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Rating: B+
1984’s supposedly Final
Chapter, which ironically spawned a new trilogy, finally gets us caught up to
1984, in the series’ timeline, and now everything is totally 80s. Goofy 80s
clothes, a love for primitive tech gadgets, and notable appearances from
Crispin Glover and Corey Feldman.
Here
we’ve gotten away entirely from the core team of the first movie with director Joseph Zito taking the
helm. Zito directed a bunch of grindhouse low budget films in the 70s and 80s,
most notably early WWII-themed slasher The Prowler.
Zito’s version of Friday is a lot colder, crueler, and meaner than the goofy
fun of the last few movies, which helped make the film one of the fan favorites
in the series.

While
we’re no longer right by Crystal Lake, I think, we’re still in the woods and
cinematographer João Fernandes does a great job at finally getting across the
unknown menace. All the exteriors have this really dark, chilly look from the
hills filled with dense foliage to fog rolling over the lake. There’s
definitely more attention paid to atmosphere here and less on continual jump
scares.
At this
point, Friday the 13th reaches the point of stopping to care about teenage
protagonists as anything other than stuff for Jason to kill. The film seems to
actively despise Crispin Glover and his friends (most of whom are total
assholes) and invalidates the experience of the virginal “final girl”
stereotype who gets immediately killed after admitting she’s fallen in love
with a guy and loses her virginity. The kills are more simple and brutal
(Glover getting a wine cork to the hand and butcher knife to the face is a
notable one) while the sexual content comes back with a gratuitous vengeance
(there are two skinny dipping scenes!).

Instead,
the focus is put on a mother, daughter, and son (an excellent Feldman who
reminds you he was a gifted child star) living out in the woods next to the
teenagers who are there for a vacation. The mother’s going through a divorce,
the kid is obsessed with making monster masks, and the daughter starts a
flirtation with a mysterious camper who is out to take revenge against Jason. Though the teens are just there to
die, the film succeeds by finally giving us characters we’re invested in.
Feldman
is eventually the one who “kills” Jason with a machete through the
face in a particularly gruesome sequence. While Friday the 13th till this point definitely lacks any character
connections like the Halloween and Nightmare films sometimes had, it does seem
appropriate for a character that is essentially make up effects artist Tom
Savini to kill off his creation.

The Jason
here was played by a nearly 60-year-old Ted White who famously was John Wayne’s
stunt double in many films. He plays a very brutal Jason who starts to become
more of a monstrous bogeyman in this film than the wilderness hillbilly. His
hands are more corpse-like with these thick, ugly fingernails and his face is
truly ghoulish.
During
this one I was thinking about why these movies always have that part where the
final girl character sees the bodies of everyone that Jason has taken the time
to lovingly display for her to find. Plot wise this is to get the final girl
caught up to speed because she’s usually kept in the dark until the last 20
minutes or whatever. But why does Jason go to the trouble of setting up the
bodies everywhere? What’s the point? I have to give this some more thought.
-James P.

Next up:
Jason Lives, or does he?
Body
Count: 13


Rating: B/B+
The CW isn’t generally a network I turn to as I’m no longer a teenager and pretty burned out on superhero entertainments, but a co-worker was talking about the 100 and it sounded interesting…and it was on Netflix. While the post-apocalyptic show does have a lot of trappings of the network and does struggle a bit at the beginning, by the end of the first season it’s developed a fully formed world with rich characters who are regularly tried by complex moral dilemmas.
Based on a book series by Kass Morgan, the 100 has a lot of familiar elements from shows and movies like Lost, the Hunger Games, and Game of Thrones. We’re about 100 years after a nuclear apocalypse where the last couple thousand people now live in a series of interconnected space stations called the Ark. In order to preserve resources, the society follows a rigid, totalitarian set of laws where any illegal activity is punished by death via ejection into space. That is unless you’re under the age of 18 (as played by attractive models in their 20s), then you’re imprisoned.

The titular 100 current prisoners, as we start the show, are being sent on a drop ship to earth to see if it’s inhabitable, a pretty solid premise for the show. And while it is inhabitable, Earth is filled with mutant creatures and actual people they call Grounders (cue the Lost comparisons). As the teens try to find resources, develop leadership structures, and survive, the series spends as much time back in space with the adults (kind of unusual for a CW, teen-oriented show) who are trying to keep the Ark, umm, afloat as it endures equipment failures that threaten survival.
This show has a big cast, but we largely follow Clarke, the daughter of an Ark council member and head doctor, who was jailed after her father discovered the Ark’s oxygen generation systems were failing. While she’s a good person with pretty clear ideas of how to behave, a lot of the other prisoners are violent criminals initially led by Bellamy, a stowaway who should the Ark’s leader, who attempts to thwart Clarke’s desire for ordered rule in favor of hedonistic chaos.

