In case you’re new to Medium Cool, BGinCHI is here once a week to offer a thread on culture, mainly film & books, with some TV thrown in. We’re here at 7 pm on Sunday nights.
We’re running low on TV series, so let’s make this week’s Medium Cool a survey of what you’re watching. Give us likes, dislikes, near misses for TV and film. If you recommend something, make sure to indicate where it’s streaming, or what channel, etc.
WaterGirl
Is it actually possible to run out of TV series? I think not! :-)
BGinCHI
@WaterGirl: Trying to provoke some gems from the Jackaltariat.
Chetan Murthy
@BGinCHI: On a depressing night when I can’t get to sleep, and chew over angry thoughts about the state of our country and whether I should be only a little afraid, or a lot afraid, I watch Letterkenny and that makes it all feel just a little bit better.
BGinCHI
We’re currently watching Invasion (see above, on Apple+). I was so turned off by reviews I almost didn’t give it a try. Glad I did. While there isn’t anything super fresh about the plots, it’s a solid show that focuses on characters and relationships rather than the actual aliens. The invasion provokes chaos, and we follow characters around the world as they cope. Great cast, good production values, and some really excellent scenes.
It’s a good, basic story.
WaterGirl
@BGinCHI: Totally razzing you.
BGinCHI
@Chetan Murthy: I hear such great things about that show.
dmsilev
Currently watching: Foundation (Apple TV+, first season will finish in a couple weeks if binging is your preference)
Waiting for: Wheel of Time (Amazon Prime, starts November 19th)
Was thinking about giving Invasion a try, but haven’t gotten around to it.
Chetan Murthy
@BGinCHI: In fairness, it’s sorta running-out-of-ideas, in its ninth season.
BGinCHI
We also started the 4th and final season of Goliath (Prime) last night. If you liked the first 3, I think you’ll like this one, though we’re only 2 eps in. Set in SF, it’s super noir and moody, with already some excellent casting decisions (I won’t spoil). I’ve always been a Billy Bob fan, so this hits my sweet spot.
BGinCHI
@dmsilev: Give it a chance. Not for everyone, maybe, but it won me over.
Chetan Murthy
I’ve enjoyed watching Shetland (now watching season 3) a bit. They chose well for everybody associated with visuals — they’re sumptuous, even though (IIUC) the Shetlands is cold, rainy, and foggy.
dmsilev
@BGinCHI: Thanks for the brief review, I’ll give it a look.
FelonyGovt
We’re enjoying Acapulco on Apple TV. Very light, engaging, not quite as dopey as I thought it might be
Getting thoroughly tired of The Morning Show but will probably finish Season 2.
jeffreyw
Narcos: Mexico season 3 has dropped
MattF
Also watching Foundation, not particularly happy with it. Quite different from the books, but has the same structural flaw— no protagonist.
prostratedragon
Only this week got around to Atonement, now streaming on Prime. Good enough that I want to see it again soon to follow certain aspects. Similarly A Most Wanted Man. I hadn’t known that was a John LeCarre story, but by the end it was an easy guess. For gentler but still thought-provoking fare, the recent Mark Williams Father Brown mysteries are on Britbox.
mali muso
Slowly working my way through Schitt’s Creek on Netflix as it passed me by during its initial run. I appreciate the cozy, low stakes mild humor. I can’t handle much at the moment in the way of angst or drama.
James E Powell
I am enjoying Foundation. I did not read the books, so I can’t be disappointed by any deviations or omissions. I also listen to the official podcast with the show runner, David Goyer.
I also enjoyed Dune. I re-read the book last year in anticipation of the movie – or film as we artsy types prefer to call them. A lot was cut from the book’s characters & plot, but it’s still 2-1/2 hours long. I hear it’s like three years till Part 2. By then we should have feelies, right?
VeniceRiley
Fell asleep during Invasion.
Jury out on Foundation, but I’m still tuning in.
Loving this season of The Morning Show! Steve Carell did a great job turning the character into an ultimately sympathetic redemption arc. (Plus I am not above some lesbian smexy eye candy. What can I say?)
Finished Ted Lasso but cannot remember the finale to save my life.
Every single version of Walking Dead is boring me to tears.
Would give a digit for a new season of Hacks.
wonkie
I like dark humor so Wayne. However it didn’t get renewed so that kind of unsatisfying, We are also watching The Watchmen, Community, Handmaids Tale, Lucifer, and Sweettooth. I recommend Sweet tooth highly as a fundamentally sweet show but with a definite dark side.
prostratedragon
@Chetan Murthy: I liked that show. Adapted from the same writer as Vera, with a similar involvment of the landscape and environment.
