Showing posts with label television. Show all posts
Showing posts with label television. Show all posts

Friday, March 27, 2009

Cheburashka!


The fuck?:

Cheburashka (Russian: Чебурашка), also known as Topple in earlier English translations, is a character in children's literature, from a 1965 story by the Russian writer Eduard Uspensky. He is also the protagonist (voiced by Klara Rumyanova) of the animated film series by Soyuzmultfilm studio, the first episode of which was made in 1969.
[...]
In the 1970s a series of children's television shows, radio shows, records and magazines were produced in Sweden featuring the characters Drutten and crocodile Gena. These two characters were based on a couple of Cheburashka and Gena dolls purchased on a trip to the Soviet Union, so they were visually identical to Cheburashka and Gena. "Drutten" is a fairly good approximation of a translation of "one who tumbles down," as one meaning of the Swedish colloquial verb "drutta" is "to fall or tumble down."
But that is where the similarity ends. The two characters sang and told different stories from those in the USSR, lived on a bookshelf rather than in a city and are hand puppets operated in live action rather than stop motion. Only occasionally Swedish state TV would broadcast a segment of the Russian original, dubbed in Swedish. So, while many Swedes may visually recognize Cheburashka, they will generally not associate these characters with the ones Russian children know.

Fucking state TV. Was everything from my childhood covert communist propaganda?

YouTube: Gena singing in Swedish and coincidentally FREAKING ME OUT! Goluboy vagon! Same shit in Finnish! Kukdrutt!

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Evil has a New Face


Contrary to popular belief, super-bastard Chevy Chase is not dead yet:

Just when the entertainment media was about to prepare one of its bi-annual "Hey, remember Chevy Chase?" reports, Mr. Chase is popping up again, in a sitcom pilot. The show is called Community, and it's about a lawyer [...] who learns that his degree is invalid, and has to return to community college to get the credits he needs. There he meets Chase, another non-traditional student working towards gettin' that paper.

Cornelius Crane "Chevy" Chase is most famous for getting into a fistfight with Bill Murray on the set of Saturday Night Live. Chase said Murray had bad acne scars, and Murray claimed Chase was unable to satisfy his wife in bed. Both were probably valid criticisms. Also: Caddyshack.

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Banned Father & Son


Learn Swedish and then watch the awesome REA interview with Sigge & Fredrik on internet piracy.

Via.

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

You All Everybody

Do you - DO YOU - remember me mentioning a certain "Moo Cow"* in a recent SUPERBLOG!! entry? Well, that very same exact Cow has somehow managed to procure some images SPOILING events in upcoming episodes of the popular television series Lost: Island Blues starring Terence "Terry" Stepfather as the mysterious Mister Locke. Since Mr Cow's own blog was recently closed down by the government, Mr Cow has licensed the images to SUPERBLOG!! for publication. (Only one of them is truly great but I don't want to hurt his feelings so I'm posting them all.)

(*Real name: Markus Chapman, just like MY real name is Klaus Machiavelli.)



Cowboy Joe returns in episode 5.12, "The Good, the Bad, plus also Joe"! Wait for the whistle! SPOILER: "Joe" is short for Jacob.



While this may look like some cheap Taiwanese knockoff (or maybe a spoof!), the picture itself claims that the Pocket Jughead is "Official Lost: Island Blues merchandising" and I see no reason to doubt it. The camera doesn't lie! The product may tie in to an as-yet untitled upcoming episode in which Kate can't find a suitable partner and is forced to take matters into her own hands. Apparently James "Sawyer" Ford will lose his SPOILER! penis in a tragic showdown with the Smoke Monster, and Jack Shepherd is far too busy with island business to think about sex (read: impotent).

Sexuality will also be explored in episode 5.8, "Desmond Does Dallas", guest-starring Bryce Dallas Howard.



Charles "Charlie" Bongoloid will guest-star in the sixth season as the ISLAND GHOST. The Island Ghost is a wholly new character, not to be confused with Charlie Guitarist who died in season 3 (SPOILER alert!). The Island Ghost will be Cowboy Joe's greatest enemy in the fight for hearts and minds that Lost: Island Blues will revolve around in its last season. Of course it will lose in the end but it may strike some serious blows in Joe's face. Some serious Joe-blows!!

Sunday, February 08, 2009

Is the Boar Future-Sawyer in Disguise?


