When I wrote the other comparative post, the one about The Witcher and Game of Thrones, I made sure to tell you that it wasn't meant to elevate one over the other. Here it definitely is.
So, disclaimer: I will complain about what I didn’t like about TWD, if you don’t want to read that, turn back now.
Lately I rewatched some The Walking Dead and I realized that even in my most negative assessments I have given it too much credit in the past. Even the few "good" episodes per season, aren't really all that entertaining to begin with. What had happened instead was that I tried to justify my six-season long loyalty to the show by insisting that from time to time it was actually good and enjoyable, when the only thing I really enjoyed where the characters.
Of course, you have to credit TWD with the reinvention of the zombie apocalypse genre or at least with its re-popularization. Z Nation wouldn't exist were it not for TWD. TWD, however, does not exhaust the potentiality of the genre and instead reiterates the same narrative elements over and over again in an attempt to stay serious quality TV.
Z Nation is different from the get go. Produced by the people that made Sharknado it was already conceptualized as more trashy, which granted it the freedom to play with the genre and its tropes. It is in no way meant to be realistic and combines over-the-top gory moments with ridiculous happenstances like a giant wheel of cheese rolling down the countryside smashing zombies along the way.
It is often self-referential and employs meta-humor that explicitly lampshades conventions of the genre (they also call zombies zombies). Nevertheless, it isn’t a comedy. It has its comedic elements sure and its comic relief but the main story is a dramatic one. Instead of the goal of the protagonists being survival, however, as it is in TWD (after season 1), they have the clearly defined mission of getting a man, whose blood might be the only chance at a vaccine/cure, to a lab. This goal makes the characters in Z Nation more proactive, as they are moving towards something, while the survivors in TWD mostly just react to threats to their safety. It also allows for story progression in a way TWD does not.
Due to TWD’s insistence on “realism” and the differing structure - the protagonists in TWD often stay in one place while in Z Nation they are constantly on the move and cover a lot of ground between episodes - the possible narrative beats are limited and it shows, when the ‘temporary sanctuary overrun by enemies and/or zombies’ is still the main source of conflict 8 seasons in. Z Nation on the other hand not only starts 3 years into the apocalypse already (a good choice, in my opinion, as it makes the chaos and decay of the world that much more believable), it also features a variety of absurd apocalypse inhabitants and scenarios.
The group, among others, meets a fanatic zombie media enthusiast, a Mexican drug cartel, people growing weed from zombie-infested plants, a Mad-Max-esque caravan, and post-apocalyptic bounty hunters. They have to stop a nuclear power plant from melting down, escape a zombienado, deal with an anthrax infection, and a half-zombie baby. And that’s only in the first two seasons.
Despite the show’s obvious “trash TV” nature and usually fast pace, it does not lack genuine drama moments. One of my gripes with TWD is that a lot of the dramatic potential is lost because characters constantly have extended fake deep conversations about it. Z Nation doesn’t attempt to cram as much meaningful-sounding dialog into its episodes and instead focuses on the novel action (for the most part). In this way, however, dramatic scenes are allowed to stand for themselves.
At one point, for example, the group finds themselves in Roswell, where people gathered that believe that aliens are going to come and rescue them from the apocalypse. One woman, so they say, was contacted by the aliens and soon, the aliens would take them all away. Over the course of the episode the group goes investigating in the military base and finds out that it wasn’t in fact aliens but one man with high tech equipment. The woman is with them when they find out, but still goes back to her people and keeps the belief alive because she recognized that hope to them is more important than the truth. None of this is spelled out or explicitly mentioned and this is exactly why it has the impact it does.
In conclusion, Z Nation’s categorization as “trash TV” allows it the freedom to be creative and combined with the narrative drive it is, to me, very much enjoyable.
Satori over and out
See also Nadine Dannenberg’s article “‘Is This a Chick Thing Now?’ The Feminism of Z Nation between Quality and Trash TV” in Gender and Contemporary Horror in Television
I love fictional stories, be they in the form of novels, TV shows, or movies. I love to immerse myself in their worlds and often I come away with feelings, thoughts, and opinions. And what better way to share them than on the internet?
