What's Up?
I've said for as long as I've been interested in world politics that Israel will start World War 3. I've always been absolutely sure about this, to the point that I would have had a bet on it. It seems that these paranoid Nazi-aping bunch of psychopaths have taken the world one step closer to all out war.
It isn't enough that these wannabe Nazis have bombed Gaza back to the stone age and have been targeting children - the next generation of Israel haters - they have been flexing their USA backed muscle in Syria, Lebanon and Yemen. Now they choose to pick on one of the most volatile regimes in the world. Yes, Iran can't afford to have a war, but that means nothing in the grand scheme of things.
In 2010, I wrote a blog that forecast that by the time WW3 is over, Israel may well be a smouldering nuclear hole in the ground, allowing whoever is left to play the victim card again. The fact they continue to use the victim card as the main reason for all of their aggression towards just about everyone who doesn't think them wiping a race off the face of the planet is a good thing is no longer justification to allow this rogue nation to put the rest of the world at risk. Israel not only needs to be stopped, it needs to be muzzled and zero air time should be afforded to their bonkers supporters. The world sees them for what they are even if the media refuse to acknowledge this.
Best Thing on Netflix (Maybe TV)
Based on the novels by Jussi Adler-Olsen and following a brilliant but damaged cop leading a team of misfits in solving cold cases in Edinburgh, Dept Q has, without a doubt, been the best new TV series I have watched this year. It reminded me of Slow Horses but with more violence, nastiness and sex. It is a mixture of slightly comedic, bizarrely baffling and fucking excellent story telling. I know I've been banging on about this for the last couple of columns, but this really is the real deal. Matthew Goode - who I wasn't really familiar with - is superb as Carl Morck, leading his team including Akram - Alexev Manvelov - a former Syrian secret policeman, Rose Byrne as the equally mentally-troubled DC Rose Dickson and Jamie Sives as Morck's paraplegic partner. The entire series follows their investigation of a missing barrister, believed to be dead. The original investigation seemed botched and left a paper trail that suggested malpractice by every position from the original investigating team to the Lord Advocate (Crown Prosecutor played by Mark Bonner). There is also the running subplot about the shooting that paralysed Morck's partner, put him in hospital and killed a young police officer - this doesn't get fully resolved, so expect this to expand in the inevitable season two. This is stunning television; what the box was invented for. While I don't usually score TV shows, this gets a solid 11/10.Oh FFS
Yes. I know. I said I would never watch another episode of Resident Alien. After a very enjoyable first season, this show fell off a cliff with season two and was so bad in season three that I only stuck with it because I'd been assured it was going to end. However, it ended with a cliffhanger and the promise of season fucking four... So why am I talking about it now? Well, I saw a Tube of You video and read an online review that both said the show had got its mojo back. That season four seemed to return to the roots that made season one so calamitously hilarious and interesting. So against my better judgement I procured a copy of season four, episode one and put it on; this is what I thought...Shit. It was shit. Great dollops of stinky shit. As shitty a thing as ever came out of any arse ever. How the fucking hell did this heap of shit ever get to four fucking seasons? Everyone has lost weight in it. It's like the cast were told, "Sorry there's no more free food from the catering truck, you can buy your own food you fat fucks." When I say everyone has lost weight, that's everyone apart from Sarah Tomko who has taken all the weight lost by the rest of the cast and shoved it up her own arse, which is now bigger than the show itself. No more. There will be no more of this, ever. FFS, the standard of TV comedy Sci-Fi has slipped down a sewerage canal and is now wallowing in really old shit. Just fuck off and never darken my television ever again. Fuck off!!
The Incompetent Farmer
The finale of Clarkson's Farm was remarkable. Jeremy opened his pub, now called The Farmer's Dog, and it really shouldn't have been open for at least two weeks. Thousands of people turned up and nothing worked; the beer packed up; the food ran out; the toilets broke down; it absolutely pissed down with rain - which also impacted on his farming activities in a most depressing way and, of course, it finished before Clarkson discovered he needed heart surgery or he would die. Oh, yeah, some of his staff quit, the two ladies organising the pub quit on the third morning it was open and I ask the question again, how can someone go into something like this without doing his homework or realising he was making a massive error not waiting until everything worked? Oddly enough, at one point, when Jeremy discovered his durum wheat harvest was a complete write off and was literally worthless, he turned to the camera and said, 'People think Amazon are paying for this, but they're not. This comes out of my pocket. £25,000 out of my wallet because we can't sell anything we've grown.' You want to feel sorry for him, but he's extremely rich and plays the system to suit him, so if the pub doesn't work and he has to shut it down by the next series, I'm not going to feel sorry for him. This is a great farming programme that does more for the industry than Countryfile has ever done; running a pub isn't helping highlight any problems because most new pubs aren't fucking stupid enough to do it like Jeremy did. I'm still looking forward to season five because of what we've discovered has happened since this finished filming.How Did I Miss That?
