Archive | December, 2011

Book Review : ‘Zone One’ By Colson Whitehead

30 Dec

Post-apocalyptic stories are chock full of wish-fulfillment. Rugged individualism holds sway. Every survivor is as special as Harry Potter, just by virtue of being alive. We get to rebuild this whole mess, without all that postmodern clutter. And so on.

So the most jarring thing about Colson Whitehead’s novel Zone One might be how purposefully Whitehead goes about tearing these fantasies apart. Zone One is about the only thing worse than living through the apocalypse – taking part in a heroic effort to rebuild civilization afterwards. Spoilers ahead…

Top image: Manhattan Zombies, via DNAInfo

In Zone One, it’s quite some time after the zombie outbreak, and the survivors are starting to regroup, somewhat. Zone One is the new name of Manhattan, which has already been scoured of most of its zombie hordes by platoons of Marines. And now, the novel’s protagonist, Mark Spitz, is on sweeper duty, clearing out the city block by block of its lingering dead along with two comrades.

The horrible thing about Zone One is that it shows the dullness of hope. Refuges inevitably fall apart, but in the meantime they grind you down with the endless waiting for the inevitable. Mark Spitz, the novel’s hero, is often described as the most mediocre person on the planet, but he’s found his element as a kind of cockroach, surviving in the debris. The only thing that can vanquish Mark Spitz is the communal attempt to return to normality after the undead plague. In Spitz’s flashbacks, and in the present-day sequences, you see hope rise and get crushed, over and over again, like waves.

I’m reasonably sure that this is one zombie story that nobody’s ever told before — there’s a provisional government in Buffalo, NY, and order is being restored along the Eastern Seaboard. The zombie problem appears to be under control, more or less. There’s even a new theme song for the Phoenix Project, the restoration of humanity.

And somehow, the fact that the human race is apparently picking itself up and recreating its institutions, including both governments and pop culture, just makes everything more dismal. Like, instead of being able to take whatever they find in the streets and abandoned buildings, Spitz and his comrades have to subsist on goods from corporate sponsors. There are strict anti-looting regulations, so they have to keep Manhattan pristine, even as they realize they’ll never get to live there – after they finish restoring order, Manhattan will be for the rich and powerful, once again. “Politicians and pro athletes.” Even after the end of the world, there are sponsors and products and endless rules. The bureaucracy becomes more and more crushing, despite how meaningless it all seems. The price of safety.

As Whitehead writes, “tentative bureaucracy rose from the amino acid pools of madness, per its custom.”

Zone One isn’t really a satire, but there are these little sardonic touches throughout – like the persistent government propaganda and Newspeak, in which everybody is supposed to pretend the world is getting better and better.

And meanwhile, Zone One shows how life after the zombie apocalypse turns everybody into a kind of zombie – one of Whitehead’s innovations is that he divides his zombies into two types: skels and stragglers. Skels are your typical flesh-eating, roving undead monsters. Stragglers, meanwhile, are a minority who just find a place that meant something to them in life and then stay there, frozen in place until they’re put out of their misery.

The surviving humans in the book often refer to each other as falling into the “straggler mindset” — if you cling too hard to what you used to have, or the world you used to know, then you’re akin to one of those mindless, frozen zombies. Meanwhile, though, the survivors are haunted by Post-Apocalyptic Survivor Dysfunction, or PASD, which often sounds just like “past.” Memories of the horrors that everybody’s lived through keep dragging them down and making them act in irrational, unpredictable ways – as Whitehead remarks, everybody’s fucked up in a different way, just like before.

The whole thing is tinged with nostalgia, from the disturbing flashbacks to Mark Spitz’s childhood to the endlessly recounted harrowing scenes from the apocalypse.

And like many near-future stories – especially apocalyptic ones – this is really a story about cities, and urban planning. There are just tons of little observations about the geography and character of New York – clearing the place of zombies turns out to be remarkably similar to planning any kind of major urban project.

Whitehead writes: “The city bragged of an endless unraveling, a grid without limits; of course it was bound and stymied by rivers, curtailed by geographic circumstance. It could be subdued and understood.” The subway, the ferries, the rivers, the major arteries… they all become part of the logistics of monster-fighting as well as the bones of the story.

