There are going to be some changes in 2014. Some I’ll like.
Some I’ll hate. Some I’ll grow tired of and likely forget after a week or two.
That’s why I’m posting this nonsense here and now. In the event I do forget to
continue these changes, I want you to basically publically shame me back into
doing so in a manner of speaking… Like, helpful reminds and not actually
shaming me with horrid insults and threats… unless I know you very well and I
can tell you’re just joking… that said, let’s roll out.
Tuesday, December 31, 2013
Plans and Goals for 2014
Figuring myself out and working towards that better tomorrow with the person that matters most.
Monday, December 30, 2013
Humanity's Flaws: A Look at Marvel's Henry Pym
Time for another
parting look. I was struggling to think of who are next segment would be about.
It’s tough to follow a God comparison of GlaDOS BUT we have to. Not only that,
we’re following on the heels of three successful posts about strong female
characters in film and games. This got me thinking of who I could follow all
that up with and it hit me. While I might know enough to do him justice, only
one character can follow up all that and still be someone related… today… we’re
talking about Hank Pym (aka Ant-Man aka Goliath aka The Wasp aka Giant Man aka
Yellow Jacket aka fuckwad).
Figuring myself out and working towards that better tomorrow with the person that matters most.
Sunday, December 29, 2013
My Look Back at 2013
I said (on Friday)
that my post for Sunday would be a surprise. This was partly because I wasn’t
sure what to write at the time (thus, a surprise to myself as well). But I
decided to do a top ten list (last one for the year) on the top lessons learned
and events of 2013. This is more of a personal nature, but given that this
started as a personal blog for me to discuss problems with people (which never
came to fruition) I felt it was the best way to close the year. It was either
that or put together a massive orgy… but that would require more cleaning up
than I’d like.
Figuring myself out and working towards that better tomorrow with the person that matters most.
Saturday, December 28, 2013
Top Ten FILMS of 2013
This year’s top ten may be sad at this rate. I’ve seen quite a number of films this year, but there’s a good number I missed out on and I feel they’d be worth a look and deserver a spot on this list without question. If it doesn’t make it on the list but probably deserves to be like I assume Gravity, 12 Years a Slave, and The Hobbit Desolation of Smog might, then just assume I never got around to seeing it for some raisin. Without further ado, here’s my top ten movies of 2013 (note to self: which may change before the year is actually over)
Wasn't that lovely? Our top ten films of the year highlighting ONLY the BEST works of narrative in film that could possibly exist. Truly, no other such films that were released this year could have earned a place on this list except for maybe The Hobbit 2: Another One. But, alas, at the time of writing and posting, I have yet to see it and would hate to give it a spot over something like Pokemon or Monsters Inc if it hadn't truly earned it... though it still beats fucking Man of Steel without me needing to have seen it to know that. Have a great weekend and enjoy the holidays!
#10 – Pokémon the
Movie: Genesect & the Legend Awakened
- I’m doing my top ten films of the year and I know that, if anything, I’ll get some shit for this one. It wasn’t even the best Pokémon movie and I’m putting it on this list while leaving off notable works like Man of Steel and Fast & Furious Again. My response… yes, I did. Man of Steel is a movie with interesting visuals and fight sequences, but a Superman movie it is not. It’s also, in a narrative sense, boring. Zod’s whole plan and reason for doing things is generic and lifted straight from better works of fiction while the whole following daddy’s orders/teachings from two dads being a conflict for Superman got really old, especially when one didn’t feel like he really died and the other died for really no bloody reason at all.
- So, yes, I didn’t like Man of Steel and I’m retroactively giving this to a Pokémon movie to not only piss off fans, but to make a point that Pokémon is something I find fun while Man of Steel is something I don’t. Also, Mewtwo. Nothing beats Mewtwo.
- I’m doing my top ten films of the year and I know that, if anything, I’ll get some shit for this one. It wasn’t even the best Pokémon movie and I’m putting it on this list while leaving off notable works like Man of Steel and Fast & Furious Again. My response… yes, I did. Man of Steel is a movie with interesting visuals and fight sequences, but a Superman movie it is not. It’s also, in a narrative sense, boring. Zod’s whole plan and reason for doing things is generic and lifted straight from better works of fiction while the whole following daddy’s orders/teachings from two dads being a conflict for Superman got really old, especially when one didn’t feel like he really died and the other died for really no bloody reason at all.
- So, yes, I didn’t like Man of Steel and I’m retroactively giving this to a Pokémon movie to not only piss off fans, but to make a point that Pokémon is something I find fun while Man of Steel is something I don’t. Also, Mewtwo. Nothing beats Mewtwo.
#09 – Oz The Great
& Powerful
- A sign that proves I was totally right about Spiderman 3 not entirely being the fault of Sam Raimi is that I can point to a film like Oz The Great & Powerful and show that he actually possess talent of an actual filmmaker and the first two movies weren’t just flukes. The CGI, the plot, the characters, and the world building were all right in line with Raimi’s usual skillset and it was all pretty well-done. Having the ladies not being the central focus, while also being the central driving force of the plot was a fun take on the origins of Oz. Though I will still point out how creating a magical world back in the day didn’t require this much CGI, but just some actual sets and props. But in 2013, I’ll be surprise if anything isn’t green screened at all.
- A sign that proves I was totally right about Spiderman 3 not entirely being the fault of Sam Raimi is that I can point to a film like Oz The Great & Powerful and show that he actually possess talent of an actual filmmaker and the first two movies weren’t just flukes. The CGI, the plot, the characters, and the world building were all right in line with Raimi’s usual skillset and it was all pretty well-done. Having the ladies not being the central focus, while also being the central driving force of the plot was a fun take on the origins of Oz. Though I will still point out how creating a magical world back in the day didn’t require this much CGI, but just some actual sets and props. But in 2013, I’ll be surprise if anything isn’t green screened at all.
#08 – Iron Man 3
- When this first launched, I expected this to be film of the year for me. It was a movie I had an immense amount of fun with during subsequent viewings. The acting was great, the writing was hilarious, the action was minimal, but goofy and good for laughs. And the plot twist with the Mandarin was… mixed, but I liked it because it gave us (including fans of the comics) something we didn’t expect. And when a film can surprise us despite everything (plot wise) already being laid out for us, it’s a nice change from the norm. Plus, Robert Downey Jr., one of few Hollywood men I could probably go gay for if I wasn’t otherwise involved and desperately wanted some love and attention for all of about five minutes. Despite all that, I couldn’t keep Iron Man 3 on the throne of MOTY like I wanted. So many good films followed it up that it got pushed down to 8th place. That should tell you we actually had a pretty good year.
- When this first launched, I expected this to be film of the year for me. It was a movie I had an immense amount of fun with during subsequent viewings. The acting was great, the writing was hilarious, the action was minimal, but goofy and good for laughs. And the plot twist with the Mandarin was… mixed, but I liked it because it gave us (including fans of the comics) something we didn’t expect. And when a film can surprise us despite everything (plot wise) already being laid out for us, it’s a nice change from the norm. Plus, Robert Downey Jr., one of few Hollywood men I could probably go gay for if I wasn’t otherwise involved and desperately wanted some love and attention for all of about five minutes. Despite all that, I couldn’t keep Iron Man 3 on the throne of MOTY like I wanted. So many good films followed it up that it got pushed down to 8th place. That should tell you we actually had a pretty good year.
#07 – Monsters
University
- Pixar hasn’t been hitting it out of the park for me like it used to. Brave, while good, wasn’t on the same level as some of my classic favorites like Toy Story or The Incredibles. Not that it was bad. Hell, even a BAD Pixar movie is still better than the average movie. But between the less than stellar Brave and the now tiresome (no pun intended) Cars franchise, I’m wondering when we’ll see a new Pixar movie that can rival great works like Up. Well, we didn’t find out this year, but we did get Monsters University, a prequel to Monsters Inc, which is rendered less than effective by the fact that the ending of Monsters In. makes much of what is necessary in Monsters University largely unnecessary. By that, I mean that we already know scaring is outdated and obsolete in the end, yet here we have to pretend and remember that there was a time when scaring was the only thing available for energy for the Monsters world. Again, that doesn’t make this film bad, but it could have been more or even not needed, in exchange for a much better film. I’m still waiting for an Incredibles sequel Pixar. It’s been ten years. We’re ready for another outing with the animated heroes you gave us so long ago.
- Pixar hasn’t been hitting it out of the park for me like it used to. Brave, while good, wasn’t on the same level as some of my classic favorites like Toy Story or The Incredibles. Not that it was bad. Hell, even a BAD Pixar movie is still better than the average movie. But between the less than stellar Brave and the now tiresome (no pun intended) Cars franchise, I’m wondering when we’ll see a new Pixar movie that can rival great works like Up. Well, we didn’t find out this year, but we did get Monsters University, a prequel to Monsters Inc, which is rendered less than effective by the fact that the ending of Monsters In. makes much of what is necessary in Monsters University largely unnecessary. By that, I mean that we already know scaring is outdated and obsolete in the end, yet here we have to pretend and remember that there was a time when scaring was the only thing available for energy for the Monsters world. Again, that doesn’t make this film bad, but it could have been more or even not needed, in exchange for a much better film. I’m still waiting for an Incredibles sequel Pixar. It’s been ten years. We’re ready for another outing with the animated heroes you gave us so long ago.
#06 – The Conjuring
- I’ve taken it upon myself to diversify my top ten by including as many genre’s as possible. And this year was especially helpful with that. I was initially worried it’d be over saturated with super hero films. Not that such a thing is bad, but I want to have more than just one kind of movie on this list. Which is why I’m really glad we actually had one good horror film with The Conjuring. A genuinely scary film that was actually embracing the goofier aspects of horror with straight-faced seriousness. Creepy bits are creepy. And while jump scares are plentiful, they are built up to in a way that makes them all work. It’s a more modern take on the exorcist story that works and if you like horror, this is a film worth watching and not some god awful remake of a classic like Carrie.
- I’ve taken it upon myself to diversify my top ten by including as many genre’s as possible. And this year was especially helpful with that. I was initially worried it’d be over saturated with super hero films. Not that such a thing is bad, but I want to have more than just one kind of movie on this list. Which is why I’m really glad we actually had one good horror film with The Conjuring. A genuinely scary film that was actually embracing the goofier aspects of horror with straight-faced seriousness. Creepy bits are creepy. And while jump scares are plentiful, they are built up to in a way that makes them all work. It’s a more modern take on the exorcist story that works and if you like horror, this is a film worth watching and not some god awful remake of a classic like Carrie.
