alexsarll: (manny)
Monday's really been 'bent cop night' on TV these past few weeks, with the increasingly enigmatic Ashes to Ashes and The Shield both entering their endgames. And I realise I've written less about The Shield than usual. In part this is because it's the last series, so it's all too convoluted to explain now to anyone not already initiated. But beyond that, a large part of my Shield evangelism was about trying to encourage people who were hungry for more after The Wire to check out the second best cop show of the 21st century. And I wasn't the only person with that idea, except because most people (yes, even the ones who like good TV) are total dicks. So they had to go that little bit further and say that The Shield was *better* than The Wire, because you could come up with the cure for cancer and there'd still be some snotty-nosed little twunt who felt that their own inherent cool meant they had to start the backlash. I'm getting annoyed just looking for the sort of stuff I mean, so here's a representative example, although I've definitely seen worse. Generally they come from the perspective of a teenage boy reading nineties comics, who assume that Nastier necessarily equals More Real necessarily equals Better. The cops in The Wire are, for the most part, trying to do the right thing, whereas the cops in The Shield are utter gits, so the latter must be more Real and True, right? Well, if you're a kneejerk hippy dipshit, then yes, sure.
But beyond that, just like the '9/11 Truth' numpties are clinging to an inverted version of the neocon myths they despise, desperately hanging on to the notion that The USA Is In Control, even if they call the USA the villain of the piece, rather than admitting the far scarier truth that nobody's driving, so people who think The Shield is the real story don't realise how much they're buying in to their enemy's worldview. I've said before that The Shield's worldview is straight out of de Sade - the triumphs of vice and the misfortunes of virtue. The good cops mean well, but mess up; the bad cops leave a trail of blood behind them, but they put villains away. That's a bad cop's excuse, right there. Take the specific example of Antwon Mitchell from Season 4, a gangster turned peacemaker whom the dodgy cops correctly suspect of actually using his community work as a front to build a supergang. That's taken straight from the Rampart scandal, whose Crash Team directly inspired the show's Strike Team. Except the real Antwon was a guy called Alex Sanchez, who really was trying to bring peace to the streets, and got harassed, framed and eventually deported by cops who (depending how conspiracy-minded you want to get) either couldn't believe any ex-gangbanger would change, or wanted to keep the kids in poor neighbourhoods divided (subscribing to the cock-up theory of history, I would myself favour the former explanation).
More generally, the show makes the bent cops of the Strike Team so charismatic that you're always praying for them to get away with their outrages. Well, most of them - redneck Shane and his even more stupid wife are and always have been in dire need of a lead shower. Oh, and if you're one of the people who think The Wire lost its plausibility with the final season's plotline - just wait until you see the ludicrous twists and turns of The Shield's final season. It's a caper movie with more gunfire.
Which is not to say it's a bad season, or a bad show. I'm backlashing against the backlash a little here, trying to re-establish the correct order of things. But yes, if you like The Wire you should watch The Shield. It's a damn good show. Just not a truer, or better, show than The Wire.
alexsarll: (death bears)
I used to respect Tom Hodgkinson; once the Idler was the best magazine going, and How To Be Idle remains (for the most part) a valuable work of political philosophy mis-filed as humour. Alas, of late he has become one of the tinfoil hat brigade, retailing tired cliches about mobile 'phones as enslavers and the like. And he really doesn't like Facebook. Shockingly, a major company has shareholders who are a bit right-wing! Not homophobes or religious nuts like run half the public transport in Britain, mind - but a utopian who's all in favour of life-extension and the Singularity. Which is a bad thing, apparently. No, don't ask me how. Oh, and apparently it's really, like Big Brother, man! that Facebook's privacy policy says "You understand and acknowledge that, even after removal, copies of user content may remain viewable in cached and archived pages or if other users have copied or stored your user content." Because obviously if Facebook kept a record of anyone who'd ctrlC'd any of your content, and deleted that when you deleted the original, that would be in no way Big Brother-esque, would it?
Tosser.

