Jump to content

AMC: Wednesday, May 13, 2009


Recommended Posts

  • Members

Bitch, please!

DISCUSS! :P

In honor of Zoe....

">
" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="425" height="344">

Y'all remember when Ru Paul was on AMC? That was so fun! Ru appeared on The Cutting Edge when La Kane was host back in '95.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 16
  • Created
  • Last Reply
  • Members

Zach is such a moron, I know the writing is telling us Adam is evil and Zach is just avenging his son's predicament due to so-called evil Adam Chandler.... I just ain't buying. Kendall and Zach reconciling somewhat over a murder pact... there's romance for ya. Nothing like some blood and guts to bring two people back together. The whole marking the X on Adam's forehead was just downright offensive.

Anyway, I am enjoying the build up of this supposedly "shocking" murder mystery..... the next couple of days I think will be really good. Erica not walking out on Adam was great, she hates his guts, but yet still cares deeply for him.

David at Babe's grave psychoanalyzing himself BRILLIANT!!! Give Vincent something and he will make it gold. That is the magic if his ability. Its just so nice to see an exposed David.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

See, everyone's been complaining about Pratt's interpretation of David (always twirling his invisible mustache, becoming AMC's Spencer Truman), but I think it's been very spot on. All the sides are there. The vulnerability, the calculating, the genius, the devilish... it's all there. Plus, David owns all of his different sides. Good and bad. I think Vincent's been doing a wonderful job. He can play the comedy/sarcasm, the evil, the heartfelt, the who gives a fcuk?!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

I agree with Adam about that red X being put on Adam. Zach in Beasty Primitive Mode, justified or not just gets on my nerves. That moment of the murder discussion between Zendall was a little strange for me. Mileage varies.

Kendall didn't bug, she's seems sort of lethargic considering the circumstances still. I thought with the decision to go after Adam she showed some life.

I am wavering on Erica's wavering between protecting Ian's Dad and Adam. Perhaps she's still deciding whether Adam had time to stop things after he found out about the defect and/or if his meds or illness is having an effect on his decision-making. All-in-all, she's playing things smarter than Zach right now, perhaps a older, wiser, grandmom (compared to a father) can play the situation with Adam with a cooler head.

Debbi was really giving Angie the wearied, distracted Mom who still has to carry on at work thang today. Well done.

Bobbie Eakes and VI, just killing.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

I was also bothered by Zach marking an X on Adam's forehead and by Erica letting Zach off the hook. It bothered me even more that Jesse didn't arrest Zach on the spot since Zach's yelling could clearly be heard on the other side of the door and it was a death threat! Hopefully, Jesse will blame himself for whatever happens on May 18th.

Just say no to Adam & Erica romantically! As friends and rivals, they're great but they've never worked as a couple even when they were married.

David & Krystal have both been humanized lately and I love it.

Debbi Morgan proved that even in the little scenes, a brilliant actress can steal the show. While everyone around her had these big dramatic moments, she had a few quieter scenes but made me feel as much for Angie as I did Krystal, Kendall, et al.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

Zendall is disgusting -- and I am ashamed -- ASHAMED, I TELL YOU -- to have been a supporter of theirs back in the 2006-2007 days.

Jesse is a mess. Darnell is ridiculous. I'm sorry. But as a black male I feel insulted that this excuse for "acting" is on my screen. Does Darnell know how to play a scene without that stank attitude and yelling? No, he doesn't, because that's all he does. He plays a hypocritical Police Chief and doesn't make him sympathetic at all.

If Grimmace -- I mean, Marissa, forgives Krystal -- the woman who sold her and lied about her for 26 years before she forgives David, I'll be in an uproar. David lost children, bitch. He lost Leora. He lost Babe -- Babe, which he didn't even know was his daughter until that baby-stealing whore Krystal told him only to cover her ass... then he lost a baby with KWAK that he didn't even know about. Who the hell is Grimmace to sit there and judge David on his response to his children. Last time I checked, Smiley was getting a full paid tuition from Krystal -- who is getting her money from DAVID! Quit biting the hand that feeds your ass, dumb butt. If I recall correctly, YOU were the one who showed up on David and Krystal's doorstep. Krystal may have visted you while you were :D as you were giving massages to fat bald men... but you chose to show up at their house uninvited.

The whole "X" thing was a total :rolleyes: moment. Only brain dead Zendall fans would think that was hot.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.



