Showing posts with label Lord of the Rings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lord of the Rings. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 25, 2014

Book Review: Goblins


    Readers of this blog will know there are only two fiction authors I obsessively consume whatever new books they release, Christa Faust and Philip Reeve.  They couldn’t be much different.  Goblins is Reeve’s latest (in the States), and this time he’s taken on classic children’s Fantasy.  From early on, I was reminded of Lloyd Alexander’s Prydain series.  But as it’s Reeve, he takes your preconceptions and turns them on their head on more than one occasion.


    The basic idea couldn’t be much more typical of the genre.  Henwyn, a restless young boy who wants to be a hero, goes on a journey to rescue a princess from the ruined lair of an evil old wizard.  But of course, that’s only the surface.  Things aren’t nearly as they seem, from the princess to the goblin Skarper, to the boy himself.


    Kids just getting into reading, with a fancy for the fanciful, should find this book very readable and lots of fun.  It also has some good lessons on expectations, the twists life throws us, and the importance of friendships of all sorts.  There’s also a bunch of cheeky potty humor that kids will no doubt find very amusing.  The goblins alone provide plenty of fun goofiness, tainted with some dark danger.


    Though this isn’t my favorite Philip Reeve book, mostly because its classic (generic sounds harsher than I mean it, but kind of sums it up) Fantasy setting is simply something I’m not especially interested in.  Tolkien's Lord of the Rings  and other Medieval European substitute settings, for example.  But I always find his books a pleasure to read.


Goblins
Author: Philip Reeve
Publisher: Scholastic Press
ISBN: 978-0-545-22220-4

-Matt

Sunday, December 15, 2013

Prodigal Son: Let’s Try This Again



Part Nineteen

    It’s been some time since I last wrote a Prodigal Son article.  Things came up, the way things do.  I got busy, other folks got busy.  I made some priority choices, and gaming lost out.  Life happened.  Well, I’m back, and this time I’m going to give it a serious go.  I’m not stopping off at the Moon, I’m taking a rocket straight to Mars.  While I would love to do another game night some time soon, I’m putting my effort into going straight for a regular roleplaying game.  Now, I would absolutely love to get a weekly session, but while I’m a dreamer, I’m not kidding myself.  That won’t be happening in all likely hood, and I’d rather have something than nothing.  So, come the new year, I’m gathering a few friends together, and we’re going to discuss options and interests.  At the moment, it looks like most, if not all, of my potential players will be new to the hobby, which is exciting (and a bit scary).  I have to remember a few things in the meantime.  1. Roleplaying is one of the most creative and exciting hobbies around; it trumps video games any day, and on the best days it trumps film and literature.  And 2. Roleplaying should be fun.


    I figure the first night, we’ll just chat about the hobby, and maybe play a round of Once Upon a Time or some such.  From there, I figure we’ll arrange a schedule of sorts, hopefully on a no less than bi-weekly basis.  To start things off, I’ll run a one or two night game of something easy and introductory, with pre-made characters.  The obvious options here would be my go-to one-shot game, Call of Cthulhu, or maybe Unknown Armies.  Or maybe, in spite of my frustration with the over-saturation of zombies, All Flesh Must Be Eaten.  Or I could go really crazy and do something like Terra Primate.  Anyway, whatever it ends up being, the point is to get the basic idea of how it all works.


    Once that introductory game is done, we can look at doing something more long term.  Maybe not an indefinite game, but a mini-campaign.  The growth and development of a character is one of the great things about a game, and something missing in one-shots, of course.  With a mini-campaign, there could be a particular story direction, with some major events mapped out, and an ending (or at least a place for an ending to fit).  It gives some sense of development while it also gives the satisfaction of a conclusion.  Short campaigns have a lot of advantages, not the least of which is their finite length.  If they’re good enough, and feature particularly memorable endings, they’ll be remembered for years to come.


