torsdag 23 mars 2023

"One of the greatest love stories"? Nah.

I'm already tempted to scrap my Nobel Prize Reading Project. Are winners chosen as a sort of endurance test for the reading public? I've purposely gone for prose writers, hoping for something gripping and epic, but the most readable authors so far have been more small-scale – I did enjoy Alice Munro and Kazuo Ishiguro (not really part of the reading project, as I read him before I started it). In contrast, I found Vargas Llosa hard to get through, gave up early on García Márquez, and now I've ploughed through Boris Pasternak's Doctor Zhivago I can't help feeling cheated.

I mean, Doctor Zhivago is supposed to be the accessible choice, isn't it? An intense love story later filmed with Omar Sharif and Julie Christie and a star-studded cast overall? Where else would I find the epic experience I was looking for, the kind of novel teeming with colourful characters that 19th-century novelists excelled at? Sadly, my expectations were misplaced – Pasternak may have many estimable qualities, but you couldn't call him a master storyteller.

To be clear: if you go into Doctor Zhivago expecting a tale mostly about the doomed love between the titular doctor and the beautiful Lara you will, like me, be disappointed. It's irritating as many promising ingredients are there, buried beneath lots of other stuff. I expected to find Lara a drag, and I'm not her biggest fan, but in the end I found her far more bearable that Yuri Zhivago himself (more on him later). And she does live an interesting life. Sometimes I wondered if the novel wouldn't have been a better read if it had centered on her instead of on Zhivago, and on random characters loosely connected to him.

What's more, Komorovsky – who has an affair with Lara when she's a young girl and is supposedly responsible for Zhivago's father's suicide – is a promising villain. But he's not in the novel nearly as much as one would expect. After Lara is finally able to cut all strings to him, he disappears completely for a large chunk of the book only to reappear towards the end as a way of getting Lara out of harm's way, but also out of Zhivago's life. Lara's husband Pavel Antipov, hardened by war, revolution and personal experiences, is set up as an interestingly menacing Javert-like character. In the end, though, he actually gets on quite well with Zhivago and only poses a threat indirectly, in that his wife is in danger when he falls foul of the authorities.

Add to the mix Zhivago's wife Tonya, who is lovely and gives her husband no excuse to cheat on her, and you have a love quintet I would have been happy to read at least a mid-sized novel about. But the romantic part of the story is swamped under pages of side plots, or not much plot at all. We spend an inordinate amount of time with secondary (if that) characters of negligible importance to the storyline. One whole section of the book, we follow the wife of a Siberian storekeeper whom Zhivago doesn't even meet. Her son later rats on Antipov in order to save and be reunited with his mother, and that's all the relevance she has to the main story.

For the longest time, I tried to tell myself that my frustration was mostly due to my own vulgar tastes, and that for those who like this sort of thing, this is the sort of thing they like. I did wonder towards the end, though, exactly who does like this sort of thing. If you're really into descriptions of nature, this novel might be for you, as there are a lot of those, sometimes evocative, sometimes with similes that feel a little strained. ("Even the sun [...] approaching as if timorously, as a cow from the herd grazing nearby would" – how is the sun like a cow?) 

Also, if you have a keen interest in everyday life in Russia around the time of the revolution, there are vignettes that, though they don't contribute much story-wise, can be memorable in their own right. Sometimes the lives of the random side characters hook into each other in unexpected ways. An idealistic young commissar who thinks he can win hearts and minds with his oratory is shot when making a failed speech to bunch of rebellious soldiers. Much later, Zhivago meets a fierce partisan soldier who admits that it was he who fired the shot and that it's the one killing he regrets. I did go "Ah, nice" over that one.

If you are more lyrically minded than me, then (Pasternak was primarily a poet), and don't insist on a strong narrative, you may appreciate this novel a lot more than I did. But it wasn't for me. Two more things came in the way of me enjoying it. One was the translation, which is the most recent English one and seems to adhere to the school of thought that puts faithfulness to the original before a natural flow. Seeing the original idioms shine through has it own charm, but it soon palls. The characters speak stilted English, as if continuously expressing themselves in a second language, which means that dialogues are almost as hard to get through as the descriptive passages.

