Review Text
Review Text di dalam Kurikulum
2006 hanya terdapat di silabus kelas XII wajib, tetapi di dalam Kurikulum 2013
hanya ada di kelas XII Lintas Minat Bahasa Inggris.
Review Text adalah sebuah teks
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Dari beberapa sumber yang saya baca, ada beberapa istilah yang berbeda untuk nama kerangka/struktur Review
Text:
Orientation/Introduction
- Kerangka yang pertama bertujuan untuk mengenalkan karya yang akan dinilai secara umum.
Identification/Background/Evaluation
- Di sini digambarkan tentang latar belakang karya tersebut, pencipta karya, ciri-ciri karya; Jika dalam sebuah film, maka akan dibahas tentang para pemeran filmnya, sutradara, proses produksinya, jalan cerita dan latar pembuatan filmya; dalam sebuah gawai, ambil lah contoh telepon genggam, yang dibahas adalah spesifikasi barangnya, memori, kamera, dll.
Interpretation/Interpretative
Recount
- Penulis memberikan penilaian/kritik secara komprehensif dan cukup terperinci, jika memungkinkan agar pembaca memahami benar bagu/tidaknya karya yang dibahas.
Evaluative Summation/Summary/Conclusion/Recommendation
- Penulis menyimpulkan jika karya yang dibahas itu bagus/tidak berdasarkan data yang dibahas di paragraph sebelumnya. Penulis pun dapat memberikan rekomendasi secara persuasif.
REVIEW ON 2 BROKE GIRLS
Orientation/Introduction
The best sitcoms are the ones that
are just relatable enough to be reasonably realistic, making you care enough
about the characters to overlook the exaggerated ridiculousness of the
situations they get themselves into. However, 2 Broke Girls’s Max
Black (Kat Dennings) and Caroline Channing (Beth Behrs) are too bitterly
sardonic and snobbishly whiny, respectively, to ever become endearing enough
to sustain viewers’ interest. Although its first season showed promise, now
in its fourth year and renewed for a fifth, 2 Broke Girls has lost
momentum and seems to be on its way to comedy bankruptcy.
Identification/Background/Evaluation
Sitcoms are not necessarily known
for their compelling plots and intricate storylines, and the format of the
genre itself is intended to be repeatable, but 2 Broke Girls takes it
to the point of tedious redundancy. It’s not surprising, given the
limitations of the premise: two roommates from drastically different ways of
life struggle together to make ends meet. Max, who grew up in poverty and
makes repeated yet brief and conspicuously unaddressed references to what by
all accounts sounds like a psychologically traumatic childhood, is the
streetwise and sassy one. Caroline, however, the daughter of a now-disgraced
and imprisoned multi-millionaire, was brought up in the lap of luxury and
struggles to adjust to and accept her new working-class life.
Holding down multiple jobs,
sometimes of the odd variety, and cracking jokes in the face of despondency
with the wacky gang at their one stable gig, a diner where they never seem to
do any work yet never seem to risk being fired, the princess and the pauper
get thrown together to deal with some outrageous situations, and hilarity
should ensue, right?
Unfortunately, the concept proves to
be too strained to last as long as 2 Broke Girls has, its value
instead depreciating into a barely funny, repetitious show that relies almost
exclusively on tired re-hashings of the same jokes: the owner of the diner,
Han (Matthew Moy), is short, sexually inexperienced, and ambiguously gay; the
cook, Oleg (Jonathan Kite) is smelly, unhygienic pervert; and the cashier,
Earl (Garrett Morris) is an elderly man with failing vision and an affinity
for marijuana. You can only make so many jokes about these various qualities,
yet the writers of 2 Broke Girls continue to try, often
unsuccessfully.
Interpretation/Interpretative
Recount
The dialogue is often forced and
only minimally resembles actual conversation, instead taking the form of
endless one-liners, with shaky set-ups sometimes thrown in between. All of
the actors deliver their punchy and often strained quips, frequently only
tangentially related to the scenario, with the same overstated sarcasm in
clear anticipation of the pauses needed to insert the overused laugh track.
The reactions of the actors not delivering the punch lines are also
bafflingly formulaic, Behrs’s response to every joke, for example, no matter
the context, is always a bemused half-chuckle, often ignoring direct insults
at her character’s expense.
While Kat Dennings has brought a
sense of wry playfulness to the Thor movie franchise as Jane’s
sharp-tongued consort Darcy with her wisecracking banter, and is a passably charismatic
leading lady in Nick and Norah’s Infinite Playlist (2008), her deadpan
delivery of every punchline, followed by her tepid grin and characteristic
head nod, loses its charm when echoed repeatedly as one of the only would-be
sources of humor for an entire series, particularly because of the rest of
the actors seem to follow her lead in their performances.
The other moderately prominent
actress, Jennifer Coolidge, a regular in Christopher Guest’s mockumentary
films and also known for her prominent roles in such films as American Pie
and Legally Blonde, plays a dramatic and supposedly Polish woman with
an unrecognizable accent. According to the laugh track, she is supposed to be
the Fonzie of the group, as her “grand” entrance each episode paired with her
“catchphrase” “Hay, everybahdy!” is always met with cheers and applause. Her
character does inject some humor into the show, particularly when she
highlights her self-absorption, slow-wittedness, and lack of taste, but she
is so strangely out of place due to her extravagance and disconnection from
the goings-on of the rest of the cast that her presence never fully makes
sense, even as she takes a more prominent yet contrived role in the direction
of the storyline through her torrid relationship with Oleg.
Although puns are standard fare for
many sitcoms and can be done well, the jokes in 2 Broke Girls rely
almost exclusively on the bad variety. In one episode, Max briefly wears an
eyepatch due to an injury and pretends to be “the pirate queen of the
subway,” afterwards justifying it by saying “well, no one arrgh-ued with us”.
Hardy har. Additionally,
the sense of humor is chiefly built on sexual innuendo and racial slurs,
often forced and insipid, with frequent jabs at gay and lesbian stereotypes
that are sometimes lewd and sometimes outright distasteful.
The moments that might elicit some
giggles are few and far between, and they
usually involve some kind of pop culture reference, or a pointed and
sometimes pointless criticism. This commentary is just current enough to at least make
viewers think about laughing, including naming a bland, lazy kitten after Amy
Adams, and Max exclaiming that, upon discovering her boy toy is only
18-years-old and has never heard of Blockbuster Video, he’s been alive less
time than Caitlyn Jenner has been a woman. Although such moderately humorous
instances of relevant cultural critique do increase as the season progresses,
they are not enough to save a sitcom so otherwise comedically impoverished.
Evaluative
Summation/Summary/Conclusion/Recommendation
The bonus features in this box set
aren’t much of a bonus, comprised of a few deleted scenes that didn’t need to
be un-deleted and a mildly funny gag reel that shows that these actors have
good on-set chemistry on set and may actually be funny if left to their own
devices and unconstrained by the stale dialogue. All in all, though, season
four of 2 Broke Girls shows that this sitcom’s ending is past due. Its
value has depreciated since its promising debut, and is not worth much to
viewers anymore. 2 Broke Girls has been drawn out, and now its balance
is overdrawn.
Taken
from http://www.popmatters.com/review/196304-2-broke-girls-the-complete-fourth-season/
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