Sunday, September 22, 2013

Predictions for The Emmys

In looking at the Emmy nominations, I realized I've actually seen a vast majority of the nominated shows and performers (at least on the drama side). As with the Oscars, I feel like I can actually have an informed opinion on the "races", at least in the major categories. So, why not blog about it? I'll also be providing the GoldDerby.com favorites as well, something I checked after writing my predictions.

Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series: Anna Gunn, Breaking Bad.
Gunn transformed the formerly loathed Skylar White into a truly sympathetic character, which I truly admire. In years past I'd say Hendricks, but 2013 was sadly light on Joanie. Also, why is Morena Baccarin here? (GoldDerby.com: Gunn)

Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series: Aaron Paul, Breaking Bad.
The only threat I can see to Paul is maybe Mandy Patinkin, probably the standout on Homeland this season. Jonathan Banks possibly too. But I'll go with Paul to repeat. He truly transforms Breaking Bad for the better, where a lesser actor would be a pushover. (GoldDerby.com: Patinkin)

Outstanding Guest Actress in a Drama: Jane Fonda, The Newsroom.
There is no contest here. I love Margo Martindale and Joan Cusack (who should be in supporting), but Fonda owns absolutely everything she was in on The Newsroom. (GoldDerby.com: Fonda)

Outstanding Guest Actor in a Drama... I'm not qualified to judge this one, as I haven't seen half the nominees. I'd go with Harry Hamlin from Mad Men based on the ones I have seen, though. (GoldDerby.com: Michael J. Fox, The Good Wife)

Outstanding Actress in a Drama: Clare Danes, Homeland.
I am picking this because I think she will win, not because I think she should win. Personally, I would vote for Robin Wright, someone I thought dominated the fantastic House of Cards. I'd say Danes was down from season 1 of Homeland, though I won't say she would be an undeserving winner. (GoldDerby.com: Danes)

Outstanding Actor in a Drama: Bryan Cranston, Breaking Bad.
I want to vote Jon Hamm (maybe next year). I want to vote Jeff Daniels (I really do). But I'd be shocked if Cranston doesn't win this. Cranston has said in interviews that Walt White is the role of a lifetime... and he isn't kidding. But his performance is the performance of a lifetime. I don't know if Breaking Bad is eligible next year or not, but he'll win next year, too. And can we retroactively go back and give him Damian Lewis's win from last year? I still don't get that one. (GoldDerby.com: Cranston)

Outstanding Drama: Breaking Bad.
I want to vote House of Cards. I want to acknowledge Mad Men's return to sheer greatness... but doing so would deny Breaking Bad. Again, I have no idea how the eligibility of Breaking Bad will be handled for next year's Emmys, but the first half of the final season of the show was absolutely spectacular in every way. This is an easy choice. But where is the nomination for The Americans? SNUB. (GoldDerby.com: Breaking Bad)


I wish I could make picks on the comedy side, but I don't watch as many comedies as I do dramas. Plus, I see Parks and Recreation isn't nominated for Outstanding Comedy where Girls is, so it's a flawed exercise anyway. If this was a pool and you got points for right answers, though, I'd go all in on Modern Family, because it's obviously going to win everything anyway. Veep should, though. Veep is excellent.

Thursday, September 19, 2013

My Top TV Shows of 2012-2013

Artwork by Francesco Francavilla
And yes, this is a spoiler for my #1 show.
Since the Emmy Awards are right around the corner (my Emmys predictions post will be up on Sunday), I figure its as good a time as any to rank my TV shows of the 2012-2013 season. Because why not? I watch enough to do it, and I review pretty much everything else on here. That's why.

These rankings are completely subjective, a ranking of my general approval over the entire season. These are different than my Emmy picks... I'm not even considering the Emmys in this list. I simply went through the master list of shows that I watch and put them into three categories (excellent, decent/solid, and eh) without paying attention to the number of shows in each category. Then within those categories, I put them in some semblance of an order. I'm going from Emmys-to-Emmys... shows premiering between early September 2012 and late August 2013 (and in the case of shows that are still running right now, like Dexter and Breaking Bad, I'll evaluate them based on what they've aired thus far).

Without further adieu...

Official timmmc.com 2012-2013 TV Show Rankings.


23. Smash (NBC)
If this show wasn't about my beloved Broadway, I would have given this the Glee treatment and kicked it out of my life without the slightest bit of hesitation.

22. House of Lies (Showtime)
Absolutely loved the first season of this show, but the change in tone for season 2 was really off-putting. Still a show I enjoyed watching, but it was a bit more of a chore than the first season.

21. Girls (HBO)
Another case of enjoyed the first season, but the second didn't do it for me. Perhaps it's part of a larger plan, but the character development in season 2 made me want to punch someone in the head.

20. New Girl (FOX)
More of the same. I found season 1 full of charm and quirkiness, but season 2 was tiresome by the end, as they tried to make the characters actual people. Problematic.

19. Elementary (CBS)
A noble attempt to capture what the BBC's Sherlock does effortlessly, modernizing Sherlock Holmes. CBS succeeded in that, but the end result was yet another twist on the CSI formula CBS has in abundance.

18. Doctor Who (BBC America)

The early Amy/Rory episodes (save for Asylum of the Daleks) lacked focus, a trait shared with the later Clara episodes. The middle episodes, however? Good stuff. Uneven series (British!) as a whole.

17 (tie). 30 Rock (NBC - Final Season)
17 (tie). The Office (NBC - Final Season)

Both series, for me, returned to form a bit by the end of their runs. The Office, especially, should be commended for it after a run of bad stuff since Steve Carrell left the series. 

16. Dexter (Showtime - Final Season)
The closing moments of episode 11 worked, and the finale may well be fantastic, but it's too little, too late for the show. It was a season of false starts, the storylines never quite building to something that would send the show off right.

15 (tie). Boardwalk Empire (HBO)
These two shows have nothing to do with each other, so they get separate blurbs. While I understood the need to tear Nucky's world down, the end result seemingly changed the character altogether. I get it, but I didn't enjoy the season as I did previous ones.

15 (tie). Downton Abbey (PBS)
To be honest, PBS is the reason this show is so "low" on my list. Had the twist at the end of the Christmas special not been spoiled by months due to PBS airing on a 6 month delay, my memories of the season might not be as tainted. Alas, that is it's reality.

14. Veep (HBO)
This is an example of a show building on a strong first season, changing tone a bit, and still getting it right. Loved Selina as a moron, loved her even more as an actual politician.

13. Homeland (Showtime)
Despite a major (and probably expected) drop off from season 1, Homeland was still a must-watch. Not many shows on this list where you have literally no idea what the end-game is, and that's great.

12. True Blood (HBO)
12? Really? I know. But I absolutely loved this season. Maybe it was the shortened length, but the re-focusing on the core characters really helped. The new showrunner also seemed to embrace the inherent cheesiness a bit more than in the past, which is certainly welcome. Fantastic rebound.

11. Shameless (Showtime)
Emmy Rossum's performance the entire season was top-notch. The show suffers a bit by Frank never changing, but his dastardly deeds went to new lengths this year. Made for delicious if nauseating TV.

10. Arrow (The CW)
Obviously, I'm a sucker for superhero fare. The split-focus storytelling gets old after a bit, but both stories are compelling enough to warrant time. And a fantastic finale certainly keeps things fresh in my mind.

9. Fringe (FOX - Final Season)
Truly fabulous finale for a truly fabulous series. Tragically disappointing ratings, but massive kudos to FOX for letting this show conclude right.

8 (tie). The Walking Dead (AMC)
8 (tie). Game of Thrones (AMC)

The genre shows packaged together. Both shows had their strengths of the season, but the actual close to their seasons were not them. Game of Thrones suffered from the let-down from the Red Wedding, and Walking Dead made the puzzling decision to let The Governor live. That said, the latter provides for some interesting stuff in the new season.

7. The Americans (FX)

Fantastic suspense, great performances, didn't get the buzz it deserved. I wonder about the long-term options for the show (like Homeland), but I'm excited to see it through.

6 (tie). The Mindy Project (FOX)
6 (tie). How I Met Your Mother (CBS) 

Perhaps it was The Mindy Project's high enjoyment level that hurt New Girl. Quite possible. But I love it. Mindy Kaling is used perfectly, coming off quirky and adorable while simultaneously human. Whereas some shows had disappointing finales that leave a bad taste in your mouth, How I Met Your Mother didn't have that. In fact, the long-awaited reveal of the mother made for one incredibly long summer of waiting.

5. The Newsroom (HBO)
I didn't love the pace the overall story unfolded at, but the content of the episodes were top-notch. I know Aaron Sorkin's writing has its detractors and I fully acknowledge its faults (females, relationships, too smart, etc), I absolutely love it.

4. Parks and Recreation (NBC)
I read something at some point that P&R was on a Cheers-like run of constant laughs... and that is 100% accurate. Best comedy on television, for my money.

3 (tie). House of Cards (Netflix)
3 (tie). Orange is the New Black (Netflix)

These totally count. In both cases, I actually looked up how they ended up on Netflix, and I still don't get it. Did networks actually pass on these shows? House of Cards is great drama and better performances, and OITNB had the best blend of characters I've seen on a show in a long, long time. Top notch, both of them.