    If the group only makes it through one mini-campaign, I’ll count it a success (assuming folks enjoy themselves).  But my hope isn’t to do a single four to eight session story and be done with it all.  There was a time when I was involved in two or three ongoing games a week, when some games lasted several years.  While those days may be long gone, I’d like to get back a bit of it.  So, if the first game and/or the first mini-campaign is a success, I’d sure like to do more.  More mini-campaigns?  This is, of course, an option.  It allows for various types of games, and there are so many I’d like to try.  However, I’d very much like to do a long form campaign.  Something open ended.  As with all things, there are pros and cons to this.  But the longer the game, the more character and setting development, and the more players can influence not just events, but the whole tone and direction of the story.


    The real trick, and this will likely take some time to get rolling, will be to get a game of Ars Magica going.  For that, the group’s numbers might have to be expanded.  Ars Magica is the only game I can think of where very large groups can still work.  Otherwise, six people is pushing it.  Before an ongoing, open ended game, it’s time to get serious, and get this business done.  Time to stop putting things off and talking about how cool it would be if…  Come January, I’m getting a game together, dang it.



-Matt

See the rest of the series here, and here.

Saturday, August 24, 2013

Prodigal Son: The Recap Part 2



    Re-reading the earlier posts was a bit sad, knowing that things petered out like they did.  But I also see a lot of good stuff in there, stuff that I may try to build on in the coming weeks and months.  These ‘recap’ posts are in part to try to inspire me to get off my creative ass again and try for something.  So if you’re interested in what I’m saying, that’s great.  But I realize these may not be especially riveting for those not interested in tabletop roleplaying.

Part Eleven: My Sandbox or Yours?
 
Part Twelve: The Campaign Trail

Part Thirteen: Back on the Horse

Part Fourteen: More Homework

Part Fifteen: Game Night

Part Sixteen: The Role of the Player


Part Seventeen: In Tune



Part Eighteen: Reading Science Fiction

    So, that catches me up to where I left off on publishing Prodigal Son articles back at the beginning of 2012.  I had two more pieces, one I scrapped when it was half done, the other I just never posted because my heart wasn’t in it (covering the second and final Game Night).  I’m not sure if I’m going to start the column up again or not.  But I’m giving it serious thought, especially as I’m giving serious thought to once again trying to get a band together to make some gaming music (figuratively speaking there…I mean play some games).  Time will tell.




-Matt

Wednesday, June 26, 2013

Dork Art: LIGHTS! CAMERA! MONKEYS!


Artist Chet Phillips re imagines popular culture with primates for his new series of 5 x 6 postcards.  You can purchase the set at his Etsy Shop.  There is also the 11 x 14 option.  25 bucks a pop.  Not sure if I need all of them, but Monkey Trek has to be had, right?  And Kill Bonobo just makes me chuckle.

--Brad

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Dork Art: Mondo Nazgul


I'm not the hugest Lord of the Rings fan (that's the other Dork, Matt) and I've been kinda lukewarm on Mondo's recent Tolkein tributes, but the above Nazgul print is stunning.  Artist Matt Suftin conjures the horrors of Middle Earth beautifully and the below B&W variant is even more striking with it's Night of the Living Dead undertones.  The print is sized at the typical 24 x 36, the regular release will run $50, and the variant $75.  Artist Paolo Rivera also has a print titled "Precious Cargo," depicting Frodo & Samwise crawling up Mount Doom.  It's also $50 and measures 24 x 36.  All three go on sale tomorrow.  Good luck, cuz yer gonna need it.


--Brad

Friday, January 4, 2013

Dork Art: Weapon of Choice


Another year, another kickass art show I have no chance of ever seeing in person.  But that's what why god invented the internet.  Starting January 11th in Los Angeles, the Hero Complex Gallery will be hosting the Weapon of Choice art show.  The theme being cinema's great partnerships of man and killing tool.  As much as I love Bruce Yan's Shaun of the Dead tribute, I think my absolute fave is Tim Jordan's Love Gun, James Bond's greatest weapon indeed.  Check out Slash Film for a few more nifty pieces.





 



--Brad

Friday, August 24, 2012

Matt’s Week in Dork! (8/12/12-8/18/12)



    Busy week, but not much in the way of Dork.  I did finish off some TV seasons, though.

