Streams 2022 Dec Jan Feb Mar

Series

Severance
  • Severance
    This is just awesome. Every element of this show has been carefully crafted down to the last detail. The cast are fantastic, the set pieces and cinematography terrific, and the tone is perfectly creepy and mysterious.
  • It’s Always Sunny In Philadelphia (Season 15)
    It is unbelievable how a show fifteen seasons deep can be this good. The break certainly did a lot of good. The last four or five seasons, while still enjoyable, saw the gang become caricatures of themselves. This season not only fixed that, but added whole new layers of social commentary delivered with such subtlety that it wasn’t until the closing credits of the final episode that I realised the entirety of what they were getting at. No other show can be this hilariously dumb and intelligent simultaneously, and the cast are better than ever. I can not wait for more.

Kaitlin Olson is Always Sunny’s MVP
  • How To With John Wilson (Season 2)
    HTWJW is brilliant. You have never seen anything like it before. Season one was fantastic, and the second run doesn’t let up. I want more. The less you know about it going in, the better.
  • Ozark (Season 4 Part 1)
    This show has been quite the adventure. The first season was great, but felt a lot like “what if Breaking Bad, but in Missouri”, and when that season ended with its cliff-hanger my eyes rolled back like the cherries on an Ozark poker machine. But I pressed on, and it soon became more than that and carved out a place of its own. Solidly engaging and shocking (Wyatt!).
  • On Cinema Oscer Special 2022
    Somehow, Tim and Gregg continue to lift these specials to even greater heights of absurdity. This year’s instalment might be in my top three (Gregg’s carbon monoxide Joker finale is still top of the pile).
  • Euphoria (Season 2)
    Season one of this had me hooked. The cinematography was phenomenal, and the plotlines shocking, but used in service of the plot. Season two just went right off the rails. There was no cohesive story, plenty of dead end plot lines and no clear season arc. The whole thing was a mess. Lexi’s play was hilarious in it’s ridiculousness (also, she’s the only likeable character in the entire show so it was good to see more of her), but otherwise the season was pretty empty. Not sure I’ll press on from this point.
  • The Book of Boba Fett
    Four really bad episodes of a Boba Fett show, two great Mandalorian episodes, and one final episode blending a bunch of fan service together like a Star Wars smoothie. Temuera is stiff, the story is all over the place, the new characters don’t seem to fit (spy kids?). Mando was the best thing to come from the Star Wars brand in a very long time. This was a reminder that most of the time, it’s rubbish.
  • MacGruber (Series)
    Loved it. Puerile and dumb, just as expected. Forte, Wiig and Phillippe are fantastic as ever. And Laurence Fishburne turned down another Matrix for this – proving that he’s far smarter than the rest of the Matrix cast.
  • Yellowjackets
    File this one under “shows I wouldn’t have watched if Omicron hadn’t kept me inside”. That said, it was an enjoyable surprise carried mostly by the cast and a nineties soundtrack rather than the story. Christina Ricci is great.
  • Murderville
    Simple concept, executed successfully for the most part. A couple of guests don’t hit the mark but the rest brought back memories of the brilliant Thank God You’re Here.
  • The Afterparty
    Clever idea from Lord and Miller. Essentially, an evening’s events are recounted by a different character each episode in an attempt to solve a murder. In a similar vein, the visual style changes – which is really clever – but also got frustrating at times as it meant the tone of the show was also all over the place.
Absolutely brilliant