Initially the dialogue is kind of bad in the first couple of episodes, particularly the pilot, and a lot of the characters come across as stereotypes. If you give it some time, though, the dialogue gets a lot better and the characters more complex. The show does a great job of giving each character clear motivation and having them respond.
For instance, Bellamy who we find out isn’t really a bad guy, but has spent his whole life trying to protect his sister, Octavia. The actual only siblings on the arc due to a one child rule, Octavia grew up in hiding. When she gets to earth, she’s never dated anyone or really experienced anything. Meanwhile, a lot of Bellamy’s leadership is designed to protect his sister and prevent the Arc from coming to earth to prosecute him for shooting the Chancellor.

What’s also great character wise is the show puts women and minority actors in positions of power. Women can be total badasses and powerful leaders, and there are never any corny lines about women being able to do the same things as men or shit like that.
Of course, there’s some other stuff that doesn’t really get better like how the show’s always trying to insert these currently popular songs—there’s a really cringe worthy Imagine Dragons’ song in the first episode. And a lot of the first season involves trying to get as many beautiful people to have very tame TV sex with each other. Not that that’s a bad thing, it’s just very CW and all the sex scenes are the same so they’re really kind of dull. However, not just women are the eye candy—everyone’s eye candy here.

Overall, the good outweighs the bad, and it’s very entertaining overall. The plot moves along very quickly with each episode having clear objectives like rescuing someone from the grounders or getting supplies. It tells a very clear story with a well-formed world, and they never seem to be making it up as they go along like Lost. And as a further corrective of that show, there’s always a little bit of mystery, but they clear things up before deepening the world.
What really makes the show worthwhile is it’s a show about complex moral decisions similar to Game of Thrones or Breaking Bad. On the Arc, the people in charge have to decide the best way to deal with the declining oxygen and it that’s killing hundreds of people so the rest can survive. Down on the ground, they’re struggling with whether to torture a grounder for information. And all those decisions they make matter too, even seemingly insignificant ones.

Like Game of Thrones, it’s also a very deadly show with the characters inhabiting a very dangerous world. By the time the teens land on Earth, some have already died and many more die during the season. They’re also not afraid to kill off main characters or people who seem like they would traditionally be very important. There’s no mercy on the 100.
And having already seen the second season, I can tell you that it gets a lot better and the 100 gets really awesome so it’s worth plowing through those first couple of episodes.
-James P.

Rating: B
While Part II didn’t do quite as well at the box office
as the first movie, it still made plenty to justify a third and initially final
entry. Part III had twice the budget of the last movie, though most of that
seems to have gone to shoot the film in 3D. It seems weird now, but the early
80s saw a big resurgence in 3D films—mostly horror flicks like Amityville 3D
and Jaws 3D. The 3D here is all gimmick with everything from a yo-yo to a spear
gun coming at your face.
Originally there talk of a plot of having Ginny from part II returning and
getting stalked by Jason at a hospital, but that ended when Halloween II came
out with the same plot. Fortunately, Friday the 13th changes the game up enough
to be much better than the last entry. Steve Miner returns here as the only
director to helm more than two of these films, and closes out the first
“trilogy."

The plot picks up right back where we left in 1984 (this was released in 82)
with Jason still alive and now causing havoc outside of Crystal Lake. After
slaughtering a goofy old married couple, he comes across a group of teenagers
vacationing in a cabin transitioning this to more of a spooky cabin in the
woods film than another campfire tale.
While some elements are familiar, like another wacky townsperson replacing
Ralph, and the guy who loves pranks, the characters are much more amped up and
ridiculous. The teenagers get harassed by a biker gang, there’s a
Cheech-and-Chong-style stoner couple, and the loser fat kid is always
pretending he’s dead or a serial killer.

The violence is again more brutal, which led to some problems with the MPAA,
though there’s not really any sex or nudity. That’s appropriate considering
part of the film is about being a rape survivor. Final girl Chris was once
attacked by Jason two years ago, but blacked out and woke up without knowing
what happened. That’s left her spooked by nearly anything and unable to be
intimate with her boyfriend who doesn’t really understand her problems because
men are assholes.
But rather than this being a I Spit on Your Grave revenge film, the outcome eventually breaks Chris by the end. Watching this again after many years, I was impressed that amidst a lot of the silliness they were able to treat this fairly seriously and not nullify it by filling the screen with boobs.

Jason here is played by former trapeze artist Richard Brooker who did stunts
and later became a producer, director, and web design entrepreneur. Notably he
was a director on Bill Nye the Science Guy. Brooker is a much taller Jason, and
they make him look stockier than the last film. He’s now bald with an evenly “mutant
face,” though not as intense as his elephant man look in the last film. Jason
gets hanged in this one and takes a machete to the head and lies presumably
dead at the end, though they have a lot of fun messing with the canoe in the
water ending of the first film.
Next up: Corey Feldman kills Jason…again!
Jason Body Count: 12 (biggest yet!)
-James P.


