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Back in My Day…

by Dion on Sep.05, 2010, under TV

Sometimes I have “old fogey” moments. Remember the good ol’ days when people were freaking out over the videoclip for Twisted Sister’s “We’re Not Gonna Take It”? It all seems so innocent when the latest Eminem video features spitting, implied domestic violence and arson.

I also remember watching classic Disney shorts without fearing an impending epileptic seizure. But I guess that’s what was missing from Golden Age animation: a contempt for moderate attention spans.

So while we get beautifully restored versions of Sleeping Beauty and Pinocchio on Blu-ray (geared more towards adult enthusiasts than children), the kids gets hit with this junk:

All we need is for Poochie to start rapping with Goofy about Xtreme skiing and the end-times prophecies will be fulfilled.

BLAM!

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Futurama: The Prisoner of Benda

by Dion on Aug.22, 2010, under TV

OK, I have to gush. The last episode of Futurama was extraordinary, even by the show’s own standards. The sixth season has just gotten better and better recently, and this is the best episode yet.

But what’s so great about it? Ken Keeler, who has a doctorate in mathematics (and is probably the most responsible for the show after Matt Groening and David X. Cohen), wrote and apparently proved a new theorem in group theory in order to solve the main problem posed by the episode’s plot. Yes, I’m serious.

Even better, the proof itself is very clearly (but briefly) shown in the episode itself.

The last time I studied group theory was almost ten years ago, so I need to brush-up on it in order to fully understand the proof, but even if the idea is more-or-less trivial, it’s still incredible to see in an animated comedy show.

This should, at the very least, exonerate Keeler in the minds of many Comic Book Guys, since he also wrote the much loathed episode “The Principal and the Pauper” for The Simpsons… 13 years ago.

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The Nostalgia Files: Dec. ’79 – Feb ’80

by Dion on Aug.20, 2010, under Movies, Music, TV

Being born in 1978, I’m pretty much a child of the ’80s. I grew up with the radio playing at every opportunity, loved going to the movies and couldn’t get enough of Star Wars, He-Man and The Muppet Show. (Yes, there was bleed-through from the ’70s, as you’ll soon discover.)

Each week, I’m going to make an effort to present the pop-culture events of a very specific period of time in the ’80s. Today, it’s summer ’79/’80, as seen Down Under.

This was the period when Bon Scott, the lead singer for AC/DC, died of alcohol poisoning; it was also the period when Kingswood Country debuted on Australian TV…

(continue reading…)

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Futurama: Season 6

by Dion on Aug.05, 2010, under TV

I’ve been lukewarm on the new Futurama—there’s been a couple of good episodes, some mediocre ones and some really bad ones as well. But the last episode (“The Late Philip J. Fry”) was outstanding.

Why? Oh, let me count the ways…

  • it actually addresses real questions in cosmology and metaphysics
  • it references everything in science fiction from the writings of H.G. Wells to the films of James Cameron
  • it has moments of tenderness and pathos, as well as soul-crushing despair
  • it acknowledges past continuity in funny, relevant ways

And finally, there’s a hilarious parody of Zager & Evans’ “In the Year 2525″ that is a work of genius.

The team behind the show’s original run obviously haven’t lost their touch. (The new writers, on the other hand…) This episode is probably in the top 10 for me, and while it isn’t as mind-bending as “Roswell That Ends Well” or as heartbreaking as “Jurassic Bark”, it recaptures the essence of those episodes. At its best, Futurama was (and is) possibly the best comedy, the best science fiction and the best animated show to ever hit TV screens.

Here’s a clip from “The Late Philip J. Fry”:

Futurama Thursdays 10pm / 9c
In Search of a Backwards Time Machine
www.comedycentral.com
Futurama New Episodes Roast of David Hasselhoff It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia
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