ITV are really going for the big push, aren't they? OK, so their best show, Entourage, shows no sign of returning from its baffling mid-season hiatus, but that's an import. Their best home-grown, and the best thing they have on terrestrial, is Primeval, which restarted on Saturday. Kingdom is probably the weakest Stephen Fry offering in some time, but it's still Stephen Fry and thus better than almost anything on ITV; that came back Sunday. Royal dramedy The Palace looks like it might be half-decent, but it's scheduled opposite City of Vice (Henry Fielding fights crime - WITH WIGS!), so I shall probably never know. Oh, and there was Moving Wallpaper, wasn't there? That should have been good. I loved the idea of making a new soap, and then having a sitcom set behind the scenes of the soap, even before I knew Ben Miller was starring in it. They've also got a couple of Absolute Power alumni, and therein lies their problem - media in-jokes only appeal to a niche audience, and Absolute Power does them much better, even in the episodes written by Smug Slug*. The show has been infected with that terrible ITVitis (the disease which atrophies human acting and scripting ability even in the gifted). On top of which, they've absolutely blown it by showing Moving Wallpaper right before the soap whose production it shows/undermines, on the same channel. Echo Beach belongs on ITV1, channel of choice for the undiscriminating cudlip. The sly dig at it should not be interfering with their evening of cathode ray grazing - it should be tucked away on ITV2. Same slot, so people who want the pair reflecting on each other can still have the experience - but you should have to work for it, if only in the sense of changing channel.
Not that ITV are the only people launching inept sitcoms, of course. Consider Never Better on C4, with Guy from Green Wing once again playing a less amusing variation on the same character. But for heavens' sake don't consider it for very long, life is short and there is so much better stuff you could be watching. Or indeed, appearing in; his Green Wing brother Martin has been openly retconned into Primeval, which somehow evades ITVitis and continues to kick arse. Motorbike chases with velociraptors in a shopping centre? 'Sound of Thunder' time travel messes used to mess with the lead's head *and* sex up the set-up? Hannah S Club with a gun? I'm sold.

Have been listening to A Cellarful of Motown volume 3 a fair bit lately. It's volume 3 of a label rarities compilation and it doesn't have a single dud on it; how many labels can say that, and how many volumes would it take Motown before they started scraping the barrel? Which is not to say I love them all equally - 'Uptight' aside I never really got Stevie Wonder, and Carolyn Crawford's 'Too Young Too Long' is a bit reminiscent of the song at the end of Brass Eye's Paedogeddon - but not one track sucks. I find myself especially drawn to 'Loving You (Is Hurting Me)' but that may just be because it's credited to the Fantastic Four, so I picture it soundtracking another of those painful Reed/Sue/Namor love triangle scenes.

An interesting if grouchy piece on Marvel and DC notes that both companies, as corporate entities, place a vanishingly small amount of their emphasis on the ongoing publication of comics (against which, part of me is thrilled to see DC describe itself as the home of "such popular characters as Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman and The Sandman". Gaiman's boy in with the Trinity already...). And the scorn directed at the concept of an Ant-Man film is definitely misplaced when you recall that Edgar Wright has been named in connection with the project. But this ties in with something I was thinking about before christmas, except I see it as cause for rejoicing if only the message could be filtered up the line. To wit:
It doesn't matter what happens in the comics.
Corporate superhero properties have, as a rule, been reined in by a fear of hurting the brand. The theory goes that if little Tommy sees the new Batman film, and he then picks up a Batman comic at the drugstore/newsagent, it should to some degree tally with what he saw on screen. So Batman has to be Bruce Wayne (this has already nixed one of Grant Morrison's rumoured plans for the forthcoming Final Crisis).
Except drugstores and newsagents don't carry comics anymore, or if they do it's one of the reprint titles with 'classic' material. So it doesn't matter what's happening in the comics in the comic shops. Because if little Tommy goes in there, the retailer would be a mug to sell him the latest issue of the monthly. Give him one of the trades of the classics. If he says 'goddamn' a lot, give him All-Star Batman. If he's blatantly a goth, Arkham Asylum. I'm hard-pressed to think exactly what sort of little Tommy you'd need to think that giving him the monthly would be a remotely wise idea. So in the monthly, just let Grant Morrison do whatever the Hell the little voices are telling him, and everyone's happy!

Live Free Or Die Hard (fvck the UK title) is basically the same plot as Die Hard With A Vengeance + The Interweb, isn't it? Not that I'm complaining. And Die Harder is a great film overall, but definitely has the least compelling villain.

*He tries to pass for human by the name 'Mark Lawson', but does it really fool anyone?

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