GR Dailies: How I Met Your Mother – Sunrise

by Grace Crawford

Images courtesy of Bay & Thomas Productions and 20th Century Fox.

Images courtesy of Bay & Thomas Productions and 20th Century Fox.

9×17: “Sunrise”

So remember how in last week’s review I got all serious and said how, what with the Mother losing the love of her life and doubting if she would ever luck into that again? And how overall the episode was about moving on?

Well, this week’s episode, “Sunrise,” was about letting go. This may be crazy talk, but I’m sensing a theme here.

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her

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by Thom Yee

Her poster

her images courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures

her is one of those movies most people will go into very consciously.  You won’t just be giving it a try on a “larf”, you won’t be buying your ticket, sight unseen, and you won’t be settling down into your seat not knowing what to expect.  If you see it, you’ll be seeing it very deliberately.  You’ll know exactly what you’re getting into.  You’ll know you’ll be seeing a quirky, Oscar-nominated film and you’ll know there’ll be at least a degree of self-questioning.  Perhaps the only thing you won’t know is how it could possibly end in anything other than complete and utter heartache that will leave you shattered… gutted.  And in some ways, you’ll know that that’s the main reason you’re going to see it in the first place.

It’s a funny little movie.  It explores the extraordinary questions of our collective, modern zeitgeist — the nature of existence, the nature of reality, the progress of technology, programming, memory and the singularity — but only on the surface.  The deep thoughts that question existence itself are mere table stakes, the empty, insubstantial detritus of a film that’s aiming far higher.

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GR Dailies: Community – Analysis of Cork-Based Networking

by Thom Yee

Community images courtesy of NBCUniversal Television Distribution

Community images courtesy of NBCUniversal Television Distribution

5×06:  “Analysis of Cork-Based Networking”

Particularly In comparison to the last two episodes, both, in their own ways, gut-wrenching goodbyes to two long-standing cast members, “Analysis of Cork-Based Networking” is a relatively light episode.  It’s very plot-based, not particularly dependent on established relationships or longstanding quirks of the series, and it’s probably the closest the show’s felt to season one in a while.  Which isn’t a bad thing.

In establishing the “Save Greendale” Committee, Annie splits the remaining members of the Greendale Five (née Seven), along with Professors Duncan, Chang and Hickey, into teams to tackle a variety of pressing issues around the school, among them updating the Greendale Student Census, planning the decorations for the mid-term dance, and rehanging the bulletin board in the cafeteria.  So, three tasks, three storylines.

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GR Dailies: How I Met Your Mother – How Your Mother Met Me

by Grace Crawford

Images courtesy of Bay & Thomas Productions and 20th Century Fox.

Images courtesy of Bay & Thomas Productions and 20th Century Fox.

9×16: “How Your Mother Met Me”

Sometimes, when writers want us to feel sympathy or camaraderie with their characters, they make said characters go through something negatively life-altering: embarrassment, failure, loss. We can’t identify with characters when they’re happy all the time, which is why all our favourite stories start out well, get really awful, hit rock bottom, and then go back up to being great again.

If the situation is too unsubstantial or not sufficiently devastating, we won’t feel the emotions we’re supposed to feel. But if the situation is too severe, we can become angry with the writers, thinking, “I see how you’re trying to manipulate me, and it’s not going to work. I’m smarter than you. I’m not going to feel anything.” It’s a constant challenge we writers face: how to write a compelling story about an engaging character that doesn’t make the audience want to smash their own faces in with a hammer.

Say what you will about this week’s How I Met Your Mother, but I think the writers, flawed as they’ve been in the past, succeeded in that goal.

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Sherlock (Series 3)

by Grace Crawford

All images courtesy of the BBC.

All images courtesy of the BBC.

Spoilers ahead!

Almost exactly one year ago, I had the flu/mono/Spanish plague. I was in bed for a whole week. I had all kinds of nasty things leaking out of my face. I was cross and hot and miserably uncomfortable. I was looking for a diversion, and my sister recommended Sherlock.

“Why not,” I said to myself. After all, it wasn’t like I was going anywhere, and it looked like there was about nine hours’ worth of episodes. That would keep me busy for  a while. So I started with “A Study in Pink,” and that was pretty intriguing. Then I watched “The Blind Banker,” and even though it wasn’t a particularly great episode, I kept watching. Then came “The Great Game.” It was at that moment I realized I was hooked.

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GR Dailies: Community – Geothermal Escapism

by Thom Yee

Community images courtesy of NBCUniversal Television Distribution

Community images courtesy of NBCUniversal Television Distribution

5×05:  “Geothermal Escapism”

When I think about it, I’ve never particularly liked Troy.

But give me a second.

I can explain…

Let me explain…

…*

Occasionally, but only occasionally, I’ll run across a fellow Community fan in real life.  It’s a rare occurrence to be sure, but it almost always represents one of those odd moments of kinship, one where we both have an instantly heightened sense of respect toward each other.  But that can only happen if, during the usually brief chat about the show, neither of us allows the conversation to devolve to asking, “who’s your favourite character?”  Some people will say Annie or Jeff, a certain type of person really likes Chang, and just about nobody likes Shirley (and not just because she intimidates us all sexually, but probably mostly because her character type is least represented in Community’s audience demographics).  Abed is usually everybody’s favourite, though, and with him Troy naturally follows.  If anyone, I might like Britta the best, but only because I admire her for the grace with which she (usually) handles everyone taking a giant crap on her.  But to me, Community’s never been a show about individual character favourites; it’s very much an ensemble, one that works, thrives, and depends on the contributions of everyone involved. Continue reading

GR Dailies: How I Met Your Mother – Unpause

by Grace Crawford

Images courtesy of Bay & Thomas Productions and 20th Century Fox.

Images courtesy of Bay & Thomas Productions and 20th Century Fox.

9×15: “Unpause”

This week’s episode began with a statement that we’ve become familiar with over the last eight years and that we all know to be true: “Nothing good happens after 2 a.m.”

Unless you mean The Mother going into labour in 2017 and Barney telling all his deepest secrets to Ted and Robin right now, that is.

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American Hustle

by Thom Yee

American Hustle-poster

American Hustle images courtesy of Columbia Pictures

If there’s one part of my life that I’m actually happy about, it would have to be that I was never alive during any part of the seventies.  Plaid pants, shag carpets, quadrophonic sound, the empty leftovers of a previous decade that actually meant something, a meaningless, empty presidency after five straight years of Nixon-ian paranoia.  Looking back, it’s all a sensory overload in the worst kind of way:  the colours, the textures… the way things look like they must have smelled like… I’m glad I missed all that.  To be fair, I am kind of a fan of the Farrah Fawcett haircut (which looks like it must have taken forever to do), I do wear sideburns (but that’s mostly because of the inherent absurdity of Asian male facial hair), and I still think bell bottoms look awesome on a certain type of girl (though that type of girl tends to look awesome in almost anything).

And all of these are really broad generalizations.

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