#05 – Prisoners
- It’s hard to really define Prisoners. It has elements of mystery because of missing people and needing to find out who did it and why. It has elements of horror because I can’t think of anything more terrifying than having your kids be taken away by strangers who might very well kill them. It has elements of action because of some brutal torture scenes that also come off as borderline horror. But it is generically defined as a “drama” and I feel that doesn’t do it justice. Either way, you won’t walk away feeling good and you’ll likely agree that now, if ever, Hugh Jackman deserves some fucking recognition for his considerably good acting. I walked away somewhat depressed from this film because a lot of it really does take from real life with the only exception being that happy endings are a rarity in life and that if this had been real, those kids would likely never have been found. Now I’m going to go cry a little and think of something positive… like…
- It’s hard to really define Prisoners. It has elements of mystery because of missing people and needing to find out who did it and why. It has elements of horror because I can’t think of anything more terrifying than having your kids be taken away by strangers who might very well kill them. It has elements of action because of some brutal torture scenes that also come off as borderline horror. But it is generically defined as a “drama” and I feel that doesn’t do it justice. Either way, you won’t walk away feeling good and you’ll likely agree that now, if ever, Hugh Jackman deserves some fucking recognition for his considerably good acting. I walked away somewhat depressed from this film because a lot of it really does take from real life with the only exception being that happy endings are a rarity in life and that if this had been real, those kids would likely never have been found. Now I’m going to go cry a little and think of something positive… like…
#04 – Thor: The Dark
Worlds
- Marvel had two great showings this year, which wasn’t that surprising. But what did surprise me is just how much better Thor 2 was compared to both its predecessor AND to the Marvel films in general. Aside from Avengers, I felt like Thor 2 really stepped up its game enough to hold its place as one of my favorite super hero films of all time, which says a lot since it’s up there with Spiderman 2, Dark Knight, Avengers, and even Incredibles. Granted, the strength of this movie lies with Tom Hiddleston’s Loki, who is the most fun and most incredible in this film, by far. The A-plot feels like it takes a back seat to him at times, but that was somewhat expected given his popularity sky rocketed in Avengers. It makes me excited for next year’s outings in both Captain America and Guardians of the Galaxy. But I have doubts that nothing can compete with this film in terms of just being fun and entertaining when it comes to super heroes, at least not yet.
- Marvel had two great showings this year, which wasn’t that surprising. But what did surprise me is just how much better Thor 2 was compared to both its predecessor AND to the Marvel films in general. Aside from Avengers, I felt like Thor 2 really stepped up its game enough to hold its place as one of my favorite super hero films of all time, which says a lot since it’s up there with Spiderman 2, Dark Knight, Avengers, and even Incredibles. Granted, the strength of this movie lies with Tom Hiddleston’s Loki, who is the most fun and most incredible in this film, by far. The A-plot feels like it takes a back seat to him at times, but that was somewhat expected given his popularity sky rocketed in Avengers. It makes me excited for next year’s outings in both Captain America and Guardians of the Galaxy. But I have doubts that nothing can compete with this film in terms of just being fun and entertaining when it comes to super heroes, at least not yet.
#03 – Pacific Rim
- Argue with me if you want that it’s just “Cliché: The Movie”. Argue with me if you want that this is just a dumb movie with giant robots and monsters made to appeal to children. Argue with me if you want that it just isn’t good. Those arguments fall on deaf ears because I had fun with this film more than most other movies of 2014. How often do we get movies with giant robots or kaiju anymore? How often do we get big spectacles with absurd stories? Yes, it’s dumb, but I was on the front lines showcasing that, while dumb, that Saints Row 2 was one of the best games ever made simply because it’s fun. And Pacific Rim is right in line with that. Could it have been more? Sure, but so could a lot of films. I would love to see more of this, even if it is all just nonsensical robot and monster fights with another barely noticed story. Why? Because that’s fun. Certainly more fun than watching Superman mope in his underwear after destroying Metropolis, a city in which he was supposed to be protecting.
- Argue with me if you want that it’s just “Cliché: The Movie”. Argue with me if you want that this is just a dumb movie with giant robots and monsters made to appeal to children. Argue with me if you want that it just isn’t good. Those arguments fall on deaf ears because I had fun with this film more than most other movies of 2014. How often do we get movies with giant robots or kaiju anymore? How often do we get big spectacles with absurd stories? Yes, it’s dumb, but I was on the front lines showcasing that, while dumb, that Saints Row 2 was one of the best games ever made simply because it’s fun. And Pacific Rim is right in line with that. Could it have been more? Sure, but so could a lot of films. I would love to see more of this, even if it is all just nonsensical robot and monster fights with another barely noticed story. Why? Because that’s fun. Certainly more fun than watching Superman mope in his underwear after destroying Metropolis, a city in which he was supposed to be protecting.
#02 – Frozen
- Of 2013, there have only been two films where I legitimately wanted to stand up and applaud it for giving more effort to not only be entertaining and tell a good story, but to throw away traditional aspects of story structure and common trends of writing now in favor of doing something unique and bold. One of those two films is Frozen, an animated Disney musical about two sisters who must overcome their individual problems to help save the kingdom from a problem they both unintentionally started. Going into detail on how this film breaks tradition of Disney storytelling would be spoiling the third act in its entirety, but it takes cues from other, more modern, animated works and does something that you never would have expected Disney to go with. And, hey, you know what? The holidays are here and you might have kids in your family (yours or ones you’re related to) that would likely enjoy this film. Go see it because it is probably one of the best Disney movies of all time, and certainly one of the best films in 2013. There’s no reason NOT to see it. If you need further proof, just look up “Let it Go” on youtube and be amazed by what is one of the best musical numbers in Disney canon to date. Or watch the video embedded above this paragraph because it’s fucking good!
- Of 2013, there have only been two films where I legitimately wanted to stand up and applaud it for giving more effort to not only be entertaining and tell a good story, but to throw away traditional aspects of story structure and common trends of writing now in favor of doing something unique and bold. One of those two films is Frozen, an animated Disney musical about two sisters who must overcome their individual problems to help save the kingdom from a problem they both unintentionally started. Going into detail on how this film breaks tradition of Disney storytelling would be spoiling the third act in its entirety, but it takes cues from other, more modern, animated works and does something that you never would have expected Disney to go with. And, hey, you know what? The holidays are here and you might have kids in your family (yours or ones you’re related to) that would likely enjoy this film. Go see it because it is probably one of the best Disney movies of all time, and certainly one of the best films in 2013. There’s no reason NOT to see it. If you need further proof, just look up “Let it Go” on youtube and be amazed by what is one of the best musical numbers in Disney canon to date. Or watch the video embedded above this paragraph because it’s fucking good!
#01 – Elysium
- The other film that decided to buck trends in your usual Hollywood writing was Elysium. So many times, I feel movies are dumbed down and spending time to explain everything in a story so it all makes sense to as many people as possible. The best example being X-Men Origins: Wolverine which spoiled all the mysteries of Wolverine’s character, making him infinitely less interesting. But there’s also just your average sci-fi or fantasy film that has to take time to explain how in world stuff works and why things are the way they are. Elysium is a sci fi movie that doesn’t bother to sit down and explain things, because it has a story it wants to deliver and it jumps out the gate making sure that’s all that matters. Everything is very much “Show, Don’t Tell” which is supposed to be the golden rule of writing 101, and it’s very pleasing to see a movie keep to that. Taking this fact alone was enough to cement Elysium on the top ten…
- But beyond that, it’s just a good sci fi film. So many interesting things I want to explore more of. So many great characters with actors giving some of the best performances I’ve seen of any of them. A special shout out to Matt Damon for actually being in a movie where I don’t get bored of him playing a one-dimensional character. The action scenes are really good and everything just looks fantastic. Another Neil Blomkamp spectacular that is worth of all the praise it can get and well worth your time to see it. I wondered if this could have been unseated by anything else this year and Frozen was REALLY close to doing so.
- The other film that decided to buck trends in your usual Hollywood writing was Elysium. So many times, I feel movies are dumbed down and spending time to explain everything in a story so it all makes sense to as many people as possible. The best example being X-Men Origins: Wolverine which spoiled all the mysteries of Wolverine’s character, making him infinitely less interesting. But there’s also just your average sci-fi or fantasy film that has to take time to explain how in world stuff works and why things are the way they are. Elysium is a sci fi movie that doesn’t bother to sit down and explain things, because it has a story it wants to deliver and it jumps out the gate making sure that’s all that matters. Everything is very much “Show, Don’t Tell” which is supposed to be the golden rule of writing 101, and it’s very pleasing to see a movie keep to that. Taking this fact alone was enough to cement Elysium on the top ten…
- But beyond that, it’s just a good sci fi film. So many interesting things I want to explore more of. So many great characters with actors giving some of the best performances I’ve seen of any of them. A special shout out to Matt Damon for actually being in a movie where I don’t get bored of him playing a one-dimensional character. The action scenes are really good and everything just looks fantastic. Another Neil Blomkamp spectacular that is worth of all the praise it can get and well worth your time to see it. I wondered if this could have been unseated by anything else this year and Frozen was REALLY close to doing so.
Figuring myself out and working towards that better tomorrow with the person that matters most.
Friday, December 27, 2013
Top Ten Games of 2013
Guess what folks! It’s time for that end of the year “Best
Games OF 2013” list. I held this list off as long as I could to make sure I
could fit in all the best games I could in here. Getting as close to the end as
we could, we might still be missing a few titles, but that’s largely due to a
lack of money, a lack of technology (I don’t own all the consoles after all),
or due to a lack of free time. That said, here are my top ten games of 2013.
Take it away, myself.
Figuring myself out and working towards that better tomorrow with the person that matters most.
Wednesday, December 25, 2013
Putting the Yule Back in Yuletide
I’ve been debating about this for a while and there’s lots
of reasons for and against posting this. Why do it? Because this initially started
off as a journal to express personal thoughts, opinions, and feelings about
life events or just life in general and it has sort of deviated from that, but
in a good way (I think). But I’d like to get to personal topics more often,
especially when they may or may not be relevant. So if this does get posted, it’ll
be Christmas because of the topic I’m going to cover…
Figuring myself out and working towards that better tomorrow with the person that matters most.
Monday, December 23, 2013
God in the Machine: Parting Thoughts on Portal
Wow, these “Parting Thought” bits actually got views… and at
least one got a response, and an insightful one at that. Perhaps I should do
more of these in the hopes of elevating myself into some kind of internet wise
man who explains all unclear parts of games and movies that none understand or
that are left up to MASSIVE amounts of interpretation. We’ve already put Elsa
and Clementine under the looking glass and I feel a trend going here. I want to
spend an issue talking about how GlaDOS from
Portal is God.
Figuring myself out and working towards that better tomorrow with the person that matters most.
Saturday, December 21, 2013
Saving the Digital World
I have found myself in a bit of a lull for the past few
days. Nothing has come up for me to write an angry post about and all my “Best
of” posts are for the upcoming week along with some religious-themed stuff (a
topic I rarely touch for reasons you’re likely to find out here in the coming
week). Thus I have nothing in particular I want to write. I have ideas for a
few topics, but nothing I want to do because I want to do more “research” on
the subject.
Figuring myself out and working towards that better tomorrow with the person that matters most.
