shadowkat: (tv)
Woke up in an irritable mood for some reason - although did manage to thirty minutes of pilates exercises on my mat after a shower (yes, I know it would have made more sense to reverse the two, which occured to me while I was in the shower). Then made the mistake of reading the reviews in Entertainment Weekly - the reviewers in that mag used to be good, now they just grate on my nerves much the same way someone pulling their fingernails down a chalk board would. The television and movie reviews are *too* subjective, which I didn't realize was possible, and self-congratulatory. Providing me with very little insight on whether or not I'll them. In some cases they read like rants that I can read for free on the internet. Which begs the question - has the internet negatively affected the art of reviewing or was it always like this? Gillian Flyn is the worste of the bunch - she sounds like Carrie Bradshaw from Sex in the City, without the class.

Speaking of reviewing things....this is the first in a series of reviews on lesser known or below the radar tv shows that I think deserve a second look.

Journeyman

I've seen about four episodes of this one so far, which is enough to review it. Not that I don't judge tv shows on the basis of one episode - I do, there's too bloody many of them not to, but the ones that spark my interest - get four or five before I committ to them.

Journeyman on the surface appears to be yet another in a long series of shows about a guy or gal who helps strangers each week often to their own detriment. This trend started with the highly successful men on the run from (you fill in the blank) threat, typified by The Fugitive. It was followed by the man because of a weird science experiment must save others - The Incredible Hulk, The Six Million Dollar Man, and then jumped to the man who must redeem himself by saving others - Highway to Heaven, Angel, Forever Knight, and finally the man who gets stuck or lost or is part of an agency that travels through time - must save others to get back to his own time - Quantum Leap, TimeCop, and Time Tunnel.

I have never been much of a fan of this format - find it repetitive and predictable. It also has a tendency to leave me unsatisfied since the show keeps you by never resolving the problem at the center - which is why the person is forced to keep saving people even though he'd clearly be happier doing something else. With Angel - it was the curse and the hope for a possible shanshue which would make him human and allow him to be with Buffy, his one true love. Of course the character never achieves this - an apt metaphor for how life is about the journey not the destination or the proverbial carrot which in truth is little more than an illusion we have created to motivate ourselves. With Sam on Quantum Leap - it was saving enough people or hitting the perfect time solution so he could go back to his wife and family. Which of course never happened - instead he discovered that he became "saved" and left the earthly plain or something like that, the last episode of Quantum Leap was annoyingly surreal. The Fugitive may have been the only series that had a satisfying and/or optimistic ending - and it was a two hour movie event that set a record.

The time travel television series, episode on sci-fi tv shows, book, or film is not a favorite genre of mine either. Because they tend to focus too much on "the coolness" of traveling back in time. The main character spends a lot of time wandering around in the past, may even change a few things, but is the same - that character remains unaffected by what they've done, their lives aren't changed that much, no one seems to have missed them or noticed that they've left, and whatever they did in the past was clearly meant to be. Instead of using the idea to explore the potential problems of traveling through time - this is ignored.The only film I've seen that delved into the problems was The Butterfly Effect - not a great movie by any stretch of the imagination, but at least it explored what happens when you try to fiddle with your past. And how nothing ever turns out perfect. There is always a trade-off or price to be paid. Tweak one thread in the pattern of life - you tweak them all. Also, the last episode of Star Trek Next Generation - entitled All Good Things Must Come to An End did an interesting examination of how our choices affect what comes next in our lives and how we are the sum of all our experiences not just a few isolated ones.

What never interested me that much in regards to time travel or science fiction tv shows in general is the science. I go into the show not expecting the science to be accurate. Heck, TV can't even do an accurate legal show - why would they be able to do one that deals with quantum physics? As long as it isn't silly or really out there? I'm fine. Also helps that I don't know that much about quantum physics or physics in general - unlike law or criminal procedure, which I do know something about.

Journeyman, despite what it looks like, is not your typical time travel tv show or man saving strangers to his own detriment each week or for his own salvation. It is interested in exploring something the others in this genre weren't - which is what happens in the present when the guy is sucked back into the past? What effect does his absence have on his current life? And does whatever he accomplishes in the past justify what goes wrong when he is sucked backwards? The whole metaphor of losing one's present by dwelling too much on one's past is examined in great depth here. The other issue it explores is what effect does his ability to time travel have on the people he loves the most? How does it help or hurt them? The B plot line is not how saving lives is making Dan (the time traveler) a better person or changing the world in a great way, but how it is affecting his life in the present and his loved ones, how they are dealing with it or not as the case may be.

Unlike most sci-fi/fantasy shows - Journeyman is more interested in examining its characters. The action, the time periods, the science of it - are all secondary to the character exploration. I've never seen a time travel show do this before. It sticks closely to Dan's point of view, only veering to include his wife, Katie, and brother, Jack to get a glimpse of how his travels are affecting his current life. We don't know why he's traveling any more than he does. We aren't given any more information than Dan is given.