BGinCHI
@wonkie: Is Watchmen getting another season?
I was floored by where they took that premise.
Suzanne
@prostratedragon: I actually got to see A Most Wanted Man in a movie theater, which means I got to see the whole thing. I very rarely get to choose the movie or actually finish watching it. I love all those John Le Carre things. And PSH was so good.
Payingattention
Try DOPESICK on Hulu. Michael Keaton is phenomenal.
Miss Bianca
Currently making my way through one re-watch (Star Trek: The Next Generation) and one new (to me) watch (Parks and Recreation). Also, just binge-watched The Mandalorian (both seasons) with my niece and her family. Almost enough to make want to stream the Disney Channel for Season 3 and the new Boba Fett series that’s going to drop in December.
Almost.
BGinCHI
@Payingattention: Was curious about this show. Love Keaton.
prostratedragon
@Suzanne: There seemed to be enough going on visually that it would be worth while to see it on a proper screen should I have the chance. Right now I’m making do with my 32in monitor.
And yes, he’s good enough that it made me kind of sad all over again knowing that that’s about it, yet it’s a memorable last major role.
thruppence
There’s a trilogy of mystery thrillers set in the Basque region of Spain on Netflix: The Invisible Guardian, The Legacy of the Bones, and Offering to the Storm. I thought they were really well done and they immerse you in another part of the world.
zhena gogolia
We’re always far behind everyone else, so we’re in season 2 of The Crown. I enjoy it thoroughly for the fabulous acting, costumes, and sets, but it’s kind of icky colonialism all the time. So I’m curious about the new film about Diana, Spencer, because A. O. Scott says it’s a “rebuke to The Crown.” And I love Jack Farthing (Charles) and Stella Gonet (Elizabeth). But I’m not going to theaters so I’ll have to wait.
I got tired of Guy of Gisbourne with my lunch, so started The Souvenir, which seems really interesting. (A film, not a series, though, so I’m OT.)
ETA: The Crown is Netflix, The Souvenir is on Prime. But only till 11/14.
Yutsano
For the Trekkies among us, I’m gonna throw a recommendation to Star Trek: Prodigy. There are only two episodes on Paramount+ (three since the pilot is two episodes smashed together) and right now the pilot is on YouTube for free. It’s written for a younger audience, but it is definitely Star Trek through and through.
Nancy
I keep going back to Major Crimes and Life.
Craig
@Chetan Murthy: the best show! Those folks are geniuses.
VOR
@zhena gogolia: Emma Corrin is amazing as Diana in season 4 of The Crown.
HeleninEire
Is there a good Britbox cosy’ish mystery similar to Midsummer Murders? Everything solved in one episode, and kinda funny?
Craig
Watching Hill Street Blues on Hulu is kind of surreal. Some of it holds up great, some doesn’t, but that first season really changed network TV a lot.
sab
We are loving Ghosts on CBS. Young couple in a haunted house she inherited. Many ghosts only she can see who all died on the property and are ghosts until they resolve their issues. Oldest is a viking named Thorfinn. A Native American who has been there 500 years, having to deal with Thorfinn. A boy scout leader accidentally killed by one of his troop with an arrow. A sleazy stockbroker who died in flagante ro delicto so he has a suite jacket shirt and tie but no pants. And others. It’s hilarious.
Miss Bianca
@Craig: Didn’t David Milch (of Deadwood fame) work on Hill Street Blues?
I remember that show being a must-view when I was in high school (or was it college? – damn – well, it was the very early 80s, anyway)
@sab: Oh, that one sounds like fun!
FelonyGovt
Oh, and having just gotten Hulu recently we caught up on Little Fires Everywhere. Definitely cringe-y to watch, but well done and great acting.
zhena gogolia
@HeleninEire: Jonathan Creek.
ETA: It’s not exactly cozy, but it’s very funny, especially the first three seasons.
zhena gogolia
@FelonyGovt: I wish I knew what “cringe-y” was. One of my students just informed me that they consider Hamilton and Lin-Manuel Miranda cringe-y now. That made me sad.
Chetan Murthy
@zhena gogolia: Can confirm! Though after the first three seasons, it got a little boring. But the first three, loved it!
Steeplejack (phone)
@HeleninEire:
Everything I think of turns out to be on Acorn. But Poirot is on BritBox. Mostly very good Agatha Christie mysteries with David Suchet as the Belgian detective. Great production values.
Tony Jay
@sab:
That sounds like an American remake of the British ‘Ghosts’, unless we stole the idea from you guys.
