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“What’s the sitch, Gary?”

Christy Romano, who I’ve known for years as the title voice of Kim Possible, is going to joining the Broadway cast of Avenue Q in the role of Kate Monster…

Christy Romano, who I’ve known for years as the title voice of Kim Possible, is going to joining the Broadway cast of Avenue Q in the role of Kate Monster / Lucy.

Okay, it’s not world-shattering news, but it’s kind of fun news joining two “shows” I very much enjoy.

Potpourri on a way-too-busy Tuesday

PALINESQUE POLITICS! Executive Experience and More on “Executive” Experience – Having “executive experience” is a lot more (and a lot less) than serving in office in an executive branch. Obama’s demonstrated…

PALINESQUE POLITICS!

  1. Executive Experience and More on “Executive” Experience – Having “executive experience” is a lot more (and a lot less) than serving in office in an executive branch. Obama’s demonstrated executive ability in this very campaign, something I’ve yet to see from Palin’s track record (hiring of lobbyists aside).
  2. Disclosures on Palin Raise Questions on Vetting Process… – Speaking of executive decision-making, the way McCain appears to have handled the whole process — the first decision he gets to make as a proto-president — demonstrates a lack of planning, rash decision-making, and shoot-first-questions-later style of leadership that … is not quite what I think we need today.
  3. Borderline – More obvious sources unexamined before the decision was made.
  4. ABC News Confirms That McCain’s VP Pick Was AIP Member – But remember, John McCain is for America, first!
  5. Atheists’ Worst Nightmares: Sarah Palin, Bananas – It’s so amusing to hear conservative women’s groups slam traditional feminist groups over the Palin nomination, when without the feminists of the 60s and 70s and beyond Palin wouldn’t have made it past being a beauty pageant winner.
  6. George Lakoff: The Palin Choice and the Reality of… – Does the Palin decision make a difference? “Yes, the McCain-Palin ticket is weak on the major realities. But it is strong on the symbolic dimension of politics that Republicans are so good at marketing. Just arguing the realities, the issues, the hard truths should be enough in times this bad, but the political mind and its response to symbolism cannot be ignored. The initial Democratic response to Palin — the response based on realities alone — indicates that many Democrats have not learned the lessons of the Reagan and Bush years.”

POLITICS SANS PALIN!

  1. Report: Gonzales Mishandled Classified Data – washingtonpost.com – Speaking of knee-jerk selections of incompetents with insufficient vetting, no surprise here that not only did Gonzales not keep highly classified data under proper security (i.e., something beyond sitting in his unlocked brief case at home), he couldn’t remember the combo to his house safe.
  2. Protests in Minneapolis [The Corpus Callosum] – Because if you call them “terrorists,” you can do whatever you want, right?

NO POLITICS!

  1. Study Links Gene Variant in Men to Marital Discord… – Genes aren’t destiny … but they can certainly give a behavior nudge.
  2. Shelley, Percy Bysshe – A quote for today on tolerance.
  3. Superman/Aquaman Hour of Adventure, The: Warner Issues… – Hawkman, Bird Man … what’s the diff, y’know? I mean, they’re both, like, comic book guys with feathers.
  4. A fresh take on the browser and Google Chrome, Google’s Browser Project: Do we really need another browser out there? I remain in love with Firefox — but I’m damned tempted to see what Google’s up to with Chrome.

Final Bachelor Movie Reviews

With Margie and Katherine coming home tomorrow, here are a few last things I watched before they did. Tin Man (2007) : For all that Sci-Fi channel’s original programming tends…

With Margie and Katherine coming home tomorrow, here are a few last things I watched before they did.

Tin Man (2007) : For all that Sci-Fi channel’s original programming tends to suck, they can do a pretty decent job at times. This clever homage to Wizard of Oz (it’s not quite a retelling, but it reincorporates a whole slew of elements in an updated-yet-steampunkish kind of way) manages to stay entertaining for most of its three 90 minutes (broadcast time) episodes. The production values are low-value, and the plot stammers a bit toward the end, but it kept my attention and my amusement. I might very well watch this with Margie — and possibly Katherine, too.


