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The Top 5 Worst ‘Anime’ Of 2016

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With the end of the year right around the corner, it’s time to look back at worst Anime titles which came out in 2016. It should be noted these animes are more disappointing than absolutely terrible. Still considering how much other media is available watching something which isn’t satisfying is almost a worst crime. The time spent watching these shows could have been used to help expand the upcoming best of list from five entries to a full ten. Time is a precious thing and it shouldn’t be spent watching shows of less than average quality. Without further ado, here are the five worst animes of 2016.

Gundam Unicorn

5. MOBILE SUIT GUNDAM UNICORN RE:0096

It should be noted if you have no other way of watching Gundam Unicorn, then by all means check out this series. It is one of the best Gundam shows to come out in a while which wasn’t being self-referential (Gundam build Fighters) or without having to introduce another timeline (Mobile Suit Gundam: Iron blooded Orphans). Unfortunately these facts aside this is just a repackaging of an already released series with little to no additional additional scenes. Essentially it’s a clip show for anyone who has seen the original Gundam Unicorn and a glorified clip show easily fits onto this list.

Nurse Witch Komugi

4. Nurse Witch Komugi R

Remember SoulTaker? No? Then maybe you caught its OVA, Nurse Witch Komugi where they spun off a character and made her into a magical girl. Still nothing? Doesn’t matter as this series is supposed to be a reintroduction and reinvention of the characters. Unfortunately this series doesn’t exactly know what it wants to do. Sometimes it wants to be an idol show complete with a song and dance number almost every episode, other times it’s trying for comedy and deconstructing aspects of the magical girl genre, and a few times it seems like it’s actually trying to be a legitimate magical girl series. Unfortunately most of the time the jokes aren’t funny, the new magical girls are cookie cutter (A Magical Maid and Magical Sister are introduced) and the songs aren’t even close to being as catchy as those featured in Love Live. If this show had tried to stop being other shows and instead had dedicated itself to one idea, it might have been worthwhile instead of easily forgotten.

Ace Attorney

3. Ace Attorney

It is possible to have an adaptation be so faithful it actually hinders itself. This is the case with the anime adaptation of Phoenix Wright. The anime takes the first two video games stories and so accurately represents them in-motion they come off kind of boring. Who was the show even for? The fans? They have already played the games so they know what is going to happen. A newcomer? The show assumes you are already a fan and will appreciate the nuances which went into the animation. In the end you’re left with the series which is below average and not really much fun for anyone.

Time Bokan

2. Time Bokan 24

As many studios keep trying to relaunch old shows for a new generation there was a lot of promise behind this series which was one of Tatsunoko Studios more iconic franchises. Unfortunately this new installment of Time Bokan is so formulaic you can time out how each episode will play out nearly to the second. The series isn’t helped by overwhelming need to present a more comedic atmosphere. The good guys travel back in time to discover “true history” such as the Wright brothers being one guy or Cleopatra being a two-person comedy act. Meanwhile, the villains are actually trying to keep things the same so they don’t have to change the textbooks they produce which really makes it feel like these roles should be reversed. It’s underwhelming and is intended just really to sell the robots featured in the show to kids. Considering how well other shows can do this and still present an entertaining promise, this one just runs out of time.

Berserk

1. Berserk (2016)

Man this one hurt. After waiting 18 years for another Berserk series to expand upon the atrocious stopping point of the first one, a continuation finally arrived. Unfortunately, it’s not very good. The art is literally painful to look at at times as the studio preferred to wait for the final renders to be available with the blu-ray releases which is becoming far too common a practice. The story is a bit underwhelming as this arc moves slower than previous ones and introduces one of the most annoying characters in all of anime. Seriously, the Nina character whined so much she got trained executions, whose job is to ignore the complaining of others to stop. Considering how many Berserk fan there are in the world and how much they were looking forward to this series it almost feels like a slap in the face. The original manga is known for having gorgeous art, being deep and emotional at times, and is considered one of the best fantasy mangas of all time. This series just felt rushed and quickly ran out of steam in a very bad way. Hopefully the studio will learn its lesson and the next season in 2017 will at least look a little better. They’ll already have to win back the audience who were disappointed after watching this 12 episode trainwreck.


