Direct Beam Comms #38

TV

Halt and Catch Fire – Grade: A

The highly underrated AMC series Halt and Catch Fire returned last Tuesday with two new episodes. This third season finds the characters in a very different place than in the second. Donna, Cameron and Gordon (Kerry Bishé, Makenzie Davis and Scoot McNairy respectively) have moved their families and company Mutiny from Texas to San Francisco to be closer to computer technology and capital. While Joe MacMillion (Lee Pace), a serial incubator/stealer/taker of good ideas has created a company of his own that sells antivirus software, their motto is “Are You Safe?”, and has become the focus of attention he always aspired to.

I don’t know there’s ever been a TV series quite like Halt and Catch Fire that depicts what it’s like to create something from scratch. For Donna and Cameron who created their company Mutiny which started with online games but transitioned to a message board, there’s no roadmap for what they’re doing. Everything they do is brand new and they’re creating new and exciting places for people to begin meeting up online.

Lee Pace
Lee Pace

For Joe things are a bit different. He stole the core technology of his company from Gordon and has turned this nugget of an idea into a multimillion dollar empire. Joe’s real strength is of seeing the value of other’s ideas. Be it IBM with their PC that he set out to clone in the first season or Mutiny which he wanted take over in the second. Joe can see the future but he doesn’t have the skills necessary to create something himself of value. And instead of wanting to work with people to create that thing Joe will try and buy/steal whatever this is.

In Halt and Catch Fire, both Mutiny and MacMillion Utilities realize that once you have a company in a highly competitive market there’s no stopping. Everyday you have to think of new and different ways to engage with your users. If it’s Mutiny they’re creating new spaces and ways for people to connect. If you’re MacMillion you start creating software for home PCs when before your main customers were corporate users.

I think that’s interesting. For the people of Mutiny, especially, they think that what they do next will take them to a higher level of success and make life easier. And while they do become more and more successful their lives become harder and harder because there’s always someone else looking to do what they do or other, larger companies looking to take them out.

For Joe, though, success is different. He’s much more comfortable in the role as a powerful businessman. He’s been a guru in search of worshipers since the first season and with MacMillion Utilities and his role as a Steve Jobs-ish frontman he’s finally found his calling.

The Tick – Grade: B-

the-tick-07Last week, during their “pilot season,” Amazon debuted the first episode of several series, one of which is The Tick based on the comic series of the same name by Ben Edlund. I feel bad that I’m not more familiar with The Tick than I am. I never read the comic book — issues of which were quite popular and therefor pricy when I was collecting and out of my reach — and was exactly the wrong age to watch the 1990s cartoon series too.

I did watch the short-lived nine episode live-action Fox TV series, though, and enjoyed that a great deal. So I come to the new Amazon Tick pilot at a different angle than most who I suppose are either super-fans of the cult-character or totally unaware of him.

In the Amazon series, a superhero arrived on the Earth in 1908 and ever since the world has been populated by them some of which are pastiches of popular DC and Marvel characters. But instead of being heroic and serious like the Marvel and DC movies, The Tick is more slightly goofy. Which is one problem I had with the show; its tone.

The Tick is a series where one moment a character can accidentally trip over their own feet and almost do a prat fall but the next a super villain is literally executing the members of rival team on the street of a city. The show was all over the place at times from silly to horrific. And it’s not like some new creative team here has swooped in and changed around the tone of the series either. The Tick was created by writer/artist Ben Edlund who also wrote the pilot to the Amazon version too.

This is Edlund’s version from start to finish but feels unbalanced.

This first episode establishes all the characters from the Tick (Peter Serafinowicz) to Arthur (Griffin Newman) and sets up their relationship of becoming superhero/sidekick. Much of the plot is of Arthur trying to prove that a long dead super villain named “The Terror” (Jackie Earle Haley) is still alive and the Tick being the only person who wants to help him in his quest.

There’s also a bit here where Arthur’s sanity is questioned with him having issues as a kid where his blue nightlight voiced by Serafinowicz used to talk to him and Arthur now being on medication because of certain issues. So is the Tick real, or in his head? Except he’s obviously real since the Tick does battle with some baddies in the episode and leave a smoking crater in his wake.

