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The Complete Mecha Works of Yoshiyuki Tomino: BRAVE RAIDEEN Part 2

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When we last finished off on Part 1 of the Brave Raideen review, we saw a show which had innovative ideas, solid potential, and every so often delivered these aspects. Yet most of the time, didn’t because it couldn’t decide if it wanted to serious or comedic. Will this change, or will it be “second verse same as the first?”

Episode 14 starts off like a mini bottle episode with our leads in a giant cave, as Raideen suffered an injury which prevents it from fighting. We find out Raideen is made of Mutronium, which is like adamantium, because it’s this impenetrable element without an explanation where it came from.

Prince Sharkin in Brave Raideen.
As I’ve said time and again, the only legitimately good part of the show.

Episode 15 establishes a unique plot twist which is never followed up on any of the subsequent episodes. Raideen is vulnerable to diamond, as evidenced by the beating it takes at the hands of a monster with diamond appendages. Does the Demon Empire take advantage of this obvious flaw in the next episode? Of course not, this is a Saturday morning cartoon show, so the enemy doesn’t learn from their mistakes.

This brings up a relevant point. For a major threat, the Demon Empire, is a complete non-threat. General Agayo is one of the most ineffective Generals in narrative fiction. The only reasons I can assume he still has a job is because he’s blackmailing Prince Sharkin over something, or this is a Wayne Fontes situation, where he sucks at his job, and coasts on decent talent, but magically pulls something out of hammer space and still has a job. We’ll get back to this, trust me.

Really, General Aguyo? You’re surprised you failed? You fail almost every show.

Episode 16 has another unique idea: a ticking clock plot involving a cruise ship and bomb planted on the ship. If this sounds familiar you’ve seen Speed 2: Cruise Control. It’s not as derivative but it’s one of those episodes focusing on the comic relief. This is terrible for many of reasons. I don’t like kids, I don’t like comic relief, and I sure don’t like them together. It comes off to me as pleasant as a car alarm blaring into an eardrum. So naturally, I found them insufferable. It doesn’t mean there weren’t kid characters I liked in the series. I’ve kept track. There are two sick girl characters, both had surprisingly sweet single episode arcs, and I enjoyed those despite how blatant the manipulation is.

Episode 17 continued a downward slide. It starts off with Prince Sharkin telling General Agayo he has no more tolerance for failures (if this were the case, Agayo would have been dead by episode 6), and Agayo gets another chance. He gets his own giant monster, he fails yet again, and is seen escaping in his escape pod cursing out Raideen like a Saturday morning cartoon. This episode also introduces a girl character, Atchan, who unlike the rest of the comic relief isn’t annoying. Why isn’t she annoying? Simple, she is relevant to the plot later. Plus, she has a pet lizard, even if the lizard resembles the king lizard from the old Sesame Street cartoons.

Surprisingly, the idiotic plan of hiding in plain sight, is so effective it worked. Even the moronic comic relief is surprised.

Episode 18 is the episode we see hope and gives this series justification. Prince Sharkin is berating Agayo for his failures and tells him this is this true last chance. So, he does the thing we all do, beg for mercy from the opposing side. This plan is so stupid, it works, Agayo infiltrates Raideen’s base, but can’t complete the coup de grace, and dies at Raideen’s hands.

In these episodes, I’ve noticed a kind of seriousness emerging in the background. The series is developing Cerberus syndrome, and I’m so grateful, because when the series had serious episodes, it became legitimately great to watch. The biggest change comes regarding Akira’s injuries. In the early episodes, even though Raideen is being attacked, he is never hurt. Around episode 9, with the concussion subplot, and continuing in the background, the hits to Raideen, now appear to hurt Akira. You may say it’s a little thing, yet I’ve always believed the sum of trivial things make the larger things possible. So, when the Cerberus Syndrome emerged in the forefront in Episode 18, with Agayo’s death, you could see it coming, for the most part.

You know, there are some days when I love this job. This is one of them. Brave Raideen eats a sandwich this big!

Episode 19 is a straight riff on King Kong (specifically the 1976 Dino De Laurentiis remake, which was big at the time). A sad gorilla befriends Mari and the Demon Empire turn it into a monster. It’s quite moving, seeing Akira wail on this monster, not knowing this was the giant monkey Mari befriended (and was kidnapped by). The episode tugs at the heartstrings and it works.