Movies

  • The Humans
    Unsettling, creepy, great cast. A little arty. The less you know going in, the better.
  • Don’t Look Up
    Ugh. If you’re after a movie that thinks it’s far smarter than it actually is, this one’s for you. There is absolutely no subtlety to any of it and so the gags just don’t land. It’s as though the cast are constantly winking at camera saying “GET IT? GET IT?” and it’s incredibly tiresome, and the ending is obvious before the first act is over. The all-star cast only make things worse. Leo and J Law are poorly cast. They only demonstrate that their acting chops fall apart when a comedic performance is required and their presence feeds into the condescending, holier-than-thou tone of the entire movie. Blanchett (being unrecognisable) and Jonah Hill (a comedic performer) are the exceptions, and deliver the most memorable moments. It’s unfortunate, because the underlying message is important and the skeleton of the concept is clever. There’s just no meat on the bones. Satire is best when the point is realised in the viewers’ head, not yelled at them through a megaphone.
    Don’t Look Up? More like Don’t Bother. Watch Idiocracy again instead.
  • Spider-Man: No Way Home
    A big fun spectacle. If someone had pitched this idea six years ago they’d have been ridiculed, but somehow it works. Mind you, I think it’s the kind of thing which can only work once. Spider-Man is possibly the only Marvel fare I have time and patience for, given the tone is right (light, breezy, a bit silly but not overly so). But I’m not sure I have reason to continue beyond this. It wrapped up twenty years of the franchise all too well.
  • Finch
    A pleasant surprise. Hanks is Hanks. The robot’s character is surprisingly well written. Some really nice visuals. Just pleasant.
  • The Power of the Dog
    A well-paced western with an ending that hits you out of nowhere. This looked fantastic, and Cumberbatch didn’t piss me off – which is quite an achievement.
  • No Time to Die
    I’m not much a fan of Bond. I find them incredibly dated and corny. That said, Spectre was a fantastic movie (mostly because it was the least Bond-like instalment I’ve seen). I gave up on the penultimate instalment after twenty minutes, but decided to watch NTTD given it was Craig’s last performance in the role. The ending was great, the action sequences were clever and tight. Ana de Armas was a great addition, but featured way too briefly.
    But in true Bond style, the bad guys were cartoonish and a lot of dialogue was corny. Rami Malek is poorly cast. For the big bad dude of the movie, he had absolutely zero presence.
  • The Matrix Resurrections
    Holy shit. I thought the second and third instalments were bad, but this lured me in with rumours that they’d gone all meta with the plot. I was intrigued, but unfortunately it was done so poorly that it took me five sessions to get through. Terrible. Just terrible.
  • A Quiet Place Part II
    Solid sequel. Nothing to get excited over but some decent thrills.

Streams 2021 Sep Oct Nov

Series

  • Succession (Season 3)
    This show just gets better and better. It is now up there with Better Call Saul as the only series to which I salivate as I await new episodes (I’m not the only one). The cast is just phenomenal, as is the writing. And I have no idea where it will go next.
  • Squid Game
    This was terrific. Mind you, the style and themes do all the heavy lifting. Without the distinctive visuals, intense subject matter and class war themes, you might be left thinking more about that dead end plot line with the cop (whose phone battery seems to last days), an organ harvesting storyline which went nowhere, and the overly drawn out nature of the story (that last episode in particular was a drag). Still, a highlight of the year despite these pet peeves.
  • Dexter: New Blood
    The original run of this show had the worst final season and final episode of any show, ever. Somehow, I was still up for more eight years later. Thankfully, it’s a return to form (thus far anyway. At time of writing there’s still four episodes remaining). Worth a look for fans of the series before it turned bad.
  • Ted Lasso
    What a great first season of a show, followed by a clusterfuck of a second to undo all the good vibes of the first. Season one is a great mix of drama, comedy and warmth. Season two was hot garbage. Much like Mythic Quest it doesn’t seem to understand what was appealing about the show in the first place (keep it light for a start), and overestimates my interest in the “world” of the show. I give zero fucks about B-characters. I don’t need to know more about them, or watch them go on LENGTHY side quests to find themselves. I sure as shit don’t need to know about the issues they had or continue to have with their father. It’s a simple light breezy show and the tone was set in season one. Keep it there. Suffice to say I won’t find out if they get back on track for season three because hit the ejection button on this rickety plane before I got to the end.
  • Foundation
    Well this sure was pretty. Some incredible and unique sci-fi visuals. Unfortunately that was about all it had for me. Perhaps my hopes were too high, but this was a chore to get through.
  • Curb Your Enthusiasm (Season 11)
    This season had a few weak moments, but Larry still makes me laugh. Will I continue to watch? Sure. Would I be sad if they stopped making it? Nope. Always Sunny on the other hand keeps me wanting more.
  • You (Season 3)
    Yes I watched this. Yes it is trash. Yes I knew it was trash going in.