2. Mad Men (AMC)
Another return-to-form season. Mad Men set the bar really, really high in the past... and this season might have been the show's best. I could have used more Joan, but minor quibble.

1. Breaking Bad (AMC - Final Season) 
The season isn't over yet, I know.... but it doesn't matter. I initially thought that there was no topping the shootout episode, but I was proved incorrect the next week. I've never watched a show that left me in physical pain before. Breaking Bad does just that, and it's a GREAT thing.

Friday, August 23, 2013

Fan Reaction to the New Batman

If you read my past posts, you know I'm a Ben Affleck fan. Judge away. Obviously, I'm pretty happy about his new role. So this post is coming from a biased place.

Believe in GOTHAM.
But the reaction to him being cast has been incredibly annoying. OMGDAREDEVIL! Shut up. People were not going to happy with whoever Warner Brothers chose to don the cowl.

Cast Joseph Gordon-Levitt? "But he's John Blake! Batman NEEDS to be Bruce Wayne!"
Cast Armie Hammer or Ryan Gosling? "Too young! And he's BLONDE! Terrible!"
Cast Orlando Bloom or Richard Armitage? "Is Batman a HOBBIT?!"
Cast Scott Adkins? "Who? They need an ACTOR!"
Cast Jeffrey Dean Morgan or Matthew Goode? "OMG, did you even see WATCHMEN? Terrible!"
Cast Josh Brolin? "Why so OLD?"
Cast Christian Bale? "THAT DOESN'T MAKE ANY SENSE!"
Cast an unknown? "Henry Cavill is already an unknown! BORING!"

I could continue.

But seriously... shut up. Wait for the trailer. Or, even better, wait for the actual movie.

Mark Waid (well, Stephen Wacker) had a premonition.
Art by Chris Samnee.
I freaking love their Daredevil series...
I've seen a bunch of long-time Batman fans mention that back in the late 80s, when Michael Keaton was cast, there was a pretty big uproar from the fans of the character. 'How could a comedic actor... BEETLEJUICE... play a character like Batman?!?' That worked out pretty good, didn't it? Fast forward about 20 years, with Heath Ledger being cast as the Joker. Similar reaction.... he was pretty good too, eh?

I know this is the age of social media, where everyone can weigh in on anything immediately... but how about we sit back and let Zack Snyder and Warner Brothers do their thing? Say what you will about the finished Man of Steel product, but we can all agree they knew what they were doing casting the thing... right? While the movie isn't without flaws, the leading trio of Cavill/Adams/Shannon were pretty spot on, I'd say.

Could Ben Affleck be another George Clooney? Maybe. But why bother waiting to see? Let's just trash the performance now, no need to see it. They should just put nipples on the Batsuit and call it a day.

Sunday, June 23, 2013

REVIEW: World War Z

Directed by Marc Forster
Watched June 23, 2013

Is it weird to say that World War Z is a pretty decent zombie apocalypse flick, but the worst part is undoubtedly the zombies?

Now, I don't mean the zombies themselves. They look fine. They are appropriately creepy. They aren't the same old re-hash of the zombie stereotypes (shuffling along moaning "braaaaaaains", etc). In theory, these zombies are pretty scary.

The problem with the zombies are in the execution. The whole zombie apocalypse, as told in the film, unfolds somewhat realistically. Then, all of a sudden, you meet zombies that are flinging themselves through the air, climbing all over each other to scale walls and take down helicopters, literally clicking their teeth at characters on the run. The zombies come off very campy, which doesn't juxtapose real well with the otherwise-realistic feel of the film. TV's The Walking Dead demonstrates that things like zombies can successfully populate an otherwise realistic world.... why is that not possible here?

And yes, I realize how unfair it is to compare WWZ with The Walking Dead, but it's an inevitable comparison you are sure to make if you've ever watched the show.

The film is also riddled with plot holes and massive jumps in logic... but that's pretty much a staple of big-time summer blockbusters. Sure, it makes no sense that the only person that can stop the zombie apocalypse is a retired United Nations investigator with luscious, flowing locks... but if you just accept that (along with a few other leaps), it doesn't prevent an enjoyable time. And I really did enjoy the movie. It's a great popcorn flick, full of suspense and tension and special effects and excitement. I'd recommend it for anyone that likes action suspense flicks.

But... just ignore things. Like the zombies.

Sunday, June 16, 2013

About the Ending of MAN OF STEEL...

Warning: I'm going to be discussing the ending of the film... so, obviously, spoilers abound.

I've been doing a great deal of reading on Man of Steel since I wrote my review on Friday night. All of the reviews talk about one moment at the end of the film, the moment where Superman kills Zod. I feel like I have to write a little about that, because apparently it's a real big deal.

Panel from Alan Moore's 1986
"Whatever Happened to the Man of Tomorrow?" Story
The adage is that superheroes don't kill, and that's mostly true. In their epic battles with various villains, one of their primary concerns is to protect the innocent. And when it comes down to the ending of that final battle, the villain typically destroys himself (or herself, of course), or are merely apprehended (there's also the third option of simply disappearing.... for the convenience of a later film or story arc). There is a definite code of conduct for these characters. But in Man of Steel, in his first big battle as Superman.... the code of conduct is broken. The fist fight with Zod destroys, seemingly, about 90% of Metropolis, culminating in Superman killing Zod with his bare hands.

Now, I know, I know, the murder of Zod clearly effects Superman. After doing the deed, Kal-El lets out a visceral scream and the look on his face is clearly a "what have I done?!?" look. Naturally, Lois runs to the hero and comforts him. To be completely honest: I'm fine with the ending up until this point. I can see the worth in having Superman haunted by, essentially, the blood on his hands. As the love interest, I feel the audience would be robbed to not see Lois comforting Superman. Fine. What bothers me is what follows.

Mere moments later, we have a scene in the desert where Superman, charming as ever, tells the General that he's all-American and the people have nothing to fear about him. Where is the remorse? Apparently whatever time jump we just saw heals all wounds in our hero. Then in the next scene, the secret identity of Clark Kent, Reporter is born... and the effects are even more invisible and distant.

I understand wanting to have an uplifting ending, but I'm not so sure the ending actually given works for the character. In fact, I know it doesn't. I'm assuming the ending was done like this to give the illusion of this being a standalone film, not just a set-up for a second film. How foolish.

How would I have ended the film? I would have much rather seen the murder affect Kal to the point where he leaves Lois there in the train station (or whatever that final building was), heading straight for the Fortress of Solitude. Then they could have some other time jump to when Metropolis is on the road to recovery, perhaps dedicating a statue or something to Superman, with a voice over by Lois talking about how a hero was born... while also showing clips of Superman still struggling with his decision. Save the rest of the stuff after the murder for the beginning of Man of Steel 2.

Of course, there's nothing that says the murder won't affect him going forward; this reaction is simply based on what we saw in Man of Steel. In fact, I'd be surprised if he kills again, making the death of Zod the "birth" of Superman's code. But call me crazy, I'd like to see him in pain over what happened, not just a somewhat smug "That was unfortunate... musn't do that again!" kind of reaction. Hopefully Man of Steel 2 will address this.

Saturday, June 15, 2013

REVIEW: Man of Steel

Directed by Zack Snyder
Watched June 13, 2013
Going into this, I freely admit that I was not a Superman fan. The original movies never grabbed me, the TV shows didn't interest me at the time, the comics bored me, the character just never clicked for me. The trailers for Man of Steel definitely had me excited, though, so I certainly had my hopes pretty high.

And the flick delivered.

The cast is uniformly great. Henry Cavill is absolute perfection in the title role, with Michael Shannon a great foil. Amy Adams plays Lois Lane with conviction for a change, not just the damsel in distress. Kevin Costner and Diane Lane leave a wonderful mark as the Kents, with Russell Crowe certainly a fitting Jor-El. The effects look great, with the flying especially being a highlight. In all prior Superman adaptations, the flying has been what's killed me, but the visuals here made it actually seem realistic. Director Zack Snyder uses quick zooms and camera effects heavily at times, but I don't recall feeling overwhelmed or distracted by them. For yet another retelling of the same old origin story, the story telling felt fresh and original to me, which is certainly welcome. The first challenge for the hero felt organic, personal and was interesting, more Batman Begins than Green Lantern (lucky for absolutely everyone involved). The film plays like an always surging roller coaster, the slow points only making the high points more fun.

Now, don't get me wrong, the film is by no means perfect. The "classic" love story between Lois and Clark is under-developed and rushed, and actually somewhat goes against the new take on Lois (she's not merely a damsel in distress type and is actually vital to the action-filled third act... but she still falls in love with the hero seemingly simply because he's the charming, sculpted hero of the story). The lack of development there also kind of makes Clark's decision to choose Earth over a new Krypton somewhat hollow and merely plot-based... aside from following his Earth father's lead, what inclination did Kal-El show that he loved Earth? He certainly didn't care enough to save Metropolis from near complete destruction, which was another of my problems with the film. Seems to me that when you are building a film series, you want to ramp up the destruction, not start off with essentially decimating Metropolis. This qualms, however, are overcome in the movie, I would say.

