TV recommendation thread

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No joke. I've started buying used Blu Ray players because most are internet enabled and people forget to unlink their accounts. Free movies and TV for me!
Thats a dick move, and awesome all at once!:wink::grin::thumbsup:
 
I am.

I like FD. But it's not one of my favorites. It's like the Venture Bros in that it's hilarious, satirical, and mocks the source genre from which it derives (like R&M and Archer).

But VB is about failure, and so too is FD, to a lesser extent. Archer and R&M are not, in the sense that the failure themes are there, but they don't dominate the entirety of the show episode after episode. I don't like failure as a theme. It takes away from the humor and wit, and leaves me with a bitter-sweet feeling where I'm laughing and admiring the writer's genius, but simultaneously feeling somewhat diminished.

I like stories about heroism, even if it's tainted, marred, ugly, or savage. I don't like loss as an aesthetic.

I can understand that.
 
I had flu this week so I stayed home and... once the worst of it was over... binge-watched The Mist. I loved the original story and the movie but hadn't bothered with the show.
It wasn't great, but it was different from the book/movie in significant ways that would make it better suited for a continuing adventure/mystery (and probably more gameable as well). Some of the final scenes had me very curious what the writers had in mind for the (never to be) 2nd season.
The main botch is that the powers-that-be seemed to think the audience would sit still for 7 episodes before stuff really started to happen... before episode 8 it's mostly lots of talking with a few (very few) scattered bits of horror.
It does let some character stuff build nicely... so that punches land harder later on... but most of the characters don't build to much more than they appeared in the first episode... so mostly it's just filler coasting to the last few episodes.
I've seen people complaining that the show was 'too PC'... which tells me they didn't make it to those final few episodes.
 
The Manhunt: Unabomber series on Netflix with Sam Worthington is a well done, understated character procedural.
 
I tried three times to get into Supernatural, everything about it seems like it should grab me. But I just kept loosing interest. Think I made it as far as the third season at most. There's wasnt a specific reason I stopped watching, it wasnt bad, but nothing that pulled me back.

I own the first season of Ash Vs The Evil Dead. It was fun, and Ill probably pick up the second season, but not sure how much of that is just riding on my overall love for Army of Darkness.
 
I tried three times to get into Supernatural, everything about it seems like it should grab me. But I just kept loosing interest. Think I made it as far as the third season at most. There's wasnt a specific reason I stopped watching, it wasnt bad, but nothing that pulled me back.

I own the first season of Ash Vs The Evil Dead. It was fun, and Ill probably pick up the second season, but not sure how much of that is just riding on my overall love for Army of Darkness.

Supernatural has mutated and changed over time. The first few seasons actually had some scary episodes and the brothers seemed in real danger and out of their depth.

Once angels were introduced, the show went more cosmic. The brothers now hang out with the king of hell and battle Lucifer and save the president of the US.

I think what I like is the amazing mythology that has been built up over time. And how the US government is seemingly oblivious to all the monsters. The whole thing should be ridiculous but honestly watching it is liking watching 1st level D&D characters grow to the highest levels. It just continues to fascinate me.

As for Ash, introducing Lucy Lawless and the other two main actors make the show for me. And they are building some mythology too, if the show lasts long enough. Lee Majors as his dad was good too. I like that they are expanding the Army of Darkness universe.
 
I was put off Supernatural when a friend made me watch an episode from a later season, it just seemed like a silly WB show about hunky bros.
Later on I binged the first few episodes out of boredom and had a much different reaction.
Those earlier seasons, when the brothers are shown as criminals and outsiders... hunted by the law as well as the monsters... are my favorites. They're on a lonely and desperate crusade that seems sure to end badly for them.
If the show had ended at the final showdown of Lucifer and Michael it would have felt complete... but it kept going, and never quite got back to what had got me watching.
I stuck with it for a while but when Felicia Day showed up I finally lost my last shred of interest... fan-service run amok.
 
I stuck with it for a while but when Felicia Day showed up I finally lost my last shred of interest... fan-service run amok.
There's always been an element of fan service in Supernatural. Look at the way the female fandom reacts when Sam or Dean gets a Significant Other that isn't their mother. But that said, the last couple of seasons have been a real return to form. Yes the plots are kind of cosmic, but the stakes feel personal. And as usual, the resolution of one season leads directly to the problems of the next. But in a fun way.

