Saturday, 22 April 2017

Doctor Who: Return of Doctor Mysterio: Blu Ray Review

Doctor Who: Return of Doctor Mysterio: Blu Ray Review


Riffing on superhero lore and also cocking a sly wink at the general silliness of their spectacle, the Christmas episode, Return of Doctor Mysterio saw a return to the screens for Peter Capaldi's Doctor after a year long absence.

When the Doctor inadvertently creates a child superhero, he ends up back in New York stuck with an invasion from a group of brain-sucking baddies. And caught up in the middle of a love triangle involving a caped superhero, a man nanny and a female reporter...
Doctor Who, starring Peter Capaldi

Romp is perhaps the best way to describe Doctor Who: Return of Doctor Mysterio and that's no bad thing with Capaldi given the chance to play a little looser with the character than in the previous season's heaviness.

Freed from the weightiness of the emotional arcs, it can feel a bit lighter than usual (and possibly works within the context of a Christmas broadcast) but there are more hints when Capaldi alludes to his darkness within.

Ultimately, Doctor Who: Return of Doctor Mysterio plays with superhero silliness quite well and while it may feel friskier than usual, it's great to see Who not taking itself as seriously or being so self-involved.

It all bodes well for Capaldi's final year, starting in Easter 2017.

Friday, 21 April 2017

Silicon Valley : Series 3: DVD Review

Silicon Valley : Series 3: DVD Review


The boys of Pied Piper are back for yet another series of awkwardly generated but belly smashing laughs.
Silicon Valley : Series 3: DVD Review

Starting with Thomas Middleditch's Richard being fired as the CEO of his own internet company, this latest attempts to bring fractures between the teams, but never loses sight of the occasional absurdity and heart which keeps the show going.

Dabbling a little with the click farm politics that hits portions of the internet from time to time, there are plenty of moments in this latest that make the third season of Silicon Valley feel both pertinent and contemporary, while never losing some of the timelessness of the comedy.

From TJ Miller's boorish wannabe to Kumail Nanjani's hen-picked but hilarious programmer, there's an ensemble here that crackles with the writing. It helps that the show's paciness and general embracing of the genre and the concept all comes together with considerable aplomb.

The appearance of Stephen Toblowsky as a potential partner also is welcome this year and while he's not in the entire run, he injects plenty to ensure the show doesn't feel staid and willing to rest on its laurels.

Thursday, 20 April 2017

Mass Effect Andromeda: PS4 Review

Mass Effect Andromeda: PS4 Review


Released by BioWare and EA
Platform: PS4

Space is big.
Mass Effect Andromeda: PS4 Review

Really, really big, according to the Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy.

And it's in this big background that BioWare's moved back into the universe to allow the player to take control of either Scott or Sara Ryder.

Set 634 years into a journey with the protagonist waking up with perils threatening the plans to rehouse everyone on a new planet...

It's a very familiar sci-fi trope, and to be frank, Mass Effect Andromeda deploys it well along with your averagely typical bad aliens storyline that's thrown in for effect as well.

Peppered with side quests, Mass Effect Andromeda and its word wheel of choices, Mass Effect does a solid job of trying build relationships with crew-mates and giving an insight into your protagonist's thoughts on all of this.

And while the animation and delivery does occasionally fumble the ball when it comes to putting the emotion into all of this, the depth that it aims for certainly adds a lot to proceedings.
Mass Effect Andromeda: PS4 Review

Much has been made of the odd animation, and the way not everything comes together early on, but the recent patch deployed has gone some way to fixing these niggles, and while there's no denying that Mass Effect Andromeda is a flawed game in parts, there's equally no denying the scope and ambition of the project.

Combat takes up large portions of the game, and in this execution, it's relatively thrilling as it all builds towards its morally greyer areas.

In many ways, it's similar to Star Trek in scope, and it's these touches of ambiguity that add greatly to the game's feel.
Mass Effect Andromeda: PS4 Review

Ignore what you may have heard about Mass Effect: Andromeda. Sure, it may have some issues in terms of performance and tone, but its concept is up there with every sci-fi film you've ever loved; it's probably fair to say Mass Effect: Andromeda is more about the journey than the destination.

Going in Style: Film Review

Going in Style: Film Review


Cast: Michael Caine, Alan Arkin, Morgan Freeman, Kevin Dillon, Ann-Margret
Director: Zach Braff

For an audience of a certain age, the movie-going experience can sometimes be a bewildering one.
Going in Style
Wishing for more gentle fare perhaps is what's led to the release and remake of the little known 1979 caper film Going in Style with an older cinema alumni aimed at giving the older generation something to enjoy, rather than the non-stop barrage of blockbuster action.