I was talking with my good friend (sometimes enemy) Pepe Moko about the television series Lost, the one with the people on the island, remember? Anyay, Pepe recently re-watched season 1 and he thinks the BOAR that was Sawyer's nemesis way back then will play a huge role in upcoming eps, and so do I. SPECU-SPOILER!: I think it will turn out that all this time the boar was Future-Sawyer in disguise, time-jumped. So James Ford was chasing himself!! Himself!!!!

p.s. They're dead and in Hell and it's all someone's dream.

Tuesday, December 30, 2008

Fun #26: Swedes

Today in FUN we'll be looking at some famous Swedes.

1 & 2. Lasse Berghagen (Lassie Mountainmeadow) and Loket (The Train). Two extremely popular and respected Swedish television personalities. The Train is the little fat one.


3. Pippi Lockstocking (with friends). Pippi is a fictional character and does not exist at all.


4. Lukas Moodysson. Lukas directed some movies before vanishing into obscurity. He was most famous for sometimes wearing bear-ears in public. In the photo he is using hand gestures to tell his critics to Shut the Fuck Up.


5. Lukas again, seen here with his posse of actors. To the right in the picture is Loa Falkman (Leo Hawkman), one of Sweden's top singers and racenteurs. Loa/Leo is also an actor and a baryton.


6. Bonus Swedish Fun Image! Is is a fake movie poster for a movie called "The Juwes are the men that will not be blamed for nothing" in Swedish. The title could be interpreted as anti-Semitic but I think it is just intended as some good old ripping FUN.

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

More Cowbell



Wikipedia:

"More cowbell" is an American pop culture catchphrase originally derived from an April 8, 2000, Saturday Night Live comedy sketch about the recording of the song (Don't Fear) The Reaper by Blue Öyster Cult. The sketch featured guest host Christopher Walken as music producer Bruce Dickinson and Will Ferrell as fictional cowbell player Gene Frenkle.

Here's the transcript.

Wednesday, September 03, 2008

Apt UK/US Television Comparison of the Day



British TV is like a shit that comes out sideways. It's tightly packed and lovingly crafted, full of proteins and fully-digested solids.
American TV is more like the eager watery rush that follows a meal of asparagus, coffee beans, and sunflower oil.
There's more of it, but some things should be judged by the quality of the experience rather than rapidity and volume.

- a polyamorous young man

Also pictured: Jennifer Love Hewitt.

Saturday, August 09, 2008

The Year of Definitely Not Watching Any DVDs: June, 2008


Okay, seeing as how it's August now, I think it's the perfect time to tell you all about the stuff I watched in June (R=repeat viewing):

House of Cards (1990, 4 episodes)
British political satire thriller about Francis Urquhart, a ruthless Chief Whip. Sharper-edged than Yes, Minister and more serious than The New Statesman. Rather excellent. Co-stars Susannah Harker from Chancer (series 1 reviewed in 2007's Part 36, series 2 in May). Moral: The scum also rises.

To Play the King (1993, 4 episodes)
Urquhart continues his Reign of Terrificness. His adversary, The King, is coincidentally played by the villainous guy from season 2 of Chancer. British TV is a small world. Moral: Might makes right.

The Final Cut (1995, 4 episodes)
Third and last part of the House of Cards trilogy. Not as good as the previous ones, even sloppily written here and there. Moral: Even the longest, the most glittering reign must come to an end someday.

Tonari no Totoro / My Neighbor Totoro (1988)
Conflictless Miyazaki. Speaking of which, here's an interesting tidbit about his upcoming Ponyo on the Cliff by the Sea: "HM Queen Silvia of Sweden was granted a sneak preview of the film together with director Hayao Miyazaki during the King and Queen's state visit to Japan on 3 March 2007." Isn't that amazing? Moral: Morals are stupid, I think I'm done with them now.

The Simpsons: Season 19 (2007-2008, 20 episodes)
Maybe I should stop watching this before it erases the memories of all the old, excellent episodes. Remember when this was the best TV show ever? It seems like a hundred years ago, but really it's only 10 or so. I stand by what I said about the the 18th season in 2007, Part 23.

if.... (1968) (R)
You know what? This is a weird-ass film in which nothing much happens. How come I didn't notice that the last time I saw it? It's still cool, though.