I’m honestly interested in seeing where The Tick goes from here and hope that the issues I had with its tone get worked out if the series does get picked up for a full season run. Which we won’t know for a while and even if it does get picked up we won’t see the next episode for another year or so.

The Tunnel – Grade: B-

TheTunnel-1The UK import TV series The Tunnel ended its 10 episode run on PBS last week. The first season of The Tunnel was interesting enough but I think it was just too long for what story it had to tell.

The Tunnel follows to detectives, one from the UK Karl Roebuck (Stephen Dillane) and one from France Elise Wassermann (Clémence Poésy) who are investigating a double murder committed in the Chunnel exactly half way between the UK and France. But the case quickly spirals out of control as this double murder is actually the first “lesson” given by the “Truth Terrorist” (TT) who’s mission is to bring enlightenment to the masses on all the problems of the world by doing things like killing all the residents of a nursing home, kidnapping a bus full of schoolchildren and locking a war hero inside a meat locker to freeze to death. All of which is broadcast live on the internet.

Think a flashier and longer version of Se7en and you’re close to what The Tunnel is. All of which makes for some interesting TV, but as TT’s crimes get more complex and larger in scale the series also becomes less and less believable.

Like if TT is really terrorizing two countries, wouldn’t the UK and France assign more than two detectives to the case? And if TT really is constantly traveling between the two countries, wouldn’t this eventually lead him to being caught since surly there are records kept somewhere of who’s traveling where on what day? And, much like the crimes of Animal Kingdom, TT’s crimes become so complex and convoluted that just one slip-up along the way of 1,000 little details that need to be completed perfectly to not get caught stretch the bounds of believability and break off into some fantastical realm.

It doesn’t help matters that the big “twist” that’s comes at the end of the season, series like The Tunnel always have a twist, is apparent right from the first episode. Like, not to spoil things, but in a TV series the only reason time is dedicated to anything is because that thing is important. And once you realize this there’s something that one character does that’s obvious that they’ve been communicating with TT the whole time.

Honestly, I think that if The Tunnel had been four episodes rather than 10 I would have enjoyed it much more. Instead, it seems like much of the latter half of The Tunnel series is filler and could have easily been axed.

I did greatly enjoy the first half of The Tunnel and loved the Wassermann and Roebuck characters a lot. They have a unique chemistry I’ve never seen before — he’s a dedicated husband and father of a handful of kids yet is a womanizer and Wassermann is a woman who’s so dedicated to policing that she’s almost robotic in her manner yet wants to act more “normal.”

It’s because of those two characters I stuck with the show until the end, not because of what wild and wacky thing that TT was going to do on this weeks’ episode.

Movies

Triple 9 – Grade: B+

triple-9-movei-chiwetel-ejiofor-kate-winslet-reviewI’d been meaning to check out the movie Triple 9 ever since I’d heard of it earlier this year but waited a while to check it out on digital even though it’s been out a few weeks. This movie is about a group of crooks made up partly of cops and partly of ex-special forces soldiers who take on high risk robberies in Atlanta. But when they’re faced with their toughest challenge yet of stealing something from the Department of Homeland Security they figure the only way they’ll have enough time to pull off the job is by killing a fellow officer so that a “999,” or “officer down” code goes out therefor tying up the rest of the police giving them enough time to escape. But things get a bit complicated as the Russian mob who’re calling the shots on this criminal crew gets antsy and while killing a fellow officer is theoretically doable, in practice it’s much more difficult.

I’d been a fan of Triple 9 director John Hillcoat ever since I saw his movie The Proposition. To me, Hillcoat’s films are marked with an overt kind of brutalism not seen in mainstream Hollywood — see his movie based on the book The Road to see what I mean. So him doing Triple 9 had me interested since I wondered if that same kind of aesthetic would be present here or not? And honestly, it’s not. But I’m not sure that’s such a bad thing. Triple 9 is much more of a mainstream action movie, sort’a Heat mixed with Training Day and I’m not sure things like people being stomped to death, something that happens in The Proposition, would’ve flown in Triple 9.

