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Thigeic
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member since: Aug 7, 2004
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RECENT FRIENDS' REVIEWS

  • 9.0
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    member since: 03/07/03

    The Bottom Line: "Superb"

    Millenium was the work of X-Files creator Chris Carter, and the show debuted around the time that X-Files was sort of at its peak popularity. It makes sense--television this good never gets greenlit unless it's the pet project of a hot producer riding the wave of something much more popular. The show followed the morbid crime solving adventures of Frank Black, played with sullen perfection by perhaps the most underrated actor ever, Lance Henriksen. Frank is a former FBI agent that burned out and retired after a serial killer (or perhaps a copycat following a similar MO) begins stalking and sending polaroids of Frank's wife and daughter to him. Frank also has a unique ability--he can literally put himself inside the head of a killer, and see what he sees.

    At the outset of the series, Frank has moved from DC back to his home area of Seattle, and hooked up with a group of former law enforcement types called the Millenium Group. These folks consult with various law enforcement agencies on particular evil crimes. It's sort of like the Super Friends of criminal profilers, pathologists, forensic experts and investigators. Through the first season, you get to know Frank, his wife and daughter, his assorted cohorts within the Millenium Group (including his most frequent contact, Peter Watts, played by Lost star Terry O'Quinn and his always amazing moustache), and friends within the Seattle PD.

    The series starts off similarly to the way the X-Files did. There's an underlying plot with Frank dealing with the ghosts of his past, feeling his way through his membership with the Millenium Group, and trying to figure out who it is, exactly, that's stalking his family. Most of this is downplayed originally, and the episodes are decidedly...well, episodic, in nature. A lot of disconnected cases that range from a deranged pharmaceutical chemist that uses clinical trials to make people crazy, to a geneticist that uses a special technique to create dozens of children in his own image so as to create the perfect society after the world comes to an end in the year 2000 (and is only discovered after some of them start killing themselves via self-immolation, among other things).

    While the year 2000 isn't nearly the enigmatic danger that it might have seemed when the series debuted in 1996, it made for a very intriguing backdrop for many of the series' storylines at the time. In fact, the Millenium Group itself turned out to be more than a simple consulting group as the show went on. More and more the show took on intriguing religious prophecies, demonology, and ponderances as to what, if anything, would happen when the year 2000 finally hit. Season 2 probably hit the most right notes when it came to its subject matter, as it took the series into darker, more engaging territory. Season 3 flew off the rails a bit, going into territory that sometimes seemed like a more watchable (but still flawed) version of the X-Files season where Robert Patrick showed up. Saying more than that would spoil the whole outcome of the series, as well as several key twists. But needless to say, Millenium ended well before it should have. The last episode comes almost out of nowhere, and while the conclusion itself is far more satisfying than most series finales tend to be (especially in contrast to the atrocious X-Files finale), you really wanted to know more about the motives of everyone involved in this gloomy tale.

    Amid the armageddon prophecies and serial killers, Millenium also had a legitimate heart to it. Scenes of violence and horror are frequently contrasted by scenes of Frank and his family. Henriksen, and Megan Gallagher, who plays his wife, Catherine, have amazing chemistry together. Henriksen often plays Black as a brooding fellow with little in the way of sense of humor, but when he gets around Catherine and his daughter, Jordan (played with utterly non-cloying precociousness by Brittany Tiplady), his ability to warm up and mesh as a father and husband is unbelievably natural. It makes some of the particularly ugly revelations later in the series exceptionally emotional.

    Millenium never really found an audience during its three seasons, but it's a shining example of what crime drama can be when done well. It's stylish and substantial, and remains that way throughout. Where the X-Files went on and on and on well past its welcome, Millenium kept it short and sweet. Maybe that was, on some level, purposeful, since the show did end in 1999. But even barring the backdrop of the Millenium, the misadventures of Frank Black could have sustained a series well past the year 2000 gimmick. It's just a shame it never got the chance. If you're the type that likes your crime drama black as a black cat in an unlit midnight hour, and with a little bit of supernatural edge to it, go find Millenium on DVD, and give it the chance it never got on network TV.

    03/19/2006 11:24pm | report abuse
  • 9.4
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    member since: 09/04/04

    The Bottom Line: "Superb"

    Amanda starts out as a dippy little hippie chick and by the end of her week-long run with Clinton and Stacy, she emerges to be a stunning woman. There have been episodes of WNTW that feature more drastic makeovers but without a doubt this is the episode that features the best "final product". My wife gets mad at me that I search through the Tivo listings looking to catch Amanda's makeover again but she's just SO DARN CUTE.

    Come to think of it, why don't I just keep the episode on my Tivo? Answer: Because that would make my wife even more perturbed.

    Anyway, Amanda you had me at hello.

    06/24/2005 5:07pm | report abuse
  • 10
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    member since: 05/04/02

    The Bottom Line: "Perfect"

    I was born in 1979. Admittedly, everything I've seen of Match Game has been thanks to the strident work of the Game Show Network kids and their constant re-running of Gene Rayburn's piece de resistance. Which probably makes me like Match Game more than Match Game honestly deserves to be liked.

    But if anyone is wondering why all the kids are coked up, wearing super-wide butterfly collars, and listening to sped'ed up Casablanca disco records in crazy rave club parties, it's because of Match Game. While less of a game show and more of a yell-at-your-TV-while-second-string-celebrities-get-drunk-and-smoke show, Match Game was a glorious peek at what the 70s *must* have been like. Which is to say, laid back, mildly tawdry, and most certainly pointless. But, you know, so what?