Rating: C+
Originally there was talk of making Friday the 13th an
anthology series where each movie would feature another freaky happening on the
titular “holiday.” But after the success of the first film, associate producer
of the first movie Steve Miner, who went on to direct a number of decent horror
movies like Halloween H20 and Lake Placid, took the director’s chair. Instead,
they decided to run with the shock gag at the end of the first film that Jason
was still alive.
Part II came out a year later, but the story picks up five years later (this
would put us in 1984, though everyone still looks like they’re fresh out the
70s). It opens with the surviving Alice still trying to get over the incident before
she gets stalked and killed by a mysterious man (spoiler alert: it’s Jason). It
seems like originally there was a larger plot for actress Adrienne King, but in
real life was stalked by a crazed fan following the success of Friday the 13th,
which discouraged her from wanting to act much in the sequel.

From there, we get essentially the same movie as the first one with a new group of counselors on the first night of a counselor’s training camp (I guess they were too afraid to show Jason terrorizing children). There’s a much bigger cast including two people of color who get no lines (a first for the series) and a guy in a wheelchair (not sure if he was actually disabled or not).
They also threw twice as much money at the film this time around. It’s filmed in a similar style, but the sets are better, there’s more kills shown on screen, and a lot more sex. Definitely follows the bigger, the better sequel philosophy.

In regards to sex and drug usage, while everyone still gets killed, this one
still has this very liberated 70s vibe. All the women are shown to be in
control of their sexuality and are the ones who instigate sex in the film. They
also present this idea that everyone from teenagers to responsible adults smoke
marijuana and that’s perfectly fine. It’s important to remember this one was
filmed before Reagan was present and before the AIDS crisis.
A lot of the same character stereotypes are here like the practical joker and
the responsible camp owner, and Crazy Ralph returns, but the characters have
slightly more depth to them this time around. They play around a bit with who
is going to be the final girl, it actually ends up being a couple, and
revealing if the killer is really Jason or just some lunatic.

They hide Jason until the very end and when they reveal him it’s a total
bummer. He’s this hillbilly-looking guy who wears a sack over his head, wields
a pitchfork and other tools, and is not particularly menacing (in the next film
he’s in the hockey mask) until his sack gets ripped off to reveal a deformed
mutant face. What I do like is they try to show him as this resourceful
woodsman trapper who’s built a cottage from scraps he found, it includes a
shrine to his mother’s decapitated head, and sets up traps in the woods for
people and animals. This was an idea explored further in the remake.
Mostly the movie follows the same beats as the long movie down to a final shock
for the audience (and a super incoherent ending). Still, it’s pretty
entertaining.
-James P.

Next up Jason finally gets his iconic look…in 3D!
Jason Body Count: 9 (also implied he
killed a dog and could have killed one other person)
The first Jason was played by Warrington Gillette who from what I can tell is
just a random guy. Steve Daskewisz is also listed as Jason’s stunt double. He
appears to also just be some dude.


Rating: A-
Kicking off a new feature where I go through one of the Friday the 13th films each Friday.
Directed by Sean S. Cunningham and released in 1980, Friday the 13th was one of the first
“holiday” slasher films to capitalize on the success of John Carpenter’s
Halloween. Hence, the name of the
film which takes place on Friday the 13th, even though it has little to do with
it. While the critics hated the gory flick, it grossed close to $40 million at
the box office despite a lowly $550,000 budget. Thus kick starting a seemingly
endless number of sequels and spawning tons of other kids-at-camp slasher films
like Sleepaway Camp and the Burning.
At the start of the film, a couple 1950s camp counselors are killed off after
having sex. Flash forward to 1979 and the camp is being reopened as a camp for
inner city youth despite the protests of the townspeople, including a local old
coot called “Crazy Ralph.” They probably didn’t have enough budget
for kids, so the movie takes place before the camp opens with the counselors
getting picked off one by one, including Kevin Bacon who gets one of the best
death scenes in the film (the fairly iconic arrow through the throat from under
a bunk bed).

Compared to Halloween, Friday the 13th is quite a bit less
sophisticated. It seems like they were hoping to shoot for a mix of horror film
and sex comedy, though it’s not as violent or filled with sex as later entries.
The movie takes influence from Italian Giallo films with a mostly unseen killer
whose eyes we see a lot of through. In particular, Mario Bava’s Bay of Blood seems to be a big
influence. The “killer vision” would definitely be a major carryover
in the slasher genre.
For some who haven’t seen the series before, it may come as a surprise that
Jason isn’t the killer here, but his mother. At the time, it was a brilliant
strategy to have actress Betsy Palmer show up as Jason’s mother, trying to
avenge the death of her son who drowned while camp counselors having sex. She
was well known at the time for her TV, game show, and film roles as a kind,
warm figure and no one would have suspected her.