Episode 20 continued this upward pattern with the introduction of Commodore Dilandou… I mean Daldon, and already Daldon did more than Agayo ever did. The monster battled Raideen for the full episode instead the 10-15 minutes in previous episodes.

Okay this shot, is admittedly really cool. I give them credit here.

Episode 21 & 22 are minor downward slopes, Episode 21 was four minutes away from continuing the upward increase of quality. Daldon has captured Raideen & Akira, ties Raideen to a St. Andrew’s Cross, and torturing him. It’s quite visceral to watch, and you can really feel Akira’s pain, until Mari comes in and tells him to survive. I swear I could feel the balloon deflate, when she interjects. The episode also introduced a robot for the comic relief to pilot and let me tell you something, there was no amount of sympathy seeing the comic relief’s robot being attacked. I am not joking. Episode 22 had an intriguing plot by Daldon. Keep Akira on watch for three straight days and tire him out, then shell the rock fortress Raideen is located, until it’s destroyed. It’s not a bad plan, except they should have kept him on watch for a whole week. He’d just fall asleep and then boom, destroy Raideen.

Episode 23 is okay, not great. The show still insists on focusing on the unfunny “comic relief” and their “robot”. Honestly, this episode proves the point I’ve been mulling over watching the series. There seems to be two different visions for the show. One team (probably Tomino’s) felt it should be a completely serious giant robot show. The other was making a Mazinger Z rip-off and decided to compromise. This could explain why some episodes (4, 10, 18-20, and most of 21) come off as great, while most of the episodes come off as tonally confused, veering between scenes of decent action, and unfunny comedy.  I’d like to believe cutting out the comic relief and focusing tightly on Akira and his support team (Rei Asuka and Jinjuki) and beefing up on the pseudo-scientific elements, would have made this show a more consistent watch.

General Daldon from Brave Raideen
General Dilandou…I mean Daldon. (aka a Go Nagai villain)

Anyway, episode 23’s plot involves two monsters teaming up to destroy Raideen’s bird form. It doesn’t work but good plan though. Episode 24 had a freeze monster, I’m speeding through this because I’m getting tired of the series and it’s declining in quality in record time.

Episode 25, like a lot of the episodes had a great start then falls apart. It’s starts off with Akira getting blinded from an explosion caused by the Demon Empire, and he now must fight on sound alone, where he bumbles his way towards success. It also prevented something interesting happening, because Mari was going to sacrifice herself for Akira, then Gihren’s predecessor tells her to pull the emergency release hatch. The remaining investment I had in the series, plummeted to almost zero.

A rather intriging scene from Brave Raideen
Well, somebody’s working through their issues.

This incidentally set the stage for the two part “finale.” I call it a finale because it ran for 26 more episodes, yet episodes 26 & 27 seemed like a suitable place to finish this train wreck. Episode 26 like the rest of the series has an intriguing concept. The monsters Akira fought came back, wreaked havoc, and were defeated in five minutes of screen time. Anti-climax, what’s that? This leads into a surprisingly good finale.

Prince Sharkin is being punished for his failures and comes to the realization he needs to turn into a giant monster to defeat Raideen. This seems to do the trick, except it doesn’t, because Sharkin’s defeated. Distraught over this failure, he commits seppuku in a tragic scene. The scene composition itself, is pure Shojo. Rain pouring, our hero crying, sitting beside the vanquished villain. Composition wise, it’s clichéd, yet perfect. This would also be the perfect way to fade to black…

The final battle in the Tomino based Brave Raideen
This is it, the final battle, (insert your own cliche music here!)

It doesn’t, guess what happens next? Go on, I know you’ll get it right. The show immediately cut back to the kids. The perfect topper to mountain of inconsistency.

Episode 27 and the remaining 23 episodes of the series was directed by the late Tadao Nagahama. The previous episode (26) was the last directed by Tomino, he was replaced by Nagahama for unknown reasons. TV Asahi, Tohokushina, and probably Sunrise (the companies who produced the series) probably weren’t happy with the way the show was heading, with the seriousness Tomino was trying to inject and removed Tomino from the production (watching the episodes, I got the sense there were two different artistic directions who were completely at odds with each other, which reeks of production problems). The show Tomino took over after Raideen, a series called La Seine no Hoshi, a shojo series, in which he directed the final 12 episodes.

