Category Archives: Movies/TV

‘Mockingjay’ is No Mockery: My Review of ‘Mockingjay, Part 2’

The poster for the film, which was released November 20, 2015.

After nearly four years and as many films, the Hunger Games “trilogy” has come to an end. So huge was the climax that, as is tradition with young adult book series adaptations (see Twilight Saga and Harry Potter), it took not one but two films to contain it. After leaving filmgoers starving for more (see what I did there?) last year, were the odds ever in the favor of Part 2?

With the war escalating, Katniss Everdeen (Jennifer Lawrence) leads a Section 13 strike team into the Capital, intent on assassinating President Snow (Donald Sutherland), all the while everything she holds dear—including Peeta (Josh Hutcherson)—hangs in the balance.

 

(SPOILER WARNING!)


 

First, let me apologize, Giga readers, for not publishing this review sooner. Normally I’d see a film like this during opening weekend, but I waited so I could see it with my little sister when she came home for the holidays. She loves the films, and I wanted to experience it with her.

Second, I think I should give brief thoughts on the films and books before I continue, especially since this is the second half of a what’s essentially one long movie. I didn’t see the first film until I’d read the book by Suzanne Collins, for which I was glad. I honestly think the books shouldn’t be considered “young adult.” In my opinion, they’re excellent dystopian science fiction that just happens to have a teenage girl as the protagonist.

The result that was seen on pests was also seen in both order levitra online men and women. The pdxcommercial.com viagra online prescription additional indication observed is exhaustion. After that a prescription is generated and the medication is delivered as per the instructions of the health professional & the duration must be continued pdxcommercial.com viagra delivery as per the responses of the male patient. * The patients must curb with the intake of alcohol & smoking habits after being suggested with such medicinal treatments since it would not produce proper results. The 2nd medication to be released on the industry was online generic cialis . levitra a slight chemical compound distinction that has been identified to be a lot more powerful in comparison to levitra uk. That being said, I was actually slightly disappointed with the first film. It is certainly well-acted and well-directed, but I felt that certain elements lack punch compared to the novel because of the greater amount of world-building that was done in the latter. The ending (where Katniss and Peeta eat poison berries) in particular is far less dramatic than it is in the novel. However, it hits the right tone and definitely replicates the spirit of the book. I was happy to see the subsequent films improve on the first, cutting less from the source material with each entry. My only major complaint, however, is that there is far less foreshadowing for the revelation that Section 13 existed than in the novels, so when Mockingjay Part 1 starts at that fabled location, it seems to come out of nowhere. Regardless, Part 1 is easily the best film of the series at the time, ending on the perfect cliffhanger with a tortured and brainwashed Peeta almost murdering Katniss.

While Part 2 has more action sequences and set pieces than Part 1, it’s still not a glorification of violence or war. Some complained this made both halves slow and plodding. I, for one, was never bored. I knew that this was a film that wanted to ponder ideas and show the ravages of war. Ask any veteran and he’ll tell you, “War is Hell.” Collins pulled no punches with her characters, and neither does the film. Every character is either broken or killed. The novel, in most respects, has a very un-Hollywood ending. There are few, if any, happy moments until that ending, and even then they are realistically tainted by tragedy. Mind you, that brokenness is a bit stronger in the novel, but it still comes through loud and clear in the film.

Yet despite showing the horrors of war, the film, like the novel, isn’t strictly antiwar. War is ugly, but it is often necessary. Those who wish to wage it, especially if for a just cause, must be willing to pay the price. This is a difficult balance to strike. In a time when war-weariness seems to be on the rise, this film dares to say there is a time and a place for a “just war.” Yet it never glorifies it. In fact, Section 13 President Coin (Julianne Moore) uses tactics that are arguably as despicable, if not more so, than that of the cruel Snow. I applaud the filmmakers for unflinchingly exploring this idea.

