I am hooked on the show now. I was just telling someone about it last night.
I believe that a theme of the show is that bad things happen to good people.
The thing about the characters is that they are just regular folks that have
been turned into monsters (and a ghost) that was outside of their control.

 I have been wondering if there are any other supernatural creatures in
their universe. Also, why are the vampires trying to take over the world
(again)? Seems like they should have been able to do that a long time ago.

On Mon, Aug 10, 2009 at 9:37 PM, Keith Johnson <keithbjohn...@comcast.net>wrote:

>
>
> I know a couple of people mentioned "Being Human". Anyone watching it other
> than them and me? I enjoy the show. It's light at times, but then very
> serious at times, even scary and creepy. Only the Brits can strike that
> balance in scifi so well. I like the characters--i'll even forgive the
> eleventy millionth rendition of the young, hunky, angst-filled vampire. I
> find the whole society of vamps who look out for each other interesting
> ("don't mind me brother; you just keep doing your orderly duties and let me
> sip a little blood from the patient in the bed. What? You won't let me feed
> off a patient? You want to be an outcast?!")  The young ghost who can hold
> objects but can't be seen by many is interesting. The actress is good as a
> bright spirit (no pun intended) whose natural ebullience is tempered by the
> fact that she's a mostly insubstantial shade who can't yet crossover. Among
> all the curses suffered by the roomies, I'd think being a ghost would be the
> worst. At least the guys can enjoy some measure of life--at least even the
> vamp can hold a woman, and in this show, he even eats regular food every now
> and then.
>
> But what got me most recently is a show dealing with the young nebbish dude
> who's a werewolf. The show starts off with him transforming, and a voiceover
> speaks of the pain of the transformation.  It states that, since the
> werewolf frame is smaller than a human, the organs all have to shrink: the
> heart must reduce in size, which is painful, as do the liver and the
> kidneys. As the organs are rearranging themselves, bones break and reform,
> hormones are flooding into the system.  At the height of the change, the
> narrator says in a eerily clinical tone, the organ restructuring is so bad
> that the organs literally shut down as they're reformed--the lycanthrope is
> effectively dying. But, he can't die, as adrenaline is pumped into the body
> in huge amounts, constantly keeping him alive, and of course the animal
> savagery starts kicking into gear. it's like a series of
> deaths-and-resurrections, all painful because none of the regular
> pain-killing hormones are working.   I'm not quite accurate with my
> description, but the gist was I never ever thought of a werewolf change in
> those terms, and it was quite disturbing.
> kudo's for that.
>
>
> 
>



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