Monthly Archives: October 2019

Mr. Robot S4E04

Not Found

This was a ponderous episode. In a final season where every episode is precious, “404 Not Found” was seemingly a side show with very little plot progress. I’m confused about this approach after such a dramatic episode last week.

The show follows two trips: Elliot with Tyrell and Darlene looking for Elliot. We pick up right after the last episode ends. Elliot tells Tyrell they are being listened to by the Dark Army. Tyrell goes outside while Elliot keeps talking in his apartment and Tyrell ambushes the DA guy in the van with a solid bonk on the head. Tyrell thinks he killed the guy and they are pleased to find that the conversation he and Elliot just had wasn’t relayed to the evil powers. So the boys jump into the van and head upstate to get rid of the body. At a pit stop, the DA guy isn’t so dead and takes off in the van, stranding the boys who have to hoof it to the next town to get cell service. Positive that the DA guy has passed on the info that Tyrell is working with Elliot to bring down Whiterose, Elliot is panicked that Darlene is now just hours away from being killed. He has to warn her so he leads the charge into the woods, the so-called short cut to the next town.

Back in the city, Darlene calls Elliot to tell him their plan won’t work. Olivia Cortez doesn’t have the security clearance to get into Whitrerose’s financials. They’re going to have to beak in and enter a business to get access to the correct servers. Elliot is off with Tyrell– with no cell service–so she has to leave a message for him. She rants for three minutes about how awful of a brother he is, and when the voicemail service cuts her off for the time limit, she does it again but much shorter without the diatribe. She hides her feelings.

The information that Darlene gives us, is the only plot progression in this episode. The rest is character confrontation.

Elliot and Tyrell get lost in the woods (big surprise) and are forced to deal with each other because they have no other choice. Elliot is laser-focused, keep moving to that other town. Tyrell laments about his life. How is life focus on doing everything to climb up the enterprise later–stepping on everything and everyone in the way–hasn’t done anything to make his life better. His wife and kid are gone and his new job title, CEO of ECorp is meaningless. It’s one of the biggest companies on the planet but he’s nothing more than a puppet with a guillotine blade hanging over his head. All he has to show is his misery and the $6,000 suit he’s wearing in ankle-deep snow. He goes on to imply that Elliot’s life is much easier because he doesn’t care about anything, wearing the same clothes every day is like his armor to ignore everyone around him.

That statement shows how little Tyrell knows about Elliot. Elliot worries about everyone he knows, he just bottles up everything as a shield to the world. Right now in fact, he’s petrified for his sister and that’s his motivation. Tyrell keeps saying they should quit and Elliot shuts him down every time. He admits–without hearing Darlene’s first voicemail–that he’s a horrible brother and he has to do better. His admission to Tyrell is that his reason to live and keep fighting the hydra of ECorp is Darlene.

Darlene ends up traveling towards Elliot with a drunk Santa Claus named Tobias. While Elliot and Tyrell use each other as a shrink, Darlene opens up to Tobias. She’s mourning the death of basically everyone she knows. Elliot is her only anchor and she’s furious with him and at the same time, she’s petrified that he’s dead. It’s conflicting emotions that she’s having a hard time coming to grips with. As she talks to Tobias, he gets into his personal life and he’s having struggles of his own, so much so that it sounds like he’s suicidal.

Darlene spends just a few hours with Tobias and she comes to care about him. When she drops him off at home, she goes the extra mile to confront him, that his life is worth living despite his problems. It turns out that she misinterpreted most of what he said, he isn’t suicidal. Considering she’s been chased by the grim reaper for the past few months, it’s not surprising how she (and we the audience) turned his words based on her current perspective on the world.

Still, that was a very powerful conversation she had with Tobias. She doesn’t have anyone to talk to and lately, she’s terrified of getting close to anyone (a parallel with Dom’s small story this week). More importantly, as Tobias bobbles into his home, Darlene breaks down in the car and he has his own moment of great concern for someone he barely knows. He goes back to the car and gives her words of encouragement for her own life—another thing she hasn’t heard in a while.