Prince Sharkin's Death in Brave Raideen.
NOOOOO!!! Prince Sharkin was the only thing keeping me invested in this series!!

So, what of Brave Raideen? Simple, it’s inconsistent. You can see the building blocks of other Tomino anime in here, at least in the characterization, and every so often there will be a great episode or three. Then they focus on the annoying kids and all the momentum is flushed down the drain in an instant, it’s quite depressing. I’ve found I’m not a fan of Super Robot shows. Yet I enjoy Real Robot shows, because of the amount of effort put in the drama, and the relative realism of the mechs. Thus, Brave Raideen didn’t sell me on Super Robot shows. In short, they had the pieces of a great mech series, yet couldn’t put the puzzle pieces together to make a great final product, which you could say the same thing about the Demon Empire in the series.


What are your thoughts on Brave Raideen? Leave a comment below and let us know.

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JON FAVREAU Star Wars Series THE MANDALORIAN First Look

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Star Wars fandom is buzzing after Jon Favreau released the first official details of his upcoming live-action television series for the Disney streaming service. Leading up to the first stages of production, rumors have been surfacing regarding various directors for the series, along with several leaked photos. Not to be outdone, Favreau posted on his Instagram account The Mandalorian, along with a short synopsis.

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Playing off the nostalgia of the original Star Wars trilogy, the synopsis for The Mandalorian is written like an opening crawl. Adding the crawl is a nice nod towards the Star Wars fandom, providing a “feeling” many have been asking for.

Suspicions were high regarding the Mandalorian nature of Favreau’s series, so it’s nice to have a solid confirmation. What fans weren’t expecting, however, was the “lone” gunslinger arc. It appears the live-action series created by Favreau is tapping into the same Western style fans experienced in Solo: A Star Wars Story. Which just happened to be one of the best parts in Solo.

Jon Favreau And The Mandalorian

Jon Favreau The Mandalorian leaked set photos
Image via Star Making Wars

The Mandalorian is the first Star Wars live-action television series airing on Disney’s streaming service when it launches sometime in 2019. According to Favreau, the synopsis of the show takes place, “after the stories of Jango and Boba Fett.” And the series timeline is “after the fall of the Empire and before the emergence of the First Order.”

The Western “lone gunfighter” doesn’t specifically state the character will be a bounty hunter. However, it does elude to this individual being somewhat of a loose cannon (outside the law) by stating it’s in the Outer Rim “far from the authority of the New Republic.”

In addition to Favreau leaking the title and synopsis, there are rumors surrounding who will direct. Dave Filoni’s name has come up several times, along with Alan Taylor. Favreau is writing The Mandalorian but is likely to direct some of the episodes too.

Mysterious creature on set for Favreau live-action series Star Wars The Mandalorian
Image via Star Making Wars

The Mandalorian Star Wars live-action television series will air on Disney’s streaming service sometime in 2019. Are you excited about this series? Let us know in the comments your thoughts regarding The Mandalorian. “May the Force be with you, always.”

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Review: No You’re Not Dreaming, Sleepwalker’s Back in INFINITY WARS: SLEEPWALKER

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Chad Bowers, Chris Sims, Todd Nauck and Rachelle Rosenberg are the dream behind the return of Marvel’s 90s beloved cult-classic Sleepwalker in INFINITY WARS: Sleepwaker.Sleepwalker

Infinity Wars: Sleepwalker #1
Written by: Chad Bowers and Chris Sims
Art by: Todd Nauck
Colors by: Rachelle Rosenberg
Letters by: VC’s Travis Lanham

Deep within the mind of Rick Sheridan is a mysterious being—a guardian of the Mindscape, the dimension that borders on the minds of all intelligent life. And when Rick sleeps, the being walks—into Rick’s world, where this Sleepwalker continues his noble mission to use his powers to strike fear in the hearts of Earthen evildoers everywhere

Writing

Writers Chad Bowers and Chris Sims clearly love the 90s. Bowers worked on Youngblood for Image, and the duo previously collaborated on the fun and (sadly) short-lived X-Men ’92. Now, they set their sights on Sleepwalker and their affection for the character, concept and time period easily leaps off the page. Right from the start, we get tons of 90s Marvel references; Silhouette makes an appearance and Hummingbird and the New Warriors get named dropped. It makes for some nice easter egg moments for long-time fans. They also throw in a nice new detail of Rick learning to mediate from Doctor Strange to access the Mindscape, something that is a total no-brainer.Sleepwalker

However, strong knowledge of this history is not needed as Bowers and Sims (using a cool narrative technique of Sleepwalker’s host Rich Sheridan making a documentary on C-listers) give readers plenty of set up as to how Sleepwalker and Rick fit into the 616 universe. We do get a little exposition on the mythology of the Mindscape, but it’s done in Sleepwalker’s own words so it’s not jarring or overly cold.

