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Sunday, May 31, 2020

Reading/Watching Log #53

Lockdown has finished in New Zealand, and hopefully we’ll be moving into Level 1 soon, which means a loosening of the social distancing and ongoing disinfecting regulations we’re currently living under (and subsequently, an assurance that we’ve flattened the curve on the spread of Covid-19. At the time of this writing, there’s only one active case left in the country; everyone else is recovering).
With the end of lockdown, I moved back into my New Years Resolution of focusing on women-centric stories, though a few variations on this rule slipped by during quarantine, in which I returned to a lot of my favourite films from childhood/adolescence. Some I hadn’t watched in years, and it turns out I had great taste in my younger years, considering they all hold up extremely well today. It got a little surreal at times actually, as watching things in isolation that were so formative to my childhood (which already managed to mess up my sense of the passing of days) was like stepping into a time vortex.
So in here we've got treasure islands, secret gardens, stage magicians, wild swans, Greek gods, magic carpets, sentient robots and undead mummies. Plus, another win for LGBTQ happy endings. Man, a part of me is going to miss having all the time in the world to race through so many books and shows...

Sunday, May 17, 2020

Review: The Black Cauldron (game)

Last month I revisited Disney's The Black Cauldron, a rather misbegotten adaptation of Lloyd Alexander's The Chronicles of Prydain (or at least the first two books) which is not without its merits, but certainly not a success either. It did, however, inspire me to track down the tie-in computer game released by Sierra On-Line in 1986.

I played this relentlessly as a child – not quite as often as King’s Quest, the game series that was a formative and intrinsic part of my childhood – but enough so that it brought on intense feelings of nostalgia. I haven’t played any sort of video game released since the mid-nineties, and I don’t think sophisticated graphics will ever appeal to me in the same way the 2-dimensional pixel art of that period does.

Wednesday, May 13, 2020

Links and Updates

It’s back to work for me this Friday, the news of which came as a big relief. Have I made the most of lockdown to churn through books and shows that I’ve been meaning to get through for months, if not years? Yes, but I also want to get back into the community (with safety measures, obviously) and make myself useful again.
New Zealand is now officially moving into Level 2, which means that most public spaces will be open, only with plenty of hand sanitizer and social distancing involved. The library I work at is pretty small, so I’m not entirely sure how well that’s going to work, but we haven’t had a confirmed case of coronavirus in a few days and most people are confident that the clusters have been contained.
Obviously, normality is still a far-distant dream and a blog that mostly focuses on pop-culture isn’t going to have much to say beyond “a lot of stuff has been cancelled” – but there’s still some links and updates beneath the cut…
And of course, there’s always going to be a massive backlog of books, films and shows to get through – and honestly, I hope there always will be.

Friday, May 8, 2020

Xena Warrior Princess: The Furies, Been There Done That, The Dirty Half-Dozen (+ A Solstice Carol)

So here we are, still in lockdown but heading into the third season of Xena Warrior Princess, which contains what are considered some of the very best episodes the show had to offer. There’s the infamous “Rift” arc between Xena and Gabrielle, more flashbacks into our heroine’s dark past, plenty of juicy material for favourite guest characters Callisto, Ares and Aphrodite, and some scripts that are incredibly good – not just in the context of a cheesy swords-and-sorcery show, but genuinely good in regards to the issues they tackle and the creativity with which they’re shot and performed – including the musical episode. 

There’s good stuff ahead of us!

Friday, May 1, 2020

Woman of the Month: Iris West-Allen


Iris West-Allen from The Flash
I’ve said it before, and I’m saying it again: playing the Love Interest to a superhero is one of the most thankless roles an actress can take.
It usually involves three of the most tedious tropes imaginable: Locked Out of the Loop (a prolonged period of time in which you can’t know his secret identity, even though everyone else does), Distressed Damsel (in which your connection to the hero means you’re constantly rendered a helpless victim) and The Caretaker (any relationship with a vigilante crime-fighter usually revolves around his needs, responsibilities and identity). And there’s always the constant threat of fridging in order to devastate and/or motivate him.
Candice Patton had even more on her plate when she took the role of Iris West, given the inevitable troll remarks over her race (the character has been traditionally depicted as white) and narrative baggage in the form of Iris and Barry being raised together in the same house as children, giving them a quasi-sibling vibe that many viewers used as a mark against the pairing.
Throw in plenty of Romantic False Leads that were usually pretty likeable, and the typical scenes in which Iris becomes frustrated at Barry’s furtive behaviour (even though the audience knew there was heroic reasoning behind it) and I wouldn’t have blamed Patton for casting nervous glances over at Arrow and the complete hatchet job they made of Laurel Lance, her leading lady equivalent.
The deck was stacked against her, and yet in Patton’s hands, Iris rose above it all.
Much of this has to do with her innate charisma, though it took a while for the showrunners to utilize her outside the boundaries of the typical unattainable love interest. They focused on her role as a daughter, sister and girlfriend, and dabbled a little with her interest in freelance journalism, though it wasn’t until season four that they settled her into the role of team leader at Star Labs: guiding Barry through his heroics via an earpiece, issuing orders to the rest of the team, and offering emotional or moral support wherever needed.
From this point forward, her stories improve exponentially, from a short stint as a speedster after gaining Barry’s powers (with very cool purple lightning) to re-establishing her newspaper and hiring staff, to meeting her time-travelling daughter from the future and grappling with her new role as a mother. She even had fun playing Millie Floss in an alternate-world, magic-infused crossover episode. Throughout it all she retains her integrity, her optimism, and her great love for her family. I don’t think she gets nearly enough credit as The Heart of this show, and it wouldn’t be the same without her.
There are many variations of Iris West out there, but Candice Patton has set a new precedent for how she’s portrayed, leading to the casting of another black actress (Kiersey Clemons) in the DC Cinematic Universe – whose scenes were cut from Justice League. Of course they were. But I’m hearing good things about Iris’s continuing role in the sixth season of The Flash, so hopefully she’ll continue to make her mark on the ever-expanding franchise…

