Showing posts with label Justified. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Justified. Show all posts

Sunday, March 25, 2012

The Best Dramas on TV.

So for this ranking, I'm going to go with the show that is the best RIGHT NOW.. not the one that's had the strongest run or has influenced the most or any other measure.. but the one that I want to see the next episode the most. I think this allows to include some younger, exciting shows along with some more established ones, but find a balance between the two. So without further ado, here are the best dramas on TV, today.

First, as a disclaimer, I haven't watched "Downton Abbey" or "Treme".. although, knowing what I know about both of those shows it seems likely that they'd be included if I were to actually watch them. Oh well, so many shows, so little time.

Honorable mentions: Southland, Sherlock, NOT The Walking Dead


9. Luther

As a disclaimer, I have a serious mancrush on Idris Elba. The dude is a vastly underrated actor.. with tremendous range and a certain unhinged menace beneath a composed and suave veneer. Aka, awesome. If you haven't watched "The Wire", get the hell off of the internet and thank me in a month after you've completed the greatest American artistic achievement of the past decade.. and Mr. Elba probably gives the best performance of the whole damn thing. Possibly surprising to "Wire" fans: Mr. Elba is VERY British. Detective Chief Inspector John Luther is a very flawed hero. Quite possibly unhinged, self destructive, yet also very brilliant, he's the best at what he does while simultaneously being a giant pain in the ass to everyone he knows. By taking unorthodox (and sometimes illegal) approaches to his investigations, Luther is always unpredictable, and always a lot of fun to watch. Only 14 episodes total through 2 seasons guys, currently streaming on Netflix.. VERY easy to catch up.


8. Fringe

TV science fiction can be a tricky business. First, the lower budgets and time constraints of TV don't allow for the same effects work that have become the hallmark of cinematic sci fi. In addition, the need to fill 20+ hours of storytelling per season can lead to some cheesy and downright ridiculous storylines. From JJ Abrams and the brains behind 2009's "Star Trek" and in the vein of the X-Files, "Fringe" follows an FBI "Fringe Division" team tasked with using "fringe" and unorthodox scientific means to investigate strange and unexplained phenomena. After starting with a largely episodic "case of the week" approach, this show truly became something special when it became serialized and began continuing stories dealing with a parallel and competing dimension that continues to be fleshed out currently, in its 4th season. Featuring some strong characters and top-notch acting from John Noble (best known as Denethor, Steward of Gondor) in particular, "Fringe" continues to deliver consistently strong storylines and a solid hour of television. Season 4 is currently airing, on Fox.


7. Luck

Since I started working on this post, "Luck" has been cancelled due to a number of horse deaths on set. This untimely and all-to-early cancellation (production on Season 2 had just started) is very, very tragic, as "Luck" was well on its way towards climbing to the top of this list. From Producers David Milch (of "Deadwood" fame) and Michael Mann (of awesome movie fame), "Luck" stars Dustin Hoffman, Nick Nolte, Dennis Farina, Kevin Dunn and a number of familiar faces at and around the Santa Anita racetrack in Los Angeles. Characters include jockeys, trainers, owners, gamblers, would-be-tycoons facing revenge, track doctors and basically detail horse racing in a knowing and almost obsessive fashion. Combining Mann's visual flair with Milch's trademark knack for interweaving narratives and highly detailed characterization, "Luck" is consistently one of the best hours of TV in any given week.. and was well on its way to becoming a great television show. With the last episode of its first season airing tonight, we can only hope that Luck's one and only season ends as well as its been thus far. Farewell, Luck.. we hardly knew you.


