Review of miniseries, Taken

Sci-Fi channel production also known as Steven Spielberg Presents Taken, December 2-13, 2002.  Executive producers:  Leslie Bohem and Steven Spielberg.   

When I hear of the movie title, Taken, I don’t think of Liam Neeson’s Taken, Taken2, or Taken3 about evil people kidnapping his family members. You can’t copyright a title so the same title can be used by anyone else. 

Instead, I think of producer Stephen Spielberg’s Taken miniseries (10 episodes written by Leslie Bohem) in which evil space aliens keep kidnapping and torturing humans all over the world, and treacherous humans take advantage of humans and aliens, but the story is focused on three generations of families over five decades–the Clarks, Crawfords, and Keys.

The story is narrated by 8-year-old Allison “Allie” Clark/Keys (Dakota Fanning), who sounds so mature giving the overview of each episode.

Aliens can appear in any organic shape especially human.  Humans are either their alien victims or fierce enemies trying to kill everybody including aliens.

Casualties

The series started with fighter pilots in a battle with German planes who see blue lights during the battle and it seems that the lights help the wounded among them.   The memories they have later of the surgeries are different.  They all survive in spite of their wounds but end up with physical and mental problems and all except one die early for no apparent reason.  The child of the survivor will be abducted by aliens for years.

Women in the series are fodder for military men and the women’s husbands or boyfriends, i.e. the Colonel Thomas Campbell’s (Michael Moriarty) daughter, a farm woman, a fresh woman, two female mediums, government undercover psychologist Harriet Penzler, etc.

Even military contractors were casualties.  Dr. Kreutz (Willie Garson who we lost this year) was a treacherous German-accented scientist working for the U.S. military; Dr. Goldin (Rob Labelle) a Jewish scientist who died because he wanted the alien to keep him in the memory of the happiest time in his life–his bar mitzvah; and Matt Frewer as an astrophysicist.

The only alien casualties of record were the ones who looked like doctors treating the soldiers injured in the original dog fights and the handful of aliens captured over the decades.

The actors were excellent.   I believed the treachery of the captain/killer Owen Crawford (Joel Gretsch) of humans assigned to the project of tapping into the one alien ship they had for decades instead of the fake weather balloon reported at Roswell

There was a different director for each of 10 episodes:  Breck Eisner, Felix Enriquez Alcala, John Fawcett, Tobe Hooper, Jeremy Paul Kagan, Michael Katleman, Sergio Mimica-Gezzan, Bryan Spicer, Jeff Woolnough, and Thomas J. Wright.   It was so interesting hearing the directors’ opinions in the extras after the miniseries.   I saw the miniseries week by week from its origination in 2002.   And, luckily for me, the Baltimore County Library had the miniseries I could borrow recently.  The pace is action, action, action!

Written by Rosa L. Griffin

Review of The Nevers television show 2021

Remember those feel-good television shows like Touched by an Angel, where angels walked among us and helped people with their daily lives?  Well, this is not that show.

The Nevers is not about the kindliness of mankind or angels.   As a matter of fact, kindness is rare in this American scifi, drama, and historical fiction.  “Victorian women find themselves with unusual abilities, relentless enemies and a mission that may change…”   Not for the faint of heart nor the prudish.  The constant violence is its own character in the series.

I saw the first 3 episodes of The Nevers for free on HBO as a merchandising tool to entice me to add HBO to the cost of my subscription to Xfinity cable TV.  The Nevers is wonderful.  It is about women who kick ass in their attempts to keep safe those who are “touched” or extremely different than the average person, especially other women.   The difference is that we don’t know how or why these individuals are now endowed with newly acquired “powers”, unorthodox skills, and/or odd physical appearances.  These things make the average person think they are demon-possessed or witches in the 1800’s.

But people were allowed to see some kind of bizarre-looking ‘vessel’ fly through the city and drop invisible dots which touched individual residents with new skills and odd malformations, making some people feel different almost right away, while in others, the transformations took time. All quickly forget what they have seen. They—different sexes (mostly women), races, and professions—are labeled as “touched” from then on. 

