(no subject)
Oct. 1st, 2005 03:18 pmLoved it. Loved it, loved it, loved it. Made myself a Blue Sun shirt to wear to the show, 'cause I'm a big nerd. Got compliments, including one guy who was reall impressed I did it myself.
Hmmm, favorite parts? Hard to say. I loved most of it. Though, Sean Maher with his shirt off is always worth mentioned. Kaylee is a lucky, lucky girl to finally get Simon. Loved the moment were she was all "Hey, if I finally get sex, I'm gonna live."
I was spoiled that someone was going to die, but I didn't know who. So once Book bought it, I figured "Oh, there we go." Nope. Not in the slighest. *shudder* Even worse than Wash's death for me was Zoe's response to it. I mean, she's as hard as nails and no nonsense. Look at her in War Stories. But his death broke something in her, I think. Joss refuses to acknowledge the unspoken contract with his viewers that certain characters are not supposed to die. Actually, this is a good thing. We, as viewers, need a shakeup on a regular basis.
Some people have said that this was about Mal and River. But I don't think it's about River at all. I mean, look at all the critical scenes with the Operative. All of them were with Mal. Heck, I don't think River was ever in the same room with him. I think River was something of a McGuffin in the film. For those who don't know, a McGuffin is "a device or plot element that catches the viewer’s attention or drives the plot. It is generally something that every character is concerned with." It comes from Hitchcock films. It drives the plot, but it's not what the story is about. The real story here isn't River. It's what happens with Mal. He goes from "you are not my crew" with the Tams, to considering Book and Inara part of his crew, even though they aren't on the hsip anymore, to seeing that he has a connection to the whole solar system of people. If Firefly and Serenity are about any one person, they are about Mal and his journey of belief.
Now, that aside, everyone was wonderful in this. Summer Glau was, as always, perfect. Morena Baccarin is wonderful with her expression, though the script gave her very little to do (and wasn't that a disappointment). Adam Baldwin has become my archtypical thug, and whenever I see him in a different role, he totally throws me. Loved the setup for Mr. Universe, with his bot wife. You think he's got some model lounging around in the background, until he comments. Heee. And did I mention Sean Maher took his shirt off?
Hmmm, favorite parts? Hard to say. I loved most of it. Though, Sean Maher with his shirt off is always worth mentioned. Kaylee is a lucky, lucky girl to finally get Simon. Loved the moment were she was all "Hey, if I finally get sex, I'm gonna live."
I was spoiled that someone was going to die, but I didn't know who. So once Book bought it, I figured "Oh, there we go." Nope. Not in the slighest. *shudder* Even worse than Wash's death for me was Zoe's response to it. I mean, she's as hard as nails and no nonsense. Look at her in War Stories. But his death broke something in her, I think. Joss refuses to acknowledge the unspoken contract with his viewers that certain characters are not supposed to die. Actually, this is a good thing. We, as viewers, need a shakeup on a regular basis.
Some people have said that this was about Mal and River. But I don't think it's about River at all. I mean, look at all the critical scenes with the Operative. All of them were with Mal. Heck, I don't think River was ever in the same room with him. I think River was something of a McGuffin in the film. For those who don't know, a McGuffin is "a device or plot element that catches the viewer’s attention or drives the plot. It is generally something that every character is concerned with." It comes from Hitchcock films. It drives the plot, but it's not what the story is about. The real story here isn't River. It's what happens with Mal. He goes from "you are not my crew" with the Tams, to considering Book and Inara part of his crew, even though they aren't on the hsip anymore, to seeing that he has a connection to the whole solar system of people. If Firefly and Serenity are about any one person, they are about Mal and his journey of belief.
Now, that aside, everyone was wonderful in this. Summer Glau was, as always, perfect. Morena Baccarin is wonderful with her expression, though the script gave her very little to do (and wasn't that a disappointment). Adam Baldwin has become my archtypical thug, and whenever I see him in a different role, he totally throws me. Loved the setup for Mr. Universe, with his bot wife. You think he's got some model lounging around in the background, until he comments. Heee. And did I mention Sean Maher took his shirt off?
no subject
Date: 2005-10-02 12:49 pm (UTC)