Exact same concept, except our oldest is a Stone Age guy who has been haunting the site for millenia. A headless Tudor lord. A Stuart Era victim of the witch hysteria. A very naive late 18th century girl. A Regency poet. An Edwardian Grey Lady. A WWII Captain. A 1980s Scout leader (with the arrow) and a trouserless Tory MP.
We love it.
There are those who call me...tim... (Still posh)
The wife discovered BBC’s “Miranda”, which was great, and featured Tom Ellis, which led us to “Lucifer”, and O His Dad, what a talent! Dude does it all. The plots are more criminally insane with each season, but it’s worth it just to watch him work. Of course, the whole cast keeps up, and Dennis Haysbert is, well, God.
zhena gogolia
@Chetan Murthy: When Maddie left it fell apart.
andy
Loved Squid Game, an almost note-perfect commentary on late stage capitalism. Really liking Midnight Mass. Just when you think it’s a meditation on faith it turns out to be about vampires! Really liking Prodigy, too. Definitely Star Trek.
NeenerNeener
Season 4 of Yellowstone just started 10 minutes ago.
NotMax
Noted that the snarkolicious Corner Gas (the live action version) is back — this time on IMDb TV (which comes for no extra cost along with Prime).
And an early mention of something different: Cumberbatch channeling Eastwood? Coming to Netflix December 1st, The Power of the Dog.
Pharniel
Disappointed in Foundation, not because it doesn’t have a protagonist, but because it misses the core point of how empires fall. It’s gone all “Super weapon!” instead of “too many fires to put out created by the side effects of core values that allowed the empire to become an empire in the first place but in the new context are liabilities”
Legends of Tomorrow continues to be, just, great. Completely out there w/out a single fuck given.
Doom Patrol continues to be hearbreakingly great and a highlight of my week.
Star Trek: Lower Decks just ended, and that show has absolutely no right being as good as it is. The season finale was 110% uncut distilled TNG at its best.
Waiting for The Boys S3, Wheel of Time, and Hawkeye. Oh, and The Mandolorian: The Book of Boba Fett
prostratedragon
@HeleninEire: MM does dominate that niche doesn’t it, especially if you want contemporary. The above-mentioned Father Brown has some of that quality as well, and though the title character is Catholic of course and he generally interprets his concern for people in terms of their souls, there is room for other voices and ideas of the soul. One thing I like about the earlier episodes in particular is the view of changing Britain in the early post-WWII era. There are a lot of damaged people, and feelings about refugees, Germans, and so on still run high.
A straight drama and not a mystery, but one I just discovered last night on tv is The Indian Doctor. Sanjeev Bhaskar from Unforgotten plays a doctor who, with his very urban wife, finds himself as the only practitioner in a small Welsh mining village in the early 1950s. His apparent antagonist is a mine operator played by Mark Williams of all people. The doctor and his wife might be undertaking a kind of civilizing mission of their own, it seems. The overall tone seems rather gentle. It is streaming on Prime, or if you’re in Chicago at least, showing on WTTW Saturdays.
sab
@Tony Jay: I wonder if we can get your version over here?
Omnes Omnibus
Not as sci fi oriented as some of you. I recommended Astrid on Prime in WG’s thread last night.
Steeplejack (phone)
@Steeplejack (phone):
The Jeremy Brett Sherlock Holmes series from the ’80s is on Britbox. Definitive versions of the stories with the definitive Holmes.
BGinCHI
@thruppence: Thanks! Will check that out. Love the Basque region.
Kalakal
@HeleninEire: You could try Death in Paradise, like Midsomer it has georgeous locations, cozy plots and does not take itself seriously. A lot depends on wether the hunour works for you.
Someone mentioned Johnathon Creek, that’s fun
Mousebumples
Literally watching the second half of Leverage – Redemption right now. Thinking of watching The Librarians next.
Chetan Murthy
@zhena gogolia: Interestingly, the actor who replaced her was pretty good in the sketch comedy show Smack the Pony.
HeleninEire
Thanks everyone.
beth
@sab: Yes it’s on HBO Max. I didn’t know they’d made an American version – I’ll have to check it out.
Kalakal
@HeleninEire: Just remembered, the Doctor Blake mysteries. It’s Australian, set in the 50s but definitely fits cozy mystery. I rrather like it.
Mike in NC
@Chetan Murthy: We visited the Shetlands summer of 2019. Windy as heck but it was sunny the time we were there. Not too many trees.
NotMax
@HeleninEire
Hamish Macbeth. Not, curiously, on Britbox (AFAIK), but on Prime, Tubi, Acorn and a host of other streamers.