My final gripe is the title character himself. First, I thought he was just a bit bland, but later he does show personality – a pity it's not a very appealing one. Yuri Andreevich Zhivago is an insufferable prig. His nearest circle is remarkably tolerant about this; even his father-in-law, after Zhivago more or less tells him not to embarrass him in front of others with conservative talk, answers graciously and without irony: "I like the way you pose the question". Lara, naturally, thinks he's wonderfully intelligent. Zhivago grows swollen-headed so that he even when he's down on his luck silently judges his critical friends: "The only live and bright thing in you is that you lived at the same time as me and that you knew me." He keeps his thoughts to himself, though, "so as not to distress them".

I'll say this much: I really want to rewatch the film – which I saw ages ago and hardly remember – and watch the TV series now, because I'm curious how these adaptations reshaped the novel into a coherent romantic drama. "One of the greatest love stories ever told", the Daily Mail is quoted as saying on the blurb. They were talking about the film, right? 

måndag 13 mars 2023

A villain-lover's guide to Marvel Phase Four: She-Hulk and the TV specials

From now on, I'll give up the grand overviews of Marvel's phases, and will instead adopt my Star Wars stance: one post per film/TV show, if and when I feel so inclined. The reason? Well, apart from the sheer scope of MCU content, there are some Marvel properties I have more to say about than others, as will be made clear below. Though I enjoyed the TV Halloween and Christmas specials, I would probably not have blogged about them if they weren't part of an overview. As for She-Hulk: Attorney at Law, perhaps it's the kind of show I shouldn't blog about...

She-Hulk: Attorney at Law

Series set-up: Jennifer Walters is an ace attorney who also happens to be the cousin of Bruce Banner aka The Hulk. She accidentally acquires Hulk powers during a car accident, and she's not happy about it. Bruce tries to show her the ropes, but she just wants to get back to her normal life and be a good lawyer. Besides, she doesn't have the same issues with a split personality and uncontrollable rage in Hulk form as her cousin does, so going green once in a while should be a breeze. Right?

Additional genres (apart from the super-hero genre) channelled: Light-hearted legal comedy in the Ally McBeal style. 

Overall impression: Oh dear. Look, I have tried defending the odd show or film I find overhated. But this... this is just so bad. I'm not against trying on a legal comedy within the MCU bracket on principle. I rather like the way Phase Four has experimented with different genres. But a legal comedy without interesting cases or good laughs? 

I enjoyed Ally McBeal (showing my age a bit here) because it was funny and inventive, and that made me put up with some odd messaging here and there. During the first episode of She-Hulk, in contrast, I didn't laugh once, and the second episode raised only two chuckles. And so it continued. The satire was clunky, the protagonist (in spite of the innate charisma of Tatiana Maslany) annoying at times, and the writing surprisingly amateurish for an MCU product. Say what you like about Ms Marvel – it wasn't really my cup of tea, but at least it was professionally made.

There was one episode of She-Hulk I liked all the way through, and that was "The Retreat", where Jennifer, ghosted by a guy she was really interested in, visits her client Emil Blonsky (more on him in a bit) on his expensive retreat and is unwittingly roped into one of his therapy sessions. There she shows some vulnerability, and we get to the core of her troubles with her She-Hulk personality: She-Hulk is like the popular girls she used to envy at school, and no-one seems to be interested in "just Jen". I liked how Blonsky's therapy, though completely bogus, nevertheless managed to help Jennifer; that was funny and also a bit touching. 

The next episode, where Jennifer meets Matt Murdock aka Daredevil, in and out of the courtroom, was also enjoyable for the most part, though by the end the clumsy satire made a reappearance. And then the finale was a complete train-wreck. Fourth-wall-breaking, apparently prominent in the comics, is also a part of the TV series, and I don't mind that. But the way it's used in the finale makes sure the series ends in a huge anticlimax and messes up MCU lore (unless the implications are ignored in future shows and films, which I'm pretty confident they will be) for the sake of a lame joke.

And then, there's the messaging. I usually have a higher tolerance for misandry than perhaps I should have. Not being much for the macho ideal, there are few things I'd consider "unmanly", but whining victimhood might just be one of them. Blokes should be able to take for instance the odd mildly sexist jibe from River Song in Doctor Who on their chin like – well, like a man.

