Last TV Show You Watched?

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  • Fire_and_Ice_ReturnsFire_and_Ice_Returns I am trying to get away from this mountan!
    Posts: 23,327
    The Flash 100th episode, as a fan of the show this was great, I'll be rewatching this one.
  • Posts: 12,267
    Recess - an old cartoon I grew up with. It still holds up pretty well and really does a fantastic job of exploring childhood, at least for my general age group.
  • RemingtonRemington I'll do anything for a woman with a knife.
    Posts: 1,533
    FoxRox wrote: »
    Recess - an old cartoon I grew up with. It still holds up pretty well and really does a fantastic job of exploring childhood, at least for my general age group.

    Totally forgot about Recess. It was a good one.
  • Posts: 3,333
    bondjames wrote: »
    Homecoming (2018)
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    I decided to make use of my Prime membership and took in Amazon's new psychological thriller, directed by Sam Esmail and starring Julia Roberts. It's an interesting show. Each episode is 30 minutes, which makes it easy to get through. Roberts plays psychologist Heidi Bergman, who works at a government facility ostensibly helping soldiers recover from PTSD and get back to normal life. Some years later, after she has left the facility, she is visited by a dogged Defense Dept. auditor (Shea Whigham). His questions about her past and work at the facility raise questions about its true purpose and her role there. The show unfolds slowly like a mystery puzzle, with a fair amount of timeline shifting between the present and past. It's more focused on the impact of events on the characters rather than on the plot itself, and it's a testament to Roberts, Whigham and co-stars Bobby Carnavale & Sissy Spacek that the viewer remains engrossed as things progress. There is a prevailing feeling of claustrophobic uneasiness and paranoia here, accentuated by a wonderful eclectic score which directly samples from classic thrillers such as Klute, Dressed to Kill, The Parallax View, Carrie, The Thing, All The President's Men, Body Heat and The Eiger Sanction among others. They don't make film music like they used to, that's for sure. Recommended.
    A big thank you @bondjames for pointing this series out to me. I don't think you've oversold it. The Parallax View is a good comparison. I'd also throw into the mix the 60's The Prisoner without the wackiness. A very good recommendation, and I agree wholeheartedly with your review.
  • bondjamesbondjames You were expecting someone else?
    Posts: 23,883
    Glad you enjoyed it as much as I did @bondsum. I must check out The Parallax View sometime. The Prisoner is a show I've been meaning to get to as well.

    Just to let you know, Season 2 of Homecoming has been confirmed.
  • CraigMooreOHMSSCraigMooreOHMSS Dublin, Ireland
    Posts: 8,034
    diegoluna_copy.jpg

    NARCOS MEXICO

    Finally got a chance to catch up with this and despite it being quite slow in spots, as well as generally being tough viewing, it was very rewarding. Both Diego Luna and Michael Pêna are very good in it. Even though it's very much its own thing (you could jump into it even if you hadn't seen the other seasons) it had a couple of nice tie-ins to the Escobar era. All the stylistic traits remain - gritty cinematography, brief but graphic explosions of violence, generally awful people on both sides of the law - and a subtle but strong ending sets up a potentially exciting second season.
  • Creasy47Creasy47 In Cuba with Natalya.Moderator
    Posts: 40,469
    I was excited for the ending of Narcos: Mexico because I knew what was going to happen, and thus, the implications of the following season, which I feel will (somehow) be even better than the opening season, which was already fantastic. I can't wait - they're already filming it, thankfully.
  • MajorDSmytheMajorDSmythe "I tolerate this century, but I don't enjoy it."Moderator
    edited December 2018 Posts: 13,894
    batman_tas.png

    At just over 20 minutes each, it is so easy to watch a number of episodes in one sitting. I have already watched:

    On Leather Wings
    Christmas With The Joker
    Nothing To Fear
    The Last Laugh
    Pretty Poison
    The Underdwellers
    P.O.V
    The Forgotten
    Be A Clown
    Two Face: Pt I
    Two Face: Pt II


    I watched this show back in the 90's, and didn't remember much. But watching it now, more things are coming back to me. I love this Batmobile. I love the Art Deco style in general, but I love the Batmobile especially.
  • Posts: 3,333
    bondjames wrote: »
    Glad you enjoyed it as much as I did @bondsum. I must check out The Parallax View sometime. The Prisoner is a show I've been meaning to get to as well.