And in the end, the city becomes a literal “melting pot,” as the dead are homogenized and turned into huddled masses, yearning to devour your flesh:

They had been young and old, natives and newcomers. No matter the hue of their skins, dark or light, no matter the names of their gods or the absences they countenanced, they had all strived, struggled, and loved in their small, human fashion. Now they were mostly mouths and fingers, fingers for extracting entrails from soft cavities, and mouths to rend and devour in pieces the distinct human faces they captured, that these faces might become less distinct, de-individualized flaps of masticated flesh, rendered anonymous like them, the dead. Their mouths could no longer manage speech, yet they spoke nonetheless, saying what the city had always told its citizens, from the first settlers hundreds of years ago, to the shattered survivors of the garrison. What the plague had always told its hosts, from the first human being to have its blood invaded to the latest victim out in the wasteland: I am going to eat you up.

As slow as the book gets — and it gets very, very slow — the beautiful writing carries you along. Whether he’s writing about a zombie attack or one of Mark Spitz’s childhood memories, Whitehead has an amazing gift for the jarring phrase. Like this zombie attack early in the book:

Two of them got the old man down and then all of them were on him like ants who received a chemical telegraph about a lollipop on the sidewalk. There was no way the old man could get up. It was quick. They each grabbed a limb or convenient point of purchase while he screamed.

I love “point of purchase” in reference to zombies consuming the living.

And yet, the book is definitely a frustrating read — you get the sense, after a while, that Whitehead is deliberately trying to deny the reader any feeling of narrative satisfaction, through denseness and obfuscation. Flashbacks start and end without any warning – sometimes in the middle of a paragraph, or as part of a random observation – and major plot twists are both telegraphed and buried in other random pieces of information.

And sometimes, Whitehead’s urge to describe and explore and dissect everything becomes actually neurotic. For example, he’ll say that there were no pets in a building — and then he’ll pause to describe the types of pets that might have been there, and what types of collars the pets would have been wearing had they been there. Or he’ll say there were no passersby on the street, and then pause to wonder what types of passersby there might have been.

But if you keep forging ahead and pay attention to the tricky time-jumping and narrative digressions, the book pays off marvelously. It’s a book for anyone who loves cities as well as people who want a very different, discomfiting look at an apocalyptic worst-case scenario we’ve never seen before. And the book has a knife-gouging, horrifying ending that makes the whole thing absolutely worthwhile.

Rating : 8/10

Tv Review : Doctor Who – The Doctor, The Widow And The Wardrobe (Xmas Special)

26 Dec

This review contains spoilers.

The fact that the last series of Doctor Who only finished in October means that we’ve not had the traditional wait of several months for the annual Christmas special. And, perhaps as a consequence of that, it feels as though expectations for it have been a little lower. That it might just be being taken for granted a little bit.

Leave it to Steven Moffat, then, to issue a warm reminder of just what a lovely part of the festive celebrations the annual Doctor Who special can be, with a pretty much standalone story.

As it turned out, The Doctor, The Widow And The Wardrobe was, for all of its wonderful production work, quite a contained tale, that of Madge Arwell.

Madge, played wonderfully well by Claire Skinner, is faced with putting on a brave face for Christmas, for the sake of her children, Cyril and Lily. Her conundrum is that the story is set during the war, and Madge has received a telegram, informing her that her husband is missing, presumed dead. Her plan to withhold this information from her children, to ensure they have the best possible Christmas, is a haunting and loving one.

But naturally, any plan where the Doctor crashes into the midst of it is bound to veer off course.

So it proves, in an opening 20 minutes or so that demonstrates just how wonderfully well Matt Smith plays comedy. For the last few episodes of series six, Smith’s Doctor was carrying the weight of what was to come, and there are still nods to what he’s been through, and what he now faces, through Steven Moffat’s script. However, there’s also a sense that he’s been given something of a day off, and the way that he rips through the guided tour of the house, with particular focus on the best children’s bedroom you could wish for, was gloriously good fun.

The Doctor Who Christmas special, as both Moffat and Russell T Davies have noted over the years, is a slightly different beast. Accepting that a large bulk of people watch it after a bloated day, and not short of either sugar-laden or alcoholic beverages, its tone tends to be just a little lighter. Moffat works that very much in his favour, but doesn’t shy away from the darkness in the background. Madge’s choice is never far away.

It’s the Doctor operating without a companion for the duration of The Doctor, The Widow And The Wardrobe, too, and this also seems to free him up just a little. The closest he gets to sidekicks are Cyril and Lily and, not for the first time, Moffat writes his younger characters wonderfully well. The economy of dialogue for Cyril proves to be a great choice, as young Maurice Cole conveys more in a wide-eyed look than any collection of words could. Credit, too, to director Farren Blackburn for bringing the most out of the younger members of his talented cast.

