2026年7月8日 星期三

"Illuminations: Stories" by Alan Moore (2022)


"One major problem seemed to be that nearly everyone working in the business - artists, writers, editors and publishers - was a promoted comic fan who though they might know everything about King Bee, had no original or viable ideas of their own that might conceivably alleviate the comic world's near-terminal condition."

Alan Moore is a noted writer of comic books who began writing fiction in the late 90s.  He first came to widespread attention through his work at DC Comics, where he wrote a celebrated run on Swamp Thing, and where he then created the groundbreaking limited series Watchmen with artist Dave Gibbons.  Since his heyday in the 80s he's bounced around quite a bit, penning a number of comic book titles for a number of different publishers.

My personal (?) relationship with Moore goes back to that run on Swamp Thing in the early 80s.  I liked that character prior to Moore taking on writing duties, but it was Moore's innovations on that title that made me a genuine fan.  From Swamp Thing it was an easy leap to Watchmen, another series I loved, but after that seminal work I largely lost track of Moore, only reading a handful of the comics he wrote for Image later on.

This said, I have made jokes at his expense.  A few years ago I came across a quote by Moore, something to the effect of people becoming the thing they dread.  As part of this quote Moore explained that he'd become a wizard, and for years now I've been warning people of the perils of going to bed and waking up as a wizard, encouraging them to guard against such transformations.  This joke only ever lands with one friend who's also familiar with the same quote, but I still insist on repeating it from time to time, as if its repetition will make the reference any less obscure.  "I went to pay for my latte at Starbucks," I'll say, "And damned if I didn't become a wizard once the change hit the counter."

Alan Moore, to put it another way, takes himself incredibly seriously, and he probably thinks that you and I should too.  While briefly researching this short story collection, for example, I ran across an interview with him in which he explains the literary devices he uses in the writing of his stories - in case, you know, the rest of us are too slow on the uptake.  In the interview he seems nice enough about it, but yeah, he is in this respect far from unsassuming.

Anyway, on to the stories.

1. Hypothetical Lizard

This story starts off promising but goes nowhere fast.  I really liked the bit about the "whore of sorcerers" and the procedure employed in the creation of such a being, but the overall narrative is an extremely pedestrian tale of sexual jealousy which fails to utilize an excellent opening.

2. Not Even Legend

One of the better stories here.  A group investigating the paranormal meets and runs afoul of all the spirits which normally exist outside of their investigations.  It's a little like The Curious Case of Benjamin Button meets a detective story.  It works well.

3. Location, Location, Location

A pointlessly sexual story involving a real estate transaction and the end of the world.  I'm really not sure where Moore was trying to go with this one, and I don't think he's entirely sure either.

4. Cold Reading

A psychic gets on the wrong side of the supernatural.  It's a solid story that would have worked well as a horror comic.  Anything more than that would have involved a deeper dive into the characters.

5. The Improbably Complex High-Energy State

One of the most pretentious things I've ever read, and keep in mind that I've struggled through books like Gravity's Rainbow and Finnegan's Wake.  This story is best described as a kind of fantasia (or phantasmagoria) involving entities existing in a quantum substrate.  It tries to be amusing, occasionally succeeds, but I found reading it to be a real chore.

6. Illuminations

An older man pays a heavy price for nostalgia.  This is far and away the best story in this collection, and I assume it leans heavily on the author's memories of younger years.  The ending isn't altogether unexpected, but the various plot elements click together nicely in the end.

7. What We Can Know About Thunderman

This novella is the centerpiece of this short story collection, and serves as Moore's grand statement on the (American) comic book industry.  By turns pointless and confusing, this sprawling... thing really puts the "T" in "turgid."

In case, as Moore is likely to suspect, you're too slow to catch the symbolism, "Thunderman" is a stand-in for Superman, "American" is a stand-in for DC, and "Massive" is a stand-in for Marvel.  Having endured Moore's dismissing vignettes of various figures within the comic book industry, I can understand why more current creators are often so cryptic in their descriptions of interactions with him.  He's probably not a pleasant individual to deal with.

8. American Light: An Appreciation

What's more pretentious than a Beat poem which places various Egyptian deities in the context of San Franciscan history?  Its author supplying footnotes to this same Beat poem for the edification of his less literate readership!  Hey, at least it's short!

9. And, at the Last, Just to be Done with Silence

Don't ask me, I don't know.  Maybe it's about the devil?

