Categories
Sam Who Likes Nothing Writing

Sam Who Likes Nothing – In The Fall

I had high hopes for In the Fall after the first few chapters. A long, multi-generational tale of a Vermont Yankee who marries a former slave after the Civil War, the book basically falls into three parts. The first is a family saga about the principal couple’s first twenty-five years together and is the best part of the book. The second is a literary noir about small town bootlegging pre-WWI and is well done but nothing special. The final third is a ridiculous attempt at southern gothic, ruining for me what had been more good than bad up to that point. Much of the book was overwritten, with characters engaging in long monologs that sounded a bit too close to the author’s own voice, but the ideas were interesting and the characters beautifully drawn, at least until the end. That’s when the sixteen year old protag of the final section heads south to find out why his grandmother committed suicide, loses his virginity to a distant cousin within four hours of meeting her, and learns just how horrible the south can be.

Faulkner it ain’t. And after seventy years or so of reading this crap, I’m so done with 20th c. male literary writers making no attempt whatsoever to explain why their female characters jump into bed with their male protags the minute they meet them.

So done.

Categories
Sam Who Likes Nothing

Sam-Who-Likes-Nothing: The Mandalorian

Sam-Who-Likes-Nothing recently finished watching the second season of The Mandalorian and, same as the first season, he was unimpressed. Some of it was fun, some of it wasn’t, and too much of it was just plain stupid. Though it was good to see Luke at the end, the whole Deus Ex Skywalker of the resolution was pretty meh. Not to mention that Star Wars has now descended to the level of bad Star Trek when it comes to the crappy rubber masks and thick gloves that now pass as aliens. It looked cheap in 1977, but it looks even cheaper now. Even worse, the writers don’t even pay lip service to the science part of science fiction anymore. The business of flying to a neighboring star system in a couple of days without hyperdrive is almost as stupid as seeing four different planets in four different star systems blown up in real time in the sky from the surface of a fifth.
Or having hyperdrive capability on an x-wing.
Categories
K-dramas Sam Who Likes Nothing

Why I Like K-Dramas

Why do I watch K-Dramas? Sky Castle, which my wife and I just finished, is an excellent example. It’s too long (twenty episodes rather than the usual sixteen), is an over-the-top soap opera, and has a central plot about high school students. (Boys Over Flowers? Blecch.) If Sky Castle were an American show we wouldn’t even pick up the remote. So why did we watch it? And like it?

Because K-dramas frequently leaven their histrionics with humor, something I can’t remember ever seeing in an American soap opera unless the show is also a parody. (Dallas, anyone?) But Sky Castle is no parody. Sky Castle takes its characters as seriously as any four-hankie weepfest. Even as it skewers those characters and the insanely competitive Korean educational system that is its ultimately satirical focus, the show demonstrates as much sympathy and understanding for its villains and buffoons as it does for their tortured victims.

I can’t imagine any American show combining straight-up melodrama and biting satire in the same way. In Korea, the two meet up in surprisingly sweet and horribly funny combinations all the time.

Or maybe I just need to watch Big Little Lies.