Caine, Arkin and Freeman star as Joe, Al and Willie, a clutch of retirees who are rocked by the news their pension fund from the manufacturing company they've worked at all their lives is being seized. Having recently been a bystander in a robbery at his bank, Joe decides that the group should risk it all to pull off a similar heist to ensure their final days are given a degree of comfort after they've been financially screwed over.

Going in Style is less The Italian Job, more a stuttering OAP job.

Granted, with growing enmity toward the corrupt banking sector, and even a swipe at pension thefts and the average Joe getting shafted by those they've worked for for years, Going in Style had the potential to have a bit of a modern sting in its admittedly broad-brush strokes execution.

Former Scrubs actor and Garden State director Zach Braff brings little to the directorial table other than a simple presentation of the narrative, and even peppering the entire film with an upbeat jazzy OST throughout doesn't help it feel like anything other than a pill-induced high.
Going in Style
Admittedly, one "chase" sequence involving an OAP speedster mechanical cart, a security guard and a bag of flour provokes some laughs, a sort of slow-mo race for the older generation, but the laughs are few and far in between.

And while the trio get to play to their erstwhile strengths (Caine's insistence that one should "stay in the bloody car", Arkin's continuing cantankerous old man schtick and Freeman's ever-present geniality), there's a terrifying feeling this bunch of old timers have been handed better fare in their acting years and are simply schilling themselves for scraps.

Though, while there will be some who feel the pangs of recognition as the trio watch trash TV like The Bachelor and discuss its lack of merits, there's little for a younger audience in this movie who would benefit from some of the messages within - unless you wish to see the great actor Michael Caine attempting to smuggle Spam out of a shop.

It's not a terrible film in many ways (though Christopher Lloyd's alarming turn as a dementia patient is terrifying for all the wrong reasons), and it's competently put together, but it just lacks panache and substance, even in its swirling recreation of the actual heist.

Going in Style
Fairly stock standard Saturday afternoon family fare it is, and with its messages of seizing the day, embracing family and friends et al, there's enough to garner a whimsical reflection from its target audience.

But in the final stretches, this bland script from Hidden Figures scribe Theodore Melfi doesn't really garner the protagonists a redemptive arc that feels earned; it's simply a case of playing on the fact you wouldn't want your own grandparents to be screwed over, and unfortunately, that doesn't feel enough to warrant the film's conclusion or the journey within.

A bland and generic mishmash of heist films and buddy antics, Going in Style lacks the substance needed, the poignancy that should have been deserved or the sentiment required to give these old timers the send-off they're clearly aiming for.

Wednesday, 19 April 2017

War On Everyone: Blu Ray Review

War On Everyone: Blu Ray Review


It's hard to work out if the writer / director of the sublime Calvary has his tongue firmly in his cheek in his first American film foray.

At times, War on Everyone, with its scuzzy OTT moments, appears to be parodying the 70s Cop shows that were so prevalent and so over the top with their characters and testosterone-filled leads. And yet, you're never quite sure if this was intentional or a pure drizzle of cinematic coincidence.

As it starts on a great philosophical question of "If you hit a mime with a car you're chasing him in, does he make a sound?", you could be forgiven for thinking this tale of two corrupt and nihilistic cops is going to do more than revel in its black humour.

Skarsgard and Pena play Monroe and Bolano respectively, who are one chastisement away from being kicked off the force because of their unconventional methods. But when they come face to face with tweed wearing Brit bad guy Lord Mangan (played by Theo James), the duo could have bitten more off than they can chew....

It's not as if War On Everyone doesn't have the McDonagh black humour trademarks scored through. With some truly off-kilter one-liners and some continual prodding of the Brits via an Irish character, the hallmarks are there for laughs.

But somehow, the delivery of the whole thing feels flat and at the end of the day, what should be steeped in irony and deliciously dead-pan ends up grating and frankly, at times, irritating as hell. The comic banter between the duo becomes annoying and tiresome as the satire falls flat and the film begins to drag.


For an American foray, McDonagh has his genre bases well covered and there are anarchic touches that are welcome throughout - it's almost as if it was a 70s cop TV show through a profanity laced filter.

As one character remarks, "You ain’t got a good script, you ain’t got shit". It seems an awfully meta touch from this criminal that really does hit the crux of the problem on the head. Whereas Calvary and The Guard were steeped in a dark delicious humour that delivered emotionally and cinematically, War on Everyone spends most of its time trying to beat you into submission like a moustachioed police officer trying to garner a confession from a crim.

It's not a fatal flaw for War on Everyone, but this lack of consideration over how it will sound on the screen does hold the film back from soaring and making you reflect on why films like Lethal Weapon and the buddy dynamic work so well.

Instead, this cop film deserves to be locked up - and McDonagh needs to be given a warning over its disjointed narrative and execution. 

Tuesday, 18 April 2017

Passengers: DVD Review

Passengers: DVD Review


They say in space, no-one can hear you scream.