Whatever it's about, it's the last story in this collection, and I felt like I'd just completed a marathon after finishing it.  Getting through Illuminations wasn't easy, and I have no desire to repeat the experience through any of Moore's other books.  Alan Moore has certainly written some excellent comic books, but I doubt the rest of his fiction is worth locating.

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2026年7月3日 星期五

Absolute Batman Vols. 1 and 2 by Scott Snyder and Nick Dragotta (2025 and 2026)


This Batman, described as a "genius of violence" by none other than this comic book universe's Alfred Pennyworth, is a lot more badass than the Batman you're probably used to.

Is he rich?  No, he was born poor, in Crime Alley, where he developed several lasting friendships with people who were, in "normal" DC continuity, his adversaries.

Does he have a chip on his shoulder?  Yes, he does, but for different reasons.  In the Absolute universe his father, a teacher, was killed during a school field trip, and his mother is still living.

Are bats relevant to his becoming a masked vigilante?  Yes, but not in the same way.  Instead of falling into a cave full of bats on his parents' estate, he gets pushed into the bat house during a shooting which leads to his father's death, and he never develops the same fixation on that animal.

Is he an unassuming, normal-looking guy outside of his costumed adventures?  In a way yes, in another way no.  He does work a regular job, but he's also a HUGE individual - hulking even - with an interest in things like poker and boxing.

Is he the world's greatest detective?  Not in the conventional sense, no.  This Batman is more of a strategist ready to get his hands dirty.  What he wages against Gotham's criminal element is more of a war with serious casualties, and he has zero qualms about taking lives in the process.

Does he have a Robin?  Lord I hope not.  The Wikipedia entry detailing his exploits in volume 3 (which I have yet to read) mentions that the Absolute Deathstroke makes an appearance with "an army of Robins" later on.  I sincerely hope Robin isn't introduced as part of a lame attempt to tone this character down and/or make him more "relatable."

How about his rogue's gallery?  Scott Snyder has, I think, made them all better.  Gone are the more cartoonish adversaries of yesteryear, to be replaced by truly terrifying individuals acting out nearly unimaginable levels of trauma.  The Bane of this series is SCARY, and even relatively minor villains such as Black Mask are very sinister.

By this point Absolute Batman represents over a third of the Absolute Universe's total revenue.  I totally get this.  I've read bits of Absolute Superman, Absolute Martian Manhunter and Absolute Flash, and Absolute Batman outshines them all in terms of consistency, attention to detail and sheer badassery.  

It should also be said that volume 2 far outshines volume 1 in terms of awesomeness.  If you've only read volume 1 and wondered what the big deal was, I highly encourage going back and reading volume 2 immediately.  Volume 2 is METAL, upping the ante considerably on all the weirdness hinted at in volume 1.

I plan on reading volume 3 later this summer.  For that matter I'd like to take another pass at Absolute Martian Manhunter (which I enjoyed) and track down Absolute Wonder Woman, which I haven't read yet.  At this point in time DC is BURYING Marvel in terms of comic book sales, and for evidence one need look no farther than the two trade paperbacks discussed here.

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Thoughts on 1966-1967's Ultraman TV Show 3


Almost done with the original series!  I think I might watch some vintage anime after this entry - there seems to be a lot of it on YouTube.

If you've enjoyed these entries I'm glad.  Writing them has certainly been an eye-opening experience for me, and at some point in the future I'll probably continue on to Ultraseven, the next Ultraman series after the original run.



Space creatures invade a cosmic ray research center, miniaturize various scientists, and cause general distress.

This episode's monster's name, "Dada," is, by the way, a reference to the avant-garde art movement which developed around World War I.  Dadaism came after the cubist movement, and often involves cutting and pasting words or images.  David Bowie used the Dada approach to writing poetry to craft the lyrics to many of his early songs.



"Golden Monster Goldon."  Try saying that five times fast.

As monsters go Goldon is bad news.  He eats up gold and hides inside the earth, and he likes to stomp mountain villages.  Cap and Ide take a new vehicle, the Vellucidar into the subterranean depths to catch him, but that goes badly and Ultraman has to save the day again.



Things get mythological when a hunter angers the monster Woo by pursuing a "snow girl" into the mountains.  Said Woo is NOT COOL with hunters bothering its lady friends.



One of my favorite episodes.  It makes almost no sense from beginning to end.

The Science Patrol gets a new member, or at least a transfer from the Science Patrol's South American branch, and this transfer isn't all that he first appears to be.

Yes, Random Scientist Guy, any civilization founded by blood-drinking sentient plants is doomed to failure!



