Так бывает забавно иногда почитать их тв-обзоры...
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Свежак из NYTimes:
"Hey, ladies! That Sapphic soap "THE L WORD" is back (Showtime, tonight at 10), and in fine form. The stormy couple at the show's center, Bette (JENNIFER BEALS) and Tina (LAUREL HOLLOMAN), have been reunited by the birth of their baby; Shane (KATHERINE MOENNIG), the lothario, has seemingly been tamed by Carmen (SARAH SHAHI); Jenny (MIA KIRSHNER) is still bonkers, though less so than in the Season 2 finale, when she engaged in an orgy of self-mutilation".
А это из статейки одного телекритика:
The women of "The L Word" do resemble real people, but only if those people's parents were muses named Turmoil and Drama.
I feel for "The L Word." It's been criticized by hetero hate groups for depicting homosexual characters, and it was criticized by columnists in its first season for not introducing a broader spectrum of lifestyles. But the start of the third season is loony tunes. Most characters are volunteers for ridicule. In one hour:
*Alice (Leisha Hailey) stalks her ex, tries to drive the ex off the road, cries during yoga and destroys camaraderie wherever she goes.
*Tina (Laura
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Holloman) and Bette (Jennifer Beals) argue during a session with a sex therapist who wears a red clown ball on her nose.
*And Bette doesn't even try to make a good impression on a social worker (the great Cynthia Stevenson), whose job is to judge if Bette may be approvable as the adopted other mommy of Tina's daughter. Bette makes no apologies that there are sharp things all over their baby's home, no toys and no crib.
"Let me just review," the social worker says of Bette. "No baby-proofing. Passionately unemployed. Harbors sexually explicit, anti-patriotic propaganda masquerading as art. What about men? ... Will she ever rub her cheek up against a scratchy unshaven face, play with the curly hairs on his chest or his back?"
"The L Word's" convoluted setups and insulting images of lesbians waste the good talents of all sorts of actresses, though I suppose I'm glad they're getting paychecks.
Someone may claim "The L Word" is worthy for its comically dramatic depiction of women, but the only laugh during the season premiere is when the name "Chewbacca" is used as a euphemism for the female tuft.
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