more powerful and important :)
 
 
hexnessie
02 May 2010 @ 08:53 pm
Been watching Legend of the Seeker -- and yes, yes, before you ask, I am so very ashamed of myself, but I can't help watching anyway. It's stupid, it's cheesy, it's simplistic, it's almost worse than the books, but it also has the hottest villain recently seen on TV.

And when exactly did I evolve from "yeugh, but they're brothers" into "OMG, they are such HOT, hot brothers who hate each other so very sexually"?

TV corrupts.
 
 
hexnessie
25 April 2010 @ 12:39 am
I'm extremely disappointed with the most recent episode of Supernatural, which I would have liked a whole lot better if

Read more... )

Well, at least Baldur was cute...

Plus, I'm having the Third Cat Syndrome, where the cats' combined ability to litter slowly exceeds my ability to clean litterboxes. Fortunately, the Third Cat should go to a good home after she gets a clean bill of health this Sunday ::crosses fingers::
 
 
Current Mood: annoyedannoyed
 
 
hexnessie
01 March 2010 @ 10:16 pm
I had a minor existential crisis the other day. It turns out I purl in an "unusual" way. I purl weird! I'm a weird purler.


"You what weird?" Family asked in astonishment.
Me: "Purl! You know. Like, when you knit."
Family: "You knit?!?"
Me: "Shut up! It's a hobby."
Family: "But it's so... 19th century."
Me: "I have migraines! That's 19th century too! And ANYWAY, I tried knitting these socks and..."
Family, worried: "You know we'd buy you any socks you wanted, right?"


At which point I decided that I'm alienated enough with my "PURLING - UR DOING IT RONG" problem without my family making fun of me, and I turned to the wisdom of the Internet.

Where I soon discovered that, yay, there are other weird purlers in the world! There are people who purl my way. There are actually people looking down their noses at other, regular purlers, because they believe purling the way I do is purling BETTER!

Granted, it's not quite a momentous a discovery as when I realized there were other girls who liked to read about hot man-on-man sex. But it reinforced my conviction that no matter how weird you are, you are bound to find an Internet community of people devoted to the same weird ways!
 
 
hexnessie
11 August 2009 @ 09:17 pm
... you can either laugh hysterically or fix yourself a drink.

Article 7: European Territorial Cooperation

1. For the purpose of cross-border cooperation, the NUTS level 3 regions of the Community along all internal and certain external land borders and all NUTS level 3 regions of the Community along maritime borders separated, as a general rule, by a maximum of 150 kilometres shall be eligible for financing.


Yes, we have NUTS regions in the European Union. We're all NUTS! But as per Regulations, we do keep our NUTS well separated by at 150 kilometers.

Sorry. After two weeks of translating this kind of sheep manure I'm ready to laugh manically at commas and semicolons.

I do need a vacation. But so does the person who wrote this piece of excrement and called it Regulation.
 
 
hexnessie
28 July 2009 @ 11:56 pm
Having seen (and actually rather liked, in a tepid way) the movie, I clued in that it was a remake of a recent TV series staring none other than John Sims. And that, quite frankly, made me angry. There was nothing in promotional content to show that it was a remake; there was no information during the initial credits; there was nothing at all to tell me, hey, maybe I want to get out of the movie theater and watch the original first? GRR! I consider this to be the hugest spoiler EVER achieved by spoilery spoilsports all over the world. Me not happy.

I watched the original anyway and loved it -- at 6 hours, it gave the plot the time it needed to develop, instead of presenting abridged notes for dummies. Plus, it had John Sims.

Torchwood, that I watched unspoiled, although I had some vague warning that something might happen. Oddly, I didn't find it depressing much. They obviously wanted to wrap up the series.

Spoilers for the three people in Antarctica who haven't seen it yet )

Now watching:
  • Mental -- sickeningly sweet and positive, unfortunately, not at all realistic. Still, watching other people being mentally ill at least makes you believe you aren't. Somehow.

  • Nurse Jackie -- I like the main character, I like the actress, I like the kids. Shockingly, I also like to watch very sick people struggle with their disease and die. I wasn't like that before I started mainlining TV!

  • Warehouse 13 -- nice summertime television, nothing spectacular, but they have a ferret, so.



I'm also writing all this and coding HTML by hand, because I'm weird and old like that. I wonder if I'll ever go around to installing an LJ client. Probably not, seeing as they broke my carefully designed comments page so that it now shows in plain LJ style without any of my hard work visible. GRR. Again.
 
 
hexnessie
25 June 2009 @ 10:07 pm
I give up. Bookmarks suck. Sidebar links suck (10 entries? SRSLY?) I need to find a way to organize my bookshelf. Like people do master posts for their fic. I have no idea how to make one stick on top of all other entries, so I guess I'll just set one up regularly, and add a link to the sidebar.

To lie down some groundwork-

(Note to the unlikely sole person who might read this: these are not reviews or unqualified recommendations as such, just a list of things I read, liked for some reasons and want to explore further.)

http://belyste.livejournal.com/23007.html#cutid1
Fic by [info]belyste, the author of the sweet harlequiny J2 office romance AU. And the evil author who made Barbiemobile out of Impala. Serious Dean angst.  SPN 

http://thenyxie.livejournal.com/tag/fic
[info]thenyxie's fic. Author of 'Stranger than Fiction' which I read by recommendation and very much enjoyed. Absolutely must read the rest of her material.  SPN 

http://fleshflutter.livejournal.com/tag/fic
[info]fleshflutter wrote the "Incestous Courtship..." which I haven't read yet but heard great things about, and the ming-boggling, totally brilliant Spyverse which I'm definitely going to reread. Despite her fixation on the size of Jared's manly attribute, which says a lot, as it's a pet peeve of mine. Also, she wrote a very dark and disturbing ficlet where Jared is a complete and utter psychopath (with a big attribute -- again with the size!).  SPN 

http://keelywolfe.livejournal.com/
[info]keelywolfe wrote "Moment of Our Silence", a brilliant ST:Reboot coda ficlet. Definitely must read her other ST:R  ST:R