22nd September, 2023: The Intro.
It’s Friday: and … ?
I officially live in a ground floor flat.
And have just seen three — count them, three — whole police vans go past.
Police Technical Support vans, so you know.
Quite what’s happening at the other ens of my street?
I think I’d rather not know!
~≈👼🏻≈~
At any rate … ?
It’s Friday night.
Which means?
Well, as ever, it’s fish and chips for dinner!
Next … ?
I’ll be watching the next episode of Good Omens: then telling you about it, tomorrow.
Assuming we’ve not been arrested.
23rd September, 2023: “The Ball”.
Shax … ? Needs to arrange an invasion: and needs a little help from Furfur.
Meanwhile … ?
In Whickbar Street, Aziraphale (Michael Sheen) is persuading, cajoling, and outright bribing, his fellow traders: into coming along to the monthly Whickbar Street traders meeting.
He has the reluctant help of Crowley (David Tennant): and assorted preparations.
Frankly? Aziraphale’s planning not a meeting: but a dance.
What he doesn’t realise?
Is that Hell has plans …
~≈👼🏻≈~
Now …
What did I make of this episode?
Of “The Ball”?
It has to be said: I miss something!
At least three episodes — “The Hitchhiker”, “I Know Where I’m Going” and “The Clue” — have all had what the show’s producers call a minisode, a mini-story, incorporated into them: something the main part of the episode then expands on.
“The Hitchhiker”, for example, tells us about zombie Nazis: revived, in order to chase Aziraphale.
Those, I felt, added a certain something: a certain amount of heft that enriched each of the relevant episodes.
By contrast, “The Ball” didn’t have a built-in minisode: something I felt weakened it.
It lacked a little punch, I think.
Saying that … ?
Saying that, “The Ball” is a very good episode, in and of itself.
- The acting — unsurprisingly, given this cast — is great: Richardson as Shax, in particular.
- Gaiman and Finnemore’s writing is superb.
- The production, itself, is great: especially as it’s built around a minimum of sets and locations.
And … ?
Inevitably, there’s a nod to the late Terry Pratchett: in the shape of Mrs Sandwich, played by Donna Preston.
She’s a seamstress.
No, not someone who sews for a living!
If you’ve not read Pratchett’s Men at Arms?
You’ll not know that Ankh Morpork, chief city of Pratchett’s Discworld setting, has nine hundred and eighty-seven women who identify as seamstresses.
And two needles.
Mrs Sandwich doesn’t exactly do sewing, lets put it that way.
~≈👼🏻≈~
Sir Terry uses the term ‘seamstress’ constantly, in his Discworld novels: as a euphemism for ‘prostitute’.
It’s something that — as far as I know — stems back to at least Victorian times: or, at least, to the late 1880s.
And it’s something I’ve been aware of for a long time: along side the old phrase, ‘house of ill repute’, as a description of a brothel.
(The one that’s supposed to be in Brentwood? Isn’t a house of ill-repute. On the contrary, it’s quite well spoken of … !)
~≈👼🏻≈~
At any rate … ?
Seeing an old Discworld joke?
For me, was like seeing an old friend at a slightly strange party.
Extremely familiar: and very reassuring.
As reassuring as seeing other familiar signposts in the earlier episodes of this season.
Yes: I, found the lack of a lack of a minisode something of a down.
But yes: this episode is reassuringly good.
Frankly?
I’m going to be back, next week, to watch the last episode of the series.
I’ll be watching the last episode of Good Omens — “Every Day” — on Friday, 29th September: and posting my written and video reviews of it on Saturday, 30th September
I will, hopefully, see you then.
Take care!
“The Ball”.★★★☆
No comments:
Post a Comment