Monday, December 16, 2013
The Best I Can: Parting Thoughts Walking Dead Season One
“You’re either livin’
or you’re not. You ain’t little. You ain’t a girl. You ain’t a boy. You ain’t
strong. You ain’t smart. You’re alive.” The new game is almost out… so let’s
talk about the last one because we can…
Figuring myself out and working towards that better tomorrow with the person that matters most.
Friday, December 13, 2013
Let It Go: Parting Thoughts on Elsa
Frozen was a very
unique film in a lot of ways and it’s something I’m interested in discussing
farther because there really are a lot of layers to it. Warning, spoilers
ahead.
Figuring myself out and working towards that better tomorrow with the person that matters most.
Thursday, December 12, 2013
To Friends, Family, and You
I’ve learned a few things recently in relation to this blog
posting I do. First, I actually do have readers. This has become evident
because of the reaction to the personal post I did a few days ago AND from
actual discussion with actual people about it. And that’s really good. My goal
isn’t to strive for attention, but to at least put opinions out there in a
hopefully constructive manner and instigate some discussion on the matter.
Figuring myself out and working towards that better tomorrow with the person that matters most.
Monday, December 9, 2013
Movie Reviews: Frozen
Frozen is a Disney
film that came out roughly a week ago (and a few days). I only just got to
seeing it recently because of scheduling reasons. And it’s a shame because it
was really good and I wish I could have been there from the beginning with
everyone else saying how it is really good. So good that you should just drop whatever
you’re doing and go see it as soon as possible.
Figuring myself out and working towards that better tomorrow with the person that matters most.
Another Generation of Greed and Stupidity
Before we get to any reviews of any movies that are any
good, let’s talk about some stupid corporate bullshit in the video game
industry. Why? Because I’ve got two bits of news that just straight piss me off
for one reason or another. No more filler, we’re diving right on into this
mess.
Figuring myself out and working towards that better tomorrow with the person that matters most.
Sunday, December 8, 2013
Why?
For the duration of this article, I’ll be using the word “man”
because most of this is referring to one man in particular. Or, more accurately,
a boy. Because he never really grew out of that mental state of being a
self-absorbed teenage twat. But the generic, soul-seeking questions I ask could
either be male or female. I’m clarifying this now to not look sexist and to
open with something moderately comical. On with post.
Figuring myself out and working towards that better tomorrow with the person that matters most.
Wednesday, December 4, 2013
Walking Dead Mid-Season 4 Kerfuffle
So as you all know based on several posts, I love me some Walking Dead. The best version is the
TellTale game because it knows how to make good characters (as in characters
that feel real, not just characters of good people).
Figuring myself out and working towards that better tomorrow with the person that matters most.
Sunday, December 1, 2013
Xbone? PS4? Trigger, Please!
I’m sure I’ve done a review for the game somewhere before.
But this came up in discussion not long ago. In short, a few chums of mine and
I were debating on the best console since some new ones just launched the other
day. And after some careful thinking, I had an answer. The Xbone and the PS4
are both severely inferior to SEVERAL devices for one simple flaw.
Figuring myself out and working towards that better tomorrow with the person that matters most.
Thursday, November 28, 2013
Thanksgiving Special Supreme
It’s Thanksgiving and some people I know are doing that
“What I’m thankful for” thing every day or every week of the month. I’ve been
tempted to do that, but I’ve never done so because I always forget to the first
few days and then when I notice the posts, I don’t want to feel like a copycat.
So I thought I’d post something on Thanksgiving. The top twenty five things I’m
thankful for. There might be an order to it. At the time of initial writing,
there isn’t, but we’ll see what the magic of editing can do.
Figuring myself out and working towards that better tomorrow with the person that matters most.
Sunday, November 24, 2013
I want YOU... to help me out!
To make up for the lack of posts, we’re doing a double post
day. But this time, I actually have a reason for this.
So I want to start making improvements to hopefully have
this blog/journal/whatever reach more audiences. Larger audience means I might
actually get someone to notice my writing and they might take me on for a job
somewhere. That’s the hope anyway. So I’m going to reformat how this blog works
over the course of the next week (holidays give me a little more free time to
work with). And I need some opinions on how to make this better.
First, what do you guys want to see in the posts? I do
personal stuff, commentaries, reviews, jokey fun stuff, and a few other
gimmicks too. Is there anything you want more or less of? And of what I’ve
listed, what could be done to improve the posts more and maybe interest more
readers?
Second, I’m thinking of adding a website component to help
organize the blog as well as leave room for additional content I can add later
on. When I get a chance to get back into videos, then I can have a page for
videos. Separate the personal posts from the commentaries and reviews so you
can find what you want to see more of instead of having to look through
EVERYTHING. In short, I want to streamline this process so YOU can find what
you want to read/watch and enjoy it with greater ease. If you have suggestions
on what you want done or know of ways I could improve I may not have thought
of, I’d love to hear it.
Lastly, I’m wanting to dress up this page, a potential
youtube page, and maybe some other bits with graphics. Especially designing a
logo to help have some kind of signifier of who I am and what this is all
about. That said, you all know by now I’m a terrible artist. I can draw stick
figures and dicks and that’s about all I’m good for. So if anyone has some kind
of art-talent and wants to lend a hand, that’d be great. I can’t offer money at
the moment, but you will be credited on every page your work is featured and I’ll
recommend you to others looking for artists should I be asked as well. It’s not
much, but I’m asking for simple designs and ideas to start with, so I’m hoping
it’s a fair offer.
This is a short post because it’s mostly housekeeping. I’m
hoping to hear back from some of you one this. Again, any help you can offer
(even just suggestions for content) would be great for future posts and
updates. See ya later!
Figuring myself out and working towards that better tomorrow with the person that matters most.
Reboot Review: Tomb Raider 2013!
Hey, it’s been a while. Sorry for the lack of posts
(assuming that it’s really that big a deal to any of you). I’ve been
preoccupied raiding tombs. Spent the past few days exploring ancient societies,
finding lost artifacts, and, when I make time, blowing up old buildings and
murdering waves of psychotic cultists. That’s right, I was playing Tomb Raider (the 2013 reboot) and now I’m
going to review it. Don’t you just feel lucky?
Figuring myself out and working towards that better tomorrow with the person that matters most.
Monday, November 18, 2013
Ashes to Ashes, Dust to "Dust: An Elysian Tail" - A Review
This review has been in the works for a long time coming. By
that, I mean I haven’t really played this game since I first bought it upon
release because of my schedule, other projects, girl(s), that guy who’s always
trying to kill me with elaborate deathtraps in his moon base, and pie. But I’m
finally here and ready to get around to reviewing Dust: An Elysian Tail.
Figuring myself out and working towards that better tomorrow with the person that matters most.
Sunday, November 17, 2013
Man of Steel 2 Speculation
Man of Steel 2…
let’s do some discussion and prediction.
Figuring myself out and working towards that better tomorrow with the person that matters most.
Friday, November 15, 2013
Spiderman 3 and Dark Knight Rises... They're the Same Movie
I made a facebook post not long ago about the similarities between Dark Knight Rises and Spiderman 3 and I thought I’d take time
to elaborate more on that. See, the concept was born from a discussion with
myself and the lovely and amazing Erin Casey. I’m not entirely sure how we got
onto the subject, but it started with me calling out on of the characters in DKR to being similar in terms of plot
functionality as another character in Spidey3.
We then dove deeper into the topic and were blown away by how they were pretty
much the same damn movie. Thus, I figured I’d post a more organized version of
that conversation into a post-like thing that I sometimes do. Here we go.
Let’s start with the most obvious similarities between the
two movies. Both are third installments of a trilogy that didn’t go over well
with critics while both still were more financially successful than their predecessors.
Neither hero has a desire to kill their opponents and, for the most part don’t.
Any time a villain has died in either film it was accidental or not the fault
of the hero. Both of which are persecuted at one point or another in their
respective franchises (at least in the comics, in the films, it’s mostly just
Batman, I think). Both trilogies peaked in their second and most impressive
film due to having better villains and stories than their respective third
installments. Both characters are orphans being raised by non-biological parents
(aunts/uncles and butlers) all of which are old people. Both use a mixture of
intelligence, science, parkour, and a variation of grappling and swinging
around to fight crime.
Going a step farther, let’s take a look at some of the
important relationships in the films. Peter Parker (Spiderman) loves Mary Jane
and they get to a point where he is about to propose to her. About to, but
suffers a radical personality shift due to an alien goo and he ends up being a
bitch to her instead. On the darker and knightier side of things, the third
film is the movie where we see Bruce in a relationship with another woman where
they have sex. From what I can tell, we have no confirmation he’s ever been
that close with a woman prior to that point in the series. But it seems like a
one night stand and she ends up being a psycho in the end. So call the romance
in both movies attempts to deepen relationships that ultimately fail.
What about the big bads? Both movies sport a multitude of
villains (for the most part). You have your center-stage villain that does all
the heavy lifting and steals the most scenes imaginable. In DKR you have Bane, who is the
anti-Batman of the Batman universe since he was the one who not only broke
Batman’s back but discovered who he was and was pretty much designed by writers
to eliminate Batman the same way Doomsday eliminated Superman. Let’s websling
over to Spidey3 where the
center-stage villain is actually not the anti-Spiderman, but Sandman.
Apparently he’s back after supposedly killing Uncle Ben in the first movie
(more on that later) and now wanting to use his newfound powers of sand to get
money to help his daughter.
Secondary villains come with both films and the flavor for
this character is the frienemy. Or the sometimes enemy but sometimes ally
malarkey that almost perfectly characterizes one of Batman’s few femme fatales,
Catwoman. I’m sorry, Selina Kyle. Christopher Nolan can’t be bothered to have
fun and use the goofy comic names now, can he? Selina makes an appearance in
the film and is trying to steal from Bruce and then sets him up to be murdered
by Bane, but she eventually sees the error of her ways and decides to help him
and even save his life near the end. Flip the coin over to see Spidey’s
frienemy, Harry Osborn. The movie starts with him wanting revenge for his
father’s death. He gets amnesia from a fight they have, only to get his memory
back, try to steal MJ from Peter, and then get his ass kicked again. But, when
Peter is fighting baddies 1 and 3 to save MJ near the end, Harry jumps in to
help him because friendship or some bullshit. Willem Dafoe’s Norman Osborn was
spinning in his fictional grave.
Third round villains are the sleeper agents. These villains
were hinted at earlier in the film (either subtly or it was just obvious from
the get go) and then they appear within the last 15 minutes of the film and
actually do something only to be killed without much effort anyway. Batman
brings us Talia Al Ghul, the daughter of Ra’s Al Ghul (more on that later). She’s
hinted at by the visit of Ra’s Al Ghul in Bruce’s head but I wouldn’t call it
obvious because unless you are familiar with Batman lore prior to the film, you’d
have no idea who the fuck that was with no reason to expect it. Meanwhile the
plot of Spiderman 3 pretty much screams “Venom is showing up later in the movie”
when an alien goo takes over Spiderman to alter his personality into that of a
whiney emo bitch. That said, it takes damn near the entire movie for Peter to
get rid of the alien goo before it can attach itself to Eddie Brock (more on
that later) and finally get to the damn Venom saga (which needed more time to
develop).
