It was not what I was expecting but I enjoyed it quite a bit, as a character piece that worked really well. Putting the (not anachronistic, never using that word again...) music front and center (literally) this time I thought made the tone and language feel more natural. They even found someone in Scorpia that you could buy as being related to Jade. I liked Graydon's facial hair... On paper I wouldn't think I'd like this episode but pleasantly surprised.This was a compelling character driven episode, where the characters pushed the story forward. What each character revealed changes everything they do going forward.
It was really good. Going to rewatch yet again.
Brownies came a long way from wearing loincloth and ratskins.It was not what I was expecting but I enjoyed it quite a bit, as a character piece that worked really well. Putting the (not anachronistic, never using that word again...) music front and center (literally) this time I thought made the tone and language feel more natural. They even found someone in Scorpia that you could buy as being related to Jade. I liked Graydon's facial hair... On paper I wouldn't think I'd like this episode but pleasantly surprised.
EDIT: oh hey, was that brownie girl wearing a rock t-shirt?
Putting the (not anachronistic, never using that word again...) music front and center (literally) this time I thought made the tone and language feel more natural.
Brownies came a long way from wearing loincloth and ratskins.
When Crimson and Clover is played? At that point the characters are slow dancing and the focus is on Boorman and Scorpia (and later Kit and Jade). I saw the music as setting the tone in the same way as the first piece.I didn't mind too much when they used a pop song to score the opening chase, since it conveyed the intended energy and tone of the scene. But it was weird to have the Bone Reavers' dance party (a Bone Rave?) set to a pop song. In that kind of a scene, the music should be diegetic, the thing the characters are actually hearing and dancing to.
When Crimson and Clover is played? At that point the characters are slow dancing and the focus is on Boorman and Scorpia (and later Kit and Jade). I saw the music as setting the tone in the same way as the first piece.
Was kind of hoping it would be more aimed at kids.. More wonder, magic and fun times. Not the CW teeny angst.
You've never heard Crimson & Clover? I've heard it all over the place.I have no idea of the title or content of the song, and it's irrelevant to my point. I'm talking about the logic of it.
I take it none of you watched Reign, they did this kind of thing all the time on that. It was a period show about Mary Queen of Scots time in France, but used pop songs for most of it's music.
You've never heard Crimson & Clover, I've heard it all over the place.
I haven't watched it since it aired, but I'm pretty sure a lot of the scenes with the characters at parties played out exactly like the one here, with pop music playing while the characters danced and partied.But I assume the pop songs were not used as diegetic music that the characters could hear and dance to. Usually, even productions that use pop songs as underscore in period pieces still use period-appropriate music in contexts like concerts or dances, where the characters would actually be hearing music. I mean, even when Back to the Future Part III used the song ZZ Top wrote for the film to score a Western dance scene, they had ZZ Top dress in period costumes and perform a Western-style arrangement of it with period instruments.
I did find it amusing to see D+ show the characters getting a bit bent. Hey when you’re partying with Bone Reavers...
Airknot much on what's going on with Arik.
Airk
I think that was true of the movie, too.My biggest problem with the show is that it's called Willow but Warwick Davis isn't being given enough to do.
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