Steeplejack (phone)
@Steeplejack (phone):
Ah! The Coroner is on BritBox. Cozy and humorous.
zhena gogolia
@Chetan Murthy: She’s Saffy in AbFab too. But she and Davies don’t click at all.
zhena gogolia
@Kalakal: I like it too, but the star turned out to be some kind of abuser, I guess.
Steeplejack (phone)
@Kalakal:
Agree on The Doctor Blake Mysteries, although I would say semi-cozy.
Mike in NC
@Tony Jay: Yes, it’s apparently almost a direct copy, but the reviews for the original are far superior. The American version of Ghosts is boring to me, though the wife loves it. Go figure.
schrodingers_cat
@Steeplejack (phone): I am fan of the books. I have read every Agatha Christie murder mystery but I am not a fan of the series. They botch many of the mysteries to make them more sexy and palatable to TV audiences.
Chetan Murthy
65 comments in, so I’ll risk an OT question/bleg. It’s about divertissement anyway, sooo …..
I spent basically my entire adult life not vacationing. Just too focused on work. Now I’m quasi-retired, and once covid is over, I want to learn how to do it. Do you-all have suggestions for books to read, or maybe tours to take, to learn the skill? I mean, it -is- a skill. I lived in Paris for 3yr, worked my bloody ass off, and basically never saw any of France (or Europe). Just worked. What a *waste*. So if I were to go back to France, what would I do (today)? I’d sit in a cafe and do the same thing I’m doing here: surf the web. Again: what a *waste*.
Clearly I need to learn how to do it, and I’m sure there are resources that teach the skill/art.
Kalakal
@zhena gogolia: Apparently it dragged on in court for years and he’s recently been cleared.
schrodingers_cat
Just finished watching Battlestar Galactica on Peacock. I loved it.
trollhattan
Started “Sex Education” this weekend, the hook primarily being Gillian Anderson as mom. Good series four shows in, although parents of HS kids might consider waiting a year or three before watching (shagging, it’s a thing). The discussions revolving around relationships and interpersonal perception are absolutely on point and insightful. Also, Gillian Anderson.
Kalakal
One series I like on Britbox is Vera. A definitely non cozy mystery series
VeniceRiley
@Pharniel: LEGENDS! I love that show a little. I’ll always show up for a sappy/dangerous f/f wedding. Also see Wynonna Earp finale.
dmsilev
@Chetan Murthy: Maybe sign up for some sort of package tour, which will at least drag you away from the cafe and to some of the sights?
NotMax
Unexpected harmless pleasure: Drop the Dead Donkey on Tubi.
Also on Tubi, am rewatching* Misfits, which must give a foreword saying it will not be everyone’s cup of [insert beverage here]. Plays absolute hob with the premise of being granted superpowers.
*Yay for being able to watch on the big TV as opposed to viewing it the first time on the computer monitor.
Brachiator
@Yutsano:
ST: Prodigy is fun, even though it requires a super heavy suspension of disbelief. But I don’t judge it too harshly.
The show is pitched to kids, but I couldn’t find any reviews that included the reaction of its target audience. Every review was from grizzled veteran fans looking for a nostalgia fix.
zhena gogolia
@Kalakal: Oh, I hadn’t heard that.
Gin & Tonic
@Chetan Murthy: Watch some videos of accomplished travelers, like Rick Steves or Anthony Bourdain.
Suzanne
@Chetan Murthy: Plan specific things you want to see. When I go on an urban vacation, I pack the days full of museums, attractions, restaurants, shows. I don’t like tour groups as a rule, but I do make my own itinerary.
raven
The final season of Dickinson dropped, great show.
eclare
@Chetan Murthy: I went to Croatia for two weeks several years ago, and IMHO it takes at least three days to fully relax and get into vacation mode. I’d also recommend going to places where Europeans vacation, when they vacation, they *vacation*.
For example, my friend who went to Croatia with me was the only one on the beach with an iPad. Everyone else had old school books, magazines, some played cards. Very relaxing
Plan one thing per day. That will get you up and out, and maybe you’ll find other stuff to explore along the way. To me, more than one thing feels like a work conference.
Kalakal
@zhena gogolia: He does come across as a jerk in this article about it, the whole thing seems a bit murky
https://www.abc.net.au/news/2020-12-19/craig-mclachlan-sexual-assault-court-case-not-guilty/12990950
eclare
@Gin & Tonic: Rick Steves books are very helpful, full of advice on how to see the big attractions without the big crowds and little semi-hidden gems that are worth it.
Omnes Omnibus
@Chetan Murthy: Not a book or video, but my experience. Don’t try to do too much. Always tell yourself that you will come back and see the things you missed. Leave time for surprises or for doing nothing but sitting in a sidewalk cafe or browsing a used book store. Stroll, don’t rush.
