Stu’s Reviews- #650- TV Series – “The Girl From Oslo”- Netflix – 1 Season

Genre: TV Series   

Grade: A-/B+

Notable People: Anneke Von der Lippe, Amos Tamam, Andrea Berntzen, Daniel Littman, Created by: Kyrree Johannessen and Ronit Berkowitz

Title: The Girl from Oslo

Review: Very intense Norwegian/Israeli drama that takes place in Gaza and involves a terrorist kidnapping of a Norwegian girl from Israel. It’s a harrowing portrait of life in a constant war zone and the extraordinary craziness and enmity between ISIS, The Israelis and Hamas. Not a particularly pleasant show, but well done, well-acted and gripping. Living here in America, this is a reminder of what life is like in many places. Somewhat brutal experience, this show. Half sub-titled- half in English. Surprisingly, seemed to leave the door open for a second season.

Stu’s Reviews- #649- Book – “Death at La Fenice “- Donna Leon

Genre: Book  

Grade: A-

Notable People: Donna Leon

Title: Death at La Fenice

Review: The fist in this wonderful series. Begun, in the early 90s, featuring Commissario Guido Brunetti of the Venice police. Recommended to me by my all-time book guru (and Freshman English Instructor at Ohio State in 1970!!!, Neil Berms. …..which makes it a given that it is going to be good. There are a lot of these books and I am eager to dive further into the streets and canals of this magical city as the Commissario, who is a bit like Martin Walkers’ Bruno of Southern France, fights the forces of evil with a twinkle in his eye and a shrug of his very, very Italianate soldiers. Great mystery story as an aside featuring the death of a famed Maestro at the Venice opera house. A definite keeper.

Stu’s Reviews- #648- TV Series – “Annika”- PBS – 1 Season

Genre: TV Series   

Grade: B+

Notable People: Nicola Walker, Jamie Sives, Katie Lunge, Ukweli Roach Created by: Sarah Solemani

Title: Annika

Review: Based on the popular Scottish, Annika Strandhed novels, this PBS Masterpiece entry stars the wonderful Walker (Unforgotten, Last Tango in Halifax) as the very in-over-her head newly minted leader of the Glasgow Marine Homicide Unit. Walker is alternately imbecilic, brilliant and hilarious with her mismatched team of investigators. Another in a long line of BBC DI- somethings, it’s worth the watch and promises a second season.  

Stu’s Reviews- #647- TV Series – “We Own This City”- HBO – 1 Season

Genre: TV Series    

Grade: A-

Notable People: Jon Bernthal, Josh Charles, Jamey Hector, Dagmara Dominczyk, Wunmi Mosaku Created by: David Simon

Title: We Own This City

Review: A six-episode mini-series based on the book by Baltimore Sun reporter Justin Fenton, this is the less titillating and more factual follow up to Simon’s “The Wire”. Hector switches sides from his Gangsta turn in The Wire to play a troubled homicide cop here. Bernthal is the clear star as the wacked out and dirty-as –can –be detective who never saw a pound of powder or a roll of bails found in a bust that he did not think was rightfully his. The show, set in the aftermath of the Freddie Gray scandal, walks a line between drama and documentary so lacks the character development and nuance of The Wire, and frankly, is not all that pleasant but it will make your head explode in thinking about the state of policing in America and on the regression in race equity that we are facing. This is filthy, filthy shit.

Stu’s Reviews- #646- TV Series – “Ridley Road”- PBS – 1 Season

Genre: TV Series     

Grade: A+

Notable People: Agnes O’Casey, Rory Kinnear, Eddie Marsan, Tom Varey Created by: Sarah Solemani

Title: Ridley Road

Review: another wonderful book adaptation from PBS Masterpiece- this is a four-part miniseries focused on the post-was Fascist movement in England in the early 60s. O’Casey makes her striking debut as a sheltered British girl from Manchester, who sneaks to London for her adolescent fantasy lover and winds up deep in with her splendid Nazi-fighting Jewish uncle masquerading as a tailor (the always magnificent Marsan). It’s a frightening look at the staying power of the Nazi movement in Europe juxtaposed with the emergence of the swinging sixties in its London birthplace. Mini-skirts meets madmen. A four-part one-time series well worth a watch.   

