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Sandman
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I honestly found it awkward and immersion-breaking to watch her often blank expression, carbon copy line deliveries, and the way she was completely unphased by the insane things happening around her while literally everyone else was giving their all, and I wish they’d chosen someone with more experience and range considering how important the character was to this season.
I hate to say it about any actor who seems like a decent person, let alone a kid, but yeah.
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@GF Frankly this is the same as any other child actor. For example you can’t put the boy who played Jed on the stage next to a veteran stage actor like Stephen Fry and not expose him. But that’s why directors need to protect young actors in important roles through what they are given to do.
In retrospect I wonder how much they plan to expand the cast in future seasons. There are a lot of characters we haven’t seen yet, including half of the Endless.
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@Arkandel I vote for Jason Michael Lee as Destruction. Bring in some of that Earl vibe to the job.
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@Wizz Yeah I sadly have to agree. This isn’t a universal thing for
childyoung actors; I thought that Jed’s actor was actually notably more engaging, despite being younger than her. But I think Rose’s actor was a bit underwhelming, and contributed a little to my sense of the back half of the season taking a lil dip. -
Are we referring to 21 year-olds as child actors now?
I do agree that it feels like a little more experience will do her well, though I did actually like her quite a bit for the role.
I have bigger qualms about how some of the representation was handled, at least in the first half. Not great when every queer person is a villain and every poc is subservient. Like, they’re not major qualms, I think the show righted some of this by the end of the season, but it was enough to give me pause.
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@Selira I think criticizing Sandman - of all shows - over its representation of race or sexual/gender orientation is probably unfair.
But more specifically many of its villains were white old men. Many of its best and most powerful characters - like Death - were POC. Other major ones were gender-flipped (Lucifer, Constantine) compared to the comic. Several very sympathetic characters weren’t straight.
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@Selira I think criticizing Sandman - of all shows - over its representation of race or sexual/gender orientation is probably unfair.
But more specifically many of its villains were white old men. Many of its best and most powerful characters - like Death - were POC. Other major ones were gender-flipped (Lucifer, Constantine) compared to the comic. Several very sympathetic characters weren’t straight.
As an avid lover of the comic and the many artists that worked on it (Like Jeffrey Catherine Jones, one of the most underrated, amazing, phenomenal artists of any generation), I loved all of the changes. They elevated what they changed and I am very happy with what they produced. I’m glad they didn’t fuck it up and even with my bar set that low, the series blew my expectations away.
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@Arkandel And many of those changes were in the second half of the season. In the first half we see Lucienne, Paul, Garry, Kate, Nada, Rosemary, Mazikeen, Rachel, Agilieth, Cain, Abel, Ruthven, Kevin and Ric the Vic (as well as a very brief appearance by Rose) as POC characters. There’s a pretty strong pattern of these characters being subservient to white characters, victims, or villains. Death doesn’t appear until the second half, nor do the Walker/Kincaid family in any kind of prominent role.
Just because a show was clearly trying – and to be clear, I think Sandman most certainly was! – doesn’t mean it’s above critique where it stumbled. I’m not saying it ruined the show – I loved the show! – there were just some things that had me a bit
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@Selira I refer to anyone who does not have chronic back and knee pain as a child.
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There’s a bit of a (justified) uproar online about the fact Netflix hasn’t approved Sandman for a second season yet.
I mean, I get it, it’s an expensive production. It’s also probably the best thing they’ve put out in years. And they do have a reputation for killing fan-loved shows only to replace them with utter junk.
I’m already debating whether maintaining a Netflix subscription is worth it as it is.
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There’s actually a grim reason why Netflix cancels so many shows in after the first, or more often second, season. Apparently it’s very long standing convention in the tv industry to pay actors and staff ~70% of their normal expectation during the first few seasons of a show before it “takes off”. Netflix has taken advantage of this to float a metric ton of shows for cheap and then drop them.
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@shit-piss-love Well, that’s valid from Netflix’s point of view! And from mine, I can always use that extra $20/month while I sail the seven seas for the occasional production they haven’t cancelled yet.
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NEW EP JUST DROPPED!
Dream of cats and Callipoe!
On my birthday! Life is good!
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I guess it’s good I’ve been dragging my feet on wrapping up my thoughts on the series, then.
@BloodAngel Happy birthday.
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@BloodAngel omg omg omg omg happy and happy I didn’t know they were going to release more!!!
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Was going to post a link, but then figured it might contain spoilers. It was one Neil Gaiman had posted on his FB page.
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Well. If they had to depict the SA scene, I’m glad they did it with a camera zoom onto a word processor screen and an ugly musical sting.
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@GF Thank you!
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I just watched the new episode.
And I also made the mistake of reading two articles about the new episode after the fact, one written by a man, one written by a woman.
The episode was lovely. The articles… have me expecting that any conversation about Calliope’s story is going to be dominated by a very specific subset of male comic nerds who are too fucking stupid to even understand what happened, let alone be entitled to write paid think-pieces about it in popular media.
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@Aria Well now you gotta share the link. I am in the mood to see if I will laugh or get angry.