6. Boardwalk Empire

Despite the fact that a decision made at the end of Season 2 may have ensured that I'll no longer be watching this series (I'll leave it at that).. through the first 2 seasons, Boardwalk Empire has used sky-high production values, strong acting and compelling gangland storylines to consistently deliver excellent TV. Set in Prohibition-era Atlantic City, Boardwalk Empire follows corrupt politico fictional Nucky Thompson and a number of true to life crimeland figures (Arnold Rothstein, Al Capone, Lucky Luciano, Meyer Lansky and others..) as they attempt to carve out crime empires through the now illegal liquor trade. Unevenness among some of the characters and storylines are why Boardwalk Empire finds itself all the way down at number 6.. because when it's at its best, it's one of the 2 or 3 best shows on TV. Michael Pitt alone is more than worth the time investment. Boardwalk Empire, season 3 will be back this fall.


5. Game of Thrones

"Game of Thrones" comes back for season 2 soon, which probably should be called "Clash of Kings", but that's neither here nor there. This series, from producers David Benioff and DB Weiss ambitiously attempts to bring George RR Martin's epic "A Song of Ice and Fire" novels to TV. This is no small task, as the novels feature dozens of characters spanning across multiple continents and a kingdom approximately the size of South America. The first season found itself mostly up to the task, admirably depicting the tale of dynastic rivalry, war, intrigue, sex, incest and struggle. The Stark family are lords of the North of Westeros, and through a number of occurrences, found themselves drawn into the greater struggles of the kingdom at large. Book 1 is wild enough in and of itself, but believe me when I say that you haven't seen anything yet, as books 2 and 3 seriously ramp up the action and dramatically widen the scope of the narrative. I, for one, am very interested to see how the show manages to translate an increasingly broad and varying narrative to the screen. Epic medieval action, great acting, tremendous characterization and a great narrative made Season 1 a pleasant surprise and huge hit for HBO.. Game of Thrones is must watch TV. Season 2 premieres on April 1.


4. Justified

We're in rarefied air now, folks. "Justified" consistently delivers compelling, addictive TV, and the final 2-3 episodes of every season are as explosive and watchable as anything else out there. "Justified", created by Graham Yost (the writer of "Speed" and creator of "Band of Brothers") and based on an Elmore Leonard character, follows US Marshall Raylan Givens, a modern day gunslinger, as he finds himself increasingly drawn into the crime world of Harlan County, Kentucky, where he grew up. Each season introduces a new villain or set of villains, and Raylan finds himself on a collision course where it becomes clear that it's either him or them. Timothy Olyphant (of "Deadwood" fame) is electric as Raylan Givens, and Walton Goggins (of "The Shield" fame) steals just about every scene he's in as Raylan's boyhood friend and would be Harlan County kingpin Boyd Crowder. Once this show decided, about 8 episodes in to season 1, that it was going to deliver serialized storytelling, it became a truly great show.. one that I eagerly await weekly, and miss when its gone. Season 3 is currently airing on FX.


3. Mad Men

Matthew Weiner, who whet his teeth on "The Sopranos", is the creative mastermind behind Mad Men, the cultural phenomenon that put AMC on the map as a place noted for its original programming. Mad Men is at once a stylized look at life in the 60's, a scathing portrayal of the paper facades supporting how we view ourselves, and a character study of a man who in many ways personifies America in the 60's. Featuring incredible, complex and layered writing, strong performances, and exquisite period costumes, sets and details, Mad Men features a small New York ad agency and details the massive societal changes underway in the 60's. Season 5 started March 25, and moves us further along in the 60's.. so needless to say, it's safe to assume that the times they are a-changin', and "Mad Men" will deal with them in turn. Mad Men features perhaps the most fascinating character on all of TV, and Jon Hamm turns in a top notch performance in depicting Don Draper, the impossibly complex creative genius at the center of "Mad Men". People have their varied reasons for watching "Mad Men".. it simmers rather than burns like many of the other entrants on this list, but there's no denying that it's an important piece of art. Currently airing on Sundays on AMC.


