Friday, September 24, 2010

My Generation Tv Show

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My Generation Tv Show:New latest result of “My Generation Tv Show” On Tv.Michael Apted in “Up!” A series of documentaries is one of the greatest achievements in the history of film and television. It is almost impossible to overestimate its importance as part of the movie and part cultural anthropology. If you have not seen the movie, who checked in on the lives of a group of British children every seven years since they were seven, to take a long weekend and watch the DVD.
One of the things that critics said, as they looked, so that Neil and Nick and Tony and John and others have evolved from children to mature adults in the fact that “Up!” Series created by a real human drama in a way that you could never script.
This is a reminder that Noah Hawley, professed fan of “Up!” series is likely to have received, but he decided to try anyway.
And now, thanks to a new ABC mocku-Dramedy “My Generation”, it is a cautionary tale.
Although “My Generation” simulates a documentary style, it is crushing disappointment, in which every moment rings false. It’s as deaf pilot, as you’ll see this fall, although I suppose it will find few supporters, mostly among viewers who are literally the exact same age as the characters on the screen. [I'm five years older than they are, that should make me at least close enough to the demographic match, but apparently not so much.]
Full Review of “My Generation”
Vanity “My Generation” is that the documentary crew made some really superficial interviews with a group of older people in Austin, Texas high school. Then, 10 years later, the director decides to return to the students and is shocked – shocked! – To find that most of his life had changed in an ironic way since high school and that most of them are not living the life they had predicted for himself a decade ago. In shock!
As a film director tells us: “a lot can change in 10 years. Life takes unexpected turns. But the nine men and women, these last 10 years was just the beginning.”
This statement is the thesis behind “My Generation”, and it is both banal and meaningless. This does not mean anything.Dramatic irony in “Up!” series – the things the audience knows that the characters do not know, and which allow us to feel elegant and above said characters – built over years. There’s no doubt about it. It helps if you start with a seven-year-old children giving their views on marriage, politics, and their aspirations. When they flip-flopped 21 years later, which can be a source of both humor and drama. Nevertheless, “Up!” series has never been entirely about dramatic irony. It’s just something that happens.
“My Generation” is just the irony of his mind.
First real line of dialogue in the whole show comes from Mehcad Brooks as ego-driven jock who, shockingly, become selfless soldiers.
“My name is Rolly characters and I think that George Bush would be the best president this country has ever seen. Woo!” nature of the bellows into the camera.
Yes. We get it. Because … see … It turns out that this kind of thing that this character – and other characters – in what may regret saying or which may later look silly.
And no matter what George Bush would probably not have a huge amount of support for African-American teens (even in Texas) in the spring of 2000, because the fact is, winking and nudging, rather than the possibility of actual moments in nature.And when the ultra-annoying Sokol said the chamber in 2000, he was going to become rich thanks to MP3 and everything looks confused, as if it were mp3s best that Falcon was hip, it does not matter that people were trading MP3′s on Napster for nearly a year at that point and that the format was the standard for online sharing music for three or four years already, because the fact is, winking and nudging, rather than the possibility of actual moments in nature.
But it’s not just an annoying line of dialogue that drives the irony. Romantic, the characters were a pair of almost entirely based on the confused reaction that these couples will bring a decade later, when none of them apparently have no access to Facebook, and they should recover.
The entire pilot: “Wait, are you married to them?” Wait, you’re now working like “What?” “Wait, you said that you will be awesome and you really LAME. How odd that?”
And if the point is to impose a documentary-style realism, maybe Holly was not a great choice, as showrunner. I loved the ABC’s short-lived “Unusuals” due to increased dialogue and situations, and I was impressed by Hawley TCA press tour sessions with his identity, but an increased dialogue and self-consciousness is really a terrible combination for Display in this format.
And it did not even want to show the documentary style makes it particularly well. Yes, there are off-screen director asks annoying and all too self-awareness, and sometimes the camera jiggles a little, but Hawley and experimental filmmaker Craig Gillespie did not try at all to embrace the benefits and limitations of style. He feels as though this little documentary, without the likelihood of funding, much less ever seen, has a crew of at least three or four cameras, and they have great technology remote microphone and the secondary characters, of people not affiliated with documentary themselves, no qualms about the shot is saying and doing some things awkward.
The documentary style is not light, and, finally, it is little more than a stylistic tic. Actors so funny in 2000 incarnations, I really can not believe we will consider more of those moments in later episodes, if “My Generation” is really a comedy at heart. “My generation” memory recall “Friends” memories in their levels of dramatic performance.
?. As I wrote in my Take Me To The entry pilots, “Pretty Nutter Stepford 20-something on the camera ominously about his goals in life, romantic obstacles and difficulties in finding happiness Dear This’ E-Harmony Commercial: the series.” And you know how to watch those E-Harmony commercials and go, “I do not believe for a second that any of you actually spent any time in the dating pool is much smaller than what you have found each other on E-Harmony,” This is a level artificially achieved on “My Generation”.
Partly because on Thursday night, a huge night for advertisers, it is also traditionally a big night for television event. It continues to house a trio of large (or sometimes big) NBC comedy, and CBS “The Big Bang Theory,” sometimes the big “Grey’s Anatomy”, increasing (in his own way) “Vampire Diaries” and a pair of CBS procedural that some people seem to really like it. Perhaps sensing excessive stress on the DVRs of the country, the network decided to introduce only “My Generation”, “Kal My dad said,” and “outsourcing” in their rotation Thursday. This is the most charitable explanation I can give for less than the appointment of a new quality show tonight premiere of the series.

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