Showing posts with label Ben 10. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ben 10. Show all posts

Thu, Nov 6, 08 - NCIS, Cavemen, Ben 10, Always Sunny In Philadelphia, Legend Of The Seeker

05.30 NCIS
06.30 Cavemen
07.00 Ben 10
07.30 It's Always Sunny In Philadelphia
08.00 Legend Of The Seeker

NCIS. Season 5, Episode 2. "Family" Sometimes the show finds very tenuous ways to make the case-of-the-week a navy crime. Like this week: the victim just happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time and the actual case is a baby kidnapping thing. Not usually what we see on NCIS, but it make for a good case. Especially when it prompts Tony to do some deep thinking about his recent ill-fated romance. There are many great character scenes. Ziva cornering Tony in the toilets is one of the best. And her obviously affection for him is wonderful to see.

Cavemen. "Nick Sick" Nick gets sick and think he is dying. Meanwhile, Kate decided to dump Joel (for no apparent reason) and move on. She neglects to tell him this, of course, and he spends the episode chasing her to find out what is going on. It's a funny episode. Nick Kroll gets all the best lines/moments but Sam Huntington and Bill English are pretty close behind him. At this stage in the production, all three actors have a total handle on their characters and are able to get laughs by just reacting to stuff. Nick has no insurance, so he pretends to be Joel for a while. Stephanie Lemelin (who is incredibly hot) gets lots of good screen time in this one (which is incredibly wonderful). Her adorable character, Thorne, is nice to Joel through out the whole break-up mess, even advising him to buy socks as a gift in one (hilarious) scene. One of the better episodes.

Ben 10. Episode 2. "Washington B.C." Between episodes Ben and his family seem to have taken the decision to become fully fledged crime-fighters. This second episode opens in the middle of a case and they are all in full hero-mode. I was expected this to be a more gradual process. I guess not.

As a case-of-the-week, the story of Dr. Animo is fine. He has a grudge and he can turn animals into monsters. He's a tiny bit over the top and he reminds me of the villains on The Tick. The story plays with the conventions of Ben's powers very nicely and there are a couple of exciting sequences where Ben and his family are in danger without any kind of super-power help.

Ben's uncle is interesting. The show plays with us, but dropping hints about him and his past. It happened in the pilot when he seemed to know what they were up against very fast, and now in this episode - during a chase - he makes a comment that alludes to a colourful background.

It's Always Sunny In Philadelphia. Season 3, Episode 5. "The Aluminum Monster vs. Fatty McGoo" HILARIOUS. This is one of those episodes where the gang are all tied into the same story. And what a story it is: the gang enter the fashion design business, complete with sweatshop. Many, many scenes are hilarious. Glenn Howerton is at his best in this episode. Maybe this is his best episode to date. All of the Dennis scenes are fantastic: his various meetings with Judy Greer, his attack on the model (Rachelle Wood) and his fantastic entrance at the very end: clad in his own demented creation. But, as good as Howerton is, this is an episode where all the cast shines and there are many, many laugh out loud moments/scenes.

Legend Of The Seeker. Episode 2. "Destiny" Much more like it, and a great step up from the opening episode. Richard has taken to his fate very nicely and opens this episode very much in hero-mode (but with a few hints of I-can't-believe-I'm-doing-this). His partnership with Kahlan is fantastic. I'm smitten with Bridget Regan. She is incredibly beautiful and brings great acting talent to the part of Kahlan. With her performance, the witch is both strong and vulnerable, all-knowing and very-unsure, and - more than anything else - utterly beautiful. The climax of the episode is thrilling. A slo-mo battle with flames and FX in the back-ground, and it drives home the concept of Richard and Kahlan as a very dangerous force for good. Nice. Count me in!

Highlight? It's Always Sunny In Philadelphia (Glenn Howerton)
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Fri, Oct 24, 08 - It Takes A Thief, Ben 10, The Avengers

10.00 It Takes A Thief
11.30 Ben 10
12.30 The Avengers

It Takes A Thief

It Takes A Thief. Episode 2. "It Takes One to Know One" Everything I liked about the pilot is back for this second episode. Even Susan Saint James returns (despite the fact that her character in the pilot was murdered!). Once again the pacing at the very start is fast. Before the opening credits roll we have several short scenes telling us the story and Al's part in it. His mission: prevent the theft of some diamonds in a foreign Principality. Al quickly spots the thieves, outwits them, joins them and has time to romance a beautiful princess before the closing credits roll.