Movies

  • Dune
    I’ve been waiting many many years for this one. When I heard Villeneuve was attached to direct, my anticipation only increased – and it did not disappoint. My first visit to the cinema in two years and it was well and truly worthy of the big screen.
  • The Father
    One of the best of the year. Very cleverly structured and perfectly executed. The less you know before hitting play, the better.
  • Free Guy
    Enjoyable enough but wouldn’t recommend. Plot wise, a bit like The Lego Movie meets The Truman Show with Ryan Reynolds doing his usual thing (which while fun, is really getting a little tired). Taika’s character shat me off too. But what really got to me was the godawful ending. The female lead is sold as a highly intelligent girl, yet somehow she is completely oblivious to her male friend overtly crushing on her for years. So, she’s not interested right? Or she became interested because he grew and changed? Nope. He does fuck all, goes to get a coffee and she suddenly notices all the creepy messages he left in the game for her. So when he returns with his coffee she’s *all over him*. What a steaming pile of Hollywood horse shit.
  • Jungle Cruise
    Does what it says on the label. Entertaining fun in the vein of Indiana Jones and The (Brendan Fraser) Mummy.
  • Nitram
    Fantastic performances and overall a very chilling film. My only gripe is that by the end I wasn’t entirely sure of the point of it all. Perhaps that it was all preventable? I guess that sense of unease might be the whole idea.

Docos

  • Woodstock 99
    Where the 90s died. Pretty alarming to watch now but they make the argument that a lot of what grunge and rap seeded in the early 90s mutated into an angry white male beast by the name of nu-metal. Somehow the messages within the lyrics were lost on a lot of people. I guess that same angry crowd is storming the US Capitol these days.
  • Watch The Sound
    This made for an interesting dive into different technologies, effects and concepts of music production within the last 40 years. Especially interesting given I was diving into some of these effects myself during lockdown.
  • Shirkers
    Really quirky and fascinating doco. I went in blind, which is best. You never quite know where it’s headed or what the point is, but come out of it feeling as though you’ve watched something unique.
  • Inside Central Station
    I love this stuff. In another lifetime I could see myself involved in infrastructure somehow. It was pretty eye-opening to see the amount of work that goes on behind the scenes to keep Sydney moving.
  • New York Super Airport
    Similar to above, a doco about infrastructure and engineering, and I lapped it up. It covers the impressive reconstruction of New York’s LaGuardia airport, completed whilst the airport remained functional.
  • Q: Into The Storm
    I’ve stayed out of the loop with the ins and outs of this cesspool. This HBO doco was pretty thorough and engaging. Really makes one reflect on where the balance sits between pros and cons of the internet.

Games

Walking a dystopian version of Vancouver in Backbone
  • Backbone
    I fired this up knowing little about it and found myself on the streets of a dystopian version of Vancouver (albeit not named as such – but the inspiration is clearly there right from the game map to the scenery). Beautiful artwork, engaging story. Good to see a story-driven adventure work so well on a console.
  • Mini Motorways
    Well this just consumed a lot of lockdown time. Addictive, fun, and frustrating. Sim-City meets Oilswell.

Heidecker Parodycast on OHL

“Science is amazing. Animals are interesting.”

This is genius. Last year he delivered the best stand up special I’d seen in a long time and today Jeremy Levick and Rajat Suresh join Tim Heidecker to parody “Gwyneth Paltrow for men” and “the valedictorian of summer school”, Joe Rogan.

That Fuddruckers backdrop is inspired.

Rogan is the Jimmy Fallon of podcasting, and every bit as cringe.

