
Showing posts with label television. Show all posts
Showing posts with label television. Show all posts
Wednesday, September 18, 2013
Age of television and reading magazines

Tunnisteet:
history,
magazines,
television,
The Age of Television
Thursday, January 08, 2009
Change of pace: early TV Moomins

I don't think I've much talked about my fascination towards the Moomin books and graphic novels (or actually comic strips) by Tove and Lars Jansson. (Sister and brother, in case you didn't know.) I've been reading them for over 30 years now (I think I read the first already before going to school in 1978 (which was, by the way, 30 years ago - last Fall, that is) and still enjoy them very much. I hope you all have some time to take off from pulps and paperbacks and find the Puffin paperback translations there are plenty of. (A graphic novel publisher did all the comic strips a while back - now, I can't bring my mind to it now. Anyone..?)
That's a whole lot of brackets. Okay, to the actual point. There are also plenty of television shows and movies made from the Moomin books. The best-known hails from Japan starting with a feature film in 1992, but there was also a very good puppet-animated series from Poland, made in the seventies. However, the first one came, also from Japan, already in the early seventies. The short series never caught on and the Janssons famously hated it for being too cruel and violent. The Masaaki Osumi-directed series seems also vanished in the air and it's not on YouTube nor are there comments on it in the IMDB.
Today, however, skimming through books and scanning photos for a coming book of mine, I found a picture from the series, and since it's the only one I've ever seen I thought I'd scan and upload it. It looks perfectly like the Jansson Moomins (even though Moominmama's ears seem a bit too long). This is a familiar scene: sneaking into a witch's hat, Moomintroll is transformed into a strange thing and no one recognizes him. Until Moominmama looks him straight in the eye and says: "Yes, I know you - you're my Moomintroll." It's a scene that waters your eyes.
Sorry, in black & white only.
Wednesday, March 05, 2008
Fallen Angels

I bought, um, maybe last Summer three VHS cassettes very cheap from a thrift store. They contained all the episodes of the second season of the neo-noir TV mini-series Fallen Angels (1995) whose episodes were based on stories by famous and not so famous pulp and noir writers of bygone days. I don't know if the series has been released on DVD, but I think the purchase was a nice bargain. I don't also remember if the series was ever shown in Finland or if it came here only on video.
The series is uneven. Some of the episodes are pretty mediocre, some due to the weak original story, some due to weak directors or actors. I think the weakest is "Tomorrow I Die", based on Mickey Spillane's short story (from Cavalier, February 1956). It's just not believable and all the action these people make seem wrong. The ending is downright laughable.
Agnieszka Holland's "Red Wind", from the Raymond Chandler story (Dime Detective, January 1938), feels pretty uneven too: the artificial studio look, with the sets that you never mistake for reality, doesn't quite fit the Chandler I know, and Danny Glover as the black Marlowe - even though he's quite good - seems only a joke. The plot is what it is - I'm sure that if Holland had sent Chandler a telegram asking "Who killed who? And who doublecrossed who?", Chandler would've sent back a telegram saying "I don't know."
Some of the strongest ones include "No Escape", based on a Bruno Fischer story (from Detective Tales, January 1949) and written by Scott McGehee and David Siegel, the makers of Suture and The Deep End. The story is strong and it's easy to see why McGehee and Siegel were drawn to it - in the story, the female lead faces the same kind of obstacles as in The Deep End. In this, everything is just more violent and menacing.
Also strong is "The Professional", from a David Goodis story (as Professional Man, Manhunt, October 1953), directed by Steven Soderbergh, who's shown his love and interest for noir in several films. This one, written by Howard Rodman, plays with the idea that the professional killer of the story is actually a homosexual. The style is cool and detached, but also seems a bit too artificial for Goodis - at least the story has been taken into a timeless art deco world, that's pretty alien to Goodis. I think Rodman is going to talk about this episode at NoirCon.
Other episodes include two Cornell Woolrich versions which were okay, a Dashiell Hammett piece ("Fly-Paper", from Black Mask, August 1929, in which Christopher Lloyd makes a believable Continental Op) and a boxing story written by Evan Hunter. That was okay, too, but I don't seem to remember much of it now. The Walter Mosley piece, "Fearless", seems a bit out of context here, since it's the only new story in the bunch. It's set just after WWII, though. (The story was first published in the anthology Spooks, Spies, and Private Eyes in 1995.)
One of the weakest points in the series is actually the retro feel. Okay, the sets are nice, music is great, it's just that it's too obvious. Saxophone, guns, smoking, cocktails, the art deco lounges at hotels... it becomes a bit corny in the end. And it's corny in the epilogue that was directed by Phil Joanou - at least when you watch it nine times. What's corny is that every woman looks like their hair was made in 1995 and not in 1945 or 1955. (With the possible exception of Marcia Gay Harden in "No Escape".)
Nice try, though, and I'd really like to see another Fallen Angels: another nine episodes of classy neo-noir. Maybe you could do it now with new stories. There's lots of interesting, intriguing, electrifying, utterly satisfying noir out there, you know.
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