Justice League: New Frontier (2008) : A variant retelling of the formation of the Justice League of America, based on a 2003-04 comic series by that name. Set in the late 50s and early 60s, we get smatterings of McCarthyesque red-baiting and general paranoia, set against luscious retro settings, as the various heroes — Flash, Jonn Jonnz, Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, and an initially pre-GL Hal Jordan struggle with what it means to be a hero for the people in the face of social ostracism and government suspicion. It works pretty well, even if some of the voice artist choices are a bit off, and for someone with a love of Silver Age DC, there’s chewy bits a-plenty. It’s also rated PG-13 for some fairly violent scenes and a fairly high body count, making it a dubious choice for Katherine.

Movie Review: Kung Fu Panda

So this was looking pretty funny during all the trailers. But did it live up to its potential? Awesomely.     Kung Fu Panda (2008)  Overall Story Production Acting Story: Kung…

So this was looking pretty funny during all the trailers. But did it live up to its potential? Awesomely.


 

 

kung-fu-panda

Kung Fu Panda (2008) 

Overall Story
Production Acting

Story: Kung Fu Panda is the story of Po, an overweight, out-of-shape Panda who is a tremendous fan of the Furious Five, martial arts masters at the Jade Temple up the mountain over the Valley of Peace where he lives, working in his father’s noodle shop. A comics nerd, in short. When he is “accidentally” chosen to be the Dragon Warrior, the kung fu master who will transcend all other fighters, and incidentally protect the Valley from the notorious Tai Lung, can he overcome his many shortcomings — and the opposition of the other masters — in order to succeed?

Well, of course he can. If there’s one flaw in this movie (and there aren’t many), it’s that there are very few surprises. Each of the characters flows in a very predictable story arc, and from the time the initial problem is established, it’s pretty clear how it will end.

That said, and within those limits, KFP’s story is neatly crafted, with some imaginative ways of getting from the predictable points A to B to C to D. It won’t keep you on the edge of your seat in suspense, but you won’t mind sitting back and enjoying the ride.

Acting: I’ll limit myself here to the voice acting, since the physical acting, obviously, is part of the overall production. It’s good, no question about it, but not great. There’s a variety of accents, some stereotypical, some pedestrian. Indeed, the mix is part of the confusion — some folks having overt oriental accents, others anything but. 

For that matter, though many of the voice artists are martial arts / action-associated stars (Bruce Lee Jackie Chan (duh), Lucy Liu, Angelina Jolie), that doesn’t actually add all that much to the mix. In point of fact, not many of the characters have a lot of opportunity for a lot of voice artistry, any many of those who do are more “roles” than “characters.” Indeed, beyond Po and Shifu, and perhaps Oogway, Tai Lung and Mr Ping, most of the voices take a second place to the action.

That said, Jack Black gets a chance to do some fine stuff with Po, and Dustin Hoffman’s Shifu is a pretty nice part, too.

Production: Here’s what makes the movie stand out. The action sequences are exquisite. The martial arts scenes are wonderful — each creature’s moves (of the Furious Five) are both marvelous uses of their individual physiology and based on the actual martial arts styles attributed to those animals. While you can imagine a tiger style and a monkey style, and the Karate Kid gave us a little taste of the crane style, watching the mantis and snake styles are a lot of fun.

Indeed — arguably, based on the chorography, Best Martial Arts Movie Evah. At least, the best computer generated movie fight scenes, and I include my beloved Incredibles in that. Y’know all that wire-fu and fighting-on-tree-top sorts of things they do in Chinese cinema? They do it here, and it looks real.

The CG movement is fantastic, foreground and background, textures are wonderful, and character design is lovely, stylized when it needs to be, realistic when it should be. The general Chinese mythos world, is lavishly decorated, both to generally walk through and as fights roll across it. I’m certain that the city in the Valley of Peace was fully mapped out and set up for the fight choreography — it just feels that way.

As if that were not enough, we get a second style of mythos/animation — an initial credits sequence and an end titles sequence, rendered in a more traditional 2D animation, but still lovely. Indeed, I commend sitting through the end titles for two reasons: (a) the drawings that flow past it (mostly, it seems, views of the characters into the future, now that things have been settled for the moment), and (b) a (back to CG) denouement which, while not Iron Man-squeeful, is touchingly appropriate.

