25 August 2023

Superman: The Animated Series (1996-2000)

Superman: TAS (1996-2000)
Dirs. Various | 54 episodes (split over 3 seasons), approx 22 mins each [1]

Conceived and produced by many of the same creative team that made Batman: TAS (1992–95) so good, Superman's animated series looked familiar but also different.

Metropolis is much brighter than Gotham, with a different kind of art deco influence, one more inspired by Streamline Moderne. 

Giving each city its own visual identity is a positive change, but the less textured aesthetic of Metropolis looks unintentionally cheap and sparse by comparison.

Likewise, and the first indication that what you're watching might be a step down in quality, the opening credits, which are a montage of episode scenes in roughly chronological order, feel tawdry and lazy compared to the dramatic excellence of Batman's. Superman's are spoilery, too, for anyone who's not seen the series before. And subjectively speaking, Shirley Walker's accompanying theme music is also less memorable.

14 August 2023

Dark Water (2005)

Dark Water (2005)
Dir. Walter Salles

Struggling mother Dahlia (Jennifer Connelly) moves into a dingy apartment in Roosevelt Island with her young daughter Cecilia (Ariel Gade). The building has seen better days, but the recurring dark splodge in one corner of the child's bedroom ceiling may point to something more malevolent than leaky pipes.

Dir. Walter Salles didn't make a lazy US by-the-numbers horror film, which was a pleasant surprise, and nor did he simply replicate Hideo Nakata's superior 2002 film version wholesale, but there's no passion in any of it, perhaps least of all in Connolly.

The Manhattan setting is a clever nod to the 'island' backdrop that's relevant to many Japanese works, and attempting to tether a meaningfully sombre tone to the original story's psychological one was interesting, but ultimately it's just boring. It's also devoid of scares, which I don't think was intentional.

7 August 2023

Re\Visioned: Tomb Raider Animated Series (2007)

Re\Visioned: Tomb Raider Animated Series (2007)
10 episodes, approx 6 minutes each.

An anthology of short animated tales featuring the virtual bra-busting Brit, Lara Croft, from a number of different writers and animators. See the end of post for a full list of names. [1]

Each creator puts their own unique spin on the Lara character, which range from the wonderfully inventive (Keys to the Kingdom) to the piss-poor self-parody (Revenge of the Aztec Mummy).

None of them bother to waste time giving her any back-story or history. They assume that most viewers will already have knowledge of that from the games. The short format really doesn't allow for that kind of exposition, anyhow.

Brief (and biased) thoughts on each episode are below the cut, if you care to know more.

1 August 2023

The Wicker Man: Novel (1978)

The Wicker Man (1978)
Authors: Robin Hardy and Anthony Shaffer | Page Count: 285

The phrase 'never judge a book by its movie' is generally applied one way, to defend a good book from the damage done to its reputation by a bad movie, but sometimes the opposite perspective is needed. Judging by how good The Wicker Man (1973) film is, I imagined the book to be at least equal in terms of impact, given that it's written by the film's director, Robin Hardy, and uses much of the dialogue from Anthony Shaffer's excellent screenplay verbatim. I've only myself to blame for that assumption not panning out as hoped.

The protagonist is Police Sergeant Neil Howie. On the surface he's an honest, steadfast Episcopalian Christian respectful of the laws of man and God.

Beneath that he's forceful and secretly judgemental of others. It's possible to view him as a haughty zealot who's quick to strike down those who challenge his beliefs, but that's only half the story. Deeper still, hidden from the world, he's inexperienced and fearful of his own desires.