EYG Comic Cavalcade #51

August 23, 2023

Happy Birthday, Todd!

It is another NEW COMIC BOOK DAY and, with school underway, I have less time to read. I came back from Comic World tonight and, since the Dodgers game was in a rain delay (and eventually postponed) I was able to get some of them read. I hope to get another post later this weekend with the rest of the new books.

Plus, I picked up a series of back issues at Comic World today. Some back issues of The Avengers during Avengers Dissembled, a series called Planetary from Warren Ellis, Bendis’s Secret War, Neil Gaiman’s Black Orchid three issue series, and World War Hulk issues of Incredible Hulk. I hope to get these read over the next week or so as well.

The books I started reading first this week included:

The Schlub#1. Story by Ryan Stegman & Kenny Porter with art by Tyrell Cannon. Freaky Friday meets The Boys. Roger Dalton is a down on his luck loser whose dentistry business is in jeopardy from his own brother. When a super hero named Cirrus crashed into his dentist office during a fight with villainous Wyrm, thing get strange. Roger winds up with a mysterious artifact that flips the consciousness of Roger with Cirrus, giving Roger the power that he had been lacking for so long. This was an interesting start that I am curious about movie forward.

The Immortal Thor #1. “All Weather Turns to Storm.” Written by Al Ewing and drawn by Martín Cóccolo. Alex Ross is the cover artist. A great new arc for the Thunder God as we get Loki, some frost giants, and some amazing creatures from the Utgard dimension. There are some utterly gorgeous images in this book, in particular the art near the last third of the book. The arrival of Toranos are breathtaking. I am more excited about Thor than I have in quite a while.

Amazing Spider-Man #32. Written by Zeb Wells and drawn by Patrick Gleason. Marcio Menyz did the cover art. Kraven the Hunter is back and causing trouble, heading after Norman Osborn. Spider-Man is to the rescue, but things go awry for Spidey. Kraven may have actually %$#%ed up badly.

Unleashed #1. Written by Kyle Starks and drawn by Jesus Hervas. The cover art was done by David Baldeón & Israel Silva. This is a combination of the DC League of Super Pets and Strays. It did feel better written than Strays (the movie) though (maybe Stray Dogs-comic series is a better comparison). Marvel animal characters are teaming up with such animals as Lockjaw, Goose, Lucky the Pizza Dog, Redwing and, apparently, Throg. And another appearance of Kraven the Hunter. The dialogue between the animals threw me a bit, but I think I am going to continue to give this a try. It is silly, but harmless.

Invincible Iron Man #9. “The End of Iron Man.” Written by Gerry Duggan and drawn by Juan Frigeri. Kael Ngu did the cover art. Tony Stark and Emma Frost are at their lowest. Stark has to give up his Iron Man armor and Emma just discovered about the massacre on the night of the Hellfire Gala. With their back against the wall, they take some drastic steps in their battle with Feilong and Orchis. The characterization of Tony Stark in this series has been top notch.

The Oddly Pedestrian Life of Christopher Chaos #3. Written by Tate Brombal and art by Isaac Goodhart. Nick Robles did the cover art. Christopher, Jordi (aka Dracula Boy) and Viv are in trouble and things are only getting worse. They all believe themselves to be monsters and the ghosts chasing them are making matters even more problematic.

Jean Grey #1. “Mind Maze” Written by Louise Simonson and drawn by Bernard Chang. I got a variant cover with Miss Minutes on it. Not sure what happened here. The book started with Jean’s latest death, but then went back to the time when Jean and the other original X-Men came to the present. They went back to their own time, but kept their memories of what happened in the future and suddenly Jean was becoming more drastic in her actions. It felt like a What If issue that is extending on. It was fairly engaging though.

Fantastic Four Annual #1.Contest of Chaos: Part Three” Written by Zac Gorman and featuring art by Alan Robinson. Francesco Manna & Erick Arciniega did the cover art. The back up story with Clea, Spidey and Jessica Jones was written by Stephanie Phillips and drawn by Alberto Foche. The Contest of Chaos continues on, this time with Johnny Storm vs. Johnny Blaze. Human Torch vs. Ghost Rider. I have enjoyed these annuals so far as I am intrigued by what Agatha Harkness is up to.

No/One #5. Written by Kyle Higgins & Brian Buccellato. Art is by Geraldo Borges. The mystery behind No/One continues to enthrall me. In this issue, Aaron Kern, the man convicted for being No/One, recanted his confession and wound up being released. Things are heating up again as we reach the halfway point for this series.