Instead, her arrival late in the film would have likely
put audiences at ease (similar to a certain actor showing up late in
Interstellar). It’s unfortunate that we don’t have the same experience today.
Reportedly, Palmer hated the script but did the movie to buy a new car. Later
she ended up embracing her role as a delightfully deranged killer.
One of the biggest advantages watching this film on subsequent viewings is it
plays with the idea of how far a parent would go to protect their child. While
Mrs. Voorhees attacks teenagers after having sex, it’s mostly about their
neglect for her son. Subsequent films would translate that into a bizarre sense
of morality where anyone doing “bad things” deserves punishment.

But here, it’s really more about hacking up teenagers and
even the “final girl” isn’t really the main character like Jamie Lee
Curtis in Halloween. She’s simply the
only left or all that pure (it’s implied she’s having an affair with the camp
owner and participates in a game of strip monopoly). We don’t really care about
any of these characters, though that doesn’t stop the intense end chase/fight
with Mrs. Voorhees and final girl Alice from being really exciting and scary.
Friday the 13th is a fairly trashy
rip off of Halloween, but it’s pretty
fun and was a little inventive at the time. Definitely worth seeing if you’re
interested in the start of the slasher genre. On to the next one where Jason
wears a bag over his head!

One last fun fact is the legendary Tom Savini did the make-up effects for the film. He had just received some popularity working with George Romero on Martin and Dawn of the Dead and the arrow scene and the decapitation of Mrs. Voorhees would make him the go-to effects guru for most of the slasher era.
-James P.
Mrs. Voorhees Body Count: 9


Rating: B/B-
I work from home most of the week and Fridays it can be a struggle getting through the day. What’s surprisingly helped is putting on a TV show that I’m mildly interested in, but normally wouldn’t watch in my spare time. And that’s how I plowed through seven mostly okay seasons of Sons of Anarchy on Netflix.
Sons of Anarchy was created by Kurt Sutter, who was a writer and cast member on The Shield, an excellent early FX show about crooked cops in California. Sons of Anarchy has a similar gritty feel and look, though it’s more lighthearted at times and nowhere near as good. The show peaks early with two very good seasons, three mostly enjoyable seasons, and then two fairly bad seasons with an alright ending.

The show primarily follows Jax Teller (Charlie Hunnam), the Vice President of the Redwood Original branch of the Sons of Anarchy motorcycle club. His deceased father founded the club and his stepfather Clay Morrow (played by Ron Perlman) is currently the president. Decades after the club was founded under hippy-ish anarchistic ideals, they now make their money running guns imported by the IRA, which seems kind of random.
This is kind of like grimy version of Hamlet, with some Greek tragedy thrown in, and by the end of the first episode it’s pretty clear that Jax’s father was likely killed by his mother Gemma (Katey Sagal in one of the show’s best roles) and Clay because he wanted to get the club away from guns. That tension drives the show, along with Jax trying to push the club into more legitimate business vs. Clay pushing further into illegal territory to make more money.

The other source of tension early on is Jax becoming a father and having to quickly mature from a party boy outlaw. While married, his wife Wendy is a drug addict and overdoses causing her child to be born prematurely. The baby’s alright, his soon-to-be ex wife goes off to rehab for a few seasons, and Jax reconnects with Dr. Tara Knowles (Maggie Siff), a former high school flame recently back in town for mysterious reasons.
Tara sticks around for the long haul, and I liked how she was not the typical antihero wife character. The early part of the show uses her as the audience’s look into how the club works. While it still sucks that we don’t have a show like this that’s not all just dudes doing bad stuff, it is nice that Jax and Tara develop this equal partnership and both Tara and Jax’s mother are quite involved with the club.

The show does its share of objectifying of women to be sure, but it also does a surprisingly solid job of validating sex workers and portraying them as fleshed-out women (i.e. Lyla). Characters who try to slut shame on the show are generally called out on their bullshit, and the later seasons do a lot to promote the advantages of legalizing prostitution.
Of course, what the show does best and makes it very watchable is the big focus on action. These dudes are always getting into lengthy car chases and gun fights. The show borders on a parody of the antihero genre at times due to its massive body count. I looked it up and it’s like 150+ people get killed on the show with Jax killing about a third of them.

Most of the seasons involve the club trying to deal with various levels of law enforcement, plus rival gangs in town usually with one other group trying to rise to the top. The best of which is in season 2 where the club is trying to outrun both this ruthless ATF agent and dealing with a vicious white supremacist group featuring Henry Rollins of all people (Marilyn Manson and Courtney Love also make appearances in the last season).
On that last note, one of the best parts of the show is its cast. Sons of Anarchy fills out its sprawling cast with tons of great character actors and notables from lots of solid shows. You’ll encounter prominent actors from the Sopranos, Mad Men, the X-Files, Deadwood, Lost, and pretty much the entire cast of the Shield. Best of which is a reoccurring part for Walton Goggins as a transgender woman that seems to start as a grotesque joke, but actually sets up this touching and oddly beautiful story about acceptance and the romance between one of the sons and this woman. The social issues on the show are fairly clumsy, but the show does seem to steer these semi-racist, mostly white, womanizers towards acceptance.

