Jan. 6th, 2022

canyonwalker: Malign spirits in TV attempt to kill viewer (tv)
The premier episode of The Book of Boba Fett dropped December 29 on Disney+. We watched it last week, though It's taken me until now to write about it because I've been a bit "backblogged" after Hawaii and New Year retrospectives, and purposefully limited my posting to 3/day. And while I've been curious to watch this new series since it was announced as a spinoff of The Mandalorian in The Mandalorian's last episode a year ago, I haven't exactly been chomping at the bit for it. I was never one of those "OMG Boba Fett is the most awesomest character in Star Wars EVER!!1!" fan bois.

Temeura Morrison and Ming-Na Wen star in The Book of Boba Fett (2021)

The Book of Boba Fett stars Temeura Morrison as Boba Fett, the titular famed bounty hunter, and Ming-Na Wen as Fennec Shand, an pan-galactic assassin who became a recurring character in The Mandalorian. Both are pictured above. The premier episode splits its focus between present day, picking up from a scene in The Mandalorian where Fett and Shand decide to set themselves up as crime lords in the fiefdom once ruled by Jabba the Hut, and flashbacks to Fett's past, with how he got from his last appearance in the movies (in Ep. VI, The Last Jedi) to today.

Overall the premier, entitled Stranger in a Strange Land, was "Enh" to me. I saw clear potential for it to get better— or not— in the next few episodes. Here are Five Things split between those that Worked and those which Did Not Work: [Spoilers marked as appropriate. Assume comments contain spoilers.]

1) The "Space Western" Setting [WORKED]
The Book of Boba Fett is styled in a "Space Western" setting like The Mandarian. Like Old West movies, norms and power structures are all local. The Empire has been defeated (mostly) though the reach of the Republic does not extend very far. Most worlds in the galaxy are ruled by whatever people or warlords live there. It's a narratively rich setting, and one that allows tight, focused stories of good vs. evil— or even evil vs. evil— to be told concisely.

2) Rich Visuals [WORKED, mostly]
It's obvious in almost every scene that the producers have poured a lot of money into making this series good. ...Or at least look good. The set design and costuming are great, the special effects look great (with 1-2 arguable exceptions). You really feel like you're on desert planet with a mood that some new danger could lurk around any corner.

3) Dialogue Between the Actors [WORKED]
One thing that works better than The Mandalorian is that there are two lead actors here. They play off each other well in dialogue, adding a delicious comedy element through witty side banter. They basically trash-talk the action and the minor characters. What a relief that they're not both playing the straight man 100% of the time, like everyone in Mando had to do.

There were two particular scenes where I liked their witty repartee. Read more... )

4) Morrison as a Physical Badass [DID NOT WORK]
Temeura Morrison has great physical presence. When he stops and stares, his glower can melt the paint off a wall. But he's a 61 year old man. He doesn't move fast or nimbly. This conflicts with the characterization of Boba Fett as the most feared bounty hunter in the galaxy. Yeah, they could put in stunt men for the fighting scenes, but they kind of... don't. I think the director, the famed Robert Rodriguez— whose early films I absolutely loved— wanted to keep the camera shots up close and personal in most of the scenes. Subbing in a stunt man every time the action starts would mean too many scenes shot from far away or from contrived camera angles where you don't see the star's face.

Curiously, Ming-Na Wen is a physical badass. She played one in her recurring role in the Mandalorian... and, of course, in her starring role as elite agent Melinda May in Agents of Shield. Wen is the kind of actress who can do martial arts scenes credibly, handing over only the most dangerous stuff to a stunt double. The director seems to underuse her talent, though. I think he soft-pedals her capability so she doesn't run circles around Morrison.

5) "Why Do I Care About This Story?" [DID NOT WORK— yet]

A story's got to have some reason for the audience to care about it to keep them engaged. In The Mandalorian that was the narrative arc introduced in the first episode when Mando found "Baby Yoda" and decided it would be his mission to protect the child and deliver him to appropriate foster parents. A show just about Mando being a badass & hunting people for bounties would've gotten old quickly. ...And that's even with actor Pedro Pascal being a credible physical badass. (Plus, with him being religious about keeping his helmet on, they could always stick a stunt double in there and we wouldn't know.) The action scenes in Boba Fett frankly suck so far compared to those in The Mandalorian.

Shoot-em-up action isn't going to carry this show very far. In fact it's already played out and FAILED in the shield-fighting scene at the episode's climax. The story of two warlords taking over some dusty backwater planet isn't going to hold interested too much longer, either. Stories about one evil vs. another lose interest fast. So the showrunners really need to come up with a reason we like these characters and want to see the rest of their story.

canyonwalker: Winter is Coming (Game of Thrones) (game of thrones)
A few nights ago I decided to take the plunge and start watching Game of Thrones. Y'know, catch up with the 2010s (the show aired 2011-2019) before they're over. 🤣 Here are my thoughts as I watched through the premier episode. I'll mark spoilers though at this point, 10+ years since the episode aired, how many people want to watch the episode and haven't?

It starts like a D&D game turned TV show...

As I watched the opening scenes of the episode I thought, "Hmm, this is a like a D&D game." Swords and sorcery stuff. Three intrepid guardsmen ride their horses through a tunnel blocked by locked gates at both ends. They emerge on the far side into a snowy winterscape. Behind them we see they've just tunneled under an unnaturally shaped mountain built like an enormous wall. Let's call it the Winterwall.