Zumbolar is one of the cuter monsters.  It must have been really hot to stomp around in those flames wearing that suit.

In this episode "Patty," visiting from the Science Patrol's India branch (!), fails to help the Science Patrol deal with Zumbolar's stompiness and general disregard for both public and private property.

No idea why they suddenly feel sorry for Zumbolar at the end of this episode.  It's not like he was any more or less sympathetic than the other kaiju.



This Mefilas is a real tool.  I bet he hangs out with Alien Baltan when he's not attempting to seize other species' planets.

But for whatever reason Mefilas needs a particular (human) boy to verbally cede the Earth to him, and what follows are some weird "torture" sequences involving the boy and his sister, Akiko.  In the course of this "torture" Mefilas (as you would expect?) turns the lovely Akiko into a kaiju, and the Science Patrol has to pull its punches when it comes to fighting the city-wide destruction which results.

At the end Ultraman just kind of says "Fuck it," and lets Mefilas fly off.  Mefilas vows to return, hoping for some future human who will say "The Earth is yours!" so he can take over.

In case Mefilas is reading this, I recommend journeying to Las Vegas or some similar city next time.  After people have gone through the last few dollars in their bank accounts THAT'S the time to swoop in and ask: "Hey, would you mind handing over the entire planet to me?"



Cap has Hayata fly the VTOL over just to deliver an umbrella?  That's not a waste of public or private resources... at all!

Kinda weird including a suicide in the first five minutes of a kid's show, but then again they did the same thing in the Spider-Man series.  Japan is... Japan.

You can tell the actors involved had more fun making this one.  There are fun little improvised (?) scenes of them waking up in the middle of the night, drinking beer and (I'm not making this up) shooting a rocket up a kaiju's ass.  Japan is - again - Japan.



Satisfyingly ridiculous.  In this episode the Science Patrol decides to have a Buddhist funeral for all the monsters Ultraman's thrown into space.

Seabozu is a sad, skeletal-type monster who just wants to leave the Earth's atmosphere.  Why be dicks about it, Science Patrol?  Why attack him when he just needs a hug?  Why not just help him leave?

Anyway, don't ask me to explain it, but after a lot of weird empathizing with the kaiju the Science Patrol dresses up a rocket to look like Ultraman, and uses this rocket to shoot Seabozu back into space.



The Science Patrol fights a Doomsday-like monster that gets stronger every time they attack it.  Arashi ("the Spider Shot guy") goes rogue for a bit and helps Ultraman take the monster down in the end.



It's time to get meta.  Pigmon shows up in a Tokyo department store and looks over some choice Ultraman toys.  After that Ide invents a machine to translate Monster Language into human speech (no thanks to the professor!) and they find out that a MONSTER APOCALPYSE is about to happen if they don't defeat Geronimon, a kaiju that has resurrected all of Ultraman's defeated foes.

....the end result being Ide's realization that Ultraman helps those that help themselves... even if poor Pigmon does get squished in the process.



Our Heroes journey to Planet Q to retrieve something called a "BM Fuse" for a damaged space station.



What a weird end to the series.  Aliens decide to invade the Earth and Ultraman loses - for the second time in the entire series - to an alien adversary.  The difference in this instance being that he really does die - or something - and then decides to "sacrifice himself" for the sake of Hayata, his human host.  At this point Zoffy, an emissary sent from the Land of Light, takes Ultraman back there in a big red globe.

BUT... what about the undefeated kaiju?  What about the alien invasion?  Is the world still doomed?  The Science Patrol, busy saying goodbye to Ultraman, is completely oblivious to such matters!

After watching this episode I'm no longer sure that the series is set in the distant future.  The scientist guy mentions that the aliens have been making contact since the 1930s, and that the alien invasion is the result of forty years of planning.  So, at the latest, this series takes place in the 1970s, a little after the episode's broadcast date.  An earlier episode described the Cold War as an event occurring in the distant past.  Who knows?

Anyway, that's it for Ultraman for now.  I'll be watching other things for a while, and, as said above, I may work my way (back) to Ultraseven in the fall.

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2026年6月14日 星期日

"The Life Cycle of the Common Octopus" by Emma Knight (2025)


"A large part of her wished she could stop caring about whatever it was that had come between her dad and Lennox.  Why this fixation on a past that wasn't even hers?  But she knew why.  She could see how easy it would be to relive her parents' lives without quite choosing to, the way a toboggan finds its way into the pre-compressed path of whoever went before.  She wanted to better understand the route they had taken, so she didn't fall into it by mistake."

