Tag: sci-fi (page 34 of 35)

Movie Review: Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen

Coolest.  Old guy.  Ever.

Cast: Shia LaBeouf, Megan Fox, Josh Duhamel, Tyrese Gibson, John Turturro, Ramon Rodriguez, Isabel Lucas, Peter Cullen, Hugo Weaving and Frank Welker.

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The Jovian Gambit

Jupiter & Callisto

Continuing where The Jovian Flight ended.

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Guardians of the Galaxy

Rocket Raccoon & Cosmo, Courtesy newsarama

I ended up being pretty pressed for time at work today, so instead of tackling two of my current favorite titles from Marvel, I’ll focus on just the one. Guardians of the Galaxy starts up in the wake of the Annihilation event, which introduced older characters from outside of Earth in the Marvel universe (the regular one, not any of the odd parallel ones) and made them awesome. I’m not exaggerating – the very first mini-series took Drax the Destroyer and changed him from an energy-shooting Hulk-wannabe resembling a lime green brick to a shirtless badass armed with a couple of knives and more attitude than Wolverine on a bad hair day. He doesn’t even wear a shirt when exposed to deep space. That’s pretty badass.

He’s a member of the Guardians of the Galaxy, a team of super-powered beings from all over the Milky Way brought together by a guy who has no powers whatsoever, Peter Quill (aka Star-Lord) in order to keep an eye on the goings-on in the greater universe and to keep things from going too pear-shaped. They’re kind of like interplanetary troubleshooters. Their roster is a fascinating mix of individuals, ranging from the most deadly woman in the universe (and one of the hottest) to a gun-toting wise-cracking anthropomorphic raccoon who tends to ride in the branches of a living tree whose got strength that rivals the aforementioned Drax. I’m not even making this up. Rocket Raccoon is awesome and if you disagree with that sentiment I’m going to have to ask you to step outside.

What makes the Guardians on the whole appealing to me is the way the stories, action and dialog remind me of the very best space operas of the past. Picking up the latest issue has a feeling that brings to mind the anticipation of a new episode of Star Trek: the Next Generation or reading The Cat Who Walks Through Walls for the first time. Since the Guardians are mostly adults, there’s none of the “Dawson’s Creek” feel that could occasionally creep into the Legion of Super-Heroes and the title delights in deep space swashbuckling and high adventure without descending into the camp of the 1980s Buck Rogers series, though there’s more than a little humor to be found. I mean, come on, a raccoon riding a walking tree! And did I mention the telepathic dog who used to be a Russian cosmonaut?

If you’re a fan of science fiction at all, or you like fast-paced action mixed with humor and diverse character interaction, I heartily recommend this title. And if you find yourself in desperate need of reading material dealing with sweeping cosmic events and visuals that will blow your mind – Drax’s final confrontation with Thanos for example – go to Amazon and pick up the Annihilation trade paperbacks. I hear Annihilation: Conquest is just as good but I don’t have the scratch to spare to pick those up.

If nothing else, you’ll come to understand how “I AM GROOT” can express quite a wide range of emotions.

Movie Review: Terminator Salvation

Cast: Christian Bale, Sam Worthington, Moon Bloodgood, Anton Yelchin, Bryce Dallas Howard, Common, Michael Ironside and Helena Bonham Carter.

Courtesy the Halcyon Company

The best thing I can say is that it’s not bad.


Stuff I Didn’t Like:

  • The whole movie looked and felt like a first-person shooter. Big CG-driven action sequences, a color palette that has huge swatches of “dirt” and “grit,” and characters growling out their alpha-maleness that is probably meant to show them as heroic but makes them come off as swaggering pricks. There’s one exception (see below).
  • The male leads might have been more rounded if their lines had been better written. Again, the script writers apparently came from EA instead of the work rooms of Sarah Connor Chronicles. The talents of the cast were let down by these substandard writers.
  • Likewise the substandard director. McG tries to get pathos out of Christian and Sam and what we get is a lot of baseless bravado. And some… interesting subtext. You can’t tell me that John Conner staring down the chained up Marcus Wright isn’t a bit of a Foe Yay moment. I giggled a bit at it, but this is under “didn’t like” because it wasn’t what McG intended. At least, I don’t think. He missed the target like a champ on more than one occasion.
  • 2018 Los Angeles, just over a decade after nuclear war, and the resistance fighters are fine in rag-tag jackets and no respirators in sight? Clearly, when they were pulling their ideas out of FPS games, they didn’t spare a glance to Fallout 3.
  • Sam, buddy? Pick an accent. Thanks.

