olivia_sutton: (Don't Blink)
The DVD is a filmed version of the Royal Shakespeare Company's production of Hamlet, starring David Tennant as Hamlet, and Sir Patrick Stewart as Claudius -- and it's brilliant!  Instead of merely filming the production straight-on, this is an actual film - shot on location at an old abandoned seminary (according to the behind-the-scenes feature).  A few scenes do look like an older college building, rather than a castle - but for the most part the location really works.

The main location in the film, the court at Elsinore, has a jet black shiny floor that would make an Art Deco set designer from RKO Pictures proud.  Seriously, I thought this was a set when I watched the film, though a brilliantly designed one, for a play about deception and secrets.  That the basic space really existed is amazing!

Anyway, David Tennant is so brilliant in this -- and I thought he was brill in Doctor Who.  He has a wonderful manic energy -- but, because this is film, and shot as film - not a mere theatre archive piece, he also has the ability to go very quiet and intense (such as in the famous "To Be or Not To Be" speech).  Tennant also brings to Prince Hamlet the impression that he's really quite clever and crafty - he's faking being insane while trying to decide what to do with the information provided by his Dad's ghost.  OK, so maybe not totally sane -- but Hamlet doesn't come off at the whiny wimp he sometimes can.

Sir Patrick Stewart, meanwhile, is also brilliant as Claudius.  You can see how he manipulates everyone around him - Gertrude, and Laertes, especially.  But even courtiers like Rosencrantz and Guildenstern jump to do Claudius' will, immediately.

Both Gertrude and Ophelia were brilliantly played.  Gertrude is especially good in the "closet" (or bedroom) scene with Hamlet.  And Tennant is scary good in that - especially when he breaks the mirror!!!  The actress playing Ophelia does a great job with her mad scene, though it's a thankless role.

The only one I didn't like in the play was Polonius - whom I found annoying.  Now maybe he's supposed to be annoying, but his quoting of quaint proverbs sounds actually cliched, and he underplays giving the lines too! (Eg bits like giving his son the advice "neither a borrower or a lender be" when sending his son off to college or wherever Laertes is going at the start of the play).

I loved the use of highly polished surfaces throughout the play, such as the floor in the court, and also the mirrors.  The cracked mirror in Gertrude's room seems to symbolise Hamlet's cracking soul.  Brilliantly realised that!

The use of cctv footage (breaking to a view thru' a camera) I found less successful - it was distracting, and I even wondered if there was a fault in my DVD at first (like it was going to an alt-angle view or something for no reason).  According to the "Behind the Scenes" documentary on the DVD - this is meant to suggest the lack of privacy and the "all-knowing, all-watching" state that prevails at Elsinore.  It didn't quite work for me.

But I do highly recommend this - Tennant is brilliant, Stewart is brilliant, the rest of the cast is fantastic, the film is quite, quite good.

Running time was at least three and a half hours, though.  I watched it last night, and man - it did feel a bit long. But still well worth it.  There are two special features and a commentary.  There's a nice behind-the-scenes feature, which runs a bit over half-an-hour, and there's a quick advert for careers in the RSC (Royal Shakespeare Company), that's actually pretty cool.  Haven't listened to the commentary yet.

Recommendation:  See it!
Rating:  5 of 5 Stars!
olivia_sutton: (Star Trek)

Marvelous music vid to an instrumental track -- and a reminder that Star Trek - (ToS) really did know how to do hurt/comfort!  Bonus pts for using two of my favorite McCoy episodes in the same vid:  "The Empath" and "For the World is Hollow and I have Touched the Sky".

YouTube - Spock/McCoy Video - Unlucky
olivia_sutton: (Default)

A brillian music vid -- with a lot of story behind it (and no, I didn't make this - I just found it).  The music is "Banned from Argo", the original edition performed by Leslie Fish.  Leslie Fish practically invented filking (the folk songs of SF and Media fandom, especially for Fish for Star Trek) - along with Julia Ecklar, another brilliant filker.  "Banned from Argo" is a humorous song, gently poking fun at Star Trek (classic).   This vid, tho' a little on the risque side (as is the song) has brilliant editing, and is just plain fun.  It's Torchwood - so it includes a bit of Jack/Ianto, Jack/everyone and anyone - but not too much.  Scenes are from Torchwood series 1 and Doctor Who series 1.  Enjoy!