Media has always been a huge theme in this series. The focus has shifted from being a criticism of reality television as the brutal opiate of the masses, to its use as a propaganda tool in wartime. Both Section 13 and the Capital use state-controlled media to perpetuate a mixture of truth and falsehood, though proportions obviously differ. This is timely in an age when information is rampantly available, yet most sources are biased. Deciphering the truth in the cacophony is an almost impossible task. This is seen most strongly toward the end of the film when Snow tells Katniss it was Coin, not him, who ordered the bomb drop that killed her sister and hundreds of Capital children. She refused to believe him, a man who had lied to the masses, but he reminds her that they’d promised never to lie to each other. This forces Katniss to see Coin in a different light—and in the end, assassinate her instead of Snow.

Mockingjay Part 2 is no lightweight in terms of acting. While every actor gives a good performance, it’s Jennifer Lawrence who, unsurprisingly, steals the show. Katniss is a complicated character: a young woman of intermingled strength and weakness. Lawrence is at her best near the film’s end when Katniss has returned to her ruined home in Section 12 and finds her sister’s beloved cat, who had always hated her. She tells it Prim is gone, but when the cat ignores her, she has a breakdown. She yells at the cat, throwing dishes that narrowly miss it, until finally embracing the feline, which no longer hisses at her. Lawrence proves once again why she won an Oscar.

Becoming more common in many films these days, the special effects are a mix of practical and CGI, though it seems to favor the former. Even when Katniss and her troupe are accosted zombie-like Mutts, the creatures are CGI only when necessary, which adds to the horror. Most things feel “real” and “present,” even when it’s a CGI hovercraft flying overhead. The special effects are used not as a spectacle unto itself, but as a means of telling the story. That’s an uncommon thing in modern cinema.

Mockingjay Part 2 closes out a thought-provoking yet exciting series of films in the most appropriate way possible: with a faithful adaptation of the final novel that gives the story time to breathe while pondering its big ideas.

Final Grade: A

Going Into The Badlands: Episode 2 Reviewed

So another week has passed, and here we are, at the second episode of Into the Badlands. While the first episode didn’t exactly impress me, I was looking forward to this week’s installment. After the satisfying town fight scene in “The Fort,” I was confident in getting more good and corny action. However, I was less confident in getting a solid story and actors who haven’t recently undergone lobotomies. Despite my reservations, I still went into this with a hopeful mindset, so now I can talk about how “Fist Like a Bullet” didn’t raise my hopes much.

Action is this show’s forte, and episode two at the very least gave me more reason to say that. The first fight scene involves The Widow (Emily Beecham) fending off several minions in what I can only assume is a strip club. The Widow has an agile ninja fighting style, so much of the fight focuses on her dodging her brutish opponents and using her environment as a weapon. She jumps on top of the bar and kicks bottles at her enemies, and she swings around a stripper pole, kicking everyone around her. It all flows naturally, even giving it a unique pole dancing feel to it.

The focus on fast moving and small strikes gives The Widow a unique fighting style to Sunny.

The scene does lack the interesting cinematography shown in the town fight from episode one, but that’s saved by The Widow’s flips and her marksmanship with her throwing knives. The fight also maintains a tongue-in-cheek tone, which saves it from the return of the hilariously bad blood effects. All of the problems from the first episode’s attempt at gore are preserved here. At one point, The Widow repeatedly slices a guy up, and with each swipe of her blade, the same paint looking blood from last episode splatters. All of it looks goofy, but since the fight itself features a dress-wearing ninja pole dancing her enemies to death in a strip club, goofy isn’t out of place.

Sunny, once again, gets the spotlight in the second action sequence, and it’s very reminiscent of the first one from “The Fort.” It’s Sunny against a bunch of outclassed thugs, but now in a warehouse, which isn’t winning any awards for set design, but it’s better than generic woods. The fight is oddly serious save for one visual gag. The tone was especially hard for me to take, because the gang leader reminded me of Paul Giamatti.