The great Mel Brooks will be 99 on June 28th. he has outlived pretty much all of his friends and loved ones. He is still remarkably able, or at least he was during 2023 when they made Imagine... Mel Brooks Unwrapped, the latest (and last) in what became a series of interviews with the American auteur over about 45 years. Brooks was just 97 when it was made and I wondered how old Alan Yentob, who had first interviewed him since 1982, was and the wife said, "He died about two weeks ago." I was gobsmacked. I think I keep up with current events, but I clearly missed the death of the 78-year-old former head of BBC2 and it really shocked me and seemed to prove my opening line about Brooks outliving everyone. About 60 years ago or so, Brooks and his lifelong friend Carl Reiner performed a skit called the 2000 Year Old Man and I'm beginning to wonder if the man born Melvin Kaminsky is going to outlast us all. Two years ago when this wonderful and funny show was made, he was still zooming around like a man half his age and capable of making me, you, Yentob, Alan the cameraman and everyone else laugh. It was great to watch this show, which was put on as a tribute to Yentob. I'm still reeling from the fact the man died at the end of May and I never knew about it. I wouldn't say I was a fan of his work, but he never did anything I couldn't respect. Totally shocked.Stuck
It appears that Stick has more in common with Happy Gilmore than the actual game of golf. I'm not ready to give up on this yet, but I fear it might be one more episode and I'll be done with it. I apologise in advance but I'm going to be a bit anal about this third episode of Owen Wilson's golfing comedy: amateur golf competitions follow PGA and USPGA rules, therefore 1) players or caddies are not allowed to use buggies; 2) there is not a gap between the front nine and the back nine - you finish hole #9 and go straight to hole #10, you don't get time to sit around in a shed talking to a woman who just got fired from her job as a barmaid; 3) on course betting is illegal in the USA; 4) Santi and Pryce simply turned up for the tournament; there would have been entry rules and even wildcard entries system, who usually find out about a few days before it starts; 5) never in the history of golf has someone shot a +6 on a front nine, been given a one shot penalty for being late to the tee (+7) and then shot -9 on the back nine to win the tournament with -2: it's improbable at best.This is Ted Lasso country without a doubt. In the football comedy, the truth was jettisoned to allow the jokes to work and because most of the USA has no idea how 'soccer ball' works, it could appeal to all the ignorant fuckwits while tickling the fancy of people who understood how Association Football worked. I can't imagine there will be that many people out there who would watch Stick if they had no interest in the sport; this is going to appeal mainly to the 10 million people who subscribe to golf channels and watch major tournaments; the crossover appeal is close to zero... Then there's the characters; Owen Wilson's Pryce Cahill is like a kid with a gun, but he's the most consistent thing about this. Maybe it's the mish-mash of oddball characters that is going to make this tick, but I simply can't see past the fact that it plays fast and loose with every aspect of the golf game and I know that makes me a nerd, but I do like my comedies to have an internal logic, which this is struggling to find.
The fourth episode, which we watched on Wednesday night, confirmed all my fears, but also allowed me to basically put into words the problems I have with this series... Pryce's golfing prodigy Santi (Peter Dager) is a young punk and a twat, I wouldn't say he's totally dislikeable, more like hateable. Pryce's former caddy Mitts (Marc Maron) who is their driver, isn't likeable and seemingly just brings Marc Maron to the show (the man who produced the most listened to podcast in US podcasting history); Santi's mother (Mariana Trevino), who has screwed $100k from Pryce to turn her son into a champion is really unpleasant and unlikeable. Zero, the barmaid who got sacked for having a giant chip on her shoulder is an argumentative bore, is thoroughly horrid and millennial. Meanwhile, Owen Wilson is more of a fucking doormat than suspected, he needs to grow a pair. However, I'm not going to be around to see if he does grow a pair or if this show manages to be better than it currently is; I'm not hopeful and I'm not watching any more.
