Showing posts with label Quantum Storm Editors Review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Quantum Storm Editors Review. Show all posts

Sunday, December 1, 2024

THE LAST ISSUE OF THE QSE.357 FOR 2024 IS RELEASED!

QSE.357 ISSUE 39 of 10/1/2024

52 Pages

ON THE COVER - Rachel "Wilder" Whaley
Promo Photo by Micro Photography

MAIN ARTICLES

A Busy Year for the QSE.357 - WE have tons and tons of never before released photos and liner notes from cast & crew members regarding several promo photo shoots and film projects. There are some great memories openly shared and a special look back at some issues from 2022 & 2023.

Studio Leading Actors - The QSE Awards for 2024 are out and statuettes are getting ready for delivery! The QSE Awards list is enclosed with a special category for teenage actor awards.

What to expect in 2025 - Every year the QSE.357 E-Mag changes format, always bringing you the best entertainment for all of our subscribers. Our opinionated publication is spreading out to many areas of the globe, presenting stories
from a large number of studios.

 YOU MUST BE A SUBSCRIBER TO VIEW THE FULL CONTENTS THIS NEW 2024 ISSUE OF THE QUANTUM STORM .357 E-MAGAZINE AND FOLLOW THIS BLOG

 Thank you for stopping by!
 

 

Saturday, June 3, 2023

"YELLOWSTONE" SEASON 5 PROVIDES GLIMPSE INTO CREATORS TRUE WEAKNESS

🎥🎞️Series Review🎞️🎥 - YELLOWSTONE [2023] - Peacock - [PG13] - Created by Taylor Sheridan. Written by John Coveny, John Linson, Brett Conrad, Eric J. Beck and Ian McCulloh...but don't let any of those names fool you, Sheridan is in charge of all the scripts, screenplay and the dialog. Stars veteran actors Kevin Costner, Kelly Reilly, Cole Hauser, and upstart actors, Luke Grimes, Kelsey Asbille, and Wes Bentley.

The series covers the life of Montana Rancher, John Dutton, whose family history has established one of the largest ranch in the United States; there are several spin offs that have flourished over the development of the series backstory to present the power and growth of the fictional Dutton family. There's a lot of dirty business that has helped a cluster of the family maintain control of the land against government officials, a local Native American tribe, environmentalists and some dark "mob-type" family rivals who have also established a foothold in the area of the ranch, known to all as Yellowstone. Even though Sheridan created & developed the show, most of the show's impact on viewership has been built by the prominent popularity and addition of Costner as the leading character. Sheridan makes a cameo appearance in the series, but his addition did not boost an increase in viewership.

THE GOOD - There are moments in the series where the drama is thick, the action is super heavy & intense, and the emotions run high. Many of the upstart actors get prime limelight in the series and are given story arcs to help develop their characters; several characters splendor off and are planning to have their own series[?]. The cinematography can be extremely breathtaking, being able to capture a multitude of epic open scenery, nature, wildlife, and environmental atmosphere that can only be described as "magnificently captured."

THE BAD - Costner has lived a life of movie making where completed scripts have given him a sense of direction where the project is going; what the final goal of the project is being developed to reveal. In contempt, he may have confronted Sheridan over the course of the series, which was obviously only planned for five seasons, but it's been alleged that Sheridan has indulged himself in a money grab movement against Paramount, wanting to expand the series to six seasons which apparently angered Costner - who has contracts with other movie studios & working on a new film - and had Costner demand that production on the series end during the fifth season. It's no secret now that Sheridan has shut off production to re-write the scripts to close out the series in the November [2023]. Each season has arranged a large volume of story and plots that seem to jumble about and throw off the series tempo. There is a large array of what I call "cowboy videos" which presents a track from a local country singer, some views of cowboys parading about doing rodeo stunts, and some colorful panoramic views of daily cowboy life. Even though the addition of these cowboy videos may seem to bring a love for the culture, but the fifth season, these little additions to the series have become nothing but filler; red taped video to extend an episode because of a lack of story. There's no doubt about it, and you can sense a little tension and dismay over these filler scenes by watching Costner's performance in the later episodes; he seemed to be dropping the same dialog over and over again. The worst parts in the series is Sheridan's constant presentation of dread that follows any spark of positive reinforcement in the show. At the time of this review posting, Costner has refused to show up for production efforts and his estranged wife was not happy with the progress of the series.

