Direct Beam Comms #38

TV

Halt and Catch Fire – Grade: A

The highly underrated AMC series Halt and Catch Fire returned last Tuesday with two new episodes. This third season finds the characters in a very different place than in the second. Donna, Cameron and Gordon (Kerry Bishé, Makenzie Davis and Scoot McNairy respectively) have moved their families and company Mutiny from Texas to San Francisco to be closer to computer technology and capital. While Joe MacMillion (Lee Pace), a serial incubator/stealer/taker of good ideas has created a company of his own that sells antivirus software, their motto is “Are You Safe?”, and has become the focus of attention he always aspired to.

I don’t know there’s ever been a TV series quite like Halt and Catch Fire that depicts what it’s like to create something from scratch. For Donna and Cameron who created their company Mutiny which started with online games but transitioned to a message board, there’s no roadmap for what they’re doing. Everything they do is brand new and they’re creating new and exciting places for people to begin meeting up online.

Lee Pace
Lee Pace

For Joe things are a bit different. He stole the core technology of his company from Gordon and has turned this nugget of an idea into a multimillion dollar empire. Joe’s real strength is of seeing the value of other’s ideas. Be it IBM with their PC that he set out to clone in the first season or Mutiny which he wanted take over in the second. Joe can see the future but he doesn’t have the skills necessary to create something himself of value. And instead of wanting to work with people to create that thing Joe will try and buy/steal whatever this is.

In Halt and Catch Fire, both Mutiny and MacMillion Utilities realize that once you have a company in a highly competitive market there’s no stopping. Everyday you have to think of new and different ways to engage with your users. If it’s Mutiny they’re creating new spaces and ways for people to connect. If you’re MacMillion you start creating software for home PCs when before your main customers were corporate users.

I think that’s interesting. For the people of Mutiny, especially, they think that what they do next will take them to a higher level of success and make life easier. And while they do become more and more successful their lives become harder and harder because there’s always someone else looking to do what they do or other, larger companies looking to take them out.

For Joe, though, success is different. He’s much more comfortable in the role as a powerful businessman. He’s been a guru in search of worshipers since the first season and with MacMillion Utilities and his role as a Steve Jobs-ish frontman he’s finally found his calling.

The Tick – Grade: B-

the-tick-07Last week, during their “pilot season,” Amazon debuted the first episode of several series, one of which is The Tick based on the comic series of the same name by Ben Edlund. I feel bad that I’m not more familiar with The Tick than I am. I never read the comic book — issues of which were quite popular and therefor pricy when I was collecting and out of my reach — and was exactly the wrong age to watch the 1990s cartoon series too.

I did watch the short-lived nine episode live-action Fox TV series, though, and enjoyed that a great deal. So I come to the new Amazon Tick pilot at a different angle than most who I suppose are either super-fans of the cult-character or totally unaware of him.

In the Amazon series, a superhero arrived on the Earth in 1908 and ever since the world has been populated by them some of which are pastiches of popular DC and Marvel characters. But instead of being heroic and serious like the Marvel and DC movies, The Tick is more slightly goofy. Which is one problem I had with the show; its tone.

The Tick is a series where one moment a character can accidentally trip over their own feet and almost do a prat fall but the next a super villain is literally executing the members of rival team on the street of a city. The show was all over the place at times from silly to horrific. And it’s not like some new creative team here has swooped in and changed around the tone of the series either. The Tick was created by writer/artist Ben Edlund who also wrote the pilot to the Amazon version too.

This is Edlund’s version from start to finish but feels unbalanced.

This first episode establishes all the characters from the Tick (Peter Serafinowicz) to Arthur (Griffin Newman) and sets up their relationship of becoming superhero/sidekick. Much of the plot is of Arthur trying to prove that a long dead super villain named “The Terror” (Jackie Earle Haley) is still alive and the Tick being the only person who wants to help him in his quest.

There’s also a bit here where Arthur’s sanity is questioned with him having issues as a kid where his blue nightlight voiced by Serafinowicz used to talk to him and Arthur now being on medication because of certain issues. So is the Tick real, or in his head? Except he’s obviously real since the Tick does battle with some baddies in the episode and leave a smoking crater in his wake.