Emma Knight is a Canadian author with only this novel to her credit.  Before turning to the writing of fiction she was a journalist and co-writer of cookbooks.  There's talk of The Life Cycle of the Common Octopus being adapted into a television series by MGM Television, but that series is far from being realized at the time of writing.

In the book Pen (short of "Penelope") ventures to Scotland to study abroad.  After doing so she forges a relationship with the Lennox family, a group of erstwhile aristocrats living in a restored castle.  She is immediately attracted to the Lennox's young son, Sasha, but her and Sasha's feelings for one another are undermined by both Pen's father's past dealings with the Lennoxes and family secrets on both sides.

What's a young, sexually inexperienced Canadian girl to do?  Well, if you've read as many of these "chick lit"-type books as I have, you'll know that yes, Pen and Sasha eventually hook up, and yes, all of the family secrets are brought to light in the concluding chapters of this novel.

Just don't ask me what the octopus present in the title is supposed to symbolize.  I'm still not entirely sure.  The Margot character attempts to explain that during her and Pen's outing at the aquarium, but it seems a feeble metaphor, and one not entirely connected to the narrative.

The Life Cycle of the Common Octopus is a clumsily written book by a first time author.  As such I'd give it a passing grade, but only passing.  It resembles any number of similar books now on the market, and the author needs to either increase her output or start taking serious chances if she wants to avoid drowning in a sea of literary mediocrity.

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2026年6月7日 星期日

(Japanese) Spider-Man (1978-1979) 2


"Spider Strings!"

"Spider Machine GP7!"

"Marveller!"

"Change Leopardon!"

Yes, it's time for another round of the Japanese Spider-man TV show, my lowkey sexual obsession with "Amazoness" continuing unabated.

This entry brings me up to 28 episodes out of 41.  That's all I could find on YouTube.  I'd love to watch the remaining 13 episodes, but alas, I couldn't find them online.  

(I even tried searching by スパイダーマン! )



Spider-man helps a boy with a heart condition.  Not much happens in this episode, even if Spider-man FINALLY figures out Amazoness' secret identity as the editor of his girlfriend's newspaper.



Professor Monster and his Iron Cross Army try to blow up a dam AND flood the city of Tokyo with gas that they plan on igniting afterward.  The Iron Cross Army be gangsta like that.

And that's one tough dog.  Not only does it walk off two bullets, but it later falls off the side of a damn and fights off several henchmen.

Not sure what the boy was doing in the mountains in the first place.  Maybe looking for his dad?  But how would he know where his dad was?



A pro wrestler wants to become "the strongest one there is," and ends up getting turned into a "machine bem" that resembles the Thing.



Spider-man helps a boy bullied by classmates while the Iron Cross Army, for inexplicable reasons, commits a series of extremely low level crimes across the Tokyo area.  Can't help but feel sorry for the mom accused of stealing 5 million yen.  That was a low blow, Amazoness, even for you!

And how many boys had fathers killed in car accidents in late 70s Japan?  Judging by this show it was A LOT.



Definitely one of the weirder ones.  I'd put this alongside the cat demon episode.  Spider-man meets an alien boy with mind powers who takes him to a secret village in the mountains where the locals (who can all fly) are planning to sacrifice the boy's sister to a monster in a lake.  Amazoness gets a new outfit in this one, and I'm not a fan of the new look.  Maybe they thought she was too drab in earlier episodes?



Funny how you bad guys keep running into Takuya, isn't it?  It's almost as if he's... Spider-man?

In this one the Iron Cross Army kidnaps a girl (so much kidnapping!) who might have the power of precognition. 



This is one of the more random ones.  An Interpol guy gets caught spying on the Iron Cross Army, and Spider-man helps him escape their clutches.  But why not carry the guy once he's injured?  Isn't Spider-man strong enough?  And why bother to commandeer the helicopter if they weren't going to escape in it?  And why not take the guy directly to the hospital, so he could see his son another day?



One of Professor Monster's more skeletal henchmen goes around stealing people's blood for his boss.  In the midst of that Spider-man rescues a blind little girl.  Can you guess who the little girl's father is?



Watch your back, Takuya, some dude's buying your girlfriend presents behind your back!

Shortly thereafter Takuya stumbles upon - I kid you not - a private club where people gamble on rabbit races, chick races and spider fights.  Go figure.  Was that really a thing in Japan at the time?  I kind of doubt it.

It should be noted that at this point in the series Spider-man not only has a spider sense but also X-ray vision and the completely inexplicable ability to know when someone's trying to contact him.  By this point his powers are pretty much all over the place.