Still, Triple 9 is an intense movie with a bit of heightened realism of street cops operating on the bad streets of Atlanta where the bad guys are as likely to shoot back when they feel threatened no matter what the consequences than they are to stand by and be disrespected.

And the story of Triple 9 flows very well. The crew, including Michael Atwood (Chiwetel Ejiofor), Marcus Belmont (Anthony Mackie), Gabe Welch (Aaron Paul) and Russell Welch (Norman Reedus) are in a bad place with the Russians since at any time matriarch leader Irina Vlaslov (Kate Winslet) can turn on them sending the crew to jail forever. So they end up placing themselves into precarious positions trying for just one more job in order to be let go of their obligations. Of which this high risk Homeland Security job seems to be their ticket out.

Enter Chris Allen (Casey Affleck) a veteran cop assigned as Belmont’s partner and the one they select as their prime 999 candidate. But when Allen saves Belmont’s life during a drug raid things get complicated.

The more I think of it, Triple 9 really is the spiritual successor to Heat except that whereas the criminals of Heat lead by Robert De Niro are suave Armani suit wearing crooks, the ones of Triple 9 are more street-thug is who won’t hesitate to maim or kill innocent bystanders if they get in their way or are needed to prove a point.

However, Triple 9 falls apart in a big way at the end. It’s not so much that the story’s no good, but it’s almost like the filmmakers ran out of time. For 110 minutes the story flows perfectly, but in the last 10 it’s a race to close out a story that had been going so well at that point. Literally the movie ends with one character in the backseat of a car where there’s an exchange of gunfire to close out the movie where I’m not sure that character would have ever been able to get to that car in the first place. Why do things happen this way? I can only imagine it was because that’s the only way it could have happened in the short time left the filmmakers had to tell it.

I wonder how much better of a movie Triple 9 could have been, one of the great crime films perhaps right up there with the likes of The Way of the Gun if it would have had more time to develop the ending.

This week in pop-culture history

  • 1968: Kristen Cloke, Shane Vansen of Space: Above and Beyond is born
  • 1985: The TV series The Twilight Zone premiers
  • 1987: The TV series Captain Power and the Soldiers of the Future premiers

Direct Beam Comms #29

TV

The Tunnel

TheTunnel-1
Clémence Poésy and Stephen Dillane

Grade: B+: The new drama series The Tunnel debuted on PBS last Sunday night having originally aired in the UK back in 2013. Based on the Danish/Swedish series The Bridge which was also turned into a series that aired here in the US on FX also back in 2013, The Tunnel moves the action to a deep and quite dark tunnel.

Here, a body is found in a service tunnel of the Channel Tunnel that connects the UK to France. Half of the body is lying on the British side and the other half on the French which means that Elise Wassermann (Clémence Poésy) a French detective and Karl Roebuck (Stephen Dillane) a British one are both assigned the case. And when it turns out in a rather ghoulish way that there isn’t just one body, there’s actually two, and a bomb is placed in the car of a popular English writer things might be more complex than their case might have first seemed to be.

I watched the FX series The Bridge when it first debuted also in 2013 and thought it was all right. That series took place on the border between the US and Mexico and since it was also based on the Danish/Swedish series had most of the same plot-points as The Tunnel. The US series had interesting moments, but what lost me was the idea that the murderer had this almost supernatural way of doing things and the character of Sonya Cross (Diane Kruger) who had absolutely no social skills whatsoever which meant that I watched about half the first season and gave up on it.

While the British series is also based on the Danish/Swedish The Tunnel is like a distant echo of the US series and after one episode seems much more watchable.

The Elise character in The Tunnel still has her quirks but she’s no where near as anti-social or distant as the Sonya one was in the US show. I remember it being mentioned several times in marketing materials for The Bridge that Sonya was supposed to be slightly autistic which Kruger played up well in the show. Except I could never imagine that her character would ever have been able to relax enough or make enough friends on the police force to advance in the ranks to be a detective — or even a street cop for that matter. There’s a lot more that goes into getting a job like that than being great at it, and all Sonya had was that she was the perfect detective but no one could stand being around her.