Unforgettable
We sat down to watch Immortals, a film with Henry Cavill before he had a nose job and his teeth fixed. It had Mickey Rourke as the bad guy and Luke Whatshisname as Zeus. It looked really dark, moody and quite sumptuous at times, it was unbelievably boring and almost impenetrable at other times. After it finished it was twelve hours before I remembered I hadn't written a review about the film I saw last night that I can't quite remember...
Weird Scenes Inside the Twat's Mind
Oliver Stone's 1991 biopic The Doors is a lot of pretentious bollocks. It might be reasonably accurate, but this overblown art house nonsense - because that's what it wants to be - just paints a picture of a complete narcissistic arsehole and his three gophers. It isn't the story of the Doors, it's the story of Jim Morrison and how though a mixture of drink, drugs and his own ego managed to become one of the Hippie Era's first sex symbols. The rest of the band were just cyphers, characters put in the film but not really in it. Kyle MacLachlan's Ray Manzarek is a wallflower; Frank Whalley's Robbie Krieger is portrayed as someone who only functions when Morrison tells him to and Kevin Dillan's John Densmore is portrayed as argumentative and demonstrative, until the closing scenes when it felt like his history had been revised.This is a film that exploits women by pretending to be all about the Swingin' Sixties and the Hippie movement, but it simply felt like an excuse for Stone to get any female in the film to get her tits out. Kilmer is incredible as Morrison, but Morrison is an arsehole and you literally, from about the hour mark, start wishing for it to hurry up and let him die, in Paris. He's unpleasant, egotistical and dislikeable; but so are everyone else in this film, either overtly or passively. This is a film that was fantastic in 1991 and now feels of its time and like something best forgotten about. 5/10
A Song of Ice and Flatulence
At the age of 76, suffering from ill health and 14 years since he wrote the last published part of his Game of Thrones series of books, it is now blatantly clear, given his most recent blog, that the fat fuck who is responsible for said Game of Thrones nonsense isn't going to finish writing The Winds of Winter and will never begin writing A Dream of Spring, which, allegedly, would conclude the massive tome. Martin basically said in his most recent blog - which he manages to write with far more regularity than he does anything to do with Westeros - that people should be excited for all the other projects he has coming out and need to allow him to enjoy these things and not hassle him for the latest in the Westeros saga. So, it's not an actual admission that it isn't going to happen, but IT'S NOT GOING TO FUCKING HAPPEN! I've been convinced about this for at least seven years when I got embroiled in an argument about whether this ludicrously overrated writer owed it to his fans to finish a story so many were invested in. I was firmly on the side of 'If you start something and it's popular then you owe it to the people who have made you shit loads of money to finish it.' There were many people quite happy to allow GRRM 25 years to finish the story and others who claimed it was his right to do whatever the fuck he wanted. He can. He's still a fucking Grade A Tool in my books and he won't get another penny out of me.Almost Midsummer Santa
Time plays tricks with your mind. Over the last twelve months or so, ever since we watched a dodgy horror film about Krampus, I've been trying to remember this Nordic horror movie we saw that I was so impressed with I wanted to watch it again. Then I stumbled across Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale, a Finnish film which was the movie I'd been trying to track down. There's this American company drilling into a mountain in Finland and they hit a vein of pure sawdust and then it's a race against time to plunder this underground for everything they can get before Christmas. It's at this point in the movie that you think something is building to crazy crescendo; reindeer die, strange things start happening, like all the kids disappear and all the while Onni Tommila - Pietari - thinks there's something odd going on involving Santa Claus. There is this bizarre build up with hundreds of bearded naked old men running wild in the Finnish snow fields and a giant something encased in ice and then something happens, all the naked men stop trying to kill everyone and that's about it. 75 minutes, at best. I was convinced we'd watched a version that had had all the action removed; maybe to confuse non-Nordic people into wondering what the fuck they'd just watched. The wife said, "Maybe that's why it stayed in your mind, because nothing happened and it was really shit?" 2/10Och Aye the Noo, Old Chap