I know the movies don't exist to sell comics, but the first thing I did when I got home was to crack into Scott Snyder's new Superman Unchained comic. For the first time, I was exposed to Superman and craved more (the first issue of the series, by the way, is very strong, setting up what could be a great story). I would absolutely say the film has made me a fan of the character, which has been an issue for me in the past.

I don't think I could recommend Man of Steel enough. While I know I am solidly in the target audience, the film absolutely met my expectations (which have been set really high due to recent superhero movie experiences). To reuse the analogy from before, this film is much closer to Nolan's 'Dark Knight' trilogy than the messy, underwhelming Green Lantern. Bring on MOS 2 (and, dare I say it... The Justice League?)!

Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Idol 2012: MY Finale

Remember how all season long, I've been pulling for a Kree/Candice finale?

:)

I'm recapping tonight slightly differently.

The Top 2, Song 1: Simon Fuller's Choice

Kree Harrison, "Angel" by Sarah McLachlan
Candice Glover, "Chasing Pavements" by Candice Glover
I'll give this round to Candice. Both song selections were pretty decent, all things considered, but the arrangement of Kree's really hurt her. Not to say that the arrangement of "Angel" was bad... quite the opposite, really. The problem was that it didn't allow for Kree to have that special moment to stick in your head. "Chasing Pavements" had moments for Candice, and as always, she nailed them. Both performances were very strong, but I'll give the edge to Candice just because she was more memorable.

Song 2: The Potential Winning Singles

Kree, "All Cried Out"
Candice, "I Am Beautiful"
After last year's delightful "Home", we return to underwhelming, sappy, generic winning singles. Oh well, at least they aren't about climbing mountains or magic rainbows or something random. Once again, Candice's song allowed her to shine a bit more, perhaps because there was more connection there for her. Not sure. Both girls sounded absolutely fantastic, however. I would give the edge to Candice, but not a major one. I would probably buy Kree's first. How's that for indecision?

Song 3: Finalist's Favorite Performance

Kree, "Up to the Mountain" by Patty Griffin (from the Vegas round)
Candice, "I (Who Have Nothing)" by Ben E. King (from Top 10 week)
What a way to end the season. Hot damn. Kree's song was new to me (I started watching after Vegas), and she completely sang her face off. Her runs were spot-on and completely real (I have written down "buttery"), and she had her MOMENT. By far Kree's best in weeks. Candice, on the other hand, reprised the song that made me realize she was the future champ. I can't say that I liked this as much as I did the first time she did it, I certainly cannot deny that she once again slayed it. It's shades of Adam Lambert's "Mad World"... perhaps the unpredictable nature of the first performance gave it the edge for me. I would give this round to Kree, but again, a very narrow edge.

Wrap-Up

Great finale. Sometimes finales can be duds, but this one was great. Both finalists sang their faces off, raising the bar each time. Great stuff. Great end to what I'm going to call a solid season. I know I'm in the minority there. But whatever. Can't wait until tour!

Timm's Votes

I've tried to base my votes this season on the actual performances. For the most part. I know I've failed, but whatever. This week, I'm voting for who I want to win... which doesn't exactly match up with how I evaluated the night. Based on tonight, I'd probably go the reverse, but I'm not.

Kree - 30
Candice - 20

I'm going to guess it's the difference in the music styles... and Kree is right up my alley. 

I will say, however, that Candice should be the winner. She absolutely slayed this season, with the domination not really seen since Adam Lambert (I would say). And yes, I know he wasn't named the winner. But he should have been (coming from a big Kris Allen fan). 

Great season.

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Idol 2013: The Top 3, as Projected

I think, to this point, this might be the most predictable season of Idol yet. Has there really been one actually surprising development yet? Maybe Lazaro lasting as long as he did... but even then, there wasn't anyone that could have won that left for him to stay (a la Jasmine Trias in season 3).

That is, until this week. I'll bet Kree is next to go, but I wouldn't be surprised to see her survive (and for the record, I obviously think she should).

Anyhoo, on to this week's theme-less show. Producer's choice, Judge's choice, Jimmy's choice? Fun stuff. Except when they use the show uses their song choices to sabotage contestants (see: Allen, Kris). Good times.

Top 3, Song 1: Jimmy's Choices

Kree Harrison "Perfect" by Pink
Not surprising that they would give Kree a song where she can't really shine. Girl's a country singer that doesn't always click with her material... let's give her a sincere rock ballad! C'mon man. Honestly, it came across somewhat karaoke, though sung with Kree's usual awesomeness. 

Candice Glover "One" by U2
This was pretty much exactly what you'd expect from Candice here. I admit that I don't know the Mary J Blige version, but I can hear it in Candice's version. She did a good job with it, but really, it's a lazy song choice by Jimmy.

Angie Miller "Sorry Seems to be the Hardest Word" by Elton John
Can a song choice be simultaneously lazy and wonderful? It's painfully obvious why this song was selected for Angie, for her to do exactly the same performance she's done about 50 times. But for once, she didn't do that, and it came off great. Not perfect, but this was one of Angie's best, I would say.

Top 3, Song 2: Judge's Choices

Candice "Next to Me" by Emili Sandé
HOT. Perfect.

Angie "Try" by Pink
And... yelly karaoke. Definitely a disappointment after her first performance. She seemed comfortable, sure, but her usual musicality was missing.

Kree "Here Comes Goodbye" by Rascal Flatts
Not a perfect vocal, mostly because she kind of mangled the big note... but that was, without question, the most connected Kree was to a song so far. And the result was one of her best so far. Fantastic.

Top 3, Song 3: Contestant's Choices

Angie "Maybe" by Emili Sandé
Ah, here's that Angie performance. But you know what? I liked this more than all the other ones. Maybe it's the song (note to self... check out Emili Sandé), or maybe she just sold this one better, but I liked. Wasn't her best vocal, but I still liked it.

Kree "Better Dig Two" by The Band Perry
Not the type of song that Kree excels on, but she did with it what she could. Was that the sound of the bus being thrown into reverse?

Candice "Somewhere" from West Side Story
I don't get this song choice from a pop music standpoint. But oh. my. goodness. 

Wrap-Up

Great week. Great. Week.

I would give round 1 to Angie... round 2 to Kree... and round 3 to Candice. Round 2 was close, but the other two rounds weren't close.

This is going to be a great finale next week, whatever the pairing is.

Timm's Votes

I'm actually not going to vote this week. I got the top 3 I wanted, and I'll be happy with any finale pairing. And really, I'd probably just split my votes three ways, and give Candice the remainder. 

I'm still reeling from that "Somewhere".

Wednesday, May 1, 2013

Idol 2013: The Top 4 (Yep, Part 2)

What's to review from last week? Nothing. Predictable.

A now and then theme for this week? I can't wait to head more of the same... then see what Idol's definition of "now" is. The Adele catalogue is "Now", right?

Top 4 (Again), Song 1: Now, which is 2013

Angie Miller "Diamonds" by Rihanna
Same old same old, but a great re-arrangement. But that high note? Yikes. Bet the judges will single out the note as being brilliant, though. Or ignore it completely, because telling the truth would be criticizing the producer's favorite! Can't have that!

Amber Holcomb "Just Give Me a Reason" by P!nk and Nate Ruess
What we have here is a really good karaoke version. Amber sang the song well enough, but there was absolutely no connection to the lyrics. The original song, like all of P!nk's ballads and mid-tempo songs, are so personal and heartfelt... but Amber performed it like an Idol victory song. 

Candice Glover "When I Was Your Man" by Bruno Mars
Idol is trolling us by putting these two songs back to back, right? Candice takes a song that doesn't apply to her at all, and still connects to it in a way that makes it seem like her song, all the while singing the hell out of it. As usual, another master class by Candice. 

Kree Harrison "See You Again" by Carrie Underwood
You know, this is probably my favorite song on Carrie's album... and Kree improved on it, in almost every way. You can see it in Kree's face that she got the song and was singing it from where it should be sung from. Spectacular.

Top 4, Song 2: Then

Angie "Someone to Watch Over Me"
Terrible arrangement. Angie doesn't have the vocal prowess to do what this arrangement required, and it showed. Such a simple song, and this take on it ruined it all.

Amber "My Funny Valentine"
Harry Connick, Jr. for the win. Him calling out Amber for not knowing what she was singing was absolutely perfect, and was completely right. I'd dare say this was Amber's best performance so far, the first time I've ever bought into the judges hype. I don't know if this performance will win her votes (and she should still be the one to go home), but in the moment, this was fantastic.

Candice "You've Changed"
I vote that Harry Connick, Jr. replace Jimmy Iovine, and mentor the contestants each and every week. His tips here are, again, spot-on, leading to complete and utter perfection. By the end of Candice's run on the show (and if this was her end... shame on you, America), I don't think you'll be able to pick out a 'best performance'. Girl is a star.

Kree "Stormy Weather"
Alright, now here's where Harry stumbles a little bit. I totally get and agree with him about how runs and singing songs straight... but there is a line between showy runs and making a song their own. The little licks that Kree uses at the end of some phrases, to me, would be perfectly fine for standards. Runs, not so much. Personal preference, I suppose. I do think Kree got a little bit in her own head here, trying to strike that balance. Overall, the result was quite good, but could have been better if she was freer, if that makes sense.