All of these titles are streaming at Crunchyroll. What was your most hated Anime title of 2016? Leave a comment below and let us know.

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Review: ‘Jojo’s Bizarre Adventure: Diamond Is Unbreakable’: Episode 39

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Goodbye, Morioh – Heart of Gold

And so the fourth arc of Jojo’s Bizarre Adventure comes to an end. It’s amazing how despite these characters knowing how dangerous an individual Kira is they still allow him to move about and it once again causes a citizen to get caught up in battle. Of course it shows the act of how desperate he is as he’s not exactly at his best after the punishment he received in the previous battle. It’s hard to talk about this episode without spoiling it but know it was one of the better ending to a storyline in recent memory.

The entire cast shows back up and each of them gets a cute moment in the spotlight. Also, it turns out despite an initial assumption, the theory of Josuke being the person who saved his younger self didn’t come to pass. It was just some other guy who had pompadour and looked like he had just come from a final battle. Considering Deadly Queen had the ability to mess with time, it seemed like a very possible scenario of Josuke getting sent back to the past and being the individual who saved himself and his mom in the flashback near the start of the series..

There will be a more descriptive breakdown of this series by the end of the month with a full review of this season. Overall this is a nice wrap up to what was a very entertaining installment of this series. There is now a gap every Friday where a new episode of one of the most over the top and bizarre series once stood. Hopefully something just as entertaining will appear in winter 2017 to fill this void. It would be a shame if fans would have to wait the entire year for the next arc, Jojo’s Bizarre Adventure: Vento Aureo because there wasn’t any other good anime released.

Jojo’s Bizarre Adventure: Diamond is Unbreakable is streaming on Crunchyroll.

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Carrie Fisher Suffered A Massive Heart Attack On Flight From London

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Carrie Fisher suffered a massive heart attack Friday on a flight from London to LAX when she went into cardiac arrest, people on board were administering CPR, according to TMZ.

According to TMZ’s source, the heart attack occurred 15 minutes before the plane landed in Los Angeles. An unidentified EMT on the plane administered CPR as the flight landed at LAX. The plane landed just after noon and paramedics rushed Fisher to a nearby hospital.

We will update this story as news becomes available.

Actress Anna Akana was on the flight as well, she was one the first people to report the situation.

Carrie Fisher

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Great Lakes Brewery: Winter Ale – A Spicy Review

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As of yesterday, winter has officially returned to the northern hemisphere. Many aren’t thrilled at the prospect of having to trudge through the slush for the next three or four months. But, at least we can look forward to the aromatic return of winter beers. And, to mark the beginning of winter, I picked up a 750-mL bottle of Great Lakes Brewery’s Winter Ale. I’ve previously written reviews for two of Great Lakes Brewery’s other beers. Check them out here and here for information on them and the brewery.

For now, change your tires, strap on your snowshoes, put on your heavy coats, and grab your shovel: it’s Winter (Ale) time.

Great Lakes Brewery: Winter Ale – First Sip

Winter Ale pours an amber-hued golden colour with an inch or so of foam that dissipates slowly. This beer has a smooth mouthfeel and relatively lively bubbles. Winter Ale’s orange-peel smell mixes well with a cinnamon flavour that gives way to a ginger-y aftertaste.

Great Lakes Brewery: Winter Ale – Last Sip

This is a sweet and aromatic brew, almost like a shandy. And, at 6.2% ABV in a 750-mL bottle, one is enough, especially if you’re enjoying it after previously drinking a 473-mL can of Bolshevik Bastard.

The obvious benefit of feeling tiny while drinking from a 750-mL beer bottle aside, you’re only hurting yourself by drinking this one without a glass. This is a brew you should smell as well as taste.

Winter Ale reminds me of thick apple cider, so I suggest enjoying it alongside a sausage on a bun. But, with its rich flavours, it’ll also go well with a savoury turkey dinner. For seasonal seekers who look for thick, rich, and spicy beers in the spring and summer, this brew will also go well with barbecued chicken and vegetables.

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Episode 105: The Best, Worst, And Deep Tracks From 2016

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As we close out 2016, it’s time to reflect on the good, the bad, and the surprises of the film year that was. What was your favorite film from 2016?