    Just to let you know, Season 2 of Homecoming has been confirmed.
    Cheers @bondjames. To be honest, had it not been for your own write-up and recommendation, I might never have given this series a go, so thank you again.

    I happen to agree with @Creasy47 with regards to Narcos: Mexico. Also, I'd never complain that it was "slow in spots". I thought the pacing was measured and on the nose, considering what it was building up to. This is one of the most consistent adult shows on TV right now. I understand that Season 2 of Narcos: Mexico is already being shot as I write, which is very good news.
  • CraigMooreOHMSSCraigMooreOHMSS Dublin, Ireland
    Posts: 8,034
    Creasy47 wrote: »
    I was excited for the ending of Narcos: Mexico because I knew what was going to happen, and thus, the implications of the following season, which I feel will (somehow) be even better than the opening season, which was already fantastic. I can't wait - they're already filming it, thankfully.

    Absolutely. I had heard of the story and how it ended and I think they did great justice to the power struggles that led to the cataclysmic final episode. Very much looking forward to Season 2.
  • Creasy47Creasy47 In Cuba with Natalya.Moderator
    Posts: 40,469
    Creasy47 wrote: »
    I was excited for the ending of Narcos: Mexico because I knew what was going to happen, and thus, the implications of the following season, which I feel will (somehow) be even better than the opening season, which was already fantastic. I can't wait - they're already filming it, thankfully.

    Absolutely. I had heard of the story and how it ended and I think they did great justice to the power struggles that led to the cataclysmic final episode. Very much looking forward to Season 2.

    It's funny that they actually sort of "reveal" the ending in season one of Narcos when Holbrook's character brings up Kiki Camarena, and how he changed the scope and handling of the war on drugs.
  • Posts: 12,267
    Remington wrote: »
    FoxRox wrote: »
    Recess - an old cartoon I grew up with. It still holds up pretty well and really does a fantastic job of exploring childhood, at least for my general age group.

    Totally forgot about Recess. It was a good one.

    Glad we have another fan! It’s such a fun show - then and now.
  • bondjamesbondjames You were expecting someone else?
    Posts: 23,883
    Safe (2018)
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    I was browsing Netflix and came across this English thriller series starring Michael C. Hall. I wouldn’t have given it another look except for the fact that Hall is in it. Dexter is one of my all time favourites, and so I decided to check this out and I’m glad I did. It’s set in an English suburb, and Hall, a resident surgeon and widowed father, sports a shaky English accent throughout. It’s a bit jarring at first to hear him speak in this fashion but one gets used to it quickly enough. The show plays like a standard whodunit, where we are presented at the outset with a scenario which rocks the neighbourhood (in this case a murder and a missing person related to Hall’s character) and then get to learn more about the town inhabitants (and possible suspects), their lives and their secrets during successive episodes (which include flashbacks) until all is revealed at the conclusion. It’s a bit caricatured and soapy, but also reasonably slick and entertaining. It doesn't feel stuffy or old fashioned at least. Hall is a compelling presence as an anxious father, but I couldn’t quite shake the serial killer vibe from him throughout. Hannah Arterton (Gemma’s sister) co-stars.
  • Creasy47Creasy47 In Cuba with Natalya.Moderator
    Posts: 40,469
    I thought Safe was enjoyable enough for a one time viewing. Nothing special - very soapy as you say, predictable, and Hall's accent is horrible, but it was entertaining enough to warrant a viewing.
  • StanKobraStanKobra Serbia
    Posts: 108
    Huge recommendation for "The Little Drummer Girl", mini-series based on the book by John le Care.

