I love this series, which is edited to a fast pace that had me
at the edge of my seat. Small elements of gore and horror make this all the
more dramatic and Derek’s eerie howl is enough to raise hairs on my arm. I like
how the bad guy of this story is constantly changing and never fully clear;
Derek Hale, moody and angry, has all the right intentions but his actions are
always alienating our protagonist; even the Alpha can be empathized with and
later tries to help but is too mistrusted. And the characters who should be the
good guys – the human werewolf hunters – are actually the most brutal and
cruel. Some of the jokes can be cheesy but I find them and the characters endearing.
2013 promises an exciting series three that should finally unite all the
characters against a common foe.
Friday, 31 August 2012
A Review of 'Teen Wolf'
Exchanging stakes for wolfsbane, Teen Wolf is so refreshing
after the Vampire mania. Set in a small American town, Scott McCall is torn
into the mysterious world of the werewolves with a bite that changes his life
forever. Suddenly the teen becomes the star player in his school’s sport of lacrosse
– which I find original and surprisingly brutal; he gets the girl, Allison, and
their star-crossed love is magnificently more impressive then Bella and Edward’s.
With his best friend Stiles - who makes this show charismatic, funny and witty –
together they face the revenge-obsessed Alpha, the secretive, angry Derek, Allison’s
family ‘The Werewolf Hunters’ and the usual high-school dramas like uncompleted
homework and late night detentions. Then
there’s the inquisitive Jackson, who smells something strange and as one of the
most popular and richest teens in their town threatens to unravel their secret.
With a tough guy disguise, it’s his loneliness that turns him cold-blooded and
murderous, which Scott has to control, in between his own struggles at keeping
the wolf at bay. The trek through the woods is perilous but with Scott’s own
pack of rag-tag humans, they can solve the mystery of the Alpha’s identity, the
truth of the arson case and the murders of the old swimming team.
A Review of 'How to Train Your Dragon'
I really enjoyed this film and felt it had an admirable
message, one that shows the disabled, Hiccup whose leg had to be amputated in
the battles, positively.
Monday, 27 August 2012
A Review of Mary Hooper's 'Newes From the Dead'
This is a novel beginning with sorrow and injustice, not foreign
concepts in a story based on reality, but which concludes on a feel-good ending.
Hooper flits between the mysterious present and the innocent past, taking us to
the 1650s where Anne Green, a handmaid, is taken advantage of by the rich
Master Geoffrey, who promises her status in exchange for her purity. Of course,
this leads to her doom as she loses all her friends – including a kind John
Taylor, becomes pregnant, is rejected any help by the lying culprit and is then
accused of infanticide when the bastard is a still-born. Whisked away to the
gallows, all because of Sir Thomas’s rage at the stain Anne claims against his
grandson, she is hanged on a cold, drizzly day. Her body is donated to science
and the knife is just inches away from her skin, ready for dissection, when her
eye lid twitches. Astounded, the surrounding scholars set to work resurrecting
her…
Mary Hooper opened my eyes to the misfortunes frequently
experienced by young females serving under reckless, selfish Masters in the
centuries before equality was introduced. I found this an extremely moving tale
that benefits from the religious tone as it not only reflects the beliefs of
the time but brings justice to the deserving and undeserving characters. Furthermore, throughout runs the theme of faith, that which inspired the Physicians to put down their knifes and instead save the girl rumoured to be innocent.
Sunday, 26 August 2012
A Review of Grey's Anatomy
A Review of Once Upon a Time
Once Upon a Time is an American TV series that puts a unique twist on the traditional fairytale stories that we all know from our childhood. Featuring the tales of Snow White, Cinderella, Rumpelstiltskin, Red Riding Hood, Pinocchio and many more, we see how the characters entwine in a genius and creative way, whilst their original essence is respected and kept. The main plot follows the Evil Queen, desperate to take revenge on Snow White, cursing the magical land and all its inhabitants and sending them to our world. In the small town ironically named Storybrooke, none of the fairytale characters remember who they are or who their loved ones are; effectively the Evil Queen, now Mayor, has taken away everyone's happy endings. However, she never expected her adopted son Henry to find his biological mother, Emma Swan, who's arrival in Storybrooke has prophecy fulfilling effects. The town becomes unfrozen, the clock starts ticking, signalling the breaking down of the Queen's curse. Henry, aware of everyone's true nature, implores the help of Emma whom he insists is the Saviour. Though Emma is logical and disbelieving, she humours her son in 'Operation Cobra' and soon finds herself the Queen/Mayor's enemy. Episode by episode she discovers that Regina - who cannot possibly be the Queen! - is nevertheless a cruel, manipulative and powerful opponent who will go as far as framing people for murder and even killing. It is Emma's task to have faith and save her family from a world she doesn't comprehend.
What I personally love about this television series, other than the fabulous costumes, is how all of the characters' stories are told - slowly to add mystery and suspense - so that on some level the audience can empathise with the bad guys, the Queen and Rumpelstiltskin. Unlike in the original fairy tales things are not so simple and unrealistic as to be in black and white, which is what makes this show so modern and intelligent. Overall this is one of the best creations I've seen on the television, which despite having just aired an awesome season one finale, still promises an intriguing season two.
What I personally love about this television series, other than the fabulous costumes, is how all of the characters' stories are told - slowly to add mystery and suspense - so that on some level the audience can empathise with the bad guys, the Queen and Rumpelstiltskin. Unlike in the original fairy tales things are not so simple and unrealistic as to be in black and white, which is what makes this show so modern and intelligent. Overall this is one of the best creations I've seen on the television, which despite having just aired an awesome season one finale, still promises an intriguing season two.
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