An interesting side note on design. Obviously the Main Characters are all different sorts of critters (the aforementioned Po and the Furious Five, plus a tortoise, a red panda, and a snow leopard). Interestingly, the general populace is much less heterogenous. Broadly speaking, just from a single viewing, they appear to be rabbits (general peasantry), pigs (clerks, merchants, courtiers), and geese (court/temple functionaries, though at least one runs a noodle shop). Oh, and rhinos (soldiers). It’s an odd mix (and makes for an amusing running joke regarding Po and his family), but it works.

Overall: I’m sure I’m leaving stuff out, because something this full and lavish to the eye is going to have eleventy-dozen other things that get caught with reviewing. But in short, Kung Fu Panda is a tremendously fun and attractive movie — and one that is suited for “kids of all ages” (children will love it, but it doesn’t rely upon “juvenile” humor to do. If the story itself is no more unexpected or filled with twists and turns than any other myth or legend, it’s well done for all of that, and will reliably entertain for years to come.

Highly recommended, and pre-ordering the DVD.

Wall Art

I’m not generally much for avant-garde and surrealistic head-scratching art and animation — but the nature of the medium and canvas in this case make MUTO worth watching. MUTO a…

I’m not generally much for avant-garde and surrealistic head-scratching art and animation — but the nature of the medium and canvas in this case make MUTO worth watching.


MUTO a wall-painted animation by BLU from blu on Vimeo.

Avatar – Season 3 DVD announced

I’ve been very intentionally staying away from the current Avatar: The Last Airbender season, waiting for the collected set for Book 3: Fire. Which has now been announced: 16…

I’ve been very intentionally staying away from the current Avatar: The Last Airbender season, waiting for the collected set for Book 3: Fire. Which has now been announced: 16 September. (Not yet on Amazon.)

Katherine and I recently started rewatching the two previously released season sets. Looking forward (with some sadness) to the final one.

 

Potpourri on Arbor Day Eve

Shamos: Why e-voting paper trails are a bad idea | The Iconoclast – politics, law, and technology – CNET News.com – Are e-voting paper trails actually useful, or desirable? I…

  1. Shamos: Why e-voting paper trails are a bad idea | The Iconoclast – politics, law, and technology – CNET News.com – Are e-voting paper trails actually useful, or desirable? I think what the whole e-voting thang has raised is how secure (or insecure) our voting process is, and what risks we need to take (and which we need to work on reducing).
  2. When the Ex Blogs, the Dirtiest Laundry Is Aired – New York Times – I don’t know if it’s a good thing, or a bad thing, that my divorce from Cheryl was in pre-blogging days.
  3. The Superman/Aquaman Hour of Adventure DVD news: Announcement for DC Super Heroes: The Filmation Adventures | TVShowsOnDVD.com – This makes me sooooooo happy! The SAHoA was dearly beloved by me as a child — esp. for all the non-Superman/Aquaman bits, which is what this DVD set will collect. Glee!
  4. BMWSportTouring Forums: Space Shuttle Processing: Rarely seen by the general public – How to assemble a space shuttle for lauch. Cool. (via GeekPress)
  5. The Art of the Title Sequence – This looks like an extraordinarily cool site, looking at TV/movie title sequence. Pretty. (via kottke)

Potpourri on a Monday morning

Time to clear out the various tabs … At what point do fanfic and fan websites cross the line from fair use to infringement. A new Harry Potter case may…

Time to clear out the various tabs …

  1. At what point do fanfic and fan websites cross the line from fair use to infringement. A new Harry Potter case may help pin that down.
  2. What actually kills you in a crucifixion?
  3. Not quite sure what Six Apart’s new ad network is supposed to give me that simply including Google Ads doesn’t do. Not that Google Ads have netted me any big bucks.
  4. Recreating childhood photos.
  5. Dora the Carefully-Tailored-by-Committee Explorer. Bruce mentioned this article the other evening. I thought we were past Dora, but since Kaylee loves it, Katherine’s gotten back into it, too. And, worse, Go, Diego, Go.
  6. Worst baby names. It’s almost impossible to come with a name that some kid, somewhere, isn’t going to poke fun at, but it’s nice to at least make the ffort.
  7. How to terminate a Terminator.

