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Re: Now Watching on TV

Posted: 02 Feb 2020, 13:31
by Tom Waits For No One
pcqgod wrote:
Tom Waits For No One wrote:
Powehi wrote:

Bing-watched it last week. Absolutely fantastic show - one of the best of last year.


What do you think happened to the guy that squirted 'lubricant' over himself before slipping down the drain?
Series 2?


Google "Lube Guy Explained" if you want an answer. I think it's funnier if he is not explained at all.


Ah! Thanks for that.

Re: Now Watching on TV

Posted: 05 Feb 2020, 11:11
by Geezee
Copehead wrote:
ever/never wrote:Everyone (apart from us) seems to be talking about this:

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after my cousin badgered me for the umpteenth time to watch it, I finally saw the very first episode. It looks interesting (I mean that genuinely). Ted Danson is great in everything, isn't he? The only thing that bugged me, strangely, is the high production values - you almost long for a bad shot, or a fluffed line. Every scene looks like it cost millions. Squeaky clean, flashy. Anyway I'm looking forward to watching the rest of the first series.


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Watched all 3 series back to back and just getting to the end of series 3.

A great comedy with plenty of real laugh out loud moments rather than just smiles.

Danson is great, they all are.

Life, death, philosophy, morality, ethics, heaven, hell and a forking shirt load of great writing and high production values.

It has occasional poor episodes, what great comedy doesn't, mainly the ones with too many demons in especially Trevor, but Mindy Sinclair is one of the most inspired bit part comedy characters ever, with Derek a tiny step behind - There are wind chimes where my ding dong should be; we'll work with that. And what about Donkey Doug and Pill Boy?

I thought the first few episodes were a little slow but when it blossomed it really blossomed.

Recommended.


The Good Place really deserves its own thread, but I guess this will have to do. We binge-watched the final episodes now and it does end on a high note (pardon the pun). Although I will say, hopefully without sounding too much like an OK boomer, that I'm finding it less and less enjoyable to binge-watch anything these days - it really nulls the senses and it feels like you are just ploughing through to the end. But The Good Place really is up there with the great American TV series, and I'm now just gearing up to watch the final episodes of Bojack Horseman which are the two best things I've seen in many years. Good Place is at times overwhelming - I felt lost and disconnected sometimes because it jumps so much from one setting to another - but it's a series I'd happily watch again to get more of that context. Ultimately, perhaps Eleanor's final story line feels a bit on the cheap side, over how she finds peace with herself (which happens both startlingly quickly but also feels a bit generic - and at least I was convinced that there was no way she had done enough to feel at peace so assumed she was going to turn back one more time...but she then walks through and that's it). I was hoping perhaps for a bit more wisdom, which is probably a bit too much to ask for from a sitcom.

Re: Now Watching on TV

Posted: 05 Feb 2020, 14:46
by `
Don't F**k with Cats - Despite the silly title, the latest in Netflix' coveyor belt of fascinatingly moreish true crime docs. After one especially jaw dropping revelation around halfway through ep 1 I had to check online to make sure the whole thing wasn't some elaborate hoax.

Re: Now Watching on TV

Posted: 05 Feb 2020, 14:48
by `
Tom Waits For No One wrote:
pcqgod wrote:
Tom Waits For No One wrote:
What do you think happened to the guy that squirted 'lubricant' over himself before slipping down the drain?
Series 2?


Google "Lube Guy Explained" if you want an answer. I think it's funnier if he is not explained at all.


Ah! Thanks for that.


Sorry for the late reply, my computer has been fucked up and only just come back from Apple - apparently repaired but with the type skipping all over the place as it did before it went in for servicing

Re: Now Watching on TV

Posted: 07 Feb 2020, 11:26
by copehead
On the go at the moment

Watchmen: covered elsewhere

The Witcher - OK you have to have played the video games I'd imagine as no one has probably read the books, jumps around across diffrent time lines, at least 4 I think, without telling you, that is surely just going to confuse people coming to it fresh.
The Witcher is perfectly cast and the back story for Yennifer was excellent. But in the end it all seems a bit incoherent because of all the jumping around in time, I am sure it will all tie up when he meets Ciri at the end of series one and series 2 will be more straight forward perhaps, who knows.

The Mandolorian; have only just started this, production values look good, background music, as with the Witcher, is atrocious.

Enjoyed the BBC Dracula - "Welcome to England Count Dracula, what kept you?" was the line of the year.

Also really enjoyed A Christmas Carol despite people hating it for making it darker, surely that was just going to the places that Dickens could only hint at.

Re: Now Watching on TV

Posted: 07 Feb 2020, 12:27
by `
Copehead wrote:On the go at the moment

Watchmen: covered elsewhere

The Witcher - OK you have to have played the video games I'd imagine as no one has probably read the books, jumps around across diffrent time lines, at least 4 I think, without telling you, that is surely just going to confuse people coming to it fresh.
The Witcher is perfectly cast and the back story for Yennifer was excellent. But in the end it all seems a bit incoherent because of all the jumping around in time, I am sure it will all tie up when he meets Ciri at the end of series one and series 2 will be more straight forward perhaps, who knows.

The Mandolorian; have only just started this, production values look good, background music, as with the Witcher, is atrocious.

Enjoyed the BBC Dracula - "Welcome to England Count Dracula, what kept you?" was the line of the year.

Also really enjoyed A Christmas Carol despite people hating it for making it darker, surely that was just going to the places that Dickens could only hint at.