It’s a heavily serialized show, but it’s less Breaking Bad and more Gossip Girl. SoA is all about constantly shifting alliances and the same groups fighting all the time. The sons might be aligned with the Latino group one week and the next they’re enemies. After awhile it was kind of pointless to keep track of all the constant entanglements.
This is largely the result of the show increasingly dragging out the main storylines. Starting at the end of season 2, they start dropping a shocker in the last episode that becomes the plot of the next season and doesn’t get resolved until the end. That forces them to deal with all these shifting alliances during the middle parts. As the show goes on, the episodes get longer and longer too leading to more foot dragging.

The other major issue with the later seasons is the show gets increasingly full of itself. Even in the beginning, you could tell Kurt Sutter just thought he was writing the most beautiful shit ever about these guys, instead of a fairly trashy show, but later on is just full of anguish and long stares and pretentious dialogue. This also goes hand-in-hand with the show getting increasingly violent and gory. You reach this point where the show wants you to love these people, but you realize they’re all these horrible mass murders and you just kind of want them all to die.
Season six and seven are a real slog, though the show never becomes totally unwatchable. Five seasons would probably been enough for all the story they wanted to tell, though at least the last few episodes are pretty enjoyable and wrap up everything decently. At the end, the show seems to finally come to terms with what it is and that helps to make the last episode feel fairly satisfactory.

So yeah, this is a show that peaked early with the potential for greatness and continued on for seven seasons thinking it was better than the Wire, at least in my opinion. It’s easily watchable for the most part, though I’m not sure if I’d recommend it as anything more than a solid show you put in the background while doing other stuff. At least don’t watch this until you’ve seen the Sopranos, the Shield, the Wire, and Breaking Bad.
-James P.

Rating: B+
I only recently got a PS4, mostly to play Bloodborne, so I’m currently playing catch up on a lot of games. The Evil Within’s trailers and imagery struck a chord with me last year and while it was released on the PS3, I wanted to wait to play it with the best graphics. After finishing the game, I found the story was overly confusing and the characters poorly developed, but I did enjoy the gameplay and atmosphere of the survival action horror game.

The Return of Shinji Mikami
My gaming knowledge is pretty limited, so I missed a lot of the hype surrounding this game which was centered on Shinji Mikami—the creator of the Resident Evil Series—returning to the survival horror genre after his split with Capcom under his own Tango Gameworks studio. A lot of people were really excited for this game and that contributed to some mixed reviews over the end product.
Story and Character Development
The big problem here is the story and character development. You play as Krimson City detective Sebastian Castellanos who is investigating a multiple homicide at a mental hospital with his two partners. He sees video of a mysterious pasty, burned man dispatching all the people, gets knocked out, and wakes up in a grimy butcher room where a scary Leatherface-esque guy with a chainsaw is chopping up bodies.

The story isn’t overly complicated when read on Wikipedia, but is presented in a convoluted way. Mainly the pasty man was wronged and now is wreaking havoc using his mind hooked up to a bunch of bathtub looking things…and maybe it’s not that simple.
A lot of video game stories aren’t very clear or overly complicated, but strong characters help to brush that off. That’s not the case here, either. Sebastian’s back story is only presented through notes you find and has little connection with the events going on. That’s the only character development and most of the game has Sebastian saying stuff like “What’s going on?” and “This is really stage” in a hilarious deadpan that actually breaks up some of the tension (likely unintended by the game). His two other partners seem more interesting, but there’s very little info on them provided. The game also seems to be holding out on info for the DLC, which is kind of annoying.

Game Play
Fortunately the game play and overall atmosphere largely make up for that. You spend the game in pasty man’s mind where any number of horrible things can happen. You’re constantly being transported to different parts of his memories mixed in with the real world. Areas are fairly linear, but you’re always in a different type of environment from creepy mental hospitals to spooky houses to destroyed cityscapes to parts where you roam a European countryside in the middle of the day. You really have no idea where you’re going next and the game’s unpredictability is definitely a strong suit.
Along the way you encounter a number of horrifying creatures. These creatures start with mutilated zombies wrapped in barbed wire and get more disgusting as you go on till you’re fighting things that look like they got turned inside out and mashed together. There’s not very many jump scares, but all this stuff makes you feel uncomfortable at all times.

The game is very difficult early on as you only have limited tools at your disposal and everything is out to get you. Besides the enemies, there are traps everywhere and the game is kind of doing everything to kill you. You’ll be using a pistol, shotgun, and crossbow for the most part, though more weapons like a sniper rifle and .44 magnum become available later in the game while some don’t show up until new game plus. Generally I’m not one to replay games, but Evil Within lets you play through again with new tricks while increasing your stats so that’s pretty cool.
While the guns are a little basic, the Agony Crossbow in particular provides a new depth to how you play the game. It’s totally unrealistic—perfectly fine since you’re in pasty guy’s mind—and can be uploaded with all types of ammunition like harpoons, bombs, and freezing darts.

