Sunday, May 20, 2012

Game of Thrones Season 2...TV Series Winner

     Game of Thrones. An epic fantasy bestowed upon us courtesy of the imaginative genius of George R. R. Martin. His series, A Song of Ice and Fire, took us to Kings Landing, Winterfell, The Wall, The Eyrie, Pentos, Vaes Dothrak, Pyke, Harrenhal, and Qarth where he made us care about the Starks, the Baratheons, the Lannisters, the Night's Watch, the Targaryens, the Dothraki, the Greyjoys, and a host of others too numerous to name. Whether we loved the characters or hated them (or loved to hate them), we followed their journeys to places that became as familiar to us as our own stomping grounds and were as eager to learn their fates as we would our friends. And then David Benioff and D.B. Weiss brought those wondrous places and complex characters to life and HBO gave them to us.
     Currently in its second season, Game of Thrones is everything that a true fan of Martin's books could hope for. Except for the gratuitous sex scenes that are a hallmark of HBO and expository conversations that never took place in the books, it is a faithful adaptation in that it mirrors the works that it is meant to represent in a different medium.
     The characters and their places in Westeros and Essos are exactly as Martin wrote them. I had expected to be presented with familiar actors who bore a passing resemblance to my favorite imaginary people and behaved in ways that were merely pale imitations of them. Instead, I was blessed with a gifted ensemble carefully chosen for their uncanny likenesses to the characters they portray and amazing talents that transform them in ways that make believers out of even the most hardhearted cynics.
     My absolute favorite, hands down, is Peter Dinklage who portrays Tyrion Lannister, the only Lannister that possesses a sense of humor or anything that remotely resembles a moral compass. The character on paper often made me smile at his quick witted sarcasm and ability to turn any situation to his favor. The character brought to life by a gifted actor deftly commands every scene, often before uttering a word. And when he speaks, we are immediately rewarded with such acid pronouncements as, when referring to his nephew, "We've had vicious kings and we've had idiot kings, but I don't know if we've ever been cursed with a vicious idiot boy king." It's just not possible for me to feel anything but nirvana every time that sharp tongued, self-serving speaker of truths no one else dares to utter opens his often profane mouth and takes someone down a peg or two. A wonderfully entertaining (because it was perfectly executed) example of this is the following exchange (shamelessly hijacked from IMDb).



"Game of Thrones: Garden of Bones (#2.4)" (2012)
Tyrion Lannister: What kind of knight beats a helpless girl? 
Meryn Trant: The kind who serves his king, Imp! 
Bronn: Careful now. We don't want to get blood all over your pretty white cloak. 
Tyrion Lannister: Someone get the girl something to cover herself with. 
[Sandor Clegane gives Sansa his cloak
Tyrion Lannister: [to Joffrey] She's to be your queen. Have you no regard for her honor? 
Joffrey Baratheon: I'm punishing her. 
Tyrion Lannister: For what crimes? She's not fighting her brother's battle, you halfwit. 
Joffrey Baratheon: You can't talk to me like that. The king can do as he likes! 
Tyrion Lannister: The mad king did as he like. Has your uncle Jaime ever told you what happened to him? 
Meryn Trant: No one threatens his grace in the presence of the Kingsguard! 
Tyrion Lannister: I'm not threatening the king, Ser, I'm educating my nephew. 
[to Bronn
Tyrion Lannister: Bronn, the next time the Ser Meryn speaks, kill him. 
[Back to Ser Meryn
Tyrion Lannister: THAT was a threat. See the difference? 



Educating his nephew indeed. And Ser Meryn too just for kicks.

     The rest of the cast should be commended as well. Most notable among them are Maisie Williams (tomboy Arya Stark) and Sophie Turner (Arya's proper, love struck older sister Sansa) who are perfection in demanding roles, which is impressive as hell considering their ages, fifteen and sixteen respectively, and the fact that (I'm relying on the accuracy of IMDb here) neither of them had any professional acting experience before Game of Thrones. Wow. I'll say it again Ladies. Wow. You should both be very proud of yourselves. And thank you.
     Also a standout is Jack Gleeson who portrays the aforementioned vicious idiot boy king with such ease that one might begin to wonder if there really is an evil heart beating in there somewhere. That is, if one didn't read the kindest things said about the young actor from a variety of sources. Amazing. Thank you.
     I could go on in this same vein, but there are so many rich characters brilliantly portrayed by gifted actors that I couldn't possibly do them all the justice that they deserve. So, with a final thank you to Sean Bean for giving us a Ned Stark that made us weep along with his daughters, Arya and Sansa, when he was executed on the steps of the Great Sept of Baelor, I will leave it to you to tell us what you think. Did David Benioff and D.B. Weiss get it right? Is Peter Dinklage's Tyrion Lannister the most interesting character in a TV series for the second season in a row? Or is it someone else? You've seen it. It's fair game. Let's talk about it.