At the very end, Tyrell and Elliot discover the van crashed on the side of the road with a dead deer nearby. The DA guy was well enough to drive away but a surprise road crossing by a stupid deer is a serious danger to everyone. Tyrell ends up getting shot in the stomach by the gravely injured DA guy and tells Elliot to leave him behind. This puts Elliot into a bind and cannot be the way Tyrell goes out. I can’t believe Sam Esmail would write out one of his best characters like this so I’m just going to have wait until Sunday to find out if I should rage about this or not.

Despite being a weird pump of the breaks in story progression, this episode still delivers memorable character moments and fantastic dialog (Darlene and Tobias have a string of highlights).

2019 Scary Movie Season

Happy Death Day– Take the movie Groundhog Day, set it on a college campus, and add a murderer and you have this fun movie. Tree Glebman wakes up in a boy’s dorm room on her birthday. She goes through the day and is murdered by someone wearing all black and the mask of the school mascot. On her death, she wakes up back in the boy’s dorm room and lives through the same day until she can stop her murderer. A pretty clever movie, enough is done to keep you guessing on who the murderer is and Tree is a smart character. She works to widdle down her suspect list and naturally finds out clues and picks up on things that are wrong. My guess is that this script was worked on for a while, it’s way more clever than I thought it would be. Rated PG-13, this movie is light on violence and almost absent of gore. The most you see is a knife handle sticking out of someone. More thriller than a horror movie, this is a good movie for scaredy-cats (it’s not scary at all) to watch with their friends who like horror movies.

Happy Death Day 2U– The sequel starts on the same morning as the original. Ryan, the roommate of Carter, opens this movie by showing the audience where he goes after Tree leaves Carter’s room. The big hook of the movie is that it explains what caused Tree’s time loop–Ryan’s science thesis project. Just when Tree thinks she’s out, Ryan ends up making it worse and before long it’s more than just Tree’s life on the line in this alternative timeline. This movie almost changes genres, adding science fiction to the thriller aspects while keeping the dash of horror movie influences. I give credit for the effort in making this movie stand out and unique. By pushing the time idea, it remixes the events of the first movie offering different routes for the characters to take and changing the mystery of who the killer is. I did find it weird and disappointing that despite Ryan being the focal point of the movie at the start, he falls to the wayside and Tree headlines the movie again. That said, what they do for Tree is well done and interesting. She doesn’t do the same motions as the first film and more opportunities are made with the timeline change to give more depth of her character. She has to make a few hard choices which help make for a more interesting story in the end. While I like the first one more, this is a worthy sequel.

Green Room– A punk band travels to the woods of Portland, Oregon on a last ditch effort to make some money on their sputtering tour. The gig is at a neo-nazi bar but they’re reassured they’ll be playing early in the day so the crowd won’t be too gnarly, the contact at the venue is cool, and the amount money they’ll get for playing a few songs will be enough for them to get back home. The kids end up seeing something bad–essentially being at the wrong place at the wrong time–and they are forced to fight for their survival. This movie is awesome from start to finish. A good set-up with a fun cast you get to know and like quickly and then the decent into chaos ratchets up perfectly. Patrick Stewart is in this with a role I’ve never seen him do before. The late great Anton Yelchin is fantastic in this as well so watching this kept me at the edge of my seat the entire time. There’s a good amount of violence and gore on display but it isn’t gratuitous which I think was a good move. What’s there sells the horror and that’s enough. The whole movie takes place almost entirely in one location and the set is used really well. The band tries various ways to get out so the pacing has these great peaks and valleys of action. The only thing I didn’t like is that I didn’t watch this movie sooner.

Mr. Robot S4E03

Forbidden

This week we got a rare look into Whiterose’s (known only as Zhi Zhang) past with a terrific cold opening.

