Lifejumper
Member
Oh shit hes doing the next ep? Loved his work on Atlanta.Very excited to see what Hiro Murai does with the next ep. Really talented director.
Oh shit hes doing the next ep? Loved his work on Atlanta.Very excited to see what Hiro Murai does with the next ep. Really talented director.
Oh shit hes doing the next ep? Loved his work on Atlanta.
Oh man. It's that ep of Atlanta directing this weeks? I'm gonna be shitting myself. Fat man is already too scary for me and Aubrey went from hot to I don't want to ever see her again in forty mins last weekThe Devil With Yellow Eyes' new form.
Who was the first guy they showed in the Clockworks circle?
”Legion" Season 1 will have an ending.
Hawley was far more comfortable talking about ”Legion," which is currently airing its first season on FX, than ”Fargo," which doesn't return until April 19. That's not typically the case with creators and returning shows, but ”Fargo" starts a new story each season, making details far more telling than for ongoing series.
But Hawley doesn't see a big difference in the two shows' storytelling style, drawing an unexpected parallel between both.
”Even though [”Legion" is] a returning show, the first season has to have a beginning, middle, and end," Hawley said. ”That's just good storytelling. You want people to have a satisfying experience."
Hawley didn't go as far to say he wanted the season to stand on its own, but he gave off the impression that Season 1's narrative arc would provide closure related to how it began.
”Mulholland Drive" heavily influenced the tone of ”Legion."
Accordingly, Hawley isn't overly concerned with clarity. Though his first professional writing gigs came on broadcast television, Hawley has distanced himself from that mindset.
”Clarity in broadcast television is you have to know what's coming, you have to watch it happen, and then you have to talk about it happening," Hawley said. He later noted how broadcast executives have to cater to the ”dumbest" potential audience member at home. His shows do not.
”You don't watch a David Lynch movie for information," Hawley said, noting how some of Lynch's most terrifying scenes defy logic and reason.
”In ‘Legion', I keep referring to that scene in Mulholland Drive," Hawley said about the diner scene featuring Patrick Fischler. ”It's one of the scariest scenes ever filmed for reasons that don't make any sense! [...] By the time you get out behind the dumpster, it's terrifying for no apparent reason, other than it's something uncanny."
3 episodes in. I can't believe how fucking creepy this show is man. The visuals are totally insane. Really liking it so far.
This scene in ep 3 fucked me up lol
Wait, the black spot on the Angriest Boy mask was his mouth? I thought it was a mustache and he was like Adolph Hitler Jr. It didn't make any sense to me but that is what I thought.
Oh wow I thought it was a hitler mustache too lol.Hahaha it is his mouth but I also keep registering it as a Hitler mustache whenever I see it.
It's more clearly illustrated when seen in the actual picture book during the episode where they enter David's memories.
That was a great pilot - how did I miss out on this from the beginning?
I'm impressed by Dan Stevens and didn't see Crawley at all.
- Promo for this week's episode.Season 1: episode 6 "Chapter 6" (Directed by Hiro Murai of Atlanta fame)
David goes back to where it all started.
But is this real or are we in David's mind?
The central element of Legion, much like Mr. Robot, is that it has an unreliable narrator. But even though things are trippy beyond belief or perception in Legion so far, there's a thread of the story that stems from a sense-making core. Meaning, Hawley is rigorously experimenting with what a TV series would look like if it explored mental illness from the inside of a patient's brain, while simultaneously shepherding a Marvel X-Men property where the main character is a mutant with a special power that negates the idea of mental illness (almost) entirely.
So what we have is an intellectually curious creator who doesn't seem particularly interested in the superhero genre unless he can subvert its conventions from the inside and make them fresh and interesting with new purpose and meaning.
That, if you believe Hawley is pulling it off right now and will continue to, is a spectacular example of creativity.
Also delighted its been given the go ahead on a second series, I was a bit worried how mainstream audiences would take to it.
It's easily my favourite show of any of the superhero TV adaptations.
Also delighted its been given the go ahead on a second series, I was a bit worried how mainstream audiences would take to it.