Captain America Finale #1. Written by Jackson Lanzing & Collin Kelly with art by Carmen Carnero. The Outer Circle storyline comes to an end as Steve Rogers and Bucky Barnes bring the manipulators to their Doom (literally).

Tenement #3. Written by Jeff Lemire and drawn by Andrea Sorrentino. They are to Floor Seven. Not sure where Isaac had went, the group continue to explore this spooky building. The comic art is beautiful, but I have been having a tough time following everything so far. I have loved the previous Bone Orchard work so I am ready to continue this.

Rebel Moon Trailer #1

This is a two-part film on Netflix from Zack Snyder.

I was surprised to hear what sounded like Anthony Hopkins’s voice immediately. I did not see him in th etrailer but I am sure that was his voice.

This feels epic, but is it going to be too much. Sometimes Snyder films are more style over substance. This is clearly a lot of world building going on.

Still, it looks to be fascinating at least. There are a lot of scenes that feel like it comes from other sci-fi franchises.

The film stars SOFIA BOUTELLA, CHARLIE HUNNAM, ED SKREIN, CLEOPATRA COLEMA, DJIMON HOUNSOU, ANTHONY HOPKINS, COREY STOLL and JENNA MALONE.

Only Murders in the Building S3 E4

SPOILERS

“The White Room”

Only Murders in the Building returned this past Monday night with the next episode of the third season. Charles, Mabel and Oliver did a little more investigating on the murder of Ben Glenroy this week while Charles’s panic over his patter song from the musical Death Rattle Dazzle sent him into the White Room.

Apparently, the White Room is a panic-induced delusion suffered by stage actors where they do not realize what they are saying or doing. Charles’s trips into the White Room apparently resulted in some vile and shocking behavior during his song performance.

This was not the only thing that happened when he was in the White Room. He also proposed to his girlfriend Joy, who has just recently moved in with Charles- along with her 62 fish. Charles was trying to find a way to get her to move back out when he went into the delusion and ended up popping the question.

Meanwhile, Joy becomes yet another suspect as they found one of her lipsticks in Ben’s dressing room, with a picture of a pig drawn on the mirror in the red lipstick. Mabel discovered that someone was in the dressing room with Ben the night he collapsed and ‘died’ on stage.

We also got the return of Tina Fey as Cinda Canning with an offer to Mabel. It’s always fun to see Tina Fey on this show and I am curious about what she is really trying to do with her offer to Mabel.

Mabel, who was having trouble finding an apartment. She was shown doing a visit to an apartment that was very small (all white too) and you could tell that she simply did not want to move into this after living in the Arconia.

We did not see Meryl Streep this week, but we did hear about Oliver’s stress over trying to come up with the perfect date to break his rule about dating someone from his play. He eventually just texted her the word, ‘dinner?’.

It was good to get more into the mystery and less with the musical.

2023 EYG Hall of Fame Nominees

It is that time of the year again. The poll is active and the ballot is available on the main page.

Vote here: https://embraceyourgeeknesseyg.com/

You may vote as many times as you would like.

You may vote for any nominees that you think deserve to be inducted in the 2023 Class of EYG HoF.

The poll remains open until Talk Like a Pirate Day (psst… that is September 19th, if you are a landlubber who did not know).

Nominees include:

Dungeons & Dragons (1983 animated TV program)

Barbie Doll (the toy)

G.I. Joe (the action figure)

The Armorer (a character from The Mandalorian)

John Wick (movie character)

The Witcher (streaming TV show on Netflix)

Wheel of Time (fantasy book series)

Return of the Jedi (Star Wars movie)

Smokey Bear (character)

time travel (theory)

Coelacanth (an ancient group of lobe-finned fish)

Neil de Grasse Tyson (American Astrophysicist)

Lock Ness Monster (legendary Scottish creature)

Power Rangers (characters/Team)

Frankenstein’s Monster (class monster)

Lebron James (NBA star player)

UFOs (unidentified flying objects)

Jurassic Park (movie featuring dinosaurs)

Marques Brownlee (YouTube creator)

streaming videos (digital online videos)

Kenner Star Wars toys (original Star Wars toys)

electric vehicles (new cars that run on electricity)

Dave Filoni (director, producer, screenwriter, and voice actor. Mind behind Mandalorian)

Medusa Deluxe

What a wild ride.