Having said that, I don't approve of consistent man-bashing, and that's what we get here. Men in bars, men at the workplace, men on the dating scene, men in long-term relationships, men on the internet – they all get dumped on, and it's not even done in a witty way. I confess that if the comedy had been brilliant, I'd probably have swallowed the sexism happily and not been so harrumphing. But the question is academic. Unsubtle messaging and less-than-stellar quality tend to go hand in hand for some reason.

OK, enough ranting. What about villains? You mentioned Blonsky. Isn't he from The Incredible Hulk? He is indeed. I have by now watched The Incredible Hulk, and found it soporific – with the exception of Tim Roth as Blonsky aka Abomination. Though his motivations were disappointingly macho (wanting to be the best soldier there was), he had that character-actor-playing-clever-villain look which kept my eyes glued to the screen, and he's still a peach to look at. 

This Blonsky has little in common with the testosterone-fuelled mercenary of the film, though. Now he's more interested in making easy money with therapy mumbo-jumbo. I quite liked this version of Blonsky as well, but it didn't seem like the same character, and if Wong hadn't shown up to spring him out of jail at the end, the show would have painted itself into a corner with him. A cheat, but a necessary one.    

However, it's not Blonsky who's the villain of this show, but a group who calls itself the "Intelligentia", but is in fact a bunch of... male internet trolls.

Look, I could go on about how She-Hulk has nothing interesting to say about "toxic" men on the web, but instead opts for pointing at them and basically saying "ha ha, you dumb". But I have to get to the two specials some time today. Let's just say, internet trolls do not make for compelling villains. And don't get me started on the underlying message that anyone who doesn't approve of She-Hulk the character or the show must, by definition, be a troll.

Werewolf by Night

Set-up: A group of renowned monster hunters meet up, after the death of the most prominent hunter, to compete for a prized gem with magical properties. The one who catches a dangerous monster will be rewarded with the gem. The dead man's estranged daughter is also in the running. The complication? One of the hunters is, you guessed it, a werewolf. He's also the hero.         

Additional genres (apart from the super-hero genre) channelled: Classic horror.

Overall impression: I don't know much about classic horror of the endearingly hokey variety, but I'm guessing if you like that sort of thing, this is the sort of thing you like. It feels like a very loving pastiche, with plenty of practical effects instead of CGI overload, and the labyrinthine set where the monster hunt takes place is a delight. I confess I wouldn't have watched it if I hadn't been bitten by the Marvel bug, but it's a nice length and quite fun.

It must be said, there are some story beats that feel distinctly of the twenty-twenties: the standard "who are the monsters here" plot line, for instance (guess what – the monster hunters are the bad guys), and the fact that Elsa Bloodstone, the estranged daughter, is of course the most competent of the hunters although she wasn't trained by bad old dad. Nevertheless, if you have any lingering fondness for scenarios where characters look at a shadowy creature out of frame and go "Aaaaah!", you could do worse than to put this on next Halloween.

Villains? Over-the-top, which I guess is in keeping with the genre. It's a bit of a pity, because Elsa's stepmother has a legitimate reason to resent the chit who comes to claim her inheritance without showing any grief over her father's death. However, this is isn't a psychological family drama, and so the stepmother is mostly played for laughs. 

The Guardians of the Galaxy Holiday Special

Set-up: The Guardians are hanging out at their new base, but their leader, Peter Quill, is still sad about losing the love of his life. Drax and Mantis have heard stories about an Earth holiday called Christmas and, although they haven't much grasp of what it's really about, they decide to give Peter a special present to cheer him up: "the legendary Kevin Bacon", who they think is a real hero and not an actor. Shenanigans ensue.

Additional genres (apart from the super-hero genre) channelled: Sci-fi (of course, it's the Guardians), heartwarming Christmas story.

Overall impression: This is a charming Christmas-tree bauble of a show. The humour is a little twisted at times, but not so much that it takes away from the warm, fuzzy feeling you get at the end. Mantis and Drax are a great duo, and Kevin Bacon impressively game. If you haven't seen the Guardians films, this is probably not the right place to start making their acquaintance, but if you have seen them and liked them, you'll probably enjoy this a great deal.

Villains? No.