Spider-Man 2 (2004) (R)
Excellent. Aside from Vern Schillinger and Daniel Desario, bit parts include Bill Maplewood, Dr Kim Briggs, Ash and Jin.

Suddenly (1954)
Pretty stupid but fairly watchable public domain film noir in which Frank Sinatra tried to assassinate the President and Sheriff Sterling Awesome Hayden and his fellow hostages try to stop him. Download it.

L.A. Law: The Movie (2002)
TV movie that reunites most of the cast of the TV show, eight years later. They used to make fun of Douglas Brackman because he has no hair, but now they're all bald or balding! (Except Aaron Echolls, of course.) The script is pretty weak, but for fans of the original TV series, it's still fun to see the characters come out and play for just 85 minutes more. Should probably have been a miniseries, though.


Spider-Man 3 (2007)
Kind of entertaining but also stupid and very, very messy. Thus completely unlike the very focused Spider-Man 2. A lot of the problems seem to stem from trying to compress plot points that could easily fill two or three movies into one. (I mean, three different villains, what does that remind you of? Joel Schumacher's Batman and Robin, that's what.) As a result, none of the many different storylines and characters (Sandman, Eddie Brock, Venom, Green Goblin, Mary Jane, Gwen Stacy...) are very engaging.

Sexy Beast (2000) (R)
Retired gangster Ray Winstone is visited in Spain by wonderful psycho Ben Kingsley who wants him to do another job. Very enjoyable straightforward crime drama.

Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer (2007)
This is probably the one Marvel movie franchise that has least lived up to its potential. The first movie was completely pedestrian, far from Fantastic (ha ha). But since the first one lowered my expectations so much, this sequel is almost a pleasant surprise. It's suitably cosmic, and it's short.

Ghost Rider (2007)
Nicolas Cage's skull is on fire in this yawn fest by Mark Steven Johnson, who also wrote and directed the lackluster Daredevil.

Diary of the Dead (2007)
I like most of Romero's old zombie movies (2007, Part 8: Zombies) and thought Land of the Dead was a worthy follow-up, but this one is a disappointment. The gory effects are fine, and there are some nice touches, like a zombie clown, and the last shot of the film, plus an Amish guy who is as awesome as the Amish usually are (i.e. very). But the story itself is weak and the social satire seems way too heavy-handed this time. Most importantly, the whole hand-held camera "documentary" thing gets very old very fast. Romero apparently didn't have much faith in the conceit anyway: All the footage has been professionally edited together, with multiple camera angles and added "scary music". I think this could have been a much better film if it had been told in a more conventional manner.


Diabolik / Danger: Diabolik (1968) (R)
Stylish and very '60s comics adaptation featuring a simply supercool costumed criminal. Extra points to Diabolik for having a hotter girlfriend than any superhero I can think of.

I Am Legend (2007)
Mostly intelligent and extremely watchable for at least an hour (thanks to Will Smith's convincing performance). Stays good until the insulting and tacked-on ending. The originally intended ending, available in an "alternative" version of the movie, isn't all that satisfying either, but it's much more interesting than the theatrical version. Both are different from the ending to Richard Matheson's book. Commenters on the A.V. Club discuss:

Imma Legend, yo
by CountAightBlah

So if they axed the ending, which in the book defines it's until-then-baffling title and provides an excellent mind-fuck moment.... why is it still called "I am Legend"?

RE: Imma Legend, yo
by JacksonBentley

Test audiences were confused by the working title, "I'm Not Legend."

The Punisher (2004)
Forget what I said about Fantastic Four, THIS is the biggest fuck-up of the Marvel movies of the 2000s. My first thought was that at least five excellent movies could be constructed from comic book writer Garth Ennis' Max series. But on reflection, I don't think it's possible to make a movie that captures the essence of the Punisher, because he simply isn't a movie character - he could carry an TV series on HBO, though. The most important misunderstanding that should be corrected is this: The Punisher is not a tragic hero, he is an insane man who has devoted his life to killing criminals. Anyway, this movie, directed by Armageddon and Next screenwriter Jonathan Hensleigh, gets almost everything wrong. I mean, Joan the Mouse played by Rebecca Romijn - that's just ridiculous casting. And Thomas Jane (as the Punisher) doesn't even KILL his first victim! I was also curious to see how the movie would let him dispatch the most evil character in the film, who happens to be a woman. Would he simply shoot her? No, the movie contrives a situation where he doesn't have to kill her himself at all! Plus: some truly shitty dialogue, some laughable moments (like the tombstone scene). Jane's fight with The Russian and a couple of other scenes are straight out of Welcome Back, Frank, but - of course - consistently dumbed down.

