To: Jhana who wrote (51497) | 1/6/2025 11:01:00 AM | From: research1234 | | | Shrinking, a dark comedy series about a dysfunctional psychiatric practice starring Harrison Ford as a grumpy curmudgeon. No topic or language is off limits. |
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From: koan | 1/10/2025 5:14:50 PM | | | | Made some cioppino today.
I put in some olive oil and fresh garlic, then some wild Gulf of America prawns, and some large fresh San Francisco dungeness crab, and red snapper.
Cooked it a bit and then added my San francisco "Paladini pasta cioppino sauce, and another bottle of tomato sauce and some red wine.
Then let it simmer for awhile.
I will eat it with red wine and french bread.
We have such a great fish market in my town.
Happy New Year. |
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From: Sam | 1/13/2025 5:58:31 PM | | | | I guess this video of this guy reunited with his dog Oreo after 5 days belongs here:
Tearful reunion for man, pet dog following Palisades Fire evacuations The dog slept on rubble for five days before he was found. By Liz Kreutz and Karla Rendon • Published January 12, 2025 • Updated on January 12, 2025 at 4:39 pm nbclosangeles.com |
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From: Jhana | 1/15/2025 8:30:07 AM | | | | "Greyhound" on AppleTV - WOW. Long ago (like when Saving Private Ryan came out), stunning war movies would get the attention they deserve. But nowadays, they get a short blurb before they drop behind a paywall and the herd moves on.
Too bad Tom Hanks didn't have a rubber superhero suit, just a Navy uniform. And his only superpower was commanding a team of destroyers to fend off a U-boat wolfpack attack in the North Atlantic. I mean, what's that compared to laser vision?
This is a must see for anyone who appreciates great action and direction. Almost all of the movie happens on the bridge of one destroyer, but you get a visceral feel for the crazy scene they were part of.
Big thumbs up. |
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From: Jhana | 1/16/2025 8:19:01 AM | | | | Wrapped up the latest season of "Shetland" last night; they moved on to a solid new cast with the new lead detective, so it should keep going for a good while (Silent Witness and Taggart are both around season 27).
Also started a new series "Protection" that looks good for a 6-episode run.The "In Plain Sight" formula set in the UK but the latest assignment goes very wrong. |
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From: LoneClone | 1/17/2025 12:16:35 PM | | | | I should set up this tale by saying it happened in the very staid and genteel city of Victoria, where strange things rarely happen.
I have David Lynch to thank for one of the most surreal movie experiences I have enjoyed., and that was only partly to do with what was on the screen
Back in the day, word got out among my arts and culture-oriented circle of friends that we needed to go see this new movie called Blue Velvet that was coming to town, so we got together and headed down to $2 Tuesday -- remember those? -- at a local multiplex. I had read a few reviews of Eraserhead, which sounded intriguing, but otherwise had not been exposed to anything by Lynch.
The theatre itself was a perfect setting, an odd space in a round room with an aisle running around the outside of the seats. This would come in handy for the radical lesbian collective on mushrooms.
There was a remarkable sense of anticipation running through the audience as they waited. It felt like before a stadium concert. .I won't spoil the opening scene of the movie for those who haven't seen Blue Velvet yet, but suffice to say that within seconds we knew we were in for a remarkable experience.
Usually I require that the theatre be quiet to enjoy a film -- needless to say, I rarely go the theatre these days -- but there was none of that this Tuesday, with the gasps and exclamations coming from the crowd enhancing the surrealism. The cherry on top was the lesbian collective on mushrooms, who would periodically get up from their seats and march around the outer aisle while emitting inarticulate exclamations.
I was exhausted but exhilarated by the end of the showing. It was such a perfect viewing experience I have not sullied the memories by watching Blue Velvet again. Even though I can still recall perfectly many scenes, maybe it's time to watch it again after all these years, though I guess I'll have to do without the acid-fuelled lesbians.
