Joss and his slow beginnings, part II
Mar. 20th, 2009 10:21 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
And tonight we learn, *finally*, that Dollhouse really *is* a Whedon show. The whole Whedon package. Plot twists, layers, challenging the audience's expectations, and raising hard questions about just about everything.
I still have no idea why it took five episodes of some remarkably dull televsion to get here. But whatever. We have ourselves a show.
Re: hous
Date: 2009-03-22 02:15 am (UTC)The other thing that was fabulous in every way possible was the Paul/internet mogul conversation, and the way it all played off the last scene.
Oh, hell yes. Especially since it was pre-undercut with Paul's colleague claiming he'd gladly pay to sleep with Caroline - and these are supposed to be the good guys?
I have a particular animus to shows that play to our sense of moral superiority. LOOK! Exploitation!! BAD! Am so very happy to see that as usual Joss is taking those audience predilections and yanking on them very hard.
Do you follow Big Love? So far, even given this episode, I'd say it's been doing what Joss thinks he's doing for the last three years... a lot more subtly, too.
Re: hous
Date: 2009-03-22 02:45 am (UTC)I don't know Big Love. What is it?
Re: hous
Date: 2009-03-22 11:20 pm (UTC)It's an HBO series currently wrapping up its third season, starring Bill Paxton, Chloe Sevigny, Harry Dean Stanton, and a bunch of others. It's... kind of difficult to sum it up and make it sound as awesome as it is, but it's essentially a drama series about a mormon family in Utah. A polygamous family, one guy and his three wives, just trying to live a normal life in modern-day USA with the man bringing home the money and the wives serving him. And apart from being a rather excellent drama, it's also one of the subtlest and creepiest examinations of power structures, patriarchy, free will and all that jazz I've ever seen on TV; every episode basically makes me need to take a shower. And they're constantly playing off the audience's preconceptions, our wish to be tolerant towards others while at the same time telling ourselves that they're completely different and we're not anything like that...
Re: hous
Date: 2009-03-24 04:07 am (UTC)