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« Risposta #3 il: Domenica 20 Settembre 2009 13:17 13 » |
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è la migliore (dopo tante cagate branaghiane...) trasposizione in chiave moderna dell'amleto che mi sia capitato di vedere: un giovane principe alla scoperta di se stesso e della verità sulla morte del padre ad opera del turpe usurpatore, una madre intrigante e palesemente incestuosa, una ofelia riletta in chiave contemporanea (questa mi sa che non si suicida  ), un fantasma in formato A4 Five Reasons: Sons of Anarchy FX's new leather-clad motorcycle-club drama has plenty of horsepower--but is it going to run out of gas? Five reason to and not to watch inside.
In Five Reasons, TV.com takes an early look at upcoming episodes of shows and scoops what's good and bad about the program we just watched. We're not telling you to watch it or telling you to avoid it--we're just offering up our two cents as a helpful guide.
"SAMCRO is not the enemy...it's the glue. The one thing that will always be there to pull you through the ugly s***."--Gemma Teller Morrow, Sons of Anarchy
Do you like sweaty men with leather jackets and greasy hair? Well, then you might just be in the right place. FX's Sons of Anarchy tells the tales of a Californian motorcycle club--not a weekend gathering for businessmen to ride their crotch rockets, but a down-and-dirty clan of hog riders who get into no good.
The show explores the rise of a prodigal son, Jackson "Jax" Teller, and his desire to follow his dad's tire tracks up the ranks of the Sons of Anarchy Motorcycle Club Redwood Original (SAMCRO), a gun-running group of gruff men on bikes.
Sons of Anarchy stars Charlie Hunnam (Undeclared), Ron Perlman (Hellboy), Katey Segal (Married With Children), and that hotel clerk from Memento (Mark Boone Junior). Kurt Sutter (The Shield) is the creator.
Sons of Anarchy premieres tonight on FX. We give you five reason you should watch...and just to keep the universe in order, five reasons you shouldn't.
Five reasons you should watch Sons of Anarchy
1. Katey Segal You've seen her as Peg Bundy in Married With Children and Helen in Lost, and heard her as Leela in Futurama. But you've never seen her or heard her as the conniving and manipulative matriarch of SAMCRO Gemma Teller Morrow, easily the strongest character in Sons of Anarchy. Segal delivers a knockout performance. Also strong--Johnny Lewis as "Half Sack," the runt of the litter.
2. Violence It's on FX, so you know there's a little leeway. And part of the leeway involves a pool cue to the sensitive area and a strategically placed axe. 'Nuff said!
3. Shakespearean drama The Bard probably never imagined his style performed in leather jackets, but the mother-son-new-dad dynamic in Sons of Anarchy is a Hell's Angels Hamlet. And it never gets old (well, it's actually really old, but not old old--oh never mind).
4. Strong endings The last 10 minutes of both of the first episodes really stand out, and manage to leave viewers wanting more. The show really has a lot of...
5. Potential Sons of Anarchy doesn't exactly tear off the screen, but it's building to something big. The inevitable showdown between Jax and Perlman's Clay is going to be dyn-o-mite!!
Five reasons you shouldn't watch Sons of Anarchy
1. A little too much posturing We get it--these guys are supposed to be tough. There's no reason to rub it in our wimpy faces. Also, is that second-hand smoke coming through the screen?
2. Ancillary storylines Obviously nothing is going to outshine the aforementioned Hamlet plotline, but the B-stories just aren't catchy enough.
3. Location shots I lived in Silverlake (a Los Angeles neighborhood) for almost 20 years, and I never saw a biker gang remotely near Echo Park. Nit-picky, but still. (Editor's note: pilots often shoot where it's cheap and convenient, and it's solved in the second episode)
4. A little too much racism Racial slurs are bandied about like tennis balls, so it's not for the politically correct. I understand that a predominantly white biker gang is going to use the N-word a lot, but it just seems like lazy writing to use it so often. Also, the Latino gang has a name--The Mayans. No need to generalize. Come to think of it, the show doesn't paint a pretty picture of rednecks, either.
5. Gratuitous product placement Hey, these guys drink Budweisers! Be sure to turn the label for the camera!
TV Review: ‘Sons of Anarchy’ Season 1 DVD & Season 2 Preview (Ep. 1-5)
Dr. Royce Clemens Posted by Dr. Royce Clemens | September 8th, 2009 at 3:23 pm | Trackback
Sons of Anarchy Season One DVDSons of Anarchy Created by Kurt Sutter Starring Charlie Hunnam, Katey Sagal, Ron Perlman, Maggie Siff, Kim Coates, Mark Boone Junior Twentieth Century Fox Season 1 DVD release date: August 18, 2009 Season 2 premiere date: Tuesday, September 8, 10 EST/9 CST on FX
The handiest and dandiest nutshell in which to describe the FX show Sons of Anarchy is “Hamlet with Bikers.” It’s not the least accurate metaphor in the world: You have a Claudius, you have a Gertrude, and even the hero of the show, Jackson “Jax” Teller (Charlie Hunnam), has blond hair and blue eyes, looking as Danish as Danish can be. Hamlet with Bikers isn’t the worst kind of thing for a show. There are a whole ton of shows that don’t have Shakespearean allusions or dirty, smelly bikers, so can’t we have one that does?
But the more cynical way to describe Sons of Anarchy is “The Sopranos with Bikers,” but it’s too early to call on that one. The show needs six more seasons to overextend itself and a ton of out-of-place dream sequences to live up to that. That show got so bored with itself that it ended in mid-sentence to go and do something else.
