Premium Cable: The Cursing Costs Extra
[NAFDA] A thread for the discussion of all original programming on HBO, Showtime, Starz and other premium channels.
This is NOT a general TV discussion thread.
My wife and I have very few shows that we both enjoy, and right now that's basically Blacklist and Grimm. Finding time to watch shows together is not easy so we're like 3 episodes behind on Blacklist.
With 1st daughter, I try to watch one of Marvel AoS, Flash, Gotham or Arrow each week. With other kids, Once Upon A Time.
I suspect it will be awhile until I can get to the most recent HBO shows, though GoT gets priority. I've already had to relegate Girls, Shameless, Newsroom, House of Lies and Episodes to the "one day in the distant future" pile. Hoping to get to Better Call Saul, Justified and Archer in the nearer future, and keep up with the final Mad Men eps and start the new Orphan Black season on time.
Is it just me, or is there really just too much good tv?
There really is too much, and we know we're going to have to cut back on the shows we watch when ltc is born, but what to cut?
There's a lot, right? I was hoping that when I came back from vacation I would have some backlog that I wouldn't mind not catching up on, so I could just drop something, but that pretty much hasn't happened.
I'm halfway through the second episode of
Daredevil
and I already love it.
Congrats, sj. I cannot remember, is this your first?
Also, can you help me out with the acronyms - TCG and ltc? I know I'll feel stupid when you tell me.
I'm not ashamed to say I've put my babies to bed in front of plenty of grown-up tv shows. They seem to be turning out okay.
OK, so I'm watching the last fight scene in
Daredevil,
and there's this one bit where
Daredevil knocks out one bad guy and, in the process, trips over another guy and falls out of frame. The way the scene is shot--a steady camera on the door to the kidnapped boy--does a wonderful job of framing the action. And little things, like Murdock's aforementioned trip or little tired momentary leans against the wall, really sell that he's at the end of his rope.
The whole thing is really well done.
Calli, that scene was incredibly well done.
I loved how the camera pans the rooms on each side so you see who Daredevil is going to have to take out before he can rescue the boy. At first, I thought he was just going to take out the one guard who was in the hallway, then slip in and grab the boy and slip out. But I guess he felt the risk was too great to the boy, so instead he takes out like 20 guys just so he can guarantee the boy's safety. It says so much about the character.
I also liked how well the scene
conveyed that sense of exhaustion at the end. I even said to my daughter, "beating up guys can sure take a lot out of a guy" as he leaned against the wall.
Yes to all of that. Also
that moment he takes to center himself and, I think, not be too scary to the boy before he opens the door (as well as rest)
Somebody put a lot of thought into that scene.
Congrats, sj. I cannot remember, is this your first?
Thanks! Yes, it's our first.
Also, can you help me out with the acronyms - TCG and ltc? I know I'll feel stupid when you tell me.
Teacup Guy, because he bought me a teacup on our second date when he saw I collected them on our first date. ltc is for little teacup.
The thing that is striking me most about Daredevil, which I am enjoying, is the voices.
ALL the voices are soft, subtle and often whispering.
I'm also struck by how understated Vincent D'Onofrio is in this role. Impressive.
For all the kicking and punching and over the top action, all of the characters seem so normal.
Not like larger-than-life superhero fodder at all.
That is what makes it so compelling, I think.
eta: Okay, that thing I said about 'understated'? Typed them minutes before seeing the car door thing. Yeah. Not soo understated.