Medusa Deluxe is a murder mystery set at a British competitive hairdressing contest. One contestant is found dead and scalped. The other contestants, models and lovers interact as the uncertainty of what happened washes over them.

The plot itself is not the most important aspect of this film. The flamboyant atmosphere and over-the-top characters dominate the screen.

The other true star of this film is the director, Thomas Hardiman, who made his directorial feature debut with this A24 film. His film was shot as it was a one-shot throughout. It clearly was not and I enjoyed picking out the hidden cuts, but it is a big swing to attempt to do this as your debut. Plus, it was done so well that if you did not know much about filmmaking, you could believe that they just followed the actors with the camera. It was smooth and beautifully constructed. This was a remarkable debut as a director.

The performances are all excellent. Some of the characters are strange, but every actor does an exceptional job. Standouts included Clare Perkins, who played Cleve, a hairdresser with a serious anger problem, Luke Pasqualino as Angel, the lover of the victim, and Harriet Webb as Kendra, another of the hairdressers.

There are some really strange things happen too as the movie progresses. There is a dance routine at the end of the film that is just amazing.

Now, the murder mystery does fade as the film goes. The story itself is a little weak and does not feel like the most important part of the film. However, the dialogue is spectacular, the characters are eccentric and bizarre, and the film’s technical aspects are just excellent. There are also some impressive stunts and a scene involving fire that is outstanding.

This is an original film with some of the most creative moments in it.

I rented this film on Vudu.

4.35 stars

The Bear S1 E7 & E8

Spoilers

Wow. These two episodes were fire. I have to say, they felt more like a series finale than just a season finale. Most of the main storylines were wrapped up ion the eighth episode.

E7: “Review”

E8: “Braciole”

Episode seven was amazing, but I swear it was over like a snap. I paused writing this to look up the run time for the episode and it was only 20 minutes. So much was packed into that 20 minutes though that it really had a frantic pace, which really emphasized the breakdown that the characters were having in the show. It was set in real time and that added to the nature of the chaos happening in the restaurant.

The end was as anxiety-filled as the entire episode as I couldn’t believe that it was over. I had just mentioned how the crew had been starting to really blend as a team heading into this episode, but that went straight out the window.

“Review” was an outstanding episode and, probably, the best episode of the series so far.

Then, episode eight had some amazing work too. First, we kicked off with one of the best monologues you are going to see on TV from Jeremy Allan White. His seven minute monologue was so powerful and filled with amazing character admissions that had been building all season.

White had another astounding moment when he accidentally set the stove on fire and he was suddenly lost inside his head. You could almost hear his thoughts thinking that this would end the problems of the restaurant.

Richie had wound up in jail waiting to see if he would be charged with manslaughter because he had punched a guy who was tearing up the restaurant and the guy had hit his head. Thankfully, the guy awoke and Richie was not facing a manslaughter charge. You could see how this affected Richie and he made some realizations of his own.

Then Richie gave Carmy the letter he had found a few episodes ago from Michael. Another dramatic moment from White as he finally opened the letter.

It read “I love you dude. Let it rip.” and then on the back was a recipe for the family spaghetti and that which indicates that they should use smaller cans of tomatoes for their taste.

Another thing I had speculated on earlier in these posts was what Michael was doing with all the money that he had been borrowing or taking in. We discovered that answer here as when Carmy had opened up the tomato cans, he found bags of money in it.

Closing down The Beef and announcing the soon-to-be opened The Bear was very satisfying as a closing scene. Episode seven and eight really work well together and highlights the best parts of this series.

Season two is next up, featuring 10 episodes instead of the 8 like season one received.

EYG Comic Cavalcade #50

August 20, 2023

Fifty posts in the EYG Comic Cavalcade! Of course, when I reached fifty posts in the Comic Catch-Up, I rebooted into this current format. I am not going to do that this time. We will continue to push forward with the EYG Comic Cavalcade moving ahead.

It is a good time to reflect on what I have done over the last year or so. I have gotten through a ton of the piles sitting around my house. The books are being bagged, boarded and boxed. I am in the process of reorganizing everything, which is a massive chore.

The comics I read on a weekly basis are really some of the best I have read in my years of collecting comics. I still consider myself a mostly Marvel guy, but the increase in my independent collection cannot be ignored. I would guess that Something is Killing the Children was the initial emphasis of this new push, though one can not deny that Jeff Lemire’s Gideon Falls had a lot to do with it too.