In 1982, Whiterose and his secret lover–Chen–were working on behalf of the Chinese government, landing a huge partnership with IBM. On this trip in the US, the two were able to be together more openly, even if it was still behind closed doors. The Chinese government forbids homosexual relationships, so the men were using this partnership as a way to leave China. Zhi would parlay this success into a US Ambassadorship. With success in their grasp, Whiterose came out to her partner as a trans woman, showing her even bigger secret presumably for the first time. Chen didn’t hesitate to accept this revelation. It didn’t change his mind on anything, the love of his life was still there and they were planning a future together. But the plan didn’t work as expected. With such success, Whiterose was offered an even greater role in the Chinese government, meaning they wouldn’t be leaving the country. This news comes on the day of Chen’s arranged wedding day to another woman. Fraught with the realization that they’d never be leaving China, forced to keep themselves closeted and farther apart from each other. Whiterose tells him to be patient, that they’ll get away together and time, but Chen sees it as an admission of surrender. Unable to cope, Chen takes his life.

This devastated Whiterose in ways that still haunt her today. He uses Chen’s watch and inherited his obsession with time. His death–what Whiterose feels directly responsible for because of a choice she made–is most likely the cataylst for the plan that she’s been working on for more than 30 years.

When Whiterose is advised that Elliot and Page are probably in cahoots and they need to slow things down to keep an eye on them, she takes it as an admission of surrender. She demands that the shareholder meeting happen tomorrow (Christmas Day) to keep his adversaries from having the time to make something happen.

Elliot and Darlene are still under the gun, trying to figure out a way to get access to Whiterose’s financials when the shareholder meeting happens. They track down a contact of Susan Jacobs–Olivia Cortez–the only contact she had at the Cyprus Bank. Darlene is gung ho on helping Elliot with her and he won’t let her. He’s too afraid of putting her in danger and wants her to work on something else while he’s gone.

In typical Mr. Robot fashion, Elliot finds an in with Olivia. She’s divorced with a kid and she’ll lose custody if she gets caught using drugs again. With this leverage, Elliot is gung ho to simply blackmail Olivia into giving him her bank FOB so he can get the password into her work’s network. It’s impossible to get in without that FOB. Mr. Robot slows him down, saying he doesn’t need to go scorched Earth.

In one of the best character scenes in the show, Mr. Robot opens the door for Elliot to make a human connection. Something Elliot hasn’t done in a long time and is desperately needed because he’s extremely detached. Funny how the split personality, the one who isn’t actually a person, recognizes the value of not isolating yourself in order to truly fix things. Over the course of the night, Elliot discovers a kindred spirit and the keycode he needs.

Cue complications! On the way back from Olivia’s apartment, Elliot spots a Dark Army tail. He moseys back home in order to sell that he’s not up to anything only to find Tyrell Wellick in his apartment. The worst person to be caught with by the DA and he just starts running his mouth about stopping Whiterose.

While that is sending Elliot into a panic, the other side of the bear trap that he doesn’t know about is starting to shake loose. Vera is slinking around trying to figure out how to recruit Elliot to help rebuild his drug empire. He gets a whiff of Elliot’s problems with his ex-therapist, Krista Gordon. Just like how Elliot dug around Olivia to get leverage for what he wanted, Vera is doing the same to Elliot. It looks like the net of destruction around Elliot is about to get bigger.

Joker

Have you ever heard the saying “The feel good movie of the year”? Joker isn’t that movie. As one would expect, nothing good happens to the man we watch become the Joker.

Gotham City is a rough place to live in. Arthur Fleck is one of its citizens and every day is a challenge. Struggling to make ends meet while living and caring for his ill mother, Arthur doesn’t have too much to look forward to. He has to maintain his own psych meds along with his mother’s medication and scrape up enough money for rent and food. There are times when he forgoes food to ensure his mother has something to eat. He takes small jobs as a clown (store sales, hospital visits) with his ultimate dream to be a stand-up comedian. He also has a condition called Pseudobulbar Affect which causes him to laugh uncontrollably at inappropriate times. The highlight of his day is watching the Murray Franklin Show with his mom.

