Stu’s Reviews- #603- TV Series – “The Cafe”- Amazon- 2 Seasons

Genre: TV Series

Grade: B+

Notable People: Michelle Terry, Ellie Haddington, June Watson Created by: Michelle Terry and Ralf Little

Title: The Cafe

Review: Cute and quirky English comedy about three generations of very stoic woman running a seaside café in remote Britain. Wonderful cast of zany characters and almost slapstick type of situations. Droll in the finest British comedic tradition. Phoebe Waller Bridge seemed to hone what would become her infamous Fleabag character as aide player on this show. A very nice diversion if you usually watch intense serial dramas , and at around 20 minutes per episode, it’s a refreshing quickie. Two seasons and out, unlikely to return given last season was in 2013.  

Stu’s Reviews- #602- TV Series – “Back to Life”- Showtime- 1 Season

Genre: TV Series

Grade: A-

Notable People: Daisy Haggard, Adeel Akhtar, Created by: Laura Salon, Daisy Haggard

Title: Back to Life

Review: Really offbeat show- sometimes comical, sometimes very dramatic, starring the wonderful Haggard, who is an undiscovered gem waiting to happen. She plays a 40 y/o woman returning to a staid seaside British community after 19 year in prison for killing her best friend……which it’s very unclear whether she did or not. Her indomitable spirit provides the spark against a series of mountainous adjustments. Akhtar is the gentle neighbor who everyone would want on their side in a crisis. Not sure if this is one series off, but may come back. This one is a sleeper.

Stu’s Reviews- #601- TV Series – “American Rust”- Showtime- 1 Season

Genre: TV Series  

Grade: B+

Notable People: Jeff Daniels, Maura Tierney, Alex Nuestaedtner, Created by: Dan Futtermen

Title: American Rust

Review: Dark and foreboding drama set in the far reaches of Western Pennsylvania coal country. Daniels shines as the lonely and depressed Police Chief, hiding/running away from a past as a Pittsburgh Detective. The critics really did not like this show, for reasons I can’t really understand. It is a bit slow moving, and, at times, a bit predictable. But, Daniels is a tour de force (as always) in a complicated role and the supporting cast is really good. The cinematography brilliantly captures the area’s fade and despair, and the music is dead on. Nuestaedtner shines as confused former town football hero, stuck in his home town and charged with murder. I anticipated Sundays each week to see the next installment. Anything with Jeff Daniels is worth watching. Season finale left the door open for another season.

Stu’s Reviews- #600- THE BIG #600- Book – “Another Kind of Eden”- James Lee Burke

Genre: Book   

Grade: A

Notable People:  James Lee Burke

Title: Another Kind of Eden

Review: It’s 1962 and a drifter finds his way to Trinidad, Colorado; a troubled Korean War veteran and would- be writer with demons galore. This is the setting for Burke’s 40th novel- a standalone book with all kinds of wisps and thread to his Bayou Robicheaux and Old West Holland series. Although a novel, this is clearly centered on Burke’s origin story, and it’s a potent piece of writing. The Denver Post has called Burke “America’s Best Novelist”, and Michael Connelly says he is “the heavyweight champion of fiction” (from the cover quotes). Though I think there is some room for debate on this, it can’t be far off. Burke is a combination intellectual literati and roughneck American everyman. His prose is not for everyone- you sometimes need a thesaurus to read a sentence (incubus? succubus…. the kind of words that appear regularly), but his wonderful storytelling with deep dark foreboding about evil and the purpose of man, along with a firm sense of America’s historical roots and their lasting effect on us (think slavery and Indian annihilation). This book is loaded with myth, symbolism and spiritual guide-seeking, all wrapped up in a coming of age story of young Aaron Broussard Holland. Check it out and be patient with it…it’s a marvel.

Stu’s Reviews- #599- TV Series – “Mare of Easttown”- HBO Max- 1 Season

Genre: TV Series  

Grade: B+

Notable People: Kate Winslet, Julianne Nicholson, Jean Smart, David Denman, Created by: Brad Inglesby

Title: Mare of Easttown

Review: Quirky seven-part mini-series that the critics were mixed about, but we found quite watchable. Winslet is a depressed detective in a small working class town in the northeast with lot of baggage. Complicated plot with lots of rough family dynamics. Shot grey and gritty and good ensemble cast performances. Dialog seemed over the top at times and the last episode seemed superfluous, but I was drawn into it. Masterful performance from Winslet in a real role departure for her. One and done, I think.

Stu’s Reviews- #598- Book – “City of Dark Corners”- Jon Talton

Genre: Book 

Grade: A-/B+

Notable People:  Jon Talton

Title: City of Dark Corners

Review: Like Noir? Read Talton. The creator of the Detective/Historian David Mapstone series, once again sets his sights on Phoenix (he is fifth generation Arizonan), but this time in the 1930s at the height of The Depression. Talton lovingly depicts the beginnings of transition of his beloved Old West small dessert town to the lavish retirement oasis that it would soon become. Along with the remarkable development came all sorts of shadiness, graft, mob rule and dirty police work. Talton captures it well while weaving in a hell of a yarn. He also manages to capture the angst of the time and many of the more famous Phoenicians, such as Barry Goldwater, Bugsy Seagal and Del Webb. Dark, but comforting.