Each time Dan goes back in time, his current life is affected but not by what he is done in the past - but by his mere absence. In one episode, his wife finds herself alone on a plane that they boarded together. She has to explain to the authorities how he disappeared from the plane when it was in the air. The result is that both Dan and Katie (his wife) are barred from plane travel and the newspaper where Dan works - does an article on the gaps in security at that airport. That's just one example. Also time works differently - unlike Doctor Who, where the Tardis can take the Doctor and his companion back to the exact time they left or for that matter Back to the Future, where Marty McFly reappears and his family never knew he was gone - in Journeyman three days may have passed when for him it was no more than a couple of hours or vice versa. Also unlike Doctor Who or Marty, he has no control over it and little warning. In the world of Journeyman - time travel is not fun and an apt metaphor for how little control we have over the events in own lives and the lives of others. We are stitches in the fabric of life, not weavers of the fabric. We also get bits and pieces of Dan's life - since he only travels back in time in his own neighborhood and surroundings - so we see who owned his house before he did, what he used to do, what his wife used to do, what his relationship with his older brother had been like and where he came from.

The show is by no means perfect. Some of the A plot lines or savings of the week feel a bit cliche and underdeveloped. The twists are often telegraphed - such as last week's episode where Dan saves a man by thrusting him into danger. Or the delivery of a baby on an airplane during the 70s, they went a bit too far with the costumes, those of us who lived in the 70's know people did not dress quite that colorfully. But those are minor points and are floating more and more to the background as the series advances and its B plot lines come to the forefront. The only drawback of the B plot line taking center stage is that you can't just jump into the series and be able to follow it. You sort of have to watch from the beginning.

If you haven't tried Journeyman yet and have zip to do at 10 pm on Monday nights, now's the time.
shadowkat: (rainboweyelock)
Haven't done too much today, cold or allergies have wiped me out. Did go grocery shopping and bought more cold meds, since whatever I bought yesterday wasn't doing the job last night. Kept up blowing my nose, coughing, and my eyes watering, plus clogged ears. Mucus in all orifices? Lovely.

Lovely day though. Wicked sunset last night - had a rainbow, shades of orange, pink, lavender, and blue with dark gray and brillant yellow. And today - crystal clear blue sky taunting me with its fabulousness. I really wanted a gray rainy day, dang it. Sometimes you just do.

Did make it through most of the tv shows/premiers I DvR'd during the week - only have "Dirty Sexy Money", "Cane", "Life", "ER", "CSI", "Doctor Who", "Torchwood", "Damages", and I think "Bones" to go. I've watched Moonlight, Bionic Woman, Grey's Anatomy, Heroes, Reaper, House, Journeyman, Chuck, Back to You, Smallville, Ugly Betty, and Without a Trace. Missed Eureka, Big Shots, Boston Legal, and the Office, because we must make choices.

Sigh. Too much bloody tv. I'm going to have to cut some of it. And I *really wish* 30 Rock and The Office were on some other night besides Thursday. Like maybe Friday? Or Monday? I can tape two shows on two channels at the same time but not three. Also is it just me or has anyone else's DVR/Tivo cut out the last minute of a show because the stupid things are all going a minute over? Missed the last minute of Grey's because of that - it flipped to ER.

So...what's my quick take on the one's I've seen so far? Well, for the first time in a long time, I agree with the reviews I've read on my flist regarding them.

New Shows:

1.Bionic Woman )

2. Chuck )

3. Reaper )

4, Moonlight )

5. Journeyman )

6.Back to You )

Returning Favorites:

(ugh should do two posts for this but don't feel like it.)

1. Grey's Anatomy - does contain a vague spoiler )

2. Ugly Betty - this feels like a cheerful and warmhearted send-up of soap operas. And is at times a bit over the top about it. I do find it amusing though. And I like the twists and turns. Plus I enjoy all the characters.

3.Heroes - plot spoilers for the episode! )

4. Smallville )

5. Without A Trace )

6. House )

Show's I'm thinking of giving the ax to? Too early to tell. Still have more to watch, when and if I find the time. Ugh. I do have a life outside of television watching...you know.
For example just finished reading Kafka on the Shore - which I highly recommend.
I may write a complete review of it in another post...until then will leave you with this quote from it:

Every one of us is losing something precious to us. Lost opportunities, lost possibilities, feelings we can never get back again. That's part of what it means to be alive. But inside our heads - at least that's where I imagine it - there's a little room where we store those memories. A room like the stacks in this library. And to understand the workings of our own heart we have to keep on making reference cards. We have to dust things off every once in a while, let in fresh air, change the water in the flower vases. In other words, you'll live forever in your own private library.

Am currently reading America's Best Short Stories - 2007 edition, edited by Stephen King which is not what you'd expect and so far kick-ass. The first story blew me away.
And the second is doing much the same thing. That too, I'll save for another post.


Am tired or wiped out. Going to take medication and go to bed.
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