Abyss, on 02 March 2016 - 10:53 PM, said:
Quote
The casting was okay, although Holden still looks too young imo. ...
So many people are not loving Holden and i don`t understand why. The character in the book is practically a cypher, all we knew in WAKES is that he's good looking and fiercely loyal to his crew (eventually).
His background is sort of a cypher, but his personality is not. WAKES clearly establishes that Holden is fiercely loyal to his crew (he repeatedly asks after them first and takes danger upon himself rather than them), he's matured from a hot-headed youngster into a more morose/reflective young-middle-aged fellow (lots of sarcastic/self-deprecating quipping about his younger self), and always wants to 'do the right thing' often without thinking/caring about the longer consequences (the mass-broadcasts, his dishonourable discharge from the navy, etc).
TV-Holden doesn't have any of the maturity, nor the "do the right thing" idealism. He's still a hot-head, and it is simply less interesting in terms of motives for his actions. Looking at the mass-broadcast(s) before the Donnager, book-Holden actually reasons out why it is a good idea, and it is a combination of protecting his crew and "doing the right thing". The reader can understand the reasoning and agree "hey, that makes sense and is a good idea!" (then later the long-term consequences come down and both the reader and Holden together can experience some dismay at not realizing how that would turn out). TV-Holden is just angry/bitter and sends it out in a pique of pre-emptive revenge, including facts that the show has already setup the viewer to doubt (Holden's broadcast assumes the transponder reflects the perpetrators, but the show has already mentioned twice that that is skeptically convenient).
So no, I totally disagree that book-Holden in WAKES is a cypher, because his actions have a lot more depth to them and it teaches us about who he is. TV-Holden, on the other hand, is just a stream of emotional actions without contemplation, so its no surprise to me that a lot of viewers aren't bonding him with him... because there's nothing deeper to bond with.
Abyss, on 02 March 2016 - 10:53 PM, said:
amphibian, on 02 March 2016 - 08:17 PM, said:
The Butcher went from Captain to Colonel in a wartime situation. There was no Major.
That too.
Uh, no? AFAIK, there's no specific mention in the books of whether he was ever a Major, Lieutenant-Colonel or other rank/appointments between him being Captain of a missile frigate team and Colonel of the coalition Marines, but none of that time was wartime. His promotion(s) and accolades were the result of peacetime patrol and police work, not war.
Heck, the USA currently really is at war with ISIS... so if anything by this wartime vs peacetime logic Fred should have been promoted to Colonel
slower than Amph's cousins.
That's entirely besides the point for me, though, because...
Abyss, on 02 March 2016 - 10:53 PM, said:
amphibian, on 02 March 2016 - 05:42 PM, said:
QuickTidal, on 08 February 2016 - 09:20 PM, said:
I'd like to go on record as saying that Chad L. Coleman as Fred Johnson is ENTIRELY miscast. Moreso for me than the miscasting of Holden. Coleman is a fantastic actor in the right roles...but Fred is supposed to be an older guy, with more of a weary state to his character. I'd have bought Morgan Freeman, or Delroy Lindo, or Bill Cobbs in the role. Coleman as Fred feels too young to be the Butcher of Anderson Station. I mean the guy was a Colonel in the UN Marine Corps BEFORE he became the war-weary leader of the OPA...this is not a guy in his early 40's...this is a guy who should easily be early 60's. Completely miscast.
I have two cousins who are colonels. Both of them were stressed about making the cut from major, as there's only so many slots available to move up in a peacetime military. Both made it. One is late forties, the other is mid forties.
The age range is right for Fred Johnson in a war time footing (promotions a bit faster than normal).
Wonder if later books are coloring your view QT... he`s described as feeling his age by GAMES, but its not a thing in WAKES
...frankly I don't actually care if Fred Johnson looks like he is 25 or 90, nor whether he "feels it in his bones" or whatever. Regardless of his age, Fred is supposed to have a commanding presence *and* he is supposed to be
menacing. Holden goes around spitting in everyone's eye without fear, except for when he is in a meeting with Fred where the book makes specific mention of Holden feeling and acting intimidated by Fred.
TV Fred just doesn't have the presence or the impact. In the conversation between Fred and that random Mormon kid, for example, there doesn't even seem to be a difference in hierarchy between them, let alone any sort of respect or chagrin from the Mormon kid. He interacts with the other main characters far too easily/casually. IMO, he doesn't even seem like an OPA politician, let alone a military commander... more like a random desk clerk.