#5091
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#5092
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Finished season one of Babylon 5 now watching season two.
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#5094
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Not since I was a kid, I didn't really like it back then because it was just so different to Soap. ![]() |
#5095
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Started re-watching TOUR OF DUTY through again. ![]() |
#5096
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Earlier this week I watched all three episodes of Mrs Wilson in one evening. It's a superbly written and acted miniseries, particularly so because Ruth Wilson is playing her real life grandmother, giving the events an extra sense of authenticity and meaning. This is particularly evident at the end of the last episode in a post-credits scene I found very emotional and hard-hitting. I could quite happily watch it again this year and highly recommend it to everyone who likes period dramas. This is a bit different, but I'm currently re-watching the entire series of Buffy the Vampire Slayer and I'm halfway through the third season. Watching the show in such a short space of time (usually three or four episodes each night) is good because it shows how the writing improves, the budget allows for more convincing visual effects, and it looks like the actors gradually settle into the characters and the relationships between them. It's a show which is very cleverly written and aware of the cinematic history, stories, and conventions of horror, sci-fi, and teenage dramas as it draws on all sorts of vampire lore and has references to such films as The Creature from the Black Lagoon, Network, Alien and The Exorcist.
__________________ ![]() Last edited by Nosferatu@Cult Labs; 18th December 2018 at 04:26 PM. |
#5097
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#5098
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![]() That should have said 'events', not 'offence'! It is now corrected.
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#5099
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Looking closer it's an intelligence murder mystery thing. |
#5100
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The story follows a woman, the titular Mrs Alison Wilson (Ruth Wilson), whose husband, Alec (Iain Glen), dies of a heart attack and she is shortly visited by someone about the same age who introduces herself as Mrs Wilson and says she was married to Alec. The timeline moves around from the second world war to the mid-1960s as Alison's relationship with her sons becomes increasingly strained and the information she uncovers about Alec puts pressure on her post around her. It's quite hard to classify because it isn't a thriller like Bodyguard, Killing Eve, or The Night Manager, nor a War and Peace or Dickensian-style period drama. If anything, it's more of an understated family drama, but one with espionage as a backdrop. If anything, it's more like Mike Leigh's Secrets and Lies in terms of the impact that one person's secrets can have on everyone around them.
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