Yet more lovely potpourri

A store for time travelers. Tech travel tips. It’s bacon! It’s salt! It’s Bacon Salt! Things that only happen in movies. Bulbapedia – everything you (or your daughter) want…

  1. A store for time travelers.
  2. Tech travel tips.
  3. It’s bacon! It’s salt! It’s Bacon Salt!
  4. Things that only happen in movies.
  5. Bulbapedia – everything you (or your daughter) want to know about Pokemon.
  6. Super-heroes as fine art? No, super-heroes in fine art.
  7. A flow chart of the results of being exposed to D&D early in life.
  8. Those darned n00b time travelers

TV Time

Randy sent me a note pointing me at SurfTheChannel, which looks like it aggregates online videos (of dubious, ah, copyright clearance) through a single site. I only briefly dipped into…

Randy sent me a note pointing me at SurfTheChannel, which looks like it aggregates online videos (of dubious, ah, copyright clearance) through a single site. I only briefly dipped into it, but it looks like it could be a huuuuuge time sink.

Not all the shows have full sets, but there’s still an impressive array of things to watch (though some of the feeder sites are very slooooooow …).

Support your local dog catcher

Hrmph. So Katherine throws on a Dora the Explorer on TV. And here we have Dora saving a bunch of cute, capering puppies who were obsessively captured by a Javertesque…

Hrmph.

So Katherine throws on a Dora the Explorer on TV. And here we have Dora saving a bunch of cute, capering puppies who were obsessively captured by a Javertesque – yet – buffoonish dog catcher.

Ah … what?

Okay, so this is an old meme that was hoary back when I was a kid. But, as an adult, I realize that:

  1. Dog catchers don’t just randomly hunt for dogs to snatch away and lock in cages. 
  2. Animals captured by animal control officers (as we call them these days) are running loose — which, in most communities I’ve ever lived in — means they are lost, out of control, and/or feral, and are a potential threat.
  3. Dog catchers are called out by people who see a loose animal that’s a problem. They don’t just cruise around, actively hunting animals to lock up.
  4. If dogs are licensed and tagged, then if they are caught by the dog catcher, they will be recovered.
  5. If there are leash laws in your community, that’s not the fault of the dog catchers, but the populace at large.
  6. For the most part (presumably they are as human as anyone else), dog catchers are hardworking people who uphold laws/regulations and actually both protect animals and people.
  7. If more people bought pound animals — and spayed/neutered their pets — the number of animals that get caught by dog catchers (and are then put down when not adopted) would dramatically drop.

I don’t know if I’m being politically correct, or incorrect, here, but I think I may have a chat with Katherine about the episode after she’s done watching it.

UPDATE: Margie actually said something before the very end of the show, and I echoed it, and Katherine indicated her understanding of what we were saying.

Kijm Paasibeel?

Dubbed in Dutch, natch….

Dubbed in Dutch, natch.

Quick potpourri on a Friday morning

How a cockroach got 30 people fired. It’s good to be the king … Lesson from the Heathrow baggage snafu — don’t upgrade both your redundant systems at the…

  1. How a cockroach got 30 people fired. It’s good to be the king …
  2. Lesson from the Heathrow baggage snafu — don’t upgrade both your redundant systems at the same time.
  3. That River certainly is a creepifying girl.
  4. Using Google Spreadsheets to run a survey. I might have to try this.
  5. Blogger gets fired for having a blog. Corporate myopia, employee naiveté, or both?
  6. The risks and costs of using the Internet as your hard drive. That remains, honestly, why I keep so much of my online stuff on my own domain (where, if it goes away, it’s probably my fault). Though, even there, I still host my mail on Google …
  7. Satellite spotting sounds like a fun hobby — even if (or perhaps because) it causes the government security fits.
  8. Now that security has made air travel even more miserable (and perhaps lethal), let’s start ruining train travel, too.
  9. I didn’t do an obit for Steve Lieber Steve Gerber because, honestly, I was never much of a Howard the Duck fan. Thundarr the Barbarian, on the other hand(via Scott)
  10. Exporting contacts from Outlook to Gmail is a fine idea — except that it doesn’t transfer snail-mail addresses. *sigh* 
  11. One of the coolest things about the Internet is that if Katherine is trying to sing along to the lyrics to a favorite TV show, I can probably find the text for her online. Of course, it’s usually transcribed, and so subject to individual interpretations.
  12. Disney’s Night Kingdom? If it saves the Adventurer’s Club from oblivion, I’ll fork over my money.