Some of my favorite Marvel books over the last few years are more than just Spider-Man books. It was unexpected, but I loved Hellcat, a few of the variations of Jessica Jones, and Loki. It always seemed that when I really started to enjoy a book, it would end. Now, with the limited series being the norm, it is easier to deal with.

I am still not into DC much, but I will admit that I am enjoying the Knight Terrors event. This week there were only five issues as things are starting to wrap up. My order of favorites this week would be Knight Terrors: Nightwing, Knight Terrors: Superman, Knight Terrors: Wonder Woman, Knight Terrors: Catwoman, and then Knight Terrors: Punchline. Punchline has been one that I have had a hard time getting involved with since I did not know the character prior to the event.

Other books that I completed this week:

Void Rivals #1. Written by Robert Kirkman and featuring art by Lorenzo De Felici. Ryan Barry and Mike Spicer did the cover art. What an unexpected pleasure this was. I had no idea that this book was tied into the Transformers at Image thing that is happening. Yes, the cover looked like a Transformer, but I did not make the connection. This would not be the first character that looked like a Transformer. Not only was this a Transformer, but it was Jetfire. Jetfire was my favorite Transformer character on the 80s cartoon (he was called Skyfire on the show), but his appearance here caught me completely off guard. I was interested by the two characters the book introduced at first, but when Jetfire showed up, the book truly started to pop. Void Rivals made me interested in checking out Transformers #1 from Image, something that I had not been before.

What If…? Dark: Moon Knight #1. Written by Erica Schulz and drawn by Edgar Salazar. The new Dark What If series of books have been interesting and this new issue deals with Moon Knight… at least a little bit of Moon Knight as he does not last long in the story. The whole ending with Marlene becoming a luminary of Ra and being taken over by Ra was weird, but fit well in the nature of the What If series.

Loki #3.The Liar: Chapter Three.” Written by Dan Watters and drawn by German Peralta. Dustin Nguyen was the cover artist. Remember when I mentioned that the limited series allow me to know a story isn’t going to last. This one caught me unexpected when the final page said it would be concluded next issue. Four issues was not what I thought. I did enjoy the reunion with Loki, Wiccan and Hulkling.

Something Epic #4. Written and illustrated by Szymon Kudranski. The latest issue of the book that does more to celebrate creativity and the imagination of comic books than just about any book out there came out this week once again. It is working on creating the mythology of this universe with the existence of ‘epics’ and has placed Dan into almost a video game like situation. Something Epic is continuing to be the most original book I read.

X-Men: Days of Future Past-Doomsday #2. The prequel to the major X-Men story from the 1980s continues here as we get several of the mutants dying and Colossus and Kitty Pryde taking the chance to express their love for one another. The series is dark, but I did appreciate how it took a moment to find the joy inside the grief.

Star Signs #4. Written by Saladin Ahmed and art by Megan Levens. The people with their star sign powers continue to join together, finding where they belong. It was a close call for the group to escape Mister Duke, and things look to be getting worse as we meet Libra.

Ghost Rider #17. “Part 2: Demonology” The team up between Ghost Rider and Wolverine is in full swing as they search for the young boy Bram. We get a flashback to where Logan and Ghost Rider meet for the first time too. The next part of the story takes place in the issues of Wolverine, which I do not get so I am not sure where this will go for me.

Marvel Voices: X-Men #1. This is a compilation of a series of shorts featuring the X-Men characters. I have to say I do not usually read these Voices books too closely, but I did enjoy this one and read it through. Bernard Chang & Marcelo Costa did the cover art.

Iron Man Annual #1. “Contest of Chaos: Part Two.” Written by Jason Loo and drawn by David Cutler. I had a variant cover drawn by Felipe Massatera. As we saw in the Spider-Man annual earlier this month, two heroes wind up fighting with each other and the winner winds up being taken. In this annual, we get Iron Man vs. Storm. There were some snipping going on through the book and it was a pretty solid fight between an X-Man and an Avenger. We also see a final few pages with Spidey and Jessica Jones heading to see Clea to look for answers.

Dark X-Men #1. “There is a Kingdom.” Written by Steve Foxe and featuring art by Jonas Scharf. Madelyne Pryor, the ruler of Limbo, returns to the forefront as she is helping some mutants escape the persecution of Orchis. She is also involved with Alex Summers, aka Havok. A bunch of interesting X-Men characters are in this book and it was a fun read.

