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Messages - Ben

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1
It's hard to say exactly which eps they skipped.  What my bf Tom and I noticed on Saturday was that a number of eps ended with one scene but began with a new scene, instead of the customary reprising of the previous ep's last scene.  We kept asking ourselves, "So what happened with such-and-such in the last episode?"  We concluded that they had to be skipping episodes but didn't think to compare what we were watching with the episode guide (we were actually taking a break from watching the boxed set, where we are now on 1970-PT). 

Not sure exactly when, but possibly by Saturday night, we noticed more continuity between eps, and when we woke up on Sunday morning, the storyline seemed to have progressed fairly slowly. 

Sorry this isn't too helpful.

Ben   [hall2_embarrassed]

2
When the binge began airing on Saturday afternoon, it was annoying that they initially skipped past certain episodes in the Barnabas-confines-Maggie storyline, but fortunately they stopped skipping after Dr. Hoffman entered the picture.  Enjoyed Barnabas frequently strangling Julia, with Julia grimacing and massaging her neck afterwards like a silent movie star.  An especially amusing instance of this occurred in the secret room in the mausoleum, while Burke and Dr. Woodard on the other side of the wall, wondering what that noise was.  How fun!

Ben

3
Just stumbled upon the DS binge airing this morning as I was looking for background to grade final exams by.  I couldn't believe it.  What a delightful surprise to rediscover Jason smirking and grinning at Liz, as well as Mitch Ryan stumbling over his lines -- like old friends dropping by because they happened to be in the neighborhood.  I'm thrilled to see any DS episodes finding their way to rebroadcast.  Although Decades has a CBS affiliation, it also is affiliated with Weigel Broadcasting, which created the successful MeTV classic TV empire. 

4
Calendar Events / Announcements '14 II / Re: Happy birthday, Ben!
« on: September 14, 2014, 01:27:13 AM »
Thank you, all, for your birthday wishes!  I don't get to visit here as often as I used to, but DS is always in my heart.  I recently watched one of my favorite episodes, Julia "Home Alone" at Collinwood.  I fantasize that immediately following Grayson's over-the-top performance in what was virtually a one-woman episode, the cast and crew gave her a standing ovation. 

Ben

5
Love her dry humor and the coolness she appreciates in her name.  I had a high school friend who was born three years before "Psycho."  His name was Norman Bates, and he eventually had it legally changed.

6
Current Talk '12 II / Re: Discuss - Ep #0294
« on: February 08, 2014, 10:59:42 PM »
Has there been any discussion about just how Sarah could have led Maggie from Windcliff all the way to the Blue Whale?  Windcliff is supposedly 100 miles from Collinsport, quite a distance for anyone to hike in heels.  Did they go to the Greyhound depot and catch a bus?  Or how about a train?  If so, did Sarah qualify for the child's fare?  Did they hitch a ride?  Or was Sarah able to zap both of them instantly back to Collinsport? 

I'm wondering how this missing scene might have gone -- lots of possibilities!  If they walked the hundred miles, perhaps that might explain Maggie's dramatic collapse in the BW. 

Ben

7
Current Talk '13 II / Re: Me-TV Network
« on: October 09, 2013, 10:31:13 PM »
P.S.: A post I saw on www.sitcomsonline.com (dated 7/23/13) suggests that Me-TV is planning to add DS to its schedule but that a date has yet to be set.  No further posts have been added.

8
Current Talk '13 II / Re: Me-TV Network
« on: October 09, 2013, 10:17:30 PM »
Me-TV, based here in Chicago, has a reputation for continuing to stay true to its original mission, unlike Sci-Fi and TV-Land.  It would be an ideal home for DS, although I wonder whether the network is ready to rerun a daytime serial, as opposed to the classic sitcoms and dramas that comprise its roster. 

Let's hope the rumor proves to be true!  I'm imagining John Karlen and KLS doing promos, the way Betty White, Carl Reiner, Dick Van Dyke, Ed Asner, Paul Peterson, and other stars have already done for their old shows.