Though fairly linear, I loved that Evil Within really gives the player a lot of freedom for how they want to tackle combat. You can try to go in shotgun blazing, electrocute a guy and sneak kill him, disarm a trap for crossbow bolt parts, or lure a zombie through a trap and watch him explode in gory goodness. There are also some optional paths and tough enemies to challenge that can provide great rewards or cause you to lose all your resources before a next boss fight.
The rest of the time, you’ll be journeying back to a mental hospital to upgrade or fighting bosses. The mental hospital is where you have to save, which is kind of annoying, but you can also upgrade your character specs with green goo. Kind of similar to how The Last of Us worked with collecting junk to use at workshops, here you can either scour dark corners or take down enemies to get the green stuff.

Sitting at this horrifying, fetishistic-looking chair, you can upgrade weapons, run longer, boost health, improve aim, etc. There’s not enough to upgrade everything so you have to pick and choose, causing you to craft a character that meets your needs whether that’s a Sebastian that’s quick and ready to get away to use a sniper rifle or a shotgun and magnum-wielding bruiser.
In terms of boss fights, I was generally impressed with these. The monsters are increasingly horrific, and they mix up the situations quite a bit. Some of the highlights were fighting the Keeper, this guy with a safe on his head that can resurrect in other safes, a fight with this giant mutant in a parking garage, and the final multi-stage battle that is absolutely bonkers. There are some letdowns like certain bosses getting reused way too often as regular enemies and fights like the one with pasty man’s scary sister that require you to figure out some puzzle/activate something in a few seconds while you’re getting chased down.

Final Thoughts
At the end, this was a weird game where the story and characters became a total turnoff, but the fun action game play, horrific creatures, and always unsettling atmosphere kept me engaged. That said, and not having a Markiplier/Pewdiepie-size following, I don’t think I’ll be shelling out another $30 to play through the three DLC episodes.
-James P.

Rating:
B/B+
Another round of short book reviews. Everything here was mostly enjoyable, but nothing was especially incredible.

Kobo Abe – The Face of Another (1964)
Abe followed up The Woman in the Dunes (highly recommended) with this philosophical “mad scientist” tale that’s told in a semi-Victorian epistolary style in the form of diaries to the scientist’s wife with a few more post-modernish touches like some corrections and reactions to earlier sections. After a lab accident that causes his face to burn off, a scientist puts all his energy into creating a mask.
Once he does, he becomes obsessed with doing bad things, especially to his wife. Mainly this is a lot of thinking about the faces people wear and not a lot happens. I saw the movie years ago and wasn’t that crazy about it and wasn’t that into this either, though it does have interesting qualities (Rating: B-).

Blake Butler – There Is No Year (2011)
I’ve long enjoyed Butler’s Vice columns, but this is the first of his books I’ve read. It’s kind of like House of Leaves mixed with Tao Lin and Harmony Korine. Maybe. I don’t know. It’s structured as a series of vignettes about a mother and father who move with their son into a new house after he recovers from a mysterious illness.
Soon all sorts of weird things are happening like insect infestations, “copy” families, mysterious rooms, and never ending commutes. Butler plays around with adding footnotes without referents, questions, and page layout. It’s interesting, bizarre, and often hilarious, but goes on for way too long (Rating: B). I’m reading his latest 300,000,000, and it seems like a winner. I’ll let you know later.

Mark Z. Danielewski - The Familiar, Volume 1: One Rainy Day in May (2015)
Danielewski’s first novel in nearly a decade is his first in a planned 27-novel series, which is just insane. As the title implies, it takes place on one day and jumps back and forth between a bunch of different characters who don’t seem to be connected at this point (we’re not quite in Sense8) territory just yet. Most of the time is dedicated to an epileptic girl named Xanther who is on her way to pick up a dog with her father.
Other times we’re with her father or mother, a detective, a gang member, two old people on the run with a mysterious orb, and a weird section in the middle where either the narrator or an observer takes control. The style and font changes with each character; in the case of a man in Singapore, it’s rendered in broken English that makes it nearly impossible to decipher.

This is a much more linear novel than House of Leaves though with some interesting touches like this narrator that interjects at times, some “coming attractions,” and a “next time” section, and his characteristic attention to the placement of the text. I don’t really know what to think so far about this first part in the series, but I’m intrigued for what’s next (Rating: B+).