EJ’s List
Best: The Handmaiden
Worst: Captain America: Civil War
Surprise: Arrival
Most Enjoyed: Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice

Matt’s List
Best: Hell or High Water – Arrival
Worst: Batman: The Killing Joke
Surprise: The Accountant
Most Enjoyed: Hello My Name Is Doris

Strap yourself in buckaroos! Episode 105 of the Monkeys Fighting Robots podcast is here.

Do you want to be our SUPER-FAN of the week? All you have to do is comment on this podcast to be eligible.

Do you have a question that you would like answered during the show? Email your questions to matt@popaxiom.com.

About the Monkeys Fighting Robots Podcast:
A Gen Xer and a Millennial debate the latest topics in pop culture. One guy is a filmmaker and the other is a journalist, but both are nerds. We make your slowest days at work better. Hosts, Matthew Sardo and EJ Moreno.

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Never heard of Matt Sardo?
For starters, he made the Kessel Run in less than 11 parsecs. Prior to that, he gave Doc Brown the idea for the flux capacitor and led the Resistance to victory over SkyNet – all while sipping a finely crafted IPA. As a radio host, he’s interviewed celebrities, athletes and everyone in between. He’s covered everything from the Super Bowl to Comic-Con.

Who’s EJ Moreno?
Is he a trained physician? No. Is he a former Miss Universe contestant? Possibly. But what we know for sure is he’s a writer, filmmaker, and pop culture enthusiast. Since film school, EJ has written & directed several short films. He’s used his passion of filmmaking to become a movie critic for MonkeysFightingRobots.com.

Places you can find the show:
iTunes
Blog Talk Radio
Stitcher

Reviews are greatly appreciated – How to Rate and Review a Podcast in iTunes

Thank you for listening!

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Nickel Brook Brewing: Bolshevik Bastard Imperial Stout – A Stout Review

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As five-foot snowbanks become increasingly common in Ontario, many leave their ice-cold beers in the fridge. Instead, they reach for full-bodied wines and hot toddies. After a day of shoveling snow, it’s nice to drink something that sticks to your ribs, and warms you up. That’s why this week I picked up a 473 mL tall can of Nickel Brook Brewing Company’s Bolshevik Bastard Imperial Stout. I previously reviewed two other beers from Nickel Brook, so check those out for information on them and the brewery.

I imagine snow removal in the Mongolian People’s Republic, on the opposite side of the northern hemisphere from my location, creates the same problems there as it does here. But, I doubt, bolshevik though they may be, that you would find anyone drinking Bolshevik Bastard Imperial Stout there. Unfortunately for my Mongolian comrades, Nickel Brook brews are only available in Ontario. And, not to rub it in, I’m going to try one now. Erüül mendiin tölöö!

Nickel Brook Brewing Co.: Bolshevik Bastard Imperial Stout – First Sip

Bolshevik Bastard pours a solid black with a relatively thin layer of foam. This stout is far less heady than Guinness, and I pour the entire contents of the can into a tulip-shaped pint glass without having to tilt the glass or pour in stages. I smell chocolate and roasted nuts as I take my first sip. The chocolate aroma turns into a chocolate flavour, well supported by this brew’s velvety mouthfeel. Bolshevik Bastard’s chocolatey flavour gives way to a well-balanced bitterness, likely a product of its “aggressive hopping” and high alcohol content.

Nickel Brook Brewing Co.: Bolshevik Bastard Imperial Stout – Last Sip

Much like the Bolsheviks this brew is named for, it’s not to be messed with. Weighing in at a significantly high 9% ABV, you should probably limit your intake to one. This makes Bolshevik Bastard a great beer to start with, especially if you’re coming in out of the cold.

With its heavy chocolatey flavour, I suggest enjoying this brew with something savoury. Luckily, the holiday season is a time for all kinds of foods, not just sweet ones. This is as full-bodied, and about as alcoholic, as any wine. So, if you feel like drinking something with dinner, try this revolutionary beer alongside your turkey, ham, latkes, jerk chicken, or whatever else you’re going to stuff your face with.

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Thank You, Hollywood: Six of the Best Movie Remakes Ever

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Next to a decent video game adaptation, the most elusive movie in Hollywood is a great remake. Which is sort of an oxymoron. How can remakes be great?

Well, they can. Some. And here’s the few that are worth your precious time.

