Home Blog Page 1222

‘Fantastic Four’ (2015) Retrospective Review – What Went Wrong?

Monkeys Fighting Robots
Photo Credit: Courtesy Twentieth Century Fox
Quick question- where are the Thing’s pants? Photo Credit: Courtesy Twentieth Century Fox

Fantastic Four is a tough nut to crack for Hollywood. Despite two previous attempts, the team has yet to strike gold as a movie franchise. What is going wrong?

In the span of a few years, Josh Trank has gone from one of cinema’s rising talents to a pariah. His work on Chronicle was good, but 2015’s Fantastic Four debacle makes him persona non grata.

Reed Richards (Miles Teller) discovers teleportation in grade school. Years later, he is recruited by Dr. Franklin Storm (Reg Cathey) to work at the Baxter Building think tank. His colleagues include Sue Storm (Kate Mara), her brother Johnny (Michael B. Jordan), and antisocial programer Victor Von Doom (Toby Kebell). There is an obvious tension between Reed and Doom, because the latter is the first to have found existence of an alternate dimension. Cue the sinister music.

While drunk, Reed, Victor and Johnny decide to go over to the new dimension, bringing along the former’s friend Ben Grimm (Jamie Bell). Lo and behold, something goes wrong during the trip, and Victor is lost in the process. Upon their return, Sue is also affected by the blast and gains invisibility powers. Johnny combusts into flames and fly. Reed can stretch to great proportions, and Ben transforms into a rock-type creature. Distraught, Reed escapes to Central America. One year later, the four are brought together to face Victor, who is still alive in the other dimension.

The cast does adequate with what little they have to work with. Teller plays Reed with a believable intensity. His precocious beginnings harken to the kid heroes of Steven Spielberg’s filmography. Bell is a reliable, supportive Ben Grimm, yet he disappears for a long portion of the movie’s first half. His transformation into the Thing is difficult to watch, though. It would have helped if his friendship with Reed was given more development.

Fantastic Four

Michael B. Jordan does well showing Johnny’s recklessness and troubled nature. Despite the film’s flaws, he gives a well-rounded take on the Torch. Ironically, Jordan is one of the few good points of the movie. Mara doesn’t have much to do as Susan Storm, who’s the adopted daughter in this version. While she’s intelligent and driven, Mara has a believable chemistry with Jordan. As Franklin, Cathey provides the knowing, paternal figure and voice of reason.

Kebell is problematic as Victor Von Doom. From the get-go, he’s a creepy computer genius with feelings for Sue. However, he does not feel menacing or commanding in Doom mode. Nor does he bring anything new to the character. His one major moment takes place in a long hallway, but it feels reminiscent of a similar scene in Chronicle. Only difference is, he’s not chilling like Dane DeHaan.

Fantastic Four Doom

Fantastic Four‘s biggest problem is the tone. Instead of an action-packed adventure, the plot feels akin to a David Cronenberg film, because there is fear and loathing instead of joy and excitement. It does not have much humour and instead goes for a horror-science-fiction feel. Nor does the team get much time to bond as a quartet of heroes; indeed, the only time they come together is in the last twenty minutes. Trank chooses to have the movie shot in pallid blues, black and grey hues.

The film’s editing feels choppy and very strung together, which seems like a cut-and-paste job. As you saw in the trailer, an impressive scene where the Thing drops from a plane is not in the final cut. Similarly, the visual effects range from good to shoddy at best. For example, the Thing’s craggy look is impressive. The Human Torch effects are quite cool, but Mr. Fantastic’s rubbery stretching does not follow suit.

Overall, Fantastic Four is a disappointing adaptation. In trying to be different, Trank misses the point of the characters entirely. Looking back, it’s clear Fox needs to go back to the drawing board. Either that, or let the film rights revert to Marvel.

Monkeys Fighting Robots Youtube

‘Jessica Jones’ Showrunner Talks Season 2 Villain, ‘Defenders’ Connection

Monkeys Fighting Robots

A few months back we officially confirmed that Jessica Jones season two was greenlit. Since then, however, news revolving around the season has been relatively slow.

In an interview with Entertainment Weekly, Jessica Jones showrunner Melissa Rosenberg talked about the villain(s) we could see in season two, along with the season’s connection to 2017’s Defenders.