    Great cast, production design and locations, with masterful direction by "Oldboy" legend Park Chan-wook.

    "The Night Manager" was good, I think this one is even better, more compelling story.
  • MajorDSmytheMajorDSmythe "I tolerate this century, but I don't enjoy it."Moderator
    Posts: 13,894
    54d1ad5e61c39_-_esq-cartoons-batman.jpg

    It's Never Too Late
    I've Got Batman In My Basement
    Heart Of Ice
    The Cat And The Claw Pt I
    The Cat And The Claw Pt II
    See No Evil
    Beware The Gray Ghost
    Prophecy Of Doom
    Feat Of Clay Pt I
    Feat Of Clay Pt II


    Having forgotten about so much of this show, so much is now flooding back with each episode. And watching through the eyes of an adult, the quality really holds up. I can see why there are people who feel this show has the 'definitive Batman/Joker/Batmobile etc...'.
  • doubleoegodoubleoego #LightWork
    Posts: 11,139
    I just binge watched all 4 seasons of line of duty......my God! What a phenomenal TV series. This may have just dethroned GoT as my favourite TV series. Everything about this show was on point! You don't get more gripping than this. I need season 5 NOW!
  • ThunderfingerThunderfinger Das Boot Hill
    Posts: 45,489
    Currently on season seven of the X-Files rewatch, I recently saw THE GREAT MALEENI with Ricky Jay. He was excellent in it. Also noticed that Bryan Cranston is guest starring in DRIVE (season six)
  • JohnHammond73JohnHammond73 Lancashire, UK
    Posts: 4,151
    Received the Gerry Anderson series Space Precinct as a Christmas gift. Started watching last night and, never realised before that John Glen directed the first episode and, on further looking into it, another 13 after that.

    Have to say, I'm a sucksr for this show and have been waiting over 20 years for this whole series to be released.
  • ShardlakeShardlake Leeds, West Yorkshire, England
    Posts: 4,043
    ABC Murders

    I think the problem you have when you attempt something like this is what more can you say that hasn't already been pretty much captured in a previous adaptation.

    Whoever takes on Agatha Christie's Hercule Poirot, be it Kenneth Branagh or as we have here John Malkovich, they are inevitably compared to David Suchet's definitive reading of the Belgium Sleuth.

    It's not that Malkovich is terrible here, he lends Hercule some depth that Suchet granted was investing in his performance as the excellent and definitive ITV series did as it went on. Early episodes of Poirot were somewhat cosy and bright and zipped along with some jollity, although as it went on and they shifted to full length format and started to tackle the more famous Christie novels and not the short stories it took on a more eerie and serious tone.

    Though my Wife and I still plump for Lumet's film version of Murder On The Orient Express, Finney for me still is the one that I would place 2nd to Suchet in the role although, the TV series version was really that good there would be a gap between them.

    Peter Ustinov is good fun and is first 2 adaptations are entertaining but never really gelled with him in the role, as for Branagh I've yet to see his version.

    Anyway I digress, apart from the BBC's version of Then There Were None, the writer Sarah Phelps has worried with her changes to the last 2 adaptations, I was just bored with Ordeal By Innocence and the way she changed Witness For The Prosecution was sacrilege.
    Phelps has obviously wanted to put as much distance between her take on the detective as she could. Strangely enough I couldn't help but think of Bond and what happened when Craig took over. Whereas they repositioned the story to a first mission, they stripped the character of all the memorable what is expected elements and went at the character from the beginning.

    Here they've done the reverse of making it a prequel and positioned him later in his career and like Casino Royale to a degree none of the comfortable traits. No Miss Limon, no Captain Hastings. No Inspector Japp (well briefly), replaced by a rather unpleasant Rupert Grint as far removed from Ron Weasley as he could get. Hercule is also disgraced for some reason or other related to his relationship with Japp which isn't really explained that well.