Ben

9
Calendar Events / Announcements '13 II / Re: Happy Birthday, Ben!
« on: October 09, 2013, 10:08:30 PM »
An embarrassingly tardy but heartfelt thanks to all for remembering my birthday!  Another promotion at my law school has me even busier than Reverend Trask was at Worthington Hall.  [hall2_wink]

One of my friends, a longtime DS fan, recently ran into an unlucky streak of unhappy, awkward happenings.  I was able to cheer him up by suggesting that he think of DS music cues to underscore those events, as well as any other events going forward.  There have been periods in my life during which the DS score and music cues seem to accompany me wherever I go, and, believe it or not, they are a source of comfort and gentle laughter, especially on bad days.   [8_1_202]

I may not visit as often as I'd like, but I think of you and our beloved "Dark Shadows" often.

Ben  [hall2_cool]

10
Calendar Events / Announcements '12 II / Re: Happy Birthday, John_in_NC
« on: October 17, 2012, 02:12:52 PM »
Happy birthday, John!  Has it really been 11 years since we met at the Fest in the Marriott WTC? 

Ben

11
Calendar Events / Announcements '12 II / Re: Happy Birthday to Ben
« on: September 22, 2012, 05:39:59 PM »
An embarrassingly belated but heartfelt THANK YOU for your thoughtful birthday greetings!  I've been buried these last few weeks by the onslaught of the new school year.  All is well, so it's not like I've been having Liz Stoddard-like nightmares of being buried alive.  But I did get a chance to enjoy Joan Bennett's un-Liz-like femme fatale character in a recent screening of her 1945 film, "Scarlet Street."  [ghost_smiley]

Ben

12
Current Talk '24 I / Re: Depp/Burton DARK SHADOWS Is In Release!!
« on: May 11, 2012, 07:01:44 AM »
The iconic "Dark Shadows."  Tim Burton.  Johnny Depp.  A lavishly budgeted production enabling old fans to rekindle the magic of the TV classic they grew up with.  A chance to attract new fans unfamiliar with the original.  Cameo appearances by beloved original cast members.  Pre-release advertising saturation.  How could it possibly miss?

Here's how.

One of the producers admitted in Entertainment Weekly that he had never heard of the original "Dark Shadows" (a TV gothic/supernatural soap phenom that so swept the country that its star vampire was summoned to a Halloween party at the Nixon White House), so he simply "studied up" by watching DVDs.  As if.  The extent of the similarly clueless EW writer's grasp of the original was that it "was notorious for its cheapo production values and campy melodramas."

Such superficiality overlooks the 1225-episode original as an absorbing, magical fantasy.  More than just a television show, "Dark Shadows" was an experience.  Its characters -- whether conventional or other-worldly, good or evil -- had a compelling, often sympathetic, human appeal.  You wanted to step into their world.  You cared for most of them, even the evil ones.  That's why, like thousands of kids across America, I used to run home after school to watch it.  That's why I got hooked again when the Sci-Fi Channel resurrected it in the '90s.

Not having seen the film yet, and after years of discouraging rumors, I wanted to give Burton a chance.  I wanted to love the new film, or at least like it.  After seeing the campy, slapstick trailer, I joked that the film could be renamed, "Edward Scissorhands Guest Stars on The Munsters."  I was resigned to expect a comedy, which at least could be entertaining in its own right.  Maybe playing "Dark Shadows" for laughs would capture a new audience, and we older fans could laugh along with them (just as we howled at the numerous instances of unintentional hilarity in the original).

Not.

"Dark Shadows" 2012 is not a comedy.  Nor is it a well-developed drama.  It's not compelling.  It's not nuanced.  It's not funny.  It's not fun.  It's not even spooky.  It is, in a word, nothing.  Seen in context, the comedy gags in the trailer (like Barnabas discovering a TV picture and ordering a screen-sized Karen Carpenter to "reveal yourself, tiny songstress!") are beyond lame.  None of the characters is likable, not even Elizabeth Stoddard and Dr. Julia Hoffman, whose portrayals in the original series by Joan Bennett and Grayson Hall captivated me.  Here, Julia is reduced to a throwaway, as if Burton needed to give Helena Bonham Carter something to do.

One supporting character does make a worthy impression, for I wanted to rescue Gulliver McGrath, the boy who endearingly portrays the troubled David Collins, from this troubled production.  At times, Johnny Depp ably channels Jonathan Frid's Barnabas Collins -- the quintessential lost soul, tortured by immortality -- although with his Halloween pallor, hat, cape, and shades, he distractingly resembles Michael Jackson on his way to the courthouse.