As for what I've been watching, I just binged on The Expanse. Took me a while to struggle past the first few episodes, but once I got there it was worth persevering with it. Though I can't help but feel they really under sell the sheer size of the solar system. With travel times that should be months if not years taking hours or days at most.
 
There's always been an element of fan service in Supernatural. Look at the way the female fandom reacts when Sam or Dean gets a Significant Other that isn't their mother. But that said, the last couple of seasons have been a real return to form. Yes the plots are kind of cosmic, but the stakes feel personal. And as usual, the resolution of one season leads directly to the problems of the next. But in a fun way.

As for what I've been watching, I just binged on The Expanse. Took me a while to struggle past the first few episodes, but once I got there it was worth persevering with it. Though I can't help but feel they really under sell the sheer size of the solar system. With travel times that should be months if not years taking hours or days at most.

The Expanse only really picks up mid-to-late first season. Second season is better. Though God only knows what kept from doing a book a season.

With regards to travel times, there’s no mention of the Epstein drive until S02, but suffice to say it’s the handwavium you’re looking for. :smile:

Also, the books are much, much better.
 
The Expanse only really picks up mid-to-late first season. Second season is better. Though God only knows what kept from doing a book a season.
I really liked the first few episodes. It set up space as a pretty dangerous place. After that, I thought it slowed until later in the season though.
 
The Expanse only really picks up mid-to-late first season. Second season is better. Though God only knows what kept from doing a book a season.

With regards to travel times, there’s no mention of the Epstein drive until S02, but suffice to say it’s the handwavium you’re looking for. :smile:

Also, the books are much, much better.
I can imagine that the books are much better. I'll be checking them out once I've got some Kindle allowance :smile:

As for the Epstein drive, it doesn't allow for the fact that the kind of high G acceleration, deceleration and manoeuvring G forces involved with travelling at the kind of speeds they must do to cover interplanetary distances in short order would turn frail human bodies into a thin red paste very quickly.

Which is a minor niggle in an otherwise fairly Hard SF show.
 
But that said, the last couple of seasons have been a real return to form. Yes the plots are kind of cosmic, but the stakes feel personal.
Interesting, that might get me watching again... so long as Felicia Day stays in OZ.
 
Interesting, that might get me watching again... so long as Felicia Day stays in OZ.
If you don't like Felicia Day, you'll be glad to know that it's extremely unlikely that she is going to be back.
 
Norsemen is a comedy set among Vikings. Has a nice Life of Brian/Holy Grail sense of anachronistic humour but near the end the humour becomes a bit too broad and obvious for me.
 
Last weekend Mrs. The Butcher was feeling indisposed so we stayed at home and watched a ton of TV.

We wrapped up BoJack Horseman. Fuck, that is one clever, well-written show. Fourth season’s last few episodes, particularly the one about BoJack’s mom were just... wow. Right up there with the Rick & Morty “Tales from the Citadel” thing.

We also watched Bright. Three parts passable buddy cop movie, two parts heavy-handed metaphor, one part fantasy. OK movie. Franchise could go places if handled right.

I also showed her one of my favorite movies of all time: Patton. George C. Scott, you magnificent bastard.

Finally, last night we caught the new Star Trek: Discovery episode. Predictable as the series is wont to be, but good Trekkish fun. I’m a sucker for the Mirror Universe episode. Also, marry me, Captain Killy. We will have a thousand warrior babies and they shall rule the galaxy.
 
Last Man on Earth - A William Forte sf comedy that despite the title is actually about a small group of survivors of a massive viral outbreak that wipes out not only humanity but almost all of the animal kingdom.

A ‘cringe’ comedy whose first season was a bit too black for some with a purposefully unlikeable central character.

Later seasons make Forte’s character less of a prick but always a fool. Kristen Schnaal
is the series not-so-secret weapon, she is terrific.

One of the few post-apocalyptic shows/films that doesn’t enforce an artifical lack of food and supplies on the survivors, a lot of the initial humour is built around the fantasy fulfillment of having access to all the consumer goods, booze and houses you’d want. As things progress though it does a good job I think of dealing with all the things that would slowly go wrong, fail and spoil.
 