Money Shot Comes Again #3. Written by Tim Seeley and drawn by Gisele Lagace. I have to say, this book is weird. I feel a little dirty reading it.

Here is to fifty more posts in the EYG Comic Cavalcade!

Blue Beetle

The latest DC movie dropped this weekend as the superhero known as Blue Beetle made his big screen debut. I do like Jaime Reyes, the most recent version of the character of the Blue Beetle in the DC Comics.

I also liked the new Blue Beetle movie, though I did not love it. It was extremely watchable and worth the time.

This is basically the origin of Jaime Reyes (Xolo Maridueña) and how he came about having the Scarab, a powerful alien artifact that gives Jaime a dangerous weapon and armor. Kord Industries head Victoria Kord (Susan Sarandon) wanted to possess the Scarab as well and she had a plan to use it to create weapons for sale.

Xolo Maridueña was wonderfully cast as Jaime. Maridueña, one of the main stars of Netflix’s series Cobra Kai, has a charismatic presence and carries himself as a star. Some of the over-the-top acting in the third act was not the best from Maridueña, but it did not pull me away from the film.

Jaime’s family was a huge piece of the film, and brought some of the most emotional aspects of the story. Uncle Rudy was played by George Lopez. Rudy was distrustful of the government and was experimenting in his brother’s home. Alberto and Rocio (Damien Alcazar and Elpidia Carrillo), Jaime’s parents, his sister Milagro (Belissa Escobedo), and his grandmother Nana (Adriana Barraza) all lived together.

The idea behind this family is very much Latino and I did not relate as much to them as I might have. Some of the cheesiest aspects of the movie were centered around the family especially including some of the unexpected skills shown by Uncle Rudy and Nana. The movie required the audience to really extend the suspension of disbelief. It is something that you really have to get past in order to enjoy the movie. I was really not a fan of the character of Milagro at first, but I came around to her as the film went on. The family grew on me as the film went on and I was able to get past the strangeness.

The special effects are pretty good and the action was really fun. There were some times when I had a difficult time hearing what Jaime was saying, but that was the only drawback to these scenes.

I mentioned earlier about some emotional scenes and there were some very powerful ones and these very some of the best scenes of the movie. No spoilers to the content of these scnes, but you’ll know them when they come around.

The humor of the film was hit and miss. Again, as with several of the other criticisms I have levied with this movie, the humor was not something that stuck out as a major flaw. The criticisms I have of Blue Beetle were all just things that did not bother me that much.

Blue Beetle was a decent film that introduces us to a new super hero that is charming and fun to watch. It may not be the best comic book film ever, but it is an enjoyable one.

3.6 stars

Strays

Typically, movies that focus on pee, poop, puke and penis jokes are not my favorites. However, when a film has those jokes and it is funny, I can excuse that style of jokes.

Strays is not an example of that. I found little funny about this movie.

Cruel owner Doug (Will Forte) hated the little dog Reggie (Will Farrell) that he got to impress a girl. When the girl was gone, he would try to dump the dog in different locations, but Reggie always found his way back home. When Doug took him to the city and deserted him, Reggie met other stray dogs, Bug (Jamie Foxx), Maggie (Isla Fisher) and Hunter (Randall Park) who befriend Reggie.

There were a couple of potentially funny moments in the film, but all the one that were potentially funny were shown in the trailers. The rest of the film may have had a couple of chuckles, but nothing that were worthy of laughs.

I will also say that the voice acting was spot on for these characters, which one would expect from the talented crew doing this work. I also thought the relationships between the four strays were solid and developed well, providing some good moments of heart to he story.

It was just too crude in many instances and the crude humor was just not funny. Because of that, it felt to be too dull of a story and the unfunny bits were more corny and disappointing than anything else.

It was a short run time, yet I felt like I was ready for it to be done early on. There were some good character moments, but nothing that held any real depth to it. when the crude jokes did not hit, which was most of the time, the film had little else to fall back on.

2 stars

RiffTrax Live: Rad

It has been awhile since I attended a RiffTrax Live show, and tonight, I was able to go to the latest film being riffed by the three gentlemen. That film is the 1986 BMX bike film, Rad.

RiffTrax includes Michael J. Nelson, Kevin Murphy and Bill Corbett who watch the movie with an audience (this time with the actual star of the film, Bill Allen, who played Cru, was in attendance in the audience-no pressure guys) and the three comedians take turns cracking jokes about the film.

