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The Strain S1E12, “Last Rites”

Strain Poster 2

It’s been a rough week, and your old pal Dusty hasn’t had much of a chance to write.  With that in mind, let’s skip over the unwieldy intro and get straight to my loves and hates.

Hates:

1. The stuff with Setrakian’s wife felt really forced.  There wasn’t a ton of emotion, even though I know they were trying to force us to feel something.  Also, Young Setrakian’s face seemed to be made out of wax, which was off-putting.

2. The scene with Dutch and Fet on the rooftop.  They both played that scene as well as they could – and I thought Dutch talking about her childhood was terrific – but I really didn’t feel any chemistry between them at all.  It also ended with a ridiculously clichéd exchange:
“I specialize in passionate, destructive relationships.”
“The best kind.”
So dumb.

3.  Setrakian’s half-hearted apology to the gang about his outburst.  It basically sounded like, “I got too emotional.  My bad.  I’ll try to be better about it or whatever.”  David Bradley has been pretty good so far, but this little speech was really weak.

4. The escape from the pawn shop was entirely too easy.  There were vampires bursting in from windows and doors, yet the back exit was left unguarded.  Eichorst was trying to take out Setrakian and his crew before they became a bigger threat.  I’m supposed to believe that he’s not smart enough to block off all exits?

5. Eldritch Palmer, crying for joy in the rain at his newly gained immortality.  It’s almost like he doesn’t know that it takes Eichorst hours to make himself look somewhat normal every morning.  Let’s see you celebrating when you’re putting on your nose every morning, fella.

Loves:

1. Gus dropping the line, “A plague done broke out.”  Terrible line, but it made me laugh.

2. The vampire lady in the well, speaking to Setrakian in The Master’s voice.  Really creepy stuff.  After last week’s episode, it is obvious that balding vampire women in dresses are a fear of mine.  Seems like a perfectly reasonable fear to have.

3. The initial raid of the pawn shop was terrific (vampires bursting in from the windows), and Boliver showing up to kill Nora’s mother was legitimately shocking (especially given that she is still alive at that point in the books).  I’m not sorry to see her character go, which kind of makes me feel terrible about myself.  “Yeah!  They finally killed that woman with dementia.  About time.  Her terrible disease made me dislike her immensely.”  I’m the worst.

4. Quinlan and his vampire hit squad finally showed up again.  I wanted to see more of them in this season, but, with the season finale next week, it looks like we’ll have to wait until next season to see them in full force.

Final thoughts: Kind of glad this season is winding down.  This episode wasn’t terrible, but it was pretty much like the rest of the season: remarkably inconsistent.  It’s wearing me down.  At this point, I’m ready for the season to be over.  I want them to take stock of the season, figure out their strengths and weaknesses, and come back next season fully loaded.  Here’s to hoping for a big season finale that sets up an improved second season.

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The Strain S1E11, “The Third Rail”

Strain Poster 2

The season is winding down.  While the show has gotten better, it’s still maddeningly inconsistent.  There are some great scenes – and there have even been some truly great episodes – but there are too many moments of drama driven by the stupidity of the main characters.  This episode had a little bit of each of those.  Let’s get to it.

Hates:

1. I proclaimed my hatred for Zach last week, and he did nothing this week to change my mind.  He kicked off the episode by saying, “epic fail,” and I nearly punched through my TV.  He spent the rest of the episode either staring blankly at Nora’s mother or making an ill-advised trip out of the pawn shop in search of cigarettes for her.  I really can’t stand this kid.

2. This exchange between Zach and Eph:
“Why can’t I go?”
“I can’t control that environment.”
Did you guys know that Eph is a control freak?  Me neither.  They’re totally subtle about it.  They haven’t driven that point into the ground or anything.

3. The gang left Zach and Mrs. Martinez alone in the pawn shop.  That seems like a bad decision anyway, but it seems like an even worse decision when it was revealed that there was an entire wall of weapons in the basement, just hanging out.  Sure.  Just let the child and the woman with Alzheimer’s – who has been acting erratically all day – alone with a weapons stockpile.  That seems like a pretty uncontrolled environment, Eph.