North of the Winterwall, where everything is way, way colder and snowier than 1/2 mile south, the guards are looking for a clan of savages, to check up on them or something. Guardsman 1 sneaks forward toward their encampment (they see smoke rising, indicating a campfire) and finds that Opening sequence spoilers.... ) Guardsman 1 flees.

Okay, so it's Lawful-Neutral...

Back south of the Winterwall, Guardsman 1 is apprehended as a deserter. It's a death sentence. The local baron— though they don't call him a baron, but that's totally the kind of title he'd have in any sensible D&D game— Ned Stark comes out to deliver the sentence and perform the execution personally. Stark explains to his 10 year old son that it's important the people who pass judgment understand carrying it out.

Okay, I'm thinking, the law seems unnecessarily harsh— nobody cares why Guardsman 1 fled, like most people don't even think to ask because they assume whatever he says must be a lie and there can exist no proof or corroborating details for it— but Stark administers the law with a sense of reason. So, this D&D game setting is Lawful Neutral.

Puppies!

In the next arc of the episode Stark and his retinue are traveling back to the castle when they come across a large buck, killed and gored. Stark spots a trail and follows it to find a very important plot point-- wait, PUPPIES!! )

The king visits; the D&D metaphor starts to falter

Back at Baron Lord (because they avoid saying "Baron" like it's trademarked, or something) Stark's castle building with lots of stones (they oddly avoid saying "castle", too) news has just arrived that the king is coming. Preparations must be made!

In terms of a D&D game this is where stories start to struggle. Because while most groups of players I've played with ask, no beg, no insist! that the game have politics & intrigue & roleplaying rather than just combat, whenever I give them a scenario that focuses on politics, intrigue, and roleplaying they withdraw and cop sulky attitudes until it's time to Roll Initiative again.

...Actually it's not everyone who'd get sulky about actual politics, intrigue, and roleplaying. There's a big subgroup of D&D players who see this as the perfect opportunity for a robbery spree. 😨 They're like, "Everyone's busy feasting with the king? Cool, let's loot their homes and businesses while they're they're not looking!" 🤣

More raunchy sex than any D&D group has ever been comfortable with

Through the middle of the episode the storytelling alternates between scenes at not-Baron Stark's not-castle and a faraway land where siblings Viserys and Daenerys, children of a deposed king, are plotting their return to power. Sex, rape, more sex, more rape, but don't be late to dinner! ) Because, apparently, wanton meaningless sex is okay but being late to dinner is an unforgivable sin.

And just like that, it's an Evil game

All the raunchy sex and rape— and there's some I'm leaving out here for brevity— broke my suspension of disbelief for a moment. "What happened to this being a D&D TV show, a story of good-vs.-evil with the Whitewalkers as the villains growing in power?" I mused. Then I remembered that the Whitewalkers become big villains in, like, season 6 or something. That means about 50 episodes of raunchy sex, incest, and rape until we get back to this being a proper D&D TV series.

Oh, then there's the last scene of the episode. Surprise! Genuinely evil.... ) And I'm like, "And just like that, this D&D game is an evil game."

canyonwalker: Cthulhu voted - touch screen! (i voted)
Today is the anniversary of an attempted coup against the U.S. government and its Constitution. On Jan. 6, 2021 a mob of thousands of people, some of them armed, swarmed the U.S. Capitol building with the intent of disrupting a vote to certify the results of the 2020 presidential election. Members of the mob fought with police, killing one and injuring over 100 officers. Members of the House and Senate were either evacuated from the building or barricaded themselves behind cover, in fear for their lives. This is the first time ever in the history of the United States that an attack penetrated the Capitol.

What drove the coup attempt was the lie repeated daily for weeks by then-President Donald Trump, and amplified by propaganda outlets such as the Fox News Network, that Trump rightfully won the 2020 election. In fact President Joe Biden won, by more than 7 million popular votes and an Electoral College vote of 306 to 232. Trump and allied propagandists have steadily claimed, with zero actual evidence, that Biden's margin of victory is due to widespread vote fraud.

"So what. The coup was defeated," some might say. "It was only a few thousand people. Out of, what, 330 million in the U.S.?" The thing is, the thousands of rioters who mobbed the Capitol are only a tiny fraction of an ongoing coup that's been happening in plain sight. Consider these facts:
  • On January 6, 2020, after the storming of the Capitol whipped up by the totally fake argument of widespread vote fraud, still several senators and over 100 representatives voted against accepting the Electoral College tallies. Their attempts to nullify the fair vote were also supported by the governors of 20 states. When the violent insurrection failed, these political leaders attempted a palace coup by using the processes of the government against itself.
  • It's not just a few thousand rioters or a few hundred politicians. Still today, a year later, 75% of Republican and Republican-leaning voters believe Joe Biden did not legitimately win the 2020 election. (Example source: CNN.com article, 10 Dec 2021)
  • Numerous states have enacted voting restriction laws. Even though every legal argument that widespread vote fraud occurred has been debunked and rejected by courts, politicians still take it as an article of faith to clamp down on voting rights. Of course, these clampdowns are proven not to impact voting fraud— because there is hardly any to start with— but do suppress the turnout of ethnic minorities and the poor and working classes.

So while the riotous coup one year ago today failed, there has been an ongoing coup continuing in plain sight. If Joe Biden or another Democrat elected in 2024, there could be a full scale insurrection. By then the political right will have had 4 years, not just 8 weeks, to feed its own lies and plan its next attack.

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