2. Homeland

"Homeland" is simply great. Tremendous even. From some of the creators of "24" and airing on Showtime, "Homeland" follows an obsessed CIA operative and an American prisoner of war recently returned from 8 years in captivity who may or may not have been turned into a mole for Al Qaeda. The show, through the writing and performances, becomes much more than this simple set-up, and is incredibly watchable. What raises Homeland to this upper echelon is some incredible performances.. Claire Danes, Damien Lewis (Major Dick Winters from Band of Brothers) and Mandy Patinkin (best known as Inigo Montoya) all absolutely crush their parts out of the park. I watched all 12 episodes of this one in approximately 20 hours.. it is simply that good. Danes, as an obsessed and damaged analyst, is highly unreliable and yet supremely competent, and Lewis' damaged, broken Sgt. Brody and his struggles to reintegrate to the world are simply magnetic. What separates this one from Mad Men and Justified are the levels of the performances.. Danes, Lewis, and Patinkin are all simply operating at a ridiculously high level.. this kind of work on TV is simply extremely rare. Once you start this one, you won't be able to stop. Season 2 premieres in Fall, 2012.


1. Breaking Bad

As Homeland is separated from Mad Men by its performances, Breaking Bad is separated from Homeland by two performances that are just as good if not better than anything on any other TV show, and writing that is incredibly smart, nuanced and layered. "Breaking Bad" follows high school chemistry teacher Walter White who gets diagnosed with lung cancer, and decided to use his chemistry knowledge to cook meth in order to ensure his family's well being after he's gone. Walt soon finds himself deeper and deeper in to the criminal underworld and becomes a growing power in the drug world. Featuring incredible performances from Bryan Cranston and Aaron Paul are the main attraction.. but Breaking Bad is simply great television top to bottom. It features the most interesting an in-depth characterizations on TV, and every episode is simply magnetic. There are 16 episodes remaining - Season 5 starts at some indeterminate point in the future. Can't wait, even if the ending is tragic.

Monday, January 23, 2012

The Top Media of 2011.

So it's 2012.  Wild, right?  I'm pretty sure that 2012 is pretty universally supposed to have been the future.  I mean, based on what people thought from basically 1950 until 1990, by 2012 we'd have flying cars and jetpacks at the VERY least.. insterstellar travel on the optimistic side.

So I was going to just post my top 10 movies of 2011, but then realized that I reviewed every single movie I saw in theaters in 2011, so basically a top 10 list would just be sorting movies I've already rated according to score plus plugging in whatever flicks I didn't catch in theaters.. and that's kind of boring.  So I decided to rate my top 10 media of 2011 instead, whether movies, albums, books, TV shows, or so on.  I think it should be a little more interesting than just movies, and I think it sounds kind of fun.  So let's take a look at the year that was, shall we?
 
Honorable Mentions: Game of Thrones, Season 1, Community, Seasons 2 and 3 (an uneven start to season 3 hurt this one), Childish Gambino, Camp, The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo, Moneyball, Archer, Season 2.   


10. A Dance With Dragons (A Song of Ice and Fire, Book 5), George R. R. Martin - I didn't read any of the books prior to February 2011, but devoured the first 4 months before the release of the 5th installment in July.  Everything the show (Game of Thrones) does well, the books do better, and George R. R. Martin must be an awesome kind of insane.  That's the only explanation I can think of, for his interlocking webs of past, present, prophesy and multiple, often unreliable narrators create a dense, complex, engrossing and rewarding world that I and many, many others simply can't get enough of.  Don't believe me?  Check out the online fan communities, where you'll see fans as devoted and obsessive as any.  Is the whole saga extremely nerdy?  Sure.  But at its root, it's not about magic or traditional fantasy.. it's about real, flawed characters struggling in a brutal world.  In a bleak and brutal universe, the struggles that make us human become illuminated.  It's not a merry ride, but it's certainly a fun one.  At around 1000 pages of sprawling world building, interlocking narratives and ominous foreboding, the 5th installment is (hopefully) the darkest part of night, before the dawn. I would recommend the books to anyone with an adult mind and imagination.  But consider yourself warned, at around 900 dense pages per book, these are not for the faint of heart.  