LC |
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From: Ron | 1/22/2025 1:39:02 PM | | | | Silo, season two is entertaining on Apple TV. Waiting for more Severance to download before we start watching that. Probably will watch Greyhound next. -- one we missed during Covid.
imdb.com |
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From: Jeff Hayden | 1/23/2025 8:39:20 PM | | | | Paramount+ keeps putting out Taylor Sheridan shows. Landman is a view into the oil patch. It's really good. |
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From: LoneClone | 1/31/2025 3:00:44 PM | | | | Jack Taylor S03
I had missed that there was a third and final season of Jack Taylor, which follows a rough and ready PI ‘who takes on the cases the Garda (Irish police) won’t touch. (I think I confused it with Jack Irish, featuring a similar character in Australia, which I also need to finish watching.) I did enjoy the first two seasons, but I can see why this season ended the series. It seemed to be casting around for a way to make this throwback character more relevant to modern times, including a ridiculous romance with a much younger policewoman and the final case involving video games. The attempt did not work.
imdb.com
Van Der Valk S04
This series has always been a little odd, as it features English speaking folks solving crimes in Amsterdam without ever speaking Dutch. Even putting that aside, I got quite worried early in Season 4 when series star Marc Warren, who has demonstrated elsewhere that he really can act, descended to David Caruso level, i.e. posing manfully while uttering dialogue that I assume is supposed to be pithy. The series has always veered dangerously close to CSI-style banality, but the remaining 2 1/2 episodes of Season 4 pulled the series out of that trough, delivering some satisfying crime solving with minimal banality.
imdb.com
Paience
Patience is another entrant in the burgeoning subgenre of ‘outsiders working with a police squad’ that has become popular of late, and I would say it could be one of the better examples. Patience happens to be an autistic archivist who handles the files in the basement of the York police station. She is also a puzzle fanatic, and when she encounters a detective who is not put off by her eccentricities, puts those skills to work as part of the team.
I am not qualified to judge whether this is a proper representation of autism, though I do recognize some of Patience’s traits from my own life, particularly the need to find patterns in reality. Regardless of the portrayal’s verisimilitude, she is an interesting character, and the crimes are interesting too. The show also makes excellent use of its setting in the medieval city of York, with the main weakness being the soundtrack, acoustic piano and chamber music that at times becomes overbearing.
Patience could go either way if they make more seasons. I hope they choose the more interesting path of digging in to the character of Patience rather than normalizing her.
imdb.com
McDonald & Dodds S04
Speaking of medieval English cities, this series set in Bath returns with another three episodes featuring a mismatched pair of detectives, one young and ambitious, the other old and eccentric. By now the two have figured out how to get along, fortunately as that plot line was getting boring, and instead each gets to stretch out a bit thanks to some clever plotting. This was the best season yet IMO.
imdb.com
Vuncent
I watched both seasons of this English crime series featuring veteran actor Adrian Dunbar as a retired detective who keeps getting drawn back in to helping the local police force he used to work for solve crimes. It’s a little old-fashioned, particularly when Dunbar’s character is hanging out at a local jazz club, but most of the time it works, and the production values and writing are top notch. I would call Vincent solid rather than spectacular, but it does deliver.
imdb.com
Vera
This old reliable has finally come to an end after 14 solid seasons totalling 56 episodes. The inimitable Brenda Blethyn truly embodies this character, crotchety and brilliant, someone who doesn’t suffer fools gladly, often to the dismay of her subordinates. The final season of two episodes is up to scratch, delivering a satisfying conclusion to Vera’s tenure on the force. The setting in Northumberland remains as beguiling as ever; I will miss visiting this part of the world for a few hours every year.
There was no indication of this in the script, but I can’t help but wonder if there will be a spin-off where, like Vincent, Vera is drawn back in to help her old force solve the tough ones.
imdb.com
The Bay S03-S05
Yes, I did watch three more seasons encompassing 18 45-minute episodes of this English crime series, but they really didn’t make much of an impression. The series focuses around a Family Liaison Officer in a semi-rural area on the coast of Lancashire, which should be a fertile set-up, creating all sorts of opportunities for conflict and conflict of interest, given the family of the victim themselves might be involved in this or other crimes, but this opportunity was largely eschewed in favour of banal plot lines involving the FLO’s family. The production values are good, and there are moments involving subsidiary characters that approach brilliance, but overall for me the series fell flat.
One oddity if you do watch Season3 – check out how the lead actress is apparently being directed, at the end of almost every scene, to look worried, no matter what the actual content of the scene was. The repetitive close-ups of her face looking worries get rather weird.
imdb.com
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