Stuff I Liked:

  • I’m sorry, but even when he’s working with this stuff, it’s hard for me to dislike Christian Bale. Ditto Bryce Dallas Howard, Michael Ironside and Helena Bonham Carter.
  • I also love seeing A-10s in action, even when they’re CG’d.
  • The aforementioned scene with Christian and Sam. “Oh, just kiss him already, John…”

Stuff I Loved:

  • Anton Yelchin. The kid has an amazing agent, as Comhradh pointed out, what with him getting into two major blockbuster movies that are part of franchises that haven’t seen big screen treatment in years. But on top of that, he’s the one actor who doesn’t feel like a guy trying to prove how big his dick is. There’s also the fact that at a few moments during the film’s climax, I could have sworn he looked a lot like a young Michael Biehn.
  • The movie is full of shout-outs to previous incarnations of the franchise. It also would have tied beautifully into the Sarah Connor Chronicles, if it hadn’t just been canceled. Again, it was pointed out that the movie and TV show could have helped one another in terms of sales and story. But, the writers of the show didn’t give a damn about Fox (good for them!) and I doubt they’d have given McG the time of day either.

Movie Review: Star Trek

Courtesy trekmovie.com

Starring Chris Pine, Zachary Quinto, Karl Urban, Zoe Saldana, John Cho, Anton Yelchin, Simon Pegg, Eric Bana, Bruce Greenwood, and Leonard Nimoy.

How do you stay true to established canon in an effort to reboot a franchise, when the established canon is a cold wet mess?


You do this.

Stuff I Didn’t Like

  • What, exactly, is “red matter?” Is it some form of dark matter? Primordial ooze from the heart of a star? Spock just says “red matter” and we see it create singularities, but… how? I’m assuming it has to be rare since miners can weaponize it to make localized black holes anyplace they please. If it’s prevelant in Spock’s future, there’s a lot Starfleet hasn’t told us.
  • We get not one but TWO ice monsters. Were the creature folk from Cloverfield that hard up for work? One would have sufficed to have us saying along with Kirk, “This planet sucks, and Spock is a horrible travel agent!”
  • Maybe this was just due to the cinema where I saw the film, but the score seemed VERY loud. It drowned out some of the dialogue towards the beginning and threatened to overwhelm shots later on. I guess I’ll just have to see it again to be sure.
  • While it was pretty, and consistent with current design mentalities, I’m not sure the iBridge is going to age well. We’ll see.

Stuff I Liked

  • There’s a sensation that a few things plant tongues firmly in cheek. This is done with love, however, rather than being played for the sake of parody. Having seen more than my share of Star Trek, I picked up on these, as well as some of the things characters did, and I appreciated the winks.
  • Space is three dimensions. I liked the fact that starships didn’t necessarily all share the same z-axis orientation.
  • I’ve always liked Romulans as bad guys. They’re dark reflections of the Vulcans, in that they’re thorough where Vulcans are logical, and utterly ruthless where the Vulcans are detatched. Eric Bana in particular seems to measure his emotions, unleashing his rage at key points rather than ranting and raving at every turn. Such controlled megalomania makes him a more compelling villain.
  • I didn’t even recognize Winona Ryder. This was a good thing.

Stuff I Loved

  • I’ve established in previous reviews that actors that inhabit their characters make a movie much more watchable. Tom Cruise in The Last Samurai springs to mind. He’s not Tom Cruise in that movie. Likewise, the actors in Star Trek don’t just honor the iconic characters they portray. They become them. From Chris Pine’s star-making turn as James Tiberius Kirk to Anton Yelchin’s adorable Chekov, they remind us in every frame that this is not a send-up. This is not a parody. This is Star Trek as we’ve never seen it, and possibly, the way Gene Roddenberry envisioned it.
  • The Enterprise feels huge. The engineering sets seem to be pulled right out of Crimson Tide. Even the little bit of the Kelvin we see in the opening sequence makes it clear that Starfleet vessels are military ones.
  • The opening sequence. It could have been played cheesily but is played straight, and drives home the humanity of the characters and immediately takes hold of our attentions.
  • Have I mentioned how fantastic the actors are in this? Again, things could have been done to make this a parody of the original series, but Chris Pine in particular channels Kirk’s swagger, self-confidence and smarts without making us laugh at his speech patterns. Zachary Quinto is going to be wearing those pointed ears for quite a while, and it’s clear why Leonard Nimoy gave Sylar Zachary his blessing, spread fingers and all. Karl Urban is very comfortable as McCoy and clearly happy not having to grunt and swing a sword to earn his lunch. Everybody does a great job.
  • Time travel has been used as a plot device on multiple occasions by Star Trek. The fact that the time travel in this case is not only accidental, but carries shades of actual relativistic physics – two ships go in at the same time, but emerge at different points in the past – actually makes a lot of sense, and branching universe theory promises to carry this ship and crew, and us along with them, into a place where Star Trek has never gone before. And if this film is any indication, that journey will indeed be bold.
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