Moving on, both films have another aspect in common. They
both ruin the earlier films in some way shape or form simply by having existed.
In the case of Spidey3, it claims
that Flynt Marko (Sandman before his pants became filled with sand) was the man
who shot and killed Uncle Ben. Before we were informed that it was some nobody
that Spidey had accidentally killed in the first movie in cold-blooded revenge.
But now some new guy is randomly introduced and the police are only just now
telling Peter and Aunt May that this guy is the actual killer? That doesn’t
even make sense. How do they have proof of that and even if they do, why didn’t
this come to light years ago when Uncle Ben was killed? Meanwhile, Batman’s is
less offensive and more disappointing. In the first film, we’re introduced to
Ra’s Al Ghul, who’s supposed to be immortal due to the “Lazarus Pits.” Take a
dip and there and you gain youth and immortality (temporarily) but lose a dose
of sanity in the process (or gain if you’re Joker). But the closest we get to
the Lazarus Pit is a metaphorical hole that Bruce must climb out of in order to
regain the life he lost when Bane broke his back. I was really hoping there’d
be the eternal life water somewhere in there.
Also, both films have the fatal flaw of not having the hero
in costume enough. Both films decide it’d be more fun to have the hero out of
costume for well over half the movie. The problem being we don’t go to watch
porn only to see the characters have awkward dialogue. And you don’t watch a
super hero movie just to see the alter ego piss around for an hour and a half
before putting on their ridiculously colored spandex outfits and beat up thugs and
colorful villains. Spiderman spent most of his time as Peter and as dancing Emo
Peter. Batman spent most of his time as crippled Bruce Wayne… not even joking.
Earlier in the film he has a bum leg and needs a special brace made to help him
actually be Batman and then he gets his back broken and needs to climb a wall
to suddenly get better… somehow.
And the last similarity between them is how they end. In the
case of Batman, Bat’s retired and “Robin” inherited the mansion and the
Batcave, allowing him to essentially take on the role of being the next Batman
should he choose to be. Thus, leaving it open for a sequel that will never come
because Bale and Nolan wanted to move on and only one of them succeeded. Thus,
Affleck will take on the role for the next film for no better reason than
because Warner Bros. simply can’t live without a Batman somewhere in their belfry.
Back over in New York, Spiderman beats Venom, but it’s assumed Venom isn’t actually
dead and that he escaped (like in the comics, a lot). Peter and MJ make up, but
still are awkward around each other, Harry dies, and Sandman goes to help his
daughter. It’s an awkward ending, but enough is left open for a sequel… which
will never come because the reception to the movie was so bad that Sony
panicked. And instead of loosening their control on production of Spiderman
movies, they took even more control in the production of Spiderman films,
booted the talented Sam Raimi out and then made a god awful reboot that shouldn’t
have existed at all.
And there you have it. Two super hero films that were the
final episode in their trilogy that flopped due to a lack of understanding of
the source material and too many villains that didn’t get fully developed. Both
of which ended their trilogies only to then be rebooted with new versions that
will likely be inferior because less actual effort, talent and heart is being
put into their respective creative processes. However, we can only officially
say that about Amazing Spiderman.
Whether or not the new Batman will follow suit remains to be seen, but you can
see why I’m not even the slightest bit optimistic. See ya next time. :D
Figuring myself out and working towards that better tomorrow with the person that matters most.
Monday, November 11, 2013
Just Say "sNOw" to winter (Part 1)
For all my loyal readers and those who might just be joining
us, I have a big confession I have to make. I know once I make it, my girlfriend
might look at me differently. My family might just want to get rid of me
completely. My friends will all abandon me just like they all did when I was in
elementary school (but for different reasons, obviously). I’ll lose my job.
They’ll take my degree away from me because I’ll be declared legally insane and
they’ll lock me in a box under the sea on the moon and I’ll never be able to do
anything about it. But, alas, I must come clean…
… I hate snow… winter… the whole damn lot of that mess.
There’s a lot about winter I don’t genuinely like one bit. The only saving
grace winter has is that at least when it’s too cold outside, I can just put on
another pair of socks or another shirt and help warm up that much more whereas
summer… well… once I’m down to my underwear, I only have one thing left to
remove when it’s too hot outside and that would be illegal in most parts of the
country.
So… yes… the first snowfall just happened at the time of
writing and I’m really not looking forward to winter this year at all (then
again, I never really am). But rather than dwell on all the things I don’t like
about winter (because I could go on) let’s focus on the most important bit that’s
affecting us all here and now. Let’s give the top ten reasons why I can’t stand
snow and why it should just never happen (or I should finally just move to
Texas and be done with it). To make it more fun, I’ll use examples from video
games.
#10 – Inability to see
I’ve never had good eye sight. My glasses can pretty much prove that. So when outside forces do what they can to affect my vision, I’m not going to like them any better. White outs are the worst when trying to drive and you see nothing but a big blank whiteness until you run into the back of a semi. I remember strolling through Silent Hill and while I could see a bit around me, the snow and the fog made it impossible to see too far ahead, usually only maybe twenty feet at BEST, and that was in the day. At night, I couldn’t see anything. And when you’re in a town of eerie monsters and psychotics, you want to be able to see everything coming at you. And that’s snow good.
I’ve never had good eye sight. My glasses can pretty much prove that. So when outside forces do what they can to affect my vision, I’m not going to like them any better. White outs are the worst when trying to drive and you see nothing but a big blank whiteness until you run into the back of a semi. I remember strolling through Silent Hill and while I could see a bit around me, the snow and the fog made it impossible to see too far ahead, usually only maybe twenty feet at BEST, and that was in the day. At night, I couldn’t see anything. And when you’re in a town of eerie monsters and psychotics, you want to be able to see everything coming at you. And that’s snow good.
#09 – Slickery When Wet
Another issue with snow is that it’s really slick. When it melts it becomes ice and makes things EVEN MORE SLICK. This can cause many accidents and issues that make driving even more of a hassle. I can’t recall the number of times I’ve run into people, other cars, obstacles, turtle shells, bombs, and even a dinosaur because of slick roads. So many times I’ve raced through the courses on Mario Kart and it’s always when the track is covered in snow and ice that things become an issue. I’ll take Rainbow Road over that bullshit any day of the week… At least you’re in space.
Another issue with snow is that it’s really slick. When it melts it becomes ice and makes things EVEN MORE SLICK. This can cause many accidents and issues that make driving even more of a hassle. I can’t recall the number of times I’ve run into people, other cars, obstacles, turtle shells, bombs, and even a dinosaur because of slick roads. So many times I’ve raced through the courses on Mario Kart and it’s always when the track is covered in snow and ice that things become an issue. I’ll take Rainbow Road over that bullshit any day of the week… At least you’re in space.
#08 – Too Cold to Move
Here’s something else about snow you might not have known. It’s cold. When you get cold, you don’t quite move as well because you might be shaking a bit or maybe you’re frozen solid. Hell, you may have the frostbite and your leg is just a big black piece of shit that can’t do anything for you now, so you might as well cut it off. Countless times I’ve walked around Dokapon Kingdom and I can handle deserts, forests, jungles, caves, and the lot of it. But snow slows me down every time. I step in it and I can’t move for a bit. While I’m stuck in the snow, my competition is off saving more villages, getting more money, and being badasses. But here I am… stuck in some fucking snow.
Here’s something else about snow you might not have known. It’s cold. When you get cold, you don’t quite move as well because you might be shaking a bit or maybe you’re frozen solid. Hell, you may have the frostbite and your leg is just a big black piece of shit that can’t do anything for you now, so you might as well cut it off. Countless times I’ve walked around Dokapon Kingdom and I can handle deserts, forests, jungles, caves, and the lot of it. But snow slows me down every time. I step in it and I can’t move for a bit. While I’m stuck in the snow, my competition is off saving more villages, getting more money, and being badasses. But here I am… stuck in some fucking snow.
#07 – Fuckin’ Up Me Crops
I live in Iowa. That dictates that I have to be a farmer according to everyone living in New York or LA. So, yes, I do farm. Depending on where we go, I have a wheat farm, pumpkin farm, carrot farm, potato farm, AND a sugar cane farm all in one convenient location. And I generally set my farm up whenever I enter a new Minecraft world almost right where I spawn. I don’t like wandering too far unless I have a bed available because, otherwise, I’ll just be back here again anyway if I die. But if I’m trying to set up a farm in a tundra biome (or near it) there’s a chance it’ll snow and then my tilled land is ruined because of snow falling on it. Meaning I have to till it again. Or, worse yet, my water freezes, letting the dirt around it dry up and ruin the crops more. How am I supposed to survive without food people? Just how am I supposed to do it?
I live in Iowa. That dictates that I have to be a farmer according to everyone living in New York or LA. So, yes, I do farm. Depending on where we go, I have a wheat farm, pumpkin farm, carrot farm, potato farm, AND a sugar cane farm all in one convenient location. And I generally set my farm up whenever I enter a new Minecraft world almost right where I spawn. I don’t like wandering too far unless I have a bed available because, otherwise, I’ll just be back here again anyway if I die. But if I’m trying to set up a farm in a tundra biome (or near it) there’s a chance it’ll snow and then my tilled land is ruined because of snow falling on it. Meaning I have to till it again. Or, worse yet, my water freezes, letting the dirt around it dry up and ruin the crops more. How am I supposed to survive without food people? Just how am I supposed to do it?
#06 – Avalanches
While I don’t deal with this problem on a regular basis, the thought of being somewhere where this COULD happen is probably one of my top five nightmares right before vampiric-ghost-Nazis and right after a sharkidile. Remember that episode of The Simpsons where Burns and Homer are trapped in a cabin buried under mountains of snow? Or that other time when the school was under a mountain of snow… which was actually just them being snowed in, but same principle (Skinner) applies here. And I don’t have the skills at snowboarding that Sonic has in his many Adventures. I can’t just ride the avalanche like I did in Ice Cap Zone. I just can’t.
While I don’t deal with this problem on a regular basis, the thought of being somewhere where this COULD happen is probably one of my top five nightmares right before vampiric-ghost-Nazis and right after a sharkidile. Remember that episode of The Simpsons where Burns and Homer are trapped in a cabin buried under mountains of snow? Or that other time when the school was under a mountain of snow… which was actually just them being snowed in, but same principle (Skinner) applies here. And I don’t have the skills at snowboarding that Sonic has in his many Adventures. I can’t just ride the avalanche like I did in Ice Cap Zone. I just can’t.
#05 – Abominable Snow Men (Or Women)
Most monsters aren’t real. Lochness isn’t real. Werewolves and Frankenstein aren’t real. And I’m pretty sure that John Ricotello isn’t real either. But Abominable Snowmen (and women) DO exist. I have proof. They are large white creatures with tree-like limbs for… well… limbs. I managed to catch a bunch in my Pokéballs while I was traipsing the mountains of the Sinnoh region. These things are terrifying as they have an ability to call out a snowstorm just by simply being there. While I fear for my life from these horrible creatures, I have found a way to weaponize them and use them to my advantage. Finally, I will be the one freezing all of you!
