This lovely 3 disk set makes me drunk with glee every time I watch it.
How come the details at Amazon say it's a 2 disk set?
[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.
This lovely 3 disk set makes me drunk with glee every time I watch it.
How come the details at Amazon say it's a 2 disk set?
How come the details at Amazon say it's a 2 disk set?
Because I'm addlebrained. It is a 3 part series on 2 disks. See? Drunk!
In whatever form you can find it, it's fan-tas-teek.
In whatever form you can find it, it's fan-tas-teek.
Oh, I know (at least the bits I saw of it). I meant to tape it. I memfault why I didn't, but something frelled up that plan. Once I'd completely missed the first episode, I decided, after seeing bits of the second (I think) that I'd justwait for the inevitable DVD.
Then I forgot about it. smacks own forehead
Oh well....
Slumbernut!!!!!
When I first rented it, before the desperate flight to Amazon to acquire it now, now, now...I had relatively low expectations. Hm. Nice idea. Marty talks about movies. Neat.
But, I didn't know that Marty taught film...which of course he would...and the end result left me feeling so incredibly edified and satiated in my cinemania.
Thanks for the link! I finally saw the Deadwood finale, and am among the baffled.
The more I think about the Deadwood finale, the braver it seems to me. After asking us to sympathize with the citizens of the town, it turns the most transitional character - the guy they'd converted from outright villain to an anti-hero of sorts - back into a cold-hearted murderer, killing the most innocent character yet to die deliberately, and then showed us that the outright good guys of the show would simply accept this sacrifice with the barest glimmer of revulsion. My god! I've been writing an article about the way Deadwood rejects the Hobbesian view of life in favor of Locke's neutral democracy, but this subverted my whole thesis. The characters never turned away from Hobbes' state of nature, all nasty, brutish, and short, but instead constructed a Lockean facade about it. When the chips were down, they were all - every single goddamn one of them - ready to sacrifice everything they claimed to hold dear just to save their skins. Deadwood isn't about the progressive force of civilization; it's about the adaptability of people to different aspects of brutality.
I may change my mind about all this again.
On a less philosophical note, some impressive cocksucker has counted The Number of Fucks In Deadwood.
I'm glad someone out there is tracking these important statistics.
Imteresting take, Corwood. It fits with some of what I've been thinking all season. It seemed like the story was trying to be civilization replacing the rule of the strong over the weak via something like the Invisible Hand, but I could never quite make that work. Because that wasn't what was going on, it's just what seemed to happen, I guess.
It's gonna take more thinking.
Isadora Duncan's husband (I have forgotten his name, but I remember his attitude) used to say that people should read novels like they listened to symphonies - all in one go with minimum distractions, reading straight through without stopping to, you know, live in between. I have a strong urge to watch all iof Deadwood that way - I feel like I will understand it better if I can hold it all in my head at once, which I might just be able to do if I just immerse myself in the DVDs for however long it takes.