Meade's Ball
Well-known member
i foolishly and somewhat sleepily went to see The A-Team the other day in Brighton's high-flying cineworld of dreams. i had a sneaky dark-chocolate Bounty in my rucksack to keep me going, which i chewed on avidly. I suppose just like the throwaway tomfoolery of the original series itself, there was no backstory to these 4 buffoons being quite as they were, and i suppose for an all-out commercial action adventure without heart that's to be expected and gotten over. I also suppose general awareness of the original series, to which i remember watching the pilot episode on ITV as late as 9pm back in the silver-suited 80s and feeling temporarily awe-struck, meant no history was necessary to explain.
I never expected it to be an indepth study of the cattling of the brutal and brave in an unwinnable warzone, but nor did i expect it the action to be quite so unbelievable in a bad way. Part of the charm of the series was that they were 4 out-of-place men who could get on with no one making do with the backwater instruments they found to get out of trouble and save the day for the bullied man. This time there wasn't really that. It was just them proving their own innocence. And their enemies seemed evil for no reason.
I grew bored at times.
This wouldn't have happened if they gave more time to Howling Mad Murdoch. He was underused and should have come up with the zany plan at the end with them all dressed as red indians or women that saw them and the needy who relied on them through, and for Colonel Decker to roll up in the last moment cursing that they only just got away by a whisker.
Hannibal was annoying in the series, and they repeat that unlikeable cockiness here. The Face was a failure in love in the series despite his obvious male perfectitude, but in this he wins every woman over with a glance. Crass. And the new Mr T had some dialogue and buddhist thoughts of enjailed peace and love. Strange. Could have done better.
I didn't completely fall asleep, so it wasn't all rubbish, i try to say complimentarily.
I never expected it to be an indepth study of the cattling of the brutal and brave in an unwinnable warzone, but nor did i expect it the action to be quite so unbelievable in a bad way. Part of the charm of the series was that they were 4 out-of-place men who could get on with no one making do with the backwater instruments they found to get out of trouble and save the day for the bullied man. This time there wasn't really that. It was just them proving their own innocence. And their enemies seemed evil for no reason.
I grew bored at times.
This wouldn't have happened if they gave more time to Howling Mad Murdoch. He was underused and should have come up with the zany plan at the end with them all dressed as red indians or women that saw them and the needy who relied on them through, and for Colonel Decker to roll up in the last moment cursing that they only just got away by a whisker.
Hannibal was annoying in the series, and they repeat that unlikeable cockiness here. The Face was a failure in love in the series despite his obvious male perfectitude, but in this he wins every woman over with a glance. Crass. And the new Mr T had some dialogue and buddhist thoughts of enjailed peace and love. Strange. Could have done better.
I didn't completely fall asleep, so it wasn't all rubbish, i try to say complimentarily.