But this isn’t just a Sleepwalker book, so how it ties into the current Infinity Wars event is important and on that front the book also delivers. The writers cleverly tie the realm of the Mindscape with the Mindstone, making the Sleepwalker an important player in the fight against Gamora and the Infinity Stones. It’s here that things get really fun as a couple of the Infinity Warp characters are named checked and pulled into the story; we get Man-Thing Thang Thoom (trying saying it three times!), Dark Starhawk, and the fantastic Little Monster, an Ant-Man/Hulk warp where ‘Scotty Banner’ gets smaller AND stronger as he gets angrier. Fucking fantastic.Sleepwalker

Art

Todd Nauck was a great choice as penciler for this book. Not only is he a seasoned pro, but he also has the right mix of the cartoonish and grit a surreal title like this needs. Nauck, along with colorist Rachelle Rosenberg creates some great psychedelic images and layouts. The use of stark white for the interactions between Rick and the Sleepwalker was also a great choice; it helps cement how strong the bond between these to is by virtue of them being the only images on the panel/page.  It’s a solid looking book that has a classic comic feel, yet still capitalizes on newer and slicker coloring techniques. It has a unique vibe.Sleepwalker

Conclusion

Infinity Wars: Sleepwalker is not the regular tie-in to an event. It feels important to the larger story, yet it’s also clear the creative team wants to tell a tale of their own as well. Grab this book today.Sleepwalker

 

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TRAILER: VICE Stars Dick Cheney As … No, Wait, That’s Christian Bale

Vice is a new film from Adam McKay and starring Christian Bale in an incredible transformation playing former United States Vice President Dick Cheney. Like Gary Oldman in Churchill, Bale’s makeup and mannerisms make the world famous actor unrecognizable. Vice is set for release on Christmas (2018).

vice-film-trailer-christian bale

About Vice

Official Description: The story of Dick Cheney, the most powerful Vice President in history, and how his policies changed the world as we know it.

Director Adam McKay guides the vision of Vice, doubling as screenwriter too. Vice pulsates with energy while setting up the central narrative of an ambitious man given too much power. Bale’s change from sexy leading man to pudgy douchebag is really remarkable. Along for the ride and making a transformation himself is Sam Rockwell who plays George W. Bush, and though he doesn’t have the makeup work like Bale, Rockwell blends into the role with spot-on character work as always. We love you, Sam!

sam rockwell-trailer-vice-movie

Vice features a cast that includes …

Christian Bale as Dick Cheney
Alex MacNicoli as Young Dick Cheney
Aidan Gail as Young Dick Cheney
Amy Adams as Lynne Cheney
Cailee Spaeny as Young Lynne Cheney
Karolina Kennedy Durrence as Young Lynne Cheney
Steve Carell as Donald Rumsfeld
Bill Pullman as Nelson Rockefeller
Sam Rockwell as George W. Bush
Alison Pill as Mary Cheney
Lily Rabe as Liz Cheney
Violet Hicks as Young Liz Cheney
Stefania LaVie Owen as Joan / Narrator (voice)
Adam Bartley as Frank Luntz
LisaGay Hamilton as Condoleezza Rice
Tyler Perry as Colin Powell

christian bale-vice-film-movie
Yes, that’s fat Christian Bale!

The trailer for Vice is high-energy, fast-paced and wildly intriguing. The trailer’s mini-narrative is incredible work that builds around the proposition that “changed the world.”
The cast is stellar, the material is ripe with potential, and the creative team is top-notch. Vice is indeed one to keep an eye on, particularly as an Oscar contender. McKay’s blend of tempo, humor, and political commentary is rare today. Also, Bale needs an Oscar or he’ll keep gaining and losing weight for roles until we lose him forever and then we’ll never see a Newsies reboot!

amy adams-vice-film-trailer

Did this trailer get you excited for Vice?
Leave your comments below!