On the Defenders connection:

My colleagues Marco Ramirez and Doug Petrie, who are doing Defenders, they’ve shared material. We’ve sat down for many conversations about what are they doing, what’s happening with Jessica? They want my input, they want all the different showrunners’ input on the characters that they’re most familiar with. Marvel was very smart in hiring those guys, because they’re really collaborative. They enjoy collaboration, which is not always the case, and they listen, and we listen to them. We’re really trying to find a way to respond to the things that they want to do, and them to respond to the things we want to do. So far so good. It’s working out. If they weren’t who they were as people, it could be very problematic. But they’re the absolutely right people to do this.”

On possible villains in the season:

“Or antagonists, plural. No one is ever going to beat David Tennant as Kilgrave, so you don’t do that. The biggest mistake would be to try to repeat that. You just go, “OK, we’re not doing that, so we have this open to us.” I can’t spoil a surprise. [Responding to the follow-up question of who this might be]”

Are you excited for Jessica Jones season two? Be sure to let us know in the comments section of this article, down below.

Season two of Jessica Jones hits Netflix sometime in 2018.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T96vjUlr06Q

Source: EW.

Monkeys Fighting Robots Youtube

Former Warner Brothers Employee Trashes ‘Suicide Squad’ And ‘Wonder Woman’

Monkeys Fighting Robots

Battle Scene

Remember the saying “Don’t bite the hand that feeds you?”

While Suicide Squad is doing well, Warner Brothers has a major issue to deal with.

Recently, an ex-employee released an open letter addressed to Warners’ CEO Kevin Tsujihara. The source of her ire? Suicide Squad. Not to mention, the ways things are being run.

Having seen Suicide Squad, Grace Law writes about her anger at how the studio handles its owned properties. She voices her contempt for the film, which she calls “this train wreck of a movie.”

“Yes, it is unfathomable to me that Warner Bros could mess up a movie starring Will Smith, Margot Robbie, and The Joker so completely,” Law writes. “But that just had me flummoxed.”

Suicide Squad

Patty Jenkins’ Wonder Woman movie does not get off so easily. Law describes the film as “such a mess. People inside are already confirming it’s another mess. It is almost impressive how you keep rewarding the same producers and executives for making the same mistakes, over and over.”

Law goes one step further: “And it’s not just DC movies, it’s your whole slate. Jupiter Ascending. Get Hard. Hot Pursuit. Max. Vacation. Pan. Point Break. Fucking PAN, you jerk. People lost their jobs and you decided Pan was a good idea. You think another Jungle Book is a good idea.”

zack snyder filming

The letter points to Zack Snyder as contributing to the problem. According to Law: “Is he being punished? Assistants who were doing fantastic work certainly were. People in finance and in marketing and in IT. They had no say in a movie called Batman V Superman only having 8 minutes of Batman fighting Superman in it, that ends because their moms have the same name.”

Keep in mind, this could just be the words of a bitter ex-worker. If true, it may not bode well for the DC Film Universe.

Monkeys Fighting Robots Youtube

Review: ‘Jojo’s Bizarre Adventure: Diamond Is Unbreakable’: Episode 20

Monkeys Fighting Robots

Yukako Yamagishi Dreams of Cinderella

SPOILER ALERT

This episode is all about Yukako finding a way to make things right with Koichi. She meets Aya Tsuji, an aesthetician with a Stand called Cinderella. It has the ability to apply make up which changes a person’s luck and fortune. This allows Yukako to have a date with Koichi and things slowly start to get better. Will it be enough to allow Koichi and Yukako to truly cement themselves in a relationship or has she done something irreversible?

This feels a bit forced. Yes, Koichi and Yukako are the one of cutest couples to come out of the entire Jojo’s Bizarre Adventure series. At the same time it feels like these elements should have built over time, like Koichi realizing he likes her, their kiss, and the love sacrifice he is willing to do at the end. These are the kinds of moments which take other animes there entire run to get around to executing and here it’s done in the course of just a single episode. It’s what can be expected as this is a Shonen series which means the focus tends to be more on action and adventure. It still seems like if they had spaced the story over a two parter it would have felt less stuffed to the brim. They even had to take out the opening and closing to be able to tell the story completely which should be a pretty big sign to show the plot was crowded. At least the fans of the Yukako and Koichi relationship will always have this episode to fall back to remind them the couple they were routing had this special moment.

Enough time has passed between the last chunk of action so hopefully next time things will get back in gear. The team has had enough downtime to catch a breather. Time to finally track down the murderer who is terrorizing the town.