Some can crush things with their hands, some can heal easily or heal others easily, some can read minds or see visions, or have the ability to control electric power, etc.  What if these abilities were from God?   One mother kills her own daughter who has new abilities and starts turning in others with these new abilities, thinking she is doing God’s work.  However, as a result of her work, some of the “touched” are kidnapped and experimented on by a “doctor” who intends to find out how they came to receive these new abilities.   Meanwhile, those he experiments on are lobotomized and/or deformed slaves working in tunnels while others are trained to kill and kidnap more “touched”.

Where are the good people in all this?  The “good” people wear many faces.   Their goodness is an illusion.  Most of the “touched” are good and are helped by seemingly nice people who only help to their own ends.   It seems the touched only trust each other. They solicit charity to keep their “orphanage” running. You can guess how it is with anybody who’s different.  Many of the scenes allude to the horrors still going on today.

Laura Donnelly (new to me) plays Amalia True, the head mistress of the “touched” in her orphanage.  She works on ways to help with her and their survival including fundraising.  Amalia is also “touched” with visions and physical strength.

Ann Skelly (new to me) plays Penance Adair, the woman who is “touched” with science and mechanical genius and is Amalia’s co-manager of the orphanage.

Olivia Williams (The Sixth Sense, Ms. Austen Regrets, Hanna, etc.) plays the charitable benefactor to the touched orphanage who has an ulterior motive for her kindness.

Pip Torrens (Preacher, Poldark, The Mystery of the Spanish Chest (Poirot), etc.) plays Lord Gilbert Massen whose “touched” daughter died in his arms probably because she was too young to receive the “gift”.  He and his secret group of wealthy men want all of the “touched” to be destroyed.  So, he is definitely not a friend to the “touched”.

Eleanor Tomlinson (Jack the Giant Slayer, Colette, Poldark, etc.) plays Mary Brighton who is “touched” with a voice from heaven which calms and calls to other “touched”.   She is also the ex-wife of a police detective.

Ben Chaplin (The Truth about Cats and Dogs, The Remains of the Day, Cinderella, The Legend of Tarzan, etc.) plays the ex-husband police detective Frank Mundi who acts like he is on the side of the “touched” but works for those who are not on their side.

Amy Manson (Being Human, Once Upon a Time, etc.) plays Maladie (malady vs. my lady) who is a woman who is “touched” just as she is going into an asylum, escapes and wants to kill everyone especially the “touched”.   Her power is pain which comes in handy for her in the asylum.

Nick Frost (Attack the Block, Shaun of the Dead, The World’s End, Snow White and the Huntsman, etc.) plays the leading gangster Declan “Beggar King” Orrun who helps whoever pays the most.

Denis O’Hare (True Blood, American Gods, The Proposal, etc.) plays Dr. Edmund Hague who unmercifully experiments on the “touched” to try to find out where their gifts come from.  He is unsuccessful in his task so far.  Be prepared for the horror of his “work”.

Zackary Momoh (Harriet, Doctor Sleep, Death in Paradise, etc.), plays Doctor Horatio Cousens who has been “touched” with the ability to heal fatal wounds practically the same day.

Rochelle Neil (Terminator: Dark Fate, Death in Paradise, etc.) plays Anne Carbey who is “touched“ with the ability to start fires from her hands.   She assists Maladie in her murderous spree until she sees a better way with the more decent “touched”.

Kiran Sonia Sawar (new to me) plays as Harriet Kaur who is an aspiring lawyer and a “touched” woman who can turn objects into glass with her breath.

The series was created, written, and directed by Joss Whedon (Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Justice League, Angel, Avengers movie series, Toy Story, Cabin in the Woods, Speed, etc.).   Update:  Joss Whedon has left the show.  (“‘The Nevers’ Can’t Escape Joss Whedon’s Shadow, for Better or (Mostly) Worse”, Alison Herman, April 13, 2021, The Ringer)

I love the show thus far and hope to see the rest of the episodes. HBO has another winner here.  No wonder there was such a fight for this show between the networks and streaming services.  (Wikipedia)

Written by Rosa L. Griffin                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   

Review of Outer Limits episode “The Vaccine”

The Outer Limits television show has always been ahead of its time.   It is my favorite science fiction show of all time.  It is done so intelligently and articulately bar none.   In descending order, OL is my number one, then Twilight Zone, Ray Bradbury Theater, Alfred Hitchcock Presents, Thriller, etc.   My favorite science fiction movie producers are too many to name.