Wrap-Up

Overall, this week completely made up for last week's stinker of a week. All four contestants brought their A-game (for the most part). While I don't quite understand the value of having a standards theme on Idol (I never have), they are almost always my favorite. This season is no different.

And the judges weren't blatantly throwing contestants under the bus for no apparent reason this week! Huzzah!

Timm's Votes

I'm throwing all my weight behind a Kree/Candice final. I've been pretty clear with that from the get-go. 

Kree - 25
Candice - 25

I will freely admit Candice won this week, but Kree needs my support. 

I would guess that Angie is safe... and I'll pick Amber to go home. Who will be in the bottom 2, I don't know. 

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Idol 2013: The Top 4 (Part 1?)

Poor Janelle. She deserved it after last week... and if anything, she's a gone a week early... but still. Sadface.

But what's interesting is the judges not using the save... Obviously, the producers can do whatever they want, but the "established" rules of the save render it null and void after Top 5 week. And the finale has been publicized as 4 weeks from now. So unless the finale is going to be a 4-hour Candice Kree solo concert... something screwy has to happen. Yay screwy!

As we begin (and I'm watching on an hour delay... enabling fast forward through crap. Yay!), I literally have no idea what the theme is. So that's a first for me.

Top 4, Song 1: Contestant's Choice!

Amber Holcomb "The Power of Love" by Celine Dion (GASP! Sigh.)
At the beginning of the season, some Idol pundits online generated a list of most over-done and therefore terrible song choices in Idol history. As it turns out, Amber apparently took that list as a challenge, and is running the gamut. And the performance was exactly like all her other ones... strong vocals, but absolutely nothing new. It's the top 4. Come on now.

Candice Glover "Find Your Love" by Drake
Candice is back. Maybe it's because I've never heard this song before, but whatever. Fantastic.

Kree Harrison "It Hurts so Bad" by Susan Tedeschi
Definitely Kree's best in a number of weeks. The runs were great, the feeling was there, the performance as loose as Kree gets.... what the hell the judges were watching, I have no idea. It actually kind of smells like the annual bus-job the Idol producers judges partake in around this time annually... 

Angie Miller "Who You Are" by Jessie J
Let me start by saying I really liked this performance by Angie. In fact, I'll go as far as saying it just may be her best yet. But everything Angie does comes across perfectly choreographed, well rehearsed. She knows how to work the camera, something Kree struggles with a little bit. So naturally, the judges wet their pants over her constantly. I like Angie, but I feel like she's being jammed down my throat by the Idol producers (though, to be fair, the judges didn't mess their pants for this as I expected them to, naturally making my mini-rant kind of silly... but I ain't deleting it!).

Oh, duets again? Looks like my fast forward button is stuck. Oh damn. I will read about the reaction to the performance before I write my wrap-up...

Top 4, Song 2: One Hit Wonders

This could be FUN. Probably won't be. But it could be.

Amber "MacArthur Park" by Richard Harris (though I'd love to hear Richard Harris sing this arrangement...)
I don't get it. But then again, I don't get disco. I missed the singing/dancing cupcakes from Priscilla, Queen of the Desert on Broadway, though.

Candice "Emotion" by Samantha Sang
Probably the most boring Candice song yet. The bit after the key change was pretty good and she does her thing with it... but I don't know. Maybe it's just my distaste for the song. 

Kree "A Whiter Shade of Pale" by Procol Harum
I didn't connect to the song, personally, but Kree sure did. And she sang the hell out of it. Great week for Kree.

Angie "Cry Me a River" by Julie London
Perhaps my rant from the first performance is more applicable here. Good, but rehearsed and made for the cameras. But good.

Wrap Up

It seems like every year around this time, the judges make an abrupt about-face on a contestant for no apparent reason and become overly harsh on them, while blowing all sorts of smoke up another's ass for the slightest thing. Unfortunately, this year, the person under the bus is the incredible Kree Harrison. And the person with their tires being pumped is the Angie with a side of Amber. Is it my bias showing? Maybe. But either way, I hate it. HATE it.

Also, Seacrest announced a twist that will be announced tomorrow.... GEE, I wonder what it could be???

Timm's Votes

I'm making a very transparent attempt to offset the bus-job. And yes, I know my 50 votes won't make a dent. But I'm doing it anyway.

Kree - 50

Sorry Candice. Love you, but Kree got the bus, so she gets my 50 votes. 

I would put someone on alert as I normally do... but I'm not going to bother. I doubt anyone will be going home tomorrow. 

Back here next week!

Thursday, April 18, 2013

Idol 2013: Girl Power

Damn it, Idol stole my title for their hashtag. Bah.

All girl top-5? Finally, some justice in the Idol world!

That's all. I'm watching on DVR on Thursday again, so my votes aren't actual votes. Lame on me, I know.

Top 5: Songs from the Year They Were Born... Or, "Idol Makes You Feel Old!"


Candice Glover "Straight Up" by Paula Abdul (1989)
I'm all for doing songs in totally different styles, and this was a pretty strong performance from Candice. Not her best, not the most exciting, but strong. BUT. Is this the only song that could be changed up like this? Because this exact thing was done with this exact song by Andrew Garcia, what, three years ago?

Ooo, a Jimmy Iovine instant reaction? What a novel concept that only took years to figure out!

Janelle Arthur "When I Call Your Name" by Vince Gill (1989)
I can appreciate what goes into doing an old fashioned musical performance like this... but this really felt too old fashioned to me. Sure, Janelle sounded great, but I can't see this performance resonating with the voters. I didn't feel it. Thanks, Keith.

Kree Harrison "She Talks to Angels" by The Black Crowes (1990)
Not my favorite performance by Kree. I absolutely love the sound of her voice, but something about this performance didn't ring true. And I think the judges are kind of hitting on what I'm talking about... Kree almost seemed distracted by all the crazy bells and whistles Idol has. I definitely see what Nicki was saying about Kree sounding completely current, however.

Also, can we get a catfight on live TV? PLEASE?

Angie Miller "I'll Stand By You" by The Pretenders (1994)
Haven't we seen this same exact performance by Angie before? Except with more confidence, the right lyrics, and better vocals. Very disappointing. And the judges and Jimmy freaking out about the performance? Fishy...

Amber Holcomb "Without You" by Mariah Carey (1994)
I never knew Amber could do ballads that require belting and riffing and all that! I'm shocked! This was good... but absolutely nothing new. Sigh.

Divas! A theme that totally wasn't planned before Lazaro was eliminated, right?

Candice "When You Believe" by Whitney Houston & Mariah Carey
Oh Candice. Candice has come back to Earth a bit. This is falling right in line with some of the other performances this week: all well and good, great vocals, all that... but nothing new. Candice is a star, but this week was a disappointment... an expected disappointment, sure, but a disappointment nonetheless.

Janelle "Dumb Blonde" by Dolly Parton
I'm now scared for Janelle. I know these performances are planned in advance and this isn't the case, but this seemed like Janelle took Keith's criticisms of her first performance and over compensated to appease him. Kind of a mess. 

Kree "Have You Ever Been in Love?" by Celine Dion
Here we go. Again, not my favorite Kree performance, but she did a great job of making the song her own without doing too much. She doesn't seem lost or overwhelmed, she's just just sanging [sic]. Much better. 

Angie "Halo" by Beyoncé
If you told me that this was a totally different performer than Angie's first performance, I'd believe you. Literally night and day different here... Still not at the level of a Candice or a Kree, but this is the type of performance that shows her regular top-3 appearances aren't necessarily way off base.

Amber "What Are You Doing the Rest of Your Life?" by Barbra Streisand
See Janelle's first performance. Sure, strong vocals, good performance, all that... but so old fashioned. And rather boring, honestly. 

Wrap-Up

I'll be completely honest: I kind of regret watching Idol tonight. I know I would have regretted it had I skipped, but there wasn't a ton here tonight that made it worth while. 

Timm's Votes

Candice - 25
Kree - 20
Angie - 5

I do think Candice came back to the pack a little bit tonight, but not a huge amount. Angie gets some votes for her Boston shoutout and for a good 2nd effort. Woo.

Bottom 2 should be (and probably will be) Amber and Janelle.... but I could see either going home. I'll go with Amber.

Thursday, April 11, 2013

Idol 2013: Watching Late Again

This week, the Boston Bruins played at 7:30 on Wednesday night. There's something about a 7:30 Bruins start time that makes me want to do absolutely nothing afterwards.... 7:00 is fine, but 7:30? Pass. So, I skipped watching Idol live (obviously) and on DVR, so I'm watching Youtube clips after the Bruins game on Thursday night. So, the results are already in.... but I'm going to go in blind. You'll have to take my word on it. But I am.

Last week... Lazaro in the top 3? Of course he was. Ugh. I had Burnell on my list, and he was absolutely the worst last week, so it's not a shock. He is going home early, but not crazy early. So, whatever. Initially, I thought maybe the save could be in play with Burnell, but then I thought better of it: that save is obviously reserved for a situation that jeopardizes a Kree/Candice finale. MAYBE a Kree/Candice/Janelle final 3. This is not that challenge.

This week's themes are the Bacharach/Hal David Songbook and "Songs You Wish You Wrote". Ugh. Aka, songs from the 60s/70s and a bunch of ballads. Gotta love it.

