Jan 23 2009
Clay Adventures
All right, this is totally cheap of me to pass this off as a blog, but I’m going to take this chance to share with you a bit of claymation that my brother made - because I love it. Enjoy.
Jan 23 2009
All right, this is totally cheap of me to pass this off as a blog, but I’m going to take this chance to share with you a bit of claymation that my brother made - because I love it. Enjoy.
Jan 12 2009
You might have heard of the films Shaun of the Dead and Hot Fuzz. These are a pair of excellently funny British films that I might have talked about on other occasions. (If not, expect more on them in the future.)![]()
Although I have a lot of respect for the writer/performers of these films (Nick Frost and Simon Pegg) I haven’t followed British comedy news since 1999… It’s a long story. Anyway, the point of this rambling commentary is that because I haven’t followed British comedy since 1999, I had no idea that Simon Pegg and Nick Frost got their start on a BBC sitcom called Spaced. (In 1999.)
I got introduced to this over Christmas break. My parents, actually, had the entire series (14 episodes or so) on DVD. They told us it was funny, and invited us to watch one episode. We watched one. Then another. Then another.
We watched the first season in one night. When we got back from Christmas break we promptly placed the second disc (the last seven episodes) on Netflix, got it right away, and watched the rest.
The formula is this: Tim (Simon Pegg) and Daisy (Jessica Hynes) are a pair of strangers who meet in a restaurant and are both looking for a place to live. They spot an ad for a likely apartment -the problem is, the owner requires that the tennants be a “Professional Couple”. So Tim and Daisy pretend to be a couple and move in, and must maintain the fiction of couplehood to maintain their lease.
At least, that’s the plot of the first two or three episodes - but saying that’s what the show is about would be a gross understatement. Sometimes the series is about Tim and Daisy struggling with their separate relationships (Tim recently got dumped, Daisy gets dumped not long after the beginning of the series); sometimes it is about them struggling with their careers (Daisy wants to be a writer, Tim a comic book artist); sometimes it is about their dog; sometimes it is about their neighbors; sometimes it is about being a young person and shirking responsibility; sometimes it is about pop culture. Pop culture is almost a star of this series in itself. There are a million and one references to pop culture - from Scooby Doo to Murder She Wrote.
The funny thing is that almost every character on this show is reprehensible in some way, yet you find yourself sympathizing with them each step of the way. The creators described it as “a cross between The Simpsons, The X-Files and Northern Exposure .” (All three of those shows - Northern Exposure especially - were favorites of mine as a young person; perhaps that explains why I loved this show so much… But don’t take my word for it. Here’s the first episode for you.)
I hate reviews where the person just repeat unquantifiable things like, “It’s really good” or “It’s hilarious”. Yes, it is both those things, but I can’t explain why at the moment, so let me cogitate on this for a while. I watched this entire series in two evenings, it’s a bit of a blurr… I think I need to contemplate it for a while before I discuss it anymore.
I think I’ll talk about Shaun of the Dead and Hot Fuzz next, and then maybe I’ll try discussing Spaced again and see if anything changed.