The movie wastes no time in starting Arthur’s descent into madness. He’s mugged and held financially responsible for the loss of the store’s sign. A co-worker gives him a gun for protection and the man soon lies about the gun to make Arthur look worse when he gets caught with it, leading to the loss of his job at the entertainer placement agency. Layer by layer, a man who for a long time has questioned his place and identity in the world gets more and more taken from him. This pollutes his mind and when cornered on the subway, he fights back with violence. At first spooked by the ordeal, he quickly comes to terms with it–with no remorse. On top of that, news of what he did hits the media and while no one knows it was him who killed those men, for the first time he feel useful. That he’s done something that people have noticed, he’s changed the world. Even though that change is bad, the feeling becomes intoxicating and he becomes more aggressive.

Joker isn’t the first movie to explore a person psychologically breaking, so it doesn’t really tread new ground in that regard. The main character being from comic books changes the expectations though. But let’s be clear, this isn’t a superhero movie. Despite the Joker not having a definitive origin (there are many stories over the decades) everyone knows what he is in the end: a monster. So where this movie goes is no surprise. With all of the violence reported in the world today, it makes a character like this all the more topical and scary.

And the movie does use the fear of mental illness as one of it’s biggest attention-grabbing features. “‘Crazy’ people are dangerous” is the lazy and untrue go-to idea everyone tends to lean on. I never got the feeling that it exploited this idea though as Arthur is a complex character. I was watching someone’s world fall away bit by bit and left with not knowing which way was up anymore. When someone needs help and they have no support, it compounds problems.

Arthur’s problems aren’t simple. Pseudobulbar Affect–caused by brain trauma or other brain degeneration conditions–is painful both physically and emotionally. He gasps for air, he chokes on his saliva, and it’s embarrassing because it’s loud and uncontrollable. It’s a social nightmare he’s had to deal with for as long as he can remember. Long before we meet him, Arthur has been struggling. Then he loses his social worker due to budget cuts, removing his access to his medication and one of the few people he’s able to talk to about his life. Couple that with physical violence and a massive revelation about his mother, Arthur loses any kind of grounding he ever had. I never got the impression that I was supposed to be sympathetic to what Arthur does.

I will say that Joker has a very narrow view of the world. The whole thing is from Arthur’s perspective and it never looks past what he sees. What happens around Arthur–due to his actions–the movie never explores. So any kind of social commentary is pretty vapid.

I see the arc of Arthur to be a bit like Erik Killmonger, the villain from Black Panther (for me the biggest highlight of that movie). Their backgrounds are completely different but the storytelling goal is the same, to give you plausible history and reasoning to make you understand why the antagonist wants to cause so much harm. You can understand what they are saying but recognize that it doesn’t justify what they are doing.

Nor do I think Joker glorifies violence as none of it is celebrated and there are no allusions to it being good or helpful.

I did find this to be one of the most suspenseful movies I’ve seen in awhile. Joaquin Phoenix is going to get a ton of acting award nominations for playing Arthur. I give him my highest praise as I completely forgot it was him on screen. He moves differently, he has all of these personal tics that become noticeable as you watch. The character truly changes from the beginning to the end. Arthur does his best to try to fit in, he’s constantly at war with himself. It’s like he’s so unsure of who he is, he looks to other people to mimic how they behave. He’s just guessing how to get by, like “Is this it? Is this ‘normal?'”

It’s a fraught journey through two acts and when Arthur puts on the full Joker outfit in act 3, it really blew my mind. I was literally seeing the comic book villain on screen, it’s him. And that’s really scary. You don’t want to be anywhere near this guy. Even the big bads like Two Face, Penguin, and Killer Croc are really nervous around him. What is he going to do was all I could think of. Joker is anarchy and there he was in the flesh for the second time (Heath Ledger being the first).