Enjoyed the Witcher immensely as it had its tongue planted firmly in its cheek a la Xena

Best line (of many) in Dracula for me was "I may be undead, but I'm not unreasonable". Lovely tip of the hat to inside number 9 onboard the ship during episode 2

Re: Now Watching on TV

Posted: 07 Feb 2020, 13:38
by The Prof
I've just finished this on NowTV. It was •OK•

Some of the characters were unbelievable and the things they did ridiculous but it passed a few hours

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Re: Now Watching on TV

Posted: 11 Feb 2020, 23:39
by The Prof
It could have been set in Berlin in 1946, but it’s set in Baghdad in 2004. A pretty good crime drama set against the backdrop of chaos and occupation in Iraq.

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Re: Now Watching on TV

Posted: 18 Feb 2020, 23:01
by Tomahawk Kid
A latecomer to this show but I'm binge watching Inside No 9 on BBC iPlayer at the moment. I'm up to series 4 now. Very clever, very dark, and sometimes very funny. At 30 minutes an episode just right. A very talented pair are Reece Shearsmith and Steve Pemberton.

Re: Now Watching on TV

Posted: 19 Feb 2020, 09:43
by `
Tomahawk Kid wrote:A latecomer to this show but I'm binge watching Inside No 9 on BBC iPlayer at the moment. I'm up to series 4 now. Very clever, very dark, and sometimes very funny. At 30 minutes an episode just right. A very talented pair are Reece Shearsmith and Steve Pemberton.


Wonderful series - beautifully written, directed and acted. The level of care extends right down to the choice of equipment used (the ~Grampus one at the start of series 3 was all shot on 1970s video cameras).

Despite featuring just one joke and zero horror tropes, Monday night's Love's Great Adventure was one of the best they've done.

Re: Now Watching on TV

Posted: 19 Feb 2020, 19:20
by Tomahawk Kid
Powehi wrote:
Tomahawk Kid wrote:A latecomer to this show but I'm binge watching Inside No 9 on BBC iPlayer at the moment. I'm up to series 4 now. Very clever, very dark, and sometimes very funny. At 30 minutes an episode just right. A very talented pair are Reece Shearsmith and Steve Pemberton.


Wonderful series - beautifully written, directed and acted. The level of care extends right down to the choice of equipment used (the ~Grampus one at the start of series 3 was all shot on 1970s video cameras).

Despite featuring just one joke and zero horror tropes, Monday night's Love's Great Adventure was one of the best they've done.



I shall look forward to watching that when I've caught up. My personal favourite at the moment was from the first series (I think) , the one where they are robbing Denis Lawson's house, and no words are spoken. Genius.

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Re: Now Watching on TV

Posted: 20 Feb 2020, 08:54
by Rorschach
I haven't seen a thread about it so I'll mention here I've just started watching Sex Education.

I love it. It's reeeeeeally funny but it doesn't spare the details: the bit in the abortion clinic, while not graphic, does not treat the subject lightly.
A lot of the peripheral characters are often two-dimensional, but the central characters (and performances) are terrific.

My school was never like that ...

Re: Now Watching on TV

Posted: 20 Feb 2020, 09:00
by Rorschach
Geezee wrote:Good Place is at times overwhelming - I felt lost and disconnected sometimes because it jumps so much from one setting to another - but it's a series I'd happily watch again to get more of that context. Ultimately, perhaps Eleanor's final story line feels a bit on the cheap side, over how she finds peace with herself (which happens both startlingly quickly but also feels a bit generic - and at least I was convinced that there was no way she had done enough to feel at peace so assumed she was going to turn back one more time...but she then walks through and that's it). I was hoping perhaps for a bit more wisdom, which is probably a bit too much to ask for from a sitcom.



Agreed.
I loved the whole thing for all the reasons already mentioned but found the last batch of episodes a bit slow and directionless. Unfortunately, I felt that the show probably had to go on for at least another thousand years before I could really believe that they could have got sick of the afterlife.

Re: Now Watching on TV

Posted: 20 Feb 2020, 11:52
by Samoan
Psychos, a 6 part drama set in a Glasgow hospital psychiatric ward, all the more poignant as one of the junior doctors is themselves combating bi-polar illness.

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The strong cast includes Douglas Henshall, Neve McIntosh, Indira Varma, Lynsey Baxter and Alastair Mackenzie plus a final episode appearance starring Peter Capaldi.
I found it very reminiscent of my psych. ward secondment when I was a student and extremely realistic.

Re: Now Watching on TV

Posted: 27 Mar 2020, 18:12
by Samoan
"That bin wants emptying - I'm downwind of yesterday's cabbage"



Re: Now Watching on TV

Posted: 05 Apr 2020, 16:38
by ChrisB
Image

It's back ! It's brilliant !

Re: Now Watching on TV

Posted: 19 Apr 2020, 23:46
by The Prof
slightbreeze wrote:Image

It's back ! It's brilliant !



Just got into this and having a binge.

30 Episodes. 20 in.

Great stuff.

Re: Now Watching on TV

Posted: 26 May 2020, 13:30
by Samoan
Andrew Marr's History of Modern Britain (2007) is currently being aired again on BBC4. Last night's episode, Paradise Lost brought back some memories of my brother and I doing our homework by candlelight although I don't think anything very constructive was achieved as I was more interested in dipping my fingers into the warm wax than anything else. My dad had some new Kenyan Asian patients and some of the women and young girls had had their gold earrings stolen by being ripped down and out of their ear lobes, tearing them very badly, just before they boarded the planes out to the UK.

Re: Now Watching on TV

Posted: 08 Jun 2020, 10:56
by Jimbly
Season 4 of The Good Fight. Only 7 episodes as they cut the season short due to Covid.

Top drawer as usual.

Re: Now Watching on TV

Posted: 17 Jun 2020, 21:45
by Diamond Dog
Ploughed through five of this six part docuseries regarding the fraud/scam of the McDonalds Monopoly game ,that ran from 1989-2001. Amazing story which really does defy belief. Last one to watch tomorrow.

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Take a look. It's on Sky Channel 114 at present.