Friday 19 January 2018

Thoughts on Acting and Production


Mulling over an upcoming stage production of Shakespeare's The Merchant of Venice.  Who to cast in the role of Shylock is always a tough call.  Getting an actor who cannot balance the comedic aspects with the grim tragic overtones of the role would diminish the role,  one of the more complex characters Shakespeare has created,  particularly for a modern audience. Unintended it may have been, but the Bard’s play probably poses more questions and challenges for modern audiences than those of his time. I can think of no better question to summarise the play than that asked in Act Four Scene One by Portia in one of her more politically correct and lucid (read as not blinded by love) moments, “Which is the merchant here, and which the Jew?”



Being me,  thinking of the role triggered other thoughts on acting and interpretations. In a way, part of the attraction of acting and indeed, part of the dynamics of acting,  lies in the element of conviction.  This element is a part of good salesmanship and being a good liar; to convince your target,  it is often necessary to convince oneself.  As much as that smacks of drinking the Kool-aid,  it is necessary to project the confidence.  A Korean actor, Gong Yoo,  said in an interview in 2017 https://youtu.be/ungTrlhrJa8 that part of the liberating attractions of acting lay in the ability to lose oneself in the character.  That is the double-edged sword of the art of acting. That is the reason why some actors go into a deep funk during and after a certain role; losing oneself in a role is both liberating and stifling.  That said,  each actor injects a part of him or herself into the character they play, that is why the same lines emerging from the mouths of different actors have different impact (or effects) and constitute different interpretations.


Acting in that sense is a dialectic;  a tug-of-war between how much of one's self to lose and how much to assert.  That is also why relationships are easily formed (and sometimes lost easily) in the entertainment industry.  Apart from the proximity factor (being thrown together constantly and intensively in a relatively short period of time),  there is the character immersion imperative.  Of course,  no one is denying the existence of physical attraction or real emotion, after all,  most actors tend to be more physically attractive than the general population. LOL stating the obvious is a necessity at times.


Lol the myriad of thoughts from one role….

Sunday 14 January 2018

Rhapsodies on Windy Nights 4

The latest installment in my music and poetry series.

Have a listen to my singing and lines from T.S. Eliot's The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock on Soundcloud.

https://soundcloud.com/judith-loewe/rhapsodies-on-windy-nights-4 

And to soothe the ears here's the link for the excellent instrumental I found online https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=ahjggbS-W1g

And for those who couldn't figure out which song I made unrecognisable (for shame, really that bad huh??)


Monday 1 January 2018

Review of Korean Drama Goblin


The following is a short review of the Korean drama Goblin.  For more detailed reviews and recaps,  do visit sites like Dramabeans http://www.dramabeans.com/tag/the-lonely-shining-goblin/.

While this review tries to be as objective as possible,  subjectivity is restricted as this reviewer has watched the entire series at least three times,  LOL holiday binge watching redefined.


What struck a favourable chord

Goofy humour that ranges from goblin vs  grim reaper rivalry to pop culture jokes and implicit references to lead characters’ other works.


The quirky characters depicted in this series seem to prove my theory that the best Kdrama protagonists are at the very least quirky, at best (and in the most polite descriptive terms LOL) neurotic man-child entities. The level of juvenile humour and behaviour may jar at times with the serious themes or tries to explore but I guess the distance provided by drama really helps impart humour to situations that would otherwise be aggravating.

Tear-wringing cliches such as when the female protagonist dies and the Grim Reaper mourns her with a reflection that asserts the existence of a cruel capricious God,  akin to the God of the Old Testament: “To the cruel question thrown out by God,  she gave a sad answer.”


Jarring notes

The theological/mystical elements



The gods shown in the drama are alternately capricious, generous and cruel. While immortal, omniscient and omnipotent, the gods in this series are oddly human. The depictions of afterlife seem to faintly echo Dante's Divine Comedy in its structure of Inferno, Purgatorio, and Paradiso. Personally, I found the other dimension of nothingness to which the Goblin is banished closest to the wasteland which is devoid of God.


There is a tiny bit of logic malfunction when it comes to concepts of time.  For God and immortal beings,  would time matter?  Time matters only when it is finite and when the subject is mortal/human. To be immortal is to be outside of time, making time meaningless.  But hey,  I have no problems shutting down logic in the face of pure entertainment and fun LOL 😄

The glut of product placement slots

Be warned,  directly or indirectly,  there's product placement almost every 10 minutes. And I'm not talking about references to the actors’ other works such as Train to Busan, nope,  it is like they decided to run commercials without the commercial break.  Beer,  sandwiches,  cameras,  the list is endless. Subtlety is not an art this series explores. Hence,  prepare to be exasperated halfway through.

The age gap question

Frankly, I'm not too bothered by the age gap issue, the crux of the problem lies in the way multiple roles are blurred. I've seen seedier real life versions of such pairings and the reel version doesn't come close to freaky. What is discomfiting is the fact that the male lead seems to act as both lover and father figure, comforting the female lead like a child even after their amorous roles are confirmed. Age play between consenting adults is a matter of personal preferences, but the ambiguity here is what creates discordance.


Overall

While uneven in certain areas of its narrative, the series is redeemed by the “aesthetic” aspects;  plainly put,  audiences are likely to be too busy noting the beautiful presentations to note the flaws.
Of course, this has much to do with gorgeous photography as well as the leads who are easy on the eye. Yet,  the cast is not the most apparent eye candy selection. There are plenty of "prettier" and more "gorgeous" Korean actors and actresses in the highly competitive world of Korean entertainment. It is the ability to be versatile and largely natural that helps this cast rise up the ranks.



Conclusion

Watch and enjoy!

Will you be a Kdrama fan?

LOLZ