Tuesday, May 5, 2020
Saturday, April 18, 2020
Widely decried “overused” filmmaking things I actually like
I spend a good amount of my life concerned with media. Consuming it, analyzing it, reading about it, creatively engaging with it. In that process, I've also read and listened to others’ opinions on movies and how they are made. There are certain things in filmmaking, be it tropes, camerawork, or aspects of post-production, that are widely decried as overused - or just bad. I want to use this space here to share with you some of these things that I actually sincerely enjoy:
- lens-flares: dammit but I love the light reflecting off of surfaces and shining brightly into the camera. It gives everything an otherworldly feel. It’s very sci-fi to me and I think lens-flare aficionado JJ Abrams put it into words well: “The reason I wanted to do [lens flares] was I love the idea that the future that they were in was so bright that it couldn’t be contained and it just sort of broke through.”
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Star Trek 2009 (syfy.de) |
- this action scene is just noise: How often have I heard that an action scene in a movie is meaningless because it’s just noise and nothing else and while that might be true, I tend to still enjoy it. It’s cinemasins’ “explosions! running! excitement!” sin but fully genuine.
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300 |
- slow motion, especially slow motion fight scenes: I just can’t help but think that slo-mo shots are stylish and cool, no matter how often they appear in a movie. Slo-mo makes fighting especially look very sleek and I love that.
- person in the foreground doesn’t notice fight in the background: That’s just a little fun thing to do. Whenever I see it in a movie or show I just think it’s a joy.
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Kingsman |
- narration: I know it’s ‘show don’t tell’. But sometimes I like to be told. Sometimes I just like to be explicitly told what’s going on.
I’m sure there’s more that I’m currently forgetting. This post kind of fits with the theme of the “Good films don’t have to be good” post. These things are used for a reason and even if they are seemingly overused, they can still spark joy in your heart.
Satori over and out
Sunday, March 8, 2020
Sometimes...
I wanted to write this whole thing about how sometimes the determined attempt to make your movie/show appeal to the largest amount of people (in order to make the most money) works to the detriment of the product in question and how movies/shows that are made with more freedom are better. Then I realized, however, that I touched on this issue in a previous post and that other people have written enough about it. So instead of a nuanced comment, have this meme:
Monday, March 2, 2020
Game of Thrones, The Witcher and genre fiction
So. To be clear, this is not meant to complain about GoT and in turn praise The Witcher, because I genuinely did love GoT and The Witcher also only has one season right now, so there's still ample time for Netflix to mess it up real badly. Instead, it is an examination of the fantasy genre and how these shows embody or don't embody it (for the purpose of this post I’ll just compare the show incarnations and disregard the novels and games). I am also not the first person to write about GoT's relationship to the genre (see, for example, this NYTimes article), so I'll be concentrating on The Witcher a bit more.
People like The Witcher. According to google 95% of viewers liked it, its imdb rating is 8.3 and its rotten tomatoes audience score is 92%. There are a multitude of covers and remixes of “Toss a coin to your witcher” on youtube and immediately there were loud calls for a second season. As obvious as its success seems today, it wasn’t so clear before. Most people were familiar with The Witcher from the games and not the novels and video game adaptations are notoriously ill-fated. People were unhappy with Henry Cavill’s casting and the first images of him in costume were widely ridiculed. When the show was announced in 2017, Game of Thrones was still much beloved and seemed to set the standard not only for fantasy TV but for quality TV for years to come. Everything, so it seemed then, would be measured against GoT and inevitably found lacking.
And then it came different.
I am convinced that The Witcher would not have become so popular so fast, had a large amount of people not been extremely disappointed by GoT (there’s an ongoing petition to remake season 8 with, at time of writing, 1.8 million supporters). Now, the two are very different, of course, from their conceptualization and narrative structure to their content, setting, and themes. They do, however, belong to the same rough genre, that genre being (dark) fantasy.
Fantasy is, among other things, concerned with a society’s relationship to magic and the metaphyiscal powers and how that relationship changes or evolves. It deals with questions like what does the existence of magic/magical beings mean for a society, how does it shift power balances, inhowfar does it inform the structure of society and people’s everyday lives and belief systems. As already implied, politics is, also, a significant aspect of a lot of fantasy stories. The alternate world is examined and its political structures embedded in the fantastical context reflect familiar structures. As Ross Douthat, from the NYTimes article, concludes: “thus fantasy villains are sometimes fusions of premodern and postmodern forces — the demonic industrialist Saruman in Tolkien, the technological deities in Neil Gaiman’s “American Gods,” even Martin’s White Walkers, part Faerie and part climate change”.
