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Hugh Likes Movies: Gotham By Gaslight

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Batman: Gotham By Gaslight
Produced by DC Entertainment
Directed by Sam Liu

Batman GBGL

The Skinny: The graphic reimagining of the Batman mythos in the 19th century pits the Dark Knight against Jack the Ripper.

Superhero movies by their nature feature alternate versions of comic book characters. They compress plots that run for moths or years into digestible stories that audiences can enjoy in only an hour or two, without having to rely on previous knowledge of the hero’s adventures. “Batman: Gotham by Gaslight,” the latest direct-to-DVD animated feature from DC Comics, takes this truism a step further.
The dark but lushly animated film reimagines Batman’s one-man war against crime as taking place in the 19th Century, with him taking on none other than Jack the Ripper himself. In fact, the movie spends a lot more time on the case than with the origins of the character, which makes for a much darker and more explicit take on Batman’s world.
The overall effect is more gothic than steampunk, although most of the fight sequences take place on a burning airship, a burning ferris wheel, and a slaughterhouse that, inexplicably, hasn’t caught fire. The story is pretty much what one would expect from a Batman vs. Jack the Ripper story, and it hits all the broad points you would expect well enough. There are a few plot twists fans who haven’t read the original graphic novel might not see coming, but the story is mostly concerned with showing how these pulp characters fit into a slightly more antiquated Gotham City.
I will say that I felt the movie leans a bit too heavily on the Ripper-ology. The viewer is invited along with a few very nasty killings, and we get a good dose of Jack’s vitriol in the form of villain monologue. It all feels a bit voyeuristic, and lands on the other side of good taste in parts. This certainly isn’t the next film to go to after your child finishes watching Lego Batman.
Although this superhero isn’t for kids, older teens and adult Bat-fans may find something to like in this risqué and violent alternate take on the character and his world.

Thanks for reading this review! If you enjoyed it, please share it! For reviews, podcasts, stories, and more for just a dollar a month, sign up for my Patreon page!

 

Hugh Likes Video Games: Final Fantasy Tactics

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Final Fantasy Tactics: The War of the Lions
Published by Square-Enix
Played on PS Vita

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The Skinny:The definitive version of the 1997 Classic that put tactical RPG’s on the map.

Final Fantasy Tactics isn’t the first isometric, turn-based tactical RPG, but it is a milestone in the sub-genre, and a breakthrough hit in The West that lead to the success of later games such as the Disgaea franchise. A stylistic follow up to developer Quest’s “Tactics Ogre,” both were directed by Yasumi Matsuno. FFT mixes the structure of Tactics Ogre with the Job System of Final Fantasy to create a highly-satisfying strategic game. And the depth of gameplay is perfectly set off by a complex, engaging fantasy story of power, betrayal, and warring houses.
Players are thrust into the boots of Ramza Beoulve, the youngest son of a minor but distinguished noble family. He gets caught up in a web of intrigue surround a set of mysterious, powerful artifacts during a civil war, forcing him to choose between protecting his family’s honor, and serving justice.
Twenty years later, Final Fantasy Tactics still holds up well. Its mix of highly-detailed 32-bit character sprites with 3D backgrounds works very well, and has a stylish quality. It doesn’t suffer from the same dated polygonal visuals the way contemporary games like Final Fantasy VII have. The original PSX release still has its flaws, though. The translation was spotty, and a few critical bugs in the game, including one that makes saved data unreadable, hamper play.
These were resolved in the 10th Anniversary PSP release, The War of the Lions. This feels like the definitive version, with a delightfully florid “Game of Thrones”-inflected translation, extra classes, new hidden characters, and animated cutscenes. The new cutscenes feel very much of their time, but the game plays and beautifully. The additions are all fun and do little to break the balance of the game. This is the most widely-available version, as the PSP port was carried over to the PS Vita store, and is available now for IOS and Android devices.
Final Fantasy Tactics: The War of the Lions is the bar by which other tactical games are measured. If you haven’t played it, set aside fifty to one hundred hours of your time. It is well worth the investment.

Podcast: The Screaming Skull

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Tonight your hosts, Hugh of HughJODonnell.com, Rich the Time Traveler, Opopanax, and Jurd, find their own skulls screaming.

Click HERE to listen!

And HERE to watch the film on Youtube!

Chrononaut Cinema Reviews is presented by http://skinner.fm and http://hughjodonnell.com, and is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 Unported License.

Hugh Likes Fiction: Star Wars: Canto Bight

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Star Wars: Canto Bight
Written by: Saladin Ahmed, Rae Carson, Mira Grant, and John Jackson Miller
Published by Del Rey

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The Skinny: A collection of four loosely connected novellas set in the Star Wars casino-city of Canto Bight, as briefly seen in The Last Jedi.