YouTube - Torchwood - Banned from Argo (fanvid)
olivia_sutton: (TomBoy)

DVD Review and Comments on Star Trek (the Original Series) Fully Remastered Edition

Technical Aspects:  Season One - 10 discs, 29 episodes, 3 per disc

Special Features:  Many, including preview trailers of all episodes.

 

My first comment is WOW -- oh, wow -- Star Trek has never looked so good!  The original series must have been filmed in Technicolor because it looks absolutely fantastic!  The bright primary colors of the uniforms really, really pop, especially the blues and reds.  But consistently, every frame of every first season story looks good.  The restoration work going into the set must have been immense - and it looks better than even The Man from UNCLE (which had some flaws and artifacts).

If only all DVDs, especially TV DVDs had such excellent restoration.  The Technicolor look is worthy of  the Errol Flynn and Olivia deHaviland's The Adventures of Robin Hood, Gene Kelly's Singin' in the Rain, or Judy Garland's The Wizard of Oz.  Which just goes to show how truly beautiful Technicolor really was -- especially when properly restored.  The other technical notion is that Star Trek, though filmed and filmed in Technicolor at that, was filmed in 4:3 ratio - the only ratio available at the time, especially for TV (If you watch the fully restored films mentioned above you'll note they also are properly 4:3 ratio - not widescreen.)

I did have a technical problem with my set -- discs 3 and 4 did not play properly.  "Miri" skipped horribly, as did the opening CBS logo and episode 1 of  "The Menagerie".  I didn't check Episode 2 of  "The Menagerie", because by then I knew I'd have to exchange the discs.  I called Amazon (from whom I purchased the entire 3-Season set) and found I could not simply return the bad discs.  They wouldn't even accept exchanging Season 1.  This is annoying.  I have found before, especially with DVD sets with extremely large pressings, that sometimes you just get bad discs.  The problem with exchanging an entire set is that you don't want to exchange 1:1 and take the chance that different discs are bad, if you follow me.  I've watched all of  Season 1 - and found no more errors, so when my replacement arrives I should be able to take discs 3 and 4 out of it, put them in my original set and send back the replacement.  And I'll only have six episodes to check instead of  29.

First season of Star Trek is a bit uneven - I missed Ensign Chekhov greatly, and in some episodes major characters are completely missing (chiefly Scotty and Dr. McCoy, tho' Sulu also disappears occasionally, as does Nurse Christine Chapel).  However, there are some classic episodes as well.  "The Naked Time", "Dagger of  the Mind", "Shore Leave", "Tomorrow is Yesterday", "Speed Seed", "This Side of Paradise", "The Devil in the Dark", "Errand of  Mercy", "The City of the Edge of Forever", and "Operation - Annihilate!" are all first season episodes.  Of these, certainly, "Devil in the Dark" and "The City on the Edge of Forever" were personal favorites of mine.

But with the release of the new Star Trek movie (which I absolutely loved!) and now my taking the time to re-watch classic Trek, well, in the words of Gary at Mediawest during the Trek movie panel - "Isn't it great to be a Star Trek fan again?"  This is something that has happened over and over with Star Trek.  After all, the original series did not do that well - it never got good ratings and was canceled after a mere three seasons.  It was the action of the fans - especially fans who organized clubs and conventions (Shout out to Bjo Trimble who created the Star Trek Welcommittee) and the female fans who kept Star Trek alive in fan fiction that not only kept the show alive (Star Trek Lives! - Great book, not only for fans of Star Trek but for anyone interested in cultural/media fan history) - but made the subsequent series and movies possible.

--Olivia
 

olivia_sutton: (Default)
OK -- not as good as Greenpear's UFO-inspired DW credits (I missed having *credits* for one thing), but it still has some very good editing to the beat of the music.  This does really make my head hurt, tho'.  It's hard to think of two shows with more disparent tones than UFO and Star Trek.  (UFO is quite dark and depressing and the heros never win.  Star Trek, as everyone knows, is the opposite -- Kirk & Co. always win.  In fact, Kirk's infamous as the Starfleet Captian who doesn't believe in no-win scenarios.)  But the vid is worth checking out.  --Olivia 


YouTube - Star Trek UFO

March 2019

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