GoT - the show - obviously and purposefully stripped the story of quite a bit of its fantasy elements. The showrunners famously said that they didn’t want to create genre fiction and instead wanted to appeal to a mainstream audience (see, for example, this Independent article). Therefore, they concentrated on the political intrigue and the fights, strife, and struggles of the characters. Many (for example, this dude*) cite this decision as one of the main reasons for GoT’s success. This decision did, however, pose the challenge of how to adapt the more classic fantasy elements not only present in but central to the narrative of the source material. Thus, characters ended up deprived of their motivation and depth and story arcs ended up not fulfilling their purpose.
The Witcher on the other hand is unapologetically fantasy. It does nothing to slowly accustom the viewer to its world and the magic within. In the first episode there’s a dramatic battle, Geralt (Henry Cavill) fights a monster which makes his eyes go black, and meets a shady sorcerer in a bigger on the inside tower. In the next episode the audience starts to follow Yennefer (Anya Chalotra) through her sorcery-school while Geralt picks up a bard and a princess (Freya Allan) runs for her life. The show does not bother to explain that all these happen in wildly different decades, it trusts that the viewer understands from context clues. That this world is teeming with magic, curses, potions, elves, monsters, magical beings and sorcerers is a given, as is the existence of various kingdoms and the struggles between them.
And that is what makes it enjoyable. It is clearly and unselfconsciously genre fiction, relying on and remixing true and tried fantasy tropes and elements. It explores the different relationships the three protagonists have to magic and society and works towards a central conflict that is going to dominate the narrative going forward.
The Witcher might, therefore, not appeal to an audience wholly uninterested in fantasy, but as its popularity shows, fantasy appeals to the mainstream.
Over and out.
*His opinion is mostly included as a counter-opinion to what I'm trying to argue (I disagree with almost everything he says), so you can check out other opinions as well. Be warned, though, his assessment of the GoT finale critics is just a tad insulting.
People like The Witcher. According to google 95% of viewers liked it, its imdb rating is 8.3 and its rotten tomatoes audience score is 92%. There are a multitude of covers and remixes of “Toss a coin to your witcher” on youtube and immediately there were loud calls for a second season. As obvious as its success seems today, it wasn’t so clear before. Most people were familiar with The Witcher from the games and not the novels and video game adaptations are notoriously ill-fated. People were unhappy with Henry Cavill’s casting and the first images of him in costume were widely ridiculed. When the show was announced in 2017, Game of Thrones was still much beloved and seemed to set the standard not only for fantasy TV but for quality TV for years to come. Everything, so it seemed then, would be measured against GoT and inevitably found lacking.
And then it came different.
I am convinced that The Witcher would not have become so popular so fast, had a large amount of people not been extremely disappointed by GoT (there’s an ongoing petition to remake season 8 with, at time of writing, 1.8 million supporters). Now, the two are very different, of course, from their conceptualization and narrative structure to their content, setting, and themes. They do, however, belong to the same rough genre, that genre being (dark) fantasy.
Fantasy is, among other things, concerned with a society’s relationship to magic and the metaphyiscal powers and how that relationship changes or evolves. It deals with questions like what does the existence of magic/magical beings mean for a society, how does it shift power balances, inhowfar does it inform the structure of society and people’s everyday lives and belief systems. As already implied, politics is, also, a significant aspect of a lot of fantasy stories. The alternate world is examined and its political structures embedded in the fantastical context reflect familiar structures. As Ross Douthat, from the NYTimes article, concludes: “thus fantasy villains are sometimes fusions of premodern and postmodern forces — the demonic industrialist Saruman in Tolkien, the technological deities in Neil Gaiman’s “American Gods,” even Martin’s White Walkers, part Faerie and part climate change”.
GoT - the show - obviously and purposefully stripped the story of quite a bit of its fantasy elements. The showrunners famously said that they didn’t want to create genre fiction and instead wanted to appeal to a mainstream audience (see, for example, this Independent article). Therefore, they concentrated on the political intrigue and the fights, strife, and struggles of the characters. Many (for example, this dude*) cite this decision as one of the main reasons for GoT’s success. This decision did, however, pose the challenge of how to adapt the more classic fantasy elements not only present in but central to the narrative of the source material. Thus, characters ended up deprived of their motivation and depth and story arcs ended up not fulfilling their purpose.
