Saturday, 25 May 2013
Jill Valentine by Bengus
Labels:
Bengus,
capcom,
Marvel vs Capcom 2,
resident evil,
video games
Ghosts / Black Ops II: THAT'S GONNA AFFECT THE BOTTOM LINE
Mixed in with Microsoft's Comcast sales pitch was this clip of Call of Duty: Ghosts. This'll be the fourth game in the series that isn't Modern Warfare 2 and we're still stuck rummaging around an on-going apocalypse. Incredibly, Activision once thought a lightly futuristic combat setting was an unsellable proposition. Five games away from Call of Duty: Modern Warfare, video games are at the same saturation point with war on terror games that they were with World War II in 2005.
Multiplayer details are light except for a firm assurance from the Infinity Ward understudies that background lumps will frequently spring to life to ruin your killstreaking. Gee, thanks!
At this stage it's difficult to give a shit about a series now hobbled by basic errors. Modern Warfare 3 and Black Ops II both shipped with an online component featuring trace compulsion and irritation to spare. Call of Duty is now laser focused on inch encounters on cramped maps; latency ruined by an unworkable recording system that frequently breaks anyway.
Black Ops II fans upset by a potential emphasis shift needn't fret - there's still a ton of shit left to be crammed down your throat. Weapon camouflage in the Call of Duty series used to signify a player was capable of getting consistent headshots. In MW1 if you wanted the Red Tiger camo you had to able to make 150 skill shots. Not anymore. If you want ugly textures slathered all over your favourite kill-stick you need only shell out some pocket money.
Don't get too excited though, Treyarch's latest artistic affronts are subject to an in-game poll. If you want the opportunity to be able to pay for any of the above gun gunks you'll have to get voting - only two of them are going to be made available.
I haven't a clue which I'd pick, each of the choices look equally unappealing. I suppose Cyborg makes the in-game gun model look like something out of the neon drenched Far Cry 3: Blood Dragon. Mind you, if you're desperate to be reminded of that game, why not just boot it up?
If all that commerce (not to mention my grumbling) is too depressing, here's TheSandyRavage and pals tormenting a monotone pub moaner for a couple of minutes, then instantly feeling a bit guilty about it.
Labels:
activision,
call of duty,
Call of Duty: Black Ops II,
Call of Duty: Ghosts,
infinity ward,
treyarch,
video games
Friday, 24 May 2013
Transformers by Hidetsugu Yoshioka
EZQUERRA
Labels:
2000 AD,
Carlos Ezquerra,
judge dredd
Sunday, 19 May 2013
SUPER POWERMASTER
Saturday, 18 May 2013
Fast & Furious 6
Six films deep and the filmmakers finally figure out something lively for Michelle Rodriguez to do. Fast & Furious 6 is a continuity critical mass, roping in even more fringe players for a sprawling super-narrative that functions as a prequel and a sequel. If Fast Five was the series' Avengers Assemble, then Fast Six is more like a hyper-aware fight manga in which death has ceased to have any meaning. Resurrected as an amnesiac in the thrall of a grinning SAS dick, Rodriguez's Letty must chose between a robotic rugger bugger and Vin Diesel's pristine vest man. Not content to just put frowny Rodriguez over as a plot lynchpin, the production even hires smiley Gina Carano for some credible girl fighting. Fast Six is pure iteration, smoothing out the stumbling points of past entries to arrive at an expertly juggled example of popcorn bullshit.
Labels:
Films,
Justin Lin,
The Fast and The Furious
Friday, 17 May 2013
Fast Five
By virtue of putting out sequels regardless of whether the original stars can be tempted back or not, The Fast and The Furious franchise arrives at its own de facto Avengers Assemble. Fast Five drafts back every major-ish character apart from Devon Aoki for a Rio set rat pack heist. Charisma holes are plugged by The Rock, playing a perpetually sweating federal agent tasked with taking Vin Diesel's crew out / developing a crush on them. Fast Five represents a series thoroughly mutated from off-season slate filler to full-blown summer tent-pole. The pocket change CG tunnels of the previous film are gone, replaced with a billion dollar central setpiece involving a bank vault being hurled along peopled streets. It's Michael Bay's contempt for human life and property, filtered back through a Saturday tea time morality that sees terminated cops repeatedly identified as corrupt. One or two Dwayne Johnson scenes short of being very good, Fast Five is the best the series has been since the first film.
Labels:
Films,
Justin Lin,
The Fast and The Furious
Fast & Furious
Fast & Furious peaks incredibly early with a hero shot of Vin Diesel glowering in front of oil field machinery. It's a framing that seems to be deliberately evoking the stars ridiculous / incredible name, and his first act calibration as an unhinged Schwarzenegger style robot. 4 Fast begins as an equaliser vehicle for Vin, allowing him to bounce people around and dangle them out of windows. Location and incident both initially stress that other LA set muscle bomber Commando, unfortunately this doesn't last. 4 Fast quickly settles down into a zero intrigue identity thriller with both Diesel and Paul Walker pretending to be not quite who they say they are. A little too self-impressed with having got the main players back in the same film, 4 Fast stumbles and bores.