I really liked seeing the mixture of current social issues and comic book Joker. Here, since this is the beginning of the character, he has no grand plans. He’s not filling balloons with poison gas or putting bombs around a city. Here he sees the start of being able to influence and manipulate people. That’s always been a huge part of the character. And there are real world parallels that the movie uses here. The influence of media, the rampant economic inequality that’s spurning anger, and the growing phenomenon of the mob mentality. Everyone is chanting for justice and for Joker, that’s cold blooded revenge.

Joker pulls on a few more familiar source material motifs. From the amazing hospital scene with Joker talking to Harvey Dent in The Dark Knight:

You know… You know what I’ve noticed? Nobody panics when things go “according to plan.” Even if the plan is horrifying! If, tomorrow, I tell the press that, like, a gang banger will get shot, or a truckload of soldiers will be blown up, nobody panics, because it’s all “part of the plan”. But when I say that one little old mayor will die, well then everyone loses their minds!
[Joker hands Two-Face a gun and points it at himself]
Introduce a little anarchy. Upset the established order, and everything becomes chaos. I’m an agent of chaos. Oh, and you know the thing about chaos? It’s fair!

This is basically what happens with Arthur’s confrontation on the subway with the men who turn out to work at Wayne Enterprises. People get abused and killed on the streets of Gotham all the time and no one bats an eye. But if it’s a well off white-collar worker? Tragic, headline news. This is one of Arthur’s biggest grievances with society and leads him to another keystone of the Joker manifesto: everyone sucks, everyone is mean, everyone is cruel.

And in the end, I think that last bit is what we’re all fighting against and the biggest message of this movie. Good versus evil means we all have to work together to make the decisions that keep us on the right track. Cynicism isn’t a virtue, don’t let that make you jaded, bitter, and isolated. The forgotten are people too, empathy goes a long way (which I think there is a huge lack of now with all the budget cuts to many social programs that will do way more harm than good). Work for other people the same way you would work for yourself. When society pulls up together, we all benefit.

Mr. Robot S4E02

Payment Required

After last week’s crackling season preimere, I thought the train would keep barreling through but instead Sam Esmail turned the burners down to “keep ’em sizzlin'” which was a surprisingly good idea.

The show opens with Price giving the background of how Whiterose became so powerful, starting is opening in the late 80s when the Berlin Wall came down. With the collapse of the Soviet Union, it left an opportunity to fill in the power vacuum with an eager cabal of investors that Whiterose assembled. This group, called The Deus Group, is the conspiracy theorists Illumanity come to life. Deus runs the world behind the scenes but the rest of the investors were fooled into thinking they had any say in what the company did. Whiterose steered the ship from the start for the sole purpose of getting her Congo installation done. Price, having saved Elliot’s life from the OD, tells him there is nothing he can do, even pulling off the hack he wants to will barely dent TDG. Much like the late Angela, Elliot is too stubborn for that message. He convinces Price to try to get all the members together while he works on a way to hack the group when they are together. He just needs an appropriate entry point. Susan Jacobs, who worked for ECorp as a liaison for the Cypress Bank is the best bet, but she’s the one who had a bad run-in with Darlene…but no one knows that.

With some kind of plan in mind Elliot gets a call from Darlene. She got a call from the assisted living home informing them that their mother has died. To say the kids didn’t have a good relationship with their mother is one way to put it so neither are invested in having anything to do with her. Being last of kin, they are forced to handle their mother’s stuff.

This episode mostly serves as a reconciliation for Darlene and Elliot. They’ve been drifting different streams of misery for some time now, and those streams have come to merge. Elliot is so pre-occupied with tracking down Susan Jacobs, that he barely registers anything. Darlene gets pulled in as they start to clear her room. When Elliot finds his old Walkman in a drawer, it makes Darlene think and evaluate their past. They also stumble upon a bank receipt that says their mother had a safety deposit box, Darlene insists they go see what’s in it. Annoyed that his sister is putting any value to anything their mother had or has, he reluctantly goes with her. She needs some kind of closure, she can’t detach like Elliot. At an E Bank branch (ugh) there’s nothing to find.

