an anon after my own heart!
Tag: replies
Came for the star trek, stayed for a lot of things but the one that got me the most was your nature blogging (under your ‘la vie agricole’ tag. Especially found the wild pig stories fascinating)
omg anon I should ask my mother if there have been any pig updates lately
The latest dispatch from the little farm in coastal massachusetts: seals are returning to their local beach so my father is afraid of sharks, and it’s almost chicken slaughtering time.
Came for the Man from UNCLE, stayed because I really like your personality and spirit.
awww, thank you, that’s sweet! ❤ There will be more TMFU pretty soon, actually, because the housemate who I was watching with has decided to start renting the dvds again.
Came for the goblin emperor art. Stayed for the age of sail obsession.
ahaha I’m always pleased when people who follow me for my intense-but-quick fandoms stick around for the history nerd stuff. 🙂
Came for the Temeraire, stayed for the Trek, age of sail and family stories. (You have singlehandedly got me into DS9.)
Oh, you’ve been here awhile then! I’m so glad to have gotten someone into ds9, it’s still Best Trek in my book. 😀
rosslynpaladin replied to your photo: I always forget that if I take a living room…
HI FRANK
(lol Frank is also how i refer to the st francis statue by my door. I’m not even catholic I just like St francis.)
haha omg St. Francis was my favorite saint as a kid, because, of course, animals. I went to a catholic school for three years and we had a ‘dress as a saint day’ (why did we have this??? in retrospect that is a seriously weird thing for a school to have kids do. thank god no one showed up as saint sebastian) and I dressed up as saint francis and carried around a bunch of beanie babies all day. It was great.
Hey you’re really pretty funny and smart and I have a huge crush on you
aw jeeze anon!!! that is very flattering!
Top 3 museums you’ve never been to but want to visit
oh man oh man picking just three is HARD. um. in no order:
- The Museum of Man (San Diego)
- The Field Museum (Chicago)
- …and The Scott Polar Research Institute Museum (Cambridge), because, hell, I’m just that predictable.
FMK: Horatio, Archie, Bush
ahaha omg okay I would fuck Horatio, for sure, marry Bush, because he seems to be a nice and practical guy, and that leaves…. oh man, sorry, Archie…. 😦
I’m so glad you’re watching the Terror! I’ve always been into terrible adventure stories (Lawrence Titus Oates is a fav of mine, we share a first name) and the Terror looks like it brings all the elements of a classic great adventure gone wrong tale. Can’t wait to start watching myself! Hope you have a great day!
Hi! I hope you’ll have a chance to watch The Terror and that you’ll enjoy it as much as I have! It’s truly a self-contained work of art in a way that great films can be, but even the best TV shows only rarely achieve.
As for whether it brings together all the elements of a classic adventure gone wrong story, I’m…. I’m not sure exactly how to phrase this so as to avoid sounding like I’m criticizing the show, because it’s definitely not a shortcoming, but… ‘classic adventure gone wrong’ is not, at its heart, what The Terror is. While that is the setting of the story, the actual narrative structure is very firmly rooted in the horror genre. I think the show is stronger for it- while they could have not based it on the novel, and just gone straight historical and have the antagonist be ‘the crushing weight of realization that they’ve made a terrible mistake and are going to die slowly and horribly and no help is coming,’ having there be an actual creature hunting the characters injects an immediacy and tension into the story. It doesn’t lose the grim and inescapable specter of scurvy, frostbite, and slow starvation, but it takes that historical reality and adds the classic horror trope ‘being prey’ to it. The creative team of the show strike a delicate balance between these two very emotionally distinct sources of conflict, and use the interpersonal conflict between the characters to connect them. It’s deftly handled (and very impressive) writing, but the overall effect is a story that has a very different emotional arc than, say, the story of Scott’s last expedition or the wreck of the whaleship Essex.
TL;DR: The Terror uses the ‘expedition gone wrong’ as a springboard but has the narrative conventions of the horror, rather than adventure, genre. And I think the end result is great!