    The celebrities were inconsequential when this stuff originally aired, and twenty years later you have to Google them and do a good half-hour's research to understand the obscure, since-dead pop culture phonomenon that they blossomed from in the first place. It's part of the appeal.

    I know that any Match Game that I watch is a rerun. I know this because I know nothing on TV is ever being broadcast "live". I also know it because I know Gene Rayburn died six years ago (thanks IMDB!) But that doesn't keep me from yelling the super-obvious answer at the panicky midwestern high school teacher who doesn't know what to put in the Blank. Why do I do that? What the hell is wrong with me?

    Watching Match Game is like watching tapes of Johnny Carson fron the late 60s when he was wearing crazy pink neckerchiefs and everyone was drinking highballs and getting cigarette burns all over the couch. The structure of the format means nothing. This is all about a relaxed atmosphere where it's OK to get rowdy, because everything's in good fun.

    06/11/2005 6:28pm | report abuse

RECENT FRIENDS' BLOGS

  • member since: 08/27/05

    The Game

    Wow, what a weekend sports-wise!

    The NHL finally got underway and the Rangers(2-0) swept Tampa Bay in Prague.

    The New York football Giants(4-0) annihilated the Seahawks.

    And in the MLB Playoffs he Dodgers swept the Cubbies and are in the NLCS.

    Sorry Cubbie fans. I know it sucks especially now that you hit the 100 year mark. When you do win it will be the greatest thing in the world. I can't compare to that but we had to wait 54 years and July 14th 1994 ended up as one of the best days of my life.

    Overall, I would have to say this weekend in sports has been brry berry good to me!


    ***SPOILER***


    Posted 10/06/2008 8:18am | views: 16,083
  • member since: 08/27/05

    Heavenly Sword Accessories

    I am looking for Kai's cute little fox hat. I noticed that the ears are bigger than a cat so it has to be a feral cat or fox ear'd hat. Have any of you seen a real one of these? I searched online last night and couldn't seem to find anything that resembled it. I was thining that I could make a custom hat by using a marroon bandana cap or skull cap and glue things on the front with another bandana or piece of cloth. There was a post I found last night where someone said he saw a girl wearing one just like her in Japan.

    I am also wondering about Narikos head piece. I would like to think that it would be easy to find online under some barbarian site, but what keywords should I search? Tiara's seem a bit too danty for a headpiece that doesn't have any diamonds.

    Posted 10/02/2008 3:44pm | views: 16,083
  • member since: 08/27/05

    Sanitized for Your Protection

    WARNING: The following article contains NO adult content and is approved for all ages.

    I was thrilled when Harmonix announced that the Red Hot Chili Peppers' album Blood, Sugar, Sex, Magik would be released in its entirety as downloadable content for Rock Band 2. I spent two hours trying to download it the first day it became available, but due to issues with Xbox Live (Harmonix said the problems were on Microsoft's end), I was unable to complete the download. No biggie, I just got up early the next morning, finished downloading the album, and played a few songs. "Under the Bridge" was an absolute joy and well worth the wait. "Sir Psycho Sexy," on the other hand, is censored to the point that the vocals are incoherent.

    "Sir Psycho Sexy" is a dirty song, to be sure--nobody's going to argue that it isn't. Mr. Sir Psycho is a big fan of the ladies, and the song documents his sexual prowess. At least it did before Harmonix got its hands on it. In one case, 58% of the vocals for an entire verse have been completely removed. Does this affect gameplay? You bet it does. Imagine singing the verse below (each set of dashes is a word that's no longer there). Not only do you have no clue what's going on in the song, but you just sit there while the deleted lines go by, hoping that there's a line that isn't filthy coming up so you might actually get to sing something.

    I got stopped by a lady cop

    In my automobile

    --- ---- --- --- --- ----- ---- ---

    --- ---- --- ----- -- --- - ----

    That cop she was all dressed in blue

    Was she pretty? Boy I'm tellin' you

    --- ----- -- ---- ---- --- --- ----- -----

    - ---- ----- -- --- ---- -- ----

    Like a ram getting ready to jam

    She whimpered just a little when she felt my hand

    -- --- ------ -- ---- ----

    - ----- ---- --- ------- --- ------- --- -------

    Proppin' her up on the black and white

    -------- --- ------ --- ----- -----

    - ------- --- ---- -- ---- ---- ---

    ------ - ------ --- ----- ---- ---

    Do I think it's appropriate that children play an uncensored version of this song? No. Do I have a problem with the occasional swear word being removed? Not at all. But I do have a problem when I haven't been warned that the song has been excessively censored before I purchase it, and I believe Harmonix went way too far when it comes to the material removed from this particular song. You can't tell me phrases like "I said what's up?" or "Turned a cherry pie right into jam" are too salacious for the sensitive ears of our youth, especially when they're used with no context, as they would be here.

    Rock Band 2's box displays a Teen rating, but it also warns users that online interactions aren't rated by the ESRB. On top of that, there are plenty of age checks in place on the Xbox 360, so why can't adults enjoy adult music with adult language? Everyone throws the statistic about the average gamer being older than 30, so why are we being treated like children?

    Maybe I'm overreacting and this censorship isn't a big deal to most people. If you believe this is a nonissue, I'd like to hear your thoughts and opinions. If you agree that this is a problem, I'd love to hear from you as well.

    Posted 10/02/2008 12:31pm | views: 16,083
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