The Witcher on the other hand is unapologetically fantasy. It does nothing to slowly accustom the viewer to its world and the magic within. In the first episode there’s a dramatic battle, Geralt (Henry Cavill) fights a monster which makes his eyes go black, and meets a shady sorcerer in a bigger on the inside tower. In the next episode the audience starts to follow Yennefer (Anya Chalotra) through her sorcery-school while Geralt picks up a bard and a princess (Freya Allan) runs for her life. The show does not bother to explain that all these happen in wildly different decades, it trusts that the viewer understands from context clues. That this world is teeming with magic, curses, potions, elves, monsters, magical beings and sorcerers is a given, as is the existence of various kingdoms and the struggles between them.
And that is what makes it enjoyable. It is clearly and unselfconsciously genre fiction, relying on and remixing true and tried fantasy tropes and elements. It explores the different relationships the three protagonists have to magic and society and works towards a central conflict that is going to dominate the narrative going forward.
The Witcher might, therefore, not appeal to an audience wholly uninterested in fantasy, but as its popularity shows, fantasy appeals to the mainstream.
Over and out.
*His opinion is mostly included as a counter-opinion to what I'm trying to argue (I disagree with almost everything he says), so you can check out other opinions as well. Be warned, though, his assessment of the GoT finale critics is just a tad insulting.
Wednesday, February 19, 2020
A decade in review: TV shows
When I said it was impossible for me to track the TV shows I watched each year, I menat that. Nevertheless, it is possible for me to pick my top 4 TV shows from the last decade and I will be doing just that. Just in case you haven't seen them and might still want to.
Following in no particular order:
Hannibal (2013-2015)
I've said it before and I will probably say it again until the day I die: Hannibal is pure art. From the cinematography to the dialogues to the acting and writing, it is so brilliant and artistic I don't know anything comparable. That said, I totally get why someone wouldn't want to watch it, it is filled with violence, gore and body horror after all. Oh. And cannibalism of course, can't forget that.
Sense8 (2015-2018)
Look. I just love the concept of sense8 so much and I do love the execution as well. These eight people, whose chaotic lives just suddenly connect to each other, and who have to adjust to each other and fight those that would harm them. In the end their love for each other and the people they chose triumphs and that's so beautiful to me (there's a post in the works talking about that specifically, so look out for that).
Black Sails (2014-2017)
I've praised Black Sails on this blog before but I recently rewatched season 2 and was once again struck by how amazing it was, how complex the characters how intricate the story. Definitely one of my favorite TV shows of all time.
Brooklyn Nine-Nine (2013-today)
Okay, maybe it isn't fair to include B99 since it is still ongoing but it started in 2013 and it is so wonderful and hilarious and just very good, so on the list it will remain.
As you can see my favorite shows are actually much more diverse in genre and content. Maybe that's at least partially to do with creators increasingly moving to TV or the simple fact that I, naturally, watch more TV than I go to the movie theater.
Anyway. We will continue our scheduled essay/commentary blogging as soon as possible.
Satori over and out
Following in no particular order:
Hannibal (2013-2015)
I've said it before and I will probably say it again until the day I die: Hannibal is pure art. From the cinematography to the dialogues to the acting and writing, it is so brilliant and artistic I don't know anything comparable. That said, I totally get why someone wouldn't want to watch it, it is filled with violence, gore and body horror after all. Oh. And cannibalism of course, can't forget that.
Sense8 (2015-2018)
Look. I just love the concept of sense8 so much and I do love the execution as well. These eight people, whose chaotic lives just suddenly connect to each other, and who have to adjust to each other and fight those that would harm them. In the end their love for each other and the people they chose triumphs and that's so beautiful to me (there's a post in the works talking about that specifically, so look out for that).
Black Sails (2014-2017)
I've praised Black Sails on this blog before but I recently rewatched season 2 and was once again struck by how amazing it was, how complex the characters how intricate the story. Definitely one of my favorite TV shows of all time.
Brooklyn Nine-Nine (2013-today)
Okay, maybe it isn't fair to include B99 since it is still ongoing but it started in 2013 and it is so wonderful and hilarious and just very good, so on the list it will remain.
As you can see my favorite shows are actually much more diverse in genre and content. Maybe that's at least partially to do with creators increasingly moving to TV or the simple fact that I, naturally, watch more TV than I go to the movie theater.
Anyway. We will continue our scheduled essay/commentary blogging as soon as possible.
