Change Your Image
Pete_Falina
Ratings
Most Recently Rated
Reviews
Into the Badlands: Chapter XVI: Wolf's Breath, Dragon Fire (2017)
Marton Csokas May Be The Greatest Villain Ever
"Into The Badlands" is fantastic video entertainment. Superbly cast, written, directed and produced. The Ireland filming locations are astounding. Everybody associated with the show deserves the highest praise! I just wanted to give an extra shout-out to Marton Csokas in the role of Quinn. He is mesmerizing, and when he has the focus, he doesn't let up for a second. I delighted in his performance in Season 1, at the end of which he was apparently killed. I was totally thrilled to have him back again, in Season 2. The man is fantastic!
Hitler's Britain (2002)
Similar Fiction You Might Want to Read
For the same subject treated quite well in fiction, look for a copy of Len Deighton's "SS GB". You follow the path of a British cop who has to answer to Nazi officers as he first investigates, and then is drawn into, a resistance movement. The resistance schemes to draw the sympathy of the isolationist USA, looking for America's intervention in the European war. This could help you flesh out some of the concepts in "Hitler's Britain." And, frankly, I'm a bit annoyed with the summary that suggests a likely ineffectual British resistance. That scarcely jives with the Brits who survived the bombing of London, and who rescued the troops at Dunkirk. For those of you who know Len Deighton's work, you won't be wasting your time, if you can find the book.
The Prisoner: Fall Out (1968)
It Took Me A Year To Appreciate
I watched the original broadcast of this episode (and the entire series) on CBS the summer it ran in the United States. After the first viewing, I absolutely hated this episode. I wanted factual explanations, a very real and solid down-to-earth conclusion, and Mr. McGoohan provided imagery and allegory. I was perhaps excessively literal in those days, and may have been led astray by the series itself. While the episode title escapes me at the moment, I'm sure the hard core fans will remember: Number 6 wakes up to a deserted Village, fashions a raft, and eventually finds his way back to London. He works out where the Village might be from a variety of clues and returns in a military plane, only to be ejected and returned to the once-again lively Village. I was looking for something building on that episode's "clues", and was vastly disappointed. As some of you may recall, CBS ran the series again the next summer, and I tuned in again. After a year of contemplation (and maybe some maturing), I was able to accept FALL OUT for the fine work that it was and is.