And naturally the "sorceress" running the club turns out to be one of Professor Monster's Machine Bem.  She resembles a lower grade Mysterio.



Spider-man meets A BOY WHO THROWS COCKROACHES ON PEOPLE and who at one point PUTS A COCKROACH IN ANOTHER BOY'S MOUTH.  Yeah, if you enjoy that kind of weirdness this show is for you!

And as you'd expect the machine bem at the end is a cockroach.  Why wouldn't it be a cockroach?  Of course it's a cockroach!!



A former jewel thief is tortured to death by the Iron Cross Army, and they create clone (?) to trick the thief's son into divulging the location of a hidden gem.  But as you'd expect Spider-man shows up, and so much for the missing gem, the Iron Cross Army and their giant crab monster.

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2026年6月6日 星期六

Still More 00s Movies 4: 2007-2009

The movies below are ranked from "best" to "worst."


1. Exam (2009)

Several individuals enter a room to pass an exam, the nature of which is open to strenuous debate.  Like Vacancy below Exam is a very tightly paced thriller that'll keep you guessing from beginning to end.  It reminded me a little of 1997's Cube.

Fun Fact: Gemma Chan is in this for a bit.  It was her second movie.


2. Vacancy (2007)

I'm pretty sure I'd seen this before.  Not 100% sure, but it did seem familiar.

Kate Beckinsale and Luke Wilson star as an estranged couple trapped in a motel room by psychopaths, with Frank Whaley doing a nice turn as the motel's manager.  It will probably remind you of a hundred other noir/suspense films but the script was watertight and the director clearly put a lot of thought into what he was doing.


3. Shrooms (2007)

Mushroom tourism?  Is that a thing?  And would Americans really journey all the way over to Ireland for that purpose?  I haven't done enough drugs to answer those questions.  Maaaaybe?

As you'd expect they venture into the Irish woods for their mushroom excursion.  And no, their trip is not a good one.

For the record I've ingested a hallucinogenic substance exactly one time, and I have absolutely no desire to repeat the experience.  What I felt and saw during that extremely unpleasant evening long ago I have no desire to ever feel or see again.



A former hitman takes on one last job.  You might remember star Frank Vincent from Goodfellas, and there are a couple character actors from other mob movies in the cast as well.  It doesn't get off to the best start (that scene in the strip club somehow demeans the rest of the movie), but once the main characters are established this film is on firm footing.

Fun Fact: Frank Vincent appeared in three Scorsese movies, these being Raging Bull, Goodfellas and Casino.  Both he and Joe Pesci briefly worked as studio musicians before appearing in movies, and for a time they even performed as a comedy duo known as "Vincent and Pesci."


5. The House Bunny (2008)

I was prepared to hate this gender-flipped update of Revenge of the Nerds, but as it turns out it's very funny.  Anna Faris shows both great promise and great comedic timing in the lead role, and her costar Emma Stone was, in 2008, on the cusp of a storied career in film.

Fun Fact: Beverly D'Angelo is in this.


6. The Burrowers (2008)

Underground dwellers menace settlers in the Dakota Territories.  As Westerns go it's a slow burn, but I liked it a lot.  Reminded me of Bone Tomahawk.


7. Hancock (2008)

I hadn't seen this since it first ran in theaters, and I'd have to say that it's improved a bit with age.  In 2008 most of us were measuring Hancock against films such as Batman Begins, The Dark Knight or even the first Iron Man, and Hancock definitely suffered by comparison.  This said, it's definitely not a bad film and it did try to do something new with the genre.

Fun Fact 1: Before Will Smith took on the lead role, Dave Chappelle was almost cast as Hancock.

Fun Fact 2: The original draft of the script was vastly different from the finished product.  It was a dark, harrowing account of a young boy helping an alcoholic (and suicidal) superhero.  Some of those who read it likened it to Leaving Las Vegas.


8. Superhero Movie (2008)

This parody missed it by that much, didn't it?  It came out the same year as both Iron Man and The Incredible Hulk, but at the time no one knew just how BIG the MCU was going to become.

As it is Superhero Movie mostly riffs on Sam Raimi's Spider-Man trilogy.  Some of the X-men and Fantastic Four characters are in it too, and they're even referenced by name.

It's a mildly funny movie.  If they'd only waited a couple years they would have had a lot more material to work from.


9. 12 Rounds (2009)

Pretty sure I saw this one in the theater.  Pretty sure.  Not 100%.