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

Monkeys Fighting Robots Youtube

Review: ‘Berserk’ 7: Strange Team Ups

Monkeys Fighting Robots

The Black Witch

Casca and her curse which causes demons to gather near her results in Luca and the rest of the girls running into too much attention. Considering people are being burned at the stake or dragged off in chains for for being suspicious, prying eyes are not a real good thing.

Guts arrives at the camp and he gets show off his heroism. Yes he’s crass and lacking in charm but he still lives by a code of honor which tells him to step in and save those who can’t save themselves. He may not be Prince Charming but he’s still one of the best individuals to be introduced in this entire world so far. Seeing him step between an innocent person and a whip or run at top speed on his way to save Casca really make you want to stand up and cheer for him.

Isidoro and Puck get a lot of screen time together in this episode and proclaim their intentions to stick with Guts. This team up offers some lighter comedic moments complete with Puck giving Isidoro a teasing nickname. This does serve a purpose and helps to alleviate the extreme moments of violence and implied rape which can occur in the series. Still the off putting weird art style they employ to show the lighter side isn’t helping the difficulty with the dealing with the rough slapstick animation style which continues to be the biggest flaw of this series.

The episode is okay but really wins with the very last moments. The set up for next episode builds perfect anticipation for Guts to fight some demons and save Casca in the process. Hopefully the art will be a bit more balanced next time as well but it’s starting to feel like this might be asking too much.

Berserk is streaming on Crunchyroll.

Monkeys Fighting Robots Youtube

Star Wars’ Kenny Baker Dead at 81

Monkeys Fighting Robots

The man beneath the dome; Kenny Baker, has died following a long battle with illness. The actor who played the lovable R2-D2 was found dead in his home early on Saturday morning. Baker starred in six Star Wars movies, having shot to fame with the release of A New Hope in 1977 and reprising his role in prequel trilogy. Outside of Star Wars, Baker appeared in many classic 80s films such as Willow, Labyrinth and Flash Gordon. Baker’s illness prevented him from reprising his role as R2-D2 in last year’s Star Wars: The Force Awakens, but he continued to be involved as a consultant.

Baker was a regular on the convention scene and was always happy to meet fans. In recent years, his illness had prevented him from travelling. His death did not come as a surprise to his family, who noted that he had “a long and fulfilled life”. Standing only 3ft 8in tall, Kenny Baker proved that a small man could have a huge impact on people’s lives. He will, undoubtedly, be missed and is survived by his two children.

Update: We initially reported that Kenny Baker died at aged 83. His official website notes he was 81. We apologise for the error.

Monkeys Fighting Robots Youtube

Happy Birthday Alfred Hitchcock: A Look At My 5 Favorite Hitchcock Films

Monkeys Fighting Robots

Celebrate The Birth Of One Of Film’s Greatest Influences Alfred Hitchcock By Looking At My Favorite Films

Seems to be no other director in cinema history with the reputation quite like Sir Alfred Hitchcock. From notorious on-set antics to his filmography, Hitchcock has proven that he is a lasting force within the industry. Countless directors have been inspired by his work and he’s constantly homaged. To celebrate what would be his 117th birthday on August 13th, I look back at my five favorite Hitchcock films.

With over 60 directing credits, it’s a hard mission to narrowing down to 5. You can’t leave out one iconic film without making some cinema fan angry. Taken into consideration is each film’s legacy, acclaim, and watchability. This is also about how each film personally touched me as well.

Let me know if your favorite film from the British filmmaker makes the list!

“A good film is when the price of the dinner, the theatre admission and the babysitter were worth it.”
-Alfred Hitchcock

Honorable Mentions:
-Strangers On A Train
-Dial M For Murder
-Suspicion
-The Birds

Hitchcock

5. The Lady Vanishes (1938)
-This film marks the only time Hitchcock ever received an award for his directing. Winning a Critics Circle Award, this early film remains of his very best. ‘The Lady Vanishes’ was dubbed the future of Hollywood and little proves otherwise. Also what’s up with Hitchcock and his problem with trains?

4. Vertigo (1958)
-It took a very long time before a filmmaker could make a film this maddening again. Dizzying and Oedipal, ‘Vertigo‘ is hailed as one of the greatest films of all time. The film also de-throned ‘Citizen Kane‘ in a critic’s poll as the best film ever. But what makes the film so special is the tremendous score by Bernard Herrmann.