It’s the first half of the episode where it’s arguably at its strongest, but that doesn’t mean there’s too much to pick at once the children crawl through the mysterious present (where did it come from, incidentally?) and head into Doctor Who’s nod to the land of Narnia.

Here’s where the screen fills with some enchanting visuals, not least trees that appear to grow Christmas baubles. It’s almost a pity when the slightly more traditional Doctor Who story kicks in, when ‘monsters’ appear and the threat escalates. But this is Moffat-era Who, where apparent monsters have reasons for what they’re doing, and the nature of just who the actual monster is, once more, is called into question.

The creatures this time, made of wood, I found eerily effective, although the least interesting part of the episode. I think, though, that’s because the Arwells are just far more intriguing people to be around, and the moments where the focus shifts away from them are felt.

If you were being picky, which I suppose I am, then you could say that the reasoning behind the desire to flee the forest is a very straightforward one. Yet it services the story well enough. I do think it’s a real pity that the trio of troops weren’t used more. When I first heard that Bill Bailey in particular was appearing in Doctor Who, it was a good day. Sadly, he just doesn’t get enough screen time here, and I’d dearly have loved to see more of him.

The most divisive part of the episode, and bringing back slight memories of The Next Doctor, is when Claire Skinner gets at the controls of something left over from one of Michael Bay’s Transformers movies. It’s deliriously daft, and for me it works, because before anyone can take the whole thing too seriously, the thing does a pratfall onto the ground.

It’s all building up to a warm, emotional ending, of course, and this was handled logically and well. Most of us, I suspect, felt that Madge might find a way to save her husband by the time The Doctor, The Widow And The Wardrobe drew to a close (it is Christmas, after all), and so it proved. It meant that the episode didn’t shirk the moment where the children realised that their father might be gone, but allowed the Arwell’s story to end on a warm, rather than a tragic note.

This all left space at the end for the Doctor to find his own happy ending of sorts, where we learn that two years have passed since he saw Amy and Rory last. The moment on the doorstep, with the Doctor and Amy refusing to hug each other, was a lovely touch, well played. And it seems fitting that the loneliest man in the universe got some well deserved Christmas lunch at the end of quite a tumultuous year for him.

The Doctor, The Widow And The Wardrobe marks the last time we’ll see the Doctor until next Autumn, and he’s in an intriguing place. Most people think he’s dead, his time with the Ponds appears to be growing ever shorter, and there’s still the big question of who he actually is remaining unanswered.

For now, though, it was a treat to have a gentle, well told, standalone story, that proved you don’t have to veer away from an emotive and adventurous story, just because it’s Christmas time.

A lovely piece of television, and a smashing way to spend a Christmas night in front of the telly. Pass the turkey sandwiches…

Rating : 8/10

source:denofgeek.com
by:simon brew

‘Game of Thrones’ Alan Taylor to take ‘Thor 2′ director’s chair?

26 Dec

Alan Taylor is thought to be taking the director’s chair for Thor 2.

The Game of Thrones director is believed to have been offered a deal for the role, beating out Daniel Minahan, according to Deadline.

Minahan has also directed three episodes of the HBO fantasy drama, in addition to series such as True Blood and The Good Wife.

Taylor – who has also directed episodes of Boardwalk Empire, Mad Men and the pilot of The Playboy Club – was first linked with the vacancy earlier this month.

Monster director Jenkins originally signed on to take charge of Thor 2 in September, but left the project earlier this month due to “creative differences” with the studio.

Kenneth Branagh, who directed the first Thor movie, turned down the sequel due to a scheduling conflict.

Thor 2 is due to be released on November 15, 2013 and will see Chris Hemsworth, Natalie Portman and Tom Hiddleston reprising their roles from the first movie.

‘The Devil Inside’ – Official Red Band Trailer

24 Dec

DVD Review : The Fades – Series One

24 Dec

Release Date: 26 December 2011
2011 | 15 | 339 minutes | £20.42
Distributor: 2entertain
Creator: Jack Thorne
Cast: Iain De Caestecker, Natalie Dormer, Tom Ellis, Johnny Harris, Daniel Kaluuya

Back in the day, TV for and about teens and twentysomethings was a cultural dead end of “issues” drama and try-hard coolness. Then, some time in the latter half of the Noughties, TV executives realised that people under 30 can possess more than one brain cell, and started to greenlight shows that had high-concept premises, engrossing story arcs and smart, snappy dialogue. Liberal lashings of sex, swearing and violence didn’t hurt either.