Yesterday, I saw an episode of the Outer Limits tv show on the Comet channel entitled “The Vaccine”, season 4, episode 11, originally broadcast on April 3, 1998.   Before the episode began, a man’s voice made a disclaimer warning the viewer that the subject of the episode may be stressful to some because of the pandemic we are in.  

It was summarized in the scheduling as “A dozen survivors of a fatal plague must decide who will get the only 3 vaccines available”.  IMDb describes the plot as “After a doomsday cult releases a genetically engineered virus, a nurse named Marie must decide which patients under quarantine get a vaccine that may cure the plague.” 

Maria Conchita Alonso plays the nurse who wants to follow their CDC guidelines but it would involve not giving the vaccine to a child, an elderly person, or a dying person.   She passes out from exhaustion trying to carry this responsibility for her patients because she has to do everything including feeding them and monitoring them for contagion.   Her character Marie has been the only one with medical experience for months.  The science community suggests that only those of child-bearing age receive the vaccine.  

The usual suspects are among the group:  the enforcer (Biski Gugushe as James), the bystander (Laurie Murdoch as Lawrence), the misinformed (Jason Gaffney as Kirk), the bullies (Brent David Fraser as Graham and Megan Leitch as Barb), the elderly (Joy Coghill as Jean), the man dying from cancer (Jay Brazeau as Bernard Katz), the diseased soldier who delivers the vaccine on his way to his home to die with his family (Michael Buie), a male child (Lane Gates as Harry), etc.  You can easily identify with the characters.  

There is even a love interest for Marie in the form of Major Ford (played by Eric Keenley). He leaves in uniform to get more supplies and never comes back.   After all of Marie’s heartache, the episode ends with a twist which is the Outer Limits signature.   It is one of their best episodes ever and directed by Neill Fearnley.

Written by Rosa L. Griffin

Ray Bradbury’s still got it!

As a child, I used to hang out in the Pratt library in east Baltimore by myself.   The public library is where I developed my taste for Science Fiction, Gothic Romance and Black Literature.   I remember coming across Ray Bradbury’s books.  

Recently, I was delighted to find that there was a marathon of his short stories broadcast on Comet tv called The Ray Bradbury Theater on Sunday afternoons.   Ray Bradbury himself speaking about how he came up with story ideas was repeated before each story began.

On September 20, 2020, I saw an episode of a Ray Bradbury short story called “A Miracle of Rare Device” (season 3, episode 2, 7/14/89, starring Pat Harrington, Jr. formerly of the “One day at a time” tv show; Wayne Robson, and William Kircher).   It is a story about two scraggly guys who drove around in their beat-up truck looking for whatever they could find to make money.   There was a less scraggly bully on a motorcycle who was always after them to get whatever they could find.

One day they outran the guy by sheer luck and found an opening in the desert on the side of the road in which they hid.   The more intelligent of the two saw over the horizon a mirage of New York City.  It was hard for his partner to see it, but eventually he did also.

The more resourceful fella figured he could charge one dollar per vehicle for others to see it.   A scam coming, right?   But it turned out that others saw what they really needed to see.   Yes, the two men made money, but to them, it became a miracle for the people who came.   The visitors told them what they saw and it seemed like miracles to the two men, who really started appreciating the mirages as miracles.

Of course, the motorcycle man found out about their money-making and took all their money.  And, although he could not see the mirage at all, he planned on taking over, but none of the people who came after that could see the mirage at all either.    Motorcycle man gave up and left the two honest men there with nothing but their truck, not even the mirage.   But eventually they could see it again and they decided to let people see the mirage for free from now on.  

I cried when the individual people told what they saw and when the men concluded that this was something of God.   I had forgotten how good Ray Bradbury’s stories were.  I’ve seen two marathons so far and look forward to seeing more.