4. Gus, you just killed your vampire brother (who, oddly, looked slightly better as a vampire than he did as a human.  RIP Vampire Weevil).  Don’t wander around the house in the dark.  Turn on a light.

5. Wandering around subway tunnels, looking at items of the deceased, dropping lines like, “It’s everything that defined these people.”  Knock it off.
Another word about the subway tunnels.  They had just come across a nest of vampires that they had to sneak by.  They also talked about how sound travels.  And yet minutes later, they’re out there yelling at each other.  What part of “vampires in tunnels” don’t you understand?  For as smart as all of these people are, they’re pretty stupid most of the time.

6. The Master looks really dumb.  He’s like some mash-up of Nosferatu, Admiral Ackbar and Clem from Buffy.  Probably not a good sign when I laugh really hard every time the main villain is on the screen.

Loves:

1. Fet making a UV bomb.  I love the image of Fet hunched over a work bench, desperately trying to make a UV bomb.  Fet is the best.

2.  Nora’s mom smokes Morleys.  I bet her and CSM hooked up on more than one occasion.

3. The vampire lady sitting in the basement of the shop Zach got the cigarettes from was really creepy.
Of course, Zach saw her, freaked out and dropped his phone.  (This is your reminder that cell phones don’t work anymore.)  What does he do?  He jumps down from his spot to retrieve his phone, losing track of the vampire lady in the process.  Zach, you are remarkably dumb.

4. I loved the vampire crawling after Fet in the tunnel.  The way his head moved was supremely unnerving.

5. Setrakian’s coffin-smashing.  We saw a lot of pent-up rage come flying out of Setrakian this week.  I liked it.

6. Fet proclaiming, “That’s a lot of munchers,” when seeing a teeming horde of vampires bathed in red light.  I like the term “munchers” and I love that visual.
Quick story: we drove up to Wisconsin to see Radiohead on their Hail to the Thief tour.  It was an outdoor venue, and we had our spot near the back, on the top of the hill.  There were thousands of people between us and the stage.  All we could see was the backs of their heads.  Around the middle of the show, they played “We Suck Young Blood”.  It’s a slow, lurching song that eventually explodes.  For the beginning of that song, the lights facing the audience were green.  The band sang the first line, “Are you hungry?” while the green lights washed over a sea of heads, all nodding simultaneously in a slow, hypnotic fashion.  I had a terrifying thought that they were all going to slowly turn and come after us.  It was one of the creepiest things I have ever seen.
The image of thousands of vampires milling around in the glow of the red flare took me back to that moment.

Final thoughts:

More bad than good in this episode.  There were entirely too many annoying moments that distracted from the good ones.

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The Strain S1E10, “Loved Ones”

Strain Poster 2

Do you remember the end of “For Services Rendered” when the pack of vampire hunters showed up?  I sure do.  I rubbed my hands together and proclaimed, “Here we go,” to no one in particular, because my life is a non-stop party.  I love that storyline in the books, and I was excited to see what they did with it on the screen.

We have now seen three episodes since that reveal and we haven’t seen them since.  It’s a curious decision.  The show has been fairly spotty, but they’re sitting on gold with vampires hunting their own kind.  That should have been a step to something great.  Instead, they’ve thrown it aside from the time being with a, “Nah, we’re good right now.”  Will they show up again soon?  If nothing else, they’re bound to make an appearance in the season finale, which is only a few episodes away now.

Hates:

1. Zach.  Or, rather, the actor that plays Zach.  He really gets on my nerves.  When he celebrated connecting to the internet by pumping his fist and saying, “yes,” I gritted my teeth and made an angry sound.  You see what you made me do, Strain?  You made me hate a child.  I hope you’re proud of yourselves.

2. The fact that Setrakian let Eph go off to find his likely vampired ex-wife by himself.  “You must be prepared for what you find,” Setrakian warned him.  He realizes that Eph was incapable of killing a man he declared “dead to me,” right?  What makes him think he’ll be able to kill a woman he still loves?