    Phelps seems to want to take that ego away from Poirot, not have his disciples playing to his opinion of himself as the greatest, I guess this might be interesting but too much as been jettisoned from this at times you wished they'd tackled one of the non HP or Marple stories instead changing the character to the point of almost seeming like a stranger rather than Hercule Poirot.

    Malkovich's version is also deadly serious and totally missing that devilish glint and humour other versions especially Suchet invested in the character. It's at times just quite miserable and gloomy. I've argued that Se7en especially when it comes to UK detective series as informed their look and mood more than any film since. Serial Killer films and TV shows have been playing catch up ever since. This version of the ABC Murders plays out very much like a serial killer story rather than a Poirot adventure and has some quite frankly unnecessary gore and unpleasantness, feeling like cut-price David Fincher.

    Granted this was something different for the detective with him being toyed with rather than being hired to solve a murder, plot elements have been removed and the final moment between Hercule and the killer is like a more subdued version of the Joker's and Batman's interrogation in The Dark Knight, where the killer tries to convince Poirot he's his friend rather than his enemy, possibly reminiscent of Elijah Price to David Dunn in Unbreakable. The Nolan element that some will just find irritating that Bond fans have not been impressed with in the last 2 Bond films

    Although the most insulting and a definite that the writer is being influenced by Nolan and recent Bond's, even an origin story for our detective. When this idea started to become popular it was somewhat a novelty but now it seems every property needs to do this and robbing Poirot of the mystery of how he came to be, despite some hints is the final nail in the coffin. Why they did this is likely to be the question most fans of the author and the character, it's no wonder the Christie Estate never gave their blessing to this.

    It could be eyed as curiosity but please a one off, I don't see a need for Malkovich to return to the role, especially if Susan Phelps is determined to be more impressed with what she can do rob it of all what made it what it is rather than be loyal to source. I'd be quite happy if she was kept well away from Agatha Christie's work for rest of her life on the evidence of this and the previous 2 adaptations she tackled.
  • Posts: 15,804
    MICKEY SPILLANE'S MIKE HAMMER (1984)

    After watching Don Stroud today in LTK, I felt compelled to see him as Mike Hammer's buddy Pat Chambers. Great rapport with Stacy Keach.

    DEAD MAN'S RUN


    Mike's buddies await him on New Year's Eve and reminisce an old case. I believe this episode was cobbled together while Keach was in prison.

    Fun episode I recorded nearly 30 years ago off of the USA network. Pity this series was never released on DVD or Blu-ray. Maybe in 2019?
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  • MajorDSmytheMajorDSmythe "I tolerate this century, but I don't enjoy it."Moderator
    Posts: 13,894
    ToTheRight wrote: »
    MICKEY SPILLANE'S MIKE HAMMER (1984)

    After watching Don Stroud today in LTK, I felt compelled to see him as Mike Hammer's buddy Pat Chambers. Great rapport with Stacy Keach.

    DEAD MAN'S RUN


    Mike's buddies await him on New Year's Eve and reminisce an old case. I believe this episode was cobbled together while Keach was in prison.

    Fun episode I recorded nearly 30 years ago off of the USA network. Pity this series was never released on DVD or Blu-ray. Maybe in 2019?
    image-jpg.28588

    I don't know why the 1984-87 series hasn't been released, when 2 of the 4 tv movies with Keach as Hammer have been released, as well as the short lived 1997-98 series.
  • Creasy47Creasy47 In Cuba with Natalya.Moderator
    Posts: 40,469
    I've never heard of those shows sadly, but Keach looks mighty cool in that shot. I've always been a fan of his work.
  • MajorDSmytheMajorDSmythe "I tolerate this century, but I don't enjoy it."Moderator
    edited December 2018 Posts: 13,894
    They're worth looking for @Creasy.