Written by Rosa L. Griffin

Pass It On

Empathy

“When someone opens up and shares how they are feeling,

Just listen,

And be there—

You don’t have to have an answer or response.”   Alfred Adler

Empathy is something that is lacking in society today.   And in spite of someone’s political affiliation, we should be able to talk to them about something we have in common—other than politics.  I believe with all my heart that we can agree to disagree.

I remember a Bible verse which says “A gentle answer turns away wrath, but a harsh word stirs up anger.   The tongue of the wise adorns knowledge, but the mouth of the fool gushes folly.”  Proverbs 15:1-2, New International Version.

“The values we live by are worth more when we pass them on.”   Passiton.com

I had been seeing these wonderful commercials on television and wondered who produced them.  They are produced by the Foundation for a Better Life.  

“Their goal is to offer inspirational messages to people everywhere as a contribution toward promoting universal values, good role models and a better life.”   They have ads and commercials on tv, radio, billboards, videos, and more.   Check out their website at passiton.com.

I have been inspired and uplifted each time I see their commercials.   I have also subscribed to their emails. Pass it on!

Written by Rosa L. Griffin

Review of X-Files tv show

1993-2018, 11 seasons, 208 episodes, longest running science fiction series in American network tv history, 23 various writers including David Duchovny. Network:  Fox Broadcasting Company.

Conspiracy theorist Fox Mulder (David Duchovny) and medical doctor Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson) are FBI Special Agents assigned to the X-Files unit, which handles cases that no one else wants because they do not fit into any usual category of crime.

You got your supernatural, science fiction including space aliens, mysterious snitches, Illuminati-type secret organizations like the Syndicate, government schemes, humor like Mulder country line-dancing under the influence (“Babylon”, seas. 10, ep. 5), Native American folklore and their terrible treatment (“Shapes”, seas. 1, ep. 19; “Anasazi”, seas. 2, ep. 25), and mostly human monsters like the Smoking Man.

My five favorite episodes have to do with eating gross things:

“Squeeze”, Season 1, episode 3, air date 9/24/93

This is our introduction to Eugene Victor Tooms (Doug Hutchison), a serial killer who has been alive for 90 years in which he hibernates every few years only to come back out to eat a few live peoples’ livers before hunkering down again. He is caught by Mulder and Scully and imprisoned in a mental facility, but it wasn’t long until he escaped because he could squeeze through vents and chimneys to get his prey.   His hole in the wall for sleeping was nasty and oozing.

Written by Glen Morgan and James Wong; directed by Harry Longstreet and Michael Katleman.

“Tooms”, Season 1, episode 21, air date 4/22/94 

Eugene Victor Tooms is back with a vengeance against Scully, squeezing through her bathroom vent.  He should have left well enough alone and moved to another state. Suffice it to say, he will not be bothering anyone else for their liver.

Written by Glen Morgan and James Wong; directed by David Nutter.

“Humbug”, Season 2, episode 20, air date 3/31/95

A drunken circus performer (Vincent Schiavelli) has a symbiotic brother inside of him as part of a circus act. I think you might drink too if you had to carry your brother inside you everywhere and always.    However, his drunken circus brother is dying so his symbiotic host brother is constantly escaping from his drunken brother trying to find a replacement host before it is too late. He ends up murdering other people with whom he is not compatible.   And, of course, Scully and Mulder are called in on the case. But, before they can solve the case, the symbiot finds the perfect host to get into but is eaten by Conundrum (the Enigma), the potential host, his fellow circus performer who is a flesh eater.  Not for the squeamish, especially the circus performer pulling needles through his body parts.

Written by Darin Morgan and directed by Kim Manners.

“Leonard Betts”, Season 4, Episode 12, air date 1/26/97.

Leonard Betts/Albert Tanner (Paul McCrane) was a paramedic who was decapitated in an accident. His head was put into a vat of waste and his body grew a new head at home.  This is when he became Albert Tanner working at a hospital and started killing people to eat their cancerous organs. I felt sorry for him because it seemed to me that he could have subsisted on the cancerous organs that hospitals were throwing away anyway, but no, I guess he liked his organs fresh.