Stu’s Reviews- #645- Book – “The Beekeeper of Aleppo “- Christy Lefteri

Genre: Book  

Grade: A-

Notable People: Christy Lefteri

Title: The Beekeeper of Aleppo

Review: Quietly moving book I got for my b’day from old friend Deborah, who now lives in the Michigan woods and frequents her local small town bookstore, and comes away with stuff like this. Lefteri is British from Cypriot refugee parents and has composed a heart wrenching second novel about a family feeling fleeing the ravages of war, hate and brutality in Syria- and their incredible journey across continents, and in the face of all odds, to get to England and safety. Not an easy book, and the I found the constant shifting back and forth in time a bit of a challenge, but the ultimate arc of people’s desire to survive and live in a humane way wins the day. This book took me quite a while to finish as its sometimes troubling and you just need to go in short bursts, but we should all be familiar with this, right?

Stu’s Reviews- #644- Film – “The Hundred- Foot Journey” (on Amazon Prime now)

Genre: Film 

Grade: B+

Notable People:  Helen Mirren, Om Puri, Manish Dayal, Charlotte LeBon Directed by: Lasse Hallstrom

Title: Lightweight, but fun film that is surprisingly uplifting. Hallstrom gently takes on European immigration hatefulness in this quirky story about an Indian family, chased out of Mumbai in a coup, that finds themselves stranded in a small mountain town in France after their “brakes break for a reason”. Even though a lightweight, anything with Mirren is worth watching and the two principle East Indian actors, Puri and Dayal, are wonderful. The story evolves around two competing restaurants in this charming, old fashioned village and keeps you gently enthralled ……and hungry. Nothing too powerful here, but a pleasant film to watch.

Stu’s Reviews- #643- TV Series – “Better Call Saul”- Netflix – Season 5

Genre: TV Series                                                                        https://vermontrambles.com/2022/05/07/stus-reviews-641-tv-series-ben-franklin-pbs-1-season/

Grade: A+

Notable People: Bon Odenkirk, Jonathan Banks, Giancarlo Esposito, Rhea Seehorn Created by: Peter Gould and Vince Gilligan

Title: Better Call Saul

Review: What is there to day about the precursor to Breaking Bad, and what is likely the best show on television since The Wire. Odenkirk is pathetically wonderful in the title role and his crisis of faith are so subtle that you can miss them with a blink of an eye. Banks is the master of aging menace, Esposito is evil incarnate and the cast is a miracle. The story never ceases to shock and amaze and the dialog lulls you into sleep mode and then hits you over the head. Odenkirk’ ongoing complex and tortured transformation from Jimmy to Saul is a role for the ages. Miserably, the sixth and final season is currently underway and can be watched on AMC. It will be a divided season with half the episodes now and the reminder in the fall. Say it ain’t so, Saul!

Stu’s Reviews- #642- Book – “The Searcher “- Tana French

Genre: Book 

Grade: A-

Notable People: Tana French

Title: The Searcher

Review: The Irish authors 2020 novel about a Chicago cop who retires and takes his disillusionment to very rural Ireland to live a quiet life amongst the sheep and the bogs but becomes embroiled in age old mysteries and clans. Seductively draws you in with the overlay of peaceful landscape and centuries of tradition juxtaposed with the tension of the intrusion of the modern world in the form of greed and secrecy. Loved the main characters and the descriptions of a place fixed in a long ago time. Surprisingly engaging.

Stu’s Reviews- #641- TV Series – “Ben Franklin”- PBS – 1 Season

Genre: TV Series

Grade: A-

Notable People: Ben Franklin et al Created by: Ken Burns

Title: Ben Franklin

Review: It’s hard not to be bowled over by any Burns documentary and the only slight here is that there is nothing live except a bunch of historians rambling on in present- pluperfect tense that they seem to be enamored with. Unfortunately, there are no survivors to interview for this one. Still, what a story! Franklin (with the brilliant choice of voice over from Mandy Potemkin) was a giant of his time; often believed to be the most famous man the world, from his scientific proclivities to statesmanship to his wicked sense of humor in his writings. Poor Richard’s Almanac may have been the first great piece of satire and he alternately wrote columns pretending to be an elderly preacher, an indentured slave and a cranky old widow. His creativity knew no bounds, and he may be the single person most responsible for the formation of our country and its independence from British tyranny. But, he was also enigmatically quite complex: a committed slave owner well into his last years, an absentee father and husband and a bit of a dirty old man. He discovered and became a lightning rod in all sorts of ways, and the incomparable Burns presents them all. In two- two hour segments that I recommend limiting to an hour at a time of watching-it’s a lot to absorb- but fascinating stuff.