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TV Review - Justified: City Primeval
July 24, 2023
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I was a little late getting into Justified, and my only excuse is that there was a lot of other good TV on at the time. Also, it’s a little darker and grittier than my normal fare. Of course, eventually I picked up the blu-ray box set (with the flask). It took me a few years to finish the series, and I confess I didn’t always give it my undivided attention, but I really liked what I saw.

Someday I’ll watch it again.

When I heard that Timothy Olyphant was returning to the character for a Justified revival, I thought it was a joke. When I heard it was real but that Nick Searcy wasn’t invited, I was disappointed. But still intrigued. Sure, the title Justified: City Primeval sounds kinda corny, but it is taken from one of Elmore Leonard’s non-Raylan novels sans the subtitle, High Noon in Detroit.

The first two episodes of City Primeval dropped last week.

It opens, much like the original series, in Florida with Raylan in conflict at an outdoor cafe. This time, however, he’s not going to shoot anyone, justified or not, because it’s his teenage daughter Willa (Vivian Olyphant) sitting beside him. She’s been kicked out of another school and he’s supposed to deliver her to a camp for troubled teens. 

Don’t worry. Raylan still gets to be cool.

While on the road a couple of Detroit thugs try to carjack them, rear-ending Raylan’s sedan enough to pop the trunk. They take their eyes off the US Marshal long enough for him to pull a loaded shotgun from within, and that takes care of that. Except Willa misses her boat, and the two of them have to go to Detroit for Raylan to testify. 

Once again, our favorite fish is out of water.

The morning of the trial someone firebombs the judge’s (Keith David) car. Raylan and Willa end up on his bad side in the courtroom, but later the judge requests that Raylan investigate his attempted murder. In a clever twist, the would-be assassin is caught relatively quickly (thanks to some help from a local militia, natch), but the judge gets himself killed by someone else later that night. The Marshals can’t know that, though, so Raylan and Willa are further detained and we are entertained. 

“This is how we do it in Detroit.”

So far audience reactions are mixed. Those who take the time to write reviews, of course, are the superfans who have seen the original series many times and bound to fixate on any little flaw. Critics have been more generous, for whatever that’s worth. With the coming drought of new material, the studios need every new thing to be the best thing ever and the critics are in their back pocket. Is it a perfect continuation of Raylan’s story? Heck if I know. But I was entertained enough by the first episode to anticipate the second. 

What I like:

Raylan is still effortlessly cool, bemused, and wrathful as the situation requires. In the Oklahoma Wildman (Boyd Holbrook) he seems to have a worthy antagonist, even if no one will ever be able to compete with Walton Goggins’s Boyd Crowder. Setting the show in Michigan is fun for me, and I’ve spent enough time in and around Detroit to say everything feels right. Throw in a reference to Faygo pop and it’ll be perfect.

What I don’t like:

Casting Olyphant’s real-life daughter makes sense on paper. Obviously, she’s his little girl and looks the part, and they play off each other well. The kid’s not a bad actress, either. Unfortunately, her babydoll voice is difficult to understand. I don’t think I’ve heard anyone sound like her outside of a 1930’s film. So far there’s been nothing overtly political, but I’m afraid there are some subtle hints that things will take a turn. And the content is more adult than the earlier show. 

Still, when there’s so little that’s new and worth my time, I think I’ll keep watching until given a good reason to stop. 

 

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Girl-Power Isn't the Problem: Stop Treating Movies Like TV Pilots

Last weekend I was able to sneak off the theater for a screening of From the World of John Wick: Ballerina. Did I feel silly, telling the high school girl at the ticket counter, “One for Ballerina, and a small drink”? Well, not in the moment. 

I probably drank a liter of cherry vanilla Coke Zero, and that didn’t feel so great.

Plenty of box office analysts and Hollywood types are wracking their brains, trying to figure out why movies like Furiosa and Ballerina aren’t drawing huge crowds. Mad Max and John Wick are popular franchises, but apparently telling the stories of the women in those worlds isn’t working. Even if the movies are pretty good.

I’ve seen both, and they’re pretty good.

Some are arguing that no one will go near a movie that looks like it’s feminist girl-bossing. Others counter that movies like Alien and Kill Bill are female-led action films that were successful. Now, I’m not going to say that Ballerina is on par with those modern day classics. But I will say that, as a man watching the movie, it didn’t offend me. The movie never challenged me to confront any internalized misogyny. The small girl doesn’t take down John Wick in hand-to-hand combat.

Honestly, if you like franchise, whether you’re male or female, you should watch Ballerina.

In short, from a purely cinematic experience perspective, neither Furiosa nor Ballerina would be any better or worse with a male lead. Maybe that’s a hot take. But that’s mine, for whatever it’s worth. Well, okay, I wouldn’t watch a movie called Ballerina if it stared a dude. Nevertheless, I think you get my point. Petite women warriors aside, the plots and action are exactly as expected.