Streams 2020 Sep Oct Nov

The lighting in this sequence is fantastic and is a vital ingredient in heightening the tension

Movies

  • Borat Subsequent Moviefilm
    Not as funny as the first but certainly very clever. His daughter is the highlight.
  • I’m Thinking of Ending Things
    This was cleverly constructed as you’d expect of Kaufman. Plenty to deconstruct after the credits roll.
  • The Peanut Butter Falcon
    Such a pleasant movie. Nothing showy, but just all around feel-good, with some pretty scenery and a decent blues soundtrack.
  • The Squid and the Whale
    “Truly the filet of the neighbourhood”. Baumbach has a way of tackling unpleasant subject matter in a way that still leaves you feeling good. Those kids are messed up though. The young one especially, smearing his DNA everywhere.
  • Mandy
    Style over substance, and I was fine with that. It looked trippy as hell.
  • Rear Window
    I’ve been watching some classics lately. Some, like this, I had seen before many years ago. It was even better than I remembered. The suspense still holds up all these years later and it may be my favourite Hitchcock film (or perhaps second to Psycho). The lighting in the final sequence during the confrontation is fantastic.
  • Vertigo
    At the other end of the spectrum lies Vertigo. This is one I had never seen before and it regularly tops lists of best Hitchcock movies – but I honestly don’t know why, aside from some technical achievements. It’s got good moments and I can see how it could have been received well back in the day. It just doesn’t hold up. Underwhelming ending.
  • Rope
    The third Hitchcock movie I watched this quarter was another I’d never seen before. Rope is based on a play, and it certainly plays like one – and ties shots together to create the illusion of the movie being one single shot. Remarkable for the time.
  • Lawrence of Arabia
    This had been on my list for a long time but I’d always been intimidated by its runtime. I watched it in two sessions, using the intermission to break it up. I can see why it’s considered a classic. Cinematography is awesome and captures the sense of scale.
  • Palm Springs
    Disappointing. Started strong, but the laughs were too few and the substance too shallow to make up for it. I really just want another Hot Rod from The Lonely Island guys.
  • RoboCop
    This one had passed me by in its day but I had to check it out as a fan of Verhoeven’s Total Recall and Starship Troopers. I appreciate how it might have been fresh in its day, but it doesn’t hold up quite like the other two – aside from the in-world news desk and advertisements which were every bit as clever as ST’s newsreels.
  • Blow Up
    This was straight up weird. I could have done without seeing it.
Mandy

Series

  • An Evening with Tim Heidecker
    This was hilarious. It’s the freshest special I’ve seen in some time. I absolutely lost it several times. If you don’t “get” it then you’re really missing out.
  • Moonbase 8
    Heidecker, Armisen and Reilly – you can’t lose. This was hilarious and leant itself very well to the talents of each of the main cast members.
  • Aunty Donna’s Big Ol’ House of Fun
    Great to see some Aussie comedy getting some airtime. Some of this misses the mark, but it’s delivered with such confidence that you glide on by to the good stuff.
  • Raised By Wolves
    Christ. What a colossal waste of time. It only caused me to lament that Prometheus didn’t get a true sequel. While that film could have done with less Alien tie-in and more ancient engineer and android story, RBW could have been more grounded. It looked great, but lacked substance. And those kids were annoying as hell.
  • Fargo (Season 4)
    This season was grounded in the real world more than the last two seasons. Jessie Buckley is great, and the Wizard of Oz inspired episode was particularly impressive.
  • The Boys (Season 2)
    I started this season reluctantly, and was frustrated by the early episodes given that I hated just about every character, but by the time I reached the end I was on board again. Not must-see but makes for decent entertainment.
  • It’s Always Sunny In Philadelphia (Seasons 6-14)
    I managed to finish this in quarantine. Love this show, although the characters become caricatures of themselves as the seasons progress.

Docos

  • David Attenborough: A Life on Our Planet
    Ugh we’re fucked.
  • Outback Ringer
    Discovered by accident, but I loved this. Covers the excitement of being a ringer up in the top end, and followed along a series of real characters. I could see myself having a good time at the pubs they frequent too.
  • My Next Guest with David Letterman
    I miss cynical Dave. He’s become increasingly nice as this series has progressed and it’s less interesting as a result.
  • High Score
    Aside from the brief moment of seeing Ken and Roberta Williams, this series was underwhelming. I didn’t finish it.