G. O. T. on a chart. Just so you know who is effing who.
http://www.makinggameofthrones.com/...urce=fark&utm_medium=website&utm_content=link
http://www.makinggameofthrones.com/...urce=fark&utm_medium=website&utm_content=link
So, I am watching the first episode of the second season of Dark Matters, (the 1st season was pretty good). This "Womens' Empowerment" thing hollywood has going on is getting a little silly. So there is a moment when this tough guy gets cornered by three guys who are shaking him down, a girl interferes and scares them off, then she shakes the guy down, beats his ass knocking him unconscious, then another tough girl gets in a fight with her over it. I mean really? Sure this is sci-fi and all but come on, give me a fucking break. Maybe in real life a highly trained martial artist could defeat a guy who was out-of-shape or more than twice her age but in reality men weigh more than women because of muscle mass, not fat. This whole fear of promoting "violence against women" has the girls beating up guys in tv and movies and it is just more than a little idiotic. Not only that it promotes unrealistic expectations. I like a female badass as much as the next guy but it is getting a bit too commonplace to be as enjoyable as it first was. At the very least, let us not overdue it so much. Vulnerable women are attractive too (and yes, this series has one of those).
, I think that was a decent opening episode for the second season and I'm glad to be rid of you know who.
As for other current tv series that I follow:
Ash vs Evil Dead (like someone mentioned in this thread before, it is pretty good and I haven't even seen the films but still enjoyed it very much.)
It was a good opening episode but I don't think we are lucky enough to be rid of you know who. They left his storyline wide open and unresolved.
Skip the first Evil Dead movie, it was pretty low budget and kinda awful (though Stephen King liked it and his review was said to be the reason it was distributed nationally). Watch the second two (the second, "Evil Dead 2" is basically a reboot of the first), especially the last Evil Dead movie, the cult classic which launched Bruce Campbells' and Sam Raimis' long careers; "The Army of Darkness" which is what the series is mostly based on. ("Shop Smart. Shop at S-Mart." Ash Williams)
Now that Maisie is 18, what do you think she does?
Click for naked justice
http://www.celebjihad.com/celeb-jihad/maisie-williams-posts-nude-masturbation-video
fake
There aren't many sci-fi shows to begin with, so at this point I'm just happy to watch what few there are... and come to think of it, Dark Matter is the only sci-fi show that I watch (tried Killjoys and The Expanse, didn't like them).
Anyway, I think that was a decent opening episode for the second season and I'm glad to be rid of you know who.
One director typically can't produce an episode a week, especially if the show is an hour and/or uses sfx - they can possibly shoot one in a week, but there's up to a week of post-production work to do. So while one director does post on the last episode shot, the cast and crew shoot another with a different director to keep things moving.
As for consistency, that's the executive producer's job, and why show-runner is such an important gig for television; they keep the show on course, not the director, as with a feature film.
The directing staff for the sixth season was Jeremy Podeswa (episodes 1 and 2), Daniel Sackheim (episodes 3 and 4), Jack Bender (episodes 5 and 6), Mark Mylod (episodes 7 and 8), and Miguel Sapochnik (episodes 9 and 10).
- Attractions which were used to film scenes in Game of Thrones' new season are bracing for a tourism boom
- The medieval city of Girona, Spain, is expected to feature prominently when the series returns to the small screen
- Cast and crew returned to old favorites, including Dubrovnik, Croatia, and County Antrim in Northern Ireland
Actually, GOT uses multiple complete crews all filming at the same time in different countries, and locations.
Duplicate directors, one for each crew, and switching between them during the film season.