I’m honestly interested in seeing where The Tick goes from here and hope that the issues I had with its tone get worked out if the series does get picked up for a full season run. Which we won’t know for a while and even if it does get picked up we won’t see the next episode for another year or so.

The Tunnel – Grade: B-

TheTunnel-1The UK import TV series The Tunnel ended its 10 episode run on PBS last week. The first season of The Tunnel was interesting enough but I think it was just too long for what story it had to tell.

The Tunnel follows to detectives, one from the UK Karl Roebuck (Stephen Dillane) and one from France Elise Wassermann (Clémence Poésy) who are investigating a double murder committed in the Chunnel exactly half way between the UK and France. But the case quickly spirals out of control as this double murder is actually the first “lesson” given by the “Truth Terrorist” (TT) who’s mission is to bring enlightenment to the masses on all the problems of the world by doing things like killing all the residents of a nursing home, kidnapping a bus full of schoolchildren and locking a war hero inside a meat locker to freeze to death. All of which is broadcast live on the internet.

Think a flashier and longer version of Se7en and you’re close to what The Tunnel is. All of which makes for some interesting TV, but as TT’s crimes get more complex and larger in scale the series also becomes less and less believable.

Like if TT is really terrorizing two countries, wouldn’t the UK and France assign more than two detectives to the case? And if TT really is constantly traveling between the two countries, wouldn’t this eventually lead him to being caught since surly there are records kept somewhere of who’s traveling where on what day? And, much like the crimes of Animal Kingdom, TT’s crimes become so complex and convoluted that just one slip-up along the way of 1,000 little details that need to be completed perfectly to not get caught stretch the bounds of believability and break off into some fantastical realm.

It doesn’t help matters that the big “twist” that’s comes at the end of the season, series like The Tunnel always have a twist, is apparent right from the first episode. Like, not to spoil things, but in a TV series the only reason time is dedicated to anything is because that thing is important. And once you realize this there’s something that one character does that’s obvious that they’ve been communicating with TT the whole time.

Honestly, I think that if The Tunnel had been four episodes rather than 10 I would have enjoyed it much more. Instead, it seems like much of the latter half of The Tunnel series is filler and could have easily been axed.

I did greatly enjoy the first half of The Tunnel and loved the Wassermann and Roebuck characters a lot. They have a unique chemistry I’ve never seen before — he’s a dedicated husband and father of a handful of kids yet is a womanizer and Wassermann is a woman who’s so dedicated to policing that she’s almost robotic in her manner yet wants to act more “normal.”

It’s because of those two characters I stuck with the show until the end, not because of what wild and wacky thing that TT was going to do on this weeks’ episode.

Movies

Triple 9 – Grade: B+

triple-9-movei-chiwetel-ejiofor-kate-winslet-reviewI’d been meaning to check out the movie Triple 9 ever since I’d heard of it earlier this year but waited a while to check it out on digital even though it’s been out a few weeks. This movie is about a group of crooks made up partly of cops and partly of ex-special forces soldiers who take on high risk robberies in Atlanta. But when they’re faced with their toughest challenge yet of stealing something from the Department of Homeland Security they figure the only way they’ll have enough time to pull off the job is by killing a fellow officer so that a “999,” or “officer down” code goes out therefor tying up the rest of the police giving them enough time to escape. But things get a bit complicated as the Russian mob who’re calling the shots on this criminal crew gets antsy and while killing a fellow officer is theoretically doable, in practice it’s much more difficult.

I’d been a fan of Triple 9 director John Hillcoat ever since I saw his movie The Proposition. To me, Hillcoat’s films are marked with an overt kind of brutalism not seen in mainstream Hollywood — see his movie based on the book The Road to see what I mean. So him doing Triple 9 had me interested since I wondered if that same kind of aesthetic would be present here or not? And honestly, it’s not. But I’m not sure that’s such a bad thing. Triple 9 is much more of a mainstream action movie, sort’a Heat mixed with Training Day and I’m not sure things like people being stomped to death, something that happens in The Proposition, would’ve flown in Triple 9.

Still, Triple 9 is an intense movie with a bit of heightened realism of street cops operating on the bad streets of Atlanta where the bad guys are as likely to shoot back when they feel threatened no matter what the consequences than they are to stand by and be disrespected.

