Friday, 30 December 2022
Disney+ Update
Thursday, 29 December 2022
Best Books of 2022
Worst Books of 2022
Wednesday, 28 December 2022
An Ally's Top 22 LBGTQA+ Films (2022)
Sunday, 25 December 2022
Happy Christmas! Happy Holidays! Happy Yuletide! 2022
My room. My tree. My Christmas 🎄🤶⛄❅❄
Very Happy Holidays, everyone 🍵🥰
One of the surprises at my county mall 🤣🤣🤣
Saturday, 24 December 2022
Book Review - 'Marcy's Journal - A Guide to Amphibia' by Adam Colás (Writer), Matthew Braly (Writer, Creator), Catharina Sukiman (Illustrator), Tokyopop (Producer)
Wow. Amazing. Wonderful.
'Marcy's Journal - A Guide to Amphibia' truly is a must for any 'Amphibia' fan. A few things - like extra details and thoughts - included in this companion book are even better than what the show gives us. The drawings, the sketches, the legit, authentic voices given to the character(s) writing as they record their adventures and growing pains and emotional journeys and reflections; everything is a blast. An abundant flow of personality, characteristics, and features, even subtle ones - THAT is 'Marcy's Journal'.Real effort was put into the creation of this "journal". It is all so much fun, and thoughtful, sensitive and emotional. It is just as funny, exciting, suspenseful, intense, heartbreaking, and hopeful as the cartoon.
And like the cartoon, at the heart of all the Isekai-ing, magical worldbuilding, and Magical Girl-ing is the complicated, trialling, growing friendship between the three young girls - Anne Boonchuy, Sasha Waybright, and Marcy Wu. They are like real people with a history together, and they're great individually, too - so different from each other, with so many issues to work through, and yet their bond, their love, is there. They complete one another, separated or not. They are not to be easily dismissed as cartoon characters. Female friendships in ambitious epic fantasy animation for kids, I am here for it!
'Marcy's Journal - A Guide to Amphibia' - one of THE geekiest, most passionate things I've ever read, and I love it.
Two warnings: don't be fooled by the cute, kiddie and cartoony aesthetic - be prepared for an emotional rollercoaster; and be sure to watch the Disney animated series in its entirety first before reading it. It's not for casual fans (though it may well win them over to become hardcore fans, it is that good), and there are spoilers for the whole show. It's a completionist's treasure.
Official and passionate, thy name is Disney's 'Amphibia's 'Marcy's Journal'.
Final Score: 4.5/5
Graphic Novel Review - 'The Fearless Defenders, Vol. 2: The Most Fabulous Fighting Team of All' by Cullen Bunn (Writer), Stephanie Hans (Artist), Will Sliney (Artist)
'The Fearless Defenders, Vol. 2: The Most Fabulous Fighting Team of All' is a mess. It's jumpy and rushed, with important details and storylines missing from it (I shouldn't have to read twenty other comics to fully get what's going on in this one!); also missing are some character arcs and development from the previous volume. Some characters are not used to their most basic potential (Misty Knight and Dani Moonstar are just kinda there, with no arc to them whatsoever), and there are implications to a couple of certain characters' "development" - I won't reveal who and what here due to spoilers - which are not explored and are outright ignored; worse, they're played for laughs. The book is so simple, and it suddenly takes a comedic approach overall, compared to volume 1. It's like a slapdash retooling by meddling executives for the second season of a TV series.
And yet... I kind of adore it anyway.'The Fearless Defenders' is still about arsekicking super ladies saving the day, saving the world. The action, while it does take over and is prioritised above everything else, is very good, and the women look so cool and awesome doing their thing.
Volume 2 is bizarre and insane in the way that makes superhero comic books so entertaining. The art is amazing and gorgeous in every issue. The first couple of said issues are more focused than the rest. I still like the characters, especially Annabelle Riggs. New inclusions to the Defenders are Clea, Elsa Bloodstone, Ren Kimura, and Frankie Raye, aka Nova.
Sheesh, Marvel has far too many characters, and superheroes and villains to deal with, use, or merely chuck out and forget about for the time being. Even over ten years ago, it was impossible to keep tack of everyone and every event in this universe. And now the MCU has taken over freaking everything, to the point where Marvel comics are currently planning out their storylines and characters for the sole purpose of wanting to be adapted into the films' universe, and it is all spiralling out of control and Marvel Studios is hurtling towards a black hole of its own making, and practically everyone - hardcore nerd or fan or casual viewer or whoever - is starting to be burnt out and fed up with its continuous existence and inevitable downfall and "phase" rot due to the business's hubris and growing greed despite owning billions and billions and billions of dollars and ruling the entertainment world with an iron, stifling grip...