 

6) TRUE GRIT (2010)

Remake1

Any remake is risky, but a remake of classic John Wayne western is playing with fire. Of course, Joel and Ethan Coen aren’t afraid to get burned. They touted their version as a closer adaptation of the novel. It very well may be, but it is certainly more entertaining than the original.

For proof, look no further than how both movies start. The original is a dragging, glacial set up that goes into unnecessary detail of how the girl’s father was killed. The remake opts to show that same girl (Hailee Steinfeld), only now she’s a spitfire more hellbent than any male gunslinger, already deep in a revenge mission.

 
5) THE TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE (2003)

Remake2One beef with the original is it lacks character development. We only see a bunch of innocent young Texans brutally slaughtered in a hellish nightmare scenario for no reason other than “shit happens”.

It’s visual torture made more grotesque by the inclusion of a paraplegic who we know has no chance of survival. But that’s the point of the original: instill disgust.

The remake, directed by Marcus Nispel from a script by Scott Kosar, allows us to know the characters, to see them as identifiable friends as opposed to strangers from a news reel. That, compounded with the revelation that every who should help Jessica Biel and company is in league with Leatherface, adds a sense of hopelessness and suspense. Biel just might have a shot at life.

 
4) YOU’VE GOT MAIL (1998)

Remake3

Directed by Nora Ephron, from a screenplay she co-wrote with her sister Delia Ephron, this movie modernizes a classic while still keeping the original’s heart and whimsy. That classic is The Shop Around the Corner, starring James Stewart and Margaret Sullavan as feuding co-workers who are secretly pen pals in love.

Tom Hanks and Meg Ryan star in the remake. Because it’s 1990s, snail mail is out and e-mail is in. One of the best improvements is the location change from Budapest to New York City. You’ve Got Mail is more than a romantic comedy. It’s a lesson in love, loss, (and what was worn); story structure, character development, and wordsmithy dialogue.

And it’s a pretty great love letter to New York City.

 
3) THE MAN WHO KNEW TOO MUCH (1956)

Remake4

Alfred Hitchcock directed this remake of… an Alfred Hitchcock film? Yes, indeed he did! The story is essentially the same: a the child of a vacationing couple is kidnapped, forcing them to keep quiet about a plot to assassinate a diplomat.

The original is from Hitchcock’s British period, while the remake, written by John Michael Hayes, is from his Golden Age in 1950’s Hollywood. Every penny is on screen. The minutes-long assassination attempt built around a symphony performance is one of the director’s best suspense sequences.

What stands out most are the performances by James Stewart and Doris Day. Especially Day. She plays against type as a suspicious, slightly cynical former singer desperate to get her son back. And while Stewart is our hero, he’s even a little sinister when he extorts Day into taking sedatives before dropping the news that their son has been kidnapped.

 
2) FATHER OF THE BRIDE (1991)

Remake5The original, directed by Vincente Minnelli and starring Spencer Tracy, Joan Bennett, and Elizabeth Taylor, is perfection. So why remake it?

Because it’s a timeless story for any parent who’s walked their daughter down the aisle.

In the remake, directed by Charles Shyer from a script he co-wrote with Nancy Meyers,  Steve Martin plays George Banks, a father who doesn’t want to see his daughter (Kimberly Williams-Paisley) get married. What he REALLY doesn’t want is his life to change. Hilarity ensues from Martin’s resistance to the inevitable. And Martin Short as Franck, the wedding planner from God knows where is insanity brought to life. Filmmakers take note, if you want an example of effective use of voice over, look no further.

 
1) CAPE FEAR (1991)

Remake6

Martin Scorsese is the only director who could have successfully remade this classic, which was already perfect. Again, why remake it? To add more depth.

The original plays it safe. It’s clear who’s good and bad. Gregory Peck plays Sam Bowden, a souther lawyer stalked by Max Cady (Robert Mitchum), a psychopath who believes Bowden didn’t do his job as his defense attorney. As a result, Cady spent a few years in the gray bar hotel.

In the remake, written by Wesley Strick, Scorsese blurs the lines between good and bad. Now, Nick Nolte plays Sam Bowden, still a southern lawyer, but one who cheats on his wife played by Jessica Lange. Again, Bowden defended Max Cady (Robert De Niro), who’s even more psychotic than Mitchum.