Sunny deflecting the Paul Giamatti look-alike's axe back at one of his men was good for a chuckle.
Sunny deflecting the Paul Giamatti look-alike’s axe back at one of his men was good for a chuckle.

The theme of the fight is a race against time to save Ryder. After he is hung by the neck from the warehouse ceiling, he slowly begins to suffocate, and Sunny must clear the room full of baddies to get to him. This setup doesn’t really add much to the fight though, as Sunny still takes his sweet time fighting and making sure he looks cool while doing it. When the scene first starts, Ryder takes out a weapon as well, which got my hopes up that I’d get to see a team up between him and Sunny, but he’s strung up immediately after the fight begins. The choreography has gone up considerably for Sunny. Despite still being mostly Sunny walking all over everyone, choreography still manages to be entertaining. There’s a few interesting set pieces present here as well, including a fight on a series of steel girders and Sunny cornering himself in a small tunnel. Again, the gore effects are present, and are still bad, especially the scene where Sunny chops a guy’s arm off, and we get to see the stump. The more serious tone here does clash with the effects more than The Widow’s scene, but it’s still not a deal breaker.

I guess Sunny’s enemies were gelatin monsters.

Outside of the fighting, this episode did much better at keeping my attention than the last one. The plot was mostly more well paced, and I never felt the story was rushing as much as in “The Fort”. However, the characters must see something in M.K.’s “amazing” ability to emote that I simply don’t. Once again, M.K. manages to convince someone he’s just met, who’s supposed to be trained from childhood to be loyal to their baron, to directly risk their stations and/or life to help him. In this case, it was Tilda, played by Ally Ioannides, who falls to M.K.’s alleged charm. Within the first few seconds of the two making eye contact, it was obnoxiously obvious that the two would develop a thing for each other, although “develop” is a poor choice of words here. The overall M.K./Tilda plot line is a revisiting of sorts of the Sunny/M.K. plot of the first episode. The two meet, one is an outsider, the other is a baron’s loyal assassin, and the assassin brings M.K. back to their respective baron to be brought into their ranks. Then it ends with said assassin letting M.K. escape against their baron’s ultimate wishes due to a poorly developed relationship. So basically, if Sunny had made out with M.K. in “The Fort”, half of this episode would be the same.

Truly the face of an angel.
Truly the face of an angel.

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The B story of the episode follows Sunny’s further disillusionment with Quinn. As Quinn faces the realization that a tumor will soon claim his life, he becomes paranoid to the point of asking Sunny to kill the doctor who diagnosed him and his wife, as they are the only two who know of his impending death. Sunny refuses, forcing Quinn to commit the atrocity himself leaving Sunny to watch helplessly. This causes Sunny to commit himself fully to escaping The Badlands with Veil, who’s parents happened to be the two people Quinn killed.

Having the doctor and his wife have their blood link together was a bit trite, but it's nice to see some effort put into the cinematography that's not fighting.
Having the doctor and his wife have their blood link together was a bit trite, but it’s nice to see some effort put into the cinematography that’s not fighting.

This does unfortunately lead to the worst scene in the episode, where Sunny asks his friend Waldo about escaping. Waldo proceeds to spout nonsensical, philosophical mumbo jumbo that tries to explain that because living beings tend to desire to have a home to sleep in, they don’t actually enjoy freedom. The plot line itself continues many of the problems I had with Sunny’s relationship with Quinn in the first episode, but amplifies them. There’s a conversation between the two where Quinn tells Sunny about how the first time he felt alive was when he snapped someone’s neck, and Sunny looks surprised and horrified at this revelation. Last episode, Sunny had a conversation with the tattooist who marks each of Sunny’s kills on his back about becoming desensitized to murder, so why is Sunny now so affected by Quinn’s tale? Sunny’s lived with this man for almost his entire life, it’s not like Quinn is secretive about how callous he is towards human life, so why is Sunny being surprised by Quinn being Quinn as usual? The entire point of Quinn even mentioning the event is basically only to give Sunny more reason to hate him and hasten Sunny’s arc. The show’s difficulties in balancing it’s characters with it’s action makes it questionable that this episode introduced even more major characters.

