Scary tellies
Jun. 1st, 2006 09:17 amI enjoyed The Idiot's Lantern very much, thought it did all that it should, and Maureen Lipman was perfect. We were spending the weekend near Alexandra Palace with very good friends (hereon the VGFs), which made it all a bit more fun.
After watching the episode, conversation naturally turned to other scary tellies: whenever we visit the VGFs we always watch Ghostwatch. You know, the pseudo-reality TV play hosted by Michael Parkinson where Sarah Greene gets stuck in a haunted house in Northolt. It is ABSOLUTELY FRICKIN' TERRIFYING, and even after multiple viewings, I am clawing at myself in shock by the end.
Other scary tellies: Poltergeist, that Japanese one I've never watched because just the image of the scary girl crawling out of the telly was enough to freak me out, er... I've forgotten what else we came up with. Nineteen Eighty-Four didn't count, that's just propaganda and not the tellybox tricking you by pretending to be your friend ("teacher, mother, secret lover...") and turning out to be the means of transmitting DEATH ON A LARGE AND HORRIFYING SCALE.
I am reading the Stephen King novel about cell phones at the moment, which is why I am using TYPOGRAPHIC TRICKS to COMMUNICATE EMOTION. It'll pass.
After watching the episode, conversation naturally turned to other scary tellies: whenever we visit the VGFs we always watch Ghostwatch. You know, the pseudo-reality TV play hosted by Michael Parkinson where Sarah Greene gets stuck in a haunted house in Northolt. It is ABSOLUTELY FRICKIN' TERRIFYING, and even after multiple viewings, I am clawing at myself in shock by the end.
Other scary tellies: Poltergeist, that Japanese one I've never watched because just the image of the scary girl crawling out of the telly was enough to freak me out, er... I've forgotten what else we came up with. Nineteen Eighty-Four didn't count, that's just propaganda and not the tellybox tricking you by pretending to be your friend ("teacher, mother, secret lover...") and turning out to be the means of transmitting DEATH ON A LARGE AND HORRIFYING SCALE.
I am reading the Stephen King novel about cell phones at the moment, which is why I am using TYPOGRAPHIC TRICKS to COMMUNICATE EMOTION. It'll pass.
no subject
Date: 2006-06-01 10:00 am (UTC)Ghostwatch sounds delightfully creepy, though.
And Ringu (or especially the U.S. remake The Ring) is really not for the faint-hearted. I spent most of the movie gnawing at my fingernails, trying to climb onto my neighbour's lap or hiding under my anorak. I had never been so terrified by a film before. Meep.
no subject
Date: 2006-06-01 10:20 am (UTC)Love the icon :-)
no subject
Date: 2006-06-01 10:48 am (UTC)Good point. Now guess when I was dragged to the cinema in order to watch The Ring... ;)
Love the icon.
Heh. Thanks! Neil Postman's pseudo-intellectual wanking lends itself so very well to ironic quoting.
no subject
Date: 2006-06-01 11:18 am (UTC)Turn on your TV before it turns itself on
Date: 2006-06-01 11:22 am (UTC)Seriously, watch it. Watch it, watch it, watch it. If I can do it, as someone living by herself in a studio apartment, with the bed directly in front of the TV, you can do it. Put in "The Quest for the Holy Grail" afterwards until you're able to go to sleep; it works.
Dwim
Re: Turn on your TV before it turns itself on
Date: 2006-06-01 11:42 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-06-01 11:43 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-06-01 11:44 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-06-01 11:46 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-06-01 11:49 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-06-01 12:02 pm (UTC)Ghostwatch still sounds intriguing to me because it was a War of the Worlds-style "This is all real. And happening right now." sort of film, and I love this kind of production, which is, sadly enough, all too rare. (Still got a tape of the original War of the Worlds radio broadcast at home somewhere.)
no subject
Date: 2006-06-01 12:07 pm (UTC)But I loved the Fire and Water season for the music.
no subject
Date: 2006-06-01 12:10 pm (UTC)Exact same problem with BSG.
no subject
Date: 2006-06-01 12:15 pm (UTC)Re: Turn on your TV before it turns itself on
Date: 2006-06-01 12:41 pm (UTC)However, I do tend to need the Monty Python sleeping cure afterward, and I must say, it works beautifully. It also works better when I've not been watching horror films or eerie thrillers by myself, but have been watching with a group.
Let the colors tempt you in. Really, you should do this as a sort of professional service to yourself: how can you resist a film that situates the television as the primary mode of channeling the dark-side of the human psyche? There must be scads of academic publishing opportunities for a sociologist with an interest in technology...
Dwim
no subject
Date: 2006-06-01 01:15 pm (UTC)It was the facelessness that I found disturbing.
Re: Turn on your TV before it turns itself on
Date: 2006-06-01 01:21 pm (UTC)Sorry for random pimpage, I just really liked that film and now I can't watch horror any more so I want other people to watch it for me.