This entire sequence was fascinating to watch. Fantastically written and acted, I liked how this experience brings the two siblings together. Back in Elliot’s orbit, she notices he’s much more fidgety than normal and manages to get him to talk about what he’s up to. That leads into her admitting–but not officially saying why–he won’t be able to find Jacobs. That’s a huge speedbump in the plan but this also puts Darlene back on the hacking team. Elliot won’t be doing this hail mary to stop Whiterose by himself. This conversation also drops a massive bomb on Elliot.

She mentions Fernando Vera, that he approached her outside Elliot’s apartment. Blindsided, he doesn’t recall her telling him that and she replies, you didn’t seem to care when I told you so I didn’t either…should I worry about him? Vera’s been gone a long time, the ordeal with him was horrific, so him sniffing around is bad news. Elliot doesn’t let on. He also doesn’t let on to his sheer panic that she didn’t tell him, Mr. Robot kept this info from him. When Darlene leaves, he confronts Mr. Robot about it and he swears up and down that he doesn’t know what Darlene is talking about. He hasn’t kept any secrets from Elliot. So that means, Elliot has a third personality…

This scene with Darlene shows off one of my favorite visual storytelling techniques Esmail uses. Here, right after she says Vera’s name, Elliot’s eyes flick away from her, off to the right. There, in the pews behind her, Mr. Robot sits. To Darlene, he’s just checked out, she doesn’t know where his mind went. She steps over, unknowingly blocking his view of Mr. Robot, into his line of sight, forcing him to focus on her. She knows how to reengage him when he retreats.

Earlier in this episode, when Elliot gets frustrated with Price, he tags out of the conversation. Mr. Robot has been shown to be sitting behind Elliot has he talks to Price, and he starts talking to Price instead. Last episode, a similar moment happens when Elliot gets frustrated with Darlene and he taps out, with Mr. Robot quickly taking over, taking care to talk to Darlene gently as she’s in a bad state of mind.

If you don’t watch the show, you’d think that it’s a threeperson conversation, not two personalities of one person navigating challenging moments. It’s deftly done and a treat to watch with subtle set-ups and follow-throughs (Esmail is such a good director).

While Elliot is with his sister, Dom is doing as she told to keep the Dark Army happy. She’s being interviewed by a superior about her partner Santiago. As far as they know, he’s AWOL, only she knows he was murdered with an ax in front of her. Right when you think she’s going to tell them the truth, she goes with the lie, Santiago was working with a drug cartel. Janice calls her that night and Dom tells her that she’s 99.9% sure the agent believes the cover story. It turns out Janice is a real stickler for efficiency and has the agent killed. This woman really loves her job.

Finally, Price visits Whiterose (who is decorating a Christmas tree as Zhi Zhang) and pulls the only card he can to get the Deus Group members to gather quickly: he’s retiring. Whiterose is pissed–which Price rather likes–because this throws her timeline into chaos, she had no plans for this to happen. With about a week to go before the Congo delivery, everyone has their back pressed to the wall.

Mr. Robot S4E01

Unauthorized

The final season primier wastes no time in setting the stakes and the level of danger that will spool out through the remaining episodes.

Starting right where we left off in season 3, a broken Angela talking to her father, Philip Price. Exploited and devestated by White Rose, Angela is angry and ignores her father’s pleas to leave things alone. Accept that she was used by a sociopath and move on with the rest of her life. Angela isn’t having it and dismisses her father, who when walking away removes a wire taped to his chest. He is passed by two Dark Army members who quickly assassinate his daughter. Price, now distraught, is quickly called by White Rose who does her awful best to smooth things over. Price didn’t everything he could to help Angela, she just wouldn’t listen. Now focus on the business at hand–migrating those ECorp servers to the Congo as fast as possible. White Rose’s endgame is now scheduled for the end of the year.

Elliot and Mr. Robot are doing everything he (they) can to stop the move to the Congo. He’s been tracking the Dark Army’s moves for months and has found a target for him to exploit, a lawyer that White Rose uses to launder money. Elliot does is old blackmail routine with limited results as his smooth talking isn’t as convincing as it used to be. The lawyer ends up dead and Elliot walks into a trap.