*ahem*
Anyway, back to the review of the comic:
There is strong, positive LBGTQ content as well as positive female content in 'The Fearless Defenders, Vol. 2'. There are LOADS of female villains, to boot: Zheng Bao Yu, the Enchantress, Quicksand, Ruby Thursday (hey, I know her from that one classic 'She-Hulk' comic!), Titania, Scorpia, Shriek, Mindblast, and others. Caroline LeFay, the unimpressive big bad behind everything in the last volume, remains present and important as the big bad. And she's the illegitimate child of Morgan LeFay and Doctor Doom now.
Wait, WHAT!?
Since when? And HOW? Was this established in another comic, one I haven't read and have absolute zero interest in picking up?
Well, whatever. Caroline is more interesting this time round, regardless of parentage, so there's a plus.
Talking of interesting, did I forget to mention 'The Fearless Defenders, Vol. 2: The Most Fabulous Fighting Team of All' contains a talking female alien bug creature called a brood who may or may not become a Defender? How about Molly Fitzgerald, aka Shamrock (who sadly doesn't really do anything but be a barmaid)? Then there's Thanos' soldiers, ordinary people who are in cocoons for some reason, Hippolyta's Amazons, a Medusa Amazon called Delphyne Gorgon, Aradnea the "gothy Atlantean witch", Echidna the mermaid mother of all monsters, and giant lobsters and sharks.
Venom, Hercules, Iron Fist, Doctor Strange, and Jack Russell the freaking Werewolf are in this too. Whatever. They're purposefully made unimportant.
Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaannnnnnnd then it's cancelled. Typical.
Heroic women - heroic LGBTQ women - are rarely ever given the chance to really shine. For that shine to last and have an impact. Got to snuff it out before there's a revolution and change to pop culture, societal culture, and global business culture!
Inclusion and representation matters. It always has, and it still does.
This might be the last Marvel comic I'll ever read. Anything is possible in the future, of course, but I seriously have no interest in this universe and company anymore. Like my stance and feelings on the MCU, it's too much, and I'm burnt out. I miss stories that tell their own single, individual, focused and
I'm happy that my final comic from this company turned out to be a fun one, despite its many flaws. I won't be leaving on bitter terms.
As a whole, it isn't good for me anymore. It is time we part ways. For me to grow and move on.
Farewell, and thanks for the good memories, Marvel.
Final Score: 3.5/5
Sunday, 11 December 2022
Graphic Novel Review - 'Over My Dead Body' by Sweeney Boo
'Over My Dead Body'
I have been looking forward to getting my hands on this beautiful piece of graphic novel goodness for months. It sounded so right for me, it was like a miracle.Now that I finally own a copy and have devoured it, I will start by saying:
The further I read on, towards its end, 'Over My Dead Body' is quite a confusing comic. There are some holes in its plotting, mystery, pacing, structure, characterisation, and panelling. A few points, elements, creatures and characters get forgotten about - a kind of first draft, first-ideas-put-in syndrome is evident. As are the obvious edits and surely-deleted scenes left on the cutting room floor. I still don't fully understand the title; without revealing any spoilers, it is an odd little thing to refer to and emphasise in the grand scheme of its own context. And is it meant to be defiant, or subversive, or ironic?
But on the other side of the wand, it is an emotional, heavy, heartfelt gothic mystery story about friendship and found family, set in a witches' world, within a witches' boarding school. Magic, spells, animal familiars, demons, ghosts, amulets, pendulums, herbs, lilies of the valley, are abound. There is horrific imagery, too - this comic is not for children.
The characters are also human, passionate, headstrong, likeable, memorable, distinct, and rather well developed, even with the ending that's like a hodgepodge quilt with tears in it. LBGTQA+ elements include a nonbinary main character, and a slow-building side biracial w/w romance - one of the positives about the ending, of which there are many, I assure you, despite its flaws, is the girls' kiss! It is the only explicit romance in the comic, to boot. Women and girls love, and LBGTQA+ love, are everywhere here, in different shades in the light and dark spectrum. There are POC characters - people who are important, respected, and never forgotten about.
As well as magic, there is genuine love, passion and hard work to be found in 'Over My Dead Body'. Its heart is in it. In the right place. Warts and all. And I can't fault it for that.