NotMax
@eclare
Mel Brooks on filming in Yugoslavia.
:)
Brachiator
@Chetan Murthy:
What an interesting opportunity! I hesitate to give advice, because it ends up being what I would do. And I bet that others have great insights.
I was not big on conventional 2 week vacations and often did not take them. But in my 30s I had got lucky with investments and quit my job and did not work for 2 years. I did have a part time seasonal job in what became a new career and I took UCLA Extension classes in Ethics, Classical Music and a few other subjects. I did some deep travel in Mexico and later India.
One fun thing is that I ran into a motley group of seasoned travelers and observed and talked with them. Some liked to travel with family or friends. Others traveled alone because they didn’t want to have to argue about what to see next or where to go. Others deliberately got outside their comfort zone.
One thing. If you have time and a good situation, you can nibble. Try a few small things that seem like fun.
Miss Bianca
@NotMax: I watched the first two (or was it three?) seasons of Misfits, then most of the main characters whom I’d really liked exited, stage right, and I just somehow couldn’t make myself go on. You’ll have to let me know if the later seasons are worth picking it up again for.
eclare
@NotMax: Interesting interview! I didn’t see any horses and wagons, and the food was outstanding, but on a hill overlooking Dubrovnik, we were warned to stay on the path lest we step on ordnance left over from the Balkan wars.
Suzanne
Crazy Wendy Rogers called Big Bird a commie on Twitter.
Arizona is full of crazy people.
delk
@HeleninEire:COZY: Shakespeare & Hathaway, Rosemary & Thyme, The Coroner. LESS COZY: Vera, Prime Suspect, A Touch of Frost
Suzanne
All I get to watch are Shaun the Sheep, Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood, and the occasional Pixar movie.
Shaun the Sheep is actually funny.
Miss Bianca
@Suzanne: Agreed about Shaun the Sheep. I got to watch some of those on a flight from London a few years back and they are really great.
I got introduced to Peppa Pig while I was Over There as well.
Yet Another Haldane
After almost 20 years without, I’m about to get a TV, so this is excellent info, thanks, everybody!
I’ve seen an episode or two of this and that in hotel rooms over the years, and I’d really like to fill in the gaps of _His Dark Materials_ and _Watchmen_. Also, reaching back a bit, _Luther_ looks excellent. (Ruth Wilson scares the bejeepers out of me.)
NotMax
@Miss Bianca
There was a season (fourth maybe?) when the original powers that be left and the series seemed headed hellbent for leather into the crapper.
Those folks then came back and managed to right to ship, as it were.
In case you’ve never seen it, the non-episodic short outlining what became of Nathan.
Steeplejack
More on BritBox:
Shakespeare and Hathaway. Somewhat scruffy private detectives. The first couple of episodes are bumpy, but it gets better after that.
New Tricks. Retired detectives called back to work on cold cases. Many seasons.
trollhattan
@Suzanne:
@Miss Bianca:
Everything Nick Park is amazing and must be watched. Kids? Absolutely need to see them but adults need not scrounge around the neighborhood to find a kid or three to watch with. They stand on their own.
Happy 40th anniversary of “Time Bandits.”
Miss Bianca
@NotMax: Oh, hey – I think I did see the one about Nathan, thanks! : )
Huh, nice to know that Misfits managed to come back around. Maybe I’ll have to give it another try.
@Yet Another Haldane: I’ve only managed to get through two seasons of Luther despite my love of All Things Idris, because that show was just a little too intense for me. Ruth Wilson being one of the major reasons of that.
eclare
@Suzanne: Try Wallace and Gromit if you like Shaun the Sheep.
lashonharangue
I’ve been binge watching past seasons of Line of Duty on Netflix, a British crime procedural. It has some of the visual style and pacing of 24 Hours and a story line that is QAnon adjacent. But since its British the large acting cast are all quite good, diverse, and not Hollywood pretty.
Laura W.
@HeleninEire: The Mallorca Files. English female detective partners with German male detective on the island of Mallorca. Absolutely beautiful scenery.
schrodingers_cat
@Chetan Murthy: Do what the locals do. If you can get a local to show you around even better.
Yet Another Haldane
@Miss Bianca: oh yes, I can imagine needing to take long breaks from Luther. Intensity is great, until it isn’t.
This clip is everything I’ve seen of the show; it is intriguing, with sharp, subtle performances sparking brilliantly off one another, and yeah, too intense to binge.
https://youtu.be/-AB_znetvII
NotMax
@HeleninEire
Oldie but goody British solved-in-one series, Cadfael. Derek Jacobi is a tenacious delight.
