I don’t think I’ve ever written about Legends of Tomorrow before, so let me start this review with a little
confession: it is my favourite Arrowverse show, and no one is more surprised by
that than I am. For starters, I only started watching it for two, maybe three
reasons: Arthur Darvill, Sara Lance, and to not miss out on any lore-building
or continuity nods to the other shows (which, back then, were only Arrow, which I loved, and The Flash, which I liked quite a bit,
but not enough to get all the hype for it). What’s more, I couldn’t stand Ray
Palmer on Arrow (seriously, I even
listed him as one of the many things that ruined season 3 for me), and I wasn’t
at all interested in Captain Cold or Heatwave either: they were, in my opininon,
unfairly lauded boring, one-note villains, just like every single other villain
of the week on The Flash. So pretty
much EVERYTHING was against Legends
when it started, and season 1 didn’t inspire too much confidence either. But
along the way, things started to shift imperceptibly. Ray became insanely
likable, Snart and Rory were expanded and built upon as characters I could
actually care about, and when season 2 got rid off all the deadweight and
introduced Nate and Amaya to the cast, well, that was pretty much it. Couple that
with Arrow’s increasingly dark
storylines and stagnating quality, The
Flash becoming pretty repetitive, as well as Supergirl’s subpar debut season, and Legends quickly became one of the shows I most looked forward to
every week.
I appreciate and welcome comments on all of my posts! Please talk to me, I want to DISCUSS.
2018. november 22., csütörtök
2018. november 14., szerda
The Sea Dreams It Is the Sky - John Hornor Jacobs (2018)
I'm
not quite sure what to make of this book. Cosmic horror as a genre
intrigues me because I think the fear of the unknown (and what lurks
beneath) is so deeply entrenched in all human beings that, if done
right, such a work can evoke emotions stronger than any psychological or
gore-based horror novel ever could. That is why I’m so confused about
and disappointed in this book, because at its most basic it had
everything to tell an absolutely terrifying story, but instead it chose
to meander and not say or do anything meaningful with the groundwork it
laid for itself.
All of this is pretty confusing without
mentioning some specifics, so I will try to do so without really
spoiling anything. The two main characters are exiles from a fictional
South American country that has been torn apart by rebellion and the
subsequent rise to power of a military dictatorship. At first I didn’t
understand the author’s decision to invent a such country when there are
so many where such a thing actually happened in real life, but over the
course of the book I came to appreciate the additional layer of
otherworldliness this choice has added to the story. Our protagonist,
Isabel, befriends Rafael, a mysterious poet from her home country, who
eventually leaves his comfortable life in Spain to go home and search
for his lost family, which leaves Isabel in charge of his apartment.
There she discovers a written account of his friend’s former life, and
the strange and more than a little distrubing path that led to his
exile. This is where the horror elements really start to come into play,
not only through the vivid descriptions of torture he has endured at
the hands of his captors, but also through the interwoven story of his
attempts to translate an old manuscript. For some reason his captors are
really interested in this piece of work, in fact they even suggest that
him taking it on was what drew them to him in the first place.
Naturally, Isabel finds the manuscript and begins to work on her own
translation, which is when she is forced to realize that Rafael is not
safe back home and she decides to go and find him.
Sounds pretty
amazing, right? Spooky, mysterious, bone-chilling even, thanks to
Rafael’s memoir (you’ll see what I mean when you read it), this is the
groundwork I was referring to earlier. Everything is in place for a
spectacular conclusion where we finally get our answers for all the
important questions, such as: Who are these people? What do they want
with the manuscript? What IS the manuscript? What cosmic powers are at
play here? Well, we never find out any of that. The ending of this book
is a confusing mess, at least for me. I realize that so far I will be
the only one giving it less than four stars, and I could praise
the writing style and the character of Rafael (not Isabel, who was
pretty bland in my opinion) as reasons why I liked the book overall –
and I did, in a way, because it had beautiful imagery and kept me
interested until the very end. But it had the potential to be so much
more, and while I’m generally not opposed to open endings (sometimes I
even like the whole „decide for yourself what happened after” approach),
there was not even remotely enough material here for me to come up with
anything that makes sense.
