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The Roar.
First
series now showing on U.S. TV (MGM)
It
must be considered rather fitting for a TV series called the Roar
to have launched with the kind of big budgets and deafening marketing
campaign that means that by November, the only U.S citizens to be
unaware of its presence will be two fishermen called Bob living
in Alaska and the Amish.
This particular piece
of expensively produced hokum concerns the adventures of a young
Robin Hood-like youth, but rather than the green and pleasant depths
of Sherwood Forest, young chappie and his cohorts are battling away
in Ireland just before the dawn of the dark ages.
Poor Irish Prince (hereafter
to be referred to as IP) is fighting to unite his land against the
forces of oppression as represented by the crumbling Roman Empire.
These come in the form
of a glamorous Dallas toga-pads lassie who is in control of the
Roman legions invading Ireland and her immortal vampire-like advisor,
a dark sorcerer who can see into the future and keeps on inventing
weapons from the future to be used in the present.
In the first episode
the Roman invaders invent the canon and gunpowder, the feisty Irish
tribesman steal their own arms then copy it, and a great big battle
ensues in which the two sides attack each other throwing coconut
grenades and the like. The Irish are aided by a shipwrecked Sinbad-like
character who started all this trouble anyway by visiting China
a couple of centuries before Marco Polo.
Now then, let's tot up
some of the more interesting points for this series:
- Rome never invaded
Ireland
- Ireland doesn't resemble
obviously tropical Californian forest-land
- Roman legions weren't
led by women wearing toga-pads
- The Irish didn't have
gun powder, canons and grenades
- If the Irish did have
the above, they - and indeed no society - would agree to uninvent
it, forget they made them, and go back to good old honorable swords
- Moors weren't trading
with Ireland in this era
- Celt warriors of this
era didn't sound like they came from Brooklyn
- The Moors, Romans
and Irish all had different languages: they didn't have Federation
translator technology
Guess what we thought
of this marvelous piece of over-priced cinematic genius? Well, the
camera work was quite good. Oh, and the vampire sorcerer was the
only one that didn't walk away from the whole thing looking like
his theatrical tutor must have been a piece of 5X5 plywood.
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