StringOnAStick
For movies, we saw the indie film The Alpinist last week and I’m still thinking about it. Even though it’s about a guy who free Simon’s (no rope) rock, ice and alpine climbs, it wasn’t filmed to show you huge exposure and freak the viewer out; it really is the story of this amazing young Canadian living life on his terms. If you know the sport then you know he died in an avalanche along with his climbing partner, and the movie addresses that since it happened as they were making final edits.
Every other film I’ve seen about people who free solo treats it either as a freak show or opportunity to make the audience ill with fear, and this movie didn’t do that. It was about the spirituality of this climber and what drove him. It’s also an interesting look at just how on the financial edge really serious non-sponsored climbers are, living in a stairwell or a tent in the woods. This guy had zero interest in doing the promotional stuff that could have supported him financially.
Jim, Foolish Literalist
@delk:
Heh. I rewatched (most of) Prime Suspect last year. It much “less cozy” than I remembered.
Talk of Ruth Wilson makes me want to dial up Luther again. I kind of feel like I should watch something as opposed to rewatching.
Suzanne
Soooo it has been a somewhat trying day. I got flu shot and Covid booster yesterday, both in my left arm. I am right-handed and I have tendonitis in my right shoulder, so I got both shots in my left. Anyway, I am somewhat sore. So of course, Spawn the Youngest has been like a heat-seeking missile, jumping on me and smashing into the injection site. Awesome. Then she kicked me in the teeth. Twice. I am emotionally done and I am going to go lie down in bed and try to calm down.
Dan B
@Chetan Murthy: Universities run tours that can be great since you learn about interesting things. Rick Steves tours get raves for local insights. His books provide context and insight. Another option is volunteering with organizations.
Suzanne
I warned Mr. Suzanne that I needed to get away before I ended up online shopping too much. I get stressed out and packages start arriving.
frosty
@HeleninEire: I don’t know if it’s BritBox; and it may not be particularly funny, but I really liked Foyle’s War, set in WWII England. All the historical background is accurate.
frosty
@Chetan Murthy: I like Fodor’s Guides as a resource. Lonely Planet is good too. As far as the skills, who knows? Find a place you’d like to go, check out guides and apps for what to see and places to stay and take off. That’s pretty much what I’ve done all my life. And follow Rule One:
“Make a plan but stay flexible”
billcinsd
@HeleninEire: I don’t know if it is on Britbox, but I quite enjoyed The Queen’s of Mystery. A young female detective returns to her hometown and 3 aunts that raised her after her mother died. The aunts think it is their job to help the young police detective solve her cases. Her boss does not want this. The characters are quirky nd fun, the main episode mystery gets solved every show, and their is a longer term mystery about the death of the detectives mother. Quirky, funny, cosyish.
I also liked New Tricks (which was mentioned earlier), particularly the first few years
persistentillusion
@Yet Another Haldane: As well she should. Heartily endorse “Luther”.
Helen
@Chetan Murthy: Something I have done when traveling and spending a few days in a city is sign up for a couple of day tours. These are tours of various sizes that can last from a few hours to a whole day involving a specific site or a trip into the countryside. Then you have time to relax and explore on your own along with short tours. It all can be arranged before leaving home.
persistentillusion
@frosty: Foyle’s War is lovely and it’s a primer on later BBC stars. Look for a young anybody who you’ve enjoyed watching on the Beeb, and they’ll turn up eventually.
Fake Irishman
@Suzanne:
In addition to Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood, mine loves the new Magic School Bus on Netflix. It’s extremely well done and I’ve actually learned quite a bit…
janesays
@Payingattention: Dopesick is terrific, but it really makes me want to see the entire Sackler family lined up against a wall and summarily executed for the hundreds of thousands of lives they’ve destroyed with their greed. Same goes for their chief enablers in the FDA.
janesays
@Tony Jay: The American version of Ghosts is a direct adaptation of the British version.
planetjanet
So I have become wrapped up in watching “Rake”. It is an Australian series about a horrible human being, but somehow is a good lawyer. Richard Roxburgh is the lead actor. I remember being completely fascinated by him many years ago and thought I would check it out and am now hooked. Roxburgh’s character Cleaver Greene is a complete mess, gambling, drugs, in love with a prostitute. Yet for all his inability to be stable person, he does understand the messiness in others and can turn this into successful defenses of some extraordinary defendants. The first episode starred Hugo Weaving as a cannibal. It is a wild ride. It is on Neflix through the end of November. Can I get through five seasons before then?
