this post was submitted on 21 Jan 2024
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[–] [email protected] 9 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago) (1 children)

The Wire is almost a cliche to mention but the dialogue is frequently phenomenal.

Frasier has some incredibly well written farces - the ski lodge love pentagram episode is a great example.

Simpsons and Futurama have some episodes that are just gold from start to finish - cape feare, hell is other robots, war is the h-word. The jokes are all so good and so densely packed.

Arrested Development wobbles occasionally but when it's good the writing is so well balanced - over the top while still being subtle.

The Great, season 1 at least. 2 was too awkward for me. I believe it was based on a play though, so maybe that didn't count (I've been ignoring shows based on books).

Veep and The Thick of It have absolutely beautiful dialogue. The swearing, the insults. "Don't mention Israel, Katherine" is a real triumph of a line.

Motherland, all of the characters are so impeccably written, it makes all the petty status games so transparent.

Deadwood has some lush dialogue.

Gavin and Stacy ekes so much joy out of impeccably written normal lives.

Derry Girls and London Irish. Moonboy.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 10 months ago (1 children)

Well I haven't seen many of those shows but I agree with you on the ones I have, Simpsons futurama and AD.

Is there anything specific that sticks out to you as bad in mr.robot?

[–] [email protected] 2 points 10 months ago (1 children)

Mostly it was the cheesiest, most overused "twists" appearing with such mind numbing regularity that I honestly thought it was parody. Hence the M Night Shyamalan comparison. Which also made it feel like a 12 year old boy's idea of deep.

And speaking of 12 year old boys, I remember not being able to tell if the dialogue was supposed to sound like an overly serious 4chan user because that was basically the personality of the main character, or if that was unintentional.

And the daddy issues! Whining about a distant or abusive father figure is the default character arc of US cinema. It's probably an artifact of boomer screenwriters having dads messed up by ww2 but by now it's like a painting of a naked lady on a couch - the single least interesting choice that will fill that space.

I honestly mean no disrespect to people who enjoyed it - it makes no sense to judge others based on the stories they like - but hopefully the above gives you a sense of how i experienced the show.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 10 months ago (1 children)

Those are pretty fair criticisms I guess. I just wasn't as bothered by those aspects and I was more curious to see where the story would end up. Ill check out some of your recommendations. Cheers

[–] [email protected] 2 points 10 months ago

Np! Moonboy might be a good place to start, the writer plays his own childhood imaginary friend. Charming and easy going. If you like politics veep or the thick of it. If you like history try the great.

A lot of it is from the UK or Ireland.