jedibuttercup: (ardeth bey)
[personal profile] jedibuttercup
I dined at the parents' last night, and a friend of ours brought the video entertainment for the evening. I should have imdb'ed Attack Force before I let them put it in; it truly deserves a one-out-of-five-stars rating. Damn, Seagal's getting old. The plot summary's more exciting than anything that happens in it, and the only female character who isn't a secretary, a whore, or a hyped-on-drugs adversary dies before the end credits roll. We had a lot of fun mocking it.

Nearly as terribly plotted, but considerably more enjoyable: The Mummy: Secrets of the Medjai. All twenty-six episodes were on sale for something like $9 at Wal-Mart, and animated half-hour shows translate to about twenty-one minutes each without commercials, which is perfect for watching two back-to-back while on the elliptical machine. (The show pretty much presents like a parallel AU of the movies: most of the same characters are there, but they act like they don't remember anything that happened in them, and Evie's Irish or something instead of half-Egyptian).

I went through the first season of "Real Ghostbusters" the same way earlier in the year (the quality drops half-way through, but makes more world-sense than the Mummy series), and after watching the laughably-written but drawn-on-intriguing-backdrop Shyamalan movie that just came out, I think I'll pick up some "Avatar: The Last Airbender" next.

Any more animated series worth picking up on DVD for idle entertainment? I really didn't watch anything but the Disney Afternoon as a kid-- oh, and sometimes a little Sailor Moon or Inspector Gadget-- so I'm pretty unenlightened.

Date: 2010-07-30 11:23 pm (UTC)
pronker: snowflake promo (Default)
From: [personal profile] pronker
I enjoyed Real Ghostbusters when Youngest was into it. Great fun in the mold of the first movie.

Date: 2010-07-31 11:46 pm (UTC)
pronker: snowflake promo (haydensebastian)
From: [personal profile] pronker
It's dumb, but I like it a lot: Superhero Squad Show. All those Marvel heroes in extremely dumbed down mode. And the song, oh that song that won't leave your head ... it's currently on Cartoon network. Also current is Brave and the Bold, jollified Batman teamup stories a la the old BB comic book.

Also, I second Penguins of Madagascar.

Date: 2010-07-30 11:59 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] izhilzha.livejournal.com
I've been told The Venture Bros. is well worth watching.

(I'm also about to start watching Avatar: The Last Airbender, after years of having it pimped to me by friends.)

Date: 2010-07-31 12:05 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mgsmurf.livejournal.com
My brother was a huge ghostbuster fan, and thus we all watched the "Real Ghostbusters". It was lots of fun.

As a kid as I was huge Scooby Do fan. I think I'd find it formulaic if I re-watched, but the character interaction was fun, and I'd get the drug references now (my parents were not aware enough to get those).

Date: 2010-07-31 06:59 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mgsmurf.livejournal.com
I think I caught a bit of the live-action movie, and it wasn't good at all. Give the original (not newer) cartoon Scooby Do a try. It might work in a don't take it serious kinda way.

And I would hunt up "The Real Ghostbusters" on DVD, except I believe I'm not allowed to even own the movie as I can quote the entire thing.

Date: 2010-07-31 02:28 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] po-thang.livejournal.com
I liked Robotech when I was a teenager (haven't seen it in years though...despite having the boxset.) *sigh* I'll be glad when I get done with school so I can actually watch some of the dvds that I've invested in.

Date: 2010-07-31 03:06 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] flyingcarpet.livejournal.com
Have you seen Justice League Unlimited? It's fantastic. :)

Date: 2010-07-31 07:04 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] flyingcarpet.livejournal.com
Yes, they have it on Amazon. :)

Date: 2010-07-31 04:42 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bookworm-2005.livejournal.com
I'm a big fan of the first two Mummy movies. Does the animated series tell us anything about Ardeth Bey or the Medjai that makes sense? Does it feel like the writers did a reasonable amount of research? Is the bad characterization worth suffering through for the information?
I had no idea that such a series even existed, but most of the comments on IMDB seem very negative.

Date: 2010-08-01 01:01 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bookworm-2005.livejournal.com
Thanks for telling me. I'll be sure to avoid it like the plague, then. :)

Date: 2010-07-31 07:23 am (UTC)
kerravonsen: glass button: "Shiny!" (shiny)
From: [personal profile] kerravonsen
You MUST watch Samurai Jack. It is of the awesome!
Imagine a far future with Cyberpunk and Aliens, ruled by a shape-shifting megalomanic demon-wizard. And then toss a classic Samurai into the mix.

One of the things that I love about the eponymous Samurai Jack is that he is so polite. He's not one of these wise-cracking aggressive heroes - while his fighting skills are definitely kick-ass, he never takes offense, and fights defensively. And he takes all the weirdness (the first episode features talking dogs with British accents) in his stride.

It is fun. See it.

