You really ought to watch The Wire, then. I love The Sopranos, but The Wire is easily the single greatest thing ever created for TV, IMO (Band of Brothers maybe a distant 2nd). It's kind of ruined the rest of TV for me.
On the surface it looks like your average police procedural, but it's about as far from, say, Law & Order or CSI as can be. It takes the drug war in Baltimore as a microcosm of social/cultural systems in the greater world and just lays them bare. It was co-created by an ex-Baltimore City homicide cop and an ex-Baltimore Sun crime reporter, and the amount of local detail is just stunning.
Bar none the best writing and direction I've ever seen. The common thing to say about it is that it's more like a visual novel than an episodic TV show, and it's true in ways that The Sopranos (good as it is) couldn't ever match.
Check out these two very good reviews of Season 1 for a good introduction: 1 & 2
And here are a few words from the creator (David Simon, also writer/producer on Homicide: Life on the Street, which was based on his nonfic book):
Be warned that, like a novel, it's a bit slow to start. It probably won't be till about the middle of the first season that it really starts to hit you, so give it time to sink in.
If you've seen Internal Affairs, don't bother with The Departed... It's almost a 1:1 copy, clearly not what one could expect from a big director like Scorsese...
Agreed. All of the best scenes in The Departed are ripped directly from IA, and then Scorcese adds a bunch of unnecessary bs on top. Still a good movie, but unnecessary if you've seen/liked IA.
I don't know about IA, I liked it but it wasn't very optimal condition when I saw it... tv broadcast went down just in the middle of the movie climax. After thinking about throwing the tv out of the window I quickly used "internet tv" and watched the end of it but I really gotta see it again.
Many people say Departed is a rape but the director IA doesn't seem to think that way. Well I can't comment because I have not seen it yet. Also it's big tribute towards any movie if maybe the most important director currently alive decides to do a remake, though I think Scorsese took kind of "the easy way" this time, he could have done some original script also. From wikipedia:
"Andrew Lau, the co-director of Infernal Affairs, who was interviewed by Hong Kong newspaper Apple Daily, said, "Of course I think the version I made is better, but the Hollywood version is pretty good too. [Scorsese] made the Hollywood version more attuned to American culture." Andy Lau, one of the main actors in Infernal Affairs, when asked how the movie compares to the original, said, "The Departed was too long and it felt as if Hollywood had combined all three Infernal Affairs movies together."[10] Lau pointed out that the remake featured some of the "golden quotes" of the original but did have much more swearing. He ultimately rated The Departed 8/10 and said that the Hollywood remake is worth a view, though "the effect of combining the two female characters in the original into one isn't as good as in the original", according to Lau's spokeswoman Alice Tam."
And I have really missed The Wire. It has the HBO quality stamp and I'm fan of NYPD Blue so I believe I could like it much but I have totally missed it so far. It was shown here long time ago but in the middle of night with zero promoting.
I have a question - it's probably only Americans who can answer it.
Sometimes when there's an advertisement for the next episode of a show, they say "Characters welcome". What the heck does that mean? I know the meaning of each individual word, but put together like that it doesn't make sense to me. It's bugged me for a while now, so would be cool to know what the expression means.
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There are few tv series that I have really liked. The Oz, Babylon 5 and the X-files. The Sopranos is nice too, although the 9pm time was a bit early for my tv time... I never open the tv (unless it is motorsports) before 11pm