schmevil: (gwen and mj dance)
I'm looking for some shoujo manga and anime that's not nauseatingly twee. Flist? Oh, and I have two video recs, and a short rec for you today.

k-os - 4, 3, 2, 1: for good humored, stop motion popping. Read more... )

Ladytron - Tomorrow: is all soft focus impressionism, and crazy-flying-jellyfish surrealist fantasy. Read more... )

Phil and Olly (future shorts) - The Black Hole: "A sleep-deprived office worker accidentally discovers a black hole - and then greed gets the better of him..." Read more... )
schmevil: (black flash)
I went for sushi with my friend J. We were just going to get our food, eat, and then go our separate ways to study. Yeah, no. We watched the latest episode of BSG during dinner. A good time was had by all, except you know, the characters in the show, who haven't had a good time in a long while. Then I told him about my new baby, Death Note, and we watched a couple of eps. This lead to a couple of eps of Monster, some Flight of the Conchords, and my favourite rap about George Washington.

Regarding BSG: Read more... )

Regarding Death Note and Monster: can anyone rec me some shows in a similar vein (to either)?



One last thing, I suspect Death Note would make awesome drunk viewing... amirite?
schmevil: (lafayette (jello))
Oh my god, you guys. Al Green and Justin Timberlake at the Grammys, via Hip Hop Crunch. AL GREEN, people. See also MIA, Lil Wayne, Kanye, Jay Z and TI before it gets taken down. I didn't actually watch the show, so I don't have any Grammy reactions for you.

Instead I was watching the first couple of eps of Death Note, and skimming some readings for class this morning. Verdict on Death Note? Eh, so far it's goofy fun.

Gotta run.
schmevil: (black flash)
A couple months back I started reading Birds of Prey posts on [livejournal.com profile] scans_daily. It seemed like a fairly cool book, and I decided to read from the start. So I read all the way from the first mini to issue 114 - a few months behind the current issue. Chuck Dixon and Gail Simone are the two writers who really shaped this book. Dixon developed the idea of the Birds, and established their mythos. Simone made them a family.

I appreciate a lot about both of their runs, but in terms of exciting storytelling, I think that in many ways, Dixon's is superior. Dixon had a very clear idea of who the Birds were and gave them a mission that distinguished them from all the myriad other DC super-teams. He maintained a tight focus on short, mission-focused arcs that combined James Bond-like espionage, Indiana Jones-like adventure, and the particular wackiness of the DC universe.

Under Simone, the Birds started to lose focus. Instead of only being a proactive super-taskforce, Oracle decided to 'police' the meta community, by tracking down those who 'went too far'. She expanded her pool of operatives, and with the inclusion of powerhouses like Big Barda, the Birds started to look an awful lot like other super-teams. Then came Misfit, and all pretense of the Birds being a relatively low-power, low-profile team of super-spy-adventurers flew out the window. Arcs dragged on. And on. And it became increasingly difficult to pinpoint what made the Birds unique, aside from their vaginas.

There is a lot about Simone's run that I love. Love the friendships between the Birds. Love her dedication to continuing the theme of salvaging characters that were left by the wayside, and developing them into something new and interesting. Love Black Canary's development, and the entire arc of her training to be a better fighter. Love. What I don't love is the way the book took a left turn into Girly Justice League-ville, near the end of her run.

Probably the standout period for me, is just after Lady Blackhawk joins the team, when Oracle is trying to redeem Savant and Creote, and Black Canary is an unstoppable freightrain of pwn. It's also a period marked by cracktastic, kung fu teamups, like this one:



OMG! Soon after this undeniably awesome teamup, the book started to lose the sense of danger that made it interesting. The Birds increasingly started to play in the big leagues, leaving behind their dirty ops background. The McKeever Birds, who fight giant robots in Metropolis (albeit unsuccessfully) are a far cry from the ones who served up righteous helpings of pain to the wicked, (wo)mano a (wo)mano. Though I only recently spreed through the book, when others have been invested for years, I still find myself missing those Birds.

Simone, in opening up the book to the larger DC universe, and establishing Oracle's ability to call in the big guns at will, started the trend that's lead us to teen meta brawls, giant robots and a complete absence of any reason for the Birds to exist. What Simone did wasn't all bad. Under her, the Birds rolled along fairly comfortably, balanced between outright superheroics and being a crime fighting strike team. But under McKeever, everything she built fell apart, because he lacks her ability to strike that balance, and the mostly gentle sense of humour that helped it all hang together.

Simone's Birds were comfortable, easy to read and easy to identify with.

I'm starting to think, by the way, that this is the defining feature of her writing: comfort. Simone isn't a really challenging writer. She's not going to blow your mind, but put her on an ailing book and she'll steer it back on track, and deliver issue after issue of solid writing.

My ideal Birds would be something like Gail Simone redoing the Chuck Dixon plots, for added humanity. Or possibly just a whole lot of Black Canary punching people, and Huntress and Catman flirting...

***

Late as usual, I've discovered Monster. Holy awesome opening credits. Gotta love the wank in the comments:

"Okay newschool faggots, Deathnote does NOT compare to Monster. Deathnote became retard from creation. The creator of Deathnote cannot even read or speak english, that's why the title isn't death notebook. Whereas Monster has actual German in it etc."

Deathnote became retard from creation. You heard it here first.

But in all sincerity? Monster=OMG BEST ANIME EVER!!1!
schmevil: (Default)
1. Have you heard? Bendis' Luke Cage (New Avengers) has been nominated for Best Male Character in the 2008 Glyph Awards, which honours "the best in black comics and creators". Bendis' Cage is one of those polarizing figures. There are so many people who are utterly in love with him, and then there are people who utterly loathe (with the power of a million suns, even) Bendis' reinvention of the character. I'm torn. I like new!Cage, but old!Cage has his own spectular, tiara-wearing charm. In any case, it'll be interesting to see what people will have to say, should Bendis/Yu win this one.

(BTW, I still want to see this project - where's my money honey Gendy!Cage?)

2. I am utterly addicted to Saiunkoku Monogatari, which I am not watching online. *looks shifty* I so rarely find anime that I like, so this particular addiction is a pleasure. It's based on a serialized, illustrated novel, and is a combination of historical fantasy (set in a kind of ancient China analog), romance, and comedy. I don't know why, but this thing is crack. The main character is Kou Shurei, a young girl from a noble but poor family, who wants to become the first female government official in the kingdom of Saiunkoku. It's got: an intelligent and determined female lead, genderplay, politicking, secret plots, wacky plots and the requisite bishies.

July 2012

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