And the story of Triple 9 flows very well. The crew, including Michael Atwood (Chiwetel Ejiofor), Marcus Belmont (Anthony Mackie), Gabe Welch (Aaron Paul) and Russell Welch (Norman Reedus) are in a bad place with the Russians since at any time matriarch leader Irina Vlaslov (Kate Winslet) can turn on them sending the crew to jail forever. So they end up placing themselves into precarious positions trying for just one more job in order to be let go of their obligations. Of which this high risk Homeland Security job seems to be their ticket out.

Enter Chris Allen (Casey Affleck) a veteran cop assigned as Belmont’s partner and the one they select as their prime 999 candidate. But when Allen saves Belmont’s life during a drug raid things get complicated.

The more I think of it, Triple 9 really is the spiritual successor to Heat except that whereas the criminals of Heat lead by Robert De Niro are suave Armani suit wearing crooks, the ones of Triple 9 are more street-thug is who won’t hesitate to maim or kill innocent bystanders if they get in their way or are needed to prove a point.

However, Triple 9 falls apart in a big way at the end. It’s not so much that the story’s no good, but it’s almost like the filmmakers ran out of time. For 110 minutes the story flows perfectly, but in the last 10 it’s a race to close out a story that had been going so well at that point. Literally the movie ends with one character in the backseat of a car where there’s an exchange of gunfire to close out the movie where I’m not sure that character would have ever been able to get to that car in the first place. Why do things happen this way? I can only imagine it was because that’s the only way it could have happened in the short time left the filmmakers had to tell it.

I wonder how much better of a movie Triple 9 could have been, one of the great crime films perhaps right up there with the likes of The Way of the Gun if it would have had more time to develop the ending.

This week in pop-culture history

  • 1968: Kristen Cloke, Shane Vansen of Space: Above and Beyond is born
  • 1985: The TV series The Twilight Zone premiers
  • 1987: The TV series Captain Power and the Soldiers of the Future premiers

Direct Beam Comms #37

TV

Halt and Catch Fire

The third season of one of Halt and Catch Fire is set to debut this Tuesday (8/23) with two episodes beginning at 9(E) on AMC. The series about the personal computer explosion in the early 1980s, then the first attempts at networking and the internet, has consistently been one of the best things on TV even though the ratings for Halt and Catch Fire have been dismal. Just that AMC has so far given us three seasons of this series is a bloody miracle that should be celebrated ever year like Christmas and New Years.

The A Word – Grade: B+

This Sundance Channel series that’s an import from the UK follows an extended Scottish family as they come to terms with the youngest son’s autism diagnosis. The A Word stars Morven Christie (Twenty Twelve) and Lee Ingleby (Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World) as the boy’s parents and Christopher Eccleston (Doctor Who) as his grandfather.

I enjoyed this series a great deal, especially the dynamics within the Hughes family. All this felt very real to me. Where I think the series went a little askew for my tastes was that while it was doing all these clever bits with the family story, it was also checking all the typical “boxes” that need to be checked in a family drama. There’s adultery, ‘check’, first sexual experience, ‘check’, the grandpa who at times says inappropriate things…

Still, that’s a minor quibble at best and I genuinely liked The A Word from start to finish.

Comics

Garth Ennis Presents: Battle Classics Vol 2: FIGHTING MANN

61nOl4BMyTLThe collected comic Garth Ennis Presents: Battle Classics Vol 2: FIGHTING MANN is set to be released this Tuesday (8/23). The first series simply titled Garth Ennis’ – Battle Classics is a collection of comics writer Ennis’ favorite comic stories from the British 1970s comic series called Battle Picture Weekly. And it was wonderful, though decades years old those stories stand the test of time and were gripping and disturbing and amazing all at once. This second edition collects two new stories, one set during the Vietnam War and the other WWII and is something I’ve been dying to read ever since it was announced ages ago.

Movies

The Nice Guys (2016) – Grade: B+

I was really excited when I first heard about Shane Black’s movie The Nice Guys. In the last few years Black has written and directed Iron Man 3 and it was recently announced that he’ll be writing and directing the upcoming Doc Savage movie too. But he’s also written one of the best buddy-cop movies of all time, Lethal Weapon and wrote and directed one of my favorite movies of all time too Kiss Kiss Bang Bang.

So to say that I was interested in The Nice Guys would be an understatement. The minute it was available on digital I bought and watched it. And while there are some very good moments in The Nice Guys, I’m not sure the movie holds together enough as a whole to be considered as good as anything Black’s done in the last few years.