The last couple of RiffTrax events were okay, but did not reach the level of some of the classics such as Manos: The Hands of Fate, Birdemic: Shock and Terror or The Room.

Rad, however, was very funny and I found this one to be well worth the time. To be clear, the RiffTrax Live show is never bad. Just some are funnier than others. Rad presented the guys with a plethora of humor.

Plus, Rad had some “big” names in the cast including Rocky’s Talia Shore (which had one of the best riff line of the film: as she looked down on screen, ‘I was in the Godfather.’), Olympic medalist Bart Conner, and Lori Laughlin (who received a ton of riffs with the scandal about paying to get her kids into college).

I will admit that some of their jokes tend toward being out of date, but since their jokes feature allusions that fall right in to my generation, I catch more than I miss.

Fathom Events presented this night once again from a theater in Tennessee. I have always wondered if the show was truly live, but it seems as if everywhere I looked indicated that it was live and streamed across the nation.

They warmed up the audience with two short films, both featuring Gumby and Pokey animated films. Neither of the Gumby shorts were great, but it served its purpose.

I look forward to the next time they get together to riff a film.

EYG Comic Cavalcade #49

August 16, 2023

Things have changed. Yes, the summer is over for me. I went back to start school today at the middle school where I teach. No students yet. We have a week of prep, meetings and organizing to get ready. Because I was back at work, that meant I did not get the chance to go to Comic World and hang out and read a bunch of books today.

I went after school was over, but I was not able to do any reading at the store. When I got home tonight, I did some reading here, but it means that this post is not going to be as long as it has been after NEW COMIC BOOK DAY!

With the schedule busy lately, I will be working on finishing up the rest of the pile of new comics during the weekend. I wanted to get to this EYG Comic Cavalcade tonight anyway.

Starting off, I want to talk about Messenger. This is a graphic novel that I received in the mail from Amazon on Monday of this week. It deals with the life of Muhammad Ali. Written by Marc Bernardin and drawn by Ron Salas, Messenger: The Legend of Muhammad Ali is an interesting book. It is a beautiful black-and-white book that is a fairly quick read.

Marc Bernardin is a personal favorite of mine. He does a podcast with Keven Smith called Fatman Beyond and being able to match the personality of Kevin Smith is a tall order. Marc Bernardin is one of the few who can accomplish it. I wanted to order this book when I heard him promote it on an episode of Fatman Beyond. He said on the podcast, as well as in the forward of the book, that some of what appears in the book was true, but a lot of it is made up, or mushed together. It is told more for the legend of Ali than the entire truth. It’s more of creating a feel of who/what Muhammad Ali was than being tied to a narrative of what actually happened. It picked out some of the biggest moments of Ali’s life and gave us an idea of how it affected The Greatest. If you are an Ali fan, you love this. I have only a passing knowledge of the champ and this was a fun read. Check it out.

Other books I have started off with this week…

Uncanny Avengers #1. “Truth & Justice.” Written by Gerry Duggan and art by Javier Garrón. Captain America has taken a step to try and help out mutantkind once again by re-creating the Unity Squad including Psylocke, Deadpool, Quicksilver, Penance, and Rogue in an attempt to bring the rogue Captain Krakoa to justice.

Antarctica #2. Written by Simon Birks and featuring art from Willi Roberts. Hannah comes face to face with someone who is an exact duplicate of herself. Is she from a different dimension? Not sure, but there are some really weird things going on in the Antarctic.

Groo: In the Wild #2. Written by Sergio Aragonés and Mark Evanier and illustrated by Sergio Aragonés. Groo is still hungry and in search of the meat of the ortix. Sadly, it is extinct, but Groo does not understand that. And his very presence is causing all kind of trouble for King Putrio.

Daredevil #14. “The Red Fist Saga: Conclusion.” Written by Chip Zdarsky and art by Marco Checchetto. Chip Zdarsky’s run on Daredevil comes to a close with this issue. Foggy, North and Elektra have been going on with their lives for the past six months, mourning the death of Matt Murdock. They see him everywhere. When Elektra wound up at a church, she found a certain blind priest there that will be setting up the next arc of the character of Daredevil. Chip Zdarsky has been one of the greatest Daredevil writers of all time and he will be missed on this series.