Generation X (1996)
Why do I subject myself to a poorly received low-budget made-for-TV Marvel adaptation when even most of the big-budget would-be-blockbusters suck ass?
This one, based on a spinoff of the X-Men comic, but made before the X-movies, is most likely a failed pilot, directed by Jack Sholder (The Hidden and 12:01 - both reviewed in 2007, Part 30). The scenes with the students interacting are okay, but the over-the-top villain is boring and his dream machine scheme is crap. Trivia: The mansion used for the Xavier Institute is the exact same one later used in X2: X-Men United and X-Men: The Last Stand,

Michael Clayton (2007)
Absorbing if a little slow-moving drama thriller starring George Clooney as a "fixer". Written and directed by Bourne movies writer Tony Gilroy. Especially excellent is Tilda Swinton's nuanced performance as a corporate "villain".

Following (1998)
Black and white precursor to Memento, also written/directed by Christopher Nolan.

The Flintstones (1994) (R)
Critically loathed at the time of its release, but it's very true to the cartoon. Yes, there's too many computer animated critters and it's too reliant on sight gags, but, again, that's just like in the cartoon. Still charming, and John Goodman is of course perfect.

Cloverfield (2008)
The premise is kind of brilliant: a monster movie in which the monster is barely glimpsed. Unlike Diary of the Dead, there is a strong sense of urgency. A stroke of brilliance is making the guy holding the camera mildly retarded. That way it makes sense to articulate things that wouldn't normally be spelled out.

Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story (2007)
Parody of musician biopic, specifically Walk the Line. Full of familiar faces from The Office, 30 rock, SNL, and Apatow regulars. (The Beatles is for example played by an all-star group of actors: Paul Rudd, Jack Black, Justin Long and Jason Schwartzman.)
Jenna Fischer is cute. Very quotable.


Teeth (2007)
Strange mixture of horror, drama and black comedy, directed by Roy Lichtenstein's son. Slightly repetitive, but interesting all the way through. If you see just one movie about vagina dentata this year, make it this one.

Below (2002)
Tense thriller about a haunted submarine during World War II. Eventually descends into silliness, but still pretty effective. Co-written by Darren Aronofsky.

The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (2005)
I've never been a big fan of the books but I think this generally successful adaptation (great casting!) may have made me see the light - I finally understand the charm. Probably almost impenetrable if you haven't read the book, though.

The Triumph of Sherlock Holmes (1935)
Based on The Valley of Fear.

The Straight Story (1999) (R)
Old man drives a lawnmover 240 miles to make peace with his brother. Based on a true story, but in real life the brothers KILLED each other. Just kidding. Certainly David Lynch's least disturbing film but possibly one of his most affecting.

Ace in the Hole (1951)
Guy is trapped in a cave and cynical reporter Kirk Douglas milks it for all it's worth. By Billy Wilder.


All the Boys Love Mandy Lane (2006)
Horror movie completely devoid of horror. I expected at least Stupid Fun, but it's both more ambitious and more boring than that. Someone called it the thinking man's slasher flick, but if that's the case I think I prefer regular slasher flicks. Amber Heard is very pretty, though. (Maybe that's why all the boys want to sleep with her?) One scene early on establishes that cell phones (well, a cell phone) don't work where the film takes place. I've been wondering if we should expect to see such scenes in pretty much every forthcoming slasher movie from now on. You know, since so many of them are dependent on the characters being "cut off" from the rest of the world and unable to contact anyone from help?

Twin Peaks: Season 1 (1990, 8 episodes) (R)
Yeah.


Twin Peaks: Season 2 (1990–1991, 22 episodes) (R)
More surreal than the first season, right from the get-go. I think it threw reality out the window when Dale Cooper got out of his hospital bed a few hours after being badly shot. But your mileage may vary. Twin Peaks lost a shitload of viewers in the middle of this season because (SPOILER!) the death of Leland Palmer leaves a gigantic void. There's no longer any real "hook". The Windom Earle storyline gets pretty good but it takes quite a few episodes to pick up steam and until then the show just seems to tread water (wow, that's not even mixed metaphors). In hindsight it's easy to see that this was clumsily handled. It was stupid to finish off the "A" storyline at a moment when none of the other storylines were sufficiently developed to take its place. In that way they made it way too easy for the viewers to stop watching. Apparently both Mark Frost and David Lynch were otherwise engaged at the time, which would account for the plenitude of ridiculous or misguided subplots. Such as: 1. Nadine thinking she's a teenager and gaining super-strength, 2. Ben Horne restaging the Civil War, 3. James fixing a car for a beautiful woman and getting tangled up in a pointless mystery, 4. Andy and Dick trying to find out if a little kid murdered his parents. Any one of these could have been acceptable, but all four at the same time? No way. Excellent ending, though, even if it is a cliffhanger (well, several).

Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me (1992) (R)
Not entirely successful (too disjointed, for one thing), but very stylish and with quite a few fascinating revelations for fans of the show and its mythology. Very dark. Could perhaps have used some humor. And David Bowie should have had more to do.

Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle (2003)
Aggressively silly. Lots of jumping and fighting and driving, not a whole lot of logic or story. Crispin Glover in a much-too-small role. Justin Theroux sporting an outrageous Irish accent in a Cape Fear parody.

The Wind in the Willows (1996) (R)
Monty Python and Steve Coogan.

The Acid House (1998) (R)
Irvine Welsh. Great fun.

Winter Passing (2005)
Zooey Deschanel depressed. Some scenes early on, such as Deschanel purposefully hurting her hand, or drowning her sick kitten, are laugh-out-loud funny. The sad thing is, they're probably not meant to be. On the whole, the movie's not awful, but it's sometimes very close to awful. The characters never feel real, and when several unconvincing characters interact the results are just, I don't know, not very involving. Synchronicity: Zooey's mom, Mary Jo Deschanel, played Donna's mother on Twin Peaks. (And her dad directed several episodes.)

Lost Highway (1997)
Puzzling identity crime drama by David Lynch. Not quite as good as Mulholland Dr., but then, virtually nothing is. Moral: Do not tailgate.

Grosse Pointe Blank (1997)
Quirky hitman comedy. Lightweight but charming.

Boxing Helena (1993)
Julian Sands and Sherilyn Fenn in an infamous amputee thriller, directed by Jennifer Lynch (David's daughter). Perhaps not as godawful as I'd been led to expect, but definitely Bad. It's pretty much a more grotesque (but less believable and interesting) version of The Collector. Cop-out ending.

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

When Jeff Taps, He's Happy



Enjoy the smell of Simply Jeff Goldblum. From The Jamie Kennedy Experiment, which was a television program of wildly varying quality, I seem to remember. But I'm old now, and it's getting harder to remember stuff. (Link via Abhay Khosla, who writes like an angel sings.)


SUPERBLOG!!: Just Another Crappy Link Blog Nowadays, Apparently.

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Lost Cowboy Found



Sadly, it seems that my speculations the other day may have been correct. Frequent SUPERBLOG!! correspondent Moko has intercepted a promotional image for Season Five of ABC's hit show Lost. The image, leaked by disgruntled former employees, shows a mostly-obscured but clearly cowboy-like figure hovering ominously near a bound Benjamin Linus. So, contrary to earlier reports, it now appears that Cowboy Joe's first appearance will be in the fifth season's debut episode (possibly titled "Not Your Average Joe", as per the tag line in the image). We can expect the show to suck until then, and then suddenly improve dramatically as soon as we hear Cowboy Joe's trademark whistling.

The promo image subtly hints at the possibility of forced sodomy. I'm told by sources close to the production that sodomy (forced and otherwise) will indeed be a major theme in the fifth season.

SUPERBLOG!! will follow this story as it develops.

Saturday, April 26, 2008

Still No Joe :-(



Lost has returned - but whither Cowboy Joe? His absence is currently the show's greatest mystery. I know we were all terribly disappointed when the fourth season of Lost started airing in January and Joe was nowhere in sight, despite repeated promises from the producers. And then we hoped that the writer's strike would have given them a chance to get back on track and finally introduce The Man With No Name (i.e. Joe). But no. At this point, I guess it's even possible he's been pushed to season 5, which would suck.

Yeah, everybody likes Benjamin Linus but he's no Joe, is he? Unless he has a dual identity of course. Maybe when Ben popped into his Secret Hieroglyph Closet he activated a time-and-space machine and travelled to the Old West where he became Cowboy Joe? (After all, the first and last names of "Cowbow Joseph" contains exactly the same number of letters - just like "Benny Linus"! Coincidence?) And when Ben returned all smoky and we assumed it was just because he had activated Smokey the Smoke Monster, maybe he was actually covered in cowboy dust? Yeah, it's a theory.

If you had to kill off just one major cast member to make room for Joe, who would it be? You can't pick them all, sorry. Also, what kind of animal should he or she be eaten by? Don't say polar bear!

Sunday, March 30, 2008

Everybody Loves Kristen Bell



It has been pointed out to me by machine-elves from a higher level of reality that my well-documented and perhaps irrationally strong loathing of NBC's Heroes may be inconsistent with my professed love for Veronica Mars, starring Kristen Bell. Because apparently she's in Heroes too.

Certainly, I would sell my own grandmother for a chance to lick the cheek of Kristen Bell. (My grandmother is dead so I have little use for her. If she were alive I would not sell her.) Wait, that's just creepy. But I was heartbroken when Cy Tolliver bashed her brains in. (Kristen Bell's character in Deadwood, not my grandmother.) But that doesn't mean anything because there are other actors I like in Heroes as well, such as Clea DuVall and that guy from Profit. And Malcolm McDowell remains a favorite of mine, even though probably 98 percent of his filmography is shit.

Plus, as if Bell wasn't firmly enough established as Nerd Princess as it was, she's in Fanboys, the upcoming Star Wars thingie that Darth Weinstein is trying to destroy. And I hate Star Wars almost as much as I hate Heroes.

I don't remember where I was going with this post. But here's the main reason to love Kristen Bell:

[Interviewer:] Are you a typical blonde?
No, because I’m not stupid.

Friday, March 07, 2008

Everybody Loves Al, Part 2



Speaking of The Simpsons, here is Alan Moore, flanked by Art Spiegelman and Dan Clowes from the episode "Husbands and Knives". I was gonna blog a lot about that when it aired last November, but I don't think I ever did? And now it's too late. Why is SUPERBLOG!! always six months behind the curve?

I've never blogged about Spiegelman but there was a post about The Man Who Stole Ghost World back in 2005. (SUPERBLOG!!'s salad days, if you will.)

Anyway, this was supposed to be about Alan Moore so here he is meeting Death.

And here's another spot-on drawing of Alan Moore, part of a slightly larger online humor comic about (if memory serves) the creation of something called The Sinestro Corps (that link's just to a Wikipedia entry about the group itself) that I tried to find but couldn't. Maybe I just didn't try hard enough? I only gave it a couple of minutes. I'm a busy man and that's all the time I have. But I did watch Superman: The Animated Series the other day, and there he was:



Sinestro, I mean. Also, I remember that character from an issue or two of John Byrne's run on Wonder Woman, which I bought every issue of because I was a huge Byrne fan back then. Even though I didn't enjoy it. I was just waiting for it to become good, you know, because I grew up with his X-Men and Fantastic Four and stuff, and Next Men was good. At least I thought so back then. Was that around the time Byrne started sucking, or was I just developing a more discerning taste?

This has been a warm-up for my forthcoming blog post Everybody Hates Watchmen. I'm not kidding. Watch the skies.

Wednesday, February 27, 2008

Everybody Hates Heroes



What do all the good and decent people in the world have in common? Aside from being good and decent? They all hate the TV show Heroes. Here's preeminent comics writer Alan Moore in a recent interview in Word Magazine:

I was persuaded to watch it by people who said it nods to Watchmen but God, what a load of rubbish! It's a late-70s X-Men at best and full of terrible ideas and characters who've all been done to death. Beyond death. And the writing shows such contempt for the viewer. The climax, a man who is going to explode is carried off into the air by his brother... did anybody bother to compare the effects of a groundburst with an airburst nuclear explosion?

I'm impressed Moore actually seems to have watched it all the way to the climax. (Maybe he went straight to the finale?) Anyway, here's Tom Spurgeon (commenting on an analysis of the same interview):

Heroes -- an awful TV program made worse but its open mining of "serious" superhero comics 1975-1990 while denying this is being done

Here's my own review of the first four episodes, from last Summer. (And if you thought I was picky, Geoff Klock noticed many more things to hate in the pilot.)