Some parts seem conceived and written on the way to the studio.  For example, early in the film, the 1795 storyline is condensed into a five-minute narrative with clips of key moments (Think: "Last week, on (insert TV drama title)"), as if this would give new viewers all the context and nuance they need to appreciate the Collins family curse upon which the rest of the film is based.  Then, toward the end, Carolyn Stoddard (here, not the glamourous ingenue but a bratty 14-year-old) morphs inexplicably into a werewolf.  It's as if, late in the production schedule, Producer A suddenly frets: "Hey, shouldn't we have a werewolf?" -- to which Producer B responds, "Hmmmmm . . . oh, yeah -- we'll make, um, Carolyn one."

We see the familiar developments, like Victoria Winters being enamored with things of the past.  But in no time and with little explanation, she and Barnabas develop a mutual romantic attraction so strong that she instantly accepts his vampirism and is willing to leap from Widows' Hill and become a vampire herself to spend eternity with him.  Liz blackmails Roger Collins into abruptly departing Collinsport and abandoning his young son.  And it is revealed that Vicki Winters and Maggie Evans -- the two leading ingenues in the original -- are now one-in-the-same person.  Huh?  Why?  How?

I really didn't care.  In condensing storylines to their skeletons and in reducing characters to caricatures, this two-hour film -- which felt more like three -- wallows in shallowness and boredom.

There are more than a few heavy-handed attempts to make sure we know the film is set in 1972, not the least of which is the onslaught of early '70s and '60s pop hits in the soundtrack.  The Moody Blues' "Nights in White Satin" sets the tone for Victoria Winters' fateful train ride during the opening credits.  This approach destroys the charm of the original, which subtly exuded its other-worldliness through the very absence of pop culture references of the day.  We never saw a TV set turned on in the original, and the wildest jukebox tune was "Back at the Blue Whale."  So when scenes are infected by the music of Barry White, The Carpenters, T. Rex, Iggy Pop, and Donovan, the film loses yet another layer of magical fantasy and becomes exasperatingly ordinary.

And despite the unceasing references to 1972, why does Angelique's wardrobe and hairstyle appear to be right out of any current CW sitcom?  My friend John quipped that "they could have at least given her Phyllis hair" (referring to the Cloris Leachman character's up-do with ringlets on "The Mary Tyler Moore Show").

There are cameos by original stars Kathryn Leigh Scott, Lara Parker, David Selby, and Jonathan Frid as anonymous guests at a mega-bash being thrown by Barnabas in the newly restored Collinwood.  It is lovely to see them (though bittersweet that it would be the final film appearance for Frid, who died last month at 87).  It is also jarring to encounter the party's live entertainment: '70s rocker Alice Cooper (Barnabas unwittingly thought he was hiring a charming female singer with a quaint name, a gag beyond stale).

I'll admit that the flashback depiction of 18th century Collinsport as a fishing town by the sea is pretty cool, albeit a retread of Burton's "Sweeney Todd."  Burton here, however, is not an artist, but a mere craftsman, pulling out the ol' helicopter for his signature sweeping aerial shots.  He should have known that well-crafted special effects will not save a film that is pointless and passionless, insulting to old fans and not entertaining to new audiences.  Nor is it a clever, funny parody, which could well have been, in the hands of talented comedy writers who actually understood and appreciated the original.  What it needs now is to be put out of its misery and into a chained coffin for the next 200 years.

The irony is that the orignal "Dark Shadows," despite its so-called "cheapo production values and campy melodrama," achieved something far more compelling, dramatic, funny, fun, entertaining, spooky, nuanced, memorable, and enduring than this buzillion-dollar dreck.

One star.

13
You're welcome, MB!  I'll be popping in again this Friday . . .

14
I hope being exactly a month late still counts!  Belated Happy Birthday, MB!!!

15
Calendar Events / Announcements '11 I / Re: David Henesy's Website
« on: February 07, 2011, 03:45:21 AM »
True, indeed, MB!  Do you suppose the dubbing actors also remained faithful to the bloopers?  And to the actors who went off-script to rescue colleagues who blanked out on their lines (like, for example, Clarice Blackburn did for Mitch Ryan)?

Ben

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