Written by Vince Gilligan, John Shiban, and Frank Spotnitz; directed by Kim Manners.

“The Gift”, Season 8, Episode 11, air date 2/4/01

Skinner and FBI Special Agent John Doggett (Robert Patrick) get to investigate the disappearance of Mulder. Another sickness eater (soul eater played by Jordan Marder) was required by his town to eat their diseases. And this guy was forced at gunpoint to perform this free labor which affected his body adversely for decades.    Not for the squeamish either because his body displayed the sickness he absorbed. He was the victim in this episode who saved Mulder’s life.

Written by Frank Spotnitz and directed by Kim Manners.

Sure, there were a few flaws in the plots, but I was never disappointed. Fox believed that his sister was abducted by aliens, and Scully depended on her medical skill and her faith. I would holler at the screen especially when they would split up inside a dark dangerous building or go somewhere by themselves without a partner. Both were thrown together by their FBI Assistant Director Walter Skinner (Mitch Pileggi) who was skeptical at first, but eventually had their backs.

“Fresh Bones”, Season 2, episode 4, 1995 was an episode that I could relate to today.

Haitian people were being held longer than necessary to be sent back to their native country because the commander secretly wanted to learn the secret of voodoo at any cost. He had begun studying voodoo when he was stationed in Haiti many years before. These are adults in cages, and the only child is a ghost. There is no press and no third-party monitoring. This story really relates to today’s situation of immigrant children in cages in the U.S. today where even the guards say, “they were never made to handle this type of prisoner”.

Written by Chris Carter (Creator) and Howard Gordon; directed by Rob Bowman. Chris Carter also had a horror series, “Millenium”, (one of the executive producers) which I intend to look up.

Main characters

Special Agent Fox Mulder (David Duchovny also in Return to Me, Zoolander, Chaplin, Red Shoe Diaries, The Craft, etc.)

Special Agent Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson also in American Gods, Bleak House, Great Expectations, etc.)

FBI Assistant Director Walter Skinner (Mitch Pileggi also in Supernatural, Shocker, Sons of Anarchy, Basic Instinct, Flash of Genius, Knight Rider, Transformers: the last knight, Vampire in Brooklyn, etc.)

Special Agent John Doggett (Robert Patrick also in Terminator 2, Walk the Line, Trueblood, Bridge to Terabithia, Spy Kids, Die Hard 2, Endless Love, The Faculty, Last Action Hero, etc.)

Special Agent Monica Reyes (Annabeth Gish also in Wyatt Earp, Bag of Bones, etc.)

Victims

The drunken brother in Humbug (Vincent Schiavelli also in Ghost, One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, Fast Times at Ridgemont High, Batman Returns, Amadeus, The People vs. Larry Flynt, The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai, Night Shift, Escape to Witch Mountain, The Beautician and the Beast, etc.)

Leonard Betts/Albert Tanner (Paul McCrane, also in Rocky II, Fame, Robo Cop, The Shawshank Redemption, ER, 24, Ugly Betty, CSI, etc.)

Soul eater in The Gift (Jordan Marder also in American History X, Virtuosity, L.A. Confidential, etc.)

Snitches/Villains

Eugene Victor Tooms (Doug Hutchison, also in the Green Mile, The Lawnmower Man, A Time to Kill, Con Air, Batman and Robin, Shaft, etc.)

The Smoking Man (William B. Davis, also in The Messengers, The Dead Zone, etc.).

Deep Throat (Jerry Hardin, also in Cujo, The Firm, Big Trouble in Little China, Roots: The Gift, Are We There Yet? etc.)

X (Steven Williams, also in Cooley High, Route 666, 21 Jump Street, The Equalizer, Blues Brothers, Supernatural, etc.),

Well-Manicured Man (John Neville, also in Fifth Element, Billy Budd, etc.)

Alex Krycek (Nicholas Lea)

[TV shows and movies mentioned are ones that I have seen the actors in.]

Thank you to all the stunt people, the special effects makeup people, and the CGI computer people who helped make this series successful. I thoroughly enjoyed the series so much over the years that I recently borrowed the whole series from the public library—one season at a time.