Top 6: The Burt Bacharach / Hal David Songbook...

Angie Miller "Anyone Who Had a Heart"
For someone that struggles a bit with performances being a little overdramatic, this arrangement doesn't do Angie a whole lot of favors... but other than that? Solid. They picked a great key for Angie's voice, and she sounded great, but the performance did seem to be on autopilot a little bit. Solid base for Angie to build on later tonight though.

Amber Holcomb "I Say a Little Prayer"
Of course someone would do this song... and it's done exactly as you'd expect it to be done. I absolutely love the song, don't get me wrong... but I'm so over it. The song Amber put on during the second verse, though? HOT. But not really the right song for that. But HOT.

Lazaro Arbos "Close to You"
Yikes, old Lazaro is back. Weak song choice, and massive pitch problems throughout. Add into it the usual Lazaro diction/performance issues, and this is a new low for Lazaro.

Kree Harrison "What the World Needs Now"
This performance is a bit of a mixed bag for me. The very beginning started off quite exciting, but the second part was a bit of a drag, the key change was fantastic, then the ending wasn't up to the OMGKREE level. Perhaps it's the saccarine song. I don't know. I'm very excited for a second Kree song tonight though.

Janelle Arthur "I'll Never Fall in Love Again"
This is EXACTLY the song I wanted to hear from Janelle... but I'm underwhelmed. I've heard some great, re-imagined, pure country versions of this song, and this wasn't one of those. I really hate to say it, but this was very lounge singer like. Unfortunate.

Candice Glover "Don't Make Me Over"
And then we have Candice. Candice's Burt Bacharach is literally on a completely different level than anyone else. Candice sings the song in the original style, then fast forward to completely current with ease. Absolutely spectacular.

Top 6: ...and Songs They Wish They Wrote

Angie "Love Came Down" by Kari Jobe
THAT'S the Angie that I love. While I am a little concerned that this was very similar to her Colton Dixon performance, it won't matter. Wonderful.

Amber "Love On Top" by Beyoncé
I didn't feel this performance at all. I didn't like how the song sat in Amber's voice, didn't like the staging, didn't like the look, didn't like anything. Not the worst of the night (ahem), but probably the worst from Amber so far (for me).

Lazaro "Angels" by Robbie Williams
Lightyears better than his first performance of the night, but still pretty bad. Can the judges use a reverse save, and just give him the boot right now?

Kree "Help Me Make It Through the Night" by Kris Kristofferson
Pains me to say this, but I'm not feeling this performance either. A little sleepy for my tastes, and she didn't look too confident as she was performing. I understand it wasn't a big vocal song, but Kree felt to be holding back. Disappointing.

Janelle "The Dance" by Garth Brooks
This is, unfortunately, a very similar performance, results-wise, to her first performance. I was very excited to hear her sing this, but I was disappointed in the execution. I really wish Janelle made it her own a bit, as the karaoke approach didn't work for me. I'm nervous for Janelle. 

Candice "Lovesong" by The Cure
You know, I typically hate when they proclaim something 'one of the greatest performances in the history of Idol', as Randy Jackson did... but you know what? That's accurate. Sure, she took a page from the Kris Allen Playbook (borrowing the Adele arrangement of an older song), but I don't even care. This was easily the best Idol performance in years.

Wrap-Up

I was previously holding out for more of two-woman race, but after tonight, there is a clear-cut front runner, and her name is Candice Glover. This is the Candice show and everyone else is jockeying for second place. What a night for her.

Also, what a night for Lazaro. In the other direction. Eek.

Timm's Votes

Well, what my votes would have been had I watched live.

Candice - 40
Kree - 10

I wanted to put 50 for Candice, but Kree's night wasn't a failure. I'd also throw some votes Angie's way, but I don't want to take any more from my girls. So, 40/10.

I'd probably name Lazaro, Janelle and Amber my bottom 3, with Lazaro going home. That said, Lazaro was SO BAD and the judges SO honest that he'll surely get a wave of sympathy votes. God, I hate America voting. 

*checks results*

Kree/Candice? Then Janelle/Angie? Then Amber/Lazaro? And Lazaro is mercifully cut? I take it back... America, sometimes, you get it right. 

Also, how fabulous was KELLY CLARKSON?!?! 

Shut up, it's my blog, I can fangirl Kelly if I want to.


Wednesday, April 3, 2013

Idol 2013: Rock 'n' Roll, Woo

I suppose I don't really need an "intro" this week, since I don't have results to discuss. So...

Calling it now: this week's show is going to be trainwreck-city. Here's to hoping it's fun trainwrecks, not just painful ones!

The Top 7: Rock Week, Sans the Pesky Ballads

Burnell Taylor "You Give Love a Bad Name" by Bon Jovi
Well, at least Idol put the person that will struggle the most up first. And struggle he did. Complete trainwreck, and Burnell obviously knew it. Too bad, could have been LOL-worthy. The kick was a good start, though (if way too late).

Lazaro and Angie sing Queen's "Crazy Little Thing Called Love"... Lazaro is every bit as train-wrecky as you'd expect, and Angie shows her theatre-roots again. She wins this battle. Oh, it's supposed to be a duet? Oops. Wrong show.

Kree Harrison "Piece of My Heart" by Janis Joplin
Eargasmic. I seriously don't think Kree can do any wrong. I wouldn't say this was the best of Kree so far, but still damn good.

Candice and Burnell sing a duet of some sort... but I continued fast forwarding. Oops.

Janelle Arthur "You May Be Right" by Billy Joel
When the song choice was announced, I cringed a bit... but this was fantastic. Not the best vocal by Janelle, but the arrangement was just country enough to make everything just right. Well done.

Lazaro Arbos "We Are the Champions" by Queen
This season's Sanjaya is past the point of judging the vocals, but in all, not a bad job tonight. Entertaining performance, as far as Lazaro performances go. So there's that.

Janelle, Kree and Amber singing my favorite song ever. And it's as awkward as any forced trio arrangement would be. Sigh.

Candice Glover "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction" by The Rolling Stones
There is absolutely nothing about this performance that wasn't AWESOME. Hot vocals, hot lighting, great stage set-up everything. Completely obsessed.

Amber Holcomb "What About Love?" by Heart
Oh hey, Amber, what's up? HOT vocals, but I really didn't feel anything behind this performance. That said... best vocals of the night. Hot damn.

Angie Miller "Bring Me to Life" by Evanescence
Not really a fan, if I'm being honest. I'm really not a fan of that song, and Angie's version came off somewhat second rate and karaoke. Sad face.

Wrap Up

Not NEARLY as trainwreck-y as I was expecting! I can't say there were a whole bunch of performances that blew me away (besides the usual suspects), but overall, a good week. I really liked the "no ballads" stipulation, which was a particular breath of fresh air this season. I totally look forward to next week... Whitney week? Maybe Celine week? Maybe just "all ballads"? DO IT UP!

Timm's Votes

Candice - 15
Kree - 15
Janelle - 15
Amber - 5

I have my trio. I support my trio (who were all fabulous this week). And Amber gets 5 votes so my vote totals are simple (and her vocals were HOT).

I'm going to venture a guess that the bottom 3 will be Lazaro, Burnell and, unfortunately, Amber. Lazaro should be going home... but I'm thinking he'll end up being the "safe" one. Ugh. 

Friday, March 29, 2013

Idol 2013: Idol Goes to Detroit

Yep, Paul voted off last week. Not a surprise, as I had him on alert, but still: he was cut too early. I like that Idol has obviously worked hard to not have another "white guy with a guitar" win the show, by avoiding anyone with a guitar... well now they got rid of the last white guy. Not to say Paul could have won, but it is humorous anyway.

I missed the show this week, actually. And I didn't feel like watching my DVR recording until Friday morning. That's what I think of Motown week. So, this recap won't have some of the same features as my usual recaps.

Oh, sorry, it's Detroit week! Anyone from Detroit is fair game? I can't WAIT to hear who takes on "Lose Yourself" by Eminem. Surely, they'd change it to "Detroit Week" from "Motown Week" for a reason, right?

The Top 8: Motown Week Songs from Detroit

Candice Glover "Heard It Through the Grapevine"
Probably one of the better versions of this song done on Idol. And there's a hell of a lot of them! If I had to guess, I'd guess this song has been done every single year. Unfortunately, I'm holding that against Candice. But I love her.

I'm not even bothering with the duets and trios. Sorry Idol.

Lazaro Arbos "For Once In My Life"
Much better than recent efforts. Still not great, but much, much better. At least he doesn't look like he's going to burst into tears!

Janelle Arthur "Keep Me Hanging On"
Absolutely phenomenal. I'm sure Motown purists hated this... but Janelle took yet another tired song choice and warped it into something totally new, contemporary, and fantastic. Brilliant.

Devin Valez "Tracks of My Tears"
Idol's resident lounge singer was a trainwreck on this song. It's one thing to not quite connect with a song's lyrics, it's another thing entirely to completely ignore them. A mess and a half.

Burnell Taylor "My Cherie Amour"
What a strange performance. Burnell does some completely fantastic things vocally here... but also constricts his voice really weirdly at times. Hard to explain, but it's almost like he's trying to add a quirkiness to his voice that does not need to be there. Still, overall a good performance.