3. Rear Window (1954)
-Often imitated, never duplicated. ‘Rear Window‘ is one of the best stories with some of the best cinematography featuring some of the best actors ever. Perfect example of why Alfred Hitchcock is such a legend still to this day. Also, how perfect was Grace Kelly was the typical Hitchcock girl? Utter brilliance.

2. Rope (1948)
-Learning about this film and the boundaries it pushed, Hitchcock made his edgiest film with ‘Rope‘. Testing the limits of what you can do in filmmaking is hard; the director’s attempt was to make the film seem like a single take. If you have ever tried to make a movie, that’s nearly impossible. He cheated along the way but it almost works as a seamless piece. He also challenged the censorship by featuring very heavy homosexual overtones in a time that was a major taboo.

1. Psycho (1963)
-Could there be anything else? What can be said about ‘Psycho‘ that already hasn’t? We all know this film shaped horror for an entire generation after but it’s also a dissection of American life in that era. Before this film, horror was about the monsters-like creatures but ‘Psycho‘ made humans the true monster.

Do you agree with this list?

Celebrate Hitchcock’s birthday and comment with your favorite film!

Monkeys Fighting Robots Youtube

‘PaRappa the Rapper’ Anime Announced

Monkeys Fighting Robots

PaRappa the Rapper is getting a new series of animated shorts.

Titled PJ Berri no Mogu-Mogu Munya-Munya, each episode will run for an estimated 96 seconds long.

The pilot episode is set to premiere next week on the Japanese show Hi Poul.

The series of animated shorts is celebrating the character’s 20th anniversary, which is in December.

Are you excited about this new series? Be sure to let us know in the comments section down below.

Source: Polygon.

Monkeys Fighting Robots Youtube

Review: ‘Steven Universe’: Know Your Fusion: Repeats Itself

Monkeys Fighting Robots

Steven and the Gems examine fusions.

SPOILER ALERT

Steven and Amethyst fuse into Smokey Quartz and show off their skills. Pearl and Garnet become Sardonyx and proceeds to interview them like they are on a late night talk show. This is really the entire plot of the episode. There is little new elements explained except for the idea fusion gems get their own sections of the Gem temple.

The idea was basically to show the value of Smokey Quartz as a fusion which it barely does at the end of the episode by having her save Pearl and Garnet. Why was this necessary? On her first appearance Smokey successfully took down Jasper, a warrior which previously defeated Garnet. Jasper even fused with a corrupt Gem to become stronger to try and win and was still defeated. Again, why was it necessary to show what Smokey was capable of? The fans already knew and Pearl and Garnet didn’t need to have an entire episode to figure out Smokey was a competent fighter.

It almost feels like this was supposed to be the premise of a clip show, complete with scenes from old episodes and talking about what happened in them. Luckily there has never been a complete show ever this show’s history but if this is their attempt to employ the same elements to catch people up on the story it may just be better to show a full clip show. The idea of watching a talk show with the characters seems fun but the concept goes on for far too long and makes the entire episode not really worth watching. It looks like the less plot centered episodes have started and unfortunately, if they are anything like this then they will be just as hard to sit through as Steven Floats.

Monkeys Fighting Robots Youtube

Review: ‘Planetarian’ – “Stellar” Theming

Monkeys Fighting Robots

In a world of slow-paced light novel garbage like Re:Zero, we get a quaint little tear jerker in the form of Planetarian. One of the best things honestly about Planetarian is that its only five episodes long and I can review it in the middle of the season. Another great thing about its length is that if it were any longer I wouldn’t have been able to get through it. Luckily the “stars aligned” and we get to enjoy this sort of movie like visual novel adaptation that feels out of its time. Feeling that way because it is of course, the visual novel came out in the early 2000’s and was a Key visual novel (Look to shows like Air TV and Kanon 2006 for reference). Which is why I think I found it so refreshing even though it really isn’t anything I wasn’t bombarded with in the early and mid 2000’s.

So for a quick run-down of Planetarian. It takes place in a post-apocalyptic world where the sky is always cloudy and raining. Kuzuya, a junker whose scavenging a city comes across an abandoned Planetarium and is greeted by a robot attendant Yumemi. Most of the series is them trying to fix the projection machine and dancing around the fact that Yumemi doesn’t know the world has basically ended and everyone she knew is most likely dead.