Other sources:

Wikipedia

Devon Maloney, “The 10 Most Embarrassing X-File Episodes”, Vulture, Vulture Lists, January 18, 2016.

Ira Madison III, “Every Episode of the X-Files, Ranked from Worst to Best”, Vulture, January 22, 2016. (For some of these he did not explain what the episode was about but just gave it a pass or fail.)

Kimberly Roots, “The X-Files: A Deep Dive into Mulder and Scully’s Love Story (Which Began Waaaay Before You Thought It Did)”, TVLine.com, April 24, 2020

Meg Downey, “49 Actors You Forgot Were on X-Files”, Gamespot.com/amp-ga…, April 30, 2020.

Written by Rosa L. Griffin

Drug Recalls, Sleep, What Makes a Good President, What’s Eating America, and Fecal Transplants, Oh my!

Drug Recalls

Check FDA’s online list of recalled drugs at https://www.fda.gov/drugs/drugsafety/drugrecalls or FDA Consumer line at 888-INFO-FDA and sign up for alerts.   888-463-6332 for updates.fda.gov/subscription management.

Sleep

Elle Hunt, (Sleep) “Shuteye and Sleep Hygiene: The Truth About Why You Keep Waking up at 3 a.m.”, The Guardian, February 17, 2020.

Rosa’s Opinion–What Makes a Good President

A good president cares about the world and all its people.

A president is only as good as the people she or he can rely on and the structure she or he has under them.    Otherwise, it’s just a matter of time before he or she will crumble.

That’s where allies come in because a president of one country can’t do it all.

A president is known by the company he keeps—good or bad.   It’s been proven time and time again.

“What’s Eating America”

Andrew Zimmern, American chef, is a man of heartfelt convictions.   He came up with a 5-part series recently on MSNBC entitled “What’s Eating America” on Sunday nights at 9 p.m.   The series includes the topics of Immigration, Climate Change, Addiction, Voting Rights, and Healthcare.    I watched the episodes on Immigration (in which he was accompanied by José Andrés, a fellow award-winning chef and humanitarian) and Voting Rights, and I hope to watch the fifth one on Healthcare on March 15.

If they repeat the series (and I hope they do), I will watch the ones that I missed—Climate Change and Addiction.   I know I could have DVR’d them, but my skills at that need improvement.  

This is the same man who starred on the series, “Bizarre Foods with Andrew Zimmern”.   Because I had seen some of that series, I wasn’t going to watch “What’s Eating America” because I figured it would be more of the same.

I appreciate that the results of the episodes I’ve seen which were well-reported and stuffed with pertinent information and locales across America.   I am so proud of his efforts.

Zawn Villines, “What is a Fecal Transplant?  Everything You Need to Know”, medicalnewstoday.com, May 8, 2019.

Here’s something I had never heard of.    And, don’t soon want to hear of it again.

“A doctor transplants feces from a healthy donor into another person to restore the balance of bacteria in their gut.  It may help treat gastrointestinal infection, etc.   Antibiotics destroy good as well as bad bacteria.  Other names the procedure goes under:  bacteriotherapy, fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT), etc.”

There’s something I’d like to implant fecally, but “won’t touch that”!

Mr. Bean as Maigret

In July 2019, I saw Rowan Atkinson starring as Detective Inspector Jules Maigret in a 2016 ITV series (episode 1.2, Maigret’s Dead Man) that I saw on WETA UK.   The killer, Dacourt, played by John Light, who as a short man with delusions of grandeur, goes for the “bad” girl dancer while he has a wife and kids at home.

I saw John Light as a top thief who was on one episode of the “Father Brown” tv show and returned for a second episode later in that series.

I was pleasantly surprised to see Rowan Atkinson as a detective.   He was so great in the “Mr. Bean” comedy tv series in which his eyebrows and eyes were so expressive—a great part of his characterization.   I liked seeing him also as a department store jewelry salesman in the movie “Love Actually”.  

The icing on the cake was seeing him playing a dead-pan serious detective.   He played the Maigret character so well that it brought tears to my eyes.   Well-done Rowan!

