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May. 13th, 2013 10:47 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
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I didn't get into TSCC when it was on the air, because the pilot was a complete swing and miss for me, but when I was finally made to watch it, I got hooked pretty deeply. It's a shockingly well put together show, given that it was a part of the Terminator franchise. It's so much deeper than anything else Terminator related. And it is full of rich imagery and great closeup reaction shots of characters who say so much with their faces even when their faces are ostensibly blank and they're hiding secrets from each other. So it is so much fun to make vids of TSCC.
I received The Monkey's Paw, a Cameron vid to Laurie Anderson's song of the same name. It is wonderful.
It's full of great shots of River Glau's muscular, robotic, graceful movement, her brilliant body performance as Cameron. And it throws that up against the various animal metaphors that TSCC uses, the turtle that somehow represents human kindness, the pigeon that represents innocence, the snake that represents cunning and deception, wondering how Terminators learn about life by observing the life around them and ultimately in the brilliant conclusion to the vid, wondering how Terminators learn about death by observing the death around them.
But despite all the learning, all the knowledge and transfer of knowledge that this vid communicates so well, it is ultimately best summed up as talking about the 'mystery of life'. It is fully content, even cheerful, with the fact that it will never comprehend the consciousness gap separating humans from AIs, if there is in fact such a gap. It rejects the idea that there is any physical difference worth noting. The way Terminators interact with their bodies is not the same as the way humans do. The vid shows Cameron stitching herself together with a stapler, Cromartie remaking his skin. Yet this interaction with their own physicality is mirrored with humans doing the human equivalent of these repairs- recall that Cromartie goes to a plastic surgeon to have his face remade. So what the vid leaves open as the possible distinction is the soul, the unknowable mental component that endows us with something beyond the physical. The godliness that Ellison and John Henry struggle with in the final episodes of Season 2.
The other vids are all great, too. I made several, and
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Date: 2013-05-14 02:12 am (UTC)