Stu’s Reviews- #597- TV Series – “Only Murders in the Building”- Hulu- 1 Season

Genre: TV Series  

Grade: B+

Notable People: Steve Martin, Martin Short, Selena Gomez, Amy Ryan, Nathan Lane, Tina Fey, Created by: Steve Martin and john Hoffman

Title: Only Murders in the Building

Review: As you can see, it is quite the Broadway oriented cast for this light and whimsical murder mystery set inside the kind of Manhattan grand apartment building we all dream about inhabiting. Dialog is snappy, all the acting is the quality you’d expect and the filming is nicely done. May seem a bit slapstick for some, and not everyone has a taste for Martin Short. But, Martin is aging gracefully, Gomez is a good fit and Amy Ryan steals the show as an aging, sexy bassoonist. No world changer, this one, but nice short viewing each week. Given the season finale, it is clearly coming back for a second season.

Stu’s Reviews- #596- TV Series – “McCartney 3-2-1”- Hulu- 1 Season

Genre: TV Series 

Grade: A

Notable People: Paul McCartney Created by: Rick Rubin

Title: McCartney 3-2-1

Review: Absolutely brilliant six-part series (1/2 hour each) on the music and times of the iconic former Beatle. I have never been a Paul fan- am solidly in the John camp on the Beatles divide- but this series changed my view of sir Paul immensely. What a joy ride through the development, fruition and end of The Beatles. Whatever junk Paul had with his soul brother, John Lennon, is now long gone and replaced with brotherly love. The film clips and recordings are amazing and Rubin is masterful at teasing Paul out and using his mixing board to show us the intricacies of the Beatles catalog, along with Paul’s alter work. Rubin is master record producer himself and an obvious adoring fan. Loved this guy, and loved this show.

Stu’s Reviews- #595- Book – “A Private Cathedral”- James Lee Burke

Genre: Book    

Grade: A-

Notable People:  James Lee Burke

Title: A Private Cathedral

Review: “I’m talking about those moments when you strip your gears, whether you’re chemically loaded or not, and get lost inside the immensity of creation and see too deeply into our ephemerality and our penchant for greed and war and willingness to destroy the Big Blue Marble, and for brief moment you scare yourself so badly you wonder why you didn’t park your porridge on the ceiling a long time ago.”

Are you kidding me? This sentence is form the first page of Burke’s latest in his iconic Dave Robicheaux series….in the second paragraph! Holy Cow. The Denver Post ha anointed Burke as “America’s best novelist”, and though I’m not ready jump on that with certainty, it’s certainly damn close. That said, Burke is not for everyone. You get lots of: these kinds of sentences that may require a dictionary, meandering searches for the meaning of life, ruminating on good and evil and aimless wandering around the historical subconscious of the Louisiana Bayou and the Deep South, in general. Robicheaux is a wonderful character, though by my count, he must be nearing 80 by now, while managing to maybe crack middle age in the stories. And his sidekick, Clete Purcell……. hard to describe, but one for the ages. These books get more mystical with time, and thus a little less believable, but his death defying stories are quite compelling and drag you into a world you probably have never even thought of. This is like visiting a very old friend for me.

Stu’s Reviews- #594- TV Series – “Goliath”- Amazon- 4 Seasons

Genre: TV Series    

Grade: A-

Notable People: Billy Bob Thornton, William Hurt, Nina Arianda, Bruce Dern, J.K. Simmons Created by: Jonathan Shapiro and David E. Kelley

Title: Goliath

Review: the fourth and final season of this film noir TV series was the loudest by far. Full disclosure: I have never been a Billy Bob fan….but this series has given him the role of lifetime, and he has seized the day….Carpe Diem!!!!….Set in San Francisco and focused on the drunken, burned out lawyer who takes on Big Pharma, it is an homage to 1940s filmmaking, from the dark black and white dream sequences to the John Ford Western inserts and the Dashiell Hammet/Sam Spade like streets of Frisco moments…with a 40s sound track to match and so darkly me you’ll want to adjust your TV settings. The final scene set to Jack Kerouac reading his San Francisco blues to Errol Garners be bop piano is for the ages………and The Cast…. holy cow…. Simmons is evil personified in another of his fine acting performance, Dern is still kicking and hard to take your eyes off of, and Hurt…. well, it’s Bill Hurt. Billy Bob shines in this complex and sorrowful role, but the show belongs to Ms. Arianda as Billy’s brash, foul mouthed, unfiltered law protégé. This is a  story foe our time ,and by the end you will  be thinking that this should be happening in the real world, as Big Pharma and the crazed cycle of opioid profit meet their match.