Monday, May 28, 2012

Sherlock

TV Show:  Sherlock (both seasons 1 and 2 - because I'm behind, okay?)
Like/Don't Like:  So much to love!

I never reviewed this after the first season but I finally got around the watching the last episode of the second season and I am still heartily in love with the whole thing that I felt like I needed to share it with the world.  Although, let's be honest here, you've already seen it right?  Right?! So you know what I'm talking about.  It's AWESOME!  With a side of Holy Cow!

Aren't you so excited that they got it right?  Sure, the Robert Downey Jr. movies are highly entertaining, but they're not really Sherlock Holmes.  He's just a really beefed up smart guy (listen, I'm not complaining.  I'm just speaking the truth.)  But this is Sherlock Holmes. Even as a 21st century Sherlock, it's dead on.  It has captured his genius and arrogance and condescension and his itty bitty slip of humanity. I love how they have taken his most famous stories - A Study in Scarlett, The Hound of the Baskervilles, etc. - and gave them a modern twist.  The stories move quickly and nothing is wasted, just like the books.

Benedict Cumberbatch has that other-worldly look about him, which makes him a great Sherlock because we all know he's an alien.  And Martin Freeman has always been the perfect rumpled but stalwart friend - just right for Watson.  They made Moriarty sufficiently creepy.  Maybe too creepy. Can he be too creepy?  And bonus, Rupert Graves is Lestrange.  He has aged into quite the silver fox from his days as the floppy-haired Freddie Honeychurch in A Room With A View.

I just saw that there will be a season 3.  Let's rejoice!

(Note:  season one is streaming on Netflix and you can catch season two on pbs.org.  It's worth it.  Also, have something or someone to hold onto because it gets a little tense.)

Monday, May 14, 2012

Hotel at the Corner of Bitter and Sweet


Book: Hotel at the Corner of Bitter and Sweet
Author: Jamie Ford
Like/Don't Like: I wouldn't recommend it

This has been on my radar for a long time now. And I keep thinking that loads of people have recommended it to me. But maybe they were just asking if I had read it and what did I think. Maybe that was it.

Well, here's what I think: meh.

I think it must have been just mentioned rather than recommended because it's about the Japanese Internment and I would never have read a book about that subject unless it had come with high praise. There are few things in American history that make me more incensed than the internment camps. I get all sorts of angry over it. But there's more to the story than just that. There's a Chinese boy and a Japanese girl both living in Seattle during World War II and they fall in love and it keeps jumping back to the Chinese kid as an old man reminiscing about those days. Which isn't a bad story. It was just poorly written. Not even badly written. Just sloppy. And kind of lazy. The author seemed to have used up all of his descriptors by about page 30 and then just kept repeating them. The shift bell at Boeing Field, the "I am Chinese" button the kid wore, his father not speaking to him - all of these things and more just kept coming back. And that made all the other weaknesses in his writing - weaknesses that I probably would have overlooked had it been a stronger story - turn into annoyances.

But my biggest problem was that I didn't really believe the characters. They didn't talk like 12 year olds. They talked like a middle aged guy writing like a 12 year old. They talked like a history teacher. So their relationship seemed phony from the start. But I will say that all of the eye-rolling I did helped with taking my mind off of the injustice that went on in the book.