Angie Miller "Shop Around"
What even is this? I understand that Angie probably wants to show she can do more than the Colton Dixon type stuff she shines on... but make sure you can pull something off before you try to do it. This performance was a mess in almost every way possible. Yikes.

Amber Holcomb "Lately"
I'm glad this week had Stevie in it. He's really under-represented on the Idol stage. This performance was pretty fantastic, but not exactly anything new from Amber. Wonderful vocals as always, but she's just not the most exciting contestant.

Kree Harrison "Don't Play That Song"
Drop that mic, Kree. Those runs in the choruses? No big deal, just whatever. Just Kree. I do feel like she was holding back a little bit... but when you do what she does week in and week out, why bring out the big guns now?

Wrap Up

Kree and Candice continue to pull away from the pack, and Janelle hops on board the leader train too. Angie bumped off? I'd say so.

Speaking of trains, the Devin train hit a wall and was sent packing, and rightfully so (based on this week, anyway). Lazaro will probably get the boot last week, leaving a top 6 that is probably as it should be. 

Coincidence that the guys are getting picked off one-by-one? Not at all. The girls are just that much better than this season... which I'm sure is by total coincidence, right Idol producers?

Timm's Votes

Obviously, I didn't vote this week, but if I had....

Janelle - 20
Kree - 17
Candice - 13

I like to think week-to-week with my votes. Janelle was the clear cut winner for me this week, with Kree and Candice rounding out my top 3.

As for my bottom three... Devin, Angie and Lazaro, with Lazaro going home (based on the body of work... because he was the best of those three this week).

Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Idol 2013: The Beatles

Justice served last week. Goodbye Curtis.

Also, the sing off for the tour? Yippee! I totally didn't even bother to watch the performances, because the whole concept is silly. But good for Aubrey, I guess.

I know I bemoan tired themes... but Idol ALWAYS needs a Beatles week (or Lennon/McCartney week... whichever this actually is). I do, however, reserve the right to bitch about obvious/uninspired song choices in the theme. So, there.

The Top 9: The Songs of John Lennon & Paul McCartney

Kree Harrison "A Little Help from My Friends"
Dead. Not my favorite Beatles track, but Kree killed it. As usual. I would have really enjoyed her doing something like "Oh! Darling", but then again, I'll listen to her do anything. Turn down the backup vocalists, Idol! 

Burnell Taylor "Let It Be"
You know someone would do this song. Let's just be glad it wasn't Curtis, because he obviously would have. But honestly, there was a lot to love about this performance by Burnell. For the most part, he trusted what just may be the greatest melody ever written, which I absolutely appreciate. And riffs he did add worked just right. Well done.

Amber Holcomb "She's Leaving Home" 
Bravo to Amber for not choosing one of the big hits that everyone and their mother knows.... I fully acknowledge that I have never heard this song before. Though that said, I'm not sure going off the beaten path helped her too much. Amber seemed tentative at points, and her pitch struggled a little bit because of it. I do love the sparkle in Amber's voice when she really nails the notes, which is quite often.

Lazaro Arbos "In My Life"
Ho boy. Mess and a half. There isn't much working for poor Lazaro here. He's completely out of his element in this competition.

Candice Glover "Come Together"
Dead. Absolutely dead. Absolutely perfect in every way.

Paul Jolley "Eleanor Rigby"
Paul would do the most theatrical of all the major Beatles songs. Probably not the best song choice, but I found it mostly enjoyable anyway. I really wish he found a song he could really connect with, as opposed to a song he could perform... you know?

Angie Miller "Yesterday"
Fact: I did not know Angie was from Beverly, MA. Good stuff. It's fitting that Angie "revealed" during her pre-performance interview that she was a theater kid in high school, because this song was her most dramatic so far. She said she needed to go simple... but I don't think she succeeded. Great vocals, but I'm not so sure I totally dug it. And why wasn't she on piano for this song? Also, I loved Randy's comparison's to Haley from Paramore and "old girl" from Evanescence. 

Devin Velez "The Long and Winding Road"
This would be Devin's song choice. Devin is a great vocalist, but that's about it. Boring, predictable performance... you knew exactly what it was going to be like from the get go. He's not exciting.

Janelle Arthur "I Will"
Now this is the exact opposite of Amber's song. Janelle took a largely unknown song and turned it into a star performance. Sure, there were a few shaky notes here and there, but it doesn't even matter. Perfection, a great way to end this show. Well done!

Wrap Up

Overall, I'd call this a pretty strong night. There was only one complete dud, which is a pretty good percentage from this crop of contestants! And I was actually pleasantly surprised with the song selections this week... some questionable choices, and all the usuals were present, but overall, big upgrade from last week. 

Timm's Votes

Candice - 18
Kree - 18
Janelle - 8
Paul - 3
Angie - 3

I'm sad that I limited myself to 50 votes... not sad enough to up the limit and work the phones, but still. Candice and Kree are in a completely different competition from the rest of this year's finalists, which is reflected in my vote totals. Actually, can we eliminate the other 7 contestants of this show, and just make the remaining 8 weeks* of the show a sing off between Candice and Kree? We can leave Janelle, Angie and Paul for flavor, but it really continues to look like a two horse race. 

Lazaro really should be gone this week, but given that he was in 4th place last week, it looks like his story has been effective. Because of that, I'd put Amber and probably Paul on alert (sadly)

*Not a mis-count. There are 8 weeks left. Good thing that save is in play... meaning Kree & Candice are safe!

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Idol 2013: Songs That Need to Be Banned

Yeah, so I'm not all that surprised by any of the cuts from last week. Burnell making it through was a slight surprise, but not really enough to make me ask why. So, I won't dwell. Top 10!

The Top 10: Celebrating the Songs of Prior Winners


Curtis Finch, Jr.  "I Believe" by Fantasia Barrino
I'm jealous of Nicki Minaj for not having to watch that. There was absolutely nothing redeeming about that performance. Ho boy. Ho boy.

Janelle Arthur "Gone" by Montgomery Gentry (done by Scotty McCreery)
Pretty much as good as this could have been, given the arrangement. This is not the type of country music Janelle should be doing. Had she re-worked the song a little bit into what she does, this would probably be better... instead, it came off as forced karaoke.

Devin Velez "Temporary Home" by Carrie Underwood
Ho boy. Devin says he wants to prove he "can do more than just the ballads"... by doing a ballad? This really isn't my favorite Carrie Underwood song, and I like it even less when it's done in the style of a second-rate lounge singer.

Angie Miller "I Surrender" by Celine Dion (done by Kelly Clarkson)
Ugh. Celine. I get this performance... I do. Angie surely wants to show she doesn't need to be at the piano, and that she can be a powerhouse vocalist. The problem is that she really does need to be at the piano, and she really isn't a 'plant your feet and belt your face off' kind of singer. This performance was rather sleepy and came across rather forced. Unfortunate.

Paul Jolley "Amazed" by Lonestar (done by Scotty McCreery)
I really love Paul's tone, but so far his vocals really haven't been quite there... and this is more of that. The song choice is horrible (as it always is). Also, Jimmy Iovine using the whole Broadway singing thing as an insult? C'mon now. Let's just say it... Paul comes off a bit too flamboyant for country music.

Candice Glover "I Who Have Nothing" by Ben E. King (done by Jordin Sparks)
HOT DAMN.

Lazaro Arbos "Breakaway" by Kelly Clarkson
I really, really like Lazaro. I'm pretty sure it's impossible not to. But that was pretty bad. I really hate to say this, but it's kind of stating the obvious: I'd be really surprised if he's not, at best, the bottom 2 survivor tomorrow.

Kree Harrison "Crying" by Roy Orbison (done by Carrie Underwood)
Kree's tone is an absolute thing of beauty. The upper notes at the end of the song weren't as strong as the rest of it, but that's totally fine. It's only the top 10, but this already seems like a two-horse race. Sidenote: this would have been a good song for Janelle to do.

Burnell Taylor "Flying Without Wings" by Westlife (done by Ruben Studdard)
I'm sorry. If I'm being completely honest, I zoned out for the duration of this performance... just like I did for all of Ruben Studdard in season 2. Perhaps there's a connection.

Amber Holcomb "A Moment Like This" by Kelly Clarkson
The end of the intro package was about how Amber wants to make this song into her own... she does it by runs and rushing through it. Well played. It was alright. The top notes were a bit yelly, but maybe it's just me.

Wrap-Up

Two requests from the Idol producers:

  1. Please choose new themes. I'm aware this is a new theme... but it's a theme that demanded contestant rehash "Idol standards". Come on, man. Or, at the very least, create a banned songs list. Please.
  2. Please set up a live camera on Mariah Carey at all times. The looks on her face when Nicki says/does Nicki things? Absolutely incredible. 

Timm's Votes

Candice - 25
Kree - 20
Paul - 5

Candice slayed a beast of a song, Kree rocked, and I like Paul. My votes are pretty straightforward. Done and done.

Wednesday, March 6, 2013

Idol 2013: Guys Turn

Girls last night, guys tonight. I look forward to finding this year's safe, somewhat generic white dude, likely playing a guitar, that will win the whole thing! All that said, I'm fine with that. Typically. Anyhoo. Let's go.

