Setting up the Dollhouse
Ganz, ganz toller Ausblick auf die Wissenschaft und die Spannung der Prämisse von Dollhouse:
'Integration' describes the elusive stage in the treatment of multiple-personality disorder where the patient combines the various traits of their 'cast of characters' into one cohesive and continuous personality, an ascension out of the darkness and confusion of insanity into the life-challenges that the patient had been fleeing before. In terms of the general culture of Whedon's target audience, the 'hook' in Dollhouse is surely the struggle to be accepted (and presumably appreciated) for who one really is; people have the right to reinvent themselves, but doing so on an ad hoc and daily basis is chaos and self-negation.
But that's a mission-statement aimed at broader demographics than those which likely interest Joss Whedon. I can't help but feel that there's a reason the show is called Dollhouse and not Toy House. I'm not convinced by the inclusion of the male 'doll' Victor (Enver Gjokaj); outnumbered by his two female colleagues (Dushku and 'Sierra', played by Dichen Lachman), this sounds like the Token Guy, Dollhouse's own ogleable Angel, there to provide balance and backdrop to another Whedon exploration into the female psyche, the fascination - if not obsession - that threads his career. Guys will tune in for Dushku as they did for both her and Sarah-Michelle Gellar in Buffy, but Dollhouse is x-chromosome all down the line, from the evidence of the set-up.
Hey, sounds good to me.
Bei whedonesque wird der Artikel übrigens sehr spannend diskutiert.
'Integration' describes the elusive stage in the treatment of multiple-personality disorder where the patient combines the various traits of their 'cast of characters' into one cohesive and continuous personality, an ascension out of the darkness and confusion of insanity into the life-challenges that the patient had been fleeing before. In terms of the general culture of Whedon's target audience, the 'hook' in Dollhouse is surely the struggle to be accepted (and presumably appreciated) for who one really is; people have the right to reinvent themselves, but doing so on an ad hoc and daily basis is chaos and self-negation.
But that's a mission-statement aimed at broader demographics than those which likely interest Joss Whedon. I can't help but feel that there's a reason the show is called Dollhouse and not Toy House. I'm not convinced by the inclusion of the male 'doll' Victor (Enver Gjokaj); outnumbered by his two female colleagues (Dushku and 'Sierra', played by Dichen Lachman), this sounds like the Token Guy, Dollhouse's own ogleable Angel, there to provide balance and backdrop to another Whedon exploration into the female psyche, the fascination - if not obsession - that threads his career. Guys will tune in for Dushku as they did for both her and Sarah-Michelle Gellar in Buffy, but Dollhouse is x-chromosome all down the line, from the evidence of the set-up.
Hey, sounds good to me.
Bei whedonesque wird der Artikel übrigens sehr spannend diskutiert.
wiesengrund - 8. Januar, 15:29
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