Saturday 27 March 2021

Legends of Tomorrow, Season 5

 Okay, yes, I'm always slow, but that's because I like watching one season in one shot!

Legends of Tomorrow is now my favourite series in the Arrowverse. Arrow just outlived its storyline after 6 seasons and rightly terminated (though, to be honest, the spin-off on their kids and the Canary look awesome but sadly not picked up). The Flash, in my opinion, appears to be stagnant and running in a loop and slipping. I've not watched Supergirl other than those in crossovers, and I've also not watched Batwoman and Black Lightning because I ain't interested. I started watching Legends of Tomorrow because the characters were extracted from Arrow and The Flash. I once considered this the weakest, of which I continue to hold it was true for the first season, but it has not improved so much it surpasses others.

The first season was, meh. I can't recall much. The second season still confused me - how's Eobard Thawne and Damien Darkh relevant? I mean, I am still confused by the circumstances that allowed Eobard to be the main villain. The third was fine, but the fourth was great - the introduction of dark magic and John Constantine was a surprisingly welcoming element to a show that centres around metahuman and human superpowers.

I like this season a lot. I prefer the old Zari though. But she's still one of my favourite characters. I still like Sara Lance the most, and I find Charlie particularly appealing this season. Like I said, Charlie is so well-played, compared to Amaya, a character I didn't really like. I like Ava Sharpe a lot. I found that, in this season, it's comedic element is much more profound and outstanding. I'm sad that Nora and Ray left - Nora is so sweet, and Ray a close brother to Nate. But Astra's introduction is welcoming, though I can't extend the same to Mick's daughter yet. Behrad feels....incongruous. But he serves his purpose well.

In general, I like this season a lot. I mean, I remember season 1 was boring. I found season 2 a little incredulous but generally likeable. I gave season 3 a shot because I usually finish watching the show I started (with the exception of Grey's Anatomy, House MD and Lost). But season 3 turned out to be a marked improvement, with season 4 a sharp improvement and season 5 incredibly amazing.

This season has been about the return of several villains as they were sent to hell to grab some souls. Charlie is revealed to be a God, and together with her 2 sisters, once controlled fate and is currently on the run as she broke that control by hiding the three rings that yielded that power. Due to the merging of the universe after the event of Crisis on Infinite Earths, her sisters now have much smaller perimeters to search for the rings and are closing into Charlie (Clotho).

This season is awesome. I cannot describe it. You just have to give it a shot. 

I felt though that Mick doesn't appear to blend in well with other characters and have much smaller and separate screentime. I ain't sure why. I mean, he didn't even know there were two Zaris.

But Ava and Sara's relationship continued to be the focus. And they are really sweet.

I initially disliked Astra. I grew to like her.

I'm saddened Nora and Ray have to leave. I like Nora more, but it's still sorrowing that Ray leaves.

There are a few particularly strong episodes: the episode where Damien Darkh returns is very well written and scripted. It feels home in a show where personal relationship and settling down are distinct concepts. Then the one about Son of Sam, oh my god it's mind-blowingly brilliant and interesting! Also, Mick's short role as a character in television in the penultimate episode was cheeky and uncharacteristic.

There are, however, a few questions I do have

  • If Charlie (Clotho) is a God, and has remained a God, how did John manage to 'clip' her wings? His magic is applicable to a God?
  • In the finale, Charlie returns as a member of The Smell and sings in the public looking like Amaya, the identity she takes up. But that wasn't the image she used when she was a member before joining the Legends.
  • While looking for the first ring, Sara found the shooting set of Supernatural (another show I thoroughly love with every fibre of my being) and said Dean is her 'hall pass'. Weird, Supernatural is a TV show in the Arrowverse universe? What happened to Jack's mother, Kelly Kline? She's literally...Nora Darkh.
  • If Charlie and her sisters are Gods, what's their role with respect to The Monitor?
In short,
  • I'll miss Charlie/Clotho and wish she stays longer.
  • If Sara Lance or Zari are no longer in the show, I'll probably stop watching.
  • Aliens in season 6? I can't wait for season 6!!!

Sunday 14 March 2021

Anne-Marie - 2002 - Cover (finger style guitar)



I found another masterpiece. Why am I always late in discovering gems?

I found it via Spotify. Spotify does contain a lot of masterpiece, but one really needs patience while wading in.

Sunday 7 March 2021

Maroon 5 - Memories (Fingerstyle Guitar Cover)


Whoever you are, sir, you're a pure music genius.

Wonderful piece of work. Thank you for the music!

Monday 1 March 2021

The Gulf (TV)


 I've always wanted to watch a good British/Australian/New Zealand TV series because they're often short, compact, and very powerful. The Brokenwood Mysteries is a good Kiwi series but its length is a bit exhausting. I continued to google and found a new TV show - The Gulf.

I started expecting this show to be one six-part series on a single crime. It turned out to be a six-episode series with three story plot with each spanning over two continuous episodes. This means the show has everything I enjoy - short, compact, powerful. Technically it's similar as one episode of The Brokenwood Mysteries, except that The Gulf has a much serious tone, not exactly humorous, serious investigative work, and authentic suspense.

The Gulf started strong - Jess, the main female character, woke up from an accident of which she had no recollection of. Harding, her ambitious subordinate who she apparently wasn't very fond of initially, greeted her and sort of needed to investigate what happened.

The first story revolves around the finding of a boy who the police thought died five years ago but couldn't find the body and closed the case. The second story is about a missing girl from Perth who had a party in New Zealand. The third and last story is about the ex-cop on the island killing a Maori guy as alleged self-defence of home intrusion.

The third one was the most boring in my opinion, but it opened my view to an open and ongoing social unrest in New Zealand about how the Maori is treated. The minority is often not treated as equal everywhere, and New Zealand shows very rarely discuss it. Or at least I haven't come across one that does. 

I liked the first story the best, but I loved the ending. There are many questions that haven't been answered, and I'm hopeful that the newly aired season 2 will shed some lights on it.

Who knows Jess's secret?

What's Harding's relationship with his father got to do with anything and how did the lady know?

Part of the acclaim has got to do to the lead two actors. Kate Elliot's acting is powerful, she's an amazing actor. Acting like she did wasn't easy and not common. I've watched a lot of shows but not many plays a character as strong as she does. The struggle she displayed in the show about the memory loss and the slow resurface of lost memories and the painful dealing with her daughter and her colleagues and subordinates were captivating and she made the experience somehow relatable. Ido Drent's acting was good but his struggle over his internal demon part appeared true, although other than that he simply played a rebellious character.

Anyway, I like this show. I can't wait to watch season 2. I just hope it's available in Netflix - in Malaysia or Singapore.