Guys Night in Vegas: The Top 10

Elijah Liu "Stay" by Rihanna
Sleepy, pretty boring performance. Adequate vocal I suppose, but nothing that really wows me or really makes me want to see more. The judges liked his song choice, but I really don't think it did him any favors.

Cortez Shaw "Locked Out of Paradise" by Bruno Mars
The problem with doing a song like this in it's original style is that it will always sound like the original, and will always pale in comparison. That's the case here. This was a performance you'd expect to see at any karaoke bar.

Charlie Askew "Mama" by Genesis
Was there nobody else at the auditions or through the Hollywood rounds? Or are the producers trying to make a funny? Also, I'm legit in pain over how awkward the post-performance interview was.

Nick Boddington "Iris" by Goo Goo Dolls
I totally get what Nick is trying to do with this song, and as I said last night with Angie's performance, I typically love it. But this was really messy, all over the place. Good song choice, but the vocals weren't there, often times not even close. The honesty and feeling was there, but that's about it.

Burnell Taylor "I'm Here" from The Color Purple: The Musical
This song is such a terrible choice for Idol. There's no chorus to really show the singer off, save for the final note. And also, Burnell brought nothing really new to the song. Pretty generic. And he's done it before on the show? Risky indeed. Also, watch the hand gestures!

Paul Jolley "Just a Fool" by Christina Aguilera
Easily the best so far, and not even close. Pitch issues on the top notes, but got a lucky draw with the background vocalist being too loud. If he works that out, though, Paul could be onto something. Great tone. And look. And I completely get the pop-country path for him. More pop. For obvious reasons.

Lazaro Arbos "Feeling Good" from The Roar of the Greasepaint - The Smell of the Crowd
Worked the song out in a huge way. This is a song done to death post-Bublé, but Lazaro totally made it work for him. Strong vocal, and equally strong performance. Good stuff! But Mariah is right: a song that sits better in his voice would have made this even better.

Curtis Finch, Jr. "I Believe I Can Fly" by R. Kelly.
REALLY? Why do contestants chose this song? It's an automatic tune-out for me. When the opening notes are played, you know exactly how it's going to be sung... and Curtis does it exactly how you'd expect. Pass. Un-PC comment: Good to know Idol filled it's gospel singer to jam down your throat quota! 

Devin Velez "Somos Novios" by Andrea Bocelli
Obviously I'm the wrong demo, but the whole Spanglish thing totally turns me off, puts me at such a distance. Capable enough vocals, but the whole thing seemed so generic to me. 

Vincent Powell "The End of the Road" by Boyz II Men
Again with the predictable, overindulgent, saccharine song choice. I enjoy that he just gave up singing the song by the end and just went for all sorts of vocal tricks and gimmicks. Annoying.

Wrap-Up

I've vaguely followed along with assorted Idol bloggers from the beginning of the competition, so I had a very general idea of what to expect coming into this. I'd read that the guys were a rough bunch this year, but I figured that was overstating it a bit. Boy, was I wrong. Eek. There may be a few guys here that could blossom into a good contestant, but I can't see too much more than that. Hopefully I'm wrong, but this seemed mostly like tired gimmick after tired gimmick.

I guess there is a way for the producers to avoid yet another "white guy with a guitar" winning the thing... don't bring any to the voting round!

THAT SAID, I do have some favorites...

Timm's Votes

Elijah - 5
Nick - 5
Lazaro - 15
Paul - 25

I could get used to supporting Paul. While Lazaro seems like he could be a product of his story, I really enjoyed him tonight, so he gets some love. I threw some votes to Elijah and Nick, because I wouldn't mind seeing what else they can bring to the table. All that said, I'm fully, 100% expecting that Curtis will go through, no problem at all. Hell, he'll probably be the one that is trumped up as the favorite all season long until his "SHOCKING!" elimination in the top 4. But I'm so over that. Vincent will probably go through as well. Devin's got an endearing mother... him too. Hopefully, at least Paul can cut through the noise.

Tuesday, March 5, 2013

Idol 2013: It Begins!

Idol has finally begun! Well, for me anyway. As I wrote a couple weeks ago, this is where I'm beginning Idol. I could continue to write an intro, but it'd really end up being exactly what I wrote before. So, let's get to it:

Ladies Night in Vegas: The Top 10

Zoanette Johnson  "What's Love Got to Do With It?" by Tina Turner
It's fitting that the Vegas set Idol is working with tonight reminds me of The Voice... because this performance reminded me of The Voice. You know: loud, messy, pointless.... Eek.

Breanna Steer "Flaws and All" by Beyonce
I don't know what that was. I'm going to call that a terrible song choice, because I have no idea what Breanna is capable of going by this performance.

Aubrey Cleland "Big Girls Don't Cry" by Fergie
Nerves? Too big a song for her voice? Hard to tell. The verses were fine, but her voice didn't soar like it should have in the chorus. Best of the three so far, but not spectacular.

Janelle Arthur "If I Can Dream" by Elvis
Randy calls for her to do something more throwback and classic-country... agreed completely. He meant it as a compliment, but I don't. The song is so simple, and Janelle tried to do too much to make it too modern, which didn't work for me. Definitely the best so far, but again, that's not saying a whole heck of a lot.

Tenna Torres "Lost" by Faith Hill
I think a more fitting title for this performance might be "lost lyrics"... It seems to me that Teena cared more about how her voice wrapped itself around the song than the diction. And that wrapping (which is how I can best describe it) was kind of sloppy. Interesting.

Angie Miller "Never Gone" by Colton Dixon
Now this is what I'm talking about. Give me an artist sanging what they believe in at the piano (yes, sanging), and I'm happy. While her tone did some weird things (perhaps it was the song, which I don't know), that performance was fantastic. Call me a sucker, but I loved that.

Amber Holcomb "I Believe in You and Me" by Whitney Houston
Whitney is such a boring, predictable choice. Always with the Whitney! But in any case, Amber sounded pretty good, overall, if a tad inconsistent. At times she sounded like she was trying to emulate Whitney (you will fail), at times she sounded a bit amateurish. But at times, it clicked in a big way. Next time... move away from Whitney.

Kree Harrison "Stronger" by Faith Hill
There it is. Not a perfect vocal by any means, but definitely the best vocal of the night so far. And I love the natural-feeling confidence Kree exudes... I can't even explain it. Loved me some Angie, but Kress is my favorite so far.

Adriana Latonio "Stand Up for Love" by Destiny's Child
Rough. It seems like the whole performance was built around the big moments of the song, and it was really shaky otherwise. And even the big parts didn't work.

Candice Glover "Ordinary People" by John Legend
Not my style of music, but Candice nailed this performance. Absolutely nailed it in every way possible. Sorry Kree, Candice wins tonight.

Wrap Up

Some contestants absolutely nailed it tonight: big ups to Candice, Kree and Angie. But a big 'ole eek to Zoanette, Adriana and Breanna. We shall see how things work out, but there's a pretty clear separation, at least at the top end.

Before I reveal how I'll be voting, I need to touch on two new things to Idol 2013: the new judges and the app.

The Judges. As I wrote before, I really dislike Nicki Minaj. But you know what? I'm eating crow tonight. While I still don't like her whole schtick or whatever you want to call it, I absolutely loved her as a judge tonight. I found myself agreeing with her almost every single time, and I loved how she got her opinions across: shockingly succinct and often hilarious. I also enjoyed Keith Urban, but it did seem like he was coming across as the dreaded "nice judge". I would comment on Mariah... but she was on the other side of Randy, who gets fast forwarded through. Sorry Mariah.

The App. This thing is a beauty. When Seacrest first started chatting it up, I was reminded of the pretty crappy X Factor app, but the Idol one is lightyears better. Why? BECAUSE IT WORKS. Even though I was watching the show on DVR, the live-sync feature works beautifully, giving me all sorts of info on the contestants and the songs they were singing (which is good, because I didn't know a number of them tonight). The app also allows very simple voting, something I'll be taking part in this year (fun fact: I've only voted for Idol once, the season 9 final. Kris Allen all night long, baby.). Also, because of the way you allot votes, that is how I'll be "scoring" each night on Idol. So without further adieu...

Timm's Votes

Janelle - 3
Angie - 14
Kree - 16
Candice - 17

Candice won the night, but I can already tell Kree and Angie will likely emerge as my favorites. I also threw a few votes Janelle's way, because I appreciate a good country singer. Obviously, I would move those three on, with the fifth advancing female being Amber. And really, it's not even that close for me. Naturally, I'll be horribly, horribly wrong. But whatever.

Monday, March 4, 2013

As The 'JUSTICE LEAGUE' Movie Rumor Mill Turns...

Darkseid villianMan of Steel cameos. Armie Hammer as Batman! No, Joseph Gordon-Levitt as Batman! Just kidding, no Joseph Gordon-Levitt. Ryan Reynolds back as Green Lantern? No, scratch all that, let's focus on just Batman. Actually... how about Bale/Cavill?

C'mon already. This, amongst many other reasons, is why a Justice League movie is doomed from the get-go.