Thursday, April 30, 2020

Reading/Watching Log #52

Well, if this lockdown has been good for anything (besides preventing the spread of a deadly disease) it’s in giving us plenty of time to binge-watch whatever we like and catch up on our extensive to-be-read lists. I hope everyone is managing well; here in New Zealand we’ve recently moved into Level 3, which means that fast foods places are back open, but other non-essential facilities (including libraries) are still closed.
Though I’ve largely stuck with my New Years’ Resolution of female-centric stories and creators, I loosened up a bit for the sake of stress-free viewing and just watched whatever I felt like in the moment. I’ll get back to my more rigorous screening process once this drama has wound down, but don’t be surprised if a few male-led films or shows are featured here.
I also managed to watch all the various takes on Emma (which I discuss in the post directly below this one) and the first two seasons of Killing Eve in preparation for season three. So glad that show is back!
I hope everyone's keeping safe out there.

Saturday, April 25, 2020

Review: Emma (yes, all of them)

Over the last four weeks I’ve discovered the perfect combination of comforts for surviving lockdown: chocolate and Jane Austen – specifically Emma, her fourth published work and arguably her best novel. 
Yet even with nothing else to do, I didn’t have the time or energy to reread the book itself, so I made do with all five adaptations of the story, from the BBC’s miniseries in 1972, the Gwyneth Paltrow vehicle in 1996, the second BBC adaption to come out that same year, their third televised attempt in 2009, and Autumn de Wilde’s interpretation of early 2020.
The story certainly knows how to time itself, averaging one (nearly) every decade, at (rough) ten year intervals.
I’ve often believed that the reason Emma and Pride and Prejudice are over-represented in media is due to the fact Elizabeth and Emma are spirited in a way the ladies of Mansfield Park and Persuasion aren’t. Austen was saying something very different about social expectations and personal fortitude in her treatment of Anne Elliot and Fanny Price, which has inevitably led to screenwriters finding them “less fun”... but perhaps not entirely without reason. 
Elizabeth and Emma are more dynamic characters; they are different women at the end of their stories than they were at the beginning. It’s perhaps due to the internal change required of its main character that Emma is generally considered Austen’s finest work (even if Pride and Prejudice remains her most beloved) with a protagonist that is deeply flawed yet all the more lovable for it. 
According to Austen herself: "I am going to take a heroine whom no one but myself will much like", and yet we do like Emma – not in spite of her faults, but because of them. Her snobbery, her meddling, her foolishness – it’s all so entertaining that it’s almost disappointing when she grows out of it.
Austen also deserves credit for taking the familiar beats of a romance novel and turning them inside out. In any other story it’s beautiful, impoverished and musically gifted Jane Fairfax who would be our protagonist, with Frank as the dashing, unpredictable love interest who promises to save her from a life of destitution if only she can endure the secrecy that’s required to survive his formidable aunt.
Emma stands in ignorance of the drama happening right under her nose, never doubting that she’s the main character but not realizing the point of her arc is to realize how wrong she is about everything, and that her true love isn’t the charming, enigmatic Frank but George Knightley: old family friend, next door neighbour and technical brother-in-law. 
All of Emma’s matchmaking attempts end in disaster, she completely misinterprets Mr Elton and Frank Churchill, and is completely wrong about everything. She’s… dare I say… clueless?
Emma Woodhouse is also unique for being the only one of Austen’s heroines who is under no familial, financial or even societal pressure to marry. She has no need to worry about her well-being or that of her family, and her father's desire to keep her close only increases her power. She can do whatever she likes, and so when she does eventually wed, it’s entirely because she wants to. 
It gives the book a lightness of spirit that’s missing from her other works, in which Elizabeth, Anne, Elinor and Marianne have to  actually worry about their futures and financial situations, and I suspect that’s another part of the reason why Emma has been adapted so often. So many readers – rightly or wrongly – look upon Austen as escapism, and as such Emma’s complete lack of poverty or long-term worry becomes the most appealing aspect of her story.