Most monsters aren’t real. Lochness isn’t real. Werewolves and Frankenstein aren’t real. And I’m pretty sure that John Ricotello isn’t real either. But Abominable Snowmen (and women) DO exist. I have proof. They are large white creatures with tree-like limbs for… well… limbs. I managed to catch a bunch in my Pokéballs while I was traipsing the mountains of the Sinnoh region. These things are terrifying as they have an ability to call out a snowstorm just by simply being there. While I fear for my life from these horrible creatures, I have found a way to weaponize them and use them to my advantage. Finally, I will be the one freezing all of you!
#04 – Jotunheim
Jotunheim is a fucking pit. It’s nothing but snow and ice. The only people that live there are violent jerks who look malnourished and psychotic. There are some giant snow monsters there, but I won’t even get into that. Thor was right to want to kill them all off in Thor 1 and Loki later wanted to blow up the whole planet as well! But, wait, that’s not a game! Shut up, there was a movie tie-in game so it counts.
Jotunheim is a fucking pit. It’s nothing but snow and ice. The only people that live there are violent jerks who look malnourished and psychotic. There are some giant snow monsters there, but I won’t even get into that. Thor was right to want to kill them all off in Thor 1 and Loki later wanted to blow up the whole planet as well! But, wait, that’s not a game! Shut up, there was a movie tie-in game so it counts.
#03 – Mr. Freeze
When winter is here, that generally means snow. When snow is here, that generally means cold. And when it’s cold, that generally means that Mr. Freeze will come out and try to make the world his own winter hellscape. There’s no way to stop him unless you’re Batman either. So when it snows we have no choice but to endure the snow, the winter-themed death lasers, and the awful shitty puns from this fucking whack-job that makes Dinklemen look tame by comparison until the caped crusader comes to save us from such a horrible fate. Fuck you, Arnold Schwarzenegger.
When winter is here, that generally means snow. When snow is here, that generally means cold. And when it’s cold, that generally means that Mr. Freeze will come out and try to make the world his own winter hellscape. There’s no way to stop him unless you’re Batman either. So when it snows we have no choice but to endure the snow, the winter-themed death lasers, and the awful shitty puns from this fucking whack-job that makes Dinklemen look tame by comparison until the caped crusader comes to save us from such a horrible fate. Fuck you, Arnold Schwarzenegger.
#02 – Generally Being
Stuck Indoors
I’m not going to lie, I’m not an outdoorsy person. But I like being able to go outside and take a walk whenever and wherever I like. And I like doing so without taking forever to get on multiple layers and boots because it’s too much effort and boots of all kinds are just uncomfortable. So I generally choose to stay indoors rather than put on giant clodhoppers and stop around like I’m wearing fucking iron boots in the water dungeon in (insert any Zelda game here). And it sucks being stuck inside because then I generally get stuck sitting at a computer and pressing buttons all day. I press whatever buttons the computer tells me to press because of QTEs and I just generally accept such a Parable.
I’m not going to lie, I’m not an outdoorsy person. But I like being able to go outside and take a walk whenever and wherever I like. And I like doing so without taking forever to get on multiple layers and boots because it’s too much effort and boots of all kinds are just uncomfortable. So I generally choose to stay indoors rather than put on giant clodhoppers and stop around like I’m wearing fucking iron boots in the water dungeon in (insert any Zelda game here). And it sucks being stuck inside because then I generally get stuck sitting at a computer and pressing buttons all day. I press whatever buttons the computer tells me to press because of QTEs and I just generally accept such a Parable.
#01 – Other Drivers
This complaint is my general complaint of life. If other people weren’t on the road, the world would be a happier place because then I could go from place to place without wanting to run people over or off the road for their stupidity and slowness. Winter comes, snow falls and everyone suddenly gets shittier at driving and slower at everything. I get slowing down for the slick roads (as I mentioned before) but there’s also times when you’re slowing down entirely too much. I mean, seriously. How the fuck am I supposed to get from one side of Steelport to the other to make sure I can deliver the whores and the drugs to the Saints in time before I have to deal with Trevor or Dog-Eyes? I can’t when it’s snowing out. I can barely do that when there isn’t snow, but this just makes it impossible.
This complaint is my general complaint of life. If other people weren’t on the road, the world would be a happier place because then I could go from place to place without wanting to run people over or off the road for their stupidity and slowness. Winter comes, snow falls and everyone suddenly gets shittier at driving and slower at everything. I get slowing down for the slick roads (as I mentioned before) but there’s also times when you’re slowing down entirely too much. I mean, seriously. How the fuck am I supposed to get from one side of Steelport to the other to make sure I can deliver the whores and the drugs to the Saints in time before I have to deal with Trevor or Dog-Eyes? I can’t when it’s snowing out. I can barely do that when there isn’t snow, but this just makes it impossible.
And there you go.
My ten most legit reasons why snow is bad and why winter is not great and why
we’d be better off going to Australia or Jamaica for a few months instead of
dealing with all of this snow bullshit. That’s all for today. I’m off to go
find Frosty the Snowman and make sure he doesn’t live to see next winter. See
ya again real soon, alright. :D
Figuring myself out and working towards that better tomorrow with the person that matters most.
Ponce Upon a Lime
I love good stories, fun characters, and worlds filled with
imagination. What I hate is when things lack any real logic and sensibility,
making the story almost unbelievable or just outright silly. Let’s take some
television shows for example.
In the most recent episode of Once Upon a Time, my bullshit meter went off the chart. Let’s start
with the love-triangle between Neil, Emma, and Hook. Neil and Hook are both
adults. And while I understand their desire to be with someone you love (or
perhaps their acting on more baser instincts and just want to “tap dat ass”),
they go about it like they’re in high school. Part of the plot requires them to
light a candle. Rather than just do it, they get into a dick measuring contest
via “who can light the candle best” and then they lose the lighter because they
start having a tussle. Um, guys, the girl whose affections you are vying for is
missing her son because he’s kidnapped. By solving that problem first your
quest for love (or booty) will surely end better than by fighting over
something trivial like a fucking candle.
Yes, I get the plot was to make it so that Emma would use
the magic she learned and create a new subplot and new level of tension. But
this was just a pathetic excuse at best and I’m not really enjoying the
weakening of Neil or Hook’s respective characters. Hook was finally starting to
get interesting this season and I felt like I was only just getting to know Neil.
But this is just throwing so much of that build up out the door because these
three can’t just agree to have a threesome and leave it at that. And as I speak
it, I guarantee there is fan art or some nonsense out there of that.
Now I’m probably not the only fan annoyed at this shitty
love triangle. Because we all know Hook doesn’t stand a chance. The fanbase
wouldn’t accept that result in the long run and the writers have to stick to
the clichés the original stories started in the first place. I’m not saying
Neil is going to be the final result, but I can’t see it ever being Hook at
all. This is the same bullshit that happened in FRIENDS when Joey accidentally proposed to Rachel when she just had
a baby. A new love triangle formed there and it wasn’t necessary because we all
knew Joey wouldn’t be with Rachel. We all knew it would be Ross the whole time.
This is all for ratings. Artificial tension merely to get attention from people
who are… already watching the show… hm… I don’t quite get that.
All that said, a romance storyline in an American television
show is probably the lowest common denominator for good storytelling. That’s
like going to a vending machine filled with candy and hoping to find something
healthy. But I wouldn’t be complaining at all if I didn’t have other issues
with this episode to bring up for examples.
Let’s focus on the co-star of the series thus far, Henry,
Emma’s son. From the beginning he’s been characterized as a smart kid who can
figure out when people are lying pretty easily and also figure out what kind of
situation he’s in well before anyone with even twice as much life experience
could figure out there’s even a situation to figure out. He’s clever,
resourceful, a tad naïve at times, but that’s because he’s optimistic and
hopeful. However, the latest season has begun to paint him differently. Now he’s
filled with doubt or being exposed to elements that cause doubt, but that is a
reasonable change. He’s separated from everyone that loves him has pretty much
no way to contact them or see them because of Peter Pan. So if he wants to
doubt that rescue is coming or doubt that he’ll get out of this situation in
one piece, I wouldn’t condone him for it. It shows that he isn’t perfect and it
gives him a more human feel.
HOWEVER…
In the most recent episode, after having communicated with
Emma and Regina for something around a minute, he is filled with hope once
again and has started to distrust Peter Pan who had almost convinced Henry that
he wasn’t all that bad. GREAT! So Pan decided he had to trick Henry into trust
him again and he does so with what is, in my opinion, one of the most obvious
tricks/traps in the history of the series and perhaps even all of television
(though that last one is an exaggeration).
Pan tells one of his associates to go do a task and
specifically says to make sure that Henry doesn’t find out about it. That
raises several red flags right there. First, Henry is right near them behind a
tree and hiding to spy on them. And we’re already told that Pan can see and
hear everything in Neverland. Even Henry is well aware of this fact, given that
he’s read the books and seen what Pan can do first hand. And Pan isn’t even
being quite about these orders. He’s not whispering. He’s just talking like a
normal person, if not a little louder. Anyone with a functioning brain can tell
that Pan WANTS Henry to follow this lackey to find whatever “secret” Pan has
because it’s all a trick to get Henry to believe what Pan tells him.
Furthermore, Henry has already been told by his mother and…
um… adopted mother, that they are coming to get him. They are on the way and
everything is about to go down. If I was told rescue was on the way, I’d hang
tight and just wait for them because me moving around, getting lost, and just
being where they aren’t expecting to find me is only going to make a rescue
operation harder. I’m surprised Henry hasn’t thought of that yet.
More red flags spring up when he actually arrives to find a
little girl (Wendy) in a bed in a cave and she’s sick. First off, the room
looks really nice and the bed looks really nice. Everything looks really clean
and neat and organized. Why? It all looks set up. It all looks like it was just
placed there from out of the store and into the… cave. Tinkerbell’s place looks
like shit compared to this, and I thought her treehouse looked alright when we
first saw it. The Lost Boys and Pan don’t really even have a home or real beds.
So why does Henry not question this set up in the slightest? Also, why is there
a girl on the island who has no connection to magic? Tinkerbell at least used
to be a fairy. So her being there has some logic there. But this is a regular
human girl. And we’ve already established that Pan and the Lost Boys are a boys
only club.
Then she gives us a bullshit story about how she’s sick and that
Pan is trying to save her. While that might be true that she’s ill (it could
all be an act), I wouldn’t buy, for a second that Pan is willing to save anyone
other than himself. He’s all about power and control. He’s all about keeping
things where he can manipulate them and know how to manipulate them best. So
why would Henry believe that Pan is willing to save this little girl who shouldn’t
be on this island at all in a room that looks suspiciously nice and clean
compared to everything else on this island?