Spider-Man #11. “Marvel Tales” Written by Dan Slott and art by Luciano Vecchio. Mark Bagley & Edgar Delgado did the art for the cover. Spider-Boy tries to convince Peter that he is Peter’s sidekick. He tries to convince him by telling him about several stories that Spider-Boy claim have already happened, but that Peter has forgotten. It is a strange idea, but it really works well. I have enjoyed the character of Spider-Boy so far.

Something is Killing the Children #32. “Showdown at the Easy Creek Corral, Part Two.” Written by James Tynion IV and drawn by Werther Dell’edera. Erica and Cecilia come face to face and share their mutual dislike for one another. However, there is someone they both hate even more, and that showdown is coming soon.

Alpha Flight #1. “Divided We Stand- Part One“. The Canadian super hero team has returned to dive directly into the whole Orchis-Mutant conflict engulfing the Marvel universe at the moment. One team of Alpha Flight members team up in order to try and capture Northstar and Aurora, as well as capturing any mutants still here. Or is there more to the story?

The Bear S1 E5 & E6

Spoilers

I watched the next two episodes of The Bear from season one tonight on Hulu. This show has been cooking (ooh, bad pun, I know).

Episode 5: “Sheridan”

Episode 6: “Ceres”

I would say that I really enjoyed episode five a lot. This was the first time where I found that the whole group of characters started working as a team without any troublemakers (except Richie, of course). This episode saw just about anything that could go wrong, go wrong from the toilet exploding to loss of electricity and gas lines. Yet the staff pulled it together to still serve the food.

They do a great job of letting us know the stakes involved in the show. You believe that there is no way that they can survive shutting down their restaurant because they just can not afford to lose the money they would have made. I really enjoyed seeing how they were working together to overcome this series of events that were potentially overwhelming.

Sydney brought the fire in both this episode and episode 6. In six, she is able to calm down a possible gang fight outside of the restaurant by arranging to give them some leftover sandwiches. While she was taking care of business, Richie was running around the restaurant looking for his gun.

Richie is showing his own weaknesses in each episode, even though in five he comes through in a sense. When Carmy discovers that Richie has been selling cocaine out the alley behind the restaurant, he is extremely mad, but he needs Richie to sell some one more time to pay for a repair that they had to fix. After this, though, it does feel as if everyone in the restaurant is feeling their place except for Richie.

In episode six, we get a flashback where we see Michael for the first time, played by Jon Bernthal, telling a story to Carmy, Richie and Sugar. Bernthal is an outstanding actor and seeing him as the mysterious older brother makes me very anxious to see what events or emotional situations led to Michael’s suicide. Richie does imply that Michael was the person who told him to sell the cocaine in the first place, as a way of gaining money for the restaurant. This makes me wonder considering how much money Michael had borrowed from Oliver Platt’s character, what was happening with the money.

There are only two more episodes from season one and I expect them to be fire.

Only Murders in the Building S3 E3

Spoilers

“Grab Your Hankies”

The third episode of the third season of Only Murders in the Building dropped last night on Hulu.

I have to say, so far this season is a little slower than previous seasons. The episode focused more on Oliver’s attempt to transform his Broadway play from Death Rattles to a musical called Death Rattle Dazzles. Sure the killer is suspected to be among the cast, but there was not enough detail on the case and too much on the play itself, for my tastes.

Not to say that this was a bad episode. Not at all. In fact, I did enjoy much of what they presented us, thanks mainly to the talents of Steve Martin and Martin Short. There was a lovely song sung by Meryl Streep too. Mabel was able to do some actual investigating making some progress with the documentarian, Tobert.

I just hope that they do not make Meryl Streep the killer in this season. It just seems too played out to have a woman who is involved with one of our two leads be the culprit again.

The show is starting off by hinting toward Kimber (Ashley Park) as the first suspect. She had been emotional about the death and she had lost her hankie that Ben had given to everyone. We know that Ben wound up with a hankie in his hand after falling to his death and that it was not his own, because the stalker had the hankie that belonged to Ben.

Kimber seems to clearly be the red herring at first. I’m more interested in the brother at the moment.

There are ten total episodes of the series this year so we a just about a third of the way through.

The Bear S1 E1-4

I was looking for something to watch this afternoon and I came across a TV series that I have heard all kinds of positive things about. It was on Hulu and it is called The Bear.

I know The Bear is one of the top comedy-dramas on television right now, with a Hulu/FX release and that they have produced two seasons. I also knew that the show was based around food. I thought this was a good show to watch.

