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Archive for the ‘RadNerd’ Category

Published: Thursday, May 13th, 2010

Iron Man 2: He’s Good for Peace Consulting

Yesterday I watched Iron Man 2 with a good friend of mine, and only a day later, after chewing over the film a bit more, we both (separately, mind you) arrived at the same conclusion: The more we thought about it, the less we liked the sequel. For me, if a movie doesn’t sit quite well, and I can’t figure out straight away my impression, then I maybe need to sleep on it or drink some coffee or take a shower and think about it. Other times, the very act of writing helps me figure out what I like and don’t like about a movie or comic or video game, et cetera.

My point is, if you weren’t gushing over Iron Man 2 and you can’t figure out exactly why, maybe a line or two of my review with strike a chord:

Two years ago, Robert Downey Jr. charmed audiences with Tony Stark’s smarmy playboy attitude. Jeez, we’re chumps for assholes, as long as those assholes look good wearing Jaeger-LeCoultre and several flirtatious women. If he hadn’t endured months of terrorist torture, developed a knack for responsibility and peace and other heartwarming attributes, and came within minutes of dying horribly, Stark would have gleefully trampled egos like bubble wrap for the entire movie. Thank God those terrorists nurtured some character in him, right? Screenwriter Justin Theroux mulled over these various elements and decided that the “dying horribly” part was most endearing of all because that’s what he ran with for the popular movie’s sequel. And ran … and ran.

Read the full review now at RadNerd.

Another thing: I was just having a conversation about Mickey Rourke the other day. Supposedly he was damn good looking in his younger days, but drugs, wrestling, plastic surgery, and other fun activities zapped all the physical magnetism right out of him. But hey, everything has a silver lining, right? Now he gets to portray fucked-up Russian villains. And man, does he know his fucked-up Russians.

Rourke and Kim Basinger, who both starred in Nine 1/2 Weeks (1986)

Published: Thursday, March 11th, 2010

Reminiscing with a Couple of Grenades and Majinis: New Resident Evil 5 DLC Reviewed

Want more Resident Evil 5 content? Unless you plan on diving into co-op mode, I couldn’t possibly understand why, but hey, more power to you. Just don’t let the year that flew past us distract you from the game’s original flaws, because they stick to the two DLCs recently released.

Find out what “Lost in Nightmares” and “Desperate Escape” have to offer in this RadNerd review.

Hey, remember the days when Chris Redfield and his sassy BSAA partner, Sheva Alomar, crunched those mean ol’ Majinis side by side? I can still smell the blood rusting on the chainsaws, feel the Reapers using my guts as Play-Doh, and hear Sheva’s incessant nonsense about needing more ammo. Not to mention all the cheesy love and hugs (and, erm, Wesker drama) that hitched a ride with frustrating QTAs hogging the steering wheel. My brain can replay all that action as if it were yesterday … maybe because it practically was yesterday. Okay, a year does not equate to the concept known as “yesterday,” but Resident Evil 5 is managing against any non-masochistic odds to surf its fairly sized, “racist” wave of cheap tricks. I mean, did we all just forget how much the AI’s moronic antics bothered us or how much misery the final boss sequence caused us? Oohh, yes. Now the pain smacks you in the face.

Published: Thursday, February 25th, 2010

Interview: Fraggle Rocking with Comic Writer Heather White

If you’re a Fraggle fan like Heather White, you’ll probably enjoy this interview I conducted with her regarding the upcoming Fraggle Rock comic series from Archaia. It’s full of good stuff, including her all-time favorite Fraggle. Check it out over at RadNerd!

Muppets and rock. Whoever conceived that match (Jim Henson) certainly knocked some socks off, and now Archaia Comics has adopted the one-two Talking Puppets punch.

I sat down with writer Heather White, who enthusiastically answered my pressing questions about translating the musical television show to the page. As we chat about the comic itself, Heather touches upon the Henson Company, gives the book’s other collaborators their dues, and discusses what Fraggle familiars and n00bs alike can generally expect from this all-ages medley. You might find that the switch from show to comic is a little more sensible than you might presume.

Published: Saturday, February 13th, 2010

The 3-Dimensions of Asimov’s Foundation

If you haven’t heard, Asimov fans, there are plans for a 3-D, motion-capture Foundation movie in-the-works. Few details have surfaced as of now, but you can read news of the director, co-producer, and script writer over at RadNerd:

This discussion somehow slipped through my sci-fi clutch, but Roland Emmerich will be directing a three-in-one film adaptation of The Foundation Trilogy, written by science fiction slash professional robot overlord, Isaac Asimov. Under Columbia Pictures’ banner, Michael Wimer (2012 and 10,000 B.C.) joins Emmerich as co-producer.

Good or bad idea? Does Foundation sail for you, or should they be adapting a different Asimov work?

Published: Wednesday, February 3rd, 2010

RadInk: A Wind Named Amnesia/Invader Summer

Dark Horse recently passed along A Wind Named Amnesia/Invader Summer, two excellent novellas rolled into one pretty little book. Vampire Hunter D fans will want to grab this one, as it’s written by the series’ creator. Those unfamiliar with Kikuchi’s work will definitely enjoy the two stories, as well.

Most books and comics never make it out of their papery, multi-colored form or burst out of their speech bubbles, and that’s okay—we nerds like ’em just the way they are. Here at RadNerd, we don’t always need fancy pants movie adaptations endorsed by big budget Hollywood mouths or plastered with Nicholas Cage’s face. A little less Nick is good for everyone. We love movies and TV just as much as the next joe, but sometimes going back to to the roots of what we adore just sounds better. You know … all those crazy words and stuff. Letters are like atoms for the literately-inclined.

Vampire Hunter D writer Hideyuki Kikuchi unleashes a science-fiction double feature with the new A Wind Named Amnesia/Invader Summer book. The merry folks of Dark Horse Comics pack two novellas into one paperback collection featuring the sporadic black and white illustrations of Yoshitaka Amano. You can now swipe the English translation and enjoy a refreshing culture switch.

Read the rest at RadNerd.com.