Meanwhile, Elliot’s sister Darlene is selfmedicating over Angela’s disappearance. Darlene lost so much last year that she’s having a problem hanging on to reality. She thinks she saw Angela come out of a homeless shelter and begs Elliot to help track her down. Elliot says to stop that Angela is dead and Darlene doesn’t believe him. He hasn’t shown her the picture that White Rose sent him. Darlene is handling this so badly as it is, he’s afraid of showing her the explicit proof.

Dom is living with her mother and is also a pile of nerves. She’s so paranoid she pulls a gun on the guy remodeling her mother’s bedroom. Her mother tells her to get herself presentable as they are having a guest over for dinner. A woman comes over and the dinner gets rather uncomfortable as it’s clear Dom’s mother is trying to set her up for a date. You can’t blame her as Dom is in some serious need for human contact. Of course she doesn’t know what Dom has gone through, watching her partner get murdered, pulling her into the service of the Dark Army. Her heart is in the right place. But it turns out this woman works for the Dark Army. Dom has no reason to be paranoid…her head is in a vice and the handle is being spun to close it.

This episode had every element I love about this show. Drama and suspense out of the wazoo, awesome spy and hacking stuff, and a clear aim at what this season is about. I think every episode is going to be all killer and no filler. Sam Esmail is a fantastic writer and his direction remains top of the line. His eye for framing scenes is amazing. Even with the long break between seasons, Mr. Robot hasn’t missed a beat.

Fall is in full effect

Summer held on for as long as it could, giving one last heat blast on October 2nd. Now the chill has officially moved in! So that means hockey weather is here.

And so is the NHL season! The New York Rangers beat the Winnipeg Jets 6-4 in the home opener last night. It was a hair raising game with too many Ranger penalties (looking at you Strome). Defense was super dicey at times, rookies Fox and Hajak looking rather cross eyed at times. That meant Lundqvist had to put on his crown to keep them in the game, saving 43 of 47 shots. One of those was a soft goal, but he was stunting most of the night. All in all, promising, if sloppy. Winnipeg was all over Panarin and he was still able to make moves, which also let my boy Zibanejad run around. Both Panarin and Trouba scored so dropping all that money on them seems like a good idea so far! Oh! And Staal was the first to score! Staal! So it’s a promising start, they just need to get comfortable as a team.

The fall season also means a whole lot of entertainment is flying straight at our eyeballs. A lot of returning shows of course and a couple of new ones.

I tried watching the new season of American Horror Story and it bored me to death, so I’m out on that one. The Deuce is on it’s final few episodes, The Righteous Gemstones is amazing. Ink Master wrapped another good season

Netflix is killing it, I have more on there than I know what to do with. The Dark Crystal: Age of Resistance was fantastic. Derry Girls season 2 was terrific. Disenchantment and Big Mouth are back. I have a few stand up specials to watch, the last season of Orange is the New Black is on the backburner still, some horror movies I’ve had in wait I’ll get to this month. The Great British Baking Show! Between Two Ferns movie, The Spy, Mindhunter. El Camino!!!

On Amazon, I watched all of Undone in less than a week, liked it a lot and I’ve heard so much about Fleabag I need to figure out when to watch that. I’m probably going to stick to one series, finish the season, watch a movie, go to another series, and go like that until I run out of shows. Like I’ll run out of shows. Mr. Robot final season starts this Sunday! I think the Walking Dead is this weekend too and I have no idea why I still watch that.

And here’s a real big on out of no where: pro wrestling! All Elite Wrestling made it’s TV debut. I haven’t watched wrestling in I think 15 years so this was a trip. It was a lot of fun to watch and since I recorded it I can jump through the shoots (the story bits wrestlers do to set up fueds and such) that I have no patience for anymore. The talent they have is really fantastic. I’m happy to see anyone rise up to stick their thumb in Vince McMahon’s eye after all these years. Force his organization to be less garbage with competition.