It will not be a daily watch like I did for The Twilight Zone this summer. School is starting very soon (this week for teachers) so I cannot commit to the daily view. Still, there were only 8 episodes of season one and ten episodes of season two, so it did not feel too overwhelming.

I watched the first four episodes of season one today. They included:

S1 E1: System

S1 E2: Hands

S1 E3: Brigade

S1 E4: Dogs

I started by trying to learn who the main characters were and the place where the show started us off at. Carmen “Carmy” Berzatto (James Beard Award) returned to Chicago to run his brother Michael’s restaurant, The Original Beef of Chicagoland, after Michael had committed suicide.

Carmy had been working as a chef in one of the most successful restaurants in the world and he came to the Original Beef and started to shake things up, which alienated the staff and Michael’s best friend Richie Jerimovich (Ebon Moss-Bachrach), who had been running the restaurant prior to this. The staff was unhappy to be changing their system that was already in place.

Carmy hired trained chef Sydney Adamu (Ayo Edebiri) to help him organize things, which placed her in an unpleasant situation as well.

There are some definite funny moments in the show, especially when Richie accidentally puts his Xanax into the Ecto punch that they made for this birthday party they were catering.

Richie is very loud and abrasive, but you can see deep down that he is a caring person who loves his family. I still wanted Richie to just shut up after a while though.

The ensemble at the restaurant were a motley crew of characters. My personal favorites were Tina Marrero (Liza Colón-Zayas), who was a line cook that was pretty stubborn and hard-headed about the changes and Sydney, in particular. There was also Marcus Brooks (Lionel Boyce) who spent several parts of these episodes learning how to make donuts and cake.

Oliver Platt appeared in a couple of these first two episodes, who was a friend of Carmy’s late father, and who lent Michael a ton of money for the restaurant.

Some of the characters were difficult to like at first, but it feels like a show where the characters will grow on me, as I like a few more already.

And James Beard Award is excellent as our lead character. He has a ton of early depth and I am anxious to see how he deals with his troubles. At one point, he sleepwalks at his house and starts cooking wrapped up meat on his stove, leading to a fire that could have burned down his place.

I can see why people are saying that The Bear is one of the top shows on TV. I am excited to see where they take it and I expect that some of the issues will come to the forefront as the series progresses.

EYG Comic Cavalcade #48

August 12, 2023

I picked up a trade paperback of the first four issues of Southern Bastards by Jason Aaron and Jason Latour. I had heard plenty about this series and, with my recent entry into the independents, I wanted to check it out. I loved that trade paperback a lot. That sent me to eBay to look for the whole series. They arrived in the mail and I worked through issues #5-20 that remained.

However, when I finished issue #20, it was strange. There was no mention of it being the final issue and there was even a mention of #21. It did not feel like a finale issue as the story was not wrapped up in a truly satisfactory manner. Was this series not done? What was going on? I searched for #21 on eBay and found that it was not there. So I went to Google to search about the series and I discovered the ugly tale.

Apparently, co-creator and artist Jason Latour got himself in trouble with the way he handled himself, specifically with several women accusing him of sexual misconduct and harassment. He seemingly dropped off the map around 2020 and has only recently come back to do some conventions.

There have been hints that maybe the series would come back and I found a comment from Jason Aaron that implied that the fans should not forget about Southern Bastards.

Switching gears from the negativity surrounding the series, the actual story was sensational.

You have some of the most interesting and yet most horrendous characters populating this small county that apparently is run by the local high school football coach, Euless Boss. Coach Boss was a deep character with a horrendous back story which made the readers understand the violent choices that the coach made.

There were shocks throughout. The series introduced a character named Earl Tubb who absolutely felt like the protagonist of the series, only to kill him off in the fourth issue, by being beaten to death by Coach Boss in the street. We see a younger Euless Boss shoot his own father in the head for a local criminal in order to wind up as the coach. There was a black, blind man named Big, who was a sort of savant in football. He helped Euless when he was trying to originally make the football team and stuck beside him as his defensive coordinator until he blew his brains out.

I do not think that you need to be a football fan to enjoy this series. Football is at the center but it is also a deep character piece as well as a serious crime drama.

I do hope that they are able to return some day and put a finishing touch on the series so it does not end up with #20. Issue #20 was a good issue, but it did not serve as a sufficient finale for such a fantastic series.