Movie Review: Ratatoille

Yes, I’m likely the last person out there to have seen this.  Katherine’s seen it in theaters and a dozen times on DVD at home.  It was definitely on my…

Yes, I’m likely the last person out there to have seen this.  Katherine’s seen it in theaters and a dozen times on DVD at home.  It was definitely on my list — but it wasn’t until she threw it in the DVD player last night that I’d actually had a chance to watch the latest bit of joy from Pixar/Disney.


 

 

Ratatoille (2007) 

Overall Story
Production Acting

 

Story:  A fun and positive tale of creativity, learning to dare, and becoming comfortable with yourself and your abilities, there’s certainly a positive message here for everyone.  All the characters deal with issues of integrity and authenticity — who am I, who do others think I am, what do I want to be, how do I trust myself and others to become what I can be?  The good guys answer positively — recognizing, then following their dreams, learning integrity and pride.  The bad guy answers negatively — trying to be be something he’s not, and trying to make others something they are not.  It’s a similar motif to Brad Bird’s Incredibles, but writ here in a very different setting and in a more complex fashion.

That complexity may be the biggest problem.  The movie evidently had length problems, and though Bird says he was “brutal” in hacking it back, the resulting plot still feels rushed, the cast crowded (too many secondary characters we’d like to know more of), and the inevitable twists and turns of the story seem neverending.  Both Remy and Linguini have full-blown plots and character arcs, even with some overlap overlap, and it’s just a teeny bit too much to fit into 1:51. 

Acting:  The voice artists all do a solid job, aided and abetted by the Pixar animation, to the point where it’s difficult to distinguish the contributions of the two.  There’s an odd mixture of accents for a movie set in France with mostly French characters — American (multiple varieties), British, and French.  It’s not noticeable after a short while, though.  While there are a number of “name” actors, there are plenty of fresh and low-profile talents, too, and nobody stands out as a “movie star doing animation.”

Production:  Probably one of the most amazing efforts yet by Pixar.  One expects good, realistic (as appopriate) animation from them, but the detail, lighting and shadows, and textures in this film are positively exquisite. Even if it were an awful story, it would be worth seeing.

The music adds to the movie, but subtlely, part of the overall fabric rather than standing out on its own.

Overall:  Who could imagine that a tale of gourmet cooking could be so fun and popular?  Well, yeah, I guess they have a Food Network now, and everything, but to make a “kids” movie out of it is (to sound like a food critic) both fresh and daring.  Ratatouille is another creative triumph for Disney/Pixar (and Brad Bird), and will, I suspect, stay popular for many years come — at our household, at least.

 

 

BIIIIIIIIRDGIRL!

So while Margie was sleeping off her all-nighter, I gave Kitten an early Christmas gift — the Bird Man and the Galaxy Trio DVD collection.  Woot!  Yes, the classic 1967 Hanna-Barbera…

So while Margie was sleeping off her all-nighter, I gave Kitten an early Christmas gift — the Bird Man and the Galaxy Trio DVD collection.  Woot!  Yes, the classic 1967 Hanna-Barbera cartoon series, collected on two DVDs.

Yes, it’s inutterably goofy, but in a charming, retro, nostalgic way.  And Katherine just ate it up like candy.  My plans to raise a little geek proceed apace …

The two different serials (which ran on a single show, with a Birdman ep, a GT ep, then a Birdman ep) were part of the Alex Toth-designed era at HB, when (goofiness aside), the adventures were taken fairly seriously.  Birdman is a solar-powered flying hero (duh), vaguely associated with the sun god Ra, but now working for an international police organization against various other super-powered threats.  The plots were simplistically formulaic — villain threatens, Birdman is called to the rescue, they fight, Birdman runs short of solar energy, Birdman regains solar energy to escape near death, Birdman defeats the villain — but still fine, and the art design, and classic HB music / sound fx / voice artists all make it a quality production for the period.