The Red House:  If Edward G. Robinson tells me not to do something, I bloody well don’t do it.  That’s science.  Who cares if anyone calls you yellow.  Stay out of the danged evil forest (Ox Head Wood).  Stay away from the Red House.  I kept feeling like those inbred freaks, the Peacocks, form that X-Files episode were going to show up with Momma on her little roller thingy.  I’d also be nervous whenever a giant, strapping young letch lurked around my farm (I’m looking at you, finger pointing Rory Calhoun).  And if you’re a straight shooting, swell young chap, don’t date a fickle, sex-charged harlot (or anyone named Tibby).  This movie is extremely moody, and the first half builds a ton of tension.  The reveal isn’t quite as interesting as I’d have liked, but it’s still good.  And it’s not the Scooby-Doo, rum-runner/communist plot I was expecting.


The Return of the King (Extended):  The final entry in the epic Lord of the Rings trilogy is as grand and dramatic as you could ask for.  Beautiful effects and an excellent cast combine with a script that cuts out much of the books’ excess, creating a work I actually consider superior to its source.  Tolkien’s world is imagined with nearly unprecedented grandeur and detail.  Some complain that the movie goes on too long, but I like all the various wrap-ups of tales.  My only real issue is a hold over from the book.  I think the ghost army that helps in the penultimate battle is kind of a cop-out, deus ex machina sort of thing.


The Girl from Rio:  “What kind of a space age sorceress are you?”  About half way into this, I found myself saying something I say all too often while watching Jess Franco movies; “What the F&*% is going on?!”  Lots of moderately attractive, extremely European looking women wear lots of skimpy outfits (and occasionally less).  Lots of bad editing.  People look like they’ve got spray-on tans.  There’s a lot of awkward focus adjusting.  It’s all classic Franco.  His films are frustrating because they seem to have a lot of the right elements for making something entertaining…but then he shows up and mishandles everything.


The Occultist:  On an exotic island…which looks suspiciously like an abandoned warehouse in New York, a bunch of bad actors and extras from Breakin’ 2 (yes, Electric Boogaloo), spend a lot of time dancing.  In the meantime, some of those sweater wearing jerks from Brat Pack movies like to watch.  Oh, yeah.  And a guy who looks a lot like Dave Coulier is a cyborg or something.  News flash.  This flick sucks.  It’s mildly entertaining, and almost certainly better with friends.


The Bourne Legacy:  I’ve enjoyed the heck out of all the Bourne films so far, and though perhaps not as good as some of the earlier entries, this one does the job.  With a new super-agent gone funny, and lots of governmental conspiracy, there’s not really anything new, but it’s fun to watch play out, none the less.  There are two strikes against the film for this viewer.  First, Rachel Weisz, who is one of my very favorite actresses, and who usually plays interesting characters, is little more than the pretty girl our hero spends his time defending.  Ugh.  She’s less vacuous than the damsel in distress tends to be, but it’s still kind of beneath the actress, and in this day and age, beneath the writers.  The second problem is the climactic chase scene.  It goes on for WAAAAY too long, and is almost as choppy and motion-sickness inducing as the Hunger Games.  Pull that danged camera back, and put it on a tripod, for the love of all that is good and holy.  When will this obsession with ultra-close, hand-held camera work end?  Not flippin’ soon enough.  Still, the cast is good, most of the action is good, and the first two thirds of the film is very enjoyable to watch.  The end is somewhat unsatisfying (in part because of that final chase), but it‘s worth checking out.


The Expendables:  Lots of blood, sweat, muscles, and mayhem explode on the screen as action heroes old and new come together in the tropics to get some killing done.  A lot of the mad violence promised by 80s trailers, but never delivered, is here and flying at the screen in bloody chunks.  While not nearly as violent as Rambo, it’s still part of the new trend of making R rated action films that actually deserve it (not the hardly worthy of PG-13 stuff they were passing off as R rated in the 90s).  You want complex characters and a meditation on the human condition?  What are you doing watching movies like this?  Check it out if you want to see stuff (and people) blowing up, and big dudes bashing each other.