3. Dutch walking right into Palmer’s building, knowing full well he has cameras, and also knowing that he knows who she is.  She had very little chance of getting in and out unnoticed.  And why did she do this?  “I don’t like being taken for a ride.”  I’m hoping her dramatic exit from the pawn shop signals her exit from the show, but I can’t see us being that lucky.

4. They keeping bashing us over the head with the, “you’ll come back for the ones you love,” fact about these vampires (in the books, those people are referred to “Dear Ones”).  I get that it’s important, but I wish they would be a little more subtle with it all.
That’s one of the main problems with this show, and a trait it shares with The Walking Dead: there’s no subtlety.  If there’s something they think is important, be ready to hear about it multiple times per episode.  “In this scene, Kelly will hold a picture of her family.  We’ll zoom in on Zach, then her face, and then she’ll say, ‘Where’s Zach?’  Maybe we should go back to the picture after that, or have her drop it or something.  The people need to know!”

5. Eph’s volatile personality.  Being a milk-swilling genius apparently means acting like an ass for no real reason.

Loves:

1. Vasiliy Fet: Ladies Man.  Everywhere he goes, ladies just swoon.  I assume he goes into the sewer, gives a smile and a wink, and female rats walk right up to him and allow him to bash them into oblivion.

2. I know I’ve seen the poster a thousand times, but watching that worm crawl into Kelly’s eye was still remarkably gross and creepy.  I don’t like eye worms.  Not. One. Bit.  Still, that was a well done scene.

3. Kelly’s aim with her stinger.  Got a child with her first try.  Kelly 1, Matt 0.

4. The horrors of Diane’s basement.  That had a couple really great moments.
Vampire Diane opening her eyes in the basement and raising her head was really creepy.  It reminded me of Helen in the basement of Night of the Living Dead.
Eph putting a bullet in that kid’s head was a legitimately tough scene to watch.
Still…dude…STAY AWAY FROM THE VAMPIRES YOU JUST KILLED.  Worms crawling around and everything.  You know what they can do.  All it takes is one.  Just stay away, man.

Final thoughts:

Some decent scenes, and it sets up some cool stuff for later, but this episode didn’t do much for me.

The extremely talented LC Fremont does weekly write-ups of this show over at The Horror Honeys.  She’s a tremendous writer and a good friend.  Read her take on this episode here.
CC also has terrific write-ups over at Bloody Good Horror.  She’s wonderful.  Read her take on this episode here.
I wish my own write-ups were as good as the ones they do every week.

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The Strain S1E9, “The Disappeared”

Strain Poster 2

Since I’m so late with this write-up this week (I was out of town…sorry), I’m going to skip my normal intro and just get right into the Hates/Loves.

Hates:

1. Diane’s babysitting skills leave a little something to be desired.  Step one: don’t swear at the children.

2. Zach is not a very observant kid.  He saw movement in the house before he stepped inside, so he knows someone (or something…bum bum buuuuuuuum) is inside.  He opens the door to find signs of a struggle.  Does he hide or run outside, assuming something bad happened and that the perpetrator is still inside?  Of course not.  He makes it known that he is in the house, and only escapes because Matt was apparently equipped with the least accurate vampire stinger ever, and Eph just happened to get there in time to chop off his head.  (“You like being in my house now?  DO YA?!”)

3. They have brought up in the past how the virus affects everyone differently, but that’s extremely lazy.  It’s pretty convenient to have the first batch of infected take days to gradually turn, only to have the rest of the population turned in a matter of hours.  It’s nit-picky, but it really bothers me.  Matt had been bit earlier that night and was already in full-fledged “I’mma kill that kid,” mode.  No weird, awkward transition to being a creature of the night.  No days of feeling weird before your penis falls off.  None of that.  He went from human jackass to vampire jackass in no time at all.  I don’t ask for perfection, but I do ask for a little consistency.

4. Eph killing Matt, then just kind of standing over the body while the blood started to ooze near his feet.  Step away from the blood.  You know better.

