The New DuckTales Is Better Than We Hoped!

I have watched more than a few episodes of the new DuckTales with my daughter, and all I can say is that they nailed it.  It is more of a comedy than when I was a kid, but I can live with that.  The core of the show is still Scrooge McDuck and his nephews going on outlandish adventures and halving a lot of fun doing it.  It has been good to see Disney return to adventure cartoons, and hand drawn ones at that.

I was happy they updated Mrs. Beakley and Webby quite a bit.  In the original they didn’t get a lot to do except annoy the boys, but now Webby is capable, but just a little socially awkward, and Mrs. Beakley is some sort of spy.  Why she is working for Scrooge we don’t know yet.

The new voice actors take a little getting used to, but once you do they are all great and very expressive.  I was a little worried that when they went out and hired a bunch of recognizable names that a few of the actors would just phone it in, but so far that hasn’t been the case.

If you have Disney XD, DuckTales is well worth your time.  If you don’t, you should put it on your list of things to watch when you can.  DuckTales was a major part of my childhood, and I am glad to see Disney took the time to reboot it with care.  I am hoping the new Big Hero 6 cartoon is just as good.  If so, Disney XD might have become my new favorite channel.

Shmee Tags Along With The Mindhunter!

Generally when a show or movie comes out with little to no fanfare it means the studio or channel doesn’t have a lot of faith in it, or that it isn’t very good.  Which is why it was surprising that Mindhunter, developed by David Fincher and Charlize Theron, just showed up on Netflix this October the 13th with barely a word to the press, because it is gripping television.

The show is about the beginning of the Behavioral Science Unit in the FBI.  Their job is to try and find out why serial killers and sociopaths act the way they do by interviewing the deranged killers that have already been caught, and then use that information to catch other criminals or hopefully prevent more of these kinds of murders from happening in the future.  Of course, they weren’t called serial killers in 1977 because the FBI’s Behavioral Science Unit hadn’t named them that yet.

While Mindhunter is based on a non-fiction book about real events, they did change the names of the Agents involved.  I believe they did this to give them more freedom to play with how this affected the Agents’ personal lives.  The serial killers on the other hand all go by their real names, and the interviews with these ‘gentlemen’ are quite disturbing.  Mindhunter doesn’t get the audience hooked with a lot of gore or terrible imagery, but by hearing what these guys did to their victims from their own lips, and seeing the affect this has on the Agents as they try to get ‘close’ to them, so that killers will open up and share their dark secrets.

The cast is fantastic.  The core of the Behavioral Science Unit played by Jonathan Groff, Holt McCallany, and Anna Torv all bring something different to the group, and seeing how their characters change from the beginning to the end of the show engrossing.  The guys they got to play the serial killers, especially Cameron Britton as Edmund Kemper, are all disturbingly believable.

Then there is David Fincher.  He is a still a master director, and the episodes he directs personally all manage to have you on the seat of your pants even though nothing except talking is really going on.  I am pretty sure the guy that made Facebook interesting could make a movie about water boiling at this point, and I would watch it.

It goes without saying this show is not for kids.  Mostly due to the langue and the pictures these guys look at from time to time, and there is some nudity that feels a bit out of place.  However, if you are of age Mindhunter is great show that somehow turns the police procedural on its head by focusing on the research instead of the crime scenes or chase sequences.  In fact, no one at any point gets chased in this show, well at least the first season.  Here is hoping season two will be just as good.

Soul Forge Is At It Again! This Time We Will Turn On The Mic!

So last time our crew decided to run an online D&D campaign it failed for the first forty-five minutes because we forgot to turn the mic on!  This time we will remember for sure!  Mostly since I will be GM-ing, and I am super detail oriented, so come with us as we try and take something shiny away from a dragon.  Which always goes well.  That’s right there may indeed be Dungeons and Dragons (probably just one dragon…)!  If you would like to see a recap of what happened last time check out the video below, hosted on fellow player Plumpy Thimble’s YouTube page.  Otherwise watch tonight’s game on my Mixer page at 7:30 PM Pacific Time! If that link doesn’t work it is at: https://mixer.com/shmee-

I Am Enjoying Netflix’s New Found Commitment To Anime!

In the early years of Netflix, their anime library was a bit of a wasteland.  There was nothing to see except a couple series that just about every other service had too.  Netflix’s only upside was that they didn’t have commercials.  I complained about this a couple of times on this very blog.  However, it seems like they have learned the error of their ways.

They have announced several new shows and movies that will be distributed by them exclusively in the USA, and that they are going to start working with Anime development companies to create new shows just for Netflix.  Apparently, according to The Verge, a large portion of their $8 Billion programming budget will go towards getting more Anime on their service.

While there still isn’t a ton of Anime on Netflix, it has picked up.  Whenever I am in the mood to watch some Anime I am able to find something interesting.  In fact I just finished the Netflix Original: Kuromukuro, and while it wasn’t earthshattering, it was pretty entertaining.  This is just after watching Little Witch Academia which was excellent, so the quality is improving as well.  Not to mention their American animation arm which is pumping out great things like Voltron (season 4 just hit!).

I am not the only one that is happy, Netflix is adding millions of subscribers, and they attribute a lot of that success to Anime fans.  Yeah us!  So apparently big companies do listen to their customers, and I look forward to all the new Anime I am going to get to watch.

Blade Runner 2049 Is A True Sequel To Blade Runner, For Better Or Worse…

I was skeptical when it was announced that Alcon Entertainment, Warner Brothers and Sony were teaming up to make a new Blade Runner movie.  It seems like movies that are remade or get sequels decades after the original miss the mark more often than not, but Blade Runner 2049 stays true to the source material and delivers a sequel that feels much like the first movie from 1982.  Of course the flip side of that is if you found the first movie to be long, dark, pretentious and have issues with the male gaze, the same will be true of Blade Runner 2049, but if you love the first one like I do (or at least learned to love it later in life), you will probably love Blade Runner 2049.

I am not going to give away a lot of the plot, since for once the trailers don’t give too much away, but it is safe to say that K (Ryan Gosling) is a Blade Runner like Deckard (Harrison Ford) was in the original.  A Blade Runner is a police officer that hunts down and ‘retires’ rogue Replicants (genetically engineered/created slaves).  He also gets tasked with a case that takes him in way over his head.

Also like the original Blade Runner, in the grand scheme of things the plot is a pretty small story in the movie’s world.  Nothing really changes due to the events in this film.  I think 2049 may have a happier/more hopeful ending than Blade Runner, but not by much.  This is a still a future that is terrible, and no one is happy.  Especially not the Replicants who are treated like disposable garbage and are yet still resented for existing.

The performances are all muted in Blade Runner 2049.  It is like everyone is on valium.  This of course is by design.  We are not supposed to know if this is because they are Replicants or because they live in the worst future possible.  My guess is a bit of both.  Though that does add extra power to the scenes where characters do emote.  There is a reason the people in this film are breaking down.

Denis Villeneuve did a good job creating another great futuristic Film Noir Blade Runner movie.  You will either love it or hate, but I doubt you will forget it (though its long shots may put you to sleep).  In the end how you feel about Blade Runner 2049 will probably depend on how you feel about the original Blade Runner, since 2049 very much sticks to the formula that made the first one so good, or bad (though I am going with good).