Eastern Promises:  “I am just driver.”  Viggo is the strong silent type.  And typically Vincent Cassel is the sniveling punk.  Together they set London’s underground on fire, Russian mob style.  Part of David Cronenberg’s late, drama period, this movie still features his signature graphic ultra-violence.  Using his harsh, stretched leather features to their full advantage, Viggo creates a rugged beast of crime that no amount of naked, bathhouse slaughter can keep down.  Though I don’t love this film like I do A History of Violence, it is pretty badass.


La Ronde:  I guess you don’t call ’em French maid costumes when the movie is French; just maid costumes.  This semi-whimsical sexual romp through pre-War (WWI) society is well filmed, I guess.  And the cast good looking (unlike a lot of French film, the guys don’t look like trolls).  But I couldn’t get into it.  I’m actually not sure why I queued it up in the first place.  It’s all very French (in other words, a bit pervy and kind of boring, with more sexual repression, dysfunction, and frustration than a Televangelist at a truck stop).  There’s something oddly charming about bits of the film, though, especially the very end.  Still, not my thing.


The Expendables 2:  Jumping right to the top of my 2012 movie list, this movie has so much testosterone pumping through it, I think most of the audience went away pregnant (and not just the female half).  Kind of like Crank 2 was to Crank, this was to the first Expendables.  To say the least, they turned it to 11.  Old action stars keep popping their head in, as bullets keep popping bad guys.  Blood and explosions spray everything and the one-liners and self-referential jokes never let up.  I was giddy for an uncomfortable amount of time while watching (and after).  Fan-freakin’-tastic.  Now, where’s my meal of baby seals and whale ass…in the summer?  Now when is Expendables 3 coming?!


The Bionic Woman Season 1:  This spin-off of The Six Million Dollar Man is perfectly enjoyable, but to a degree, just more of the same.  The episodes are well done, and it’s got tons of those folk you see in every TV show made during this time.  Awesomely 70s.  Not as campy as Charlie’s Angels but still plenty of fun.


Magnum P.I. Season 1:  The man has a mustache you can not argue with.  A dashing rogue, a difficult friend, a white knight looking for a cause.  Magnum is all of those things and more in this awesome bit of 70s crazy.  One of those awesome shows that lives up to my memory of watching it so long ago.


Blue Hawaii:  “On you, wet is my favorite color.”  Keeping with my recent spate of Hawaii set entertainment, I popped in this classic Elvis movie.  Hawaii in the 60s and 70s held this kind of sway over pop culture.  An exotic and mysterious land that was somehow still part of the United States.  A tropical paradise filled with beautiful women, excitement, and wonder.  Elvis just wants to surf, not be a wealthy scion of mainland imperialist agriculture.  You can certainly see Elvis’ charm, and while he might not be an amazing actor, he’s got good comic timing.


Stage Door Canteen:  “Are you Ray Bolger?”  I’m not sure who the audience for this film was.  It’s about departing troops, heading to Europe to fight Hitler & Co (or the Pacific to battle Tojo, maybe).  Was this meant to reassure those left behind that their boys weren’t up to too much sin and mischief while they were out of town?   It features a bunch of celebrity cameos and performances, which I hate to admit didn’t excite me as much as they might have.  I’m fairly familiar with the entertainment crowd of that era, but not enough, I guess.  A lot of familiar faces, but a lot of folks I didn’t know at all.  It all felt very ‘of its time,’ and ultra-sanitized.  But it’s still somewhat charming.  “Buy War Bonds!!!”


Let’s go Collegiate:  Keye Luke as a frat boy.  That’s just not something I ever thought I’d see.  This OK bit of fluff from 1941 is enjoyable, but no classic.  Frankie Darro is typically up to no good, frequently abusing his…servant? played by the cringe inducing Mantan Moreland.  All kinds of college wackiness is on display.


    I made Ben watch the first episode of Game of Thrones.  He seemed to enjoy it quite a bit.  I’m looking forward to finishing the series in the next week or so.  Can’t wait for season 2.  I’m curious where it all goes.