Labels:
Films,
Justin Lin,
The Fast and The Furious
Thursday, 16 May 2013
The Fast and The Furious: Tokyo Drift
A return to form for the franchise after the dowdy 2 Fast. The Fast and The Furious: Tokyo Drift one ups the white guy acceptance fantasy of the original film by placing the hero in a setting where he can definitively be considered other. Stranded in Tokyo with his disinterested Dad, Lucas Black's Sean even gets to be discriminated against racially - surely a dream of sorts for suburb kids who wish for a more exotic ethnicity? 3 Fast borrows heavily from Japanese media products like Initial D, emphasising a weaving street race style rather than the drag strip histrionics of the first two films. Director Justin Lin shoots his actors straining to keep control of their cars and uses CG to stress the dangerous, people dense landscape of Japan's streets - a massive improvement over the Hot Wheels unreality of the previous Fast.
Labels:
Films,
Justin Lin,
The Fast and The Furious
2 Fast 2 Furious
2 Fast 2 Furious has more in common with the Police Academy movies than its immediate ancestor. It's an artless, glass house sequel that trades in the faintly believable car culture of the first film for a beer bloat spring break vibe. Rob Cohen was able to give The Fast and The Furious a kind of grimey verisimilitude, suggesting a vibrant car crash scene centred around teenage rep. Armed with twice the budget, John Singelton struggles to make this look like it wasn't shot for TV. Paul Walker once again plays the worst cop in the universe, this time recruited to spearhead another chummy undercover initiative. Joining him is Tyrese as a childhood friend with a chip on his shoulder. The duo spend the entire movie bickering like an elderly couple. There's an idea that Tyrese is supposed to represent the audience, chiming in to undercut Walker's bland heroics. In reality the snides play like the bitter recriminations of a snubbed lover.
Labels:
Films,
John Singleton,
The Fast and The Furious
The Fast and The Furious
The Fast and the Furious is a fad culture magazine article come to life - a sort of Saturday Night Fever for petrolheads. Paul Walker plays a dweeby undercover cop scrambling to get an in with Vin Diesel's cool guy gang by making a series of incompetent racing gestures. Although working with a similar framework as Point Break, the identity lines never get quite so blurred. For a start there's never any real sense that Walker's cop gives much of a shit about enforcing the law. Instead he's a skate punk white kid there to brush shoulders with a minority dominated subculture. Enlivened by a series of car clashes that stress personal danger as much as speed, First Fast is ultimately a high school kid's idea of reality - there is no authority greater than the guy you deify.
Labels:
Films,
Rob Cohen,
The Fast and The Furious
Wednesday, 15 May 2013
Friday, 10 May 2013
Iron Man Three
I want to see Iron Man Three again, which is more than can be said for every Marvel universe film apart from Captain America: The First Avenger. Phase 2 of Marvel's attempt to monopolise Summer drafts in Shane Black to work some wisecracking magic. Although Iron Man Three feels truncated and lacks the pure fizz of vintage Black, the co-writer / director puts a stamp on the film that borders on personal. Tony Stark's aimless basement dwelling and endless suit tinkering seem to come from Black's own post-The Long Kiss Goodnight experiences - after Renny Harlin's film tanked, Black stopped writing and experimented with redundancy.
In Iron Man Three, Stark has become a hermit struggling to contextualise his part in Avengers Assemble. His loss of control over that situation has left him feeling small and prone to anxiety attacks. Away from the blockbuster bluster, there's a sub-film here about the sapping quality of the creative process and an artist's relationship with their work. Stark trashes his legacy to start again while Shane Black rummages through career slights and missteps, reworking the ideas that got away from him.
Black reconfigures set-pieces from the various drafts of Lethal Weapon 2 - the falling mansion, a dock set conclusion - and amps them up into an anxious abstraction. Somewhere in the CG rubble of Stark's collapsed stilt house is a frightened man trying not to hyperventilate. Black has always used character to contextualise action, Iron Man Three is no exception. In both these sequences, Stark has an emotional investment that reads like a weakness but ends up ensuring his salvation. Pepper Potts juggles damsel duties with an on-the-fly ability to make the most of loaned power sources. Although the final act hinges on Pepper's abduction, she ends up saving Stark far more completely than he ever manages with her - a step-up from Patsy Kensit sleeping with the fishes. Elsewhere Black takes another pass at kid sidekicks, one of the more lamented elements in the Black redrafted The Last Action Hero, finding mileage in chummy antagonism.