It's an updated 'The Worst Witch' and other stories like it. 'The Chilling Adventures of Sabrina' also comes to mind. Its imperfections are almost charming. Regardless, it is an immersive, absorbing, exciting and spell-rific feminist, witch boarding school mystery graphic novel, which may or may not have a sequel planned. I probably won't bother to read it, but 'Over My Dead Body' on its own contains a substantial amount of things I love, and I am happy enough with it.
Final Score: 3.5/5
Book Review - 'The Little Match Girl Strikes Back' by Emma Carroll, Lauren Child (Illustrator)
A sweet, wonderful, educational and relevant little subversive fairy tale retelling for kids and adults to read in winter, at Christmas, at any holiday. At any time really. It's a history lesson about workers' rights - and women's rights - that's framed within the perspective of a poor child who has read the original Hans Christian Andersen tale, who can easily identify with the Little Match Girl, being one herself, and who has experienced some fantastical phenomena and dreams too.
But she won't let her story end tragically.Bridie Sweeney isn't a saintly, too-good-for-this-earth tragic heroine. She is proactive. She is determined. A survivor urchin. Her life won't be for the rich and well-off to feel sadness and pity for her, and then forget about and move on with their privileged existence, comforted in the knowledge that the status quo is intact. She doesn't want to die, quietly, in a fantasy, and out of everyone else's way. She wants to take action.
Match girls - match people - were real people. They actually existed, not just in the fairy tale. They had names and voices.
Bridie has a name, and a voice.
She wants to help others, including her mother and little brother, who also work in matches in some capacity, and are suffering for it under cruel and inhumane working conditions, and company abuse. She wants to help the impoverished women working in the literally poisonous match factory in London. She wants to take a stand, and fight for a better life for herself, her family, and other people like her.
She wishes to strike back.
By doing things like organising a protest...
'The Little Match Girl Strikes Back' is a quick day-read, with nice symbolic black-and-grey-and-red illustrations by Lauren Child, inspired by real photographs of the London match factory worker protests in the late 1800s. A lot of these photos are of poor children. The ending is pretty much a history account, moving swiftly alongside Bridie's story. The last few pages are another "dream" or "fantasy" or "vision" of hers, in the flame of a match. It shows a future, a happier time in her life, that she helped to make happen, and how much she can still do for others, for the world, right then. It is beautiful and almost perfect.
I do not like how the book very briefly gives us a sympathetic policeman - not a character, just a copper who whispers he secretly agrees with the women workers and wants them to be treated better. No police or similar authority figures in positions of power want to stop them, nor harm them. In a book about human rights and protests and driving change for the marginalised and disadvantaged and downtrodden. In a book published in this day and age. It is dishonest, disheartening, disappointing, especially in a children's book.
However, it is the only real flaw I can legit give 'The Little Match Girl Strikes Back'. It also has animals in it, including a cute puppy, so, softie that I am, anything to do with those, anything happening around them, I can forgive.
SPEAK UP!
UNIONISE!
TAKE DOWN CAPITALISM!
For a fast, educational, appealing, engaging, inspiring, hopeful and life affirming read to lift your spirits and faith in humanity at the end of the year, go ahead with 'The Little Match Girl Strikes Back'. I'm surprised the idea hasn't been done years ago.
Final Score: 3.5/5
Saturday, 3 December 2022
Graphic Novel Review - 'The Fearless Defenders, Vol. 1: Doom Maidens' by Cullen Bunn (Writer), Will Sliney (Artist), Veronica Gandini (Colourist)
'The Fearless Defenders, Vol. 1: Doom Maidens' can be considered an excellent and glorious start to those who are looking for female-led superhero comics, particularly in Marvel. It came out in 2013, so it is fairly old at this point (ten years!), but it is nonetheless an effective introduction to the prominent leading ladies featured here; not to mention entertaining as all hell. This is the most I've seen and understood of Valkyrie/Brunnhilde in the Marvel comics, and it marks the first time I've seen Misty Knight in anything, other than the book, 'Fearless and Fantastic!'.
'Doom Maidens' also stars Dani Moonstar (X-Man and Native American archer who is somehow no longer a mutant, and is somehow Hel's Valkyrie), Hippolyta, aka Warrior Woman (not related to DC comics, and is as far removed from that iteration as you can get), and Dr. Annabelle Riggs, an ordinary archaeologist who is swept up in the apocalyptic, earth-and-Asgard-and-the-Nine-Realms-and-the-universe-saving superheroine plot and action, and who also has the hots for Valkyrie. Cameos include the All-Mother, who are Freyja, Gaea, and Idunn, Hela, and brought in for the big climactic fight are: She-Hulk, Captain Marvel, Storm, Black Widow, Hellcat, Spider-Woman, Electra, Black Cat, Tigra, Thundra, Tarantula, and Colleen Wing! It is awesome.The ending, not so much. In fact, the ending is a downer. There is girl power, but significantly less girl success and girl support; women supporting women, and saving women. It is the reason why I kind of both love and hate 'Doom Maidens', but I won't elaborate due to spoilers. I hear it gets better in the subsequent issues, anyway, and it can't diminish the quality of an otherwise bloody brilliant and near-flawless book.