And that's perhaps a good thing, given that Morten Tyldum's space romance has a major twist in its tail, that was unshown in trailers and leaves a nasty taste in your mouth.


Guardians of the Galaxy star Chris Pratt plays engineer Jim Preston, who's in deep sleep on board the SS Aurora along with 5,000 other passengers. When his suspended animation pod malfunctions, he wakes up in the middle of the journey with no clue why. The real kicker is that the ship won't arrive at its destination, the newer version of Earth aka Homestead II, for another 90 years, effectively condemning him to death.

Stuck alone on the ship with no human interaction - the sole character Preston has to deal with is Michael Sheen's android bartender, Preston starts to go slowly mad as the reality of the situation kicks in - and he faces a moral dilemma - wake another passenger and condemn them to the same fate or spend a lifetime alone...

With production values that really reflect the space age look to a tee, and the loneliness of space is certainly evident early on in the piece as the ship hurtles to its destination and begins to malfunction.


Tyldum uses Pratt's charisma to great effect and showcases it well, with montages of the humdrum nature of his ship bound life setting the scenes excellently. But Pratt's charisma can only go so far - and while his interactions with Sheen are brilliantly dry, smarmy and deadpan, it takes the appearance of Jennifer Lawrence to really fire the dramatic spark that's needed.

Unfortunately, that spark is somewhat dimmed by the glossing over of the moral dilemma and the creepy state of affairs as this space-set ode to Stockholm Syndrome progresses. Tyldum and the script's desire to gloss over the implications of the decision that's made by the idealistic and desperate Preston prove to be slightly fatal in the ultimate wash.

There's something here about class divides as Lawrence's Aurora is clearly a step above Preston's engineer; from the quality of breakfasts she's doled out by the automated vending machines (standing in contrast to Pratt's faceless weetbix style lumps) to the quality of life, the writers could have made more of the divide between the two, rather than playing on the easy chemistry between the pair which isn't enough to weight the story.

Complete with narrative conveniences, such as malfunctions for no real reason and a sci-fi setting that's primarily doused in soapy romance rather than sci-fact, Passengers is only just a trip worth taking because of Pratt and Lawrence. It's their interaction in the coldness of space that just about will convince the romantic dreamers of the audience.


But for a high concept film, it fails to deliver on its premise unfortunately and relies on one moment that will polarise any rational member of the audience. Not exactly a disaster, but nowhere near a success, it remains a frustrating experience.


'Marvel's Guardians of the Galaxy: The Telltale Series' Arrives for Download This Week

'Marvel's Guardians of the Galaxy: The Telltale Series' Arrives for Download This Week


Official Launch Trailer for
Marvel's Guardians of the Galaxy: The Telltale Series
Arrives Ahead of the Action





Series Premiere Available for Digital Download on April 18th; Available at Retailers Starting May 2nd


Friends,

Today we are excited to reveal the official launch trailer for Marvel's Guardians of the Galaxy: The Telltale Series, which is set to premiere the first of five episodes on April 18th for $4.99 USD or equivalent on PlayStation®4 computer entertainment system, Xbox One®, Windows PC, and Mac, as well as available to download on the App Store® and Google Play™. The series will also be available as a special 'Season Pass Disc' on May 2nd at retailers across North America for an MSRP of $29.99 USD, and on May 5th at retailers elsewhere across the globe. The special 'Season Pass Disc' will include Episode One: Tangled Up in Blue, and will grant access to download the subsequent four episodes via online updates as they are released in the coming months of 2017. Additional platforms for release are yet to be announced.


Marvel's Guardians of the Galaxy: The Telltale Series is a brand new story of the universe's unlikeliest Super Heroes: Star-Lord, Gamora, Drax, Rocket, and Groot. In the wake of an epic battle, the Guardians discover an artifact of unspeakable power. Each of them has a reason to desire this relic, as does a ruthless enemy who is the last of her kind, and who will stop at nothing to tear it from their hands.

From Earth to the Milano to Knowhere and beyond, and set to the beat of awesome music, you wear the rocket-powered boots of Star-Lord in an original Guardians adventure, where your decisions and actions drive the story you experience.

The series will feature a star-studded cast of voice talent, including Scott Porter (Friday Night Lights, The Walking Dead: The Telltale Series) as Star-Lord, Emily O'Brien (The Young and the Restless, Middle Earth: Shadow of Mordor) as Gamora, Nolan North (the Uncharted series, Pretty Little Liars) as Rocket, Brandon Paul Eells (Watch Dogs) as Drax, and Adam Harrington (The Wolf Among Us, League of Legends) as Groot. 
For more information on Telltale Games, visit the official websiteFacebook, and follow Telltale Games on Twitter @TelltaleGames.

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