Sons of Anarchy is the latest, and arguably best, drama to come out of the basic cable network FX, beating out other shows like Rescue Me, Damages, and the recently concluded The Shield (which is that show poor people had to make do with when they couldn’t get The Wire on HBO). In fact, I would go so far as to call Sons of Anarchy last season’s best new show in all of television. It took a little while to get its groove on, but it veered quite close to great in its second half. That’s something even the best shows on TV rarely do.
Hunnam plays Jax Teller, the Vice President of the Sons of Anarchy Motorcycle Club (Redwood Original), or “SAMCRO.” He’s in it with a whole host of Hey-It’s-That-Guy character actors like Mark Boone Junior (as the AWESOME Bobby Elvis) and the great Kim Coates. The club is headed by the headstrong Clay Morrow, played by Ron “Motherfucking” Perlman and his wife (Jax’s mom) Gemma. She’s played by Katey Sagal in a performance that would have gotten her an Emmy nomination, were she not on FX. The Academy has a raging hate-woody for any basic cable show that doesn’t feature Jon Hamm in a suit or the Dad from Malcolm in the Middle dealing crank.
Anyway, SAMCRO holds sway over the NoCal town of Charming, a place so idyllic that they have their own Floyd the Barber (IT’S TRUE!). There’s no big urban development in Charming (in fact, one character points out that he can’t find a Starbucks), and that has plenty to do with SAMCRO, who actively quashes that kind of thing. This suits the people of Charming just fine, and even the local Sheriff (Dayton Callie) helps SAMCRO keep Charming… Well… Charming.
But SAMCRO also has a hand in gun-running to the IRA and gangs in Oakland, which leads to a season-long story arc about their conflicts with the ATF. This is merely the backdrop, though, for a story of fathers and sons. Jax has a newborn (premature, thanks to an ODing junkie ex-wife) and he finds a manuscript written by his late father and SAMCRO founder, detailing the tenets of the club. This manuscript comes into play in every episode as Jax takes the founding ideals of the club to heart, driving a wedge between himself and his stepfather Clay, who warped those ideals into a criminal organization.
The aesthetic counts for a lot with Sons of Anarchy, as I’ve spent more time than I could bear with gangsters in shows like these, but precious few bikers. There’s a kind of seedy desperation to these folks that makes them sticking together a kind of thrill to watch. In your average gangster show, the overall mesh comes from blood and family. A wonderful narrative device to be sure, but with the exception of Jax and Clay, blood relations don’t come into play for much of the rest of the club. You don’t need to be given the whole backstories for the guy who beats hookers, the Elvis impersonator who looks nothing like Elvis, and the Iraq vet with only one ball to know that these guys treat this club like family because no one else will have them. Knowing this creates a kind of buzz so unique that I fail to find precedent in modern television.
The show starts out slow, as I’ve said, but I’ll forgive it somewhat, as we’ve never really met folks like this before who have lived this kind of life. They have rules and customs that take some getting used to. But it’s time well spent, as it lays the groundwork for the back half, consisting of seven truly extraordinary episodes of television that tie you up in knots. This isn’t to say the first five episodes are bad, no, far from it. But while you can simply watch the first five, the last seven you want to grind up and snort. They’re that good.
The acting is about… ninety-five percent effective. Ron Perlman is Ron Perlman, which is all you need to know. Katey Sagal, as the matriarch of the club, uses her silences to say volumes. When someone could push Ron Perlman and Kim Coates (one of the most underrated character actors we have) out of the way and become the one to watch, it’s a performance for the ages. Some may say that Charlie Hunnam is Jax is the only weak point. I could see where they’re coming from but I disagree. They say that he doesn’t work because he doesn’t look like a biker, but that’s why I think he’s perfect. He’s the moral counterpoint to the rest of the club and it wouldn’t work nearly as well with the textbook “better choice.”
No, the real weak-point is Maggie Siff as Jax’s love-interest Tara. She’s a competent actress (in addition to being face-meltingly hot), but she seems too matter-of-fact and literal for someone like Hunnam, whose character has his head stuck in the clouds. They just don’t work together. Siff first came to our attention on Mad Men, where she and Jon Hamm seduced each other over the course of the first season. Don Draper is more this chick’s speed.
So there you have Sons of Anarchy. It’s not a great show, but it could very well become one. It’s fun, it’s compelling and it lays the groundwork for what looks to be an explosive second season… The first five episodes of which FX sent me for the purpose of review…
-SEASON 2 (Ep. 1-5) MINI-REVIEW. SPOILERS FOR THOSE WHO HAVEN’T SEEN SEASON ONE-
Unlike the slow start to Season One, Season Two comes roaring out of the gate. The ATF has left Charming, only to be replaced by Ethan Zobelle (Adam Arkin), a White Separatist hoping to shut SAMCRO down after they refuse to desist in dealing guns to minority gangs. The rift between Jax and Clay after Donna’s funeral continues to build as their decisions come at cross-purposes to one another. Tara is slowly getting used to life privy to SAMCRO and a horrible event befalls Gemma. If the first season didn’t yield Katey Sagal and Emmy nomination, there is no justice in the world if her work here doesn’t wield one for the second.
Arkin (yet another character actor who doesn’t seem to get his due) creates an antagonist in Zobelle so foul and unlikable that he takes his place alongside Glory/Ben and Marlo Stanfield in the pantheon of TV villains that you want to scrub off of your screen with Lysol.
I understand that it is sometimes common practice for TV networks to send critics advanced screeners of their television programming. But these episodes of Sons of Anarchy are so good that, on the part of FX, it amounts to bragging, almost. These episodes are heartbreaking and white-knuckle tense in equal measure. This is gonna be the show to beat this year. The sophomore slump is apparently an alien concept to these guys.
Watch this show or I’ll beat your ass.
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« Ultima modifica: Domenica 20 Settembre 2009 15:25 15 da pagy »
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