Three of my favorite horror anime, in no particular order:

Another



Another is, at it's heart, a ghost story. But it's a lot more than that. It's a murder mystery, where you begin by trying to figure out what's going on, and then move on to figuring out who the ghost actually is. I never did, by the way. The anime does a good job at dropping hints, but I either missed them or misinterpreted them. But the scariest thing for me about Another is the human variable. Japanese media seems to be able to portray the subtle, terrifying aspects of the the human psyche far better than the American equivalent, IMO.

I love this anime, and it disturbed the hell out of me. Highly recommended.

Shiki



So. Yeah. Somebody in Japan read Salem's Lot and thought, "This sucks, let's make something actually scary and awesome!" And they did. Same premise, better execution. An excellent vampire story.

Shiki disturbed the crap out of me. Highly recommended.

Death Parade



Did you watch the opening? Yes? Good. Because that shit right there is lying to you. It's lying to you like a pimp lies to a runaway girl.

See how cheerful it is? How happy? Yeah. No.

If you want a hard, brutal gut punch to your psyche, something to zap your nervous system out of sleep mode and remind you that (A) you can die at any moment, and (B) never take the gift of life and the people you care about for granted, then this anime is for you.

Death Parade makes Another and Shiki look like Friendship is Magic.

And I'm not exaggerated here at all. I'm a repeat anime watcher, meaning that I'll watch an anime over and over if I like it. I've watched DP once. Just once. I don't need to rewatch it; it stays with you.

It's a life after death story. it's about choices. It's brutal, ruthless, and completely unforgiving.

Another and Shiki disturbed me, as a a proper horror show should. This, this had a much more profound effect; it reminded me of some things I had long forgotten.

Highly recommended. Have Kleenex handy.

One final note. I don't consider these to be casual viewing. If you're looking for something light, watch something else. If you're looking for something a little disturbing, or really disturbing, then I present these three anime. And remember kids, it's me calling these anime 'disturbing', so...yeah.
 
....

As for the Epstein drive, it doesn't allow for the fact that the kind of high G acceleration, deceleration and manoeuvring G forces involved with travelling at the kind of speeds they must do to cover interplanetary distances in short order would turn frail human bodies into a thin red paste very quickly.

Which is a minor niggle in an otherwise fairly Hard SF show.

That's what The Juice is for, realistically they don't do much more than 2G sustained and maybe 10G in a burst. Fighter pilots do fine with those kinds of Gs without being pulped. Can readily believe that 3G sustained is possible if The Juice keeps everything humming along. I believe most travel, from the show and reading the books, is constant 1G or less. That kind of acceleration is more than enough to cover distances in short order. In the books it takes much longer than is implied in the show.

The Epstein is not so much handwavium, as yet to be solved physics, first to get a self-sustaining fusion reaction, then to "solve" the plasma field equations. That is, the plasma spewed out the back generates it's own electromagnetic field and it is theoretically possible for the plasma to be configured in such a way that you can shape the electromagnetic field so it is self containing and feeds back into the plasma and hence, e.g., much more highly efficient, directed, etc. This can also be used to address waste heat issues by pushing a lot of the heat radiation away from the ship, but a lot of that heat can also be addressed by assuming some on the horizon material improvements, let alone what superconducting type materials might be achieved in the future. Case in point, 30 years ago materials that were superconducting above about 40K were impossible, pure unobtainium.
 
That's what The Juice is for, realistically they don't do much more than 2G sustained and maybe 10G in a burst. Fighter pilots do fine with those kinds of Gs without being pulped. Can readily believe that 3G sustained is possible if The Juice keeps everything humming along. I believe most travel, from the show and reading the books, is constant 1G or less. That kind of acceleration is more than enough to cover distances in short order. In the books it takes much longer than is implied in the show.
The other problem being Newton's First Law of Motion. Which is to say, you don't see them accelerate half way to a destination, do a turnaround and then decelerate the rest of the way.

But then I'm a fan of a show with a time travelling phone box from the 1950s that's made of wood when it should be made of concrete. And for me, consistency matters more than accuracy or plausibility even. And The Expanse is great stuff. If a bit slow to get going.
 
The other problem being Newton's First Law of Motion. Which is to say, you don't see them accelerate half way to a destination, do a turnaround and then decelerate the rest of the way.

Actually, you do. Well, in the books anyway; I don’t recall seeing it on TV.
 