Saturday, May 12, 2012

Survivor: One World...Game Over

     Survivor. Once upon a long ago time, twenty-four seasons ago to be exact, it was the ultimate game played by a diverse group of people intent on outwitting, outplaying, and outlasting their way to the ultimate payday in the realm of reality TV. Those people were marooned with nothing but the clothes on their backs and given nothing but rice and water. Filthy and desperate to stave off impending starvation, they dragged their emaciated, crusty bug bite ridden bodies through the jungle to scrounge for rats to eat. A Reward Challenge winning tribe received canned goods and a candy bar and were ecstatic to get it. An individual Reward Challenge winner received a single slice of pizza that he shared with his starving tribe. Those people fought hard for every scrap of food that they could get, and we cheered them on. Why? Because they were Survivors.
     Twenty-four seasons later, no one seems to be cheering. The contestants (I can't make myself call them survivors, no matter how hard I try) are, for the most part, a motley collection of the most unlikable characters ever assembled for a reality show. The only things that could have made this group more detestable would have been yet another appearance by that troll Russell Hantz or for some brain-trust at CBS to allow that vile woman, Rachel Reilly, to wreck another of their reality shows with her borderline personality disorder and intensely annoying whiny teenage girl voice.
     As a fan since the Tagis and the Pagongs ate live beetle larva for immunity in Borneo, I am bitterly disappointed that I haven't been given a Survivor I can root for. Instead, I have HBIC Kim Spradlin, shamelessly channeling Rob Mariano, and her sheep: mean girl Alicia Rosa, desperate to belong Christina Cha, freeloader Sabrina Thompson, and constantly suffering from diarrhea of the mouth to the point of blabbing alliance secrets Chelsea Meissner.
     Really? This is what I'm stuck with? Four of the five people who formed an alliance on their way to camp on Day One because they had seen it work on a previous season are present and accounted for going into Finale Night, and I wish I cared.
     No one else seems to care either. Certainly not the fans who have been vocal, verbally and in print, about their need for their favorite reality show to return to its former greatness. We don't want contestants who simply follow a declared cookie-cutter leader and hope for a free ride to the end as they all feast every third day. We want Survivors who think for themselves and devise original strategies to get themselves to the end. They need to be hungry for a victory and willing to "dig deep", to borrow a Probstism, to make it theirs, not laze about camp waiting for someone else to hand it to them wrapped in pretty paper (or a yacht, as the case may be).
     Speaking of Jeff, he doesn't seem to care either. At the beginning of this wretched season, he seemed to be challenging those poor examples for women who were content to bargain with the men (and then break their word once they had gotten what they wanted), pitifully attempt to use the men by playing the helpless female card, and outright steal fire from the men because those dimwits signed up to do a reality show where, as everyone that doesn't live under a rock knows, the ability to build and maintain a fire is essential to the game...and not one of them could do it.
     Jeff also seemed to try to take the guys, who pretty much treated a survival game like an extended frat party minus the beer, to task for stupidly surrendering their immunity idol to the girls and marching their foolish looking selves into Tribal Council to vote out one of their own. Every single one of those idiots got what they deserved.
     But at some point Jeff seemed to give up trying to salvage this wreck. He has not been Enthusiastic Jeff at all this season, but a Snarky, Ready To Call People Out Jeff was, at least, an Entertaining Jeff, and the only person on that island worth watching. Now we have Going Through The Motions Jeff, who referees reruns of challenges past when he bothers to show up at all. If what I've read is true, and he was off getting a pedicure during one of the Reward Challenges, I can't say I blame him.
     And that brings us to the contestants, who don't seem to care either. Not one of them has fought hard for anything. Kim will probably get the most votes tomorrow night for doing nothing more than what actual Survivors have done before her, but, lucky for her, was more than anybody else was willing to do. I think she might have thrown a few challenges so that she "wouldn't be perceived as a threat". If so, she needn't have bothered. No one was paying attention.
     Season 24 ends tomorrow night, but Survivor, the game that so many have loved for so long, is already over. I won't be watching the finale or the reunion tomorrow night. I'll be waiting for Season 25 and hoping that I'm wrong. Unfortunately, when the most interesting thing there is to remark on over the course of a season is Jeff's footwear, the end is clearly here.
     So, tell us what you think. My day would be made if you could point to at least one thing that has made this mess worth watching, or to any signs I've missed that Survivor will be (hopefully in the near future) the show that it once was. You've seen it. It's fair game. Let's talk about it.