Segued from Kate Beckinsale's Emma to most of an episode of Dexter. Call it a study in contrasts. Like taking a turn so quickly that your brain is compressed against one side of your skull and you see stars and almost black out as the g forces drive the blood down to your feet. That sort of contrast.
Now I'm thinking how Jane Austen might write a serial killer. Could Jane write a serial killer? I think she probably could, given her eye for mood and relationship. It would all be very surface-genteel. There would be no blood. It would all be worked out in drawings rooms, and during walks to Merriton.
Anyway, I liked Emma. Felt the story a little compressed--I confess I wasn't familiar with it to this point, but it seemed another instance of ten pounds of story in a five pound bag. Still, liked it muchly. Do all of Austen's heroines have ineffectual/absent fathers? The ones I've seen so far are either deceased or in the library, reading while Rome burns.
Dexter...was very interesting. I fear being hooked. Figuratively, that is.
Now I'm thinking how Jane Austen might write a serial killer. Could Jane write a serial killer? I think she probably could, given her eye for mood and relationship. It would all be very surface-genteel. There would be no blood. It would all be worked out in drawings rooms, and during walks to Merriton.
Anyway, I liked Emma. Felt the story a little compressed--I confess I wasn't familiar with it to this point, but it seemed another instance of ten pounds of story in a five pound bag. Still, liked it muchly. Do all of Austen's heroines have ineffectual/absent fathers? The ones I've seen so far are either deceased or in the library, reading while Rome burns.
Dexter...was very interesting. I fear being hooked. Figuratively, that is.
no subject
Date: 2008-03-24 07:23 pm (UTC)Luckily for time commitment, there are only 12 episodes in Showtime's "season", rather than a typical network TV show that can stretch to 20 or 22.