Date: 2010-07-31 08:19 am (UTC)
graycardinal: Shadow on asphalt (Default)
From: [personal profile] graycardinal
All of the DCU "Timmverse" shows (beginning with Batman: The Animated Series and running through Justice League Unlimited) are highly recommendable but not necessarily cheap.

The two you might check out first: Batman Beyond (50 years or so ahead of primary Bat-continuity, mostly self-contained) and The Zeta Project. Technically speaking, the latter is a spinoff of Batman Beyond, but it's also mostly self-contained, and is fascinating because it's emphatically not a superhero series; rather, it's "The Fugitive" where the fugitive is a shapeshifting android and his partner is a snarky teenage girl. Note carefully: male and female lead, a fair amount of straight sci-fi thematics, and -- eventually -- a bit of interesting ambiguity among the requisite Annoying Government Agents pursuing Our Heroes.

All three seasons of Batman Beyond are on DVD; so far, only the first season of Zeta has been released.

An older series I liked was Where on Earth is Carmen Sandiego? (season 1 available, plus one or two other small compilations). Skews younger than the DCU shows, but still surprisingly good action/adventure -- and, eventually, some interesting peripheral characterization around the edges, plus subtle meta/fourth-wall elements because there's a very understated framing device that acknowledges the whole thing is a game-world.

Three shows about which I know next to nothing about DVD releases, but which you might look into:

Jackie Chan Adventures. If Zeta is a "Fugitive" riff, this is what you'd get if you squashed together the Indiana Jones, Man from UNCLE, and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle franchises, hired Jackie Chan to play the lead, and borrowed the Muppet Show writing team to edit the scripts. A good case can be made that the fifth and final season jumps the shark, but the series as a whole is kind of amazing, because there are equal parts wackiness, high-powered chop-socky, and actual plot.

Sherlock Holmes in the 22nd Century. This was at once charming and very, very odd. The premise is just what the title promises: Holmes and Moriarty loose in a sci-fi future, in which Inspector Beth Lestrade is the police presence and Watson is an android (not entirely a Nigel Bruce incarnation, but more that than a partner). A number of scripts adapted cases from the Canon with varying degrees of success; OTOH, the ongoing Moriarty thread was often fascinating, and parts of the supporting cast developed in interesting fashion. [There's at least a bit of fic for this, I think.]

Huntik: Secrets & Seekers. One season of this popped up a year or two ago on Kids' WB/the CW, but I'm thinking there must have been more someplace, perhaps in international syndication (it's a French co-production). Structurally, it's another collectible-card-game series akin to Yu-Gi-Oh or Chaotic, but the writing in this one is focused much less on game mechanics and more on an interesting cast of characters.

Date: 2010-07-31 08:30 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] flingslass.livejournal.com
I love The Penguins of Madagascar! Rico is my favourite! :D

Date: 2010-07-31 07:05 pm (UTC)
graycardinal: Shadow on asphalt (Default)
From: [personal profile] graycardinal
Started out as feature films, but there's now a Nickelodeon series (I haven't seen it, but the creative team is largely the crew that masterminded Disney's Kim Possible, which is distinctly encouraging).

Date: 2010-08-01 02:26 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] flingslass.livejournal.com
It goes for about 12 minutes an episode and is brilliant. I can't stand King Julian but I couldn't in the movies. I think we are watching season 2 now. There's Skipper, Kowalsky, Rico and Private and all the other kooky animals. The only ones not in it are the four main characters from the movies.

p.1

Date: 2010-08-01 10:11 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Anonymous recommends! ~perhaps unwanted, but. XD

Avatar:TLA is amazing, and has a pretty epic fandom. The new live action movie was ridiculous - they changed names, backstories, and cut way too many things for them to ever be able to follow the second and third 'Books' faithfully. A second Avatar series (taking place decades in the future with the new Avatar) has just been confirmed by Nickelodeon, and I have high hopes for it.

The 90's DC Universe cartoons are incredible. Batman: The Animated Series and Superman: The Animated Series go hand in hand, and are followed up by the Justice League and Batman Beyond. Static Shock is another side series that gets a huge YES from me, about teenage mutant Virgil Hawkins who controls electricity.

Butch Hartman's Danny Phantom (plotty, good characters, consistent and existent storylines and universe!logic), Dexter's Laboratory (single episode storylines, great characters, good general consistency), Fairly OddParents (a Nick staple, now, awesome characters, some traces of plot between episodes/seasons, but can be viewed out of order). All of these are legally hosted by Cartoon Network and Nickelodeon online.

Back in the Barnyard and the Penguins of Madagascar are 3D/CGI animated comedies running on Nickelodeon right now, and they're amazing. Back in the Barnyard is a comedy about a barnyard of intelligent farm animals who hide their day to day activities from the farmer and his neighbors. Penguins of Madagascar is a comedy spin-off of the Madagascar movies focusing on the zoo's Special Operations team made up of penguins. There is at least one crossover fic out their where Kowalsky (sp?) from Stargate is reincarnated as one of these penguins - who shares his name.