But he does believe the story and he plays right into Pan’s
hands. Pan feeds Henry more lies though, because it doesn’t stop there. The
story the girl (and then Pan confirmed) is that the magic on the island (which
can save her but probably won’t) is dying and fading away. But (as mentioned
earlier in the season) Henry is the savior of magic (which is likely another lie)
and is the only one who can save the island, the magic, and the little girl.
Pan then leads Henry to a smaller island just off the cost of the big island
they’re already on, saying that what Henry needs to do lies in that island. And
the island is shaped like a fucking skull.
Really? You’re going to tell me that Henry, a boy who was
not only raised on Fairy Tales but, for the longest time, held all of them to
be true stories and was proven to be right all along is going to believe this
bullshit? You expect ME to believe that Henry isn’t smart enough to figure out
when he’s been tricked or when he’s being played like a fiddle? Grant you, if
this is all a counter-trick by Henry to simply discover Pan’s full plan and use
it against him, then Bravo. You’ve succeeded in actually making it interesting.
But, let’s admit it. That’s really the only way this can really go. You either
have Henry use this all to his advantage and trick Pan into getting the
information he needs or Henry is now an idiot and is falling for the most obvious
traps in the book.
At least when Mako (from Legend
of Korra) gets tricked, mislead, and framed by Vareck, it’s all actually a
really clever plan that involves a lot of money and people to a scope Mako can’t
deal with alone. Him being tricked is actually believable because while his
character is smart enough to figure out when he’s been had, he’s merely being
outdone by the fact Vareck has so many connections and ways to make people do
what needs to be done to get Mako out of the way. It shows the strengths of
BOTH characters equally and makes for a much more compelling narrative whereas
Henry and his mental struggle with Pan is not as impressive.
Another GOOD example would be the game Portal. I know that every gamer on the internet who wants to make a
good point will use Portal, but for a
game with such a minimalistic approach to telling a story, it outshines so many
others in their attempt to capture the attention of audiences with a compelling
world and characters. In the game, you’re a lab rat, or so you’re told. You’re
given the idea that you’re in a legitimate facility and that everything is
fine. Eventually things seem unstable and things aren’t quite what they appear
to be, but you progress anyway because you need answers as to what’s going on
and expect to get out alive. Then the rug is pulled out from under you when you
are thrown into a giant oven and awaiting your death. It was all a lie, not
just the cake.
“But wait!” I hear some of you saying. “Portal’s protagonist
didn’t have a character. She didn’t speak. So her story is nothing like your other
examples, you fucking twit!” Fair enough, but you’re still wrong. You can take
one of two concepts from this argument. Either, one, Chell (Portal’s
protagonist) is supposed to represent you, thus it’s your personality and
intelligence facing against GlaDOS. Therefore the example works because you’re
smart enough (hopefully) to know when you’re being lied to and tricked and thus
this was a believable struggle.
Alternatively, you can accept that (much like Samus, Link,
or Gordon Freeman) that Chell actually does have a personality based on her
actions, clothing, what she surrounds herself with, how other characters perceive
all this, and the scenario in which she’s in. Granted, there isn’t MUCH to go
on, but we have enough to know she is a smart character. Clearly smart enough
to enter in the Aperture “Bring your Kids to Work Day” science fair AND smart enough
to not only understand how to use a Portal Gun right away, but also to solve
every puzzle thrown her way with it like she’s done it all her life. So,
clearly, she must be smart enough to not trust GlaDOS and smart enough to know she’s
being tricked, and thus, is willing to play into her hand only to get
information and find a way out. And, thus, a perfect example of whatever I was
talking about several paragraphs ago.
I’ll still watch Once
Upon a Time but if it keeps up this bullshit all season long (among other
things) I might end that with this season. Walking
Dead is almost walking that line, but that’s for different reasons
entirely. I hope it gets better. I hope this is just an episode that stood out
as being fundamentally bad. But now I’m bored of complaining about it. And
hungry. So I’m going to go eat… and maybe play some PayDay2… which you should
totally join me in because I want to play some of the harder missions but
soloing is just … well… ya know. So see ya next time and maybe I can complain
about another show not being so good. Yeah?
Figuring myself out and working towards that better tomorrow with the person that matters most.
Friday, November 8, 2013
Orth, Anita, and Internet Animosity
There are times I
just don’t get the internet and the way it behaves. At times it is a force for
good and a resource of a vast amount of knowledge. Other times it is a force of
pants-on-head retardation that uses the insane power it has for the cruelest
and most horrid things I can imagine. I have yet to experience true internet
backlash myself, but I look forward to the day when I start getting the death
and rape threats towards me and my family. That will be a sign I finally made
it big on the internet… or I truly did something awful, in which case, I
deserve SOME of that backlash for my insane hubris at the time.
A recent article has been going around where the now
infamous Adam Orth speaks out about the way the internet treated him in light
of what he did. For those who don’t recall, he was the guy who, when asked about
whether the XboxOne (Xbone) would be an always online device responded with the
comments of, “Even if it is, deal with it.” Adam Orth was a guy who worked in
Microsoft and worked close to the XboxOne. He was considered to be a source of
reliable information on the subject. His response to the questions got a tone
of hate.
But that shouldn’t have been unexpected. When a customer
asks about a product you have information on and are responsible for and you
act dismissive, disrespectful, and genuinely unhelpful, you deserve to get what’s
coming to you on that regard. If he didn’t know, he should have said so. If he
did know but wasn’t allowed to discuss it in public forum, he should have said
so. Instead he dodged the question, made a flippant remark, and genuinely acted
like what most of us would call, “a stupid asshole.” When I call up a store or
contact support for information or assistance on a product, the last thing I
want to hear is “whatever your problem is, deal with it.”
His little response became memetic and was the first
stumbling block the Xbone would hit in the many announcements to come. And it
wasn’t even the fact the device was a bad device, it was that the PR
surrounding it, starting with Adam Orth, was conceited. They held back
information, dodged questions, and kept being as vague as possible until the
last minute (E3). All of which led to much wild speculation on the internet,
massive rumors (some were true), and just a media frenzy that exploded into
sheer chaos. Had they just given us information and not been so secretive about
it (regardless of reason) their device might not have received all the
animosity it earned and the people responsible for showing off the device might
have come off in a much better light instead of all looking like pompous
asshats who are trying to imitate Steve Jobs (the king of pompous asshats).
I engaged in a discussion on the comments of one of these
sections stating “That while I disagree with the level of backlash Orth got, I
feel no sympathy for him since he brought it on himself.” Death and rape
threats on the internet are the work of trolls and pinheads who like to use
their animosity-megaphone to hurt people and that shouldn’t be allowed. But a
backlash of a lesser magnitude, at the very least, was very much deserved. I
then go on to compare Adam Orth’s situation to that of Anita Sarkeesian. (Which
got me some arguments about how I’m wrong simply for mentioning her name).
This prompted an amusing question in my mind, why are people
on the internet so violently against her and what she does? I don’t always
agree with everything she says. I don’t think the amount of money she earned or
claimed she needed was necessary to make the product she is putting out. I don’t
think she’s delivering her information in the best way possible, as her videos
are too long and not quite as punchy or eye catching as they need to be for the
short attention span of the internet. But while I still feel she’s entitled to
voice her opinion on the internet about negative female tropes in games (or any
medium) there are many out there who still react like she’s a cancer of the
gaming world.
Common arguments I came across generally boiled down to how
she won’t have a discussion with people on the topic. This gives people the
impression that she believes herself to be completely right and that her
arguments are without fault. First, guys, that’s a very large assumption that
ignores a pretty big and important factor. During her initial launch of the
kickstarter and videos about the Women Vs. Video Game Tropes she allowed
comments and discussion. The reason none of her videos allow for such
discussion anymore should be clear based on all the comments she got there.
When people are attacking you based on your gender and potential faith (many
calling her a “filthy jew”) as well as getting constant rape and death threats,
yeah, I think she’s entitled to turn off comments if that means she can sleep
soundly at night.
Some consider that to still be wrong. Saying she should have
to endure the hate in order for the conversation to happen. Mind if I ask why?
Yes, I’d like to have the discussion about the facts she presents in a
meaningful manner, there are quite a few who would. But why she should give up
her own peace of mind simply to please your ego? Some people can brush off that
kind of online bullying and torment because that’s the person they are. Some
confront it (for good or ill) with their own brand of arguing and bullying
because that’s the kind of person they are. In this case, she chooses to just
walk away from the people acting like four-year old rapists and murderers
because rather than deal with that level of immaturity, she took the smarter
approach and just stayed away from it and blocked it out entirely. I may not
agree with her entirely, but that’s a legitimate way for her to deal with those
people.
But, back to the original topic because I got horribly off
the wall there. In comparing Adam Orth to Anita Sarkeesian in terms of the
internet backlash, we have two very different cases here. In one corner we have
a guy who made a dumb mistake because he tried to be funny or coy or because
his stupid bosses at Microsoft game him the go-ahead. In the end, he got what
he deserved for being a jerk to his curious customers (and then some). I don’t
agree with how bad it got, but that’s the internet’s mob rage storm. As for
Anita, she was initial proposing an intellectual discussion based on gender
roles in games. Had the animosity for her not happened and the bullying never
existed, she would have done her videos and then never been heard from again
because she isn’t that big a deal in the grand scheme of things. Yet the
incident made her bigger and more noticeable. The negative kneejerk reaction to
her proposal worked against the angry mob and while I wish it hadn’t happened
because she didn’t deserve that, I’m glad it worked out better for her in the
end. I wish it could be a lesson to all that you have to pick and choose your
battles. You can’t just act like violent children towards everything that you
disagree with on the internet. But that’s not likely to happen now, is it.
So where to from here? I guess we just sit back until EA
makes another dumb mistake that we can spend hours calling them out for. We
wait until another person proposes a discussion on a serious topic in gaming,
only to be harshly criticized and threatened for suggesting such a “horrible
thing”. It’s this kind of bullshit that makes me wonder if I still want to be
known as a gamer or not. :/
Figuring myself out and working towards that better tomorrow with the person that matters most.
By the Power of Asgard: A Thor Dark Worlds Review
One thing everyone asked after the runaway success of Marvel’s
The Avengers was whether the
individual heroes could sustain themselves in their own separate franchises to
still be worthwhile? Could Tony Stark really be compelling enough to keep
people coming back for more when he just fought a God? Could Thor hold his own
movie without the ability to have witty banter between Tony, Banner, and Cap?
Will Cap be fun without the colorful supermen he was palling around with only a
movie ago? Will Hulk even get a sequel?