In The Tunnel, while the Elise character still has some of those same quirks — she’s almost robotic in the way that she talks to people and doesn’t understand visual cues on how to act — her character still feels that she might have some social skills and could maybe have realistically made her way up the ranks to be a detective. Or at least this would have been possible in the universe of the show.

The one part where The Tunnel and The Bridge do seem to share some story is the idea that the killer is this high-tech super-ninja able to do just about anything with computers. To the point where in the first episode of The Tunnel he takes over someone’s car to the point that the police can’t get him out.

This part stretched the story a bit, but since this was the only beat that seemed off I was able to overlook it. Plus Dillane, whom up until this point I was only really familiar with in his role of gruff, dangerous Stannis Baratheon in Game of Thrones is really good in The Tunnel. Here, he plays a seasoned detective who’s lighthearted, the opposite of Elise, works on instinct more than the “book” but is just as good at his job as she is hers.

I can’t tell you how weird it is to know that the US The Bridge and the UK The Tunnel came out the same year. It means that in all likelihood neither would have been able to “steal” anything from the other show. So it’s interesting to see how both shows handled the material.

Roadies

The cast of Roadies
The cast of Roadies

Grade: B: The Showtime series Roadies debuts tonight (6/26) but the pilot episode’s been available via YouTube for some time now. This series, created by Cameron Crowe, feels very much like an extension of his movie Almost Famous (2000), and I mean that in a mostly good way.

Roadies focuses on the backstage hands who travel city to city building and tearing down the stage for an arena rock band. An ensemble cast is lead by Luke Wilson and Carla Gugino as Bill and Shelli respectively, the two responsible adults trying to keep their group of quirky younger technicians working together under tight deadlines. One of these techs Kelly Ann (Imogen Poots) has decided to leave the tour and go to film school since she’s lost her passion for the music while Bill is starting to question his role in the tour too. The question is will Bill or Kelly Ann leave or will they stay with the group of “lost boys” who never have to grow up and are always having fun at the show?

Since you probably recognize the names of Luke Wilson and Imogen Poots, I’ll let you guess if they stay or not. (Hint — they stay.) And I think that’s part of the problem I had with Roadies, or at least a problem I see having with Roadies; I’m not quite sure where the series is headed from here?

Like I said I enjoyed this first episode. It feels a lot like the backstage goings on in Almost Famous but shifted from the early 1970s and updated for 2016. And since I loved Almost Famous I suppose I was destined to like Roadies too. But I’m not sure where the series goes now? The story of the first episode seemed to have a beginning middle and an end. And the introduction of a corporate “suit” Reg (Raf Spall) who’s there to stress the “branding” of the band the roadies are supporting and cut costs seems a bit cliched and toothless. Of course Reg doesn’t know anything about music and of course Kelly Ann’s able to give him a tongue lashing like no other. He’s the bad guy in a suit and she’s the girl with spunk.

What would’ve been interesting is if Reg were a music fan, knew more about music than the roadies and had still been the way he was. But I digress.

But other than the threat of Kelly Ann and Bill leaving, which is resolved by the end of the episode, and Reg there’s not much else going on in the first episode. So, will future episodes of Roadies focus on different venues then, and different goings-on behind the scenes? Or will the story be about Reg trying to control the roadies? I wasn’t sure which is a red flag for me.

One thing I did like was the episode starts when everyone waking up the morning of the show and reveals what a day of a roadie looks like from start to finish heavy lifting and all. Which was interesting. I kind’a wonder if future episodes will also employ this format?

Movies

The Girl with all the Gifts movie trailer

28 Months Later?

Jack Reacher: Never Go Back movie trailer

“Two things are going to happen in the next 90 seconds…”

The Reading List

Russia Actually Lights Rockets With an Oversized Wooden Match

This week in pop-culture history

  • 1972: Conquest of the Planet of the Apes opens in theaters
  • 1987: Innerspace opens in theaters
  • 1999: The last episode of Star Trek: Deep Space Nine airs