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Must Watch: CHILLING ADVENTURES OF SABRINA Official Trailer

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Netflix dropped the official trailer to the Chilling Adventures of Sabrina Wednesday morning and announced the series would hit the streaming network on October 26.

[embedyt] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ybKUX6thF8Q[/embedyt]

About the series:

Chilling Adventures of Sabrina imagines the origin and adventures of Sabrina the Teenage Witch as a dark coming-of-age story that traffics in horror, the occult and, of course, witchcraft. Tonally in the vein of Rosemary’s Baby and The Exorcist, this adaptation finds Sabrina wrestling to reconcile her dual nature — half-witch, half-mortal — while standing against the evil forces that threaten her, her family and the daylight world humans inhabit.

Chilling Adventures of Sabrina stars Kiernan Shipka, Miranda Otto, Lucy Davis, Ross Lynch, Michelle Gomez, Chance Perdomo, Jaz Sinclair, Richard Coyle, Tati Gabrielle, Adeline Rudolph, Abigail Cowen, Lachlan Watson, Bronson Pinchot, and Gavin Leatherwood.

Riverdale showrunner Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa, who also serves as the chief creative officer of Archie Comics, penned the script for the series.


Are you excited for the series? Comment below with your thoughts.

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Review: TYPHOID FEVER: SPIDER MAN Takes Us On a Chaotic Ride

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Typhoid Fever: Spider-Man sees the return of one of Marvel’s most dangerous mutants in a delirious, dreamy new story.

This is the first in a three-issue run, seeing Typhoid Mary (aka Mary Walker) more unhinged—and dangerous—than usual. Mary is set loose after a failed attempt to finally “cure” her dissociative personality disorder by walling-up the darker egos inside her mind. Now, she’s intent on spreading chaos across all of Manhattan…and she’s taking Peter Parker along for the ride.

The Story

Let’s be clear from the start: Typhoid Fever: Spider-Man is not a Spider-Man or X-Men book. This is a Typhoid Mary book. And, in proper fashion, the story is deliberately disorienting right from the first page.

We’re constantly slipping through what is real and what is illusory, reflecting Mary’s own mental state. As her doctor puts it, her mind is “like a television…[Mary’s] psyche keeps changing channels.” It’s an interesting take, as we don’t often get to see characters like Spidey through a lens like this.

The broader narrative starts to coalesce about halfway through, when Mary manages to use the powers of a former X-Men to amplify her own. Mary’s supercharged abilities allow her to project her delusions onto the world around her. And, when Spider-Man leaps into action to try and help, he finds himself caught in Mary’s web.

The dreamlike aura of Typhoid Fever: Spider-Man is interesting. Mary is constantly phasing from reality to an imagined soap opera in her mind, dragging us along with her. That said, the book is clearly going for a broader narrative, and the effect of not always knowing what’s real or when it’s happening can be distracting at times.

There were a few story elements that felt a little out of place, too. Particularly, one of implied abuse at the home in which Mary is a patient, which felt like it was thrown-in as an afterthought, and never really touched on again. As a writer’s rule of thumb, abuse as a motivation for a character to act can come across as a cheap cliché if not carefully handled. Here, I didn’t feel like it really landed, and it would have been best to cut it.

The Art

The work of artist Stefano Landini and colorist Rachelle Rosenberg really shines on this issue.

Typhoid Fever: Spider-Man

The page layout in Typhoid Fever: Spider-Man accentuates the tension, while deliberately clueing the reader in on certain elements. The inks are heavier, but minimal, giving all of the designs a more elegant look. The artwork feels stylized, but in a restrained and very tasteful way.

The coloring may be one of my favorite elements at work here. We have a lot of strong contrasts in color during the “reality” segments, so elements pops off the page nicely. During the illusory segments, shifts in color palette and tone alert us to changes in how we should perceive the situation. Hazy pastels evoke a dreamlike sense, while harsh reds and blacks accentuate drama.

Final Verdict

Despite some issues, Typhoid Fever: Spider-Man is a good start overall. The series promises to take us to some interesting places in the next two issues, and I’m on board for the ride.

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Review: BAD TIMES AT THE EL ROYALE Is A Good Time

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It has been six years since Drew Goddard last directed a film, the cult favorite horror-comedy The Cabin in the Woods. In the meantime, he wrote films such as The Martian and was the creator and executive producer of Netflix’s Daredevil. However, he finally made his comeback to the director’s chair this year, and one can only wonder, was it a worthy one?