Iron Man 3 gave us
an answer that the post-Avengers
films can, in fact, be good and functional on their own. Granted, it came in
with mixed reviews, but that was due to a choice with the writing. The
spectacle, the Robert Downey Jr, and the general premise of seeing more Iron
Man was still something that kept drawing people in. Had the Mandarin plot
twist not been so… well, bizarre and outside the comic book canon, I imagine it
would have been more universally loved. Though, personally, I loved that twist
as it gave the character and the mythos a much needed tweak to keep fans
surprised and make the film have its own voice instead of just repeating the
stories and concepts from the comics verbatim. Say what you will about Iron Man 3, it was probably the perfect
ending to a trilogy we haven’t seen happen in a super hero film yet. No, Dark Knight Rises was the weakest of its
trilogy and one of the least fun comic book movies in recent memory that was still
at least well-made.
This brings us to Thor:
The Dark World. This movie not only follows up Thor but also Avengers (which
shouldn’t be surprising by any means). But I bring that up now because if you
haven’t seen EITHER of those, you’ll want to because they’re both kind of pivotal
to understanding a few elements of this film. T:DW does its best to follow the
same path as Iron Man 3 in making
connections with the established Avengers
universe building that’s taken place so far, reminding us that all these films
are still connected, while trying to stand out on its own as well. It tries the
same attempt to balance playful humor with some well-design action. And, the
real kicker is, Thor: The Dark World
actually pulls it off in a way that exceeded my expectations.
I went in pretty much thinking that it would be a revisit to
how Thor was. I was pretty much
expecting a solid B-film about characters loosely based on Norse-mythos like
the predecessor. But the writing was better. The CGI was better. The fighting
was MUCH better to a point where I could actually see what was happening during
each sequence instead of having the camera being too close and mobile to see
anything at all. The plot had higher stakes, greater villains, lots of
surprises I won’t spoil here at all, and one of the best ending scenes for a
movie I’ve seen all year. The fact that Marvel/Disney can pull this off with
such grace and style while Warner Bros/DC can’t even think of a good script for
Wonder Woman is actually really
depressing.
That’s the general opinion on Thor before I get into the
plot and any possible spoilers. If that’s enough to convince you to go see it,
do it now and come back for the rest later. If you’ve already seen it or don’t
care where I go from here because (like me) you just like hearing analysis,
then I guess enjoy the rest of this crazy ride.
The plot starts with a history lesson on the universe. First
there was darkness ruled by the Dark Elves. When light appeared, namely in the
way of the other eight realms, war broke out for control. Malekith (the Dark
Elf leader) fought to regain control and submerge the universe into darkness
again. Odin’s Father stopped him and sealed his greatest weapon away in hopes
that Malekith and his kind would never have a chance to use it again, which
would only be when the realms align since that’s when his weapon would have the
strongest impact.
Meanwhile, on Asgard, Loki is being put away in jail for
what he did in Avengers and Odin
probably isn’t happy over what he tried to do in Thor either. Then the movie goes to Thor fighting monsters on
Vanaheim in hopes to quell the chaos in the other realms that was apparently
started during all of the commotion Loki caused on Earth.
Speaking of Earth, Jane Foster is relevant again and so is
Darcy. Darcy found a strange anomaly but can’t figure it out. Without Dr.
Selvig (who does show up later) she went to Jane for some help on figuring it
out. Gravity and other basic physics laws are being broken in a small area
without any real explanation. Just when things can’t get weirder, Jane steps
into portal that takes her to that aforementioned weapon. The evil energy of
the weapon (the Aether) then possesses her and she starts having weird visions.
This, in turn awakens the remaining Dark Elves from their
slumber to hunt down the Aether (which is now in Jane) and purge the universe
into darkness once again. Thor gets involved when Heimdal says he can’t see her
(because of that portal she went through). When Thor goes to get her, she has
suddenly returned back to Earth, but something is clearly wrong. Thor takes her
back to Asgard so she can get help from his people who would be able to
understand her condition best.
I won’t go farther than that because the rest gets into
spoiler territory and I feel like just giving the setup is more than enough to
give you a clue as to what’s going on. Eventually the Dark Elves attack Asgard
looking for Jane. Thor eventually has to turn to Loki for help (not a spoiler
since that’s mentioned in the trailers). And there is an epic showdown between
Thor and Malekith that is actually really good.
Acting wise, everyone brought their A-game this time around
with Tom Hiddelston stealing the show as Loki whenever he is on screen.
Bringing in his completely vile attitude with the charm of being a cunning trickster
makes for a fun package. He also has some of the best lines and interactions
with characters that he deserves some kind of prize. I don’t expect him to get
an Oscar for it, but something just to recognize how damn good he was in this
movie. I think I’ll leave that for the internet since it still has a love
obsession with him. To think he was almost the guy who would play Thor. I still
wonder how that would have turned out.
In the previous movie, I thought Darcy was annoying and I
didn’t quite like her. She was funny at times and I didn’t hate her, but I didn’t
quite like her. She definitely redeemed herself here by actually being useful,
funny, and (at times) clever. Selvig has lost his mind and it is hilarious to
see just how batshit Loki made him from Avengers.
I still wanted more of Sif and the Warriors Three, but they did have more to do
in this film than before. It’s just a shame they keep getting pushed aside and
not really doing much.
Malekith was a great villain who didn’t get a lot of screen
time, which was surprising. He got enough, sure, but given how much screentime
Loki has gotten in three films, I’m a little shocked they didn’t try to build
Malekith more. Then again, I doubt they plan on him returning anytime soon or
nearly as frequently as they plan for Loki. But the villains of this film have
some cool designs and it is definitely nice to see a credible threat that even
Loki seems to struggle fighting against. It makes for some good tension that
you wouldn’t expect from gods or god-like heroes (looking at you Superman).
Speaking of comparing to Superman, I also love how this film
was more serious than the previous film but managed to still maintain a level
of fun, charm, and humor that Man of
Steel was sorely lacking and desperately needed. Marvel has demonstrated
twice this year how they have talented writers keeping a fine balance between
goofy fun and intense, serious action. And this film, in my opinion, is
probably the most perfect they’ve gotten that balance yet, more so than Avengers (though I will say Avengers had the additional task of
balancing out roughly six main characters into a two hour film).
For me, Thor: The Dark
World isn’t the best super hero movie of all time, but it is certainly the
best super hero film of this year, only edging out Iron Man 3 with copious amounts of Loki and a really good villain
to keep things tense nearing the climax. If this is a sign of things to come, I’m
confident that Captain America: Winter Soldier will be a solid film in
its own right as well. I’m looking forward to seeing next week’s Agents of SHIELD to see the post-Thor
follow up they apparently have planned to do. And I’m very interesting in
seeing what Guardians of the Galaxy
will do next year too since there’s a post-credits scene that hints towards
that and, presumably, Avengers 3.
Also, there’s a second post-credits scene. Make sure to stick around for both.
That’s all. Again, to summarize: great movie, best super
hero movie of 2013, and more Loki is always a good deal when it comes to the
Marvel films. See ya next time.
Figuring myself out and working towards that better tomorrow with the person that matters most.
Thursday, November 7, 2013
Legit Games: The Haloz
A completely 110% legitimate summary of a
game/movie/book/thing that is totally accurate and not made up in anyway. We’re
legit and keeping it real, so that’s the truth. Let’s get started with one of
my favorite games ever, The Haloz: Combat
Evolved.
Halo is a game
that clearly takes place in Greece or Rome or some shit because the
protagonist, Master Chef, is a Spartan. He gets thrown into the battle much
like he throws hot spices into excellent cuisine when some aliens with
penis-shaped heads (not to be confused with the penis-headed aliens from the
Alien movies) calling themselves the Condiment, attack them for some reason. I
guess there’s a war going on. Apparently there’s a prequel, but I didn’t have time
to look into that because there’s no time when you have to save Greece from the
Condiments. Go Master Chef!
So you escape your ship because we’re actually in space over
Greece, not just in Greece. So more like Greece-Airspace. Also in
Greece-Airspace is a giant ring from that movie Elysium, which was a really good movie and you should watch that
instead of playing whatever it is we’re talking about because Matt Damon.
Anyway, so you are Matt Chef and you land on the giant Elysium ring because the Condiment put it there for a raisin. Matt Chef leads a crew of cooks through
various environments, looking for just the right spices to kick this battle to
the next level, BAM!
You eventually find a ship attacking your friends somewhere.
You and your buddies get into a car and drive around a bit to stop the ship and
find other ships and penis-aliens to save the day or something. But the
Condiment are tricky and will stop at nothing to get… um… wait, did they say
what their goal was yet? No? Okay, well, they’re after Wheatley, from Portal 2 because they loved how Steve
Merchant voiced that character and they wanted him to do that voice for their interstellar
smartphones… I think. Which doesn’t make sense since Wheatley didn’t exist
until 2012, but who cares, video games!
So Matt Chef must go and stop the Condiment from getting the
Wheatley and making their smartphones more entertaining. But, along the way,
Matt Chef pulls a dumb and opens up a room on the Elysium where FLUDD comes out and makes everybody wet because it’s
looking for Mario to go clean up more poo like in Super Mario Sunshine. Yeah, it’s a weird crossover, but it happens.
So Matt Chef must stop the FLUDD from ruining the Elysium as well as stopping the Condiment from getting the Wheatley
to improve their smartphones. Matt Chef had a lot of work to do.
Luckily, Matt Chef found the Wheatley first and he said he
could stop all these shenanigans if Matt Chef listened to him. But the Wheatley
is a liar. Much like he betrayed Gordon Freeman in Portal 2, so too did he betray Matt Chef in The Haloz. Once they fought through waves of the Condiment, the
Wheatley plugged himself into the machine and he became the matrix. But he used
its power for evil and decided he had enough of Matt Chef and wanted Jeff
Goldblum instead. So he tries to mur-diddly-urder Matt Chef, while simultaneously
killing everything and everyone else because Wheatley isn’t kind of dumb and
stupid. Did you see those franken-turrets? Those things were just… ARGH
So then there’s a big scene at the end that The Haloz use in almost every game where
Matt Chef must run down a really long corridor to escape an exploding building.
Just think Sonic the Hedgehog, but less colorful and fun and more futuristic and
with Matt Chef. Then the credits roll and Cortana tells Matt Chef it isn’t over
because the agency will keep hunting him down. But don’t worry because Jeremy
Renner will play the Chef in the fourth game because the studio couldn’t afford
Matt Damon a fourth time. And that is The
Haloz!
Figuring myself out and working towards that better tomorrow with the person that matters most.
Nintendo Does a Silly
As the gaming industry grows, so too do the methods which we
get games. Steam was, if I recall, the first to really bring the digital
distribution concept to life. It was rough at first as Steam wasn’t the
streamlined process it was today. But it was the first and it allowed PC gamers
to get their games easily, sometimes cheaper, with automatic updates and
patching, and was generally a good thing to bring into the world of gaming.
Following suit, other PC digital distributors emerged like GreenManGaming, GOG,
Origin, Amazon, Desura, etc. Each having a different kind of offer or deal to
incentivize you buying through them instead of Steam. Lots of great competition
on a single space to try and get the most for your dollar (unless you buy
through Origin… more on that in a moment).