    Don't get me wrong, I have enjoyed what I have seen of him as Hammer, but I think Keach deserved to play Hammer in a theatrical film. I'm thinking... maybe De Palma in the directors seat, Keach as Hammer and Sharon Stone or Kim Basinger as Velda.
  • ShardlakeShardlake Leeds, West Yorkshire, England
    Posts: 4,043
    Poirot ABC Murders 1992

    After watching Agatha Christie given the Luther make over my Sarah Phelps I needed this 1992 Poirot adaptation of the story.

    The more I think about of 2018's Christmas version of this Christie's classic the incensed it gets me. If you can't honour the text properly why bother at all, why not just make a new story?

    I've seen people already defending this in numerous places but to me the shoehorning of Oswald Moseley's shadow into proceedings comes across as the most unsubtle Brexit baiting nonsense.

    Poirot is not some tortured soul, yes he's had his moments and the later adaptations that Suchet did got darker and more layered. Although Malkovich played him more like William Somerset from Se7en than the Dame of Crime's celebrated Belgian sleuth.

    As much as I don't mind an updating of a character, I've applauded most of the ones that have happened with Bond in the Craig era and to me at least the Fleming elements have been blended well with the cinematic ones.

    Although with Poirot in this new version I saw little to remind me of the character I was more than familiar and happy with. It seems portraying him as he was written wasn't good enough.

    So sitting back with my Wife this afternoon to see Suchet as Hercule, Hugh Fraser as Hastings and Phillip Jackson alive and well as Inspector Japp was like putting on a nice comfortable pair of slippers after the dour treatment I witnessed on Saturday.

    It had been sometime since I'd seen this version but I thoroughly enjoyed it, Agatha Christie is what it is, somewhat absurd and daft at times but entertaining and a plot that moves along at a pace leading to our detective unmasking the culprit.

    No one has ever nailed Poirot like Suchet did and his vanities, fastidiousness and his companions around him are all part of the character, even when adaptations with him have been without his friend they've never betrayed this.

    Some might think seeing Hercule stripped of all these attributes makes for a refreshing take on him and I've already had conversations with some that have liked it but give me this version any day over what BBC served up over Christmas here in the UK.
  • edited January 2019 Posts: 17,279
    Finally got around to start watching the second series of Au service de la France (A Very Secret Service). Only a couple episodes in, but so far it's as enjoyable as the first series.

    Is there anyone here on the forum besides myself and @Agent_99 that have seen this? If you like the Jean Dujardin OSS 177 films, you're going to enjoy this!
  • ClarkDevlinClarkDevlin Martinis, Girls and Guns
    Posts: 15,423
    I'm planning on it, @Torgeirtrap. Is it available with English subtitles? Unfortunately I'm not fluent in French.
  • Posts: 17,279
    I'm planning on it, @Torgeirtrap. Is it available with English subtitles? Unfortunately I'm not fluent in French.

    It's on Netflix, so I'd imagine so. I watch with Norwegian subtitles.
  • Agent_99Agent_99 enjoys a spirited ride as much as the next girl
    Posts: 3,107
    Mais oui, @ClarkDevlin - on UK Netflix at least it's available with English subtitles under the title of A Very Secret Service. (I'm not fluent either but with the subtitles you can pick up some excellent French cuss words!)
  • Fire_and_Ice_ReturnsFire_and_Ice_Returns I am trying to get away from this mountan!
    Posts: 23,327
    54d1ad5e61c39_-_esq-cartoons-batman.jpg

    It's Never Too Late
    I've Got Batman In My Basement
    Heart Of Ice
    The Cat And The Claw Pt I
    The Cat And The Claw Pt II
    See No Evil
    Beware The Gray Ghost
    Prophecy Of Doom
    Feat Of Clay Pt I
    Feat Of Clay Pt II


    Having forgotten about so much of this show, so much is now flooding back with each episode. And watching through the eyes of an adult, the quality really holds up. I can see why there are people who feel this show has the 'definitive Batman/Joker/Batmobile etc...'.

    The early episodes are unmatched IMO, Heart of Ice is brilliant, still my favourite episode.
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