Re: Turn on your TV before it turns itself on
Date: 2006-06-01 01:38 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-06-01 01:39 pm (UTC)Re: Turn on your TV before it turns itself on
Date: 2006-06-01 01:43 pm (UTC)Surely the Ringu academic niche must have been filled?!
no subject
Date: 2006-06-01 01:48 pm (UTC)That bit in Ring is really, really frightening. You can see it coming, but you can't quite believe it's going to happen, and then it does.
no subject
Date: 2006-06-01 01:52 pm (UTC)Re: Turn on your TV before it turns itself on
Date: 2006-06-01 03:27 pm (UTC)Hm. Maybe I'll consult with my local horror buff and see if I can get him to watch it with me. Maybe we should host a "classic horror" night.
I was forced to watch a lot of slasher films as a teenager by friends as some kind of bonding ritual and don't care for them much
Whereas my friends are all at least as wimpy as I am when it comes to horror, so that was never a problem.
Surely the Ringu academic niche must have been filled?!
Not being in that field, I have no idea. But if you have to ask... ;-)
Dwim
no subject
Date: 2006-06-01 04:28 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-06-01 06:02 pm (UTC)As for scary tellies, the only other ones that spring to my mind are the ones at the end of The Witches of Eastwick (the film), when Daryl van Horne is enticing his little boys towards him. But then he gets switched off so it's not that scary. On the other hand, it's a whole bank of them, not just a single one.
no subject
Date: 2006-06-02 12:43 am (UTC)Actually it wasn't just that. There was lots of nice little stuff going on in that episode, which I only noticed on second viewing. the thuggish cop discreetly trying to wrap his fingers round his elbow was particularly delightful. None of it, however, managed to compensate for the shockingly clunky "You fought against fascism yet now you are authoritarian oh the cruel irony" dialogue, not to mention some seriously crap acting from the chap playing said authoritarian father. Even there, though, the script shares some of the blame. We needed to see something behind the ranting bully, to make the character real as well as to make sense of the ending. A really good actor could have given us this despite it not being in the script, but that doesn't excuse it not being in the script in the first place. Especially when you end up with a crap actor.
The whole thing just felt thin to me. The only really noteworthy part of it, to me anyway, is that I finally figured out
why Tennant is shit compared to Ecclestonwhy the Tenth Doctor's angry bits don't quite work. Tennant does the - characteristically Scottish - thing of raising the pitch of his voice when he gets irate, so that when he really gets angry he is shouting right at the top of his natural range, which tends to rob him of authority. It's much more effective to access the lower registerslike Eccleston used to doso as to give the anger a really authoritative force. Going all high-pitched just makes you sound weak. I really like Tennant's Doctoreven though he's not as good as Ecclestonbut he has the same blind spot about acting angry that Sylvester McCoy had.Still, a proper alien planet next Saturday. Huzzah!
no subject
Date: 2006-06-02 08:58 am (UTC)I'm liking Tennant an awful lot more than you - I think he does the humour much, much better than Eccleston. He has a much lighter touch.
no subject
Date: 2006-06-02 09:00 am (UTC)I read your comment last night and immediately thought of another scary telly, but this morning I can't remember. Gah.
Re: Turn on your TV before it turns itself on
Date: 2006-06-02 09:08 am (UTC)Hallowe'en is a must, if only for the opening credits.
no subject
Date: 2006-06-02 02:55 pm (UTC)I liked Eccleston's comedy bits. I still laugh whenever I see the bit in "Rose" where he's explaining why the Tardis looks like a police box. There is a quality about many of his comedic moments that suggest the apparent light-heartedness is an artificial construct around a deeply gloomy individual. That may be a deliberate acting choice or it may be the result of an actor overstretching his natural range, but either way it works for me. What makes it come across as part of a coherent characterisation are the moments like in "The Parting of the Ways" when he's on the Dalek spacecraft being all superior at the Daleks, then he gives them a great big wide grin and hops into the Tardis - and as soon as the doors close the mask comes off and he is bowed down with depression, utterly crushed.
In the end, of course, it's all about personal tastes, and individual responses to what actors bring to the role. Don't forget there are Pertwee fans out there. With ten Doctors, we may have enough to see if there are interesting correlations between sets of preferences. I prefer Eccleston to Tennant, and Hartnell to Troughton, despite both the Paisley Ferret and the Mighty Trout being fine actors. I suspect your preferences are the opposite to mine in both cases. Is there a quantitative social science research tool that is good for looking at this kind of thing?
no subject
Date: 2006-06-02 03:00 pm (UTC)Don't forget there are Pertwee fans out there.
Christ indeed.
Is there a quantitative social science research tool that is good for looking at this kind of thing?
Hm, I'll have to think...
no subject
Date: 2006-06-02 06:07 pm (UTC)This does not surprise me at all. Do you do the polite evil cackle after you have consumed Mr A's latest offering as well.
I have a suspicion there are some more scary TVs in children's shows but I cannot remember any of them.
no subject
Date: 2006-06-02 06:44 pm (UTC)'Children's shows' has reminded me: the TV that shrinks Mike Teevee in Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.
no subject
Date: 2006-06-03 10:05 pm (UTC)