9. Parks and Recreation, Seasons 3 and 4 - 
  So 2011 covered Season 3 and the first half of Season 4 of what just might be the best comedy on TV.  Since Rob Lowe and Adam Scott became regulars on P&R the show has achieved what may be approaching hilarious perfection.  Silly yet endearing, often outrageous and over the top yet still very human and very, very sweet, this show never fails to bring out the laughs and bring out genuine human emotion.  You know, like the Office when it was good, only better.  In 2011 Parks and Rec brought us the Harvest Festival (and 'Lil Sebastian), Flu Season, April and Andy's wedding, and more sweet zany craziness from the residents of Pawnee, Indiana.  Any week with a new Parks and Rec is well on its way to being a good one (especially if immediately proceeded by a Community..).  If you don't want to hang out with Leslie, Ron, Tom, April, Andy, Chris, Ben and maybe even Jerry.. well I don't trust you.  Kudos, Parks and Rec.. you really brought the awesome sauce in '11.

8. Friday Night Lights, Season 5 
Have there been better shows than Friday Night Lights?  Absolutely.  But I don't know that any show has been TRUER or more earnest, and there's certainly a lot of value in that.  These characters that you grow to know and love over the life of the series are flawed human beings.. but they are undoubtedly human beings.  I don't know that there's ever been a better and truer positive depiction of a marriage on television than Eric and Tammy Taylor.  Is it about football?  Sure.. but when it comes down to it it's about people, who have hopes and dreams and make mistakes but do the best that they can.  FNL achieved something that many shows have tried and failed to do in Seasons 4 and 5, they turned over their cast and switched the setting, moving Coach to a new school and introducing new players, and pulled it off perfectly.  Most FNL fans like the East Dillon crew more than the West Dillon crew.. who we love.  So even though the show came to an end in 2011.. you can't help but be glad that the show lasted as long as it did, and gave us a pitch-perfect ending along the way.  Also.. Billy Riggins is an American hero. 


7. Louie, Season 2.

Season 2 is when Louis CK's one-man tour de force, "Louie" crossed over from "interesting" to "tremendous".  Louie isn't just one of the best comedies on TV, but one of the best shows, period.  Louis CK is responsible for every single element of this series, and his cynical yet hilarious mind often spawns greatness.  Season 2 gave us some absolutely brilliant episodes.. including Louie's trip to Afghanistan and the long-overdue confrontation with the epic douche known as Dane Cook.  (kudos to Mr. Cook for having the guts and the magnanimity to make the appearance) It cracked me up, it broke my heart, but no matter what, it always had something to say.  Given Louis CK's brilliant comedic mind, consider me beyond excited for what Louie will bring in the future.


6. Bon Iver, Bon Iver   
   Bon Iver's (still not 100% sure how to pronounce it..) 2009 debut, For Emma, Forever Ago was truly great.  Melancholy, ethereal, gorgeous.  Written and produced in a cabin in the woods, and you can certainly tell.  Is this album an improvement?  It's so completely different, I don't know that it's possible to make that determination.   What I do know is that this album is also truly great.  It doesn't have the same unity of purpose and form, but what it lacks in a holistic approach it makes up for in ambition and variety.  Oh, and if I die anywhere in the next ten years, I want "Holocene" to be played at my funeral.. it's beautiful.  A friend of mine called listening to Bon Iver like "being in heaven's waiting room".. and while I'm not sure I agree, there certainly is something nigh-spiritual about it.  My favorite album of the year, and the one I don't skip any tracks on. 


5. Warrior
  So this one came out last fall, and I couldn't convince any of my deadbeat friends to catch it with me during the 3 weeks it was actually in theaters.  Shame on them, shame on me, shame on everyone else that didn't catch this one (and there were many..), because it is truly great.  All dramas contain an emotional journey of sorts, and in my experience, catharsis just may be the most heart-wrenching of them all.  No, I don't particularly like UFC/MMA, but that doesn't really matter.. like most great dramas, it's not about the superficial setting, but rather about the journey of its characters.  I'm a sucker for father/son stories.. and throw in a brother/brother story?  Forget about it.  So an MMA tournament brings together two brothers and their alcoholic father, long-estranged.  One brother is a war hero and gifted fighter, the other a family man, high school teacher and serious underdog.  Let me put it this way.. at the last fight I had full on tears running down my cheeks.  Powerful, powerful stuff.  Well worth a watch. 


