Stu’s Reviews- #737- TV Series – “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel”- Amazon -5 Seasons

Genre: TV Series

Grade: A

Notable People: Rachel Brosnahan, Alex Borstein, Michael Zegen, Marin Hinkle, Tony Shalhoub, Kevin Pollak, Created by: Amy Sherman- Palladino  

Title: The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel

Grade: Ending it’s brilliant five-year run with a bang this season, this dramedy features Brosnahan as a relentlessly aspiring comic in late 1950s-early 60’s New York- in a male dominated world. Dead-on period piece captures everything it should about a very optimistic time in our history; post war boom- pre-60s tumult. The sets and costumes and music are all fabulous. The feel of the time period is so right it makes me nostalgic for my childhood. Brosnahan in a tour de force in the title role-so good that is hard see her in other roles and get over her being Mrs. M- funny, droll, acerbic, sexy…she is he whole enchilada. The two sets of parents are unbelievably right casting- especially the wacky Shalhoub (Monk) and Pollak as dueling fathers in law. Borstein as the cantankerous agent is a bit much at times, but owns the part. I hate to see this one go- magnificent and relevant TV, and even offers a rendering of the great Lenny Bruce.

Stu’s Reviews- #736- TV Series – “Catastrophe”- Amazon -2 Seasons

Genre: TV Series            

Grade: A-/B+

Notable People: Sharon Horgan, Rob Delaney, Created by: Sharon and Rob

Title: Catastrophe

Grade: Very witty half hour show featuring these two nutcases; he a runaway businessman from the states, she a clock ticking madwoman from Ireland- who meet in London, have a shag and wind up pregnant and married. The chemistry between these two is amazing, and I was shocked to learn they are not an actual couple. Snappy repartee, great storylines and very funny execution. This is a sleeper. Already produced foe two more seasons –not yet showing up on Amazon but apparently available.  

Stu’s Reviews- #735- TV Series – “Jazz by Ken Burns”- PBS -1 Season

Genre: TV Series       

Grade: A+

Notable People: Ken Burns, Lynn Novak,

Title: Jazz

Grade:  I simply run out of accolades for Burns’ incredible documentaries of American life in all its forms. Watched this in dinner installments over a six-month period and was riveted by every moment of its 10 episodes and 16 hours. Makes a solid case that Louie Armstrong and Duke Ellington are the most significant figures in American, and maybe all, 20th century music. The footage is incomparable, the narrating brilliant and the interviews- oh, my- completed around 20years ago, it features some of the true greats before they passed, like Artie Shaw and Dave Brubeck. Must watch TV.

Stu’s Reviews- #734- Book – “The Hidden One”- Linda Castillo

Genre: Book    

Grade: A-

Notable People: Linda Castillo

Title: The Hidden One

Review: another entry into the wonderful Kate Burkholder series. Kate is the Chief of Police in sleepy Painters Mill in Ohio- in the heart of Amish country, and she is an escaped Amish, having left in her youth, and returned as an adult. This one involves the murder of an Amish bishop in nearby Pennsylvania, and the suspect is someone with whom Kate was very connected to growing up. Filled with passion and nuance and brilliant descriptions of the place and the culture, the books are great mysteries and mini- travel adventures. This is the 25th in this unusual series and no end in sight.

Stu’s Reviews- #733- TV Series – “Daisy Jones and The Six”- Amazon -1 Season

Genre: TV Series  

Grade: B+

Notable People: Riley Keough, Sam Claflin, Camila Morone, Suki Waterhouse, Josh Whitehouse, Sebastian Chacon, Timothy Olyphant, Created by Scott Neustadter and Michael Weber

Title: Daisy Jones and The Six

Grade:  1970’s rock and roll stardom comes to life in this part fake documentary/part drama about a top of the world rock band flaring out amidst all kinds of interpersonal drama. Seemingly loosely based on the Fleetwood Mac decades-long soap opera, it feels like a genuine dramatic look at the time and culture- but with interviews from the principles looking back at what happened from today. A bit formulaic and, at times, a tear jerker, but the music is really good (the cast can play and sings really well) and the archetypes are dead on. Keough and Claflin have undeniable chemistry and Olyphant is perfect as the seen-it-all hippie road manager (check the hair). One and done season.

Stu’s Reviews- #732- Book – “Bruno’s Challenge”- Martin Walker

Genre: Book  

Grade: A-

Notable People: Martin Walker

Title: Bruno’s Challenge

Review: Walker continues his wonderful and long running Bruno series with this installment of short stories. Brilliantly se in the Perigord/Dordogne region of France and overlaid with a fantastic sense of place, history and culture-  Bruno carries out his Chief of Police duties whilst saving damsels in distress, raising half the children in town and coking gastronomically extraordinary meals with his collection of eccentric pals. This series has been going for almost 20 years, and this is just a nice addition with little vignettes from throughout the life of the stories. If you are a serial reader, start at the beginning. If not, this might be up your alley-short, sweet and delightful.