There is very good humour and banter as well as action and drama. The dynamics are so well written and well paced. The only real flaw throughout the comic up to the ending is the weak, undistinguished and unmemorable villains, who want to control ancient armies of the dead. They are a couple of non-powered, rich, power-hungry, nihilistic, trigger-happy, ruthless, sadistic and murderous nobodies named Caroline LeFay and Mr. Raven, who just want to watch the world burn.
But there is high fun, high stakes and high emotional peaks to be had. The Marvel universe really is ginormous, ample and messy. And there is LBGTQ rep, with a w/w kiss in the first issue.
'The Fearless Defenders, Vol. 1: Doom Maidens' comes recommended by me, despite the downer ending. I've already ordered the second volume. I have to know what happens next. Can't wait.
Final Score: 3.5/5
Graphic Novel Review - 'Star: Birth of a Dragon' by Kelly Thompson (Writer), Javier Pina (Artist), Filipe Andrade (Artist), Jay Leisten (Artist), Jesus Aburtov (Colour Artist), Chris O'Halloran (Colour Artist)
Ripley Ryan is an ordinary and severely traumatised woman, and a former fake superhero, and an abuse victim, who after her "death" is inexplicably bonded to an Infinity Stone that's somehow lodged in her chest. She hates superheroes, hates the kind of world she lives in, and her morals and how she goes about things are very questionable; this combined with the power to control reality however she wants it, which she is still new and amateurish at, makes her a threat to the entire Marvel universe.
But despite, for all intents and purposes, being a villain, can this abuse and trauma survivor ever be bought back from the brink, to not be the destructive, deadly dragon of limitless and endless power she is sorely tempted to be, out of fear, and a yearning for freedom from that fear and suffering and helplessness?In this short comic there is also Captain Marvel, who Ripley, aka Star, hates and fears the most for understandable reasons (and not just because Carol punched a hole through her chest and apparently killed her to stop her from killing all of New York - I mean, yikes!); Wanda Maximoff, aka the Scarlet Witch, another reality warper who's had her own share of deep trauma throughout her whole life, and who sees herself in Ripley and wants to save her from herself; Jessica Jones; and the Black Order, including Black Swan and Proxima Midnight, who are Thanos's former lackeys. Loki and Titania cameo in the beginning, too.
'Star: Birth of a Dragon' is an entertaining read overall, full of action and emotion. I and many others are intrigued by Star's character. The horror she went through was no fault of her own, of course, but it doesn't excuse her current actions, nor her choice to be destructive - externally, to allegedly help herself internally - even though you know where she is coming from with that. She merely wants freedom, and to protect herself, to not be afraid anymore. I hope this victim-turned-villain receives the help, care and support she needs in the future, so she can truly heal and save herself, and not want to destroy anything and anyone.
I wish Carol had been more compassionate towards Star/Ripley, and not so gung ho about beating her up, when she is clearly afraid and traumatised, because of Carol, no matter Ripley's past crimes and the current threat she is while she has the Reality Stone. I haven't read the preceding comics about Captain Marvel and Star, but Carol Danvers, while I get everything she's gone through in recent years (thanks, Marvel), nevertheless needs less anger and more thought and heart again. Her issues are making her almost as much of a danger as Star at this point. Carol, and everyone else, definitely needs therapy.
In a comic filled with potent female characters, displaying varying degrees of trauma and understanding of others' trauma, Jessica Jones sadly doesn't get to do much, and she is at best an extended cameo.
At least 'Star' manages to achieve one momentous thing I didn't think was possible before: it made me care about the Scarlet Witch. Her big, expanded role, and the understanding of her character (as a good guy, and a good person) are a huge plus. I might finally read a comic starring her - a solo comic, starring the Scarlet Witch, but not Vision. I'm all for ultimate power couples and iconic, unconventional romances, but sheesh, let Wanda, who is one of if not the most powerful woman in all of Marvel, define herself for a change, without the too-many men in her life.
The art is very good, if iffy and crooked in the faces and facial expressions a few times.
For a quick, action-packed read about complex, damaged women, with an unorthodox ending, give 'Star: Birth of a Dragon' a go.
Final Score: 3.5/5