"Better a fallen rocket than never a burst of light."
~ Tom Stoppard, The Invention of Love

Saturday, June 20, 2026

Y tu Luna también: Crow: The Legend (2018)

This story is purported to be an origin myth from the Lenape tribe, although that’s been heavily disputed. It may be a modification of a Cherokee story, or it might have been dreamed up by a white author who claims to have been “retold” it by a Lenape chief. But while the actual derivation of the story is shaky, this animated rendition of it is both entertaining and lovely.

Of all the animals in the forest, Crow is most admired for his beautiful rainbow plumage and enchanting voice. Everyone looks up to him, and when a long cold winter threatens everyone’s well-being, he’s the one they ask to go in search of a solution. He’s indeed gifted the answer to their problem—fire—but getting it back to the forest might require the self-centered Crow to give up something precious.

This is a neat little short. It’s both produced by and stars John Legend, who does a nice job as the Crow with hidden potential that even he doesn’t realize he has. And of course, the singing is on point. The story is gentle, with silly jokes and a nice message backed up by some cool animation—the sights Crow sees on his journey are great. I’ve always enjoyed origin myths, and while it’s a bummer that we’re not sure where this one really came from, I still enjoy the spirit behind it.

As for the rest of the voice cast, Constance Wu is very endearing as Skunk, who’s Crow’s biggest fan but takes him to task when she thinks he can be better. We also get Oprah as The One Who Creates Everything by Thinking, which very much within her recent acting wheelhouse, after she also played Mrs. Which in A Wrinkle in Time.

Diego Luna plays Moth, who’s a fun character. He’s cynical and not the most self-aware, but he’s basically a good guy at heart and tries to pitch in, even when he’s not the ideal animal to do so. A recurring gag of the short revolves around the fact that no one wants him to be the one to go on the quest to save them from winter, since the journey will involve flying past the sun—everyone’s convinced he’ll get hypnotized by its light and fly right into it.

Not a whole lot to this character, but Luna is effective, by turns funny and sweet.

Recommend?

In General – I would. It’s only 18 minutes out of your day, and it’s cute.

Diego Luna – I wouldn’t say it’s a must, but I’d still recommend it. Again, it’s so short that it’s easy to spend a little time listening to Luna’s voice acting as this entertaining character.

Warnings

Thematic elements and maybe a bit of scariness for kids.

Friday, June 19, 2026

Joel Fry-days: Alice and Steve: Season 1, Episode 2 (2026)

*Spoilers from episode 1*

Much like White Van Man, Alice and Steve continues the trend of Joel Fry being good but sparingly used in the pilot, then coming in strong on the second episode. While I’m still not convinced that this show is for me—uncomfortable subject matter, multiple unpleasant characters, palpable levels of secondhand embarrassment—Fry’s performance here is really fantastic!

Despite Steve and Izzy’s promise not to tell Alice about their hookup, it of course comes out. What’s more, Izzy makes it clear to Alice that this wasn’t a one-off—she really likes Steve and wants to make a go of it. Alice is just incandescently angry about this, calling Steve a “pedo loser” and refusing to talk to Izzy when she wants to mend fences. As she and Daniel commiserate wondering what Steve and Izzy would possibly talk about together, Alice hatches a scheme. She invites Steve over for dinner, along with several of Izzy’s friends, hoping to make it clear that Steve is hopelessly out of his depth with young people.

Our character of the week is Steve, played by Jemaine Clement. (Neat to see Joel Fry working with another famous Kiwi! I wonder if Fry’s connections to Rhys Darby and Taika Waititi helped put his name in the casting conversation.) Even though Steve is in the most compromised position here, having slept with his best friend’s daughter who’s half his age, Alice’s wicked combination of passive aggression and scorched-earth rage winds up swinging the pendulum of fault more toward her. Steve is a bit hangdog, repeatedly apologizing to both Alice and Daniel—he tells Alice, “I don’t want you to think that I don’t know how bad this is,” and he assures Daniel that his attraction to Izzy is brand-new. But as Alice arranges the dinner party from hell, it becomes less about what Steve has done and more about how Alice is reacting. As a result, Alice is punishing the crap out of Steve (and to a lesser extent Izzy,) but the actual narrative is going a little too easy on him.

Oh my god, it’s painful. It’s so painful!! Alice is all smiles at dinner but wastes no opportunity to get her digs in. No matter what the conversation is, she turns it to reflect badly on Steve. Remarks about the environment? “Steve doesn’t believe in recycling.” A discussion about films? “Steve loves Woody Allen!” As the night devolves, Steve wins some brownie points with Izzy’s friends simply on the back of Alice being increasingly rude, crass, and vicious. So despite her very understandable anger about her best friend sleeping with her 26-year-old daughter, Steve somehow becomes the more sympathetic one to the rest of the group.

What’s more, it’s not just Steve who gets hit by her rage. Along the way, she also humiliates Izzy and emasculates the shit out of Daniel. The latter brings us into another troubling wrinkle in the whole thing: Alice and Steve are decades-long best friends, yes, but far back in their history, they used to date. Multiple times throughout dinner and after, Alice brings this up, going so far as to talk about what Steve was like in bed. Her mother, who was also invited to the trainwreck, tells Alice, “He’s your ex-boyfriend who’s probably been in love with you for ages,” and Alice announces to Izzy, “He’s only sleeping with you because he’s a sad old man. And you probably remind him of me!” Like I said, painful.

That’s the mess Alice has dropped Daniel into. He’s very sympathetic to her anger and finds the relationship just as inexplicable, and he’s concerned for Izzy in this whole thing. But as much as Daniel wants to be there for Alice, he’s not on board with her wrecking-ball approach.