This is the problem with Iron Man Three, it's best enjoyed as a grasping examination of Shane Black's career highs and lows. The film manages to feel both undercooked and padded, while Black's instinct for the unexpected occasionally undermines rather than enhances the broad beats of superhero cinema. The film operates best when it's away from the merchandise iconography, peaking when Black stresses Starks' back-to-basics approach by arming him with hardware store kibble. This is what happens when a man obsessed with Christmas tries to make a Roger Moore era Bond flick within a strict, corporate framework.
Labels:
Films,
iron man,
Iron Man 3,
marvel,
Shane Black
PEOPLE ARE CYBER-DUDES
BirgirPall is a YouTube channel featuring two Icelandic pals messing around with video games and cackling like maniacs. Enjoy!
Labels:
Far Cry 3: Blood Dragon,
Ubisoft,
video games
Superman by Agustin Padilla
Danimal Cannon and Zef - Legacy
Commando
Commando feels like the first time a film built itself around the star persona of Arnold Schwarzenegger. In the Dino De Laurentiis barbarian films Schwarzenegger was filling a pre-existing role. When he played the lead in The Terminator Schwarzenegger altered James Cameron's idea of who his cyborg assassin should be. Commando though seems to be specifically playing around with the few bankable - pitchable - attributes the actor had displayed.
First and foremost, John Matrix is a strongman. Every obstacle he comes across is expertly dismantled by his huge muscled paws. His feats of strength are so outlandish that Schwarzenegger begins to resemble a cartoonish idea of muscle might - he's basically The Incredible Hulk with an agenda. Commando is also happy to replay several beats and ideas from Terminator, most obviously in the regurgitation of a few of that film's more memorable zings, but also in how Matrix stalks his prey. When pursuing his enemies Schwarzenegger tends to slide back into his surveillance camera acting, leading his scans with his eyes, then allowing his head to follow robotically. Commando is an iterated example of the mechanical otherness that defined Arnold Schwarzenegger's early roles - the persona beginning to metamorphose from a hunter killer into a human.
Labels:
arnold schwarzenegger,
Commando,
Films
Bartkira by Adam Norfolk
Labels:
Adam Norfolk,
akira,
Bartkira,
comics,
katsuhiro otomo
Thursday, 9 May 2013
Play Arts Kai Bane
Wednesday, 8 May 2013
Transformers #91 by Geoff Senior
Labels:
comics,
Geoff Senior,
transformers
Milhouse by Chris Doherty
Labels:
Bartkira,
Chris Doherty,
comics,
The Simpsons
Tuesday, 7 May 2013
Ray Harryhausen
Ray Harryhausen didn't create special effect distractions, he crafted a series of feature players, imbuing them with character and presence. His work is unrivalled because his puppets don't just hit marks, they prowl and calculate. They're daunting and invincible, able to spring to life and seize control of the films they're in.
Harryhausen's work is a menagerie of creatures operating with a higher level of intelligence than your usual animated brutes. They move slowly and deliberately, calculating and assessing the situations they find themselves in. Harryhausen's puppets never read like glib obstacles or shallow grandstanding, instead they acted like alien intellects awoken into spaces they were still taking their measure of. Ray Harryhausen made arguably the most outstanding contribution to motion picture special effects, and he will be missed.
Monday, 6 May 2013
Ryan Hemsworth - BasedWorld
FansProject Causality CA-12 Down Force
Saturday, 4 May 2013
Far Cry 3: Blood Dragon
Aside from looking like the wank fantasies of someone who's spent the evening burning Action Force figures whilst reading Alex Ross Terminator comics, the most enjoyable thing about Far Cry 3: Blood Dragon is how few limits are placed on your basic movement. Your character, Rex Power Colt, runs with the kind of clip that gobbles up even the most long-winded objective trek. Hill summits are briskly mounted and there is no fall in the game that will damage you - vanilla Far Cry 3's irritating insistence on catastrophically tumbling over any descent higher than an anthill is, thankfully, absent.
These adjustments electrify Far Cry 3's already enjoyable prowling. Stuck at the top of a dam with your targets milling around tens of metres below? Simply hurl yourself at them like a human cannonball. Kill-chain assassination abilities are available at default, and Rex's basic jump is high enough to trigger Jason Brody's Death from Above ambush attack. Rex Colt starts out overpowered and ends up as a kind of death-ray sky God. Balance be damned, the emphasis here is firmly on fun. Blood Dragon's design philosophy is a kind of postmodernism - the keys-to-the-kingdom action finale to a thirty hour game you'll never have to slog through. A short, e-number answer to a generation of games woozy from feature glut.
Labels:
Far Cry 3,
Far Cry 3: Blood Dragon,
Ubisoft,
video games
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