The Widow was a fairly interesting character, part political schemer and part ninja. Her motivations are simple enough, kill Baron Quinn, but she also has interest in M.K.’s hidden power, and seems to be a bit more kind than Baron Quinn. She’s protective of her daughter, uses negotiation instead of brute force to expand her influence, and is capable of acting on a much more intimate level than Quinn. She also benefits from being played by probably the best actor in the show so far. While still not great, Emily Beecham provides far more genuine emotion than pretty much anyone else in the show. After finishing her fight in the strip club, she interrogates one of her assailants, and she is noticeably flustered. It shows us that she’s able to let her emotions come to the surface in high stress situations, even though she normally keeps a collected demeanor. Most of the episode is spent watching her engaged in negotiations, so we don’t get to see much more than her poker face, but there’s nothing seriously wrong with how Emily portrays the character.

She's also great at making minors uncomfortable by giving them baths.
She’s also great at making minors uncomfortable by giving them baths.

Ally Ioannides is less than stellar as Tilda. She is, like Sunny, supposed to be a trained assassin, however she comes off as a hormone stricken teen whenever she’s talking to M.K. The material Ally is given doesn’t really help her in that image, as most of her dialogue is meant to establish a forced relationship between the two, and it’s hard to make an endearing relationship happen with another lifeless character. She gets a few chances to show her moves as a fighter, but in each, she never looks or sounds like a fighter. Though doubtful, I hope to see the M.K. and Tilda relationship put to the side, or at least not be romantic, so that Tilda can develop more on her own.

This about sums up Tilda in this episode.
This about sums up Tilda in this episode.

Despite largely taking place in a new domain, much of this episode still carries the southern plantation aesthetic. The Widow’s HQ looks similar to Quinn’s, even though The Widow herself doesn’t fit the look. Her minions wear eastern style uniforms, but this simply clashes with the environments we see them in. If The Widow fancies eastern attire, it would make sense for her to also make her living space resemble that interest. The strip club from the beginning of the episode was a good change of pace, if only for the dancer with the saw. As the series continues, and more of the world is shown, I hope to see more variety in the sets.

...Or we can just get more of whatever the hell this is.
…Or we can just get more of whatever the hell this is.

“Fist Like a Bullet” is an improvement over “The Fort”. It has better action, more compelling plot, and has a focus on The Widow, the most interesting character so far, but it also does nothing to solve the last episode’s problems. Sunny’s relationship with Quinn still makes little sense and M.K.’s clear James Bond-esque mystique still eludes me while he uses it to charm everyone around him. Into the Badlands still has a long way to go if it wants to achieve more than just decent TV.

Madam Secretary: Season 2 Episode 8 Recap

Last week’s Madam Secretary may not have had a lot of action, but it certainly made up for it with plenty of intrigue. In a rare instance of camaraderie, Russell and Bess work together to bring down their newly mutual enemy Craig Sterling.

The whole plan swings into motion when Russell receives an email from Admiral Ellen Hill announcing her retirement. Obviously the President will have to find a replacement, and Russell knows if Craig vouches for a shady candidate it would lead to his demise. But before Russell can really get this plot in action, he, Bess, and other relevant staff are summoned to the situation room. The tech guy (who I finally learned is named Oliver Shaw) informs the President and company that he’s located Dash, AKA the man they all suspect Russia hired to hack Air Force One, hiding in Cambodia. Craig urges the President to send in the Navy Seals, but Bess argues that the U.S. should take a more diplomatic approach by sending in a CIA team. Russell “agrees” with Craig’s idea, but Oliver backs Bess so the President ultimately chooses to send in select CIA operatives to get Dash.