4. Justified, Season 2
  It may not be the BEST show on TV, there are far too many "off" episodes for that, but at its strongest, which usually come during the last few episodes of the season, there isn't a better show, plain and simple.  Justified focuses on US Marshall Raylan Givens (Timothy Olyphant in a star-making turn), based on an Elmore Leonard character who is a little too cowboy-esque and trigger happy for our modern world, but who happens to be very good at his job.  A native of rough and rural Harlan County, Kentucky, Givens finds himself continuously sucked into the criminal world of his hometown, much of which is run by family, friends and acquaintances.  Despite his better judgment and the pleadings of basically everyone who cares about him, Harlan County continues to pull Raylan in.  Season 2 brings back Season 1's primary villain, Raylan's boyhood friend Boyd Crowder (a particularly charismatic Walton Goggins), and introduces a menacing and outstanding Margo Martindale as criminal matriarch Mags Bennett.  Just watch, season 3 just started and has certainly not disappointed thus far. 


3. Midnight in Paris
  First thing's first.. I don't usually like Woody Allen.  I find him to be self-absorbed and more than a little egotistical.  Not that that's especially uncharacteristic of artists, or that he isn't undeniably talented and prolific as a filmmaker, but something about the man and his works has always irked me a little bit.  So in light of that comes my love and appreciation for this flick.  It certainly doesn't hurt that Owen Wilson plays Woody Allen better than Woody Allen does.  This flick is sweet, funny, smart and an all-around good time.  Gil is struggling through his first novel and uncertain in his relationship with his fiancee, Inez, and finds just what he needed on the magical streets of Paris.  Is the "message" a little simplistic and obvious?  Sure.  Does it play to the egos of its audience by making references that make them feel cultured and well read?  Absolutely.  But none of that takes away from what this flick does well, which is capture an artful playfulness in a smart and worthwhile way.  Eminently watchable, quotable and pretty damn fun, I don't know that I'll ever get tired of this one.  Hemingway is an absolute treat.    


2. Tree of Life
  This one certainly brings out strong reactions in viewers.  Despite its utter lack of what most would call a "plot", its esthetic, undeniable beauty, ambition and an ethereal sort of spirituality make it an absolutely gorgeous film.   I look at it as an artful prayer, evaluation, or speculation on the nature of existence, on god and love and life and who we are and why we are.  Unanswerable questions, to be sure, but at the same time, one of the most important functions of art is to ask these questions and search for the ever elusive answers.    The beauty and greatness of this flick is rather difficult to put into words, much like a great painting or sculpture in that way.. where it's an almost instinctual reaction.  But let me say that I'd completely understand why someone wouldn't like this one.  I just happen to think it's the best film of 2011. 



1. Breaking Bad, Season 4
   Breaking Bad is, at this point of its run, the only series that even deserves to be mentioned in the same breath as "The Wire".  Brian Cranston has been knocking the role of Walter White out of the park from day 1.. and Aaron Paul has more than held up his end of the bargain.  By Season 4, what began as a deviation into criminality to make some side money has morphed into something lucrative, devious and horrible, with ripples that extend far beyond the intended consequences.  At this point, it's impossible to deny that Walter White is a villain, but damn it if you can't stop rooting for the guy.  Season 4 finds Walter and Jesse in a Mexican stand-off of sorts with chicken and methamphetamine kingpin Gus Fring, and the tension inherent in that employer-employee relationship is the dramatic drive for the entire season.  Breaking Bad was, and remains, appointment television, and with 16 episodes remaining, I can't wait for what will undoubtedly be an amazing finish.


So that's 2011 in media, folks.  Feel free to disagree, but know that I'm most likely right about pretty much all of this.  Just something to consider.