In the latest Star Wars film, “The Last Jedi,” we get a very short glimpse of the casino city, Canto Bight, a playground for the rich and powerful play while the rest of the galaxy fights for survival against The First Order. But aside from the message that nobody good profits in wartime, and a delightfully destructive chase sequence, we spend little time there. Del Rey has released a novella collection focused on four stories of gamblers, tourists, servants and criminals that call Canto Bight home, and it is a delight.
The best of the four is “The Wine in Dreams,” by Mira Grant. It follows the self-described greatest sommelier in the galaxy, Derla Pidys, as she attempts to buy a rare bottle from a pair of sisters claiming to be from another dimension, all under the nose of a dangerous night club owner who will do anything to get it.
These four stories are very much in the vein of the new Expanded Universe. You won’t see any familiar faces from the movies in these pages, but they do a magnificent job of transforming a galaxy far, far away into a living, breathing place rather than a backdrop for Our Heroes’ Adventures. They also serve as a light, quick introduction to the writing of four excellent authors. You can find Star Wars: Canto Bight on Amazon, or in person at your local independent bookstore.

Thanks for reading this review. If you enjoyed it, please share it! You can also support me on Patreon for more goodies!

Hugh Likes Comics: X-Men: Grand Design

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X-Men: Grand Design #1 & 2

Written and Drawn by Ed Piskor

Published by Marvel Comics

The Skinny: Ed Piskor X-plains the X-Men.

“X-Men: Grand Design” is a comic with a very ambitious goal: Straighten out the tangled history of Marvel’s X-Men, and do it in such a way that it tells a coherent, interesting story. But if anyone is up to the task, it is indie comics creator and the man behind Hip Hop Family Tree, Ed Piskor.

Piskor’s distinctive style feels somewhat strange applied to Jack Kirby’s designs, but the book goes all in, even being printed on a thicker, more rough paper for that truly indie feel. And this book does indeed cover plenty of space, opening in the dawn of the Golden Age and following Charles Xavier through the foundation of the X-Men and their Silver Age adventures. It does a great job of feeling both cosmically important, and personally intimate. There’s so much crazy backstory, retcons, and downright bizarre editorial decision-making in X-Men history that this book exists at all is an accomplishment. That Piskor pulls it off so effectively is a coup.

The first issue really only gets as far as the founding of the team, but it sets a solid continuity in a few simple strokes, and it makes The Phoenix a central figure going back to origin, which is  a good retcon. Issue two covers the team’s Silver Age adventures up until Giant Size X-Men #1, and does a bit more work retconning the original run into a cohesive whole that is appealing to a modern sensibility.

X-Men: Grand Design is available online from Comixology, and in print at Your Local Comics Shop! If you want a crash course, or just would like to see a different take on characters you’ve loved for years, its well worth a look!

Podcast: CCR42-A Shreik in the Night

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CCR42

Tonight your hosts, Hugh of HughJODonnell.com, Rich the Time Traveler, Opopanax, and Jurd, get the scoop on Ginger Rogers playing a reporter who isn’t really a reporter but I guess is?

Click HERE to listen!

And HERE to watch the film on Youtube!

Chrononaut Cinema Reviews is presented by http://skinner.fm and http://hughjodonnell.com, and is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 Unported License

Podcast: “Ears to the Ground” on The Melting Potcast!

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Hey Freelancers!

Have you heard the latest Freelance Hunters story, as presented by the ever-extraordinary Melting Potcast crew? Well wait no longer, and click HERE!

When the town of Corn Hall is reported missing, the Freelance Hunters grudgingly return to investigate, but nothing can prepare them for what they find there.

As always, thanks to August, Erin, and Theo for another great performance!

Want more Freelance Hunters? Follow me on Patreon for early chapters, short stories, news, and more!

Podcast: CCRC34: Dungeons & Dragons S1E5

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CCRC34

Tonight your hosts, Hugh of HughJODonnell.com, Rich the Time Traveler, Opopanax, and Jurd, wonder just who’s running this game anyhow

Click HERE to listen to the commentary

And HERE to watch along on Youtube!

Chrononaut Cinema Reviews is presented by http://skinner.fm and http://hughjodonnell.com, and is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 Unported License.

Thanks for listening to this podcast! If you enjoyed it, please share it! You can also support Hugh on Patreon!

 

Podcast: Nostalgia Pilots Episode 11

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Welcome to Nostalgia Pilots! This week, Hugh, Jurd, and Jason watch Gundam Wing Episode 11: “The Whereabouts of Happiness!”

Click HERE to listen!

In this episode: Lady Une sashays into the most unlikely of assassination attempts, Zechs demonstrates his keen understanding of plot, and Qatre and Duo chill in a quiet desert town. Plus: Relena gives dubious fashion advice, and everybody in this party is an old creep.