Maigret Sets a Trap, Season 1, Episode 1, 2016

This is the second time I’ve seen Rowan Atkinson starring as Detective Inspector Jules Maigret on August 20, 2021 (season 1, episode2) which takes place in 1955.   Five women are stabbed to death with what appears to be a pen knife which had to be used twice or more to kill each victim.   The politicians over his head think they could find the killer in the five months it has taken so far and threaten to have a detective inspector from another region take his place.

Maigret is under intense pressure to produce the killer.    As a last resort, he recruits a dozen policewomen to act as decoys.   The killer attacks one of them and gets away.  A most unassuming polite person Marcel Monsin (David Dawson) is eventually arrested for the crime but must be proven to be the murderer without a sure witness.   I was crying by the end of the episode this time for a different reason:  sympathy for the murdered women, sympathy for Maigret’s plight, and sympathy for the killer.

Another character in this episode is the paparazzi who are squealing at his heels at every step, especially the female one (Rebecca Night?) who outwits the rest in getting scoops.   I had a hard time finding out who the female reporter was.  The actress/the character she played differed on different sights.

Judge Comeliau (Aidan McArdle) is the judge who tries to run interference between Maigret and the politicians and is eventually unsuccessful.   I saw McArdle as a psychological strategist getting other people to do terrible things just by talking to them in an episode of Poirot (Curtain: Poirot’s Last Case).  He also played the murderous husband in Ms. Scarlet and the Duke.

Atkinson has done it again as the rarely smiling Maigret!   But you can tell by his facial expressions what he is feeling: frustration at not catching the killer, the politicians trying to tell him how to do his job, empathy for the families of the murdered women, pain at mistakes being made, etc.   Also, this version of Maigret has a wife played by Lucy Cohu which I am not sure all Maigrets had.

Written by Rosa L. Griffin

Did you know? The Illustrated Man

In 1951, American writer Ray Bradbury’s science fiction short story collection, The Illustrated Man, was published.    The collection of 18 short stories was one of the first short story collections I ever read.

The premise of the collection is based on “a vagrant former member of a carnival freak show with an extensively tattooed body whom the unnamed narrator meets. The man’s tattoos, allegedly created by a time-traveling woman, are individually animated and each tell a different tale.”

In 1969, Rod Steiger and Claire Bloom starred in the movie version.

In 1984, Mark of the Devil, which reminded me of the Illustrated Man, was broadcast as the first movie in the Fox Mystery Theater television series, produced by Hammer Films.  

“A desperate gambler (Dirk Benedict) in debt with a gangster robs a Chinese tattoo artist (Burt Hwouk), getting stabbed and killing the man in the process. A black spot appears on his chest and begins to spread. Day by day, it gets bigger and bigger and forms into a tattoo. The tattoo then starts to spread all over his body and he has to go into seclusion.”

Source:  Wikipedia

IMDb.com

Written by Rosa L. Griffin

Did you know? Johnny Depp

Johnny Depp is one of my favorite actors since the TV show “21 Jump Street”.   Johnny didn’t want to be just a pretty face, sitting still and looking pretty.   In his collaborations with Tim Burton, he was able to stretch and do strange parts like Edward Scissorhand which made him stand out.   But he was pretty in John Water’s musical Cry Baby.   I was amazed to see him as Grimwald in the Fantastic Beasts movie series. However, I recently read an article that I’m quoting from that speaks to Johnny and all of us:

“…we all know someone who has the potential to get it right, but lacks the will, tools, or heart to do it.  That person stares the right decisions in the face but keeps taking the worse options simply out of comfort or insecurity.  They’d rather be in the mess instead of cleaning it up.  That someone could also be us.”

Hallelujah, sister!  Been there and done that!   Situations in which you can’t see the forest for the trees!   And, right now Johnny is up in there in a big way as detailed by the author of this article.   I wish him nothing but the best!

Source:  “Goodbye to Johnny Depp:  How to Let Go of One of Your Former Favorite Actors”, Monique Jones, September 13, 2018, https://www.slashfilm.com

Written by Rosa L. Griffin