For most of this year, my entire personality could be aptly described
by the phrase “buying a flat.” I lost any
sense of self and became a wreck of completion dates, solicitor’s enquiries and
a desperate need to exchange contracts.
Throughout my life, friends have become homeowners, home renovators and
home sellers, but I never showed an interest.
They’ve also married and procreated, and still my interest has been at
best dutiful, bopping along absent-mindedly at their wedding disco or holding
their child aloft after they’ve thrust their firstborn into my arms, commenting
that, yes, well done, you seem to have added a human to our overpopulated
planet. Over the years, my
self-obsession should have repelled all of these people, yet they still
politely ask how the new flat is going, seeming to permit me to launch into various
monologues about the John Lewis
website or how to find the most expensive kitchen bin. Two months in, though, and I’ve really got a
tale to regale them with. Sure, little Johnny
might have learnt to walk at a precocious age, or the wedding video might be
undergoing final edits (in an effort to remove me and my inappropriate attire
from all the main shots) but this all pales in comparison to the fact that I
now have a 55” TV.
I feel a bit whack using inches. As a top-end Millennial, I’ve come of age
with a blend of measurement systems – gym weights in kilos, bodyweights in
stone, furniture sizes in metric, but my penis in inches. But yes, TVs are always measured in inches
diagonally across the screen; this isn’t me being some sort of Brexiteer (I’m
not an idiot) but simply following an archaic norm. The point is: I have promised myself a 55” TV
since 2010. Ten years later and there’s
my LG OLED wall-mounted on my pristine newbuild living room in absolute pride
of place. When I was still fun enough to
attend every media industry event, I ended up at a Bauer Media event by Bloomsbury Square. Truth be told, I was supposed to be at the Company Fashion Awards across time,
but student rioting
at the Tory Party HQ had seen that cancelled, so I had tailgated along. Each room brought to life a different Bauer
brand. I remember telling the Deputy Editor
of Empire that I hated Lord
Of The Rings, but my recollections end there. Until a point when we were all ushered into a
room. Making media people do anything is
nigh-on impossible, yet some firm security staff must have forced the
assembly. Nobody wanted to go as we knew
we would have to entertain an audience with Duffy to promote Bauer’s
Magic brand. Nothing against Duffy, mind, she had some ok
songs (Warwick Avenue)
until she committed career suicide in that Diet Coke ad, but I
would rather have stood about chatting and drinking than having to watch Dr Fox ask her
questions about singing and that.
Nevertheless, a brief encounter on the way in saw me hand over some
personal details for a competition whose prize I didn’t even enquire after.
Next day in the office and it turned out I’d won a 55”
telly! This was monumental to a poverty-wage
grad saddled with uni debts. Of course,
there was no point getting the huge appliance delivered to the flat I shared
with four other broke young people, so off it went to my parents’. But then they were moving house and wanted
this huge box shifted. I finally found a
buyer and, by netting £1,500, paid off my overdraft. Yet my heart broke. Surely one day I could afford to get a massive
screen back in my life. Well, let me
tell you, as an amateur TV blogger, nearly ten years of solid office work,
climbing the ladder of the media world, have all proven worth it in order to enjoy
fully 55” of my very own.
But what show did I select to test out my new tech? Well, I was hanging on for the third series
of Stranger Things, but it’s not really
gripping me. Then I thought the third
season of Dear White People would look great
up there, but the storylines only seem to have become apparent in the final episodes
and the show has really suffered from a lack of the urgency that propelled its
first two instalments. No, instead I
have allowed pure joy to abound into my eyes through the awe-inspiring The Dark Crystal: Age Of Resistance. And yes, this is the longest the blog has
rambled on for before announcing the week’s subject.
The Dark
Crystal was a Jim Henson
film from 1982. We had it on VHS in my
sister’s room and dared ourselves to watch the slightly terrifying tale of the
dying world of Thra on more than one occasion.
Henson was known for his puppets, but this was less Sesame Street and more Game Of
Thrones. Either way, it was an
instant cult classic at a time when fantasy was far from cool. Thirty-seven years later and Netflix have returned to the rich
subject matter for a ten-part prequel series.
The first thing I have to say is: puppets. The primary characters in our story are the Gelfling
– partly elfin, partly equine-looking humanoids divided into seven clans across
Thra. Over the series, we meet a great
number of individual personalities. At
first, you might wonder why we rarely see their legs or why dialogue seems to
get acted out behind rocky outcrops that obscure their lower halves, but before
long, you completely forget these things have been knocked up in a workshop
(apart from, maybe, the synthetic-looking hair) and fall for their charm. You need to believe in them for the story to
work and I openly admit to being willingly convinced.
Our baddies are the Skeksis: bird-like extra-terrestrials
from the man-in-a-suit school of puppetry.
They, too, blow minds with the creative lengths to which the production
teams have gone to make them seem real.
Hours after watching, you’ll still hear the creepy and constant “mmmmm”
of Simon Pegg’s Chamberlain
as the dastardly Lords of the Crystal cross and double-cross each other. And, on that note, the voice cast is stellar –
it’s as much a who’s who of British luvvies as Harry Potter, with Helena Bonham-Carter,
Lena Heady and Taron Egerton all lending
credibility to the project.
The rest of Thra is populated by a menagerie of other races
and creatures, from the Podlings’ comic relief to the land striders’
feasibility as a transport solution. In
fact, every frame of every scene is a feast upon which human eyes can seek
months of sustenance. And there’s me, on
my new sofa, in my new flat, drinking it all in on a 55” OLED. Telly never looked so good. And by telly, I mean puppets. This is fantasy beyond any normal
imagination. It helps to know the plot
of the originating film, as this adds a dimension of narrative tension that certainly
propelled me through each instalment desperate to find out the action. But even without, this Netflix programme
promises and delivers nearly an hour of pure, eyeball-awakening escapism with each
instalment. I’m aghast at the labour
that must have gone into every single shot.
I can’t even be bothered to watch the behind-the-scenes documentary, yet
these people must have laboured for years to craft everything that has gone
into this show. By way of showing
gratitude, we all need to watch this.
Right now. I promise it contains
no references to me buying a flat.
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