The Minearverse 3: The Network Is a Harsh Mistress
[NAFDA] "There will be an occasional happy, so that it might be crushed under the boot of the writer." From Zorro to Angel (including Wonderfalls and The Inside), this is where Buffistas come to anoint themselves in the bloodbath.
On the plus side, it's still 4th, and only lost under a million.
On the down side... D'oh.
Did something else gain a fair amount?
Zap2It lists The Inside as it's number 1 search term, also. Google has still failed to index TI.org, which has pretty much restricted my grasp on how popular the web population has been for it, since Google accounts for most of the traffic from search engines.
Interesting. I'm reading the comments over at TWOP and it is like they saw an entirely different show.
A major understatement. I took a glance over there and the vitriol is spewing rather heavily. Even the people who don't hate it aren't showing a lot of enthusiasm for it. I don't get it.
coming out of lurkdom after those overnight numbers.
Those are very upsetting.
I question how many people really know its out there? I almost didn't watch it till I realized it was a Tim show. People are still not trained to look for good tv during the summer.
I love these kind of shows. (besides shows about vampires, space westerns, and quirky shows with talking chameleons, crime mysteries are my favorite)
On another note I do find it a bit gory. I am of the thought that gore does not make a show or movie better. The rape scene at the end was very effective to me and it didn't show anything.
I do need a new toaster so perhaps I am going to have to look into earning a few.
PenDuffy, I'm curious -- what struck you as gory? I've seen rats crawl out of the mouths of dead bodies on CSI. I had a shot of a body on the slab in the morgue, but no autopsy, for instance. I'm still amazed at this charge of over-gore, so I'm curious.
Not PenDuffy, but the photos Rebecca was looking at before the team meeting were rather nasty (I think DX mentioned last night he needed to look away). They don't cross my line for gore, but I can see that it would for some people.
Gotcha. Remember that scene in "Jaws" where Brody is flipping through the shark bite book and we're cutting faster and faster and you think you see more than is there? That's what I was going for in that scene. It's funny how people see two different things.
Some of the critics were like, "we've never seen this much gore! It's gore-porn!"
The critic from the Denver Post said: "Lean dialogue, clever plot twists and fewer ghastly autopsy details than in the "CSI" universe..."
So either it's out goring CSI or it's got less ghastly details. Can it be both, emprically?
You know, I finally realized why the first ep creeped me out so much. It was the fact that he attacked her/kidnapped her from her apartment. I am very alert getting out of my car and walking up the stairs to my apartmetn, but once I'm inside, I let my guard down. I wouldn't necessarily be paying attention if someone came up to me from behind when I walked into the bedroom or something.
I think both CSI and X-Files are/have been gorier than this, so far. Like the X-Files ep with the fat-sucking guy. Yeah.
The critic from the Denver Post said: "Lean dialogue, clever plot twists and fewer ghastly autopsy details than in the "CSI" universe..."
maybe people delinate between pictures seen on TV and scenes played. The pictures seem less real than the "action". Two layers of distance, if you will.
The "Home" episode of The X-Files was the grossest thing I've ever seen on TV. Gross doesn't necessarily equal gore, but still.
I don't think The Inside is heavily gore-tastic at all. The pictures last night went by too fast to really notice. What got me more was Strong and Brandt -- it was so clear what was about to happen, and Brandt was helpless. It wasn't gory, and the actual violence wasn't shown, but it was horrifying in the blunt reality of what was going to take place.