Bad Times at the El Royale is the newest film from writer-director Goddard. It is a mystery-thriller about seven strangers who meet at the rundown El Royale hotel in Lake Tahoe, each hoping to bury a secret. Over the course of a night, things get wild, and each person gets one last shot at redemption.

Although it is undoubtedly not going to please everyone, this film has a definite audience that is destined to love it. A direct, but intelligent allegory, the story is captivating from beginning to end.

The narrative structure of the movie is not conventional, showing much love for nonlinear films such as Tarantino’s Pulp Fiction. Fortunately, this film does not feel like it is using this storytelling method as a gimmick. Instead, it is expertly crafted to lend a more considerable amount of suspense and tension to the story.

bad times jon hamm rain
Jon Hamm stars in Twentieth Century Fox’s BAD TIMES AT THE EL ROYALE. Photo Credit: Kimberley French.

The mystery is gripping and unpredictable. Even the story itself is unpredictable. The film masterfully uses “red herrings” and other misdirections to make the audience think the story is going one way when, in fact, it is going in the complete opposite direction. With this, the viewer can easily get caught up in the story. The two-and-a-half hour run time flies by.

The tone of the movie is also highly enjoyable. There is, of course, quite a bit of suspense and excitement involved with the thriller elements of the film; however, the movie also contains much of the dark comedy characteristic of Goddard’s previous scripts. Satire, irony, and witty dialogue are all used to add a dash of humor to the film, making the pacing even breezier.

Additionally, the movie’s execution is top-notch. The amount of love that went into making this film was evident. The cinematography and production design are both fantastic. The movie feels almost like a time capsule (in a good way), transporting the audience back in time to a neon-drenched late-1960’s world. There was so much detail in the film’s sets and visuals, both for periodizing the movie and constructing its meaning.

The cast for the film is excellent. Each actor or actress gets his or her own moment to shine. Jeff Bridges delivers one of his best, most nuanced performances in years as Father Daniel Flynn, one of the more prominent characters in the film.

bad times hamm erivo pullman
Jon Hamm, Lewis Pullman, and Cynthia Erivo star in Twentieth Century Fox’s BAD TIMES AT THE EL ROYALE. Photo Credit: Kimberley French.

Chris Hemsworth’s performance, on the other hand, is very over-the-top, but equally likable. His delivery is absolutely impeccable, driving the third act completely. Jon Hamm and Cynthia Erivo also give strong and compelling performances.

However, the film’s absolute standout is Lewis Pullman. His role is far more interesting than the premise or trailers would imply, and he is the most compelling character by a long shot. The character falls into the “lovable fool” archetype, and Pullman has the goofy charm required to pull it off.

As a whole, Bad Times at the El Royale is a well-crafted, enjoyable neo-noir film. Some may nitpick the film and not be as satisfied, but the characters, dialogue, story, and execution are solidly-crafted and likable. It was worth the wait between Goddard’s films, and hopefully his next is just as good.

Bad Times at the El Royale opens in theaters everywhere October 12.

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Review: SHATTERSTAR #1 Is Clever, Fun and Heartfelt

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Writer Tim Seeley and artist Carlos Villa bring new life and dimension to one of Marvel’s most beloved 90s cult-characters in the inventive and entertaining Shatterstar #1.

Shatterstar

Shatterstar #1
Written by: Tim Seeley
Art by: Carlos Villa
Inks by: Juan Vlasco
Flashback art by: Gerardo Sandoval
Colors by: Carlos Lopez
Letters by: VC’s Cory Petit

A gladiator, a warrior, a hero…the man called Shatterstar has been many things, but one thing he’s always been is deadly. He’s not a man you want to cross or you’ll learn that fact all too well. Walk back into the darkness with Shatterstar! 

