
From Salon.
Let's talk about this week's "Treme." I found it disappointing overall -- unimaginative in most ways, and tone-deaf in others. Except for the hilarious scenes with Antoine (Wendell Pierce) rehearsing his new band and that splendid, wordless, musical opening, much of it was distressingly choppy and superficial, cutting scenes (and musical numbers) short as if with a hatchet and treating every subplot as equally interesting when in fact many of them were not interesting at all. ("On Your Way Down" was the episode title; James Yoshimura wrote it, Simon Cellan-Jones directed.)
But all those other flaws pale beside the hour's horrifying (and buzz-generating) showstopper: an act of savage criminal violence inflicted on one of the show's strongest characters. It was handled fairly tastefully by HBO standards, but also in a way that reduced its victim, a complex and steely character, to punching bag status, and that seemed, for a David Simon production, weirdly off-key.
If you haven't seen the episode, you should stop reading now.
If you have seen it, you know which subplot I'm referring to: the rape of Khandi Alexander's character, LaDonna Batiste-Williams, by two anonymous thugs who invaded her bar after closing time.
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By: LKL on 5/09/2011 1:50PM
Ahhh Simon got tired of using B more's criminals for plots???? All shows need ratings and Simon knows this kind of stuff brings the media. When will he feature the Phylicia Barnes tragedy? Waiting to see who the police arrest first.....tell him to start casting the step sis and her ex boyfriend!!!!
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By: ROBERT JOHNSON on 5/09/2011 6:59PM
I don't know if it is my TV but I find that the volume gets low when the music numbers are played on the show. The volume is good for the shows dialogue. Any one else experience this?
The show is Great!
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