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OK, so Im the most patient mofo on the planet...
Posted on 4/6/12 at 11:23 pm
Posted on 4/6/12 at 11:23 pm
...But I am giving up on MadMen after 3 episodes
WTF is the deal w the hype
I'd rather stab myself w an icepick than watch episode 4
Booooooring
WTF is the deal w the hype
I'd rather stab myself w an icepick than watch episode 4
Booooooring
Posted on 4/6/12 at 11:25 pm to zmonsoon
It's not for everyone. I always tell people if you don't like the first 4-5 episodes, you need to just stop.
Posted on 4/6/12 at 11:40 pm to zmonsoon
quote:
WTF is the deal w the hype
Its a well written show with good actors and one character that most men would love to see themselves as.
As the series continues, character development really blows you away. I'm not one of those idiots that will call you trash if you don't like it though.
Posted on 4/6/12 at 11:58 pm to zmonsoon
It's an alright watch. Mediocre show. I'm somewhere in Season 4, can't really bring myself to watch more. But I will eventually.
Posted on 4/7/12 at 12:46 am to zmonsoon
The nostalgic look at the workplace in the 60's with smoking, drinking and womanizing at work kept me interested for the first season. Once I got over that I thought it was an expensive soap. Haven't watched it since then. Nothing wrong with it but I don't normally watch weekly series TV anyway.
Posted on 4/7/12 at 2:07 am to zmonsoon
I'm not questioning anyone's intelligence, but I find Mad Men to be a thinking man's show. It's not for everybody. You need to really be into character development. Plus, the writing is one of if not the best on television.
Posted on 4/7/12 at 2:45 am to zmonsoon
This is a good summation of why some people think it's the best show on television:
quote:
It's the restraint shown by the entire cast which makes Mad Men so gripping. Where other dramas, whether they're soap operas or genre shows, illustrate arguments by having their characters screaming and throwing vases at one another, Mad Men's confrontations are quiet and understated, and a display of anger can often be detected in nothing more remarkable than a passing glance or a brief, cutting remark.
Which brings me on to the biggest star of Mad Men, which is unarguably the writing itself. No matter how apparently inconsequential and mundane the events (though, in the greater scheme of things, every scene has its own vital part to play in the overarching narrative) Mad Men's dialogue sparkles throughout.
In an era where television series are increasingly sold on their concepts, Mad Men is a rare example of a show which can't be easily summed up with two words, or even a sentence. Its premise and largely dialogue-driven plot may make it sound like something far too dry and flat for a geek audience, but the quality of Mad Men's writing, production and acting makes it an irresistible draw, despite the absence of the action, explosions or fantasy we've perhaps come to expect from American TV.
Mad Men is a series that, most obviously, uses advertising as a metaphor to explore the superficiality of the American dream, an obvious notion, perhaps, but it delves far deeper than that, and reveals something more profound about social expectations, greed and excess.
It also holds up a mirror to the way society is now, and how the relentless pursuit of wealth and materialism only lead to dissatisfaction and emptiness. Most importantly of all, it touches on all these topics with intelligence and humour.
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