Category: TV Action (Page 34 of 145)

One Piece: Season Two, First Voyage

Call me a cynic, but “One Piece” is the most inconsistent anime ever made. When the show brings its A-game, there’s not another series around that can match its harmonious mixture of action and comedy. Unfortunately, the series also has a tendency to slip into mediocrity time and again, and in the case of the first volume of Season Two, it happens more often than you’d care to see from a show with so much potential. With only 14 episodes included on the two-disc set, it’s disappointing to discover that the first eight are wasted on a stupid story arc involving a little girl named Apis and the millennial dragon she’s promised to protect. There isn’t any real progress made other than the fact that the Straw Hats’ detour eventually puts them back on course, and in fact, most of the crew members are relegated to background duty for many of the episodes. When they finally do reach the Grand Line, however, the series kicks back into high gear. The ship (along with its crew) is swallowed whole by a giant whale, and after Luffy figures out a way to escape, he’s lured into another trap set by a group of bounty hunters posing as pirate-friendly vendors. It’s this introduction to the Baroque Works crime syndicate that hints at “One Piece” returning to its winning ways in the next volume, but it’s just a shame we had to sit through this uneven batch of episodes to get there.

Click to buy “One Piece: Season Two, First Voyage”

Comic-Con treats and tricks

I’ll be writing a little bit more about the unwisely dropped direct-to-DVD festival hit, “Trick ‘r Treat,” after I return from the con. That particularly includes what I gleaned from a trio of round robin interview things with writer-director Michael Dougherty and co-stars Lauren Lee Smith (“CSI”) and Brian Cox, definitely one of the toppermost of the poppermost, acting wise. Including Mr. Cox, all very personable folks, which never hurts in show bidness.

My reaction to the film was muted by my own tiredness, but I do think there is something there. Dougherty, a co-writer on the last couple of Bryan Singer superhero projects, has an outstanding eye for creepy beauty and he certainly brings human values and humor to his horror. However, the muddy acoustics of the hall drowned out much of the dialogue for me, and the impossibility of obtaining coffee at the convention center  in the evening dulled out much of my brain. (Why, oh why, Mrs. Fields, have you abandoned me this year?) The audience reaction was, as far as I could tell, divided between wild enthusiasm and muted nitpicking. More to come.

And now, a few other more high-profile movie related con related matters live from my horrifyingly small shoe box hotel room. Also, I wonder how long I can hold out without ever setting foot in the dreaded Hall H.

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The 2009 Emmy nominations are in…

Per TV.com…

Best Drama Series
Big Love
Breaking Bad
Damages
Dexter
House
Lost
Mad Men

Best Comedy Series

Entourage
Flight of the Conchords
How I Met Your Mother
The Office
30 Rock
Weeds
Family Guy

Lead Actor in a Drama Series
Simon Baker, The Mentalist
Bryan Cranston, Breaking Bad
Michael C. Hall, Dexter
Jon Hamm, Mad Men
Hugh Laurie, House
Gabriel Byrne, In Treatment

Lead Actress in a Drama Series

Kyra Sedgwick, The Closer
Glenn Close, Damages
Mariska Hargitay, Law & Order: Special Victims Unit
Sally Field, Brothers & Sisters
Elisabeth Moss, Mad Men
Holly Hunter, Saving Grace

Lead Comedy Actor

Jemaine Clement, Flight of the Conchords
Steve Carrell, The Office
Jim Parsons, The Big Bang Theory
Tony Shalhoub, Monk
Alec Baldwin, 30 Rock
Charlie Sheen, Two and a Half Men

Lead Comedy Actress
Julia Louis-Dreyfus, The New Adventures of Old Christine
Christina Applegate, Samantha Who?
Tina Fey, 30 Rock
Toni Collette, United States of Tara
Sarah Silverman, The Sarah Silverman Program
Mary-Louise Parker, Weeds

The biggest snubs? No “The Wire,” “True Blood” or “The Shield” for Best Drama…zero nominations in major categories for “Friday Night Lights” — especially Connie Britton, who should have cracked a weak field of Lead Actress in a Drama…”Battlestar Galactica” finishes its critically-acclaimed, five-year run with no major Emmy award nominations…at all…over the five seasons…ugh.

Click here to see the rest of the nominations.

Harry Potter and the ginormous filmgoing hordes (updated)

We’ve got an early and rather light box office preview this week because only one new wide release is coming out. However, it’s already looking to be a doozy. Yes, it’s time for another highly profitable trip to Hogwarts with today’s (actually early as possible this morning’s) release of “Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince.”

Anyhow, word of highly boffo early ticket sales outpacing the midnight opening of “Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen” has proven out. Estimates of the Wednesday morning midnight take are roughly $20 million, says Variety and Nikki Finke. THR‘s Carl DiOrio wrote yesterday of roughly a $140 million five day gross and $100 million weekend. However, perhaps taking the fact that the $20 million figure beats both the Wednesday midnight opening of “The Dark Knight” by $2 million and “Transformers” by $4 million, the diviners reporting to Finke are telling her to expect $175-190 million, but with a $90-$100 million weekend a la DiOrio.

[UPDATE: The midnight gross turned out to be an even more whopping, more record breaking $22.2 million. Nikki Finke is now talking about the possibility of the fantasy flick breaking the $200 million mark in its first five days.]

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The Final “Harper’s Island” Chat: A Killer And A Survivor

Well, kids, it’s over: “Harper’s Island” has reached its conclusion, and we finally know who the killer is. I get the impression, however, that many people had it figured out long ago. As for me, I’ve said it elsewhere, but just for the record, I’ll say it here as well: I never really had a theory, because I was too busy enjoying the ride. As a result, I didn’t have nearly as many problems with the final episode as, say, Michael Slezak over at EW’s PopWatch Blog. Now, that’s not to say that I didn’t spend a fair amount of time saying to my wife, “It couldn’t be that person, could it? That’d be too easy, wouldn’t it?” But never once could I be heard to suggest that I had any real idea as to who was knocking off folks on a weekly basis.

I did, however, find myself growing increasingly enthusiastic about seeing who the Victim of the Week was. It’s hard to tell how many people were reading these interviews, since – with the notable exception of Jim Beaver – the majority of the comments tended to be criticisms of my victim numbering (in retrospect, I never should’ve started counting them in the first place, but it’s far too late to worry about it now), but I’ve certainly enjoyed talking to the various folks over the course of these 13 episodes. If nothing, I feel that, by doing these weekly interviews, I managed to bring “Harper’s Island” to the attention of some of my friends who might not otherwise have been aware of it, so I’ll take my sense of accomplishment where I can find it.

One last observation: if you dug the show, or if you missed the first episode or two and figured you’d never be able to catch up, then you’ll be pleased to hear that the series will be released on DVD on September 8, 2009. Better yet, it will be filled with loads of bonus material, including some of the scenes you may have read about in these interviews which didn’t make the cut. If you want to get your pre-order in right now, all you have to do is click right here.

And with that bit of shilling for CBS/Paramount out of the way, let us move onward and offer up the final installment in our “Harper’s Island” interview series…!

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