    And I started up season 2 of Batman: The Animated Series.  Darned fine show.  I wish there were more like it.  And I popped in the first episode of Coupling, the surprisingly charming British sit-com.  I forgot that it had a laugh track/live audience, though.  Man, I hate those.  But it’s not too overpowering.



    In preparation for the next meeting of the graphic novel book club, I re-read Habibi.  It’s an interesting book.  The story does not go in the directions you would expect, or even want.  It’s rough, but kind of beautiful.  The art is really something special.



-Matt

Thursday, July 5, 2012

Dork Art: Mondo's The Lord of the Rings


Mondo has landed the Lord of the Ring license and the above Aaron Horkey Return of the King print is the first of many to come.  This poster premiered tonight at the Mondo Movie Mystery X screening, but I'm sure the extras will appear online or at San Diego Comic Con next week.  I dig it, but Lord of the Rings has never been one of my beloved franchises.  I love the films, but they're no Planet of the Apes.

For more info on the print check out the article over at Collider.

--Brad

Saturday, March 24, 2012

A Fistful of Hunger Games! (Brad's Picks)


The whole world seems interested in only one movie this weekend, The Hunger Games.  Me, I'm gonna get to it eventually.  But all this Battle Royale, Running Man, Lord of the Flies rip-off talk got me thinking about the best bits of food related survival.  Throw me into the jungle with a bow and arrow and I couldn't hit a squirrel let alone another Deer Hunter.  But what about the folks below?  How would they do, up against Katniss?



5.  Pig Hunt (First Blood):  A small town sheriff, his army of deputies, the National Guard, and an armada of media vultures have Rambo pinned in the mountains.  But all he needs is his trusty blade tied to a stick and he's got a pig roast just minutes from his stomach.  Self Sufficient Badass.


4.  The Rabbit Lady (Roger & Me):  This 1989 Documentary from Michael Moore is still his best.  The "Documentarian" examines the economic decline of Flint, Michigan after General Motors shuts down several auto plants.  One such victim is Rhonda Britton, who sells her rabbits for "pet or meat."  In one such striking image, Britton cracks a rabbit's skull with a pipe and it's something I've never been able to shake from my brain.  A different world summed up in an organic, crunching sound.


3.  Gollum's Fish Song (The Lord of the Rings-The Two Towers):  Gollum, the saddest most wretched character in the saga.  But he's at his happiest when noodling for fish singing his screechy song.  Too bad Frodo has to betray him to some untrusting rangers.


The cold hard lands                                           Alice without breath
They bites our hands,                                        As cold as death
They gnaws our feet,                                         Never thirsting, ever drinking
The rocks and stones                                        Clad in mail, never clinking.
Are like old bones                                              Drowns on dry land
All bare of meat.                                                Thinks an island
But stream and pool                                           Is a mountains,
Is wet and cool                                                  Thinks a fountain
So nice for feet!                                                 Is a puff of air
And now we wish........                                       So sleek, so fair!
                                                                          What a joy to meet!
                                                                          We only wish
                                                                          To catch a fish,
                                                                          So juicy-sweet!


2.  Woody's S&M Rave Burrito (Rampart):  When did I know things were not going to go well for Woody Harrelson's racist beat cop?  Well, to be honest, from the second the title came up.  But the second moment in the film where I knew things were going to go seriously south was when I watched Woody tear into the grossest looking burrito I've ever seen cinematically portrayed and as he mashed his face through the tortilla and the strobe lights of the S&M club burned into his retina--the end was near!


1.  Some Good Barbecue (The Texas Chainsaw Massacre):  Is there any greater display of The Hunger Games than Tobe Hooper's Texas BBQ?  The answer is obviously, no.  Leatherface and Family snatch up drifters for their meathooks and fill their pales with their blood.  Makes for good sausage.  And if you're skilled enough to survive their hunt then you could probably take on any dystopian Running Man...that is, if you were not batshit crazy by the end of the whole ordeal.

--Brad