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NETFLIX REVIEW: A SERIES OF UNFORTUNATE EVENT SEASON 3 (2019) | Jazz Blackwell




It'll probably come as no surprise to most that I was something of a Lemony Snicket superfan in my youth (okay, I still am). The weird, gothy little child that I was became really rather obsessed with the weird, gothy tales of the Baudelaire children and their many misadventures. A hot take, but I was also a fan of the 2004 film - listen, I know it tanked at the box office and was pretty poorly reviewed, but show me anything with Jim Carey and I'm probably gonna love it.

I was pretty excited then when, two years ago, Netflix announced that they were making a TV series of the books. While I thoroughly enjoyed the film, I always did hate how much got left out. For those not in the know, the series consisted of 13 books, of which only the first three are covered in the film, with a very different ending to the one given in the books and a different sequence of events. A series had the potential to do what a film couldn't: all 13 books could have a reasonable amount of screen time, and we could get the ending that Mr Snicket (real name Daniel Handler) intended - and boy, did Netflix deliver!

As mentioned previously, I'm in love with Jim Carey, and so I worried about how well Neil Patrick Harris, wonderful though he is, would fill his shoes in the role of the treacherous villain and mediocre theatre actor Count Olaf. Any worries, however, were cast aside in the first episode of the first season: Harris is every bit as comical and sinister as Carey was, and he plays the (maybe not so) iconic role perfectly. Throughout the three seasons, he's only gone from strength to strength: he really brings Olaf to life as the character you love to hate. We don't do spoilers here, but in that scene in the final episode (if you know, you know), I was unexpectedly moved literally to tears; something I'm sure has everything to do with the performances of Harris and of the lovely Allison Williams as Kit Snicket. 

I also love Patrick Warburton - perhaps just as much as I do Jim Carey. Seeing him reprise his role as the series author/narrator Lemony Snicket was always going to be wonderful - but he, much like Harris, exceeded my expectations in this season; giving his most compelling and emotional performance in the series to date, he deserves every possible accolade available in my opinion. The same can be said for Malina Weissman and Louis Hynes in their roles as Violet and Klaus Baudelaire - each of them accurately and brilliantly portrays a child forced to grow up too quickly, in a way that really tugs the old heartstrings. Even Presley Smith - who is literally two years old - manages to give a punch right in the feels with her portrayal of Sunny, the youngest Baudelaire.

As expected, the sound, makeup and effects teams for the series have excelled themselves. I think I'll be able to watch all three seasons on a loop for years and still be amazed at how they managed to make Neil Patrick Harris' Olaf look near-identical to Jim Carey's.  The effects and backdrops are as astounding as ever, with the sole exception of the water in the final episode, though I have an inkling that this was done deliberately to reflect the fantastical and unreal nature of subsequent seasons (though that may just be the over-analytical English student in me). The soundtrack is catchy as ever, with the same eerie-yet-singable 'Look Away' theme tune as the previous two seasons. In terms of writing, the storyline is solid, as expected, with jokes, easter eggs and subtle references aplenty, with even a couple of very amusing fourth-wall-breaks. 

I really have only one criticism of the series and, honestly, it depends on how much of a purist you are. Again, I won't give you spoilers here, but I will issue something of a warning: if you're expecting the same open ending as the books, you may be disappointed. 

Overall, I'd rate this season a 9/10

Keep it weird, 
Jazz xo

NETFLIX REVIEW: THE HAUNTING OF HILL HOUSE (2018)



The latest in Netflix's original horror series The Haunting of Hill House has been something of the talk of the internet lately - and for a number of reasons. Loosely based on the 1959 novel of the same name, the show has been receiving relatively mixed reviews, with some people claiming it was so scary it made them puke and others claiming they were... well, just plain disappointed.

I, personally, fall somewhere in the middle of the spectrum. As a literature nerd and self-confessed Big Ol' Goth™, I was rather excited by the prospect of Shirley Jackson's delightfully frightening 1959 novel of the same name being serialised - after all, the 1963 film adaptation The Haunting was fantastic. If you're expecting something similar - don't. The Netflix series is, to put it bluntly, absolutely nothing like the novel on which it claims to be based. There are nods to the book certainly - through the names of several of the characters and the mention of the 'cup of stars'. But the similarities really begin and end there. 

Instead, the series follows the five Crain siblings - Steve, Shirley, Theodora (Theo) and twins, Luke and Eleanor (Nell). All individually troubled as adults, the series tells its story through a combination of present-day and flashback scenes. The flashbacks depict the summer they spent as children in the titular Hill House, while their parents renovated and eventually planned to sell it. Of course, this is a ghostly-spooky-horror series and, as is the way with such things, all is not as well as it seems in the house, and the siblings are left mentally scarred by their experiences there.

Now don't go getting me wrong. The series is good. Very good. I wouldn't go so far as to say it's pass-out, vomit-inducing scary as some people are claiming, but it's certainly unnerving and, at times, downright upsetting. It's incredibly well-directed, with plenty of scares and "oh my God!" realisations throughout the ten episodes. The casting is also incredibly strong, with the show being incredibly well-acted by the core cast, which includes total-hunk-slash-potential-love-of-my-life Michel Huisman, horror-movie regular Kate Siegel (whose husband Mike Flanagan directed the series) and the ever-brilliant Timothy Hutton. The series also gets major props from me for its LGBT+ representation and it accurate (if harrowing) portrayals of mental illness and drug addiction.

Overall, I thoroughly enjoyed the series and my only real gripe with it is that really, if we want to be pedantic (which I always want), it isn't The Haunting of Hill House at all. It is, however, in and of itself a deliciously spooky series and one I would definitely recommend if you're up for a bit of a scare this spooky season. Overall, I'd rate it a 9/10. 

Keep it weird,
Jazz xo