The Egyptian connection shows in the show’s visual design, mostly.  There’s one very brief allusion to it in the show, and in some promotional materials, but it was seriously downplayed in production, for whatever reason.  On the other hand, the show did a nice job of establishing that there was a back story to all this — villains were often someone Birdman had faced in the past, etc.

The Galaxy Trio are a bit more interesting — a trio of super-powered future space cops, sort of a mini-Legion of Super-Heroes crossed with Space Ghost, and with a lot of visual influence from Star Trek (which was on its third season when this premiered).  The plots and their resolution are a bit more varied than Birdman, since the mix of powers and personalities were more varied, too — but there’s nothing here that’s particularly ground-breaking.  Just good fun.

More on info on both sets of heroes here and here.

And, yes, I choose to consider the later incarnation as Harvey Birdman, Attorney at Law, however amusing, to be non-canonical.  🙂

Actually, Birdman wasn’t my favorite HB super-hero from that era — but that’s another gift for Kitten this Christmas …

“He’s a demon on wheels!”

Here he comes … here comes Speed Racer …  (via Les)…

Here he comes … here comes Speed Racer … 

(via Les)

“Foosa aaaahhhh!”

Having watched Madagascar again last night (great movie), I did some quick research on the “foosa,” since it was a critter I was not familiar with by that name. …

Having watched Madagascar again last night (great movie), I did some quick research on the “foosa,” since it was a critter I was not familiar with by that name.  Turns out it really is a critter known by that name (actually spelled “fossa”), the largest mammalian carnivore on the island (the largest carnivore is a croc), related to the mongoose, and is very cat-like in appearance and behavior (less dog-like than in the movie).

The Fossa is a carnivore. It is a ferocious hunter that eats small to medium sized animals, from fish to birds, but is particularly adept at hunting lemurs, and is the predominant predator for many species, with only Madagascar’s large snakes having any other significant predatory impact. Malagasy folklore often exaggerates the ferocity of the Fossa, claiming that it will prey upon cattle, or even humans.

(Emphasis mine.)

And now you know.

Lock and Load

I really wanted this list of the top 50 fictional weapons to be really cool, but instead, it’s really dorky, too pop-culturish, too video-game-oriented, too “here’s where to buy a…

I really wanted this list of the top 50 fictional weapons to be really cool, but instead, it’s really dorky, too pop-culturish, too video-game-oriented, too “here’s where to buy a replica,” and just … goofy.

  1. Any list that includes the really stupid “Golden Gun” (of Bond fame) is just wrong.
  2. Any list that ranks He-Man’s Power Sword over Glamdring, Stormbringer, or the Sword of Omens is hard to justify, too.
  3. And lightsabers get on there twice?

There are a few good elements, and a few nice reminders of items I would have forgotten, but …

On the other hand, this list of 10 Cheesiest Creatures from the original Star Trek is modestly funny … if sometimes cruel (especially if you’re just critiquing late 60s TV SFX).  And actually there are some pretty cool critters there …

(via Neatorama and Neatorama)

Angry Earthen Polka

“GIR! Why is there “Weird” Al polka music set to my Invader Zim montage?!” “I mashed it myself!” (via BD)…

“GIR! Why is there “Weird” Al polka music set to my Invader Zim montage?!”

“I mashed it myself!”

(via BD)

It’s all Doyce’s fault …

… that we (Kitten and I (and Margie, too, I suspect)) have reached the end of the second season DVD of Avatar: The Last Airbender, and … … cannot…

… that we (Kitten and I (and Margie, too, I suspect)) have reached the end of the second season DVD of Avatar: The Last Airbender, and …

… cannot bear the thought that the third season will not be out on DVD until next Fall.

No, really, it’s that good.  Great art, fine music, an rich and intricate plot and backstory, entertaining characters … I can’t recommend it highly enough.  We all loved it.

And, no, we’re not recording Season 3 on the DVR.  That would just feel wrong.

Rent, buy, or borrow it.  Watch it.  You won’t be sorry.*

* Note: Blog writer does not take responsibility for any sorrow you may feel for renting, buying, or borrowing it.  There’s no accounting for taste.