randy khan
@Chetan Murthy:
I don’t know if I’d say we do it right, but there are a few things I’d suggest for vacations:
Fake Irishman
@Helen:
@Chetan Murthy:
Agreed with Helen. My wife and I will usually explore most sights on our own, but schedule a half-day tour for something requiring lots of specialized knowledge: we’ve done food tasting tours in Seville, Istanbul and Mexico City that have helped us get an idea of what makes each place’s food tick and shown us places we never would have thought to try on our own. In Mexico City I remember waiting in line to try some street food from a woman who had been at that spot on the sidewalk since the 1960s. I turned around and asked the folks in line behind me how often they purchased from her, and was amazed when they said every week since 1985.
frosty
@Chetan Murthy: Helen had a good suggestion. We’ve done hop-on-hop-off bus or boat tours in Boston, Charleston, London, Paris, and Quebec City. It’s a good way to see the sights and find something you might want to return to without being part of a tour group.
Chetan Murthy
Thank you all for your suggestions! I’ll keep this thread for when I can travel — hopefully soon(ish)!
dm
I don’t watch enough TV to have any recommendations, though I guess Heike Story on Funimation is worth recommending: it’s an animated retelling of the Heike Monogatari from Studio Saru and one of the great directors to emerge out of Kyoto Animation.
It’s a bit confusing if you don’t know the story, though (I don’t, and I am confused). Think War and Peace only you’re tackling it without having heard of Napoleon.
Really, I’m here because I just finished HHhH by Laurent Binet, a topic from a week or so ago.
I’m grateful for the topic — it meant I reread Binet’s The seventh function of language, which is most definitely worth a re-read, because boy, howdy does Binet have fun with modern European intellectuals. Now I want to re-read The name of the rose thanks to a throwaway line set in an Italian train station.
And then I read Binet’s Civilizations, a you-just-have-to-suspend-your-disbelief alternative history in which Columbus gets lost, and Europe is conquered by the Inca. Things turned out different. Three quarters of the way through the book there’s an interesting exchange of letters between Thomas More and Erasmus on the subject of Henry VIIIths establishment of Incan Sun Temples in England. More is horrified, Erasmus is syncretic.
Finally, I took on HHhH and I consider it the weakest of the three books, even though the story it tells is perhaps the strongest (the assassination of Reihard Heydrich, the Nazi Butcher of Prague by members of the Czech resistance). The authorial presence is too much for my tastes. It’s an interesting experiment, but one that doesn’t work that well for me.
Groucho48
Surprised no one mentioned Only Murders in the Building, on Hulu, with Steve Martin, Martin Short and Selena Gomez. They all live in the same, very posh, apartment building in NYC and come together when there’s a murder in the building and they decide to do a podcast about their attempts to be detectives and find the killer. Lots of fun, though it probably would be better if they’d done it in 8 episodes instead of 10.
Steeplejack
@frosty:
Foyle’s War is great, but it’s on Acorn, not BritBox.
eclare
@Groucho48: As soon as I finish the latest season of GBBS on Netflix, which is annoyingly only releasing one ep per week, I am switching to Hulu to watch Only Murders in the Building.
Czar Chasm
@trollhattan: The series is great! It can be a bit extra at times & stretch suspension of disbelief, but otherwise does a great job with modern teenage sexuality.
PJ
@Chetan Murthy: I second the recommendation to only plan one “site” or activity per day, but would also recommend picking out one restaurant to eat in, and maybe one evening activity, depending on your interests (theater, music, sports). And spend the rest of the time walking around in interesting neighborhoods and going where your eyes, ears, or nose lead you. If you don’t see the site, or dine in the restaurant, or see the show, it’s no big deal, you can do it tomorrow, but it gives the day a focus it might not otherwise have.
If you have enough time before your trip, I would also recommend learning enough of the local language to be able to have a basic conversation with the locals.
Czar Chasm
Right now, we’re alternating between What We Do in the Shadows (Hulu; I love how they subtly establish the parameters for vampires) and Big Mouth (Netflix; better comprehensive sex ed than most courses in high schools).
Succession (HBO Max) is a great deconstruction of what happens to family relationships and dynamics when financial dependence is never a factor.
Attack on Titan (Hulu, Crunchyroll) is an anime adaptation of the manga series. The series takes so many crazy twists and turns that one’s mind is regularly blown, and the titular creatures continually elicit discomfort via body horror. *chef’s kiss
meander
Two documentary series that I enjoyed recently (though not every episode was equally enjoyable):
Icon: Music Through The Lens – a PBS 6-part series on rock-and-roll photography: album covers, concerts, iconic shots, etc. It looks like it’s all in the Passport library now, but doesn’t Amazon Prime have PBS access?
