::runs around screaming and Kermit-flailing::
(In fact, I found out four minutes after the announcement because I was obsessively checking Twitter, but here it is many hours later and I'm still running around screaming and Kermit-flailing.)
'Out Of Gas'
A place for shows presented as streaming only — for example Netflix Originals, Amazon Prime Streaming, Hulu Plus, Yahoo, and other sites. (Note: Shows that are part of the Marvel Cinematic Universe shall be discussed in that thread.)
Spoiler Policy: Spoiler font two weeks for content presented all at once. Content presented as weekly episodes may be discussed with no restrictions as it is released.
::runs around screaming and Kermit-flailing::
(In fact, I found out four minutes after the announcement because I was obsessively checking Twitter, but here it is many hours later and I'm still running around screaming and Kermit-flailing.)
One of the sites I visit reviewer OFMD as a rom-com (yes, it specializes in reviews of romance novels).
OB1 Episode 3: This episode was a bit of a mess. I really don't understand how Rebel lady managed to exit the tunnel to help Obi-Wan without running into Reva or how Reva managed to beat Leia to the pilot and kill him. I mean, if there were multiple routes (which we didn't see any evidence of) why wouldn't Rebel lady have taken Leia by the fastest route to the pilot?
The Obi-Wan vs Vader encounter didn't work for me, either. If you're going to risk upsetting previous Canon you need to make it worthwhile to the audience and this just didn't do it.
Also, speaking of breaking Canon, apparently they really did kill the Grand Inquisitor or else there's some kind of con at play.
Nobody actually came out and directly said that he was dead. Plus, there's no body. Not even a Sith Funeral.
Funnily enough, I enjoyed this episode more than the first two. I don't care at all about canon, though. There's just way to much of it for me to remember any of it anymore. I really liked the makeup or whatever on the mole person, apparently played by Zach Braff, which is funny to me.
I thought Reva said he was dead and blamed it on Kenobi. If he is still alive he's at least not talking to anyone about how Reva stabbed him in the gut.
Ok, I just heard about First Kill coming soon to Netflix and it sounds like something we will want to discuss. Trailer: [link]
Ok, I just heard about First Kill coming soon to Netflix and it sounds like something we will want to discuss. Trailer: [link]
I know these tropes!!
(post temporarily deleted because it's too late here and I'm doing something wrong with the spoiler font so it doesn't work and I'm too tired to figure it out. Re-do tomorrow. Sorry).
Woo-hoo! Found out what the spoiler font problem was! So now...
Re: Stranger Things 4. Y'guys. Sometimes things are getting weird. Mostly in my brain.
So I watched Stranger Things 4 and oh boy, am I immersed with all of the feelings. Around ep. 5 I decided to carefully visit Tumblr, avoiding spoilers to the best of my ability, to see if some folks are thinking and feeling what I'm thinking and feeling, or to open my eyes to things I've missed in the first 4 episodes.
It is where I learned about this: [link] Which threw me off personally (and I'm not gonna write more about this here because it's not what I want to talk about now), but also professionally. Now, as some of you may remember, I'm an archivist who processes holocaust-related archives and collections. And during my years as an archivist I came to learn a few things about the Jewish resistance in Vilnius. One of the most amazing operations that took place in Vilnius was the one done by the paper brigade: [link]
Here's where it gets weird/interesting (spoiler font from now on for something that took place in 1944 but is also spoiler to ST4, ep. 4).
Avraham Sutzkever, a member of the paper brigade, was a very famous Yiddish poet with some true miraculous stories. One of them is about the time he was with partisans and had to walk through a minefield. I'll let him tell the rest (Yiddish with English subtitles, approx. 1:20 minutes): >[link]
So the minute I read about the prison and after watching the last scene of ep. 4, I thought of Sutzkever's story about being saved by a melody. While the traumas are very different, I can fully see how surviving a trauma - any trauma, fictional or real, personal or genocidal/societal - can look like a miracle. A fantasy story/fairy tale. It's just quite a thing, having a very similar narrative of survival in two very different stories - one real, one fictional/SFF.
Anyway, that's what I wanted to say.