After the meeting, Russell summons Craig to his office and offers his sympathies for Bess once again gaining the President’s favor. He assures Craig that he doesn’t like her either, and that they should team up to take her down. Even though Craig doesn’t completely trust Russell, he agrees to think about vouching for General Reeves as a replacement for Admiral Ellen Hill’s position at the Pentagon. Immediately after this meeting, Russell congregates with Bess and her associate Mike B. They realize that the only way to get rid of Craig is by forcing him into his resignation somehow. They can’t expose his attempt at foiling the Cuban Embassy reopening because it will reflect poorly on the President and his entire administration.

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Later, Mike B. meets with a journalist who owes him a favor, and asks her to give Craig a little call. When she does, she claims that she has sources saying General Reeves bribed Craig to vouch for him. When he insists it isn’t true, the journalist asks for proof but Craig can’t provide it. At the time this bribe allegedly took place, Craig has it written in his calendar that he met with the senator who caused the whole Cuban debacle. Obviously he can’t show that as his proof, so he destroys the planner. Somehow Russell and Bess discover the shredded planner, and finally have grounds to ask for his resignation. By destroying his planner, Craig has broken a law which requires federal employees to keep all records of presidential meetings.

And finally the government is able to find proof on Dash’s laptop that Russia did indeed hire him to attack Air Force One, so Bess agrees to allow the United States to retaliate. The President chooses to go with the ultimate retaliation by cutting off all power to Moscow, so I’m sure we can expect even more drama from Russia this week.

Going Into the Badlands: Episode 1 Review

Despite it’s attempts to advertise otherwise, Into the Badlands is not just weekly, hour-long kung fu sessions. It has a story, but I think I know why AMC attempted to hide that. The story is nothing spectacular as of yet: it’s a fairly standard post-apocalyptic fare, several feudal warlords, a morally ambiguous main character who’s become desensitized to killing, bandits and a kid sidekick. Nothing you wouldn’t find in Mad Max, Fist of the North Star or the like. The producers perhaps attempted to hide this by making the story dash off like an Olympic sprinter. A lot happens in this first episode which, considering Into the Badlands has only six episodes planned, is not a bad thing in itself; however, when it skimps over most of what provides context and development to character relationships and plot, it creates problems.

[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wNIOtYvIaTI]

Great fight scenes are hard to do consistently on live action television. The most obvious reason is money; it’s just not reasonable to expect a weekly, serialized show to compete with what Hollywood takes several years to accomplish. Another good reason is just how much of it you’d have to produce, with the expectation from the audience of maintaining its quality from week to week. A movie has a certain amount of action scenes and can put as much time as it wants into each one as a result. Regardless of the inherent difficulties it faces, Into the Badlands promises to deliver on it’s kung fu-ery and has focused almost all of it’s pre-release advertisement on it’s action sequences. Now the series premiere , “The Fort,” is here and it’s time to put its lack of money where its mouth is.

It’s not long before the show gives us what we came for. The main character, Sunny (Daniel Wu), gets into a big fight with a bunch of bad dudes over a chest on which their leader is sitting. Unfortunately, the fight is less “cool” and more of a terrible version of a “Jackie Chan” movie. Now, I love a good Jackie Chan comedy fight scene as much as the next guy, but the sequence here lacks the energy Jackie Chan movies have. The entire fight takes place in an open woodland area with only a few trees and as such, it relies completely on the choreography in the actual fighting to be fun. However, the choreography is about as reliable as a pain killer addict locked in a pharmacy.

Sunny is the only character of the scene who doesn’t just throw himself around, so he’s basically pulling all the weight for the duration of the fight. There’s no sense of tension because Sunny clearly outclasses his opponents. As a result, the scene meanders between a few cool moves on Sunny’s part (flipping the bandit leader into the spike in the fire pit was a definite plus), until it just ends and goes straight to a highly stylized opening theme segment—wish the previous scene looked like this. The fight is made outright silly by laughable special effects, like the blood spray when one of the bandits is impaled with his own spear. Silly is okay, but this scene is taken too seriously for the inherent comedy that comes out.