The Strain - Matt's Head

5.  Matt’s decapitated head.  It looked so fake.  I couldn’t stop laughing.
There is a sponge diving museum in Tarpon Springs, Florida that has a scene depicting a man with the bends.  It’s a horrible looking dummy with blood coming out of his eyes and nose.  It looks extremely fake, but it gave me nightmares as a kid.  This is exactly like that, except with a lot more money, which only highlights how ridiculous it is.  Also, I’m older now and I don’t scare so easily.  Bring it on, sponge diving museum.  I’m ready for ya.

6. Dutch “The Magical Hacker” Velders seeing all the vampires unleashed on the world and promptly deciding, “Instead of hanging out with these people who seem to know what they’re doing, I’m just going to go home.”  Good thing Fet was there to kill her obviously vampired neighbor.

Loves:

1. Eph’s “destroying the body of my ex-wife’s boyfriend” hair.  It went well with his, “post-vampire-killing sex” hair.

2. Gus’ running.  He looks ridiculous.  Head thrown back, mouth open, arms flailing.  Dude is a good boxer but apparently has no control over his limbs when he runs.

Final thoughts: Not a great episode.  It was building up some momentum over the last couple episodes, but this one really fell flat for me.  Too many lapses in logic among our main characters.

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Rigor Mortis review

Rigor Mortis Poster

You ever have one of those movies that you watch, get to the end and ask, “What was that?”  For me, that movie was Juno Mak’s Rigor Mortis, a vampire/possession-zombie(?) movie that starts and ends in some kind of gray mud, which can probably serve as some sort of commentary on the entire film.  It was made in tribute to the Mr. Vampire series of films and stars a lot of the actors who made their name in those films.  I have not been able to track these down, but I have it on good authority (Wikipedia) that they exist.  So that’s something.

Rigor Mortis belongs in the jiangshi genre.  Jiangshi are hopping corpses in Chinese folklore.  These are also known as “hopping vampire films”, which sounds about right.  There were hopping entities in this film, complete with red tendrils protruding from their entire body, for reasons I wasn’t entirely clear on.  Were they vampires?  I’m still not entirely sure.  They seemed to be more like demons or ghosts, but that’s neither here nor there.

Vampires?
Vampires?

Let me try to explain the plot to you and we’ll see if my head explodes.  A washed-up actor moves into a decrepit apartment complex with lots of strange characters.  He immediately tries to kill himself and is saved by a resident; a great rice cook/vampire hunter.
There’s a woman who lives in the complex with her little white-haired son.  They used to live in an apartment, but now they don’t, so they wander the halls, stealing food.  They live in the basement because the kindly security guard feels bad for them.  They used to live in the apartment the actor moved into, but her husband cheated on her and got killed by ghosts?  Maybe?  That whole scene was hard to follow.
There’s a warlock.  Like, a straight-up warlock.  It might just be me projecting my thoughts when looking back, but I think he had a really dark goatee and wore a robe.  (He did not wear a robe.)  He coughs a lot and smokes “special cigarettes”.  (Spoiler alert: it’s the crushed-up bones of innocent children.)
There’s an elderly lady and her husband.  He dies by falling down stairs, and the warlock convinces her to do a ritual that will revive her husband.  It’s weird and creepy and she becomes unhinged quickly.  He becomes a monster who likes to kill, and she seems legitimately surprised by this, despite the fact that he looks like a monster and was raised from the dead by a warlock.

"He's fine, you guys.  He's just really sleepy."
“He’s fine, you guys. He’s just really sleepy.”

There’s a big fight scene at the end that I didn’t fully understand.  There’s a little scene after the fight scene that I didn’t fully understand.

I feel like I would have understood this better if I had been very familiar with the Mr. Vampire films.  But I have never seen a Mr. Vampire film, so I was very much in the dark for the duration of the movie.

YAAAAAAAAA!
YAAAAAAAAA!

It looked really cool, though.  I feel like this was one of those movies that would be perfect for putting on in the background of a Halloween party.  If I had Halloween parties, I would absolutely do that.  Mute the movie, throw some music on and glance over at the screen from time to time.  It would be tremendous.
I can’t recommend it as an actual movie, though.  Cool as it may look, the story is absolutely nonsensical.  It wasn’t a complete waste of time, but it was a 75% waste of time.

Rating: 1/5