Diana Kingston-Gabai ([info]dianakingston) wrote,
@ 2007-04-28 08:53:00
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Entry tags:misc. reviews

Passing Sentences: April 28
It's One Month Later... and everything has changed.

Well... maybe not. :)

Obviously, this week's highlight was the triumphant return of Heroes, with an episode that was very much worth the wait (that said, it's good to know there won't be any more interruptions this season). .07% delivers a bit of everything: some misdirection, some revelation, some great character moments, some long-awaited reunions, and a cliffhanger that has me on pins and needles for the next episode. I think one thing "Heroes" is doing particualrly well is applying correctives to some of the more powerful, recognizable stories in comics: Niki is essentially the Hulk except her alter ego has a personality beyond "Jessica Smash!", Linderman's scheme is an updated take on Adrian Veidt's master plan in "Watchmen" sans giant alien monster, next week's episode is "Days of Future Past" without killer robots, etc. As a rule, there are certain levels of implausibility we just have to accept when it comes to mainstream superhero stories; in fact, it's so deeply ingrained that modern attempts to invoke "realism" in the Marvel or DC universes tend to fail awkwardly (ie: "Civil War"). We, as readers, have already accepted cosmic rays and Nordic gods and giant fork-headed planet eaters, so dropping a Superhero Registration Act on top of that just doesn't work. "Heroes", having never asked us to believe in naked silver guys riding surfboards through space, is able to breach that barrier and take the whole conflation of "realistic fantasy" to a new level.

Drive was cancelled before I got a chance to check it out. Pity: I loves me the Fillion.

Christie Golden's Warcraft: Rise of the Horde ended up being a thoroughly disappointing read: pedestrian, transparent, and way too intent on making the Orcs seem like gullible, naive victims even as the narrator insists that they knowingly condemned themselves. The whole good/evil schism is taken to cartoonish extremes: the draenei are ridiculously benevolent, the Orcs shockingly simple-minded, the Burning Legion unidimensionally bad. Bo-ring.

Supernatural, Folsom Prison Blues: Another by-the-numbers episode, servicably entertaining without hitting any particular highs or lows.

The recent conclusion of Girls left me a bit cold; on the one hand, I never expected the people of Pennystown to really figure out what was going on, but on the other hand, the series ends without much closure at all, emotionally or plotwise. Given that the Lunas focused far more on the human cast members as protagonists than on the mysterious Girls, it's a bit of a surprise to see all the attention in this double-sized finale given to the "sperm-monster" and its mission - we don't really get to grieve for the dead, or see how the survivors deal with the aftermath. A disappointing end to an interesting series.

Final Fantasy IV Advance: Having completed "Dawn of Souls" (which I highly recommend), I've started the first GBA remake of the SNES trilogy. It's a bit glitchy - the buttons tend to stick, and encounter rate/ATB is way off - but the retranslated script is excellent, and the graphics have been tweaked just enough that I don't feel like I'm just replaying the same old game again.




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Heroes and such
(Anonymous)
2007-04-29 08:45 am UTC (link)
I picked up IV Advance a few months ago, but schoolwork picked up right about the raft ride and I haven't gotten back to it since. I also abandoned FF 12 for the PS2, which i was enjoying despite the somewhat annoying gambit system and it's too obvious plot similarities to the original Star Wars trilogy.

I missed out on Drive, too. Some rather egocentric kid in my scriptwriting class talked it up, but too much on TV plate with the Sopranos and the Shield starting back up. Shame, too I've liked Dylan Baker since Happiness. Though the previews seemed to imply that Amy Acker had only a minor role which was kinda weird after all the exposure she got on Alias towards it's much-needed ending.

I had missed the last three episodes of Heroes, so I caught up this weekend. They were all good, but geez, that Company Man episode was great.A bit melodramatic around the edges, but overall great stuff.

The following episodes didn't stand out separately when watched back-to-back, but I'm glad they set Mama Petrelli on track and didn't drag out the Mohinder/Skylar stuff. Only complaint I have is making Linderman the Primatech mastermind, but that's a minor quibble. As for recognizable stories, Skylar is putting off a real Venom vibe after his latest tussle with Peter.

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Re: Heroes and such
(Anonymous)
2007-04-29 08:48 am UTC (link)
PS- By the way, I'm totally with you on Hiro. In fact you're the only person I've read so far that isn't in love with his spastic screaming.

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Re: Heroes and such
[info]dianakingston
2007-04-29 09:59 pm UTC (link)
Well... to be fair, I did think Hiro was cute at first - he's basically a stereotypical comic book geek (and as such, the only character who could really cope with and appreciate the onset of superpowers), but for once there's no inherent criticism or ridicule in the depiction, the way you can find such things in the Simpsons' Comic Book Guy. Nobody ever makes fun of Hiro; nobody sees any reason to do so. Even Nathan's more amused by the content of Hiro's message than by the way he presents it.

But the thing is, most of the stereotypical characters in "Heroes" eventually transcend their limitations - Claire grows into much more than just a blonde cheerleader; D.L. turns out to be considerably less threatening than the quasi-mythical "escaped convict absentee dad" he's initially established to be; Isaac the noble junkie ends up switching sides and joining the Company; Mohinder's altruism clashes with the fact that he tried to shoot Sylar right between the eyes. And Hiro, who's had more reason to grow up than most (losing his girlfriend, being constantly frustrated in his attempts to stop the bomb and so on), hasn't progressed at all. Greater control over his powers nonwithstanding, Hiro hasn't changed or been changed at all during his heroic journey, and that just sticks out in a story where practically every character is undergoing some kind of transformative process.

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Re: Heroes and such
[info]dianakingston
2007-04-29 10:19 pm UTC (link)
I never got past the first few battles of FF12 myself; the gameplay system passeth all understanding. :(

That'd be the Whedon Curse in effect; as far as I know, no cast member from "Buffy", "Angel" or "Firefly" has managed to maintain the spotlight for very long since their respective series ended.

I actually like the idea that Linderman's funding Primatech; it explains how he's managed to insinuate himself into so many characters' lives without really making an effort. And he certainly has the motive to track other Heroes, if the story he told Nathan is true.

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