2018. november 12., hétfő
The Walking Dead 9x06 Who Are You Now?
Generally, I’m not a big fan of time jumps. I hate the
feeling of missing out on potentially important developments concerning my
favourite characters or couples (you hear that OUAT season 4? Those six
fictional months were really important to me), and it’s even riskier when
there’s such a big jump that characters invariably have to be recast with
actors who will fit their new ages better. You can tell me that it’s the same
character all you want, but if the new actors’s not good enough, I simply won’t
feel about them the same way ever again. On the other hand, I will admit that
sometimes it’s worth to have a time jump for all the new mysteries such a big change
could bring (wait, when did that
happen? Why are they not talking to each other? Oooh something BIG must have
went down, I can’t wait to find out what!)… except when you have insufferable
showrunners who handwave it all away with „oh you know, time has passed, people
change, you’ll get used to it”… and then that’s another whole new kind of
feeling fucked over. So with all that said, I’m happy to say that I really
enjoyed The Walking Dead’s first
post-time jump episode! By jumping forward a whopping six years, I was spared
from having my heart broken from watching Michonne’s fresh grief over Rick’s „death”,
which I appreciate a lot. Moreover, the only character who had to be recast was
Judith, and her new version is wonderful so far, and there was even a little bit
of mystery peppered in, although this is not necessarily the kind of show where
I expect that sort of thing. So it was great! Overall I’m still surprised by
how much I’m loving this season, and I’m a bit sad we only have two more
episodes to go before the winter break.
2018. november 8., csütörtök
The Walking Dead 9x05 What Comes After
Well that was… an episode. I’m not sure what I expected
since it’s been known for a while that it would be a kind of
flashback/hallucination episode leading up to Rick’s departure, but was it
wrong of me to want a little more out
of it? Not more action, necessarily… in fact, I’m kinda loving how lowkey and
subdued this season has been so far. It’s been nine years, I don’t crave
outrageously gory zombie slaughter every second episode anymore. I like
heartfelt conversations and small but meaningful character moments just as much.
So was that the problem? That Rick
spent his last remaining moments on the show conversing with dead people,
instead of getting some closure with his loved ones? Nope. For me, the problem
lies in the very fact that this was Rick’s last episode, or more accurately,
the fact that I knew this was his
last episode. How am I expected to enjoy anything about it when I know that
whatever happens, by the end of it Rick will be gone? I guess I could say props
to everyone involved for still managing to make it somewhat suspenseful, but
that’s hardly consoling. Like, can you imagine the absolute gut-punch this
episode could have been if they had kept Rick’s exit a secret? I know I
complained about this before but it’s something that’s on my mind a lot, and
not just regarding TWD. Generally, I would prefer never to know when an actor
is about to leave a show. I want to be surprised and outraged, dammit, not just
mildly sad when it finally happens after half a year of knowing it would.
2018. november 6., kedd
Top Ten Tuesday 11.06. - Backlist Books I Want to Read
It’s Top Ten Tuesday Time! This was a bit of a tricky topic for me because I wasn’t sure
how to interpret the word ’backlist’ at first, and usually just thinking about
the books I said I would read but then
never got around to it is enough to give me a mild headache. Also since I have
way too many unread books both on my Kindle and my Goodreads To Read List, so
many it would be impossible to choose just ten of them, I decided to narrow the
scope down to „Ten Books Released Earlier in 2018 that I Want to Read Before
the Year Ends”. Even that should be difficult enough, not only to select but to
actually read... I should really learn the art of selecting a book to read and
then actually fucking reading it, is
what I’m trying to say. Anyway, here’s my list, you guys! Let me know what you
think about any of my choices in the comments.