So what’s the deal?

Well, what no one seems to have noticed is that Ripley and The Bride weren’t replacing anyone. As we were watching their movies for the first time, we weren’t thinking about other characters for whom we already had a preference. Movies are more like TV than TV right now, and replacement characters have always been a hard sell, regardless of gender. We all remember Sam and Diane. Who still talks about Sam and Rebecca (even though Kirstie Alley won an Emmy and a Golden Globe for the part)? I had to look up her name. 

No, they aren’t technically replacing them. It’s a spin-off, set in the same world.

Spin-offs tend to succeed when the characters are already well established (eg: Frasier). Furiosa and Ballerina are more like backdoor pilots, where new characters are dropped in for a single episode to sell us on the idea of a new show. This technique is very hit and miss on TV, and I can’t think of a single example of this working in a movie franchise. Film and television are very different mediums, and should be treated as such.

Still, if it doesn’t work on TV, it’s probably not gonna work at the movies. Not where new characters and spin-offs are concerned. 

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Going Back to 1995

Maybe I’m just getting old, but it doesn’t feel like we had the thriving and distinct pop culture of past generations. Has there been a look or stye, or feeling, that defines this moment? Everything seems to have stagnated for the last twenty years. And it’s not as if I don’t pay attention. 

It’s making me nostalgic. 

Consequently, for the rest of the year, I’m prioritizing movies from 1995, the year I was twelve. At that time, my family didn’t really go to the theater, and when we did rent VHS tapes, more often than it is was older Disney movies or entirely forgettable Christian titles. Now that I’ve grown tired of trying to keep up with new releases, not there’s much worth watching anyway, it feels like a good time to catch up on those 30 year old movies that have become ingrained in what’s left of our pop culture.

So over on Criticless, I made a list.

Some of these are movies I’ve seen before, but not in a long time. Others will be first time watches for me. There’s really no rhyme or reason to what I put on my list. It’s just movies that either interest me, or are currently in my collection, sadly unwatched. As things become available on streaming, I may add to the list. And if I don’t get to everything before the end of the year, no big deal.

Hopefully, they aren’t going anywhere. 

I’ll be posting some reviews and analysis as I go, so be sure to follow me here. 

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Ironheart and Superman: A Failure to Launch

Yesterday two trailers were released for upcoming superhero projects. First, we had Marvel's Ironheart, which Disney has been sitting on for years at this point. Apparently it follows Riri Williams (Dominique Thorne), a young black woman at MIT who is (was?) intended to take over for Tony Stark as Ironwhathaveyou. If you haven't seen the trailer yet, take a look.

I stopped paying too much attention to the MCU a long time ago, but apparently Riri was introduced in Wakanda Forever, and her fans have been clamoring for a standalone show ever since (/sarcasm). Watching the trailer, I can't help but notice how many times we're told she's smart and capable. Any suggestion that she can't do something is shot down immediately. We're supposed to believe that The System is against is her because she's poor, I guess, and doesn't have Tony Stark's advantages.

Remember Tony Stark? Sure, he was rich. But he was also a self-absorbed man-child who found himself in a cave in Afghanistan who had to engineer his own escape with scrap parts. Tony Stark, who had to learn about self-sacrifice and the consequences of his actions. Robert Downey Jr. make us like the guy, with his easy charm, even though we wanted to see him grow up. There was room for a character arc. No offence to Dominique, but she doesn't have the charm, and her character clearly has nowhere to go.

A few hours later, Warner Bros./DC released the trailer for James Gunn's Superman, the latest reboot of the iconic superhero. We've been waiting for a good Superman for a long time. Something to reunite the fans, the casually interested, and possibly the entire country. And to be honest, I don't think this is gonna do it. Take a look.

Before I go any further, I want to spin my theory on the interview scene, which is a little different from what I'm hearing from most anyone else. Notice how David Corenswet pitches his voice really high when he says, "Sure!" At this point in the movie, I don't think Lois (Rachel Brasnahan) knows that Clark is Superman, and thinks he's just playacting. But when Clark drops his voice, he's showing his cards a little bit. Then, when he completely loses his cool, he's just acting how Lois thinks Superman would respond. In context (the scene is reportedly ten minutes long!), it might be interesting. Out of context, in a trailer, it's a stupid decision.

Throughout the entire trailer we see Superman smacked around, knocked out, screaming out in self-defense, and made fun of for having a dog. There are some super-heroics, to be sure, but they're mitigated by the overwhelming amount of thrashing he takes. Unlike Riri, I guess he's got some room for growth. But it doesn't inspire me to see the movie. Some are defending this approach, suggesting that someone with such a clear cut understanding of right and wrong would be frustrated and confused by our complex, political climate. And I agree. But his moral compass and grace towards an unfair world should have been set before leaving Smallville and going out into the world.

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