Seeing Sunny literally plant a guy’s face in the ground was pretty cool though.

My low expectations for the following action after the first fight scene were raised quite a bit. Almost all the problems from the first fight scene were not present here; the flat woods is replaced by a New Orleans style town. This allows for more interesting camera work and more stuff for Sunny to jump off of as he fights bowler-hat-wearing assassins. Said assassins actually fight back and the sight of them and Sunny, the Chinese Neo, bouncing off cars, through buildings, and in shadow, all on a rainy night proves to be a very exhilarating experience.

Into the Badlands Episode 1 Screenshot 2015-11-18 20-37-56

The scene never holds on one thing for too long. Sunny and an assassin crash through a window, fight while the camera captures only their silhouettes clashing, and then in the next moment they seamlessly break out another window and continue the fight outside. This sense of flow prevents the battle from becoming stale. While the silliness from the first scene is still intact—hence the bowler-hat swordsmen—it works much better here with the new location. The bad special effects aren’t as apparent either, due to the night and the rain. Blood is still here, but with no ketchup-pack-splatter effects that look like they were edited in, over the actual characters.

The fight gives us many interesting perspective shots that flow smoothly with the action on screen.
The fight gives us many interesting perspective shots that flow smoothly with the action on screen.

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One of the biggest issues with “The Fort” is the relationship between Sunny and M. K. ( Aramis Knight), a child Sunny brings back to Baron Quinn (Marton Csokas). Sunny is built up as having gone through an intense brainwashing, and is being molded into a killing machine that is blindly loyal to Quinn. Within a few days, however, Sunny goes against the baron and sets M.K. free. Very little time is spent showing the two becoming acquainted, so it makes very little sense when Sunny chooses to sympathize with this one random kid over the dozens of other ones, who have been brainwashed also. This inconsistency also undermines Baron Quinn as a villain, showing that apparently he can’t even command obedience from his most valuable, brainwashed minion. That being said, the episode does discuss Baron Quinn’s diminishing influence among the other barons, and his son comments that Quinn is getting soft. Perhaps the depiction of Quinn as some sort of failing war lord is intentional.

Most of the characters fall flat due to relatively lifeless acting. Daniel Wu seems confused as to what emotion he’s supposed to be showing in most of his scenes. Oliver Stark portrays Ryder (Quinn’s son), while also doing his best Robert Pattinson impersonation. Aramis Knight, playing M.K., is just kinda there. Marton Csokas easily has the most presence in the show as Baron Quinn, but even he doesn’t go nearly outrageous enough with his plantation owner accent. I think a fair comparison can be drawn between Kill Bill and Into the Badlands as they both go for a tongue-in-cheek style kung-fu tone, with a large focus on extended action-set pieces. Kill Bill ends up doing the job right by having a cast of zany characters, with actors who can actually bring that zaniness out.

Woman and man sitting together
Sunny’s girlfriend is no better. Thankfully, this was limited to one short scene.

Now, some people may claim that it’s unfair to expect Hollywood level acting ability from a syndicated television show, but then those same people need to remember other AMC shows: The Bryan Cranston Variety Hour, also know as Breaking Bad. If nothing else, Breaking Bad set the bar for the level of acting we can expect from our television, and it’s a lot higher than what’s on display here. Sorry Into the Badlands, maybe if you had been released a few years earlier this could be forgiven, but you came out in a post-Cranston zeitgeist, so aim higher.

“The Fort” was not devoid of quality, outside the second fight. I genuinely like the setting, mixing a deep south aesthetic with a post-apocalyptic one is a unique idea. I hope to see more environments such as the town where Sunny meets The Widow, one of the other barons.