The twist: Bowden was so disgusted by Cady’s crime that he threw the trial, ensuring a conviction.

When released, Cady begins a systematic psychological and physical assault on Bowden, his wife Leigh, and their daughter (Juliette Lewis).

Is Nolte’s Bowden more noble than Peck’s, or is he just as evil as Cady? It’s a gray area, and Scorsese wants us to fester in making a decision.

What’s not gray is De Niro’s Cady. He’s infinitely more evil than Mitchum’s version. In one scene, he seduces the woman Bowden had an affair with, proclaims “I got you now, bitch!”, and beats the shit out of her. It’s one’s of De Niro’s best performances.

Being a fan of cinema, Scorsese offers nods to the original. Both Peck and Mitchum show up in the remake. This time, Mitchum plays a detective investigating the attacks on the Bowdens; while Peck plays a slithery, conniving defense attorney. The white three-piece suit Peck wears in court is a deranged reference to another lawyer he played: Atticus Finch in To Kill A Mockingbird. Scorsese even uses Bernard Herrmann’s original score. There was no way to improve upon that.

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Sacrilege: Six of the Worst Movie Remakes Ever

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Awful movie remakes will always outnumber the good remakes. Here are some of the most wretched. Most of which fall into the horror genre.

 
6) A PERFECT MURDER (1998)

Remakes1

Only Alfred Hitchcock should remake Hitchcock. That’s the thesis of this Dial M For Murder do-over, directed by Andrew Davis and written by Patrick Smith Kelly. Try to out-twist the Master of Suspense and this is what regurgitates.

Michael Douglas knows his wife, played by Gwyneth Paltrow, is having an affair. Instead of blackmailing a long-ago friend into killing Paltrow (like in the original), Douglas hires her lover, played by Viggo Mortensen, to snuff her out. Twist one.

Twist two is the reveal of who actually tried to kill Paltrow: an ordinary burglar. It just so happened that on the same day Mortensen was to kill Paltrow, another guy broke into her apartment. Timing is everything.

From there, the movie devolves into Douglas’ desperate attempts to tie loose ends before Paltrow finds out he tried to kill her. “It’s not happiness to see me”, say both Douglas and Paltrow. Neither is this movie.

 
5) FRIDAY THE 13TH (2009)

Remakes2Actually, it’s a remake of Parts I, II, and III, but let’s not split skulls. The original’s suspense and ultimate twist are gone in this rehash from director Marcus Nispel and writers Damian Shannon and Mark Swift.

We’re supposed to root for a bunch of deplorable twentysomethings, which is impossible. The only decent character is played by Jared Padalecki, who is trying to find his missing sister.

We end up rooting for Jason Vorhees. The quicker he kills them, the sooner the movie can end. Unlike in the original series, Jason doesn’t seem to be killing out of revenge because councillors let him drown as a kid. No. It’s more like he kills anyone who stumbles upon a marijuana-growing operation in the woods of Camp Crystal Lake. Jason isn’t a vengeful murderer; he’s a drug dealer trying to stay in business. It’s doubtful the filmmakers intended this takeaway, but that’s how it looks. At least there was never a sequel.

 

4) WHEN A STRANGER CALLS (2006)

Remakes3

A better title is Sorry, Wrong Number. But that would be an entirely different remake. The original, starring Carol Kane, was essentially three short films telling one over-arching story.

Film One is a half hour of pure dread and terror as Kane’s babysitter is harassed by a crank caller asker her, “Have you checked the children?”. It’s a masterpiece in the slow build-up department.

Film Two follows the killer from Film One after he’s released from jail. He unsuccessfully tries to kill a woman he fancies in a bar.

Which leads to Film Three. The killer discovers Kane has a family and decides to finish what he started.

The remake, directed by Simon West from a script by Jake Wade Wall, is Film One stretched out over ninety minutes. When the idea is the only thing scary about your horror movie, you’ve got trouble.

Why do a lot of modern day horror movies take place in houses with walls made entirely of glass? And why don’t they have curtains? A glass house suggests the owner has money to fall over. Why would they want their valuables on view for the general public? It’s inviting trouble. But this can be overlooked for the most part.

