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What are you watching???

Micro Men, streamed on YouTube.

A 2009 docudrama about the rise of the personal computer in Britain in the 1970s and 80s, focusing on the Sinclair/Acorn rivalry. A nice companion piece to Pirates of Silicon Valley, sort of corny and oversimplified, but a lot of fun.
 
Recent and in the near future nearly everyday regulars:
- Law & Order, Special Victims Unit
- Overhaulin'
- Taskmaster UK
- Schitt's Creek
 
Sundays-Enterprise
Mondays-Jessica Jones
Tuesday-Lost in Space
Wednesdays-Farscape
Thursdays-Minority Report
Fridays-Babylon 5
Saturdays-Medium
I'm only watching one episode a week of each. Most of these I've never seen or in B5's and Enterprise's case, not seen much of Seasons 1 and 2.
 
Just watched first 2 episodes of the OG NCIS........it actually feels fresher to me than it has in years with the new agent and Gary Cole joining the cast.
 
A series of RLM watches got me to watch Amazon's "Vast of Night" which I really enjoyed. (Though thank-god for the Roku device's "replay with closed captioning" feature as the thick 50's midwestern-ny accents are hard to grasp.)

Good performances by the young actors in it, good atmosphere and use of the time period and setting, and an effective ending. Some of the editing/presentation choices I didn't care for (like the couple of times it switches the video quality of an ancient very early television. I "think" it's supposed to go with the slant the movie is supposed to be a "Twilight Zone" episode situation and not "really happening" but I'm not sure it needed that angle. I think the movie would have been just as good, and more effective, if it had just stuck with it taking place as "really happening" instead of these odd cuts to the old-timey TV quality.

There's also a quite a few slow "just dialogue" scenes which RLM equated to the Indianapolis Speech from Jaws, which I don't agree with. The impact of the Indianapolis speech is that it was an event that really happened, here characters are talking about alien signals and abductions so it loses some of depth and grasp of hearing a horrifying story of something real.

But the actors (the radio call-in telling his story and the old woman in the house) do a good job with their delivery.

I quite liked it in the end though. Good job with atmosphere, setting and the actors. But, man, have your closed captioning or instant replay feature ready.
 
I've been watching Horror movies now that we're in October. So far, I've watched:

The Screaming Skull (1958)
Gonjiam: Haunted Asylum
Creepshow 2
Friday the 13th (2009 Remake)
Night of the Living Dead (1968)

Gonjiam has been the best movie so far, a found footage korean horror movie that actually gave me some good scares. Screaming Skull was just boring, Creepshow 2 was really cheap and mostly just annoying, and Friday the 13th had some great slasher kills but a mediocre story.

Night of the Living Dead was not very good. I liked the character of Ben, and it really felt like these people were trying to survive, but I didn't like the story, there were too many useless/annoying characters, and the ending just sucked. I can see why its historically important, but I personally don't think its a very good movie.
 
Juggernaut (1974), streamed on YouTube.

Seven bombs planted on a cruise liner, a race against time to find the culprit and disarm the bombs. Starring Richard Harris, Omar Sharif and Anthony Hopkins.
 
We stayed up til 3am (very unusual for us these days) to watch all of Q-Force on Netflix. At first, it was just super funny. But as the series went on, the stereotypes became characters, and the plot got *really* good! Fabulous actors too.
 
One specific horror movie thing I'm doing this October is going through the Japanese Ju-On (Grudge) and Ring series (at least the main parts). I started today with the first two Ju-On movies (which were tv/direct to video movies, Ju-On: The Grudge is the third movie but the first that went to theaters):

Ju-On The Curse 1
and 2.

Both were decent, especially as cheap made for TV type stuff goes. Some good creepy atmosphere, actually scary ghosts and a really messed up (in a good way) origin for the curse stuff. The second film loses points for literally just using 30 minutes of the first film to pad itself out (the films are somewhat episodic, and the second film reuses the last two segments of the first film as its opening), but its original stuff was very good. I'm pretty happy so far, and it feels like I'm going to enjoy this series.
 
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