Miles Quaritch
Member
Before committing, however, you should be all in on Hardy. If not, look elsewhere, because this is absolutely his show; the camera almost never strays from him.
This is great news.
Before committing, however, you should be all in on Hardy. If not, look elsewhere, because this is absolutely his show; the camera almost never strays from him.
this is absolutely his show; the camera almost never strays from him.
I love Baskets, but that is a weird blurb.
I think Hardy said in his Chatty Man interview that for starters, they won't show genitalia and gore violence since the show is also being aired on FX simultaneously.
This can sound like an odd thing to be disappointed about. But from the trailer, I was expecting genitalia and gore. Not necessarily simultaneously
I was fascinated by the first three episodes of Taboo. Some of the storytelling is muddled, which may well be intentional, and the hints of the supernatural are at times distracting. But still, if you like your historical fiction grim and your cobblestones dirt-caked, if you dont mind looking into some of humanitys bleaker facets, this ones for you.
I love Baskets, but that is a weird blurb.
probably meant the Americans.
Taboo despite its name is mostly, perhaps mercifully, restrained. Its weird and occasionally overwrought, but violence is effectively minimal, and sex is mostly suggested rather than shown, even though a great deal of time is spent in brothels. The show is smart, but not beyond comprehension, and it layers a foundation of adventure, mystery, and solid drama that is ambitious but never boring. Despite its desire to show the dark and gritty aspects of Georgian London, it also has a style to it that is all its own. 4 stars
At heart, Taboo is a melodrama, but a melodrama with superior attention to character detail and finely nuanced performances. It is filled with darkness, danger and mystery, and has a level of quality and import not often seen in television miniseries.
Taboo looks beautiful and has talented people in front of and behind the camera, but its premiere episode is a challenging watch as it's better consumed as part of the season's longform storytelling. Taken on its own, the premiere is often inscrutable, but within the context of later chapters of the story, it becomes much more comprehensible. On the first go-around, this could prove to be the weakest installment of an otherwise engaging TV experience, but on repeat viewings (with the added context of later episodes) its quality greatly improves and it becomes a solid hour of television.
- Sepinwall's reviewAt times it seems the show is shying away from substance in favor of delivering more superficial appeal. And to be sure, if Taboo were fun, perhaps that would be understandable. But Taboo is not fun its grim, dour and self-important. Its odd the show should have spades of atmosphere and talent to offer. But for all its mustache-twirling, it never reaches a cohesive, sharp point of significance. Instead it seems a little like Penny Dreadful and Game of Thrones were hacked apart, and in an unholy dissection, eviscerated for parts. Taboo is a reanimated corpse of prestige drama tropes manufactured darkness, heavy-handed grit, and sexual titillation, assembled with little to no unifying vision.
The series is slow, dark (visually as well as tonally) and unrelentingly humorless. Any of those three qualities on its own would be fine, but put together in service of whats ultimately a trashy, if pretentious, revenge story, its an utter slog, and the biggest creative misstep FX has made in a while.
- Detroit News reviewHardy may want to mix in a romantic comedy sometime soon, if only for his own sanity. But for now, hes got demons to work out and its an exorcism worth watching. 3.5 out of 4 stars
Its a rich mix of intrigues with the occasional bout of brutal violence as Delaney tries to build his own empire and assumedly reclaim his one true love. Grade: B
Hardy may want to mix in a romantic comedy sometime soon, if only for his own sanity. But for now, hes got demons to work out and its an exorcism worth watching. 3.5 out of 4 stars
- THR interviewTell me about James Delaney.
We wanted to kind of create a modern story, some new writing, which felt like it had come from a book that hadnt been found 100 years ago and then see what we could do without any dragons or C.G.I. James Delaney is an explorer, a Machiavellian sort of type. He should run the gamut from heinous to noble. Hes gone so far through barbarousness and savagery that hes come out the other end.
This was the first time you've worn multiple hats on a project. What did you learn about yourself?
It was like university for me because I'd never done a short film or anything like that. I never really finished school properly or got my degree or anything. What was nice was I was allowed to observe from a position of having a relative amount of experience from working with some amazing film directors and talents in my career. But learning to move between departments was different to being employed to participate in somebody else's infrastructure. I learned that I actually feel very comfortable as part of that infrastructure and that there are parts of me that really do enjoy the benefit of being able to look behind the curtain at what the problem could be, whether it's financial or logistical, and help find a solution. When you're working on somebody else's job, you're not allowed behind the curtain so you just get fed a lot of bullshit. Which is cool because you don't need to know necessarily it's not your business but there is a part of me that goes, "But I could help and I really want to help."
Taboo is being billed as a limited series. Would you like to do more?
Yeah, there is a mythology to it so we can and I love being in production. I definitely want to continue down that road. I have no desire to be an auteur visionary director but I do love being part of the machinery and the infrastructure, as well as the writing and acting.
Taboo is a period drama that relishes its cutting and incendiary dialogue as much as the crudest details. Horseshit cakes Londons cobblestone streets, characters spout period-appropriate racial epithets, and despite its FX platform, f-bombs and swear words go un-bleeped. Even Jimmys inexplicable choice to walk around with his thick coat unbuttoned feels like a clever manipulation of a well-known environment to make it intimidating, masculine, and, yes, damn cool. Its an aggressive, fearless, and periodically nasty story filled with men who Delaney wants to kill, and told in a fashion that makes waiting all the more entertaining. Grade B+
Taboo may not end up being one of the great series of 2017, but its good enough that Im willing to stick with it until the end and see how the story wraps. Not to mention that a performance as strong, powerful and, quite frankly, rare as Hardys is something to behold.
Debuting on January 10, Taboo is a visceral, brutish and bloody tale of early-19th century intrigue that is very dark, very dense, truly novel and very much worth watching.
That was a really good start for me, High point being the meeting with East India Company towards the end. that was dripping in atmosphere you could cut with a knife!
First episode was great, Tom Hardy was awesome, love the supernatural elements, can't wait for the rest of the episodes.
How overt were they? Are they a focus for the show, or more of a background thing?
How overt were they? Are they a focus for the show, or more of a background thing?
I think this is pretty spot on too.Completely disagree with Sepinwall, I thought that episode was unintentionally hilarious. No idea what accent Tom Hardy was doing. Sometimes it seemed to lapse into an Irish lilt and others it would verge on going full Bane.
Enjoyed it though and will watch more.
How overt were they? Are they a focus for the show, or more of a background thing?
So far, they are a part of Hardy's character background. Not really a focus but I suspect that they will be more prominent as the show goes on.
They were pretty well placed for me. Really freaky when they did come in but that worked all the better I think.