Whatever the case, John Cena stars as a New Orleans cop pursued by a vengeful terrorist, and it all pans out as you'd expect.  By now we all know that John Cena can carry a movie, but in 2009 this proposition was far from certain, and he turns in a serviceable performance here.

Fun Fact: Renny Harlin directed this.  In case you're not familiar, he was the director behind Die Hard 2, The Adventures of Ford Fairlane (!) and Cliffhanger.


10. Fool's Gold (2008)

Matthew McConaughey and Kate Hudson trade on their collective sex appeal in this story of sunken treasure off the Florida coast.  Critics hated it, and it didn't make a great deal of money, but it passes by pleasantly enough.

I have to say, however, that the subplot involving Donald Sutherland and his (extremely attractive) daughter is far more interesting than the Spanish gold, McConaughey's faltering marriage, or whatever's going on with Kevin Hart and his goons.  Sutherland steals every scene he's in, and the actress playing his daughter is so hot she manages to make even Kate Hudson look average.


11. Blood and Bone (2009)

Hats off to guys like Michael Jai White and Scott Adkins.  They've burrowed into a very, very specific niche from which they're not likely to emerge.  Super buff martial arts guys in love with complicated fight choreography and practical effects are an endangered species, and conservation efforts are underway.

Blood and Bone is like two thirds of a decent 80s action spectacle separated by a mediocre second third which most won't pay any attention to.  For the record White is a decent actor, and his nemesis in Blood and Bone, Eamonn Walker, is an even better actor, but yeah, that middle part wasn't doing either of them any favors.


12. Ghosts of Girlfriends Past (2009)

Matthew McConaughey and Jennifer Garner star in this update of A Christmas Carol.  If it wasn't for Michael Douglas and Emma Stone this movie would be a lot worse than it is, but given their presence in the cast it's better than it has any right to be.


13. What Happens in Vegas (2008)

Cameron Diaz and Ashton Kutcher get hitched after a night out on the town in Sin City.  It's dumb, it's borderline offensive, but it does muster up a few funny scenes and bits of dialogue.  Critics hated this one too, but it went on to make a lot of money regardless.

Fun Fact: Zach Galliafanakis is in this for a few minutes.  He'd appear in the first Hangover the following year.


14. The Red Baron (2008)

One of the most expensive German films ever made and also one of German cinema's biggest disasters.  Audiences in Germany really weren't feeling the positive spin put on Germany's role in the Great War, and The Red Baron wasn't well received internationally either.  I will say that the aerial battles are amazing, even though the story's a bit thin and the characters are less than engaging.


15. Dead Mary (2007)

Lower budget Canadian film that's a cross between Evil Dead and The Thing.  The cinematography is better than the weak script and indecisive direction deserved.  The first half is promising, but the second half either fails to demonstrate its internal logic or the characters abandon this internal logic entirely.


16. Paul Blart: Mall Cop (2009)

This movie was a struggle.  Not once during its hour and a half runtime did I laugh.  Not once was I touched by any emotions resembling mirth.  Not once was my interest piqued or my attention arrested.

But of course this movie wasn't made for me.  It was made for schlubbier, more downtrodden guys still convinced they can net a hot girl who's wildly out of their league.  It was made for persons under the age of eighteen and over the age of twelve.  It was perhaps also made for members of foreign communities who don't share my sense of humor.  Whoever falls into this movie's target demographic, I hereby shake you warmly by the hand and congratulate you on discovering and embracing Kevin James, an actor's whose popularity I've never understood.

As for myself I'll be elsewhere, watching other things.  Paul Blart: Mall Cop 2?  I think not!


17. The Blackout (2009)

Either earthquakes trigger an invasion by earwig people or earwig people trigger a series of earthquakes - it's never clear what caused what.  This one's super low budget and might remind you of the far superior Cloverfield.


18. Poker Run (2009)

Like a lot of biker movies there was a good story in there, somewhere, they just failed to bring it out.  Two dudes go on a bike ride with their ladies, run into a couple bad hombres, and a lot of people end up dying.

The funny thing about this movie is the ending.  Not only do they fail to explain what happened to the girlfriend Our Hero was so urgently chasing across California, but the twist at the end makes almost no sense.


19. Static (2008)

Three dumbasses put chips into their brains and develop psychic powers.  Man, this TV movie just crawls by.



Lance Henriksen cashes a modest check while the rest of the cast - to one extent or another - f&*ks around with spiders and finds out.  The CGI in this TV movie has not aged well.

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