POST MORTEM - In my opinion, Season Five has been a complete waste of time and even though some of the plots tend to build some interest, the writer[s] shift the season in a different direction, completely ruining any momentum the last plotline was producing. This has been a constant weakness that all of Sheridan's projects project during their run. It's seriously becoming tiresome and a wast of series resources. Inner drama will destroy YELLOWSTONE before the final episodes of the series post in November and it's a damn shame too - the blame will be put squarely on Sheridan's shoulders; shoulders that have some big chips propped up on them.

 ⭐️⭐️⭐️💫[3.5 of 5 Stars]

Wednesday, May 31, 2023

"A SMALL LIGHT" TUGS AT HEART WITH THIS DRAMATIC SERIES

🎥🎞️Series Review🎞️🎥A SMALL LIGHT [2023] - Disney+ - [PG] - Directed by Susanna Fogel, Tony Phelan, and Leslie Hope. Written by Tony Phelan, Joan Rater, William Harper, and Ben Esler. Stars Bel Powley, Liev Schreiber, Joe Cole and Amira Casar. Primarily produced by the National Geographic Channel, this series was filmed in Amsterdam, Prague, and in the Czech Republic. The series is based on the true story of Miep Gies, a Dutch woman who risked her life to create an underground railroad with her husband to help save the lives of a family of Jews for two years during WWII.

Otto Frank [Schreiber] is a Jewish-Dutch business man who hires Miep Gies [Powley] build his jam jelly company during the start of WWII. After the war starts to eat up and German forces move into Amsterdam, Otto is forced to hide his family and with the aide of Gies and her husband, hide in a hidden upstairs apartment for two years. Gies does her best to help other Jewish families also escape Holland for neutral countries. There are some dangerous moments that she has to face alone to outsmart the German SS, try to live a semi-normal life, while ensuring the safety of several Jewish families under her care.

THE GOOD - National Geographic did a great job bringing 1940's Holland back to life. The details concerning modern living for that time was impeccable and the costumes deserve a nomination somewhere down the line. I was very impressed with Bev Powley's performance an emotional baggage she carried throughout the series; she should win an award or two for best actress in a mini-series. Her pain was believable and her emotional state during some tense dramatic scenes carried naturally in just her eyes. But I was truly impressed with Liev Schreiber in his performance as mild-mannered Otto Frank. I am not  big fan of Schreiber, but her really took his role to part and his acting was spot on with that of an older man trying to defend his family in the only passive means allowed to him by his religion.

THE BAD - It felt like the entire series was tied down to only a handful of locations during it's production; but keeping things small worked as a mini-series. I understand that the series was based on a book, but I feel like the directors and writers should have took some liberties to show what the German SS was doing behind the scenes. Throughout the mini-series, it just felt like the German SS was running aimlessly throughout the town, finding Jews by accident. Presenting the German SS as the cold, murdering occupational force that they were, planning their next set of arrests and presenting that informants were being forced to provide information, would have made the series far more dramatic and possibly unbearable to watch.

POST MORTEM - This was a brilliant mini-series with many remarkable performances by new upcoming actors. There was a lot of emotional distress caught on camera and the actors [plus the production crew] should be rewarded for their hard work in bringing such a daring and courageous book [and life story] to life. 

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️[5 of 5 Stars]

Friday, January 20, 2023

WHY HOLLYWOOD ALLOWED J. J. ABRAMS TO SINGLE-HANDEDLY DESTROY FILMMAKING

Blog Writer D. R. Quintana
In his early years, J. J. Abrams was a brash and creative project director who  brought solid teams together to bring hit shows to TV like Alias, Felicity, and Lost. From 1998 to 2006, world wide audiences were caught up on his shows, which built up a variety of dramatic, spell bounding, plot twisting, story-lines that kept the fans coming back to new seasons of his hit shows. I guess early on it was just something fresh to see, seeing some interesting character build ups, an entertaining variant of casting changes that bulked up the idea that these new shows were going to reveal something BIG in their final season.

Before Abrams began directing, he spent a few years working on movie sets with screenplay and assisting script writers to polish up each new script dropped on his desk. He had a quick wit with just adding those little things to make scripts read better, driving the screenplay to seem more natural to keep each passing scene flow by flawlessly, giving the each new film a realistic feel for the audiences. When he began to produce films and make creations for TV, he seemed ready to deliver the best ideas that could bring a whole new audience to the networks. And for a while, they did. Each new series he brought to the world, brought him a step closer to the ultimate goal of any series producer; the chance to work on big budget films.