Now, why am I so obsessed with proving that Heroes sucks?

Image: TV Guide cover scan via fan site Watching Heroes.

Monday, February 25, 2008

Everybody Hates SUPERBLOG!!



Have you noticed how, lately, very few people actually comment on SUPERBLOG!! posts, even though our traffic remains constant? (Indeed, it seems to have actually grown a little this year.) I have. Why is that? Is it because we have successfully alienated everybody who used to like it? Is it because WE never comment on other people's blogs anymore (I used to do that regularly, a long time ago). Is it because BLOGS are a thing of the past and the future of the Internet is STATIC WEBSITES? I think so. Should we replace SUPERBLOG!! with a single unchanging web page called SUPERPAGE!!? Do you feel like voting on that suggestion? If so, please comment below. Please. You can even be anonymous. Please. Please! Don't you like us? Why don't you comment. COMMENT! IDIOT! COMMENT NOW! I'LL KILL YOU!!



Image: From a sitcom called Everybody Hates Chris, inspired by the teenage experiences of Chris Rock. Sundays at 7 divided by 6 cents.

Tuesday, February 05, 2008

Hidden Lost Ads in Comical Booklets



I like Lost a lot and in my dreams I am one of the Oceanic Six but this Marvel Comics crossover/marketing effort (click on the "View" link) is just sad and pathetic.

It's enough to make me pick up my television set and throw it in the oven, if it weren't for the fact that the very next episode of Lost features Cowboy Joe!


Comic panel © 2008 The Evil Marvel Comics Empire and/or Maybe Whoever Owns Lost.

Friday, January 04, 2008

X-Men Simpsonized



The X-Men + the Simpsons = hilarity. These are based on the Frank Quitely-designed costumes, I believe. More pictures in the Comic Book Resources Forums.

Friday, November 30, 2007

Those Who Live by the Lankar Die by the Lankar



My new favorite Swedish word is buseman. It can mean a lot of things. Pronounced "bewe-seh-mun", I think.



I am going to die at 87. When are you? Click here to find out!

Via Bjorn: Clever Test Exam Answers (some suck but others are great)

A very Swedish blog: Värsta deppbloggen

Dangerous graphics

Al Gore Has a Posse

Simpsons Scenes and their references and again

This is an interesting sex costume. Furry! The furries are so... furry.

Sunday, November 11, 2007

The Year of Watching DVDs, Part 30: Dick


I watched the entire IMDb top 250 list and now I'm watching everything else. All reviews so far.

Neon Genesis Evangelion (1995) (26 episodes)
Evangelion: Death and Rebirth (1995)
The End of Evangelion (1997)
A disappointment. Interesting story, but too many genre conventions for my taste, and I couldn't care whatsoever about Shinji, the main character. He was underdeveloped and just boring. And while I often enjoy "controversial" endings to TV series (cf. The Prisoner, The Sopranos), I thought it was a mistake to follow 24 episodes of plot, plot, plot with a sudden switch to psychoanalysis. (The end of End of was better, but not enough to change my perception of the series as a whole.)


Single White Female 2: The Psycho (2005)
This is one of those direct-to-DVD "sequels" that has nothing to do with the original aside from being a retread of the same basic plot. Dig that superfluous subtitle! Anyway: Not as bad as might be expected - in fact, solidly mediocre. And I've always been deeply in love with Kristen Miller, by far the hottest girl in shitty comedic action series She Spies.


The Office, Series 2 (6 episodes)
Speaking of hot, there's not a character in The Office I wouldn't nail. And that includes Chris Finch. It's brilliant. Painfully funny.


Arrested Development, Season 1, Episodes 1-4 (2003)
Very good American sitcom. Well worth the 1 SEK I spent on the sampler DVD.


8 Mile (2002)
By Curtis Hanson. Eminem as a white ghetto boy who wants to be a rapper, Brittany Murphy as his trashy sexpot love interest, Kim Basinger as his over-the-hill-but-still-milfy mom.


Rope (1948) (repeat)
Hitchcock version of play based on Leopold and Loeb's famous murder. Gimmicky and flawed, and the gay subtext is buried a bit too deep. But still worthwhile.