Set in a late 1970s smog shrouded LA, The Nice Guys stars Russell Crowe and Ryan Gosling as Jackson Healy and Holland March respectively. Healy is a bruiser who makes his living giving lumps to those who deserve it and March is an ex-cop private detective who’s decent enough at his job when he can stay away from the booze. Healy is hired to give March a beating in order to chase him off of a case of a missing girl, but afterwards ends up hiring him to look for the same girl he originally was there to warn him off when Healy finds himself in over his head.

nice-guys-movie-crowe-gosling-angourie-riceWhat follows are Healy and March chasing down leads, March getting hilariously drunk a few times and the two along with March’s daughter Holly (Angourie Rice) getting in and out of various underworld scrapes in hysterical fashion.

I think what threw me with The Nice Guys is that I never quite understood the plot of the movie — or maybe it was because elements of the plot were so odd that things never really made sense. Part of the film deals with the porn industry and a film in particular that threatens to bring down Detroit and the auto industry. But hiding the evidence in a porno seemed so far fetched and unbelievable it stretched the bounds a bit of the movie for me.

Even if the evidence were in a porno who would anyone ever believe it since it’s in a porno!?

Still, other than the case Healy and March are working on The Nice Guys is pretty great. I loved Crows and Gosling’s characters, especially Gosling who’s playing a version of a detective I don’t think I’ve ever seen before. He doesn’t play the role in a stereotypical “heroic” detective way. He screams like a baby when he’s hurt and cries, and when he’s drunk makes big mistakes.

And time and time again Healy and March’s bad luck keeps them out of trouble, onto the next clue and stumbling towards success.

Reportedly The Nice Guys was originally set to be the pilot of a proposed TV series before Black reworked the script in order for it to be a feature film and I can see that. The movie essentially ends with the setup to the next story which I’d love to see.

The Arrival trailer

“We need to make sure they understand the difference between a weapon and a tool.”

The Reading & Watch List

This week in pop-culture history

  • 1970: River Phoenix of Explorers and Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade is born
  • 1986: Night of the Creeps premiers in theaters
  • 1993: The TV series The Adventures of Brisco County Jr. premiers

Direct Beam Comms #36

TV

Stranger Things – Grade: A

6f1c7f40664543.5787e03bf042cEvery so often a series comes along that’s so good and unexpected that’s like a bolt of lighting to the head — and this year that series is Stranger Things on Netflix.

Stranger Things takes place in the fictional small town of Hawkins, Indiana in 1983 where one dark and stormy night a boy goes missing while at the same time a mysterious girl known as “11” or “El” for short (Millie Brown) appears. El isn’t quite normal — she can only speak in very short words/sentences, is wearing only hospital garb and, most of weirdly of all, has telekinetic powers. On her trail is Dr. Martin Brenner (Matthew Modine) who was trying to use El’s powers for his own purposes and wants his property returned. But on El’s side are a group of misfit boys who’re looking for their missing friend while at the same time discovering just what El’s capable of.

Best of all Stranger Things stars the wonderful Winona Ryder playing the missing kids mother, David Harbour as the town sheriff and Natalia Dyer as Nancy, Shannon Purser as Barb, Charlie Heaton as Jonathan…

I think that’s the first thing that Stranger Things co-creators the Duffer Brothers got right — they had a great cast and great characters. And let that to be a lesson to other series creators out there: if you have a great cast and great characters you’re more than halfway to having a classic series.

And that’s exactly what Stranger Things is: a modern day classic.

Stranger Things has taken flack from some corners saying that it’s a nostalgia driven show. That it borrows too freely from what’s come before and isn’t that original. Which is totally true. But only if those same people who ding Stranger Things for taking elements from what’s come before are also willing to ding things like the band The Rolling Stones from feely borrowing from the blues or Nirvana from punk.

I’ve never understood why when bands “borrow” from the past and are successful they can be considered top acts, but when movies or TV series do the same thing — well, apparently those are only supposed to be completely original, new and unique.

Which is total hooey. Is there anything these days that’s totally new and unique?

Sure, Stranger Things borrows elements from the works of Stephen King and some of the visual stylings of Steven Spielberg — though much less than talk and internet marketing would lead you to believe. It also uses elements from slasher horror movies of the 1980s, especially how some of their scenes are constructed, and a bit from the manga/film Akira too.