Baron Quinn's domain does a great job of melding deep south and kung-fu aesthetics
Baron Quinn’s domain does a great job of melding deep south and kung-fu aesthetics

It also did a good job of setting up the rules of the universe and how the characters factor into it. Hidden behind the wooden acting are some fairly interesting characters as well. I was glad to see that Ryder wasn’t just the typical evil heir to his father’s throne, who would throw anyone under the bus if it meant taking power sooner. Ryder seems to legitimately care about his father’s well-being, proven by his conversation with Sunny after Quinn takes Sunny’s advice against making a move against the other barons. He doesn’t talk with disdain towards either Sunny or Quinn. Ryder simply wants Sunny to recognize that Quinn’s diminishing influence among the other barons makes him overly susceptible to suggestion from his trusted assassin.

The first episode of Into the Badlands was decent. It has a metric ton of glaring flaws, but its good parts keep it from becoming too boring. I’m worried about the acting becoming a consistent problem for the rest of the show. I don’t see how it will get resolved unless everyone just decides to start being a good actor—or everyone is replaced by Bryan Cranston. The second action scene proves Alfred Gough and Miles Millar know how to direct a competent fight scene, so at the very least, I have confidence that Into the Badlands will continue to deliver on only thing it promises.

Feeling Groovy Baby?

 

Let me just start by saying I’m a little excited, you know why? Ash vs. The Evil Dead started Halloween weekend and it’s nothing short of fantastic, nostalgic, and had me absolutely enthralled. I don’t usually laugh or cry at what I watch, but I absolutely busted out at this series. Let me teach you a few things today; some groovy things.

Army-of-Darkness-Bruce-Campbell

In case you didn’t know about the evil dead (not the female-ash version) then shame on you! Get out there and watch The Evil Dead trilogy; there is a lot of Bruce Campbell’s glory there that you are missing. Anyway, here is a quick run-down of the story. A man and his friends spend the night in a cabin; they also find a strange book that happens to be bound in human skin and written in blood. This is the Necronomicon, which summons the evil dead, thanks to Ash and his friends. Ash gets tossed into the thick of it, cuts off his own hand, replaces it with a chainsaw, gets tossed into the past and sleeps until he’s back in his own time (or to some he “overslept” and went into a terrible desolate future). It’s simple to say it’s a crazy trip, and that Ash is an absolute idiot, this series is super corny, but badass none the less.

download (2)

The series is three episodes in right now and I’m very excited about each of them. The old musician, Joseph LoDuca, is back, Sam Rami is the director again, the deadites are creepy as ever and Ash wants nothing to do with it, at first. He ends up taking up the role of El Jefe (The Boss) and gets two odd allies in Pablo and Kelly (I feel like they are Ash, but split into two people). Ash jacks up the same type of store he did before. At this point he’s even killed his old boss, tossed on the old attire that has the complete chainsaw hand option, and is being his old slick self. The series starts off with Ash talking a lady at the bar into some bathroom fun. This went awkward really fast once a deadite showed its face in the lady . . . just watch it.
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Ash vs Evil Dead

Pablo and Kelly are really getting a lot of my attention in this show too: Kelly, a young able-bodied lady who makes a short show of Ash at work, armed with whatever she can get her hands on; Pablo who apparently came from Honduras “New Jersey,” with some Uncle Abrujo issues, where he learned the stories of El Jefe, armed with his bottle (his hobo knife or busted glass bottle for stabbing). This is such a dysfunctional trio, and it makes you crawl with anticipation to see them all interact. This is the kind of combination that gets me into the story. The stuff that makes me want to move around and not sit still cause it’s too hard not to watch, and too hard to not feel like I am going to miss something spectacular.

Ash-vs-Evil-Dead-Ash-Pablo-and-Kelly

I really enjoy the campy flair of the show so far. It has all the old glory of Evil Dead, and the silly aspects of Bruce Campbell I have come to love over the years. The fight sequences have the over the top slow motion and really strange deadite lines that are dumb, but so creepy. If you are in the mood for some horror with a mix of comedy, then definitely check this out. Be warned, there is a lot of blood, almost Quentin Tarantino-esq.

P.S. Who is this Fisher lady, and why does she only want to shoot Ash? She seems as dense as he is in some ways.