*****SPOILERS AHEAD*****

Writing

Shatterstar is one of Marvel’s most well-known ’90s characters. He may not have the pop culture presence of Deadpool or Cable, but like those two juggernauts, he made his debut in the final issues of New Mutants as it transitioned into X-Force. Over the years Shatterstar went from an almost literal Longshot clone to a more well-developed character of his own. And now Time Seeley has added even further depth and development to him in a very good first issue. Seeley is a seasoned comic writer and it shows. In the span of this issue, he reintroduces Shatterstar in a new role as a loving landlord, creates a great concept (an apartment building for wayward folks from Marvel’s multiverse) and an interesting cast to populate that place, while still giving newbies enough background on Shatterstar to make you care and understand. Everything is full of clever details, refreshing humor and genuine heart. ShatterstarSeeley seems to be giving us an almost sitcom vibe…then he pulls the rug out from under us as Shatterstar’s past catches up to him and things turn violent and deadly. By the end of the issue, these new characters that charmed us are all dead and Shatterstar is in full-on revenge mode, ready to pick up his twin blade swords once again. Oh yeah, and then we get the freakin’ Grandmaster on the last page!Shatterstar

Art

The art team does a solid job here of telling a clean, well-paced story. The color palette in the apartment scenes is soft, creating a sense of ease. Facial expressions and figures are also given a nice, light touch.  When this is juxtaposed with the harder-edged, fever-dream violence that is Mojoworld (the place of Shatterstar’s ‘birth’) the sensation is effectively jarring. The attack on the apartment is also done well, coming on hard and fast as it should. It’s ‘meat and potatoes’ comic book storytelling and it delivers what the story needs.Shatterstar

Conclusion

If the rest of this mini-series is as good as this first issue, then we are in for a nice treat. Seeley and company have created a very fun, engaging and readable comic you should not overlook.

Shatterstar

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JUSTICE LEAGUE #9 Review: A Lesson In Friendship

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Taking a look at Scott Snyder’s run on Justice League up to this point, the story has been insane, but Snyder has been laser-focused on the characters that make up the team.

Every member of the Justice League is flawed, but if you put all the broken pieces together, they become stronger than Super Metal. Snyder also teaches us how to be a better friend. Justice League #9 is oozing with respect. The battle of wits between Batman and Superman in this issue gave me hope for my country. I know this sounds extreme, but if we treat each other with respect, we can have a civilized debate, which then leads to solving problems. Superheroes are supposed to inspire you to be a better person, and Snyder pulls that off this week.

Justice League #9

When Justice League relaunched out of the New 52, everything about the universe seemed jarring. From the costumes to the attitudes, the heroes and the world were off. With Rebirth, Snyder has approached the Justice League relaunch differently. It feels like he has picked the best parts of every iteration of the Justice League to form his vision.

Justice League #9 would have made a great Justice League Unlimited episode. The simple concept of the dorm rooms at the Hall Of Justice is ripe with visuals and vast with story potential. After reading this issue, you will feel slightly more attached to your favorite Justice League member, thanks to the Jorge Jimenez art. John Stewart is such a complex character, and you could analyze every aspect of where and how he sleeps. Snyder and Jimenez capture the complexity and simplicity of the characters with the utmost respect of who John Stewart is.

Justice League #9

Alejandro Sanchez colors a book that pops. Every action scene works because of Jimenez and Sanchez. Superman in space is an excellent example because the bright colors of his costume compared to the darkness of space. The use of grey and blue tones expand the depth of each panel. Then be prepared to be impressed with the Hawkgirl splash-page as the movement, attitude, and color punch you in the teeth.

Tom Napolitano has a tough battle lettering the psychic balloons of Superman and Batman. The recommendation for future issues would be to use a more significant contrast in colors or change the circles slightly for each character. During one panel I had to ask myself who was talking. A minor tweak would create a more immersive experience.

Overall, Justice League #9 is a mellow issue with a fantastic message. The sophisticated levels Snyder reaches is impressive as the casual reader can enjoy the book and the hardcore Justice League nerd can grab a glass of Scotch and appreciate the detail and story of each panel.


Is Justice League on your pull list? Comment below with your thoughts on the series so far.

[embedyt] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5wtEx4-Gcmc[/embedyt]

Justice League #9

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Episode 156: Jimmy Palmiotti Interview • Justice League #9 Review

Monkeys Fighting Robots

Welcome back my friends, Episode 156 is ready for your consumption. This week we talk with Jimmy Palmiotti and take a look at Scott Snyder’s run on Justice League as issue 9 hits your local comic book store this week.

After you read Justice League #9, come back and let us know what you thought of the first issue.

Thanks for taking the time to listen to the podcast.


Do you have a question? Email robotsfightingmonkeys@gmail.com

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.

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