The Hidden (1987) (repeat)
A young Kyle MacLachlan plays an unconventional FBI agent, a couple of years before Twin Peaks. He's on the hunt for an extraterrestrial killer. Awful 80s music, impressive bodycount, thrilling end chase, and an ending that's both poignant and slightly creepy.


Magicians (2007)
Amusing British comedy starring Jessica Stevenson from Spaced and some other Brits I recognize from stuff.


Scanners (1981)
Boring and pedestrian. I'd got it into my head that it was a PKD adaptation (stupid me, I'd gotten it mixed up with Screamers, reviewed below). Instead, it's a Cronenberg flick, with perhaps the least expressive leading man ever captured on celluloid. On the plus side: Patrick McGoohan is in it, and everybody loves Patrick McGoohan. And I've had a soft spot for Michael Ironside ever since he was the "cool" good guy in V. And the gory psychic duel at the end is kind of fun. But no, on the whole it's shit.


12:01 (1993)
Director Jack Sholder (The Hidden) made his own Groundhog Day for TV at about the same time as the Bill Murray film. This is basically action with elements of sci-fi and comedy. The appeal is mainly in the concept, not in the execution. But the resolution is very satisfying. Danny Trejo in a small role!


Screamers (1995)
Co-written by the guy who wrote Alien, Dan O'Bannon. Then again, he also wrote Alien vs Terminator. (Both are reviewed in Part 11.) Starts with an enormous infodump, many paragraphs of text, which is never a good sign. Decent mid-level budget, okay acting, and so on. But the movie seems bored with itself. Or maybe I'm projecting. It's not offensively bad or anything. Just... uninspired? I have a hard time imagining anyone who was involved in the making of this movie really, you know, cared.


Armed and Dangerous (1986)
Action-oriented comedy with John Candy, Eugene Levy, and Meg Ryan. Stupid and unfunny, but at least it's short.


Impostor (2002)
As in Screamers, the film starts with an infodump. But this one's handled a bit more elegantly, via voice-over by Gary Sinise. I had some hopes for the film early on, since it fairly competently invokes questions of identity and paranoia. But it soon turns into just another chase movie. And given that the major "plot twist" is screamingly obvious within 15 minutes, it's probably not a good idea to save "the big reveal" until the very end. Apparently, there's a 37 minute short version (with most of the chase excised) and I can imagine it working much better. This long version is not even Okay.


The Apostle (1997) (repeat)
Robert Duvall plays the titular character, a Southern preacher cast out from his church, in this Robert Duvall-penned drama directed by Robert Duvall. (Executive producer: Robert Duvall.) Luckily, Robert Duvall is an exceptional actor.


Paycheck (2003)
Interesting PKD concepts, not very interesting execution. Lots of running and shooting and fighting, some fast driving. An explosion or five. Mediocre for about two thirds, then just plain Bad.


Freaks and Geeks (1999-2000) (18 episodes)
Watching Undeclared made me seek this out again. Heartwarming and real.



The Final Programme (1973)
AKA The Last Days of Man on Earth. Based on Michael Moorcock's first Jerry Cornelius novel. Cool and fun.


Dexter, Season 1 (2006) (12 episodes)
Good Showtime series.


21 Grams (2003)
Hit-and-run organ donor drama. Strong performances by the leads, especially Naomi Watts.


Apt Pupil (1997)
Bryan Singer's adaptation of the Stephen King novella. The premise is interesting, and Ian McKellen is good (of course), but the movie is formless and ultimately kind of pointless. At 106 minutes, it's at least 50 minutes too long.


Spider-Man (2002) (repeat)
Unsubtle to the point of stupidity (and the dialogue is purely perfunctory) but it's also pretty fun and very well-cast. My fave actors: James Franco from Freaks and Geeks, and JK Simmons from Oz.



Oz, Season 1 (1997) (8 episodes) (repeat)
Previously reviewed in Part 12. Elegant, economical storytelling. Perhaps the first truly outstanding HBO series, paving the way for The Sopranos and others. "I shat all over a man. That's not normal." Where else can you get that kind of poetry?


Oz, Season 2 (1998) (8 episodes)
The poignancy reaches new heights when a menacing yet pathetic Adebisi implores Shirley Bellinger: "Suck my dick now. Suck my dick." Great stuff.


American Splendor (2003)
Based on Harvey Pekar's comic book. Uplifting and strangely affecting.


More soon.