Which, admittedly, could be the recipe for disaster. Except here what the Duffer Brothers did with Stranger Things was rather than to just copy those elements they created something new with them. Stranger Things shares no direct link with any Stephen King story but it feels like it could, and the same goes with the films of Steven Spielberg too. There are certainly visual cues from Spielberg’s movies like E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial and Stand By Me here, but on the whole Stranger Things is its own thing that’s building upon previous works of others.

Just like The Rolling Stones and just like Nirvana and just like 1,000 other pop culture things have built new things on the previous works of others.

My only concern with Stranger Things is that recently Neflix has strongly hinted that a second season of the series will soon be in the works. My concern is that the first season ended so perfectly that it’s this brilliant encapsulated story with just the right amount of questions answered and, more importantly, unanswered. I’d hate to see the Duffer Brothers come back and do a season two of the series that was a let down to the first. I’m not sure I want or need all the questions raised in the first season to be answered. Some things are better left to the imagination.

Then again, what do I know? Here I am giving suggestions about a series I hadn’t even heard about a few months ago that knocked my socks off this summer. My guess is that whatever the Duffer Brothers do next is going to be interesting regardless of which angle they take to tell it.

Now I feel like I need to go re-watch/read the Akira series and the movie The Mist again to keep on this Stranger Things high!

Angie Tribeca season 2 – Grade: B

angie-tribeca-tbs_article_story_largeThe second season of the TBS series Angie Tribeca finished this week. I enjoy this goofy series that’s in the vein of an Airplane or Naked Gun but I think I enjoyed the first season a bit more. The second season of the Angie Tribeca told a season long throughout all the episodes which felt a little forced to me. The series is essentially a comedy where goofy fun takes precedence over plot but having a season long story means that plot becomes important.

I think where Angie Tribeca works well is when the episodes are just off the wall humor where literally anything can happen between scene to scene let alone episode to episode, so to have to follow the plot to a story was a bit constraining.

A third season of Angie Tribeca is set to debut sometime in 2017 and I’m genuinely interested to see where the series goes from here.

Animal Kingdom season 1 – Grade: B-

14ANIMALS-master768The last year has seen a slew of darker series that all takes place in California. Always before California series used to focus on the sun, beaches and fun of the state but lately a lot of series have been taking place in a much different version of California. These bleaker series focus on a dirty, and dangerous place that’s as likely to give you a staph infection from swimming in the polluted waves as send you home in a body bag when you’re caught in the middle of a drug/guns/whatever deal gone wrong.

These are series I call “California Dark” like True Detective, Flaked, Sons of Anarchy and Animal Kingdom, the first season of which wrapped up last week on TNT.

Animal Kingdom, based on the Australian movie of the same name, follows the Cody family who live in Oceanside, California and make their living by stealing and robbing from unsuspecting folks. Thrown into this den is “J” (Finn Cole), forced to live with his uncles and a matriarch nicknamed “Smurf” (Ellen Barkin) who controls her sons through manipulation, deceit and guile. If J is somewhat an innocent then his uncles are hardened criminals who’ll take whatever they can get their hands on and kill whomever when necessary. But after they accidentally kill an off-duty police officer moonlighting as a security guard, the crew is thrown in disarray since they no longer have enough loot to sustain themselves and now have the police actively looking to bust up the gang after one of their own was murdered.

Animal Kingdom started off strong enough for me to watch the entire series, but I have to admit I lost interest in the show somewhere about the halfway mark. To me the series existed in their weird netherworld between two styles of show. On the one hand there’s similar series like True Detective that goes into the deep end of dark and almost play out like a horror series. On the other hand there’s network series like CSI or Chicago P.D. that are so light and unrealistic they’re soap operas with cops. And I think that Animal Kingdom fits somewhere in between these two styles. There’s a hard edge to the show, but it’s also very light in other ways.

Animal Kingdom plays out like these lite shows when it comes to the crimes the Cody family pulls off. The two big ones of the season, the first where they rob a jewelry mart of expensive watches and the final where they steal bails of cash from the US military, play out like scenes from a James Bond movie. Where there are so many intricate steps to the plan that if just one thing would go wrong the entire crew would spend the rest of their lives in jail. And in a series like Animal Kingdom while things do go wrong, they go wrong in a very TV like way.

