22 September 2021

Lucifer: Volume 09 (2006)

Crux (2006)
Author: Mike Carey | Illustrators: Peter Gross / Ryan Kelly / Marc Hempel / Ronald Wimberly | Page Count: 168

"I walked on into chaos, and the earth beat like a heart beneath my feet."

Volume 09 of 11 in the Lucifer series. The dictionary definition of a 'crux' is 'a vital or decisive stage, point, etc. / a baffling problem or difficulty'. The Lucifer book embodies both of those things, for sure.

The first story kicks off with the politics of Hell once again in disarray. The current Duke of Gly plays a pivotal role in what direction it'll take. I didn't think Marc Hempel's art on the work was a good match for Mike Carey's words. The illustrator's cartoon styling lessens the severity of the situation. I liked his version of Gaudium, though, but I'd probably like Gaudium even if he was drawn by a five-year-old wearing a blindfold.

After that single issue the regular team of Gross and Kelly take over for the titular tale. Carey's ability to drop little things into the plot, things that through causality will escalate into giant things if left unchecked, makes the book more than exciting. While it's true that characters should be left to grow at their own pace, sometimes they need a little push.

17 September 2021

Godzilla: Shōwa Era Films (1954-74)

01. Godzilla (1954) 
Dir. Ishirō Honda

NOTE: for simplicity's sake I've used English language titles for each of my Godzilla reviews, but it's always the original Japanese language versions of the films that I refer to.

The monstrous growl that's heard over the film's opening credits foreshadows what's to come, which can be summed up as the Japanese people facing a monstrous terror that the rest of the world has never seen. It begins at sea and then moves inland.

The creature responsible for the inhuman roar — the monarch of kaijū eiga — is a force to be reckoned with, for sure, and is more than just an excuse to have a guy in a rubber suit trash tiny models. You don't need to be a history scholar to pick out the many wartime parallels: nuclear weapons testing in the Pacific, irradiated wells, air raid sirens, and footfalls that sound like distant bombs impacting and exploding are all highlighted.

10 September 2021

The Ring Virus (1999)

The Ring Virus (1999)
Dir. Kim Dong-bin

TRV is (to date) one of four 'film' versions of Japanese author Koji Suzuki's Ring (1991) novel. It's South Korea's attempt at capturing the horrors, although Wikipedia mentions that's it's a 'joint project' with Japan - but what that means specifically, I don't know.*

I'll go quickly over the story again in case some folks aren't familiar with it. A journalist (Shin Eun-kyung) investigates, for reasons both personal and professional, the mystery of a cursed video tape that supposedly heralds the death one week later of anyone who watches it. The hunt for the truth puts her onto paths that lead to supernatural happenings and alleged psychic phenomenon.

Like in Hideo Nakata's version of the story, the protagonist is changed to female, but otherwise TRV more closely follows the plot of the novel. The 'virus' part of the title is alluded to directly, and there's references to cloning, identity, and gender early on.

Perhaps unwisely, it also also recreates (i.e. steals, sometimes almost verbatim) some of the other film's more recognisable original scenes, which blurs the line between it being a new adaptation of the novel or a semi-deferential remake, ultimately lessening its distinctiveness.

3 September 2021

Stargate SG-1: Season 09 (2005-06)

Stargate SG-1: Season 09 (2005-06)
Dirs. Various | 20 episodes, approx 44 minutes each.

Year nine begins with another new opening credits sequence, but that's the least of the changes. Three new cast members are added to the home team, and there's an entirely new non-Goa'uld threat that's intent on forcing the whole universe to follow a new system of beliefs.

That's arguably the goal of many organised religions, but the threat in question has the means to destroy entire planets if the inhabitants refuse to convert. Mercifully, none of Earth's actual world religions are able to do that.

The new cast members include Gen. Hank Landry (Beau Bridges) and Lt. Col. Cameron Mitchell (Ben Browder). Landry is bland, but he has the lesser role. Mitchell, on the other hand, is to the fore as he tries to reassemble the original SG-1 team after the events of Season 08.