What can’t be overlooked is the fact that the babysitter is no longer the only potential figure of authority in the house. Halfway through the movie, a housekeeper shows up, watering plants in the conservatory. Because when you’re wealthy, you can have your own personal botanical garden.

Why doesn’t the babysitter ask the housekeeper for help? Actually, why is there a babysitter? Can’t the housekeeper do double duty, or is that rhododendron that much of a bitch?

Hitchcock once said, “Logic is boring.” True. But at times, it’s necessary.

Hang up on this one.

 
3) PSYCHO (1998)

Remakes4Yet another remake of a Hitchcock classic. And another with Viggo Mortensen among the cast. Without The Lord of the Rings, his career may have never recovered.

Gus Van Sant directed this shot-for-shot remake, using an updated script by original screenwriter Joseph Stefano.  Van Sant even kept to Hitchcock’s month-long filming schedule.

Why? So he can say he did it? This is the equivalent of a toddler using tracing paper to “draw” a picture of Captain America and then put it on the fridge for everyone to adore. Totally pointless.

 
2) HALLOWEEN (2007)

Remakes5This is what happens when the kid who traced Captain America thinks he can write and direct. Rob Zombie thought it’d be interesting to plumb Michael Myers’ backstory, so he wrote and directed it. In doing so, he turns John Carpenter’s murdering force of evil into a lumbering Sasquatch of a man, who kills because he was bullied as a kid. Any got a kitchen knife?

The more interesting backstories belong to Dr. Sam Loomis (Malcolm McDowell) and Michael’s mother (Sheri Moon Zombie). In fact, Moon Zombie turns out to be the only sympathetic character in the atrocity.

All of act one and much of act two is devoted to Michael’s backstory. Apparently if we understand his psychopathy, we’ll relate to him.

The thing is, we’re not supposed to relate to Michael. We’re supposed to be afraid of him. A kid who randomly butchers his sister on Halloween (like in the original) is shocking. Why he does it is inconsequential. He exists. That’s all we need to know.

Laurie Strode (Scout Taylor-Compton) is who we should relate to, but we don’t. Where Jamie Lee Curtis played Laurie in the original as smart, quiet, and likable, Taylor-Compton plays her as antagonistic, even a little mean. No sympathy.

The gore is another downside. Zombie slathers blood on everything, more interested in torture and shocks, rather than suspense, like Carpenter. Zombie also gives us a Haddonfield, Illinois chalk full of white trash with a southern drawl.

Zombie renders his entire remake pointless by not having Kid Michael kill his baby sister Angel (eventually Laurie). The only reason for this: she wasn’t mean to him. If that’s the case, why the hell does he hunt her down years later? Zombie can’t even follow the rules he set up.

 
1) GHOSTBUSTERS (2016)

Remakes6Let’s get this straight: the women WERE NOT the trouble with this movie. That’s just the angle director Paul Feig and the media played up. In fact, if it weren’t for Kate McKinnon and Leslie Jones, the movie would be unwatchable.

Instead of finally getting a third Ghostbusters movie (or fourth if you count the video game), we get this shoddy remake,co-written by Feig and Katie Dippold, built on this idea: introduce ghosts to a New York that has never experienced them before.

This would have worked if the original Ghostbusters didn’t exist. Unfortunately for everyone involved, it does exist. And it’s a bell that can’t be unrung. Ghostbusters is an iconic property comprised of iconic characters and iconic events. Asking audiences, especially long-time fans, to ignore thirty-plus years of mythology is ludicrous and insulting.

Take Star Wars, for example. When Disney bought the rights, they made The Force Awakens – a sequel that brought back characters fans had waited thirty-two years to see again. Imagine if Disney had rebooted the franchise in name only and it had nothing to do with the Skywalker mythology. People would’ve gone out of their minds. And rightly so. But Disney didn’t do that. They respected the originals and added to them.

The decision to have the Ghostbusters remake/reboot have nothing to do with the original movies is its most grievous mistake. And one that Sony seemed to try to fix by throwing in nods to the original.

This was evident in the first trailer released. It began with “Thirty years ago, four scientists saved the world” plastered across the screen. If Sony and director Paul Feig intended a fresh start with nothing to do with the original movie, why even reference it or its characters?