It doesn’t help matters that in Animal Kingdom the stakes are never made quite clear for the J character. In the movie he’s in mortal danger from his uncles when he’s the only witness to the murder of two police officers they committed. In the TBS series he seems to be in danger, but not much. Here, it’s like the uncles may kill J, or they may send him out for ice cream.

I think where the movie version succeeded so well was in that palpable sense of danger for J. He’s just a kid and doesn’t really know what he’s gotten himself into — or even when he does he really doesn’t have anywhere else to go. But the TV version replaces that danger with a lot of flashy toys for the Cody family and minor heists as the uncles try to keep themselves in the lifestyle they’ve become accustomed to.

I think when the TV version of Animal Kingdom succeeded was when it went dark. I especially liked Shawn Hatosy who played the unhinged just out of jail and very dangerous uncle “Pope” very well. He’s the kind of character you wouldn’t want to be around but you’d be afraid to leave his side lest he get it into his head that you have something against him and come after you one night when you least expect it. And he does something so unexpected in the second to last episode of the first season it made me shutter.

Animal Kingdom has already been renewed for a second season on TNT set to debut sometime in 2017. Depending on what else is on at the time it premiers I may, or may not watch the second season of the show. It’s not bad but it’s not something people are going to be talking about for years to come either.

Luke Cage promo

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hfJvnb4H3TE

Movies

Rogue One: A Star Wars Story Trailer

“The world is coming undone — Imperial flags reign across the galaxy.”

Arrival trailer

Books

Out this Tuesday is the final book to list all of the Topps Star Wars trading cards from the 1970s and 1980s; Star Wars: Return of the Jedi: The Original Topps Trading Card Series, Volume Three. You may have to be a die hard fan of Star Wars, the original trilogy and of trading cards to want this book, but luckily I am. 😉

The Reading & Watch List

This week in pop-culture history

  • 1954: James Cameron, writer/director of Terminator, Aliens and Avatar is born
  • 1986: The Fly opens in theaters
  • 1987: The Monster Squad premiers

Direct Beams Comms #35

Movies

Transformers: The Movie

TransformersIn 1986 Transformers: The Movie made something like $5.8 million at the box office, and about $3 of that came from me.

Honestly, I have no idea how or why I decided to go see Transformers: The Movie at the theater. Back in 1986 I was into Transformers but I was just at the age where I was starting to cycle out of toys and TV cartoons for other things. I suspect that my friend Jon, who saw it with me, was the driving influence on us going since my family didn’t see a lot of movies in the theater and it wasn’t like I had a lot of money of my own to spend seeing films.

Transformers: The Movie is an odd film. It’s based on the 1980s cartoon series of the same name where no character ever died and things always stayed the same between episodes even though there were lots of battles between the good Autobots and bad Decepticons. But in Transformers: The Movie movie LOTS of characters died, even arguably the most famous characters of all Optimus Prime.

Or at least that’s what I’ve been told. Just before Optimus’ big death scene there’s a huge battle and I had to go to the bathroom. And I held it until the fighting had ended and the Autobots went to attend to a wounded Optimus. Since it was a weekday afternoon we had the place to ourselves and then I ran out of the theater to the bathroom, went as fast as I could then ran back to my seat and back to the movie. Jon leaned over and said, “You totally missed it, Optimus just died!” While I believed him, I really didn’t. Surly they wouldn’t kill off the most popular Transformer character of all time?!

Looking back now I can see what happened. In 1986 the toy series had been around for a few years and Hasbro was looking for a way to add some new Transformers characters to the line. So some characters had to die in the movie to make room for new ones on toy shelves.

Transformers the Movie
Transformers the Movie

What’s interesting, though, is that while there were big changes in the movie and new characters were added, I don’t remember that the cartoon series changed all that much the next fall. What ended the spring of 1986 continued that autumn and ignored the movie entirely. Though when I was reading up on the movie I did forget that it takes place in the far off futuristic distant year of 2005, so maybe that explains the story discrepancies?

While I do have fond memories of Transformers: The Movie those memories are mostly around seeing the film in the theater rather than the actual content of Transformers: The Movie itself. I still enjoy seeing clips from the movie, think the soundtrack is excellent throwback brilliance and love the poster, but I can’t remember the last time I actually sat down to watch Transformers: The Movie?