  • Recent Posts

    • I understand why people speculate, but I have to say it doesn’t sound very plausible that Jill Farren Phelps would be working at Y&R in any uncredited role. CBS daytime shows are tightly bound by union contracts and corporate oversight, and that kind of informal arrangement would be a major liability in 2025. Before the mergers of SAG-AFTRA and the two WGA branches, it may have been easier to hire someone quietly or off the books. But those days are behind us. With digital payroll, tighter pension tracking, and increased scrutiny from legal and compliance departments, it’s just not the kind of thing anyone can get away with anymore. Most union members, especially producers nearing retirement, would not risk their eligibility or benefits to take an uncredited role. The Producers Guild of America is also very clear about crediting. To even receive the PGA mark, a producer has to be verified through a formal review process. According to their credit certification guidelines (source), "only individuals who performed a majority of the producing functions on a motion picture or television production" are eligible for credit, and those credits must be official and recorded. If someone is functioning in that capacity, they are not supposed to be uncredited. Studios that are union signatories, like CBS and Sony, know better than to skirt those rules. If anyone has a legitimate, primary source confirming that CBS is hiring someone like Phelps in an uncredited production role, I’d honestly be curious to read it. But without that, this just feels like rumor—not reality.
    • I keep thinking about the persistent trend of eroticizing mental illness on Guiding Light. Sonni and Annie were never more compelling, or more attractive to the show, than when they were manic. It played into a recurring theme: strong women undone by their unhinged reaction to sex. The writers were likely inspired by Basic Instinct and the broader wave of neo-noir films in the late '80s and early '90s, where female sexuality was often equated with instability. The result was a crude portrayal, not just of mental illness, but of womanhood itself. Both Sonni and Annie were introduced as sharp, capable women, brought in specifically as formidable antagonists to Reva. They were logical and composed, standing in contrast to Reva’s emotional volatility. That difference made them threatening, but not especially “sexy”—until desire became their undoing. In a very male fantasy, their strength unraveled the moment they slept with Joshua. As soon as they got a taste of Lewis lovin’, they spiraled into scheming lunatics, willing to torch everything to hold on to him. It was part of a larger trend in the culture. Fatal Attraction, Single White Female, and The Hand That Rocks the Cradle all traded on the idea that female desire was dangerous, barely held in check, and always teetering on the edge of madness. Looking back, it's a pretty grim trope. And while it's not completely vanished, I'm grateful we don't see it quite as often today.
    • Elements of it were silly, but it was a small price to pay to get Zas back. I should say there's a difference between in town and out of town returns. It's understandable for Roger to skulk around town in a bad wig and clown suit when he's in Springfield and running the risk of bumping in to people he knows.  Taking us out of town to find someone always has a short shelf life. Then it usually becomes about another character knowing X is alive but determined to keep them out of Springfield. Like Alan discovering Amish Reva. I don't know how long it went on, but it was probably twice as long as necessary.
    • Elizabeth Dennehy complained on the Locher Room about how ridiculous so much of the writing was for Roger's return. She laughed at so much of Roger's antics and how it was hard for her to take them seriously. Probably another reason she was fired as she didn't play the game.  
    • Only thing I enjoyed was Abby / Olivia, etc., and the addiction storyline. Otherwise, I could do without the season.
    • Right? Vanessa had a ball gown for every occasion.
    • Roger's return storyline may have been silly but Roger's return was what lead to GL's last golden era.  It was the combination of Roger's return and Robert Calhoun becoming EP that got GL to finally hit it's stride after some really bad years. It will always disappoint me that the ratings during Robert Calhoun's run didn't reflect the quality of the show.
    • He also gave some of the best episodes, like the episodes surrounding Doug's death. The problem with Days was that Ron had a horrible vision from he top. I don't feel the same for MVJ and nothing that has happened in all these months suggests she doesn't have a handle on the show. Now if it becomes an issue I'll acknowledge it, but I'm not seeing it so far.
    • Jean Hackney was awful and that lead to Ben's exit story which sucked. I liked Ben/Val together. Val's love for Ben was that of a grown woman moving on with her life and Ben's love for Val made him willingly decide to raise another man's children as his own.
    • It wasn't just a GL thing, it was an 80s thing. Opulent party scenes on soaps were very big back then. Even in regular episodes where people are just going to dinner they're dressed up like they're going to see royalty.
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy