Posts Tagged 'kn review'

The TV Show is Better.

This the first and, most likely, the last time you will ever see me write this sentence. I’d never met a book I didn’t love more than it’s audio-visual recreation until now.

Darly Dreaming Dexter by Jeff Lindsay is by no means a horrible book, yet it didn’t have the humor, irony, and intrigue that Showtime gave it. After reading the book which inspired the television series and watching the complete first season, I can say with absolute certainty that the book is not better.

The writer’s for the Showtime series really took their rights to the book’s content seriously. The show and book are mirror images of each other for the most part. None of the characters are altered and some dialogue is cut and pasted. It’s not bad, though. The producers saw a great idea, yet mediocre excecution, and decided to give it all the depth, drama, and devotion Dexter deserved.

The book isn’t bad, just mediocre. It’s nothing I’d write a high review of, yet something I’d recommend for a quick and mindless, yet entertaining read. This is why I’m giving the book two bolts. I’d give it one if it were just a book, but the story is really something amazing, hidden behind boring, uninteresting prose and a weak progression of events.

kn review :: books

The Gum Thief
Douglas Coupland

Douglas Coupland is best known for his book jPod and while I haven’t read the popular book, I doubt I will. I’m not being harsh; I’m being honest.

The Gum Thief started out with such promise. A forty-something man with a quite downhill life is working at Staples where he meets a young twenty-something girl. The two of them write back and forth to each other about life philosophies and woes. The first forty pages had me laughing out loud and agreeing with the main character’s cynical and depressing view of society. As the book crept on, I was still enjoying it because I thought I was waiting for something to happen. Here’s where my idea of a good modern novel and Coupland’s depart.

If nothing major would have happened in the book, I still would have given it more than one little lightning bolt. Modern stories, whether they be books, movies or poetry, have a spirit (if you could call it that) of apathy. People with less than satisfactory lives are introduced to us under the pretense that there is much change in store, yet because of the character’s flaws no change occurs or the change is not the saving grace
the character anticipated. The Gum Thief was a cop out.

I don’t mind spoiling the ending (because it was lame), but if you plan on reading, I would skip down to the next paragraph. Coupland ends his book with the most cliche of all modern novels. The depressed and distraught twenty-something attempts to take her life. Though it didn’t kill the character, it killed the book.

If you’d like to read it, go ahead. It will give you a few laughs and make you want to remember some of the lines, but it’s not the ‘great book’ you were hoping for.

kn review :: television

New Amsterdam
Fox :: Mon 9 pm

Another excuse for a crime drama, but with an intriguing uniqueness.

New Amsterdam follows the story of an immortal cop living in New York. After 400 years and 609 women, he’s still waiting for the one who will make him mortal. Sure, it sounds cheesy. ‘True love makes him mortal, but more alive than ever.’ (And the show uses that line or something like it almost every episode.) Aside from the writing being a bit weak, the show is pretty decent.

Because our main character has lived through four centuries, he’s constantly referencing classic literature, music, historic events, and intriguing details about every era. This makes the show. It’s like watching Pride & Prejudice, Pocahontas, Brave Heart, Chicago, Grease, and Law & Order at the same time. Sure, it sounds complex, but it makes for a really great crime drama.

The Season Finale is on Next Monday, April 14th. It’s definitely worth tuning in.

The kn team gives it 3/5.

Spoiler: Our hero has just found out that the woman he thought was going to make him mortal, isn’t the one, yet he’s already fallen for her (and it’s mutual). With many wives having come and gone through his life already, should he just live and love or push this love aside to continue his seach for the one? How is he supposed to tell the one he’s with? (Meanwhile, each episode invovles a homicide case.)


 

July 2008
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