Don DeLillo – Cosmopolis (2003)
DeLillo’s short follow-up to the even shorter The Body Artist follows Eric Packer, a young billionaire taking a private limo across NYC to get his haircut on a crazy day that sees him losing his money and stalked by a crazed former employer. A sort-of takedown of rich Wall Street Elites, DeLillo fills the novel with terse, edgy prose and ridiculous scenarios like Packer getting a prostate exam in his limo while having a business meeting. There are some moments that approach American Psycho hilarity, but it’s too scattershot and the ending feels like of forced like he just needed to end it so here you go. Just okay and so is the David Cronenberg adaptation (Rating: B).

Kim Gordon – Girl in a Band (2015)
Kim Gordon’s memoir following the breakup of Sonic Youth and the end of her marriage to Thurston Moore reads more like a collection of biographical essays, but is essential reading for fans of the band. Gordon opens up more about her personal life, especially detailing how an abusive relationship with her schizophrenic brother let her to bottle up her feelings and use art as a way of creative release.
She touches on most of the major touchstones in her and the band’s career, details the highs and lows of her marriage, and talks about relationships with people like Kurt Cobain and Courtney Love. There’s a lot of interesting stuff here, though it feels rushed at times like Gordon was trying to connect all the dots without quite fleshing everything out (Rating: B+).

Zadie Smith – White Teeth (2000)
I’ve kind of gotten tired of the multi-generation family saga, but I enjoyed Zadie Smith’s debut novel quite a bit for its very complex, developed characters and the sharp writing. The book follows the friendship between a British man who marries a Jamaican immigrant along with his friend from WWII, a Bengali Muslim who has an arranged marriage with a younger Bengali woman. There are four sections with the first half focusing on the two men starting to raise children and the second half focusing on their teenage kids.
Smith uses a lot of White Teeth’s multi-generation saga to look into the push-pull of the immigrant experience which involves both trying to stay true to your roots while also assimilating and finding the new culture to always still see you as the other. The characters react to these tensions in different ways, most notably with one of the son’s who is torn between his love of western culture with his more fundamentalist Muslim friends.
The narrative tries to get too neat and tidy towards the end by pushing all these characters into one place for a potentially explosive finish, but doesn’t have many faults other than that. This was my first Zadie Smith novel, and I enjoyed it quite a bit (Rating: B+).

Rating: A
So far during my second watching of The Sopranos, season five is by far the best and one I had most been anticipating. Here the show brings back more of the intense mob plotting of season one while also expanding on the intense character development of the previous two season.
The big mob plot action comes from the class of 2004, a group of mobsters getting out of jail that threaten to upstage the balance of power. There’s the elderly Feech LaManna (Robert Loggia) whose card game Tony knocked off as a teen, Phil Leotardo who steps into the role of Jonny Sack’s enforcer, and, best of all, Steve Buscemi enters the picture as Tony’s never before mentioned cousin Tony Blundetto. After the death of Carmine Lupertazzi last season, there’s also a growing power struggle between Carmine’s son and Jonny Sack over who’s going to rule the New York family.

While Tony gets more awful than ever this season, David Chase and the writers present him as somewhat wizened by his experience as a mob boss. Most evident of this is recognizing Feech as a potential Richie or Ralph and getting him sent back to prison.
A major change, though, is Tony’s loss of a support system in Carmela. The two spend the season separate, consistently butting heads and seeing if there really is anything they like about each other (the party for Carmela’s father is a great moment of the latter). Tony falls back on his mob family, though finally realizing they are employees rather than his actual friends. The show seems to push more of the idea as Tony as a sociopath that only uses people, but still seems to sympathize with him as everything falls apart around him.

Let’s shift our attentions over to Tony B. for a bit. Tony B. is a bit of a thinner character than Richie or Ralph, but Steve Buscemi makes him one of the most memorable characters by virtue of being Steve Buscemi. The writers seem to step out of the way to let the actor riff a bit while also letting that underlying melancholy of the actor seep through quite a bit.
Tony S. loves Tony B., that’s for sure, but the mob kingpin doesn’t know what to with his cousin when he doesn’t want to get back into the mafia, opting to pursue a career as a massage therapist. Tony doesn’t know what to do with somewhat he can’t use yet also feels a major sense of guilt. Tony had a panic attack causing him to miss a robbery gone wrong that sent Tony B. to jail. Throughout the season, we as an audience are left to ponder what might have happened if Tony B. had stayed out and taken Tony S.’s role.

Tony B. also shares his cousin’s anger and acts impulsively in a way that his now hardened cousin wouldn’t. This puts Tony into conflict with New York and in a position where he has to choose between actual family and the “family” with severe consequences either way.
That brings us to the other tough decision facing Adriana and Christopher. For a long time now, Adriana has been stuck as an informant for the FBI. As the season progresses, Adriana is in a position where she can no longer function. The guilt and fear of her double life leads her to depression and severe medical problems.