In no particular order:
The Water Margin
Babylon 5
Heroes
Vikings
Blake's Seven
The Tomorrow People (Both versions)
Game of Thrones
Farscape
Captain Scarlet
 
2017:

Me: "Holy crap, there's a lot of new, great anime coming out this year!"

*Watches most of 2017's new anime*

Me: :angry::angry::angry::angry::angry::sick::sick::sick::sick::sick::cry::cry::cry::cry::cry::beat::beat::beat::beat::beat:

2018:

Me: "ZOMG!! NEW OVERLORD SEASON SQUEEEEEEE!!!!"

*Watches first two episodes*

Me: :angry::angry::angry::angry::angry::sick::sick::sick::sick::sick::cry::cry::cry::cry::cry::beat::beat::beat::beat::beat:
 
Somebody on Polygon claimed Devilman Crybaby was a 'masterpiece.' I guess watching decades of anime have inured them to the shitty tropes that drag down so much anime for me. The ultraviolence and sex are not an issue, the rampant stupidity and juvenile sense of humour between the outbursts of violence was and prevented it from being even amusing trash for me. That this is the same guy who made the terrific Cat Soup is really depressing.

Started watching Bosch, a noirish cop drama, almost refreshing to return to a crime drama series, excellent acting and cinematography. Dark subject matter and a definite cut above all the CSI and Law & Order spin-offs (love the original Law & Order though). Promising, willing to see how it develops.
 
Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency has been, just about, the most pleasant viewing experience I've had over the last couple of years. The first series was like Doctor Who on acid, really. The second series was D&D on acid - like they actually directly referenced it!
 
Two episodes into Salem and horror fans should dig this OTT stew of black sabbaths, witch nudity, self-mutilation, blood-suckling toads and monstrous babies.
 
Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency has been, just about, the most pleasant viewing experience I've had over the last couple of years. The first series was like Doctor Who on acid, really. The second series was D&D on acid - like they actually directly referenced it!
I really liked the one that had Stephen Mangan in. It's a shame they only did a few episodes.
 
Somebody on Polygon claimed Devilman Crybaby was a 'masterpiece.' I guess watching decades of anime have inured them to the shitty tropes that drag down so much anime for me. The ultraviolence and sex are not an issue, the rampant stupidity and juvenile sense of humour between the outbursts of violence was and prevented it from being even amusing trash for me. That this is the same guy who made the terrific Cat Soup is really depressing.

Haven't watched it yet. Nux Taku's review is interesting.

His assessment is that's it's a masterpiece because it's new. Given what I know about anime hype, this is probably accurate.
 
Haven't watched it yet. Nux Taku's review is interesting.

His assessment is that's it's a masterpiece because it's new. Given what I know about anime hype, this is probably accurate.

Yeah I've learned to take anime 'reviews' on the net with a huge grain of salt as most seem powered by enthusiasm and tolerance for the subgenre's commercial tropes I just don't share.

Seems to me that Devilman Crybaby is telling much the same story as the Bezerk: Golden Age Ark, but with a lot more fan service and annoying attempts at humour.

I DO like anime, just not all of it by a long shot. So much of it seems aimed at teen boys for one thing. Perhaps I was spoiled by being introduced to anime via Tezuka, Oshii, Watanabe, Satoshi Kon and Miyazaki.

I feel like I have to significantly adjust my expectations down for a lot of other anime. Thanks for your recommendations earlier in this thread, I'm a horror fan and it helps me sort the wheat from the chaff.
 
Yeah I've learned to take anime 'reviews' on the net with a huge grain of salt as most seem powered by enthusiasm and tolerance for the subgenre's commercial tropes I just don't share.

I usually ignore reviews, though I do like Nux Taku's (youtube) stuff. I like what I like, and don't like what I don't.

Seems to me that Devilman Crybaby is telling much the same story as the Bezerk: Golden Age Ark, but with a lot more fan service and annoying attempts at humour.

I don't mind fan service if it doesn't get in the way of the story. I have a pretty high tolerance for crap anime in general, though I've found there are a few titles I couldn't even manage to get past a few episodes (Queen's Blade, I'm talking to you).

IMO, 2017 was a crap year for anime in general. I was hoping to do a long, ranty post about it when I got time. There were a few gems, though.

I DO like anime, just not all of it by a long shot. So much of it seems aimed at teen boys for one thing. Perhaps I was spoiled by being introduced to anime via Tezuka, Oshii, Watanabe, Satoshi Kon and Miyazaki.