Satori over and out
Tuesday, December 31, 2019
A decade in review
Everyone's doing 'decade in review' statistics or lists or overviews or what have you. I thought I'd join in the fun and tell you about my favorite movies that I watched in theater each year. This is, markedly, no quality assessment, so there's no need to tell me that the movies I picked aren't the best movies of their respective years by far. This is based solely on my own enjoyment.
Unfortunately, there is no way for me to track novels or shows, so sadly there will be none of that.
But movies. Let's do this!
2010: Megamind
Honorable mention to Buried, which is an intense thriller featuring Ryan Reynolds and only Ryan Reynolds.
Honorable mention to Buried, which is an intense thriller featuring Ryan Reynolds and only Ryan Reynolds.
This year was a hard one, but considering how much I love this movie, there's really no contest.
2012: Django Unchained
The other contenders this year are Cloud Atlas and Rise of the Guardians, both of which I like very much. Django won out because it's my favorite Tarantino in the end.
The other contenders this year are Cloud Atlas and Rise of the Guardians, both of which I like very much. Django won out because it's my favorite Tarantino in the end.
2016: Rogue One
This year also had Star Trek Beyond and Deadpool but since I didn't pick the Star Wars movie last year, I picked it now.
This year also had Star Trek Beyond and Deadpool but since I didn't pick the Star Wars movie last year, I picked it now.
2018: Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse
Honorable mention to Black Panther, Love, Simon, and Bohemian Rhapsody.
Honorable mention to Black Panther, Love, Simon, and Bohemian Rhapsody.
2019: Captain Marvel
I realized while going through the movies that I've not been to the theater that much this year.
In review, I see it's very heavy on the superhero front and very few of these movies aren't action movies. What can I say, I know what I like. Although that might change in the future.
Happy new year to everyone! May the change you crave come to you!
I realized while going through the movies that I've not been to the theater that much this year.
In review, I see it's very heavy on the superhero front and very few of these movies aren't action movies. What can I say, I know what I like. Although that might change in the future.
Happy new year to everyone! May the change you crave come to you!
Saturday, December 14, 2019
Thoughts about things I saw: Deception
Sometimes something about the media i consume just gets me real good or stays with me for a bit but it’s not enough to write a whole essay about it or it doesn’t connect to a larger issue I can talk about. Sometimes I don’t even really want to recommend the movie or show or novel in general and it’s just that one thing that I have thoughts and emotions about.
This is what this series of posts is for. Enjoy short thoughts about things I saw.
(This is also probably gonna be more rambly than my other parts, just a warning.)
First up: Deception
Deception is a fun, breezy crime procedural about a successful stage magician that helps the FBI solve (often magic related) crimes. It reminded me of The Mentalist sometimes in that Cameron, the protagonist, is lovably full-of-himself and mostly puts on a sort of stage persona when interacting with people. It’s generally a good time, if wildly improbable.
What gets me, however, is Cameron’s backstory. The reason he helps out the FBI in the first place is so that he can help get his innocent brother Jonathan out of prison. His identical twin brother, who no one knew about until he got arrested. No one knew about him because their father raised them like that, so that he could do the most amazing disappearing children magic tricks. That’s so messed up. From the first episode on, I was blown away by how messed up that was and how little the show acknowledged that.
Their father only proves more messed up, the more we learn about him, training his sons, one of which he takes great pains to hide from the public, to be the perfect stage magicians from a very early age on. He, for example, locked child Cameron into a tiny box and just left him, so that he would learn escape tricks. Oh, and additionally he was an accomplished thief, who once took Cameron to a bank that he knew would be subject to a bank robbery, effectively traumatizing him. What joy.
The show’s primary antagonist, a mysterious woman with a grudge and an obsession, in the end manages to convince Cameron that he is ultimately to blame both for Jonathan’s imprisonment as well as his less than ideal existence in the shadows, which ignores that Cameron suffered under their father as well, even if his suffering was different.
The whole concept of their upbringing and the nature of their relationship resulting from that, is just something that is really interesting to me and that I’d love to see explored more deeply. The show’s mostly too light for that and, anyway, won’t ever get a second season, so I’m alone with my thoughts and feelings, which is precisely why I made this blog.
Satori over and out
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About Me

- Satori
- I am in my early 30s and finished my university career. My areas of study included media analysis, literary and cultural studies, linguistics, and history. I like reading, drawing, writing, movies, TV, friends, traveling, dancing and all kinds of small things that make me happy. Just trying to spread some love.
In lieu of starting online fights: Not everything that has rich people in it is Sucession
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