Search This Blog

Sunday, December 31, 2023

Reading/Watching Log #97

Whew, I’m finally finished. Getting laid low with Covid was one thing, but after the monthly deadline passed, I found it difficult to get motivated in finishing up this post. Plus, I still have my Recommendations of 2023 and Women of the Year posts to make, and I’ve no idea how long they’re going to take me.

It’s a little strange looking over this log and seeing it divided into what I watched before, during and after Covid. More than that, there are some crazy coincidences in what this material contains, including a. a small, almost throwaway, scene in which a person of colour deals with a passive-aggressive comment on where they were born (Doctor Who and Dial of Destiny), a skeleton that is animated by sentient bandages/rags (Zita the Space Girl and an episode of Legend of the Seeker), two social climbing women (The Crown and Dangerous Liaisons) and actors who looks like Eddie Redmayne, who are not actually Eddie Redmayne.

So here it is, better late than never.

Thursday, December 28, 2023

Links and Updates

So what did you get for Christmas? I got Covid, which meant I didn’t get a Christmas. I’ve finally dragged myself out the other side of my sick bed, though I still feel like crap and barely have the energy to type this (the post you’re about to read was written about a day before the symptoms really hit).

I’m ticked off, as I was able to avoid the virus for this long, but I suppose I knew deep down it was going to catch up to me eventually. In any case, I hope your Christmas was better than mine.

My last Links and Updates post was a bit miserable, as there’s been so little to look forward to this year and so much more that has been unceremoniously cancelled. And then, in the past couple of weeks, something happened – the promise of good stuff!

And yes, a lot of it is prequels and sequels and remakes and continuations, but they appear to have a level of care and quality involved that piques my interest...

Saturday, December 16, 2023

Legend of the Seeker: Desecrated

We start with another of those patented camping scenes in which the characters are ribbing each other over the fire (it’s a staple of this show by now) when Kahlan emerges from the forest and announces that gars are attacking a nearby village. They all race off to lend their assistance... only for it to turn out to be a surprise party for Richard’s birthday.

Aww. But also – enjoy it while it lasts.

Friday, December 8, 2023

Legend of the Seeker: Creator

Ah, it’s a good old clip show episode. This should be an easy one.

With the advent of short-form television, in which a season gets approximately eight to ten episodes at most, the use of the Clip Show has pretty much disappeared. Their purpose back in the days of twenty-two-episode seasons were obviously to fill in a bit of time and save a bit of money by showcasing footage of the show that had already been shot, usually under the guise of catching the audience up on events, or demonstrating how much a character has grown.

For my money, the best justification for a clip show was “Past Imperfect” from Xena Warrior Princess, in which the story involves Gabrielle literally revisiting her memories leading up to a particular life-altering choice, with a twist on what was actually occurring in that moment.

In this case, Legend of the Seeker goes for more of a Courtroom Drama, where our characters are forced to defend Richard’s integrity as a hero to a mysterious figure who confronts him with the prophecy that he’ll end up helping the Keeper by giving him the Stone of Tears.

Friday, December 1, 2023

Woman of the Month: Zita the Space Girl

Zita from Zita the Space Girl

I feel like I’ve been waiting forever for my reserves of these graphic novels to come through the library system, but it turns out it was worth the wait.

Having read the afterword in the final book, the genesis of this character is its own little story: originally conceived by a girl called Anna in high school, Ben Hatke began to expand the character’s adventures (presumably with Anna’s permission) in a bid to impress her. The gambit paid off, and the two are now married with four daughters – one of whom is called Zita.

The fictional Zita is a young girl hanging out with her friend Joseph in the fields behind their houses when a meteorite crashes close by. Naturally they investigate, and discover a strange device that looks like a big red button. And as it happens, Zita is exactly the type of girl who – on finding a big red button – presses it immediately.

A portal opens in the crater, and tentacles drag Joseph through. She runs away in terror, hesitates, thinks for a bit, and then rushes back to follow him to Who Knows Where. That’s a pretty good summation of Zita’s character: a girl whose impulsiveness makes trouble for others, only for her to then try her darndest to get them out of it.

The adventures that follow regularly have Zita use the phrase: “don’t tell me who I can’t save!” as she’s very much a big-picture-comes-last kind of hero. If someone is in immediate danger, then their life is prioritized before any world-saving shenanigans, which naturally creates for her a very tight circle of loyal friends.

The stories are pretty fun space adventures for the most part – though this underlying theme of Zita’s choices and what she deems most important provide an interesting look at a very popular moral equation that comes up a lot in fantasy/sci-fi: her thirst for adventure often comes across as selfish, and yet she’ll put her own safety and happiness on the line every time to help someone in need.

So she’s deeply flawed, and yet truly inspirational at the same time. It’s nice to see a story get that balance right in a female character.