Started By
Message

re: Girls Ep "It's Back"...Dude wearing a purple and gold Fighting Tigers shirt...

Posted on 3/5/13 at 10:47 am to
Posted by SlowFlowPro
Simple Solutions to Complex Probs
Member since Jan 2004
424762 posts
Posted on 3/5/13 at 10:47 am to
quote:

e but it does have many great qualities, including consistently witty/creative dialogue, awkward social situations, etc.

what's so great about forced, awkward situations? they aren't really creative and just throw shite together and go "LOL THEY'RE NOT SUPPOSED TO BE TOGETHER." as with most of this show, it's weak

what dialogue do you think is witty?

quote:

The hate for it is ooc and stems primarily from people being annoyed with seeing Dunham's naked body.

i could give a frick about this
Posted by boosiebadazz
Member since Feb 2008
80481 posts
Posted on 3/5/13 at 10:55 am to
you always mention her nudity
Posted by Jwodie
New Orleans
Member since Sep 2009
7218 posts
Posted on 3/5/13 at 11:01 am to
quote:

what's so great about forced, awkward situations?


First off, it's what made shows like The Office an international success.

LINK

An interview with Allison Williams, while mostly about her background and influences, it hits on a few redeeming/interesting recent plot points that you seem to discard in your crusade against the show.

quote:

The 20-something female’s quest to find meaningful love and status in the world is a subject for the ages. What Jane Austen began in Victorian novels took off on television with The Mary Tyler Moore Show in the ’70s and Sex and the City in the ’90s. With Girls, Lena Dunham takes on the subject for the millennial generation. Allison Williams, who plays Marnie Michaels, the textbook-pretty and trying-desperately-to-be-perfect foil to Dunham’s fumbling Hannah Hovarth, is at the center of a bona fide cultural phenomenon. Girls is a lightning rod. Although there’s been a lot of fuss about the show’s frank sexuality, what is truly provocative about Girls is its relentless exploration of motivations and emotions—never letting any of the characters off the hook—and the creator’s willingness to allow her heroines to be their complicated selves, flaws and all.


quote:

BC: When your character, Marnie, tells Hannah she’s beautiful, does she mean it?

AW: She definitely means it. If Marnie had the confidence, she’d just tell Hannah how jealous she is of the parts of Hannah’s personality she lacks. But I think that requires a lot of self-reflection and confidence, to go on about someone when you’re in an intimate friendship[.]

BC: Let’s talk about the relationships in the series—how desperate your character became when her ex found someone else in five minutes. My husband, watching the show with me, said, “Oh, come on! A beautiful girl like that, she wouldn’t care.” People think pretty girls never have any romantic problems.

AW: In that situation it’s as much about Charlie as it is about control. The comfort of having this ex-boyfriend in her control is very appealing, because she can use that as a safety net until she finds someone to move on to. The fact that he beats her to the punch—leaving her alone, feeling isolated and undesirable—is unfathomable and unbearable to her, and unexpected. For her to go right into a relationship would have been less interesting.


Flow - you're going to tell me, even as a guy, you've never been in Marnie's shows vis a vis Charlie in a past relationship? Things like that are relatable and entertaining.

This post was edited on 3/5/13 at 11:03 am
first pageprev pagePage 1 of 1Next pagelast page
refresh

Back to top
logoFollow TigerDroppings for LSU Football News
Follow us on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram to get the latest updates on LSU Football and Recruiting.

FacebookTwitterInstagram