Showing posts with label BBC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BBC. Show all posts

Monday, November 11, 2013

Mediation Might be Needed for Merlin and Me

          We are moving away from Merlin now. However, before we are to far from him I had a few thoughts on Merlin (the TV show). I watched the first episode and had a mixed reactions. So I decided to watch a few more to get a better picture of the show and... it did not improve for me. I understand that a lot of people like it, and I will admit that there are a few parts I enjoyed (specifically I really liked the character of Gaius)

That's right, don't judge me.

          However, there were a couple of this that really bothered me. It is not that I have a problem with a reinvasioned story, or the telling of a story from a different perspective. The story of a young Merlin, where he is the focus, has potential for me. My problems with the show had to do with some issues and inconsistencies about armor, plot features, and some of the actions taken by characters that don't make since to me. However, that is not what I wanted to talk about, and I will spare you my thoughts on this unless someone specifically wants to hear about them. But that is probably about as likely as....

  
... This... happening again.
 

          The thing that I wanted to talk about (which only took me two paragraphs and one shark to get at) is Merlin himself. In the show he struck me as, well... kind of an idiot. He does things that make no since at the time (telling a prince what to do, then after find out he is a prince Merlin continues to mess with him), does not follow simple directions (stay out of trouble and don't do magic in public), and it frequently comes back to bite him (There was one episode were every other scene shows Merlin in the stockades). Yet he really never learns. At first I chalked this up to, well, stupidity. But during our class discussion I had a thought.
 
 
What if "I Can't Believe It's Not Butter" is really butter?
 
          Many of Merlins actions make little to no sence in his time, some unspecified point in the middle Ages/fantacy world, but they make more sence for a person in our own time. Think about it. Merlin sees a guy forced to carry around a target so Arthur, a man clearly so some significant social status, can throw knives at a moving target. So Merlin, with little to no social status, goes to tell Arthur to lay off the guy. A medieval person would obviously see Arthur in this moment as a jerk (and probably mock him for it later), and they would sympathize with the poor guy Arthur was tormenting. But to go right up to Arthur's face and tell him off in the way Merlin did, was to suppose a kind of egalitarianism that was not widely endorsed at the time (whenever it was). Who is Merlin to talk to Arthur like that, especially after finding out Arthur was a prince.
 
"How dare you think you have the right to point out I am a jerk! Who do you think you are? A person capable of morality and independent thought?! Away with you peasant, before I laser-eye you!"
 
          However, it makes much more since when you look at Merlin, not as a medieval person, but a person with modern values who happens to be in the Middle Ages. He believes, as we tend to that people should be viewed as equals. Thus Merlin believes that no man should be above the consequences of his actions, no matter the possession he has in society, and so Merlin was willing to stand up for that poor un-named character that Arthur was harassing. In doing so he easily identifies himself as a character that modern audiences can identify with more easily with. Also, by doing this Merlin demonstrates his willingness to stand up for others, again, making it easier for the audience to sympathize with him and rout for him. Thus some of the actions that I previously wrote off as Merlin being stupid, I now see as features that may have been given to him to make Merlin a more relatable and sympathetic character for our own time.
 
Although honestly, can't they give him the hat back? That hat is the cat's pajamas!
 
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Sunday, November 10, 2013

Final thoughts on Merlin

During class, we started discussing Merlin, and how he has changed throughout the stories we have read as well as his portrayal in the BBC television series. One of the conclusions we came to was that Merlin has lost power and magic throughout time. Perhaps I am alone in thinking this, but I don’t think that he has become any less powerful. I see it more as he is becoming a more rounded character.
Instead of seeing all these stories as separate pieces, try thinking of them as parts of a whole. What we would get is a version of Merlin who is a wide-eyed youth (Merlin, BBC), who becomes a kind elderly chap who takes care of lost kids (sword in the stone), and who is deeply troubled by the loss of his dear friends (Monmouth). When you combine all these stories of Merlin together, you get a more personable character rather than an extreme attribute of a personality. I remember a book I read for fun in high school called…..Magic Inc. Merlin was a background character but he was portrayed as a CEO of the magic industry and looked sharp in a pinstriped suit.
            Unfortunately my need combine things I read or see have now permanently given me the image of Merlin as the ultimate magical being with a pointy hat who can see the future and the past, adorkable in his youth, and can run a company pretty well.

             It is possible that this is a stretch but Merlin is supposed to be immortal, right? And, he is awaiting the return of King Arthur when the world needs him most? Couldn't that be said that even if Merlin is a fictional character, by having him appear in stories and TV shows today, you are keeping Merlin alive?  I know that in a lot of lore from around the world to speak, a name is to give it power, and in some cases it gives it life. Perhaps Merlin’s immortality is dependent on how long people remember him. And if nothing else at least he looks good in a suit. 

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