It seems aimed at teen boys because much of it is, though the maturity and sophistication can vary widely from title to title. The art form isn't homogeneous in its target audience, however, as more and more stories are being written for girls and adults.

As for me, I'm just a little kid inside, so the shonen genre appeals to me, and I enjoy a lot of stuff that I think a lot of people would judge to be crap. For example, I make no apologies for loving High School DXD :grin:

But not all of it. I just finished Monster a little while ago, and that's in no way meant for kids. Likewise, the horror anime I reviewed upthread isn't anything I'd recommend for little kids. Especially Death Parade. Same with Black Lagoon. That's in no way meant for kids.

I feel like I have to significantly adjust my expectations down for a lot of other anime.

My unsolicited advice is to go into any anime with an open mind, and at least watch four episodes before you decide to quit. By then you'll have a good idea if it's any good or it's just going to waste your time. Anime quality vary wildly, and some studios can create a real masterpiece, then churn out high-level :crap: next season.

Thanks for your recommendations earlier in this thread, I'm a horror fan and it helps me sort the wheat from the chaff.

Much obliged, Voros. I'm glad somebody found those posts useful. :smile:

I'm kina on a dark anime streak, so I plan on doing another post about some I like, if and when I get the time.
 
Dark anime

For the purposes of this post, "dark' anime is defined as anime dealing with the shadow-side of human nature, the monsters of our id, corruption, and all the wonderful things that come from these.

Because, deep down, all of us want to be bad. :devil:

'Cept me, of course. :angel:

I'm only listing the anime I've watched, I think are worth watching, and have main characters that are not good guys, dark good guys, or anti-heroes. The MCs in most of these selections are straight up bad guys, or something close. They're just the lesser of evils.

Let's go from dark to darker.

Jormungand



The concept is simple: child soldier badass, who's really known little else but war his whole life, is recruited into a security detail bodyguarding a hot, female, arms dealer. Hilarity ensues.

Constant gunfights, more than a little intrigue, great characters, and a main arc that I found to be quite interesting. It's not a zero-to-hero shonen, as the main character (MC) is already highly capable, and there's little if any character development. However, the anime does a good job of engaging the viewer in the morality of war, acknowledges that war is a bad thing, and asks, "how far would you go to end war, permanently?"

A semi-dark action anime. Recommended.

Psycho-Pass



I'm only going to touch on this one briefly.

PP isn't so much about any character or set of characters, as much as it is study in future morality and the consequences of pure law and order. A little bit deeper than most of the selections I've posted here.

The setting is an idyllic utopia where near complete civil peace has been established due to the prevalence of UK style CCTV systems that watch everything you do. Oh, and they can also scan you to determine if you have the capacity to commit a crime. If you are one such person, the popo shows up to take you away. Neat!

A semi-dark crime drama. Recommended.

Saga of Tanya the Evil



Look, first of all, she's not a Nazi. It's fantasy WW1 Germany, not fantasy WW2 Germany. Do you even history, bro?

Second of all, if enjoying a story about a sociopathic Japanese salaryman who gets murdered, has his consciousness placed into that of a loli by GOD, and then is forced to go full murdermachine against Fantasy WW1 Germany's enemies in order to turn God into an atheist is wrong, then I don't want to be right.

A semi-dark action / war movie. Recommended.

Darker Than Black



Are you looking for your next dark supers campaign idea? Well, good news! You just found it.

It's mutants in Japan. But there's a twist. Actually, there's a couple.

First, everybody gets one power. Some powers are strong, some powers are weak. But every one of them has a price. You get a power, but you also get a compulsive behavior that's Not Fun. Examples include, but are not limited to: smoking, eating boiled eggs, breaking your own fingers, and aging freaking backwards!

Oh, and the bonus? Everybody's a sociopath. Everybody. The mutants, called contractors, have no real sense of empathy and are cold, calculating, logical assholes. Other assholes use them to accomplish asshole stuff, causing conflict between assholes that results in nearly all the assholes dying in order to protect the other assholes.

Season 1 is excellent. After that, well, proceed at your own risk. It gets hinky. It's worth watching for closure, but it simply isn't as good as the first season.

Tokyo Ghoul



First Edition Vampire, dialed up to eleven. Oh, and that whole personal horror thing everybody seems to be hung up on? Yeah, it's right here, and it's done right.