BBC Three’s The Fades (created and written by Skins and This Is England ’86 veteran Jack Thorne) is the latest show to follow where Being Human and Misfits blazed the trail. It’s not quite as accomplished as either, but the “Freaks And Geeks meets Ghostbusters” tale of an ordinary sixth former (De Caestecker) who starts seeing dead people still provides a gripping ride.

On the down side, the six-part series does take a little too long to get going, the first two episodes straining to establish numerous plotlines and a complex mythology about ghosts feeding on human flesh to regain corporeal form. Sticking with the show is soon rewarded, however, as it delivers edge-of-the-seat thrills, some brave and unexpected twists, and visceral horror imagery in spades – let’s just say it’s not shy with the gore.

But the biggest compliment you can pay The Fades is that it often plays like a British Buffy, populated by pop culture-literate teens (The Fades is genuinely geek-friendly) who are more worried about popularity and the opposite sex than they are about saving the world. The characters are so rounded and believable that you could take out the fantasy and still have a decent show. If BBC Three has any sense, it’ll greenlight a second series now.

Extras: Behind-the-scenes featurettes, cast interviews, outtakes and deleted scenes.

Rating : 8/10

DVD Review : Futurama – Season Five

24 Dec

Release Date: 26 December 2011
2010 | 12 | 270 minutes | £24.99 (DVD)/£34.99 (Blu-ray)
Distributor: 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
Creators: Matt Groening, David X Cohen
Cast: Billy West, Katey Sagal, John Di Maggio, Tress MacNeille, Phil LaMarr, Maurice LaMarche, Lauren Tom

Good news, everyone! Futurama’s back, like a robophoenix from the flames, eight years after cancellation and four middling, straight-to-DVD movies. The bad news? This fifth season doesn’t quite reach the highs of the show’s first four years.

The best of this season’s 13 episodes do come close though. Emmy-award-winning “The Late Philip J Fry”, for example – where Fry, the Professor and Bender use a machine that can only travel forward through time – is a brilliant hard SF concept full of pathos, humour and staggeringly dense design. Unfortunately these episodes are diamonds in the rough. “The Futurama Holiday Spectacular” is a particular let down given the quality of previous holiday specials, and “Attack Of The Killer App” – a staggeringly unfunny spoof of the iPhone phenomenon – proves Groening and company will never match South Park for satire.

The laughs don’t come as thick and fast as they once did, but this is a step-up from the movies, and feels like Futurama of old. Cancellation could yet prove to be the best thing for The Simpsons’ sci-fi sibling.

Extras:

Ten minutes of deleted scenes, superb audio commentaries and a full-length table read are the best of the bunch. A somewhat pointless music video, a making of the “Shut Up And Love Me” song and a round-up of the “previously on Futurama” recap rounds out the package.

Rating : 7/10
Extras : 8/10

source:sfx.co.uk
by:jordanfarley

The Hobbit : Behind-The-Scenes Production Video

24 Dec

Game Of Thrones Season Two: New Behind-The-Scenes Video

23 Dec

Spartacus: Vengeance Trailer !

23 Dec

Ryan Murphy says 2nd season of American Horror Story will be NOTHING like the 1st

23 Dec

According to Collider, series co-creator Ryan Murphy and FX president and general manager John Landgraf revealed on a conference call this morning that every 12-episode season of the show going forward will feature a completely new, self-contained storyline, with all-new characters, a fresh setting, new monsters, a different overall theme and even a brand new title sequence.

That means that the saga of the Harmon family ended on Wednesday night (don’t worry—no spoilers here if you haven’t seen it yet), although Murphy and Landgraf said it’s possible that some of the actors from this cast could show up as different characters in future stories. But season two will not be set in the Harmons’ haunted house and in fact will not even take place in Los Angeles.

The one constant will be that each season’s plot will be an “American horror story,” with its own definition of what that is. The show will also still utilize elements of true crime stories, as season one did with its references to the Black Dahlia and others.

Want to know what the theme of season two will be? Murphy said that hints about it appear in the last three episodes of the first season. Don’t have them recorded anymore? No worries: a DVD box set of all 12 episodes will head your way soon.

Murphy said to look for announcements about the cast, theme and setting for season two sometime around February, with the show tentatively scheduled to kick off in late September and run until just before Christmas again.

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