If you’re in the US, you can watch along on Crunchyroll!

Next week, Wu-Fei is great at boats!

Hugh Likes Comics: Top Comics of 2017

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It certainly has been a year of comics. As with a lot of media this year, the conversation in comics has felt dominated by the twin specters of Politics and Scandal. But while the Overton Window gets pulled around by various groups, I’ve come to understand better what I love about the medium. I love comics that take risks. I love comics that reinvent old concepts and characters in exciting and surprising ways. And I love comics that are unafraid of the great melding of genres and tropes that the medium allows. Originally, this was only going to be a Top Five list. But some jerk on the internet opened their mouths about how ‘there weren’t ten good comics this year,’ and now I’m angry. This is what you get for looking at social media. And here are my TEN favorite comics from 2017:

The Backstagers
Written by James Tynion IV
Drawn by Rian Sygh
Published by Boom!

Backstagers

A wonderful comic of age comic about the stage crew at an all-boys high school, and the magical, dangerous world behind the stage. As a nerdy kid in black who ran a spotlight in his time, this really connected with me. It’s Resonant, touching, and adorably cute.

Black Bolt
Written by Saladin Ahmed
Drawn by Christian Ward
Published by Marvel Comics.

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Black Bolt was never a character I felt much about in comics. As the king of the Inhumans, he always felt like a political part of the universe rather than an interesting character. But by striping him down to his lowest point and throwing him in space prison, Ahmed and Ward have lit a spark under him, and put him in one of the most visually striking comics of the year.

Dark Knights: Metal
Written by Scott Snyder
Drawn by Greg Capullo
Published by DC Comics

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This is another comic that dredges up the weird bits of superhero continuity and welds them together into something strange, exciting, and delightful by turns. By truly embracing METAL, as in heavy metal aesthetics, the grim nightmare batman antagonists are given an energy and sense of album-cover awesomeness that these comics tend to eschew in attempt to lend their darkness unnecessary gravitas. Plus, this is a series where Batman tries to time travel with an evil baby, so it’s got that going for it.

Helena Crash
Written by Fabian Rangel Jr
Drawn by Warwick Johnson Cadwell
Published by IDW

Helena Crash

An all-ages heist adventure in a dystopian future where coffee is illegal. This comic is a non-stop action story with all the energy and inventive art stylings of the margins of a middleschool composition notebook. Helena’s adventures are silly, fun, and frantic. The best kind of escapism.

Kim & Kim: Love is a Battlefield

Written by Magdalene Visaggio
Drawn by Eva Cabrera
Published by Black Mask

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I slept on the first volume of Kim and Kim, and boy was I missing out! This comic is a constant delight of genre mishmash. Following the titular Interdimentional bounty hunters as they chase the big score and deal with their bad decisions with a combination of hitting people with guitars, amateur necromancy, and the occasional giant robot before hitting the club to do it all over again. Fun isn’t just for kids anymore.

Made Men
Written by Paul Tobin
Drawn by Arjuna Susini
Published by Oni Press

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Another genre mashup, Made Men takes a gritty noir revenge story and injects a whole bunch of Universal Horror. When a swat team gets taken down in a surprise hit, the last surviving member, Jutte Frankenstein, returns to the family manor in Europe to literally get them back together and get revenge. It’s a really great twist on both concepts.

Mister Miracle
Written by Tom King
Drawn by Mitch Gerards
Published by DC Comics

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This intense, unrelenting, and unflinching look at depression and mental health is heavy but beautiful. It’s also the best take on the fourth world stories since Kirby. It’s not always easy, but it is absolutely brilliant.

Swordquest
Written by Chad Bowers and Chris Sims
Drawn by Ghostwriter X
Published by Dynamite

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The creative team of Down Set Fight reunites for a tie-in comic for an unfinished Atari game. But this canny story finds the magic in things we loved as children, even if we see their flaws as adults. This is a story about unfinished business, facing regret, and learning that it’s never too late for an adventure.

The Unbeatable Squirrel Girl
Written by Ryan North
Drawn by Erica Henderson
Published by Marvel Comics

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This year Squirrel Girl flew to the Savage Land to save an endangered biome with computer science and ended up fight a T-rex version of Ultron. I feel like I should just put ‘nuf said and end here, but Squirrel Girl has been a consistently charming, fun, and witty comic that if you aren’t reading it, I don’t know what to tell you.

The Unstoppable Wasp
Written by Jeremy Whitley
Drawn by Elsa Charretier
Published by Marvel Comics

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Much like Black Bolt, Unstoppable Wasp brings a fresh take on an older Marvel hero that I never much cared for. But giving the suit to bubbly survivor and girl genius Nadia is a masterstroke. It is unfortunate that Marvel didn’t give this book more of a push, because it is a fantastic comic about Science, Friendship, and escaping abuse.

 

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