The Christian Bale rumor is the latest in a long line of speculation, just hitting the mainstream today. The key word here is a simple one: why? Why would Christian Bale return to the role? He's played the role three times to a huge success, culminating in a very satisfying, fitting end. The man is showered with acclaim whenever he's in a new film... he certainly doesn't need the cape and cowl. And from a story standpoint, didn't we leave him in a really good place? Never mind the fact that Bale's Batman isn't exactly the 'call up the aliens and other super powered guys for help' type. It's cheap, it's lazy, and it's a way too many steps towards tarnishing the legacy of a damn good trilogy of films.

However.

A comment on the firstshowing.net article about the new Bale rumors got me to thinking. The comment:
Bale would make sense if at the same time as justice League nolan or his brother made dark knight returns for late 2014 where robin does take on the mantle but gets killed so bruce comes back to avenge him and thus leads into justice League and would definitely be a reason for bruce to name his future sidekick Robin in honor of his fallen replacement!
This... this certainly could work. If there is a good story as to why Bale's Bruce Wayne returns to Gotham, then perhaps it could be massaged into something that works. How about this: The Dark Knight Rises suggests that Joseph Gordon-Levitt's John Blake would take over the Batman mantle - perhaps something happens to prevent that from happening (as the commenter says, he is killed). Darkseid comes in, all but destroys Gotham, Bruce Wayne returns. Realizing that he is not the hero the city needs, he tracks down the likes of Superman, Wonder Woman, Green Lantern and The Flash and forms the Justice League, acting as the equivalent of The Avengers' Nick Fury. From there, you could introduce a character like a Dick Greyson to become Batman.

Alternatively, just drop Christian Bale all together. Drop this Robin/John Blake as Batman creation from The Dark Knight Rises. Have Man of Steel launch a new Justice League universe (or have it continue the universe began in Green Lantern). Ignore the whole Dark Knight trilogy. Cast someone new as Bruce Wayne. Cast someone new as Green Lantern if you want to ignore that film too. Make it work.

Unfortunately, judging by how long it's taking this Justice League movie to get off the ground or really gain any sort of traction... that won't happen. And when it will, it will probably be more Green Lantern then Batman Begins, in that it'll be a mess. Which is really too bad.

Sunday, February 24, 2013

#OW12: The Grand Finale

It's Oscar Sunday! Which means, ready or not, my #OW12 series is officially complete.... and I'm ready. I know, I know, I didn't watch Amour, but that's alright. If it shocks the world and wins one of the big awards, I'll go back and watch it, but I highly doubt that will happen. So, without further adieu, here are the official timmmc.com Oscar Watch 2012 picks.

Best Director

Steven Spielberg, Lincoln
This is an award that SHOULD be going to Ben Affleck for Argo. But that's neither here nor there (yet... do read on). This is an award that I would rather see go to David O. Russell (Silver Linings Playbook) or Benh Zeitlin (Beasts of the Southern Wild). But since Affleck isn't nominated (!), Spielberg will probably take home his third Oscar in the category. I don't mean to take away from Spielberg by naming three other directors that I'd rather take the honor, as his work on Lincoln was exemplary, but that's how I feel. Ang Lee winning for Life of Pi wouldn't surprise me too much, either, as that film certainly was something to see.

Best Actress in a Supporting Role

Anne Hathaway, Les Misérables
This category is so much of a landslide that I actually had to look up who else was nominated as a refresher to write this (for reference: Field, Adams, Hunt, Weaver). I would be absolutely floored if Hathaway doesn't take the award home. IF there is an upset, I'll go on a limb and say it'd be Amy Adams (The Master). Or Sally Field (Lincoln). Actually, Field would probably be more likely, but Adams would be the better choice.

Best Actor in a Supporting Role

Robert De Niro, Silver Linings Playbook
De Niro is, literally, my third different pick for this award.... and I haven't filled out my pool picks for the Oscar party I'm attending tonight. At first I figured Tommy Lee Jones was going to ride the Lincoln wave, but the Lincoln wave has seemed to subside. Then I thought Django Unchained's Christoph Waltz would take it, as he was the only one to really show me something new in the category, but then my attention was brought to De Niro. All of the nominees in this category are former winners, but De Niro hasn't won since 1981. So, I'm making that my tie breaker. When I fill out my pool later, Philip Seymour Hoffman from The Master may well be my pick. I'm so indecisive with this category! And to round it out, the last time Alan Arkin received an Oscar nomination, people questioned how that happened... and he won. People are questioning how he got one this year, too...

Best Actor in a Leading Role

Daniel Day Lewis, Lincoln
I wish I could write Hugh Jackman here... but his at times shaky vocals in Les Misérables quite likely will be his undoing. DDL, however, was spot on 100% of the time in Lincoln, so I'd really be quite surprised to see anyone else winning this one. 

Best Actress in a Leading Role

Jennifer Lawrence, Silver Linings Playbook
This is a category where I had to make a very tough call. Lawrence was spectacular, Jessica Chastain was spectacular in Zero Dark Thirty, Quvenzhane Wallis was spectacular in Beasts of the Southern Wild, and I hear Emmanuelle Riva and Naomi Watts were spectacular in Amour and The Impossible, respectively. Lawrence, however, is the "it" actress at the moment, lining up big gig after big gig, and starring in two huge franchises on top of them. I assume that means she is as well loved around Hollywood as I love her. So, she's my pick.

Best Picture

Argo
I really, really loved Argo. I would indeed say that it was my favorite of all the films nominated this season, by a healthy margin, actually. But, I would say this award is due to the Academy's politics almost as much as it is about how fantastic the film really is. I'm not going to speculate as to why Ben Affleck wasn't nominated for Best Director, because obviously, I have no idea. Snubs are often largely treated with a "we're sorry for you", but then a shrug... but it hasn't seemed like that has happened with Affleck's snub. In fact, it really seems to me that Hollywood has rallied around Affleck and the film, as evidenced by the film winning every single major Best Picture award so far (or, the equivalent of it), and Affleck all the Best Director awards. In any other year, I would actually pick Zero Dark Thirty for top honors due to it's timeliness as much as it's content, but this is Argo's year.

Final timmmc.com Oscar Watch 2012 Rankings

With all my reviews so far, I've added a star system. These were done arbitrarily and not really relative to anything. Here's that ranking:

5 stars:  Argo
4.5 stars:  Zero Dark Thirty, Looper
2.5 stars:  The Master

Obviously, not really relative to each other. I'm not going to rank ALL the movies I watched for this year's project, but I did rank the Best Picture nominees (save for Amour), so I'll share that:
  1. Argo
  2. Zero Dark Thirty
  3. Silver Linings Playbook
  4. Les Misérables
  5. Beasts of the Southern Wild
  6. Django Unchained
  7. Lincoln
  8. The Life of Pi
And with that, #OW12 is officially completed. As I've written before... I absolutely love it. I already look forward to #OW13!

Monday, February 18, 2013

American Idol Season 12

So, if you're a regular reader of the site (I'm huge in the UK, you know), you'll notice that I haven't blogged a word about the new season of American Idol. And there's a good reason for that: I haven't watched a single minute.

Why? Well, I really dislike Nicki Minaj. I don't get her in the slightest. I have no interest in watching her on my television screen. But, I love American Idol... what a dilemma!

So for this season, I've opted to completely skip the non-live portions of the show. I decided that I really don't have to watch the finely edited shows where it's all Nicki, fake feuds and pimping of early producer favorites. Sure, all three obnoxious Idol sideshows are all present when the show goes live, but at least it's in a show filled with music ("filled" used lightly, of course).

Now don't get me wrong: I fully acknowledge that she could be a decent judge on Idol. That may be, and I fully allow for that... but I have no interest in it anyway. At least with the live shows, I've trained myself to almost completely ignore the judges.

Apparently, this week and next week, Idol is in Vegas with the top 40 contestants... so I'll probably start watching this week. Perhaps I'll put up a blog at some point about it. Assuming I don't give up on the Nicki Show after that, expect regular recaps to start up once voting starts (which, I read, is March 5).

Thursday, February 7, 2013

#OW12: Beasts of the Southern Wild

Screenplay by Lucy Alibar & Benh Zeitlin
Directed by Benh Zeitlin

Starring Quvenzhané Wallis and Dwight Henry

Released June 27, 2012
Watched February 7, 2013

timmmc.com score: 4/5 stars
Contenders: Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actress (Wallis)
What a curious, curious film.

The film runs a crisp 93 minutes long. The opening of the film, in which young Hushpuppy (played by the truly spectacular Quvenzhané Wallis) introduces her world of "The Bathtub" (it's not what it sounds) is absolutely spellbinding in every way. I'd say that runs around 5 minutes. As the film went on, however, I found my mind wandering, checking the clock, wondering what the point was of the film, why such random things were happening on the screen. Then came the last 5 minutes of the film. Without spoiling anything, I found myself in tears, absolutely captivated by the way everything came together and formed something so wonderful. Now, I sit here in awe of how indifferent I was to the film as I watched, but how much I really enjoyed it looking back.

Curious indeed!

I don't think I can say enough about Quvenzhané Wallis's performance. And to look at her Wikipedia page and to learn that this was her first acting gig, and she's only 9 years old (6 when the film was made)? Unreal. I know who my sentimental favorite is on Oscar Sunday!