The Powell and Pressburger film I Know Where I'm Going made in 1945 and starring Roger Livesey and [Dame] Wendy Hiller is really of an age and utterly bonkers. Hiller plays Joan Webster, a selfish, gold-digging posh girl from London who is about to marry a rich man on his Scottish island, so she leaves on the overnight sleeper for the start of a journey to the Outer Hebrides. Along the way she meets Torquil MacNeil, a navy officer (and laird) also on his way to the same island and a host of interestingly accented Scots people - all of which sounding like the King, including the ones speaking Gaelic - in very un-Gaelic accents. Tha Torquil gu math dèidheil air Joan and because the weather is so bad she can't get over to marry her rich fiancée, so he does things to try and keep her amused, but she's a selfish bitch who only cares about herself, but he's smitten, so when she tries to kill them all instead of beating her senseless with someone's wooden leg, he decides to try and woo her instead and she's as accommodating as a porn star in her 51st movie. There's a good turn from Pamela Brown (pictured) as Torquil's mad (and questionable) female friend Catriona and John Laurie from Dad's Army has a role and also was the actual technical director for the ceilidh scenes. It was very much of its time and jolly strange, what, what. 5/10An American Mockumentary
For our Friday night movie entertainment, we decided to sit down and watch an extremely accurate depiction of what the USA is going to be like in probably a few weeks. Idiocracy is a film we have seen before, but as it has been almost 20 years, I wondered if it had stood the test of time or if it still felt like a stretch too far... On a tangent, it was interesting to see Luke Wilson - Owen's brother - in a film, meaning we've had a pair of Wilsons this week. It was also good to finally remember where we'd seen Maya Rudolph before, having seen her recently in whatever forgettable thing we'd seen her in. He plays a useless army grunt and she a slightly dense prostitute who are picked to take part in an experiment to keep them in suspended animation for one year, but they end up being in it for 500 years and when they wake up America is ruled by Jabba the Trump - a vile, slobbering semi-corpse... No, not that at all, but they wake up in a country so stupid it doesn't bother to wipe its own arse. It's mildly amusing but also quite disturbing, because it appears that the USA has not learned anything since this film's release. It has some sharp observational humour; many people acting stupid and a story that is essentially Wall-E with morons. It wasn't as cutting edge as I remembered it, but that might be because... you know... it's looking more like a documentary than a comedy. I'm surprised Trump never got a cursory mention. 6/10.Blink and You Miss It
This week's thrilling mini-instalment of Murderbot featured a panic attack; a graphic operation to remove a neuro-fibre from Murderbot's back; a betrayal; a gory death scene and from what clues we got the beginning of a mystery that might include the company allowing our team of space hippies to study the planet they're on. It also puts the space hippies into a strange place as Murderbot saves their lives from the murderous Leebeebee only for them to be shocked at the way the sec unit does its job. There's a bunch of usual segues into the rubbish Murderbot watches for relaxation and the growing feeling that this is going to be a set-up series and it will end on a cliffhanger meaning a second season. It's not that this is a bad idea, but we've had about an hour and a half of this so far and I swear I could grow mould on my face quicker...Reshuffle
As we hurtle towards the end of season four, this week's Welcome to Wrexham focuses on the changing times and faces at the football club. Former CEO Shaun takes on a new role as club ambassador - he could have gone anywhere but the feeling of family at this football team means he's staying to help with overseas development and taking the club forwards (as a brand). There's a look at the fading lights that have been Olly Palmer and Paul Mullin - both heroes for what they've achieved at the club, but now finding life tough as the team basically pulls away from them and their contribution wanes. Then there's a focus on Humphrey Ker, who used to be a director but now has a different role within the club and is running a marathon to raise money for one of the things he's now focused on. It also features the story of a 12 year old young man who is a huge fan of the team but is in hospital with a rare form of leukaemia. He has a bond with hero Paul Mullin, who has taken the boy under his wing and there is a scene where the Wrexham legend calls Ryan Reynolds up to have a chat with the kid - there isn't a dry eye in the house. It's at this point when you realise what the two Hollywood stars have done for this club and the city is beyond words. It also was nice to hear that as far as the management is concerned Paul Mullin's career at Wrexham is far from over, but whether that will be as a player or as a future coach remains to be seen. This is still the most enjoyable actual documentary on TV.What's Up Next?
If there's still a planet left once Israel has finished with it, the coming week doesn't feel like it has a lot going on. A couple of shows reach their penultimate episodes and there's usually always something new that crops up. As usual, what you read about is what I've seen.