1. In Byron’s Wake –
Miranda Seymour
Lord Byron is one of my favourite poets, and I’ve always found his daughter, Ada Lovelace, to be a fascinating woman. This book promises to teach me more about not only her but her mother too, and I’m here for it.
2. Legendary (Caraval, #2) – Stephanie Garber
Caraval was one of my favourite books of last year, and I was eager to read its sequel when it came out in the spring... and then I didn’t. Typical. I still really want to, though!
3. The Romanov Empress - C.W. Gortner
Caraval was one of my favourite books of last year, and I was eager to read its sequel when it came out in the spring... and then I didn’t. Typical. I still really want to, though!
3. The Romanov Empress - C.W. Gortner
I discovered this book after reading Queen Victoria’s Matchmaking, and I was hoping it would be about
Alix, but it turns out the Empress in question here is her mother-in-law. That’s
cool with me, too! The more historical figures I can learn about, the better.
4. An Absolutely
Remarkable Thing - Hank Green
I read two John Green books so far, one I hated with a burning passion but the other I liked, so I’m still undecided as to how I feel about him as a writer. Now it’s his brother’s turn to amaze me, and I kind of want to love this book.
I read two John Green books so far, one I hated with a burning passion but the other I liked, so I’m still undecided as to how I feel about him as a writer. Now it’s his brother’s turn to amaze me, and I kind of want to love this book.
5. A Keeper – Graham Norton
I’ve been watching Graham Norton every week for the last four years or so, and I didn’t have any idea that he was also a writer. I expect his book to be as fantastic as his interviews always are.
6. The Mermaid and Mrs.
Hancock – Imogen Hermes Gowar
I'll be honest, I don't even remember what this book is about, but it's been on my To Read for ages, and since then it's generated incredible buzz, so now I'm more eager than ever to finally read it.
7. I Was Anastasia -
Ariel Lawhon
The second Romanov book on my list, this time about a more well-known subject. And yet, I'm not exactly sure what this book will be about. Will it acknowledge "Anna Anderson" as an impostor, or will it be more of a "what if?", historical fantasy kind of approach where she really is Anastasia? I'll have to read it to find out.
8. Lady Mary – Lucy
Worsley
I adore Lucy Worsley’s TV documentaries, but I’ve never read
anyhing she’s written. I think it’s high time I remedy that, and a novel about the
breakdown of Henry VIII and Catherine of Aragon’s marriage narrated by their
daughter, the future Mary I, sounds like an excellent place to start. Plus, it
was published on my birthday. Better late than never to read it then!
9. The French Revolution
– Stephen Clarke
Stephen Clarke's 1000 Years of Annoying the French is one of my favourite books of all time, so much so that it's barely ever left my bedside since I brought it about eight years ago. I'm not even exaggerating, it's right here next to me this very moment. For some reason, though, I've never read anything else he's written.
10. Meet Me at the Museum
- Anne Youngson
This is supposed to be a love story that somehow involves the Tollund Man, and I'm all about him and other bog bodies ever since I wrote my MA thesis on Seamus Heaney's bog poems. Bring on the museum romance!
+1 The Secret
Language of Cats: How to Understand Your Cat for a Better, Happier Relationship
– Susanne Schotz
This book is coming out exactly today! So it is a bit like
cheating to include it on my list, but I couldn’t help it. I adore cats, and
although I never had any of my own, I know that I absolutely will one day. It’s
out of the question that I won’t. In
the meantime, I’m okay with familiarizing with all the strays in the
neighbourhood, and reading this book to make sure I don’t fuck up with any of
them.
You 1x09 Candace
I expected this episode to be momentous ever since I looked
through the upcoming episode titles like two months ago, and boy did it
deliver! True, we didn’t meet Candace in the present day just so she could
deliver some shocking truths to Beck like I originally expected we would, and
neither did we really find out what
happened to her - that’s the job of next week’s episode, I guess – but so much
else happened in these forty minutes that I almost don’t mind any of that.
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