This episode gives us a much fuller look at Daniel than the pilot. It looks like he often goes into a freeze response amid conflict—there are numerous scenes where he sits in stiff silence, averting his eyes while Alice ices Izzy out or goes the extra mile to embarrass Steve. He frequently rubs his brow like this is causing him physical pain, and there’s an instance where he covers his face as if he can’t bear to watch. Because Daniel spends so much of his screentime silently witnessing the unfolding disaster, Joel Fry was an excellent choice for this role. The way he uses his physicality throughout keeps Daniel’s perspective present, even when he’s not speaking.

Daniel’s secondary approach is to try and smooth things over, either changing the subject to distract from Alice’s warpath or gently attempting to talk her and Izzy down when tempers flare. Naturally, Alice doesn’t think either of these are good enough. At one point, she yells, “Fucking coward! Daniel, why aren’t you saying anything?” But even if she thinks Daniel isn’t sufficiently loud about his anger, that’s not to say he isn’t upset too. He is. There are a couple scenes between him and Steve where Daniel shifts between tightly-constrained stewing and speaking his thoughts plainly, albeit quietly. When Daniel and Steve pick up dessert for the dinner party, there’s a great bit where we can see Daniel putting himself together to address the cashier. One moment, he’s practically shut down, looking down and nodding as Steve insists he never thought about Izzy in that way before now. The next, he’s walking over to the cashier, taking a deep breath before he musters up a smile and says, “Hello!” in a friendly tone.

God, it’s so well done! Daniel is more than a little repressed, and conflict is clearly excruciating for him. He’s surrounded by people who are much more outspoken and put their own feelings first. Alice emasculates him at every turn (and one of his teacher colleagues does the same in front of a student,) and yet he isn’t just a door mat or a pushover. He chooses his moments—maybe not the ones Alice would want, and maybe he doesn’t go far enough for her—but he can make himself heard when he needs to. In Joel Fry’s hands, it’s compelling to watch Daniel’s reactions, and he never gets lost in the shuffle of the louder personalities around him.

Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Other Doctor Lives: Time: Series 2, Episode 2 (2024)

*Episode premise spoilers, including a few major spoilers from episode 1*

There was already quite a bit of drama in episode 1, and things heat up even more here. I’m curious to see how everything’s going to resolve.

First, let me go over the big spoilers from episode 1. On intake, Kelsey learns that she’s pregnant. At first, she continues to use drugs, but having her first ultrasound makes her decide she wants to get clean. While we still don’t know the exact circumstances (though there have definitely been hints,) the true nature of Abi’s crime is revealed: the person she killed was her own baby. She becomes the pariah of their wing, regularly targeted for threats and harassment. The episode ends with Orla’s release, where she tells Kelsey and Abi, “I hope I never see you again.”

All right, onto episode 2! This wouldn’t be a story about three women in prison if one of them gets out in the first episode, so of course Orla winds up back inside. During her initial sentence, her kids were placed in foster care, and in her desperation to secure a new flat so she can get them back, she steals from the till at her new job. Kelsey wants to marry her baby daddy Adam, not wanting to be “a slag of a single mum,” but she’s warned that marrying a drug dealer could jeopardize her position in the mother-and-baby unit, meaning her baby could be sent into foster care shortly after birth. After getting her face slashed by another inmate, Abi navigates choosing between revenge and forgiveness.

Kelsey is the youngest person we see in this wing of the prison, and most everyone there mothers her to some extent. It’s nice to see her lap up affection and well-meaning, although she can still make shortsighted and self-destructive choices. After touring the mother-and-baby unit, she announces, “I’m moving in there, soon as I can,” and the warden needs to remind her that placement isn’t guaranteed. When Marie-Louise, the chaplain, tries to dissuade her from marrying Adam, Kelsey lashes out, viewing it as the staff conspiring against her.

Across both these episodes, it’s affecting to see Abi’s isolation after her secret is revealed. The other women in the wing routinely ice her out, many of them call her “Baby Killer” to her face, and she locks the door to her cell at night because she’s afraid of getting attacked in her sleep. When Kelsey returns from her second ultrasound, the rest of the women celebrate with a dance party while Abi sits alone in her cell, playing dominos with herself. The exclusion is palpable, but it’s even further complicated because the party is specifically related to Kelsey’s pregnancy. That’s why it’s neat to see a few tentative steps toward connection here. Ever since she arrived, Marie-Louise has been urging Abi to open up—in this episode, Abi takes her up on her offer, but in a way Marie-Louis definitely wasn’t expecting. It leads to a really strong scene of a group talk session.

Then we’ve got Orla. As with the first episode, she’s really struggling and her circumstances are sympathetic, but she also continues to be A Problem. A second go-round in prison shows that she didn’t learn much the first time. She still thinks she can demand exceptions to the rules, without so much as a “please,” and she’s pretty awful to Abi. Even though her crime this time has escalated from “fiddling the leccy” to stealing from her boss, Orla still acts like she’s here by mistake and doesn’t really belong in prison. She cops attitude, she loses her temper, and she makes wildly poor decisions out of desperation.

Because, regardless of her own shitty behavior, Orla’s life is falling apart. Her mom is sick, her kids have been split up, and her oldest son Kyle is pulling away from her. She argues that everything she’s done is to try and provide for her kids, but Kyle thinks she’s just being stupid and selfish. Jodie Whittaker does a really nice job of letting Orla be self-centered, make things worse for herself, and struggle to cope with the most painful experience of her life. She’s not black-and-white, and I appreciate that.