This documentary series tells the stories that have gripped imaginations for centuries and reveals the fascinating and unexpected history behind them.This documentary series tells the stories that have gripped imaginations for centuries and reveals the fascinating and unexpected history behind them.This documentary series tells the stories that have gripped imaginations for centuries and reveals the fascinating and unexpected history behind them.
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10Yoli_B
Lets do all cultural myths. Lets expand this. Its such a calming and entertaining series.
Make sure Mr. Day can narrate or at least someone with a soothing voice.
Make sure Mr. Day can narrate or at least someone with a soothing voice.
There's a lot to like in this show. The artwork is beautiful, the retellings of myths are delightful, and when Nicholas Day is allowed to just stick to narrating those retellings, he's excellent. Above all, the academics interviewed are fascinating and fun - at least three of them are people I would love to see with their own shows!
But the editing is sloppy, the choice of art to accompany the themes is often confusing (why is a painting of Judith assassinating Holofernes described as about *love*, for goodness' sake?!), I'm bewildered as to why Day is reading, e.g., classical myths out of an apparent 19th century tome, and his script as presenter is awful - cheesy, overly portentous, and often jumping to exactly the kind of easy, stereotypical conclusions about how myths and legends work that the show claims to be correcting. Moral complexities are mentioned but then skirted over and minimised. Interesting historical details that would give context and extra light to the myths are mentioned by the academics but sometimes outright undermined by the presenter script. The shallow, Victorian vibe of the presentation (including its setting) clashes so awkwardly with the modern and beautiful art and the up-to-date brilliance and enthusiasm of the academics.
It's too good a show to be this bad, and that makes it in some ways harder to watch than if it were consistently so weak. I so hope that if there's a second series they try a different approach (but with the same artist(s), and the same interviewees!).
But the editing is sloppy, the choice of art to accompany the themes is often confusing (why is a painting of Judith assassinating Holofernes described as about *love*, for goodness' sake?!), I'm bewildered as to why Day is reading, e.g., classical myths out of an apparent 19th century tome, and his script as presenter is awful - cheesy, overly portentous, and often jumping to exactly the kind of easy, stereotypical conclusions about how myths and legends work that the show claims to be correcting. Moral complexities are mentioned but then skirted over and minimised. Interesting historical details that would give context and extra light to the myths are mentioned by the academics but sometimes outright undermined by the presenter script. The shallow, Victorian vibe of the presentation (including its setting) clashes so awkwardly with the modern and beautiful art and the up-to-date brilliance and enthusiasm of the academics.
It's too good a show to be this bad, and that makes it in some ways harder to watch than if it were consistently so weak. I so hope that if there's a second series they try a different approach (but with the same artist(s), and the same interviewees!).
I love folklore and so I possibly expected too much from this title. They try to contextualize myths in erroneously simplified histories - the organization of which is tediously bad.
Most of the time they're featured, the experts fail to provide any actual insight into myths. When they're not spouting awful platitudes - which is possibly the most frustrating part of the show - they summarize only the most surface-level details of a given historical fact or mythology. It almost seems like each episode is deliberately structured to stretch a twenty minute run-time to forty minutes.
That said, both the artwork and the narration are great. With better direction, more information, and less platitudinal babble it could easily be an 8/10.
Most of the time they're featured, the experts fail to provide any actual insight into myths. When they're not spouting awful platitudes - which is possibly the most frustrating part of the show - they summarize only the most surface-level details of a given historical fact or mythology. It almost seems like each episode is deliberately structured to stretch a twenty minute run-time to forty minutes.
That said, both the artwork and the narration are great. With better direction, more information, and less platitudinal babble it could easily be an 8/10.
It is a nice and very instructive introduction to mythology. Small sketches, perfect host - presenter, nice interventions of specialists. Sure, far to be ideal or the best example of accuracy and objectivity in few cases but a good start to birth questions, to search, yourself, informations, read books from scientific ones to epopes and novels, discover influences to contemporanity. So, good kick first steps .
The historians repeat each other and I would really love to know and understand more. I love these stories and I love the animation. Please make more and with more detail.
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- Efsaneler ve Canavarlar
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- Runtime42 minutes
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