Welcome to the new profile
We're still working on updating some profile features. To see the badges, ratings breakdowns, and polls for this profile, please go to the previous version.
Ratings463
demented_baboon's rating
Reviews7
demented_baboon's rating
Weak. Stupid. Godawful. Unintentionally preposterous.
Pointless banal plot. Interchangeable one-dimensional characters. Jarring music. A bunch of clichés randomly jammed together.
It is baffling that so many good actors could work together to make this turd.
The first episode was so terrible I decided to look it up on IMDb. When I found that it had a good rating, I felt compelled to warn people how extremely unpleasant this show is. That is, it's so terrible it inspired me to tell strangers how terrible it is.
Don't watch this.
Pointless banal plot. Interchangeable one-dimensional characters. Jarring music. A bunch of clichés randomly jammed together.
It is baffling that so many good actors could work together to make this turd.
The first episode was so terrible I decided to look it up on IMDb. When I found that it had a good rating, I felt compelled to warn people how extremely unpleasant this show is. That is, it's so terrible it inspired me to tell strangers how terrible it is.
Don't watch this.
Once Upon a Time is a silly, Shrek-ish idea. Though the pilot was executed somewhat well, it's difficult to overcome a premise so banal. It lacks suspense, surprise (besides the date scene), and proper editing. The flashbacks interlacing the present were nicely done, but several scenes should have just ended abruptly instead of sentimentally meandering along, accomplishing nothing, not even character development.
The main actresses, Jennifter Morrison as Emma Swan, Ginnifer Goodwin as Mary Margaret Blanchard, and Lana Parrilla as the Evil Queen, each performed well despite questionable material. But many of the minor characters almost seemed like they were squinting at cue cards and shouting, where a more subtle approach would have probably accomplished more.
What Once Upon a Time has going for it is the contrast between real life and fairy tales; if they can dig deeply at it, stress it by showing some unpunished injustice, punctuate it by killing off some likable characters; if they can cause Snow White to suffer and cry and change for the worse, and if they can make us think there will never be a fairytale ending again, the show will then be interesting and consequential. But if they fall into the trap of sappy clichés, the show will quickly be lost and forgotten and no one will care.
The main actresses, Jennifter Morrison as Emma Swan, Ginnifer Goodwin as Mary Margaret Blanchard, and Lana Parrilla as the Evil Queen, each performed well despite questionable material. But many of the minor characters almost seemed like they were squinting at cue cards and shouting, where a more subtle approach would have probably accomplished more.
What Once Upon a Time has going for it is the contrast between real life and fairy tales; if they can dig deeply at it, stress it by showing some unpunished injustice, punctuate it by killing off some likable characters; if they can cause Snow White to suffer and cry and change for the worse, and if they can make us think there will never be a fairytale ending again, the show will then be interesting and consequential. But if they fall into the trap of sappy clichés, the show will quickly be lost and forgotten and no one will care.
Lenard Shelby is in a hopeless fight against the unalterable past: time runs backwards and counts down, and every moment we see is a moment in the past that Lenard can never escape, the consequences already known to us and the cost already paid, but each scene rises up from the ashes of the previous one, revealing our own flawed perception of what has really happened.
Memento is a murder mystery where the whodunit question is answered in the first scene. But did the victim deserve it? Or did someone trick Lenard Shelby into killing the wrong man? And if so, why?
Because of his 'condition,' Lenard knows he has to watch out for people who want to take advantage of him. Condition is a euphemism for severe brain damage, which left him unable to make new memories. The last thing he does remember is his wife dying in front of him. When he closes his eyes, he sees her dying, and since he can't make new memories, the horror of her death and the pain of his loss is always there, fresh and never fading.
Memento at its heart is a quest for freedom from the prison of personal limitation. Lenard desperately wants to regain control over his reality. He follows clues, writes notes, takes photos, hypothesizes solutions. These things, however, can never compensate for the terrible loss of both the continuity of the present and the connectedness of time itself; he knows neither what year it is now nor how long ago his wife died. But he believes if he can somehow avenge his wife, even with his tremendous limitations, he will regain some part of the self-worth that he lost when his brain became damaged.
Profound, unique, and beautiful in its achievement -- Memento isn't a gimmick; it's an elusive puzzle with a clear answer. Is Lenard Shelby a helpless prisoner to past circumstance, or can he still decide his own future?
Memento is a murder mystery where the whodunit question is answered in the first scene. But did the victim deserve it? Or did someone trick Lenard Shelby into killing the wrong man? And if so, why?
Because of his 'condition,' Lenard knows he has to watch out for people who want to take advantage of him. Condition is a euphemism for severe brain damage, which left him unable to make new memories. The last thing he does remember is his wife dying in front of him. When he closes his eyes, he sees her dying, and since he can't make new memories, the horror of her death and the pain of his loss is always there, fresh and never fading.
Memento at its heart is a quest for freedom from the prison of personal limitation. Lenard desperately wants to regain control over his reality. He follows clues, writes notes, takes photos, hypothesizes solutions. These things, however, can never compensate for the terrible loss of both the continuity of the present and the connectedness of time itself; he knows neither what year it is now nor how long ago his wife died. But he believes if he can somehow avenge his wife, even with his tremendous limitations, he will regain some part of the self-worth that he lost when his brain became damaged.
Profound, unique, and beautiful in its achievement -- Memento isn't a gimmick; it's an elusive puzzle with a clear answer. Is Lenard Shelby a helpless prisoner to past circumstance, or can he still decide his own future?