It starts dark, gets darker, and then goes straight to black.

A dark, action/horror hybrid. Highly recommended.
 
Part two, because the system cuts me off at 5 vids.

Black Lagoon



Japanese salaryman gets sold out by his company, meets mercenaries, joins them, and begins the not-so-slow decent into corruption.

I went into this thing not expecting much. It's now one of my favorite anime ever.

It's an action anime, with lots of gunfights and killin'. It also likes to wax philosophical, the main focus being the MC's attempts to do good in what is arguably the most crime-ridden hellhole of a setting I've ever seen.

I found every single damn character facinating. All of the primary characters are all about the business of crime, but as the MC points out, everybody has their hobbies. Dutch likes to take in strays. Balalaika just wants World War 3, the MC wants to save people, and Revy just wants to kill as many people as possible and die in a ally somewhere.

MC aside, this is an anime about insane, incredibly dangerous women:

0MzoSg.jpg


A damn dark action crime anime. Highly recommended.

And last but not least...

Monster



Look at that opening. Just look at it! Jesus Christ! It captures the feel of the whole anime perfectly.

A study in human corruption, redemption, sacrifice, and good, old-fashioned, human evil.

No aliens. No monsters. No mercs. No magical teens in highschool. Just people. Victims, monsters, and a doctor who's trying to make things right.

Think The Fugitive, on steroids, with the dial ripped off.

The doc is the MC, but the story is really about Johan, the antagonist. He's a fun guy. The kind of guy who has a similar worldview as the Joker, except he doesn't need to resort to cheep theatrics to get his message across.

It's seventy something episodes of pure mind-fuckery, so strap in, turn off the lights, pop some popcorn, and enjoy the ride into shadow.

And that's it. Hope you enjoyed this and it was helpful. :grin:
 
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Thanks noman noman I liked Psycho-Pass but got distracted by life and haven't finished it. Black Lagoon, Darker than Black and especially Monster all look great. Heard of Tokyo Ghoul amd it sounds like my thang but none of my streaming services carry it.
 
Thanks noman noman I liked Psycho-Pass but got distracted by life and haven't finished it. Black Lagoon, Darker than Black and especially Monster all look great. Heard of Tokyo Ghoul amd it sounds like my thang but none of my streaming services carry it.

Crunchyroll. :thumbsup:

EDIT: Re: Psycho-Pass. You're better off skipping the 2nd season; it's pretty awful.
 
I don't watch much television but currently I am enjoying The Mick. Black comedy is my favorite kind.

In reruns I have been watching The High Chaparral. I had never even heard of it until a few weeks ago and started taping it on whatever channel. Pretty good stuff, I was lucky because they had just started over with the first episode the second week or so that I started watching it so now I get to see it from the beginning. It also has the advantage of having cast actual Latinos as Latinos so the Mexican characters all speak fluent Spanish and it sounds like they are using real Apache language as well. As a real-life Latino, I found it novel to come across a Western where the Mexican characters are treated as individual characters with their own personalities. Very good show so far. My favorite main characters are Buck and Manolito. Blue is growing on me as the show progresses.
 
Thanks noman noman I liked Psycho-Pass but got distracted by life and haven't finished it. Black Lagoon, Darker than Black and especially Monster all look great. Heard of Tokyo Ghoul amd it sounds like my thang but none of my streaming services carry it.
Allow me to chime in and give both Black Lagoon, and Darker than Black big thumbs up.:thumbsup:
 
I don't watch much television but currently I am enjoying The Mick. Black comedy is my favorite kind.

In reruns I have been watching The High Chaparral. I had never even heard of it until a few weeks ago and started taping it on whatever channel. Pretty good stuff, I was lucky because they had just started over with the first episode the second week or so that I started watching it so now I get to see it from the beginning. It also has the advantage of having cast actual Latinos as Latinos so the Mexican characters all speak fluent Spanish and it sounds like they are using real Apache language as well. As a real-life Latino, I found it novel to come across a Western where the Mexican characters are treated as individual characters with their own personalities. Very good show so far. My favorite main characters are Buck and Manolito. Blue is growing on me as the show progresses.
There's a TV channel here that plays westerns all afternoon. I've been know to watch on occasion. Sometimes I think man this really holds up and is good. Other times I shake my head and think, damn this was on primetime?
 
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