Stu’s Reviews- #7301 TV Series – “My Beautiful Friend”- HBO -3 Seasons – Italian with sub-titles

Genre: TV Series 

Grade: A-/B+

Notable People: Gaia Girace, Margherita Mazzucco, Created by Saverio Costanzo

Title: My Beautiful Friend

Grade: Based on the first of four wildly popular “ Neapolitan” novels by Elena Ferrante, the series follows the lives of two girls in post second world war Italy. Fraught with backdrops of post war chaos, the rise of fascism and the local pallor of the Mafia, the how covers four decades in their lives. The extreme loyalties, conflicts and complicated friendships of the times and of the Sicilian temperament, make for unusual scripts. The acting is excellent, the setting exotic and the story lines captivating, though very slow moving- more cerebral than action. Can be very depressing at times, but overall, quite worth the watch.

Stu’s Reviews- #730- TV Series – “1923”- Paramount Plus -1 Season

Genre: TV Series     

Grade: A-

Notable People: Harrison Ford, Helen Mirren Brandon Sklenar, Darren Mann, Julie Schlaepner, Brain Geraghty, Amina Nieves, Created by Taylor Sheridan

Title: 1923

Grade: The second and most recent prequel to the Yellowstone megahit franchise is the prolific Sheridan’s effort to bring the Dutton family forward from 1883’s trek west (the first prequel) and now settled in Montana and dealing with the post-world war one carnage and dangers of the emerging West. Wonderfully filmed with great attention to detail, very strong scripts and surprising quality performances from Ford and Mirren. Shockingly short first season, that end with a clear implication to continue- but who knows-can they get Ford and Mirren back again? Though there is some formulaic element to this whole franchise-the quality is so good-it is hard not to want more– 1943?

Stu’s Reviews- #729- Book – “Cuckoo Cloud Land”- Anthony Doerr

Genre: Book               

Grade: B-

Notable People: Anthony Doerr

Title: Cuckoo Cloud Land

Review: got this book as a birthday gift a year ago from my daughter-lost it-searched everywhere and found it while unpacking on mountain return a year later. Thus, was pretty excited to get at it, especially after reading Doerr’s extraordinary Pulitzer-prize winning first novel, “All the Light We Cannot See”. Well, bummer. Firstly, it is over 600 pages, and although I do believe Doerr is quality writer, I was pretty sure I was done after 50 pages. But, being a glutton and stubborn, I pushed through the whole thing-never feign any better really about it. From what I can make of it, it is a takeoff on an ancient Greek novel that was rediscovered in partial form 1500 years ago, and is a fantastical and sci-fi-ish account of a Homeric journey. So, Doerr takes this metaphor or parable or whatever the hell it is, and spins about a half dozen story-lines on differing characters in alternating chapters, in ancient Greece, in 1400s Constantinople, in modern day Idaho and on a spaceship from earth on a 100 plus year journey to another solar system. All of it is somehow related to this Greek text and to Libraries…don’t ask. Give it a try if you are a better reader than i. Dazed and confused-on to simpler things

Stu’s Reviews- #726- Album – “All Roads Led Home “- Molina, Talbot, Lofgren & Young

Genre: Album  

Grade: B+

Notable People: Ralph Molina, Billy Talbot, Nils Lofgren, Neil Young,  Produced by: M,T, L &Y

Title: All Roads Lead Home

Review: Three of the four surviving members of The Horse, Neil’s forever backup band, got together over this past winter and laid down these tracks. Molina and Talbot have been the rhythm section and and hearts of Crazy Horse since the late 60s and a teen age Lofgren replaced the deceased genius Danny Whitten after the latter overdosed (The Needle and the Damage Done). Of course, Lofgren went on to be not only Neil’s second fiddle but then Bruce’s. They enticed Neil to contribute a song to the album, and he reputedly plays back ground a on a number of other cuts. The lead vocals are split between the three and are mostly kind of quiet Horse dreamy types- not the blast of what might be world’s greatest garage band of all time. Neil’s one song offering is classic- close your eyes and it is 1973. I was delighted to see these guys still upright and putting out a record after so many years, though, in fairness, you probably have to be a longtime fan to really appreciate this music; a bit dated and minimally produced. But, these guys are top notch musical muse warriors. Viva The Horse.