Colverfield Poster
When Abrams sold the idea of the film CLOVERFIELD to Paramount in 2008, claiming the film could be produced in twelve weeks, he was more than excited to get the ball rolling on the film and get a chance to go up against some of the other big films being released later that year. He found Matt Reeves to direct the film and commanded him to begin filming sequences to CLOVERFIELD even before the final script was even completed. Even though Reeves admitted that he had never worked in such a "top speed" environment, he did as he was told; producing scenes out of sequence that weren't even put to script, and then adding them to the film and adjusting the scripts afterwards to officially add them successfully to the entire plotline. And don't forget the flashy lighting in the film and the addition of lens flares that follow in all of the films created and produced by Abrams; I'm sure that you're way over tired of seeing them in his films by now.

But there was one BIG problem with the script and production to CLOVERFIELD, something that also plagued those network show's that brought him up to the spotlight of success in the film industry...the movie lacked a solid ending. As a matter of fact, ALL of Abrams film and network creations all had bad endings, many that pissed off fans who watched his network show's for years; trust me, I was one of them! I watched LOST endlessly and in the final season it was revealed that the entire show was just a dream and that all of the passengers and characters had all died in an opening plane crash from season one. The failure of bad endings would [and still do] plague many of the Abrams new movies. But did he try to fix this one bad issue with all of this past films, of course not. He explained to the big wigs in Hollywood that "fans will watch whatever is tossed at them."

So, when Hollywood decided to give Abrams the keys to the Star Trek franchise and launch it with a reboot. The new STAR TREK movie of 2009 also brought with it a slew of creative problems that would also be noted in every new and old movies led by the startling new producer and director. Fans began to learn quickly that Abrams had absolutely no grasp of technical know-how on how things actually work; i.e. he knows that a key turns the ignition to a car, he knows the gas pedal makes the car move, but has no concept of how a car engine works or how combustion leads to the production of carbon, except that when the car is low on gas it needs a fill up. If you're making a movie about car manufactures and designing a new engine for a car, the concept for knowing how a car motor actually works and how to repair it, are vital.

First of all, in the STAR TREK movie alone, the concept of military ranking, officer etiquette, and advancement eluded the storytelling. Even the ship's concept and designs, required for building realistic sets were tossed out of the window. Bit by bit, the STAR TREK movie was filled utterly with "bullshit" technology that fans began to see through the hype and eventually the movie itself proved that Abrams was way out of his league when it came to writing and creating SciFi movies. His reboot of STAR TREK II, entitled "Into Darkness," was also a complete BUST with Star Trek fans. What's a bigger shame is that newer, more popular actors were brought in to try and save the new film, but that idea fell under harsh reviews and a Rotten Tomatoes Rating that even today wouldn't save anyone's career in Hollywood.

Star Wars VII Trailer Pic
So, how could Abrams escape the fracas of ruining a top notch SciFi franchise? Well, Hollywood decided to give him the reigns to the STAR WARS franchise, where the details on knowing "how things work" were never explained in the first six episodes of the franchise and how presenting military etiquette truly never meant a hill of beans. But the writing to the new scripts for this reboot presenting a complete misunderstanding of the force, how light sabers work, ship's designs, and slew of other odds and ends that Star Wars fans first ignored, but then eventually had to acknowledge that Abrams was again far out of his game. His miserable talent for creating series began to rub off on other Hollywood executives, keeping in mind that "fans will watch whatever is tossed at them" on the big screen. I feel that Abram's true failure with the Star Wars Franchise was his decision to release a trailer to the film that had absolutely nothing to do with the true scenes of the film.

And the philosophy built up and openly shared by Abrams has held him in the limelight now for over fifteen years. He is not the authority in SciFi productions, but his long list of films, his staple amplified on IMDB and his name sharing by the plethora of Hollywood elite will not let this jackass fade away. We are surely in for a long ride and in my lifetime we will see a plethora of Abrams wanna-be's who know that its not about how the ending to their films are delivered, but about the money that fans will bring in just to watch another reboot to another old idea that didn't need to be rebooted. Don't spend your money too soon just to see a reboot that [in the end] you won't like.