To start off the premise alone might get some people frustrated if they don’t let the story bring them in. This is generally a rule of thumb for most shows but I think here it makes or breaks it a little more. For most of the show our Junker, or Mr. Customer as Yumemi calls him, doesn’t ever quite come out and say that the world has basically ended. Now this has two purposes, one thematically and one narratively. Narratively it matters because if he just told her that everything went to shit and there was no point to any of this, then they wouldn’t get to share the quaint time in the Planetarium talking about stuff. It also would be really repetitive if she wasn’t inclined to believe him and of course as a viewer just rubbing off that she denies it would be even more frustrating than him just not telling her. (It works though mainly because then we don’t really have to listen to how the world go to the state its in. They try explaining this a few times and I hated every bit of it. Visual novels tend to add a bunch of unneeded world building garbage and I’m glad they decided to leave that part out.)

Thematically it says a lot about what kind of situation Mr. Customer is in. Either he just feels so bad for this cute robot that he doesn’t want to tell her, which doesn’t seem like him at all but whatever. Or he himself doesn’t like thinking about life in the world he lives. Sometimes its easy to just go on living in a shitty situation but admitting and talking about it can be even harder. Even though it has meaning and can be defended by adding supplementary logic there’s no evidence as to his motivation for not telling her. And it’s never really built on later. It doesn’t necessarily ruin the show at all, but having the show start off with some bad writing and a leap of logic can make people run for the hills.

Planetarian has a lot of good things about it though. Mainly the main robot girl Yumemi. She’s definitely moe but not modern moe. More like an early 2000’s late 90’s moe that you would totally be okay with being your wife. And the way she speaks is so soothing that you don’t want to believe she’s a robot, even though her manner of speaking is often robotic. Really the dynamic between her and Mr. Customer shouldn’t be all that interesting, and really isn’t that great of dialogue. So what’s there to like about a show that’s basically two characters sitting around and talking? Well Planetarian doesn’t live on the plot per-say, it lives on the promise of the plot. It’s the implications that their words have. Everything either character says has implications of who they are and how they have lived their lives up until now. It character building at its max, all in service of the big realization that the show establishes in the beginning by Mr. Customer not telling her that the world has gone to shit. Having the situation where two characters are on different pages of how they view things, one being the present and the other unknowingly being the past, brings both situations clashing together where clearly the present is going to win. Planetarian is that slow wait for Yumemi to realize that the way things are now are horrible, and how she is going to react to them. Alone this would seem very depressing but because she gives Mr. Customer a goal and reason to strive towards in this world, it has a rather bittersweet ending. Ultimately it doesn’t really matter whether Yumemi acknowledges the way things are, she’s a robot. What matters is that Mr. Customer realizes that the way things are isn’t all there is. That there are things that have been lost but can be taken back.

This is reflected in Yumemi idea’s as to why robots are made. Also in her wishes for the God of Robots and Robot Heaven. Yumemi is literally telling Mr. Customer, without knowing herself, what he needs to do to be happy and the reason she’s doing this is because she wants to serve humans. If anything it can be seen as divine intervention. Since Yumemi can’t be consciously teaching him this lesson, it must be the will of the God of Robots that she be there when he needs her to give him hope again. The unwaveringness that Yumemi shows to get Mr. Customer to see the projection feels almost magical in its importance, and the impact it has on his decisions is very real and relatable.

Now to be honest the show doesn’t look the best, but it doesn’t have too. Basically the only attractive thing in the show is Yumemi’s character design. Mr. Customer and the old dude look generic and uninspired as hell, the world doesn’t look anything original and the color palette doesn’t play around with enough blues and purples to make things look dreary enough for what the show is going for. If anything the world just seems like a normal rainy day, when it should feel more depressing dark and overbearing. The animation never really is noticeable because it’s basically just two talking heads for most of the show. Even the Projection which could have shown some “stellar” sequences, is just a still clip show.

Planetarian is as standard visual novel adaptation. It doesn’t really have any ambition to improve on the visual novel experience using things that animation allows. The material was really good though, so it works even though it’s basically just talking heads. I said in the beginning that Planetarian relies on emotional investment, and I’d like to go further and say that there’s really no reason to watch this show if you don’t get invested by the second episode. It’s a sad story told in a very healing way, almost like it’s preparing you for the bomb its hinting at throughout. And it gives just enough hope that it wont end the way you think it will, to be break you in two at the end where Yumemi lies broken. Planetarian is a tight story and it succeeds in its tightness and dedication to the one thing it is trying to say. Its like one big therapy session but you don’t know its taking place until it’s already over and you start to come to that realization of feeling better and optimistic.

Monkeys Fighting Robots Youtube