llywela: (DA-MaxAlec-mission)
llywela ([personal profile] llywela) wrote2007-08-16 09:43 am
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heroes

Still following Heroes on BBC2 each week, and still enjoying the ride. It's really interesting to see how polarised opinions of this show seem to be. Some people rave about it, others seem to get bored and give up very early on, usually citing too many characters and complicated plot as their reason. Me, I'm finding the characters engaging enough so far, not having any trouble keeping up with them all, and the storyline is holding my interest. I'm very impressed by the interweaving storylines of the various characters so far.

I'm always rather intrigued by the way different shows will hook different people for different reasons. I mean, I can usually say why I've become attached to a certain show - usually in mind-numbing detail, if anyone stands still long enough to listen! But I find I can very rarely define why I don't like/watch a show. 'It just didn't grab me' usually covers it, but I never really know why. Maybe because I haven't watched in enough detail to really understand my own reasoning...

It got me thinking about how shows often divide into two categories. The first category is bubblegum. These are shows that are easy for casual viewers to dip in and out of, that can be caught up on and followed with ease without requiring any commitment to viewing, because you are only expected to watch on a shallow, surface level. They are fun to watch, but often unsatisfying on a deeper level.

The other type is the more serious show, the kind with intricate ongoing mytharc plotting and character development. Sure, you can still skip in and out, watch on a surface level, but in order to really get the most out of these shows you have to really commit yourself to watching every episode with brain engaged, to thinking about what's happening, re-watching over and over in order to catch every subtle nuance. These shows can build up a huge cult following, or even a huge popular following, but are risky for networks because they are less likely to capture the casual viewers.

...I'm sure I had a point in there somewhere, but it escapes me now. Anyway. Yeah, I'm still enjoying Heroes. I haven't really attached to any of the characters yet, and long-term I do tend to need at least one character that I'm deeply attached to, who will keep me watching no matter what. But I do care about finding out what happens to them all, which counts for a lot. Plus, it's got the thrill factor of moments like Nathan shooting off into the sky and going supersonic last night, which was very cool and delighted me muchly. Now that Peter has more information and has hooked up with Isaac in search of answers, I'm engaging with him more and being less distracted by his silly hair and droopy mouth. Policeman Matt's wife is distracting me instead because I remember her from her Home & Away days, back when she had an Australian accent. Hiro isn't bugging me as much, although his cute-as-a-button shtick is getting old. So yeah, so far so good.

[identity profile] llywela13.livejournal.com 2007-08-16 10:10 am (UTC)(link)
How wonderfully self-analytical you are! I rarely manage that.

I quite like Isaac, the junkie painter, although I keep feeling like I shouldn't because...junkie *G* I like Claire, too, but less for the character herself and more because I remember the actress in other things when she was much younger, so it's that sense of 'oh bless, she's all grown up' LOL Peter is starting to engage me more now that he's beginning to figure things out. So...I'm not attached to any of them to the point where I really care on a gut level about their fate, but I am beginning to care about finding out how things will spin out for them.

I find, on reflection, that the more 'serious' shows I watch also divide into two categories - the ones with the intense character development, that I watch for that development and the characters. Like SN. And the ones that are less character focused, which I am less attached to, don't worry if I miss, but try to avoid missing because I'm interested in seeing where the plot goes. Entertainment on a deeper level than pure bubblegum, but still fairly superficial. House tends to fall into that category, and so far Heroes does too, to a certain extent, but it might yet end up straddling the divide or switching completely. It's too early to say - I think it is safe to say that I'll give it the full season to make up my mind, though. :)

[identity profile] galathea-snb.livejournal.com 2007-08-16 10:46 am (UTC)(link)
Heh, I tend to think that when we analyse a show, like we do with SN or you with many other shows, there's always a lot of self-analytical insight in those reviews, since we tend to recognise familiar psychological structures in shows and focus on stuff that we relate to the most or that touch us for personal reasons as well as intellectual ones. *g* So I'd say you are pretty self-analytical as well. *tongueout*

With SN it surely is the character development that grips me the most, but I find that the plot is so intricately woven into the characters and what drives them, that I am interested in the plot as well. As with most shows that I obsess over, it's the combination of characters and intriguing plot that completely suck me in. I admit that I have a hard time following a show for the plot alone, when the characters don't grip me, while I have less problems if it is the other way round.