neadods: (Default)
[livejournal.com profile] terri_osborne was first with the good news - There shall be a Librarian DVD and a sequel!

Announcement of the sequel
Implication of the DVD

Behold the power of cheese!

And speaking of cheese, I don't know if I ever passed this link on: Queer Eye for the Fandom Guy. The Fab Five take on Fox Mulder, Blair Sandburg, Lex Luthor, and Professor Snape, among others.

ETA: In the comments is buried a link to this gem - Queer Eye for the SG-1
neadods: (Default)
The Librarian
Gakked from [livejournal.com profile] hildy - The American Library Association presents: What real librarians thought of The Librarian. They were asked to rate it on enjoyability and on how it presented librarians in general.

Predictably, some just didn't get it, particularly the one who complained that "its paper-thin structure is a compilation of uncomfortably recognizable snippets from Raiders of the Lost Ark, Sherlock Holmes, and Romancing the Stone." (Dude! They're called "homages"!) On the other hand, there was the ubercool one who said "Not since Buffy left network TV and we lost Giles have I had so much fun with a librarian on television." Bonus points for the one who answered "What would you like The Librarian to tackle in any future sequel?" with "Karl Rove's evil empire." And I got a kick out of "What was the most "real" aspect of the film? Not one thing really, that's why it was fun."

EXTREME bonus points and amusement to "What was the most "real" aspect of the film? The fact that librarians know everything and that we are all part of a secret society." Although the one that totally made me laugh out loud was the pained review from the woman with degrees in archeology and library science: "What was the most "real" aspect of the film? Uh...Gravity apparently still functions."

Politics, but not as usual
On a much more serious note, Senator Barbara Boxer has signed the vote to challenge the Ohio electoral votes. There was a challenge to the electoral vote in 2000, but it wasn't discussed in Congress because a Senator didn't sign it. This time, one has. Now the Congress must discuss the electoral vote, for no less than 2 hours per house. Will it change the outcome? Of course not. But it will, hopefully, highlight voting irregularity. Ohio was a deciding state - a state which saw voter suppression and faults in the electronic machines - like the one that registered more votes for Bush than people who voted - by a couple of thousand votes. The system our country is founded on is broken. Bush has nothing to lose by addressing these problems. This is something he should welcome to prevent lost confidence in our most basic right!

Already RushLimbaugh.com and Glendale Oregon News are ripping her new ones, calling her a fool, a traitor, a terrorist sympathizer, etc. You can write her here.
neadods: (Default)
I wanted to see the special on Ramses. Mo wanted to see The Librarian - Quest for the Spear. Mo is not home, and I am a nice roommate, so I remote-taped Ramses and made sure I got Librarian.

I had so much fun that at the end of Librarian, I started rewatching it again. I'll see Ramses tomorrow.

This was WONDERFUL! Silliness! Homages! Noah Wiley! Every other line desperately needing to be either a button or a T-shirt! There MUST be sequels! Many, many sequels!

Behold the power of cheese!

If you liked it, write to TNT at http://www.tnt.tv/AskTNT/Addresses/0,6754,,00.html. Includes snailmail. Tell them. Tell them we want the sequels Noah refers to.
neadods: (Default)
I watched the 2000 remake of The Canterville Ghost last night. A very pretty production - nice costumes, rich settings, good acting. Such a pity the person who wrote the script didn't realize what the story is about.

Oh, they got the surface right - vulgar American family buys haunted British mansion; hilarity ensues when the ghost and the family try to run each other out. But that's not what the story is really about. It's really about cultural adaptation. The Americans are impetuous, impulsive, oblivious to tradition, and advertising oriented, yes... but their energy, optimism, and unflagging determination are routing the British at every turn. The resolution comes when they find common ground.

