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Member |
Anyone watched (watching) this series? If not, do it, the first season is just 6 episodes so you can barrel through them pretty easily. Great show in my opinion, my only bitch is the blatant and persistency of shoving gay shit in our face, but since these books were written before that was the standard, I guess they can get a pass. Basic story, 2 losers get into some serious shit with a group of hippies and some psychos. It's a funny show but serious at the same time, seriously worth looking at. ------------------------------------ My books on Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/William-...id=1383531982&sr=8-1 email if you'd like auto'd copies. | ||
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Glorious SPAM! |
I watched the first season and enjoyed it. Recording the second season now. Worth a watch. | |||
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Charmingly unsophisticated |
I liked it. I didn't see the blatant/persistent gay stuff though. Yeah, there were a few cracks about early on, but if my best friend were gay, I'd make cracks too. LOL Only time it went kinda overboard was when the 'peaceniks' and the psycho found out about it. But yeah, it was a fun series. _______________________________ The artist formerly known as AllenInWV | |||
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Evil Asian Member |
Joe R. Lansdale has always been one of my favorite writers. I was a fan since his earlier stuff in the '80s when he wrote a bunch of dark twisted disturbing horror stories. He burned out on writing those and switched to pulpy Southern Gothic crime fiction like the Hap & Leonard series, which I also really enjoy. I think the TV series does an impressive job of adapting the books. I even like James Purefoy's performance as Hap, and I really was annoyed by his all-powerful serial killer character in The Following. The guys that produce the TV series also adapted Lansdale's Cold in July into an excellent film in 2014 starring Don Johnson, Sam Shepard, and Michael C. Hall.
One of the things I like about the Hap & Leonard world, at least in the books, is that EVERYONE has a dry snide smart-alecky mouth, no matter if they're a 6-year-old kid or an 80-year-old grandma. | |||
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Member |
It was the scene with the nurse, but I have seen worse, like sense8. ------------------------------------ My books on Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/William-...id=1383531982&sr=8-1 email if you'd like auto'd copies. | |||
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A teetotaling beer aficionado |
Watched the first season and thought it was pretty good. I might pick up on it again at some point. Men fight for liberty and win it with hard knocks. Their children, brought up easy, let it slip away again, poor fools. And their grandchildren are once more slaves. -D.H. Lawrence | |||
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Member |
I thought it was fantastic. The characters were just abnormal enough to be really interesting. The villains even more so than Hap and Leonard. And it takes some doing to be farther off than a conservative, gay, black, Vietnam veteran, country music fan in the 80s. __________________________ "Sooner or later, wherever people go, there's the law. And sooner or later, they find out that God's already been there." -- John Wayne as Chisum | |||
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Member |
I thought it was great. The characters were just off beat enough to be really entertaining, without being too far divorced from reality. The villains were really out there - and it takes some doing, to top a conservative, gay, black, country music loving, Vietnam veteran. __________________________ "Sooner or later, wherever people go, there's the law. And sooner or later, they find out that God's already been there." -- John Wayne as Chisum | |||
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Diogenes' Quarry |
He's still writing horror fiction...I buy just about everything he publishes, and I'd guess it to be around a 60/40 split these days (w/ mystery/suspense at 60). The horror stuff does tend to be mostly short fiction, though -- that said, however, he did just come out with HELL'S BOUNTY, a "weird western" horror novel.
That's one of things that, for me, has progressively turned me off the Hap and Leonard series. I recently put down HONKY TONK SAMURAI because it just got to be too much, and though I have it in my to-be-read pile, I'm wary about picking up his newest, RUSTY PUPPY, for the same reason. I'm a Lansdale fan from the earliest days of his career, but even for me that shared voice/tone/patter that all his characters seem to now share is getting to be too much. | |||
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Evil Asian Member |
That's cool. I remember when Lansdale said he was going to dial back his horror because he didn't have that mindset anymore. Is his horror not as dark anymore, e.g. torture, cannibalism, people eating zombie whales and turning into rose monsters, God of the Razor wearing human heads on his feet, etc.?
Now I'm curious! I'll have to track that one down. I wonder if that bother me too or not. | |||
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Diogenes' Quarry |
On reflection, it's probably 75 / 25 these days, with horror the latter. I looked at what I've bought over the last decade of his work, and there does seem to be a more substantive shift than I'd thought earlier. And, no, no more God of the Razor stuff, though there was a recent'ish anthology around that character. His horror output of late seems to be in the weird western variety or wild steampump (e.g. FLAMING LONDON, etc.) or in the form of short stories in various anthos (and his own collections and editorial work). His full-length work -- even novellas like the recent COCO BUTTERNUT -- are indeed more mystery/suspense oriented.
Probably not if you just read one/two/three...but after close to ten of these Hap & Leonard novels, it's gets a little old...plus I think that's an authorial quirk that has gotten worse as time has gone on, as I don't recall having this issue with his work in the earlier installments of the H & L series. | |||
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quarter MOA visionary |
I just caught this show and already on Season Two. Pretty good stuff. PS...It also annoys me about the gay shit too but everyone is cramming it on every show now. | |||
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