It's a lot of fun. The appeal of the show is in watching Robert Wagner do his thing. He's debonair and charming and handsome. In some scenes he's sincere, and in others he's hilariously insincere and busy manipulating the people around him. It's great. The first half of the episode involves lots of fun and games in a casino. Al lies and cheats and fools people left, right and centre. Wagner and Saint James have fantastic chemistry. She's very different here to her normal on-screen kooky persona. Still sexy, though, with her alluring accent.

The second half of the episode is where the show really delivers. It's a heist and most of it is Al and the Princess suspended above the floor of the showroom and trying to get to the diamonds while the bad guys hold a gun on them. The story manages to pull off a nice twist that I did not see coming and the director makes great use of camera angles while our hero dangles upside down and bickers with his lady. It's actually quite simple when you describe it, but - on screen - it looks great.

Ben 10. Episode 1. "And Then There Were 10" Enjoyable origin tale with little to recommend it beyond the fact that it is an origin tale, and it sets up the premise of the series. Ben is ten years old and he's about to spend his Summer travelling with his grandfather and a (female) cousin that he doesn't like. On the first day of their journey, Ben is standing in the woods when a meteor crashes beside him. From it comes an alien device which bonds itself to Ben and grants him the power to turn into ten alien beings/handy. Handy. Since, some evil robots arrive shortly afterward and they want the alien device back, and they don't care what innocent bystanders get hurt in the search.

The episodes packs a whole lot of origin into one episode and we get to know a bit about Ben in the process. He's a likable kid. Open to trying just about anything, even if his abilities don't quite match his ambitions. His relationship with his cousin is too much of a TV cliche to interest me very much. She's a badly sketched out character in this episode. Not much airtime is given to the grandfather, either, but he comes across as quite the cool guy: willing to let Ben take the lead with these new super-powers of his.

The four aliens that do appear in the episode (Heat Blast, Diamond Head, XLR8 and Wildmutt) are all very cool and a definite reason to want to see more of the show.

The Avengers

The Avengers. Episode 129. "Invasion of the Earthmen" The first episode for Linda Thorson and it's a lot of fun. The set-up for the story is fast: an agent dies, Steed & Tara search his things, finds clues to an unusual academy and go there. They spend the next 20 minutes undercover and searching the grounds of the place, and the final 20 minutes separated, underground, and fighting for their lives against the academy's dangerous students. Nothing more to it, really.

Thorson makes a great first impression. Tara is very much the novice agent and Steed (the most deadly agent of them all) is constantly telling her things and teaching her as they work their way through the story. Tara looks great in a blonde wig (and I'm not normally into blondes at all) and the episode has a great visual style. All the uniforms have great vibrant colours, that would have been right at home on Star Trek, the academy has great wide hallways and a stylish colour scheme, and the underground tunnel (used for the climax of the episode) looks fantastic on-screen.

The bad guy is completely nuts and his daft scheme actually makes some kind of sense. In an odd way. He wants to train killer astronauts, freeze them and thaw them out when it is time to invade alien planets. Yes, he's a complete nut-job. But he's a dangerous one, thanks to some great acting and lots of menace from the cadets, the creatures and the setting.

One or two of the scenes have some odd choices from the director. Early on, Steed gets a shock from an electrified desk. But, as shown on screen, it's actually hard to know what is happening for several seconds. Later, Tara is lying on the ground for ages and ages (for no apparent reason) while a menacing killer gets closer and closer. As shown on screen there is no indication whether she is hidden or not. So the viewer is more puzzled than anything else: can he see her? Why is she lying on the ground? Is there something blocking his view? Why is this taking so bloody long??!

Minor quibbles. The whole thing is great fun from start to finish. Hardcore Avengers fans don't like this episode (or this season) but it's my favourite season and this - to me - is a fine start to it.

Highlight? I can't decide between Robert Wagner/Susan Saint James and Patrick Macnee/Linda Thorson...
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