esm wrote:I just watched all 10 episodes (so far) of The Gifted. I really liked it, except the mom character was super annoying in almost every scene she was in. It's just the whole protective parent thing, but still...
I just finished Episode 10 as well. (All 13 episodes are now available on Hulu. I'm still catching up.)
The show as a whole does a surprisingly good job of capturing that side of the X-Men comics — "that side" being the government persecution of mutants and the general feeling of hatred and paranoia towards mutants, which was not entirely undeserved considering that many mutants were in fact dangerous and uncontrolled.
The whole point of the X-Men was that they were caught in the middle between the public and other mutants, protecting them both from each other. The whole point of mutants, in contrast to the more traditional superhumans on the Avengers side of Marvel Comics, was to explore what “normal” people and even children might do with powers they didn’t ask for or earn.
So, in that regard, I'm enjoying the show. That's exactly the sort of social commentary Stan Lee and then later Chris Claremont intended. I'm also kinda sorta enjoying how they’re adapting classic X-Men characters like Thunderbird, Polaris, and…
…the Stepford Cuckoos, i.e., the clone "daughters" of Emma Frost. I knew who Esme was from the moment I saw her and heard her name, so the big reveal at the end of Episode 10 wasn't a surprise to me. But it was still cool to see them together. And since I watch with CC turned on for various reasons, I saw that they were actually called the "Frost Triplets" in the script, so Emma Frost herself is confirmed to exist in the show's continuity. I assume they'll go into more detail in Episode 11, which is titled "3 X 1" — the Stepford Cuckoos are also known as Three-in-One in the comics.
This interests me because I still want to see how the continuity of this show links up with the continuity of the movies and/or the comics, if at all. In the movies, Emma Frost was merely a henchman in X-Men: First Class. She's much more important in the comics, which is why the Stepford Cuckoos were created as characters in the first place, so I want to see what sort of retconning they will do to make all of this work.
Of course, this is Fox's Singer-verse, which bears only a vague resemblance to the X-Men comics, but I've made my peace with that.
viewtopic.php?p=228104#p228104Unfortunately, the actual writing of the show leaves something to be desired. Flat characters and strangely episodic, in the sense that everything seems to reset back at the Mutant Underground headquarters at the end of each episode. It's very much a Fox primetime series. Hopefully things will improve in the second season, which was announced a few weeks ago.
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Celedam wrote:I'm digging the new season of Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D..
I'm still digging it. Much better than last season.
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esm wrote:Been watching Black Mirror. I'm addicted to it now.
I
want to watch it, but the first season was so damned unpleasant that I'm reluctant to go back and I keep finding other things to watch instead. (See above.) I'm already a libertarian who is skeptical of technology and social media, so I don't need cringe-inducing parables to that effect no matter how insightful and well written they might be.