This Is Pop – a Netflix multi-part series on various aspects of the pop music universe. I especially enjoyed the auto-tune and Swedish producers episodes.
And a documentary-ish series on Netflix: Pretend It’s a City. Writer Fran Lebowitz opines on art, New York City, books, and most often other people. Martin Scorsese is the interviewer and director, and he seems to be having fun. She might not be to everyone’s taste, but to this grumpy misanthrope she makes a lot of great points.
meander
@persistentillusion:
Another vote for Luther. Intense, but worth it. Idris Elba is a force of nature, and I think Ruth Wilson gives one of the all time great performances in a crime drama.
Craig
Dead thread. I went to a long dinner.
Hooper is on HBO Max. Long unavailable, Burt Reynolds and Hal Needham ode to Old Hollywood stuntmen. A little dated, but just damned cool. Jan Michael Vincent as the young gun badass stuntmen, Burt as the old Legend, Brian Keith as the Legends Legend. Sally Field shows up. There’s cameos from the best stunt people, and easter eggs about them. Weird, great movie.
Steeplejack
@meander:
Amazon Prime does have a PBS Passport channel, but it’s an extra-cost subscription.
JAK
Streets of Berlin. Mhz, streaming. Gritty. One of the Tatort series. German with English subtitles. No humor.
The Undertaker. Mhz, streaming. Ex cop takes over father’s undertaker business. Swiss German with English subtitles. Some humor.
Alexandra Elle. Mhz, streaming. Medical examiner investigates suspicious deaths. Some humor. French with English subtitles.
also available from Amazon Channels.
Netflix: Lupin, Babylon Berlin. Subtitled versions.
charon
Gomorra on HBOMax. Italian with subtitles set in Naples. Like a blend of The Wire, The Godfather and Mayans MC. Was a huge hit in Italy, first two seasons were on Sundance here, then the whole series moved to HBOMax.
The Gloaming on Starz. Series of murders connected to a spooky cult and its guru. Detective show
Babylon Berlin on Netflix, in 1930ish Berlin. Detective stuff, interesting setting.
Kingeider
Korean series
Vincenzo, Korean consigliere returns to Seoul and helps a ragtag group of misfit business owners in their battle against political and economic elites. It’s magnificent!
Crash Landing on You: romance and intrigue across the N/S Korean border. Great humor and story. Plus a couple of incredibly beautiful lead actors.
bluefoot
@Steeplejack (phone):
I think it was someone here who said “Jeremy Brett is Sherlock Holmes, everyone else is acting.”
Anyway
@Kingeider:
oooh, gonna check these out. Thanks. Netflix?
BGinCHI
@planetjanet: Watched the first few seasons of this and loved it.
no comment
@Mousebumples: The Librarians is a fun show!
no comment
@Czar Chasm: I binge watched Attack on Titan on Hulu, and am impatiently waiting for new episodes. I haven’t read the manga, so I have no idea what will happen next! (No spoilers, please!) Not happy with the main character’s stated plan; hoping he is bluffing or will change his mind before the end of the series.
no comment
Currently watching: Schitt$ Creek (Netflix)
On my list to watch:
Netflix: 2nd season of Locke & Key
3rd season of Dead to Me coming out soon
Hulu: Only Murders in the Building sounds like a fun watch
Recommendations:
Netflix: inside job – Kind of an adult Gravity Falls. (Which I also recommend. Occasional episodes air on DisneyXD on cable. Maybe on Disney+ ?) Alex Hirsch, who created Gravity Falls, is an executive producer. inside job is an animated show about a company that controls conspiracies. I was hesitant to watch because of all the real life conspiracy theories that are affecting people’s physical & mental health currently. But it wisely avoids the Qanon crap. More old school conspiracies. Lots of references to the 80s and 90s. Makes fun of several famous people.
Trese – Based on a graphic novel inspired by Filipino mythical creatures. Animated. Alexandra Trese is an ambassador between humans and supernatural beings in Manilla. It starts a little slow, because as an ambassador, Trese’s first step is to calmly remind everyone of the peace treaty they signed whenever a problem arises. But she’s willing to fight when necessary. Only 6 episodes. Story really gets going by episode 3. Lots of flashbacks to Trese’s childhood. Beautiful artwork of Manilla at the beginning of each episode.
Derry Girls – Comedy about Catholic teenagers in 90s Northern Ireland. I probably missed a few jokes due to not knowing much about Northern Ireland, its history, Catholicism, and deciphering their accents. Still plenty of comedy to go around. Teenagers dealing with typical teenage stuff, plus situations unique to the time period and area.