But this production, oddly, turns the whole thing into a love story about the American daughter, who is taught the meaning of love by the mournful, romantic ghost. A nice trick, considering that the daughter's love life got one sentence in the original story and the ghost murdered his wife. (The scriptwriter blows off that inconvenient fact with a my-last-duchess story of a regretted fit of unsubstantiated jealousy.) Left behind along with the point is much of the wit. The terrible twins are sidelined to occasional comic relief instead of driving the story and my favorite bit of shtick, the multicolored blood stain, is completely removed. (The Americans keep cleaning up Lady Canterville's bloodstain; the ghost resorts to raiding paint boxes to refresh it and when he runs out of reds he uses whatever color he can find.) Instead of a hilarious story of culture clashes, we get a lugubrious, formulaic woo-by-numbers love story. Boy meets girl. Girl teaches boy that class differences don't matter. Girl leaves boy thinking he's a fortune hunter. Boy proves he's rich. Boy and girl marry.

Snoozer!


And while I'm complaining about movies, how come I saw months of advertisement for the new DVD of Aladdin, but only found out last night that the DVD of Mulan, my favorite Disney movie, is coming out the day after my birthday? And I would find this out right *after* I made an Amazon order.
neadods: (Default)
One TV show that leaps off the screen and grows too big for even fandom.

A generation ago it was Star Trek, that cheese-filled "Wagon Train In Space." They had no budget, no stars, no special effects, no network support -- and everyone else had no clue what was about to happen.
With nothing else to fall back on, Gene Roddenberry used the only tools he had at his disposal - story and character. His stories were set in the future, but they were all about the society right then and there. Racial prejudice. The difficult choices commanders must make. Social unrest. "We shall not make war... today."

And yet there was fun too; tribbles and androids and Mudd, oh my!

And now, there is... well, as of last night, there was... Buffy the Vampire Slayer.

Like Trek before it, Buffy had incredible characters and even more incredible stories - while episodes or story arcs may singly fail, the underlying metaphor was always sound. School is hell. Adulthood can be worse. Some people do want to suck the life out of you. We recognized people we knew, people we were in Buffy, Xander, Willow, Giles, even Jonathan and Tara and Anya.

Buffy has suffered in seasons of late; the underlying metaphor took several hits, and characters became pompous and self-involved, shaking the teamwork that had always been a key part of Buffy's (and the show's) survival. Yes, it was time for it to go away for a while, have a rest, maybe come back refreshed in a sequel in Joss' capable hands much later.

But first, that finale. Star Trek never had one, and in some ways, that's best. The show just goes away one night, and leaves its storyline in the hands of the faithful fans. That certainly beats the F&#$ YOU! attitude some producers have towards their own creations and those of us who love them. How many shows haven't so much ended as self-destructed? Blake's 7, Highlander, Forever Knight, Sliders, Poltergeist the Legacy, on and on and on... it's as if the producers sat down and said "we want to hurt everyone who loves our show as much as possible. We're going to kill their characters, blow up their settings, and spit on their hopes. Nobody gets to be happy, on or off screen."

And then there are the prematurely murdered series - Alien Nation, Remember WENN, Farscape, Brisco County.... They didn't mean to jerk us around, leaving us on a cliffhanger. It was someone higher up than the producer who did it. But they *did* just the same.

Any fan who says they weren't afraid that the last episode of Buffy would be a painful trainwreck is a liar. But bless Joss, who has managed to give us and ending and a beginning all at once. Buffy's story as The Slayer is over, but the Buffyverse lives on. Sunnydale's demons are slain, but there's another hellmouth in Cleveland. No cliffhanger. No death, despair, and devastation. (Well, okay, devastation. And some death. About average for a Buffy episode, actually. This is, after all, the show that took her to the mall with a rocket launcher.)

It felt good. It felt right. It was a worthy end to a 7-year-ride like few others.

Buffy the Vampire Slayer
1996 - 2003
It saved genre TV from mediocrity. A lot.

The Slayer is gone. Long live the Slayers.

Postscript: Buffy may have been shut out of other awards, but the S7 episode "Conversations with Dead People" won the 2003 Hugo for Best Short Form Presentation (their rather clunkily named TV award.)

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