The console market, always behind the PC, eventually caught
on to the idea and copied it move for move, mostly. Digital distribution became
a bigger aspect to the PS3 and the Xbox360. XboxLive Acrade and Games on Demand
allowed gamers to download smaller indie games as well as triple-A titles
without the need for a physical copy. This was aided with the ability to save
to the cloud, allowing players to access their account on any device and then
play their game on said device, not being locked into a single entity. Again,
like Steam, it wasn’t perfect at first (and arguably still isn’t) but it’s
certainly come a long way from when the features were first introduced.
Now that we’re currently starting the next generation of
gaming with the WiiU and following with the PS4 and Xbone, we have to wonder
where it will go from here. Well, if Nintendo’s recent quote tells us anything,
we’re still in for the same bullshit we’ve been getting with no real changes.
It’s good to see a new generation of gaming means the same garbage as before.
:D
The quote was in response to being questioned why their
digital games aren’t cheaper. Nintendo’s response was, <When people see a
Mario or Zelda game, to expect a certain level of quality. We don’t want to lower
the value of that quality, which is why the games are priced the way they
are>. While that’s all well and good, we (and I) called out EA for saying
pretty much the exact same thing almost a year ago and none of us agreed with
such anti-consumer logic back then either. Valuing your product more than your
costumer is a flawed concept. Because without the customer, you’re product has
no value. Thus, such value should be determined by the consumer itself.
What I’m getting at is that while I don’t mind if Mario or
Zelda are more expensive than what I’d expect the average digital game to be,
charging full retail price for a digital copy of a game on ANY platform doesn’t
make any sense whatsoever and here’s why.
First, there’s no resale value. I can’t sell, share, or
trade a digital game. Ergo, it should be cheaper simply for lack of what I can
do with it after having purchased it. Second, there’s no shipping,
manufacturing, packaging, or even shelving costs for the game. You put it
online on your server and people download it. With that much less work involved
in getting the game to the consumer, the cost should be down from that as well.
Let’s also not forget that the WiiU sales are hurting right now… like, a lot.
By making your games on the WiiU that can be bought digitally CHEAPER, you
could improve sales and balance out the cost of the WiiU people feel the need
to bitch about (despite it being the cheapest NextGen console on the market).
But let me take this backwards logic a step farther.
Nintendo has an XboxLive Arcade set up as well called “Virtual Console” which
is much better than the arcade services of either other console simply because
I can play my old NES, Genesis, and SNES games without the shitty cartridges
from the old days. Games on there are generally between $5 -$10. That’s not a
bad price. Some have complained that it might be too expensive, but I don’t
mind paying such a small amount for games I find more engaging and missed out
on when I was a kid.
HOWEVER if Nintendo truly believes the logic behind not
wanting to devalue the games by cheapening their prices, then these games
should be the most expensive products they own. They weren’t always $10 or
lower, costing $40-$50 back when they were originally released and money was
harder to come by because of lower minimum wage. Many of these games are often
MORE VALUED than Nintendo’s more current games simply for nostalgia, but also
because, in some cases, they were just better or more interesting than what we
have now. Chrono Trigger, Super Mario Bros 3, Link to the Past, Donkey Kong
Country, Final Fantasy VI (or 3), Secret of Mana, Megaman, Sonic the Hedgehog,
and many many others are games people love and continue to hold high over their
current gen counter parts (or don’t have any current gen counter parts). Hell, Earthbound and Chrono Trigger alone
should be damn near $60 by that logic because they are some of the best games
in the stable. The former of which is also rare as fuck outside of Japan.
They don’t charge insane amounts for digital copies of their
virtual console games though. So do these games that many people prefer and
enjoy not have value? Or is this just exposing what I’ve pretty much been
hitting at this whole time, that Nintendo’s quote is just the same bullshit EA
was spewing. In truth, they just won’t lower prices for their newer digital
releases because all they want is to make money, like any other company, sure.
But the fact they can’t just say that point blank is insulting. The fact they
have to lie and make it a secret damages Nintendo’s image to me more than
anything else they could have said. It doesn’t damage my image of EA because
they were already the lowest shit on the totem pole anyway. But Nintendo had
some good will among it. It was doing some good out there.
Don’t get me wrong, I don’t hate Nintendo. I don’t necessarily
hate them either. Like every other company out there with the exception of the
few who really are more geared towards providing a better customer experience,
they only care about their money and their product. We knew this when they were
trying to sue websites for hosting images of upcoming Pokemon before the game
was released back in Generation V. We knew this when they threatened to sue
sites hosting fan-made games of popular Nintendo games without any plans to
profit from those games. We knew this when they kept making updates for the Wii
to remove the homebrew app, which I know many people used for modding Smash Bros
Brawl because that game was kind of shit and needed mod improvement.
That’s all. I really don’t have suggestions or comments
beyond what I’ve said. If Nintendo really wants to make sales for their console
and really show they understand digital distribution, lowering their prices to
a more reasonable amount is the first step. Giving us sales and incentives to
buy those games digitally would be the next step, all of which could be aided
by an account system. But they’re stubborn and I don’t see them changing their
mind anytime soon. If anything, I just brought this up for everyone to think
on, because I know I am. Going to see Thor in about 13 hours. It’s going to be
hype.
Figuring myself out and working towards that better tomorrow with the person that matters most.
Wednesday, November 6, 2013
The Novel Ender's Game: The Film: The Review
If I had a dollar for every time someone has told me to read
Ender’s Game because they think I
would enjoy it, I’d probably have enough to buy a snowcone or maybe a bucket of
popcorn to the new Ender’s Game movie
that just opened last week. Then again, given today’s economy, I probably
wouldn’t be able to even afford a stick of gum that’s already been chewed and
spat onto a plate for me. But I guess that’s what I’d get for having such
strange tastes.
Anyway, Ender’s Game
is a film based off a book by a guy named Orson Scott Card. For those who don’t
know, he’s apparently anti-homosexual to the point of embarrassment where he’s
even shown up in TV ads for traditional marriage groups and the like. For some
critics and even some consumers, this has been reason enough to look at this
movie with more ire or just not want to bother with it in general. For me, on
the other hand, I don’t care. He’s entitled to his opinions, however archaic and
outdated they might be as I am mine. And, from what I gathered from the plot
and characters of the film, that homophobic attitude didn’t leak into that
fictional world. Maybe it was more noticeable in the book, but I didn’t read
it, so who cares. This is a review from someone who has no prior understanding
of the book so I can go in with a clear mind and total objectivity. You know,
like when I forgot to actual read Eragon
before watching the movie or when I was too young to really read Jurassic Park and saw the movie, though
I might have been too young for that too.
So Ender’s Game is
a film based off a book by a guy who is very homophobic and also very vocal
about that same homophobia. The actual premise, on the other hand, is about a
kid named Ender. He goes to school to learn to be a commander and lead an army
to fight bug monsters. These schools teach the kids there how to lead armies
into battle through the use of simulations that they call “games.” Oh, very
clever, Mr. Card. I see what you did there.
During the course of the film, a convenient turn of events
allows Ender to accelerate quickly through the ranks of classes almost as if
they wanted to keep this film at a manageable length. Reminds me of Harry
Potter and how they cut out many of the different classes that Harry takes in
which we get some character building moments or just fun little side stories to
help build the world up to feel bigger and more real. Granted, they do mention
that they’re jumped forward in time during points of the movie, but I feel this
could have been expanded upon more to give us a sense of some of the side
characters. We only get to really know the girl/potential-love-interest but
only because every movie has to build up one female character on their token
character checklist. We also have a black kid, a Hispanic kid who grew up on
the street, and an Islamic boy. Wouldn’t Captain Planet be proud?
That said we don’t really get a feel for any of them beyond
basic side-character tropes. And those are just the kids that Ender is forced
to team up with or battle against in the simulations. There are also the adults
who run this shady operation. I won’t spoil anything, but they get a lot more
screen time than they probably should since all their conversations and actions
indicate there’s something bigger going on we aren’t being told. But since they
put out all the money for Harrison Ford and Ben Kingsley, they might as well
get what they can for it. Though I would have preferred if Ben Kingsley
returned as Iron Man 3’s The Mandarin
for some much needed laughs.
But, as I was saying, all the adults are characterized as
being in on something. It gives the sense that they’re all hiding something
(which they are). And that makes it really hard to understand what their
characters actually are other than a bunch of two-faced puppet masters who are
merely playing Ender like a sociopathic fiddle. Because that’s the
characterization I get from Ender, though that may be due to some rather flat
acting on his part. Not that it was bad if he was trying to be sociopathic, but
it comes off as such for the longest time not only because of the acting, but
also because of how his brother and his personality affects Ender’s
personality.
That’s all part of
some ongoing bullshit about how his older siblings tried to do what Ender does,
but failed for one reason or another. His brother failed because he turned out
to be Jason Voorhees while his sister was just “too compassionate” to use Ender’s
words. It gets brought up multiple times throughout the movie like it’s
incredibly important, but it really isn’t because you only see both those
characters one time that really matters and they don’t do anything all too
terribly important either beyond live up to their already described character
trait.
But, as for the general premise, we’re going to war with
aliens and that’s what this school is designed to teach the students to do.
Lead a battle against these aliens. The problem I kept having was that it was
never explained why we had to fight the aliens. Yes, the aliens attacked us
something like 50 years ago. But did we ever find out why? Did we ever have any
kind of contact with them to figure out what was up? I know they said the
aliens couldn’t talk, but did anyone ever stop to think of an alternate way of
communication? From where I was sitting, we were going to war and attacking a
bunch of bug people for no reason other than because “they started it”. I want
to imagine most governments, military leaders, and scientists would actually
take a more diplomatic approach to this situation. But that’s me being idealistic
and the film/book is actually probably right as to how this would actually go
down. Though I would imagine that we’d probably lose the final encounter with
the aliens because we aren’t that tech-savvy nor are we that intelligent or
skilled to beat aliens who managed to make space travel that much sooner than
we did. Humans kind of suck in general when it comes to that.
I won’t go into it too much more, but the ending actually
did answer some of those questions, though not exactly what I was hoping for.
And there are some bits that felt rather cliché and token to the genre. For
example (spoiler) they explain the reason that the legendary fighter pilot won
was because he took out a single ship, a mothership, and the other aliens fell.
I immediately thought of the Chitari from Avengers
and I didn’t like how that worked there either. Kill the head ship and the army
just dies because that’s how it works. While I know the book existed and did it
before Avengers, I still want to call
bullshit because either they invented the trope or it existed prior to the book
and it just continued to spread that trope like the venereal disease it is to
good story telling.
Beyond that, visuals were good and sound was fine. Nothing
really important to discuss there, though I know someone will knock me if I don’t
mention them at all.
But that’s kind of my general approximation for Ender’s Game. Not a terrible film by any
stretch of the imagination, but not necessarily great either. Very middle of
the road at best. Tune in next time when I talk about Thor: The Dark World, a movie I am actually excited to watch. :D
Figuring myself out and working towards that better tomorrow with the person that matters most.
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