Of course nowadays if you say, “Transformers: The Movie” to almost anyone they’d assume you’re talking about the line of dreadful Michael Bay produced films that began back in 2007 with yet another one due in 2017. If the 1986 movie is bad, it’s bad because it’s too earnest in a 1980s kind’a way. If the recent film series is bad, and trust me, they are, it’s because it’s a movie series about talking robots that transform into things like cars and jets that takes itself waaaaaaay to seriously.

Which means that since there’s a slew of new, abet crappy live-action films out there now there’s less opportunity for Transformers: The Movie to air anywhere on TV. Why would kids today want to watch a crummy cartoon when they can watch a stupid live action cartoon instead?

In closing, Transformers = sort’a cool, Michael Bay = uncool. 😉

Dunkirk teaser trailer

Books

Out this week is the book Aliens: The Set Photography that looks to be 144 pages of behind the scenes pics from this movie classic.

The Reading & Watch List

This week in pop-culture history

  • 1960: David Duchovny, Fox Mulder of The X-Files is born
  • 1968: Gillian Anderson, Dana Scully of The X-Files is born
  • 1986: The Transformers: The Movie opens in theaters
  • 1989: The Abyss opens in theaters

Direct Beam Comms #34

TV

Stranger Things

29fd7ba0-2b41-0134-0ca5-0a0b9a139ea7It’s hard to see Private Joker from Full Metal Jacket aka Matthew Modine as the lead bad guy on Stranger Things! 😉

First World Problems

I always think of this time of year as the sort of doldrums of movies and TV and this summer’s no different. This year there’s a lot of interesting TV series on like The Night Of, Stranger Things and The Tunnel, and there are a few summer movies left that look worthwhile like Suicide Squad, but for the most part the summer TV/movie season has now reached its apex. Soon, summer TV finales will head into fall TV premiers that are set to begin in a few months and the same for films where movies switch from action to films geared towards the awards season start premiering. In fact, I believe the only TV series left to premiere this summer that I’m interested in, and I’d categorize it as barely being a summer premiere, is Halt and Catch Fire that starts at the end of August.

What I want to do in these Direct Beam Comms updates is, among other things, just review the first episode of a given TV series each season and then the season as a whole after the last episode airs. But since most of what I’m watching right now is in the middle of their runs, and since I really want to avoid talking about each and every episode of TV I watch since a) this isn’t my paying job and b), that stuff’s boring, I don’t have much to write about TV now either.

What sucks too is that movie releases on home media are no better. Right now the movies that are being released are ones that debuted just before the summer movie season which is another doldrum. Or, they’re movies that were released at the start of the summer season but didn’t do as well as expected, which area also movies I’m happy waiting to see when they pop up on cable in a year or so.

Some movies I would like to checkout once they’re out are things like The Nice Guys and X-Men: Apocalypse but those aren’t available for a few weeks. I suppose what I should do in situations where I don’t have anything to talk about is to just rent a recent release on iTunes and then talk about that, even if it’s not something I’d generally see. The only problem with that is that I really don’t enjoy posting negative things about movies and TV series I review, though I sometimes do, so I try and avoid that. And if it’s something that I wouldn’t generally see it makes it more likely than not that I wouldn’t enjoy the movie and would have to write a negative review.

I do find it amazing that almost every week this summer I’ve been able to review new TV series all debuting throughout the summer. When, even just a few years ago, summer was a dumping ground for reality TV or, even farther back, strictly a place for TV reruns. And most of what debuted this summer was good with a few outstanding shows like Stranger Things and The Night Of too.

The Reading/Watching List

On the Horizon

I have longer articles planned out all the way until next February. In the near-term, I’ve got columns written, or at least first drafts of, Suicide Squad, Star Trek’s 50th anniversary, new and returning TV series this fall, one about sci-fi and one about my experiences going to the drive-in as a teenager. I also have articles planned out for the movie What We Do in the Shadows for Halloween, Doctor Strange and The Man in the High Castle too.

This week in pop-culture history

  • 1987: The Lost Boys premiers in theaters
  • 1988: The Blob opens
  • 1991: Terminator 2: Judgement Day premiers in theaters
  • 2002: Signs debuts in theaters