Eventually she’s pushed into the position of having to tell Christopher and trying to get him to flip on Tony and run away into the witness protection program. Obviously we all know what happens in what is just an intense, horrifying, and very well done scene. Adriana is one of the few “innocents” on the show and one of the few genuinely good people. This time I around I was concentrating on trying to figure out at what moment she knew it was all over.
For all the shit that happens, season five seemingly oddly at first brings it all back home again with Tony and Carmela getting back together. Like Matthew Weiner did with Mad Men, The Sopranos is often a show about people who are unable to move past their faults and keep slipping into the same destructive behavior. At the end as Tony runs away from Jonny Sack’s house, he emerges—like the wild bear at the beginning of the season (the series isn’t that subtle with the imagery)—bloodied, tired, and a little afraid. Tony has made it back home, but what’s been the cost?
-James P.

Next time in Season 6 Part 1: As I recall the first half of season six, which is pretty much a normal season, gets into some weird territory with stuff like Kevin Finnerty and Cleaver. Will Christopher be able to go on after Adriana? Will Phil Leotardo continue to be a threat to Tony? See you next time kids.
Last Time: Season 4
-James P.

Rating: B+
The title of Girlhood obviously tries to play it as a response to the critically-acclaimed Richard Linklater film, though its original French title that translates to “Girl Gang” is probably more accurate for this story of a 16-year-old French teenager discovering her identity in this bold, very assured, often mesmerizing third feature film from director Céline Sciamma (the first of her films I’ve seen).
In a film that continually produces extraordinary moment after next—it’s probably better as a collection of moments than for its plot—the beginning really stands out. Girlhood opens with a group of black French girls playing American football to this pumped up, synth pop track. They’re super tough, but we get the sense they’re all having fun and support each other. Then they walk away and start to splinter off—giving us the sense this movie could have been about any of these girls—until we’re left with Marieme (played by newcomer Karidja Touré).

Marieme’s rarely seen mother is always working as a maid, the father is absent, and she’s left taking care of her sisters while trying to avoid her sadistic, overbearing brother (the limited amount of men on screen are reversed from the typical Hollywood gender roles to filling stereotypical roles or acting as eye candy for the most part). She’s told she doesn’t have the smarts for high school and her only real track is to go to a vocational school or settle for a husband and popping out children.
Living in an impoverished Parisian suburb, Girlhood is largely about Marieme’s struggle to find autonomy for herself with little options due to her economic background and patriarchal constraints. A first solution is presented in the form of Lady (Assa Sylla) and her “gang” of girls who wear their hair straight and wear very fashionable clothing. Sporty, shy Marieme is invited to join because they need a new member and not because she seems like a good fit. Marieme brushes them off, but reconsiders when she sees that they’re acquainted with a boy she likes.

Soon she’s straightening her hair, wearing edgier clothes, and going by the name “Vic” (for Victory). The movie flirts with the girl gang genre and takes elements of those old movies like Switchblade Sisters with the girls stealing and getting into fights and Vic seemingly rising in stature, but most of this part of the film is about how they bond.
After stealing dresses they get ready for what looks like to go out, but instead stay in a hotel room and start lip synching to Rihanna in what’s sure to be a long talked about scene. It starts with just Lady then they all start to join in while the frame goes larger and by the end they’re all singing. It sounds kind of stupid, but is actually really touching when you watch. Other scenes of them dancing in a park or just hanging out are all great, and I could have gone for a movie of just these girls getting into trouble and hanging out, or Vic objectifying her boyfriend (there’s this great scene where she comes over and tells him to turn over so she can check out his ass).

The movie does suffer from a bit of third act syndrome as Vic makes a major change again, becoming a drug dealer for the local slum kingpin. She has short hair, wears more masculine clothing, and binds her breasts. I like the idea of using a crime narrative as a way to show how teenagers try to find themselves by changing their look and gender identity is a fluid part of that, but this seemed to be more thrown in here than when Vic changes for the girl gang. Is she changing her look to fit in a masculine-dominated world, or does it have to do with her own identity? Is she in love with Lady? And some more questions.
That’s not really that problematic, though the last part of the film does suffer because it removes the great dynamic of the girl gang, and we don’t get much resolution to that narrative. There are still some great moments between Vic and the prostitute she lives with, and I really loved the final shot. Overall, though, I think the film itself suffers from a similar identity crisis, but maybe that’s the point.

Lastly, it’s got to be pointed out there is likely an issue here with this white director creating a film about the lives of these Black French teenage girls. On the other hand, it does seem like a good to have some representation on the French screens for young Black women rather than none and hopefully seeing Karidja Touré and Assa Sylla doing interviews and in ads will have a positive outcome. But then again, by trying to reduce the men in the film to stereotypes, which I understand the reason for doing so, this white lady makes it seem like Black men in France are all criminals.
Overall, though, I found Girlhood to be a very impressive film trying to challenge women’s roles with solid acting, beautiful cinematography, and a great soundtrack. I’ll definitely be on the lookout for more of Céline Sciamma’s films and hope to see more of these young French actresses.
-James P.