At the very least they could have referenced it correctly: three scientists and a former Marine saved the world. Winston Zeddemore wasn’t a scientist. Someone must have brought this to Sony’s attention because subsequent trailer replaced “four scientists” with “four friends”.

Having the original cast make cameos in different roles, using the same logo and science, and sticking Slimer in doesn’t appease fans. Nor should it any movie-lover.

During the original’s commentary, director Ivan Reitman mentions that he approached the premise of Ghostbusters seriously, knowing the comedy would evolve from that.

At no point can the remake be taken seriously. It plays like a spoof. Characters volley snide, “witty” comments at each other in an attempt to make the audience laugh, but only manage to make them check their watches. When I saw it, only three things provoked laughter: McKinnon, Jones, and Chris Hemsworth, who played Kevin, the dim secretary.

One of the first lessons taught in film school is avoid exposition. Show don’t tell. So how does the remake start? With a four minute monologue about a haunted house. The most action seen is the ping-ponging reactions of those on the haunted house tour.

Compare that to the dialogue-less opening sequence in the original of a mousy librarian discovering a ghost in the depths of the New York Public Library. It isn’t played for laughs; it’s to establish a mood. Reitman, with writers Dan Aykroyd and Harold Ramis, knew that for the audience to accept Slimer, Gozer, and Mr. Stay Puft, they’d have to believe their existence possible. The few chances at believability in the remake are often inorganic.

Only Ernie Hudson and Rick Moranis voiced opposition to the remake/reboot idea. Moranis opted out of participating, asking why would he want to re-do something he did right thirty years prior. After the remake’s underperformance, Hudson admitted it would’ve been better to just make a proper third installment.

Akyroyd has been pushing the third installment idea for decades. He wanted the old team to hand off the business to a new team. Sony should have gone that route.

Ivan Reitman recently said that several Ghostbusters movie projects are in the works. Hopefully one will use Aykroyd’s idea. Until then, watch the original movies. Or the cartoon series. Or the IDW comic books.

Just not the remake. Avoid it like a Class Seven ghost.

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The UnPOP Podcast Discusses Why Rogue One Is a Return to Form

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The UnPOP crew travels to a Galaxy, Far, Far Away.

Starting with a visit to Brock’s favorite Cantina, the Trio dives into some lively thoughts on the Force, that “Star Wars” feeling and an unrelenting swarm of Forest Whitaker impressions

Have a topic you’d like to hear UnPOPPED? Send any comments/love/vitriol to unpopentertainment@gmail.com

The UnPOP Podcast is on iTunes! Check us out there!

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‘Tis the Season for Sours: Best of Sour Beers 2016

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Sour Beers have filled taps and shelves with mass popularity this year. What exactly are these beers, and what are the ones worth trying? Sours rocked 2016.

Sour beer is just as it sounds, it is tart and sour to taste.

According to PasteMagazine.com, Sours get their trademark tartness and sourness from bacteria and wild yeasts—Lactobacillus, Acetobacter, Brettanomyces, and other critters—that you wouldn’t find in other styles of beer. Each type of bacteria gives its own trademark flavor and aroma: Lactobacillus has a yogurt tang, Acetobacter has the sourness of vinegar, and Brettanomyces has a barnyard, earthy, or farmhouse aroma.

Sours are best in warmer months, but they do stick around all year long. Which ones should you be tasting before the end of 2016?

Made in Wine barrels, Deux Rogues has the overwhelming red wine flavor, but in a good way. This sour is unlike any other, on the tops of many lists, this is one you need to taste for yourself. ABV: 6.2%

If you are into apricots, this beer is made for you. 2.5 pounds of fruit are put into every gallon, so you are literally drinking your fruits. Tartness is a medium to high ratio, and it is not a dry drink. This will keep your lips puckered and happy for quite sometime. ABV: 7%

Chosen partially for the name, this beer gives sours a run for their money. With the complexity of wild yeasts, and a whole lot of cherries, a tart satisfying taste comes from the can. It is only in their Kings Reserve, limited relase, but very worth the search and wait. ABV:6.9%

Three sours to try before years end, but don’t stop there! These fruity tart beers are here to stay. Beer lovers are falling for their taste, as well as complexity.

Until next time beer snobs!

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