An old Disney set: Darkwing Duck (every episode has been hosted on Youtube; not sure how legally - superhero Drake Mallard with companions Gosling (adopted daughter) and Launchpad (sidekick) clean up the streets of St. Canard and other assorted locations), Talespin, Ducktales, Chip N Dale Rescue Rangers - all of these presumably take place in the same universe, and cross over fairly often.

Other Disney cartoons are Kim Possible (plotty, good characters, great animation and acting), Gargoyles, and American Dragon: Jake Long (didn't market particularly well, but I thought it was a good fantasy).

Rugrats is a staple cartoon, and the spin off All Grown Up was surprisingly standable. Invader Zim was a fun show while it lasted, and they're reairing it on some Nickelodeon channels, despite it's low popularity. SpongeBob SquarePants will never die. The franchise has some good videogames, too.

Anime Recs: Fullmetal Alchemist (full marks for story - more than a bit dark, though), Astroboy, Rurouni Kenshin, Sailor Moon, Fruits Basket, Inuyasha (for nostalgia's sake? It's the epic romance that never ends), Dragonball series (while incredibly cracky and cheesy, I love the characters, storylines, and consistency of the first two series, however I know next to nothing about Dragonball GT), the early Pokemon episodes (before the series became too repetitive and started trading off their usual cast members), Death Note (mindblowing series, darkdarkdark), Gundam Wing, Cowboy Bepop

p.2

Date: 2010-08-01 10:11 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Cartoon Network: The Grim Adventures of Billy and Mandy, Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends (fun, and currently my favorite on Cartoon Network now that they've stopped playing Teen Titans), Teen Titans (outside of the usual DC Comics 'verse cartoons, but an awesome show), Jonny Quest (old, Scooby Doo era cartoon - wound up canceled in the sixties because of violence and 'questionable social and cultural themes), Thundercats (ooold, and cheesy, but good fun), Freakazoid, Animaniacs, Pinky and the Brain, Tiny Toon Adventures (all of the bolded cartoons are from Spielberg's era of interest - great shows, short run time, and most of them cross over with each other. Tiny Toons Adventures was a spin off of Looney Tunes, great fun. I could be wrong about whether Cartoon Network played these shows, or if they were run on Nickelodeon or the WB first), Jetsons, Flintstones (the Jetsons and the Flintstone always seem to go together.), Powerpuff Girls, Scooby Doo, Where Are You! (the best of all the Scooby Doo series, and miles above the new live action stuff they're producing now), Transformers (G-1, Armada, and the new Animated have different things going for each series: G-1 was a crackish series with an epic character set that had a great deal of plot, but no consistency and holes you could drive Optimus Prime through. Armada and Animated are miles ahead in terms of storyline, but they traditionally reinvent the cast of the series with each reproduction - with the notable exceptions of Megatron, Optimus, and occasionally Starscream), Looney Tunes (because I couldn't leave it off the list).


Another movie revamp that I've enjoyed along the same lines of Real Ghostbusters is Godzilla - the specific series attached to the 1998-1999 Godzilla film. Dr. Niko Tatopoulos (sp. in serious question) discovers Mommy!Godzilla's last baby after it hatches, and is adopted as Mommy!scientist by the baby mutant. The leftover scientists from Mommy!Godzilla's rampage band together to form H.E.A.T, a response team to various dangerous mutations, and are joined by a French spy (Monique) who was sent to keep an eye on baby!Godzilla.

Marvel Universe cartoons that are worth seeing: X-Men Evolution, the new Ironman cartoon, Wolverine and the X-Men, and the new Fantastic 4 running off of Nickelodeon. The latter three are new revamps of the series(es) to go with the new movies.

Jackie Chan Adventures is outside of every cartoon collection ever, but it's probably one of the best on this list. Hilarious, fun, supernatural adventure series starring Jackie Chan as a humble archaeologist, Uncle as Uncle, and Jade Chan as Jackie's no good mischievous niece.

Top three sets on the list are probably Spielberg's collection (Animaniacs, Freakzoid, et. al), the DC Comics Animated 'verse, Jackie Chan Adventures, and Avatar.

...I hope this helps? xD

--goes back to reading at TTH--

Date: 2010-08-01 10:40 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sulien.livejournal.com
If you want something short to keep you occupied while you're on the elliptical, you could always get your hands on seasons 1-4 of the old 50's-60's Western "Have Gun - Will Travel" (http://www.hgwt.com). The episodes are about the same length as the cartoons you're watching and the DVDs are available from several sources, some relatively cheap (just Google Have Gun Will Travel DVD).

Even if you're not overly fond of the Western genre, the character of Paladin is well worth watching the series for all on his own, not to mention the opportunity to see some of Gene Roddenberry's earlier work as a scriptwriter.

January 2026

S M T W T F S
     12 3
456 78 910
11 12131415 1617
18192021222324
2526 2728293031

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jan. 28th, 2026 09:17 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios