One film deconstructs the tropes of the lakeside slasher genre of horror. The other follows the rise & fall of a motorcycle club in the 1960s/70s US Midwest.
Continue reading “PopCult Podcast – In a Violent Age/The Bikeriders”Solo Tabletop RPG Review & Actual Play – Kids on Bikes Solo Part Two
You can purchase Kids on Bikes here.
You can purchase the Plot Unfolding Machine here.
Read our previous session setting up our game here.
Before jumping into our story, I want to talk about the tool I will use to make Kids on Bikes solo. I have chosen to go with Jeansen Vars’s Plot Unfolding Machine. I genuinely love the structures and tools Mythic GM Emulator and Mythic Magazine provide. However, they are more about creating frameworks but don’t prompt the story beyond a general direction. The Plot Unfolding Machine delivers a bit more guidance, and for the purposes of this game, I thought that would be a fun change of pace.
Continue reading “Solo Tabletop RPG Review & Actual Play – Kids on Bikes Solo Part Two”Comic Book Review – Batman: The Dark Knight Volume Four & The Caped Crusader Volume Two
Batman: The Dark Knight Detective Volume Four (2021)
Reprints Detective Comics #601-611 and Annual #2
Written by Alan Grant, Brian Augustyn, and Mark Waid
Art by Norm Breyfogle and Val Semeiks
Batman: The Caped Crusader Volume Two (2019)
Reprints Batman #432-439, 443-444 and Annual #13
Written by Marv Wolfman, John Byrne, James Owsley (Christopher Priest), and Kevin Dooley
Art by Jim Aparo, Pat Broderick, Michael Bair, and Malcolm Jones III
Alan Grant and Norm Breyfogle continued their run on Detective Comics with a series of multi-part stories. In The Dark Knight Detective Volume Four, we get four plus a novel-length annual. This creative duo was a case of being in the right place at the right time on top of being immensely talented. They were working on Detective as Tim Burton’s Batman was released. Sales on the title went from 75,000 a month to 650,000 with that film’s debut. Their success on Detective would follow them to the Batman title for a couple years and even garner a spin-off ongoing with Batman: The Shadow of the Bat in 1992. Eventually, we’ll get to that one.
Continue reading “Comic Book Review – Batman: The Dark Knight Volume Four & The Caped Crusader Volume Two”Solo Tabletop RPG – Worldbuilding: The Location Crafter Part One
You can purchase The Location Crafter here.
For this session, I focused on the location details I rolled up in the last session with Random Realities. I used Tana Pigeon’s The Location Crafter, a spin-off of their Mythic GM Emulator engine to further develop these details into a playable space. Like all Mythic-related content, the Location Crafter is intended to be modular. A solo player can choose what they want to add to their core RPG system. In the case of The Location Crafter it is about creating an explorable space with lists. You’ll roll on these lists, adding a score for how much has been explored already, which enables items from lower on the list to be “unlocked.”
Continue reading “Solo Tabletop RPG – Worldbuilding: The Location Crafter Part One”Movie Review – Ernest Goes to School
Ernest Goes to School (1994)
Written by Coke Sams and Bruce Arntson
Directed by Coke Sams
Amidst a sea of mediocrity (and trust me, it gets so bad with the last two films), Ernest Goes to School emerged as a decent watch. Part of this is likely because it’s the only Ernest film that was not directed or written by John Cherry. Instead, Cherry’s longtime writing collaborator, Coke Sams, was promoted to the lead position. The result is a film that resembles the previous films but adds some new ideas that Sams must have had rattling around for a while. The problem, though, is that Goes to School is two scripts that have unsuccessfully mashed together. There’s a script about Ernest playing football and one about him returning to high school.
Continue reading “Movie Review – Ernest Goes to School”Movie Review – Ernest Rides Again
Ernest Rides Again (1993)
Written by John Cherry and William M. Akers
Directed by John Cherry
This was the end of an era. The Ernest films lost their Touchstone financing post-Scared Stupid. It was the largest budget with the second-highest box office returns, which wasn’t too bad. Ernest Rides Again would be the last nationally theatrically released entry in the series, and the decline in budget is evident on screen. The previous film had been given a $9.6 million budget, while Rides Again clocked in at $3 million. As a result, this movie resembles John Cherry’s first theatrical venture, Dr. Otto and the Riddle of the Gloom Beam. What we get is a movie that is trying to be something of theatrical quality but ends up being the first of many slogs we have to get through.
Continue reading “Movie Review – Ernest Rides Again”Movie Review – Ernest Scared Stupid
Ernest Scared Stupid (1991)
Written by John Cherry, Charlie Gale, and Coke Sams
Directed by John Cherry
Of all the Ernest films, this is the closest we got to perfect synergy between a big Hollywood production and the particular sense of humor John Cherry & his collaborators shared. Every Ernest film had made more money than the last, which led to this being the highest budget Touchstone had ever given the production team, $9.6 million. Ernest Scared Stupid made less than Goes to Jail – $14 million compared to $25 million. This was also the final film handled by Disney, fulfilling the original four-film deal that started with Ernest Goes to Camp. Scared Stupid would mark the end of an era for Jim Varney and lead to a very different type of Ernest movie for the rest of the 1990s.
Continue reading “Movie Review – Ernest Scared Stupid”PopCult Podcast – The Boy and The Heron/Furiosa
A Japanese animation master delivers his potential swan song while An Australian filmmaking legend visits his apocalyptic sandbox once again.
Continue reading “PopCult Podcast – The Boy and The Heron/Furiosa”Solo Tabletop RPG Review & Actual Play – Kids on Bikes Solo Part One
While the hit Netflix series Stranger Things was inspired by classic games of Dungeons & Dragons, it seems like a no-brainer that someone would develop a tabletop RPG system to make playing the show possible. That’s the basic premise of Kids on Bikes, a game where players are the inhabitants of a small town where mystery and horror are bubbling to the service. Despite the title, PCs can be kids, teens, or adults and use pre-made archetypes to quickly take on a role you would expect to find in such a story. A unique powered character is shared narratively between all the players, a la Eleven or E.T.
Continue reading “Solo Tabletop RPG Review & Actual Play – Kids on Bikes Solo Part One”Comic Book Review – Batman: The Dark Knight Detective Volumes Two & Three
Batman: The Dark Knight Detective Volume Two (2018)
Reprints Detective Comics #583 – 591 and Annual #1
Written by John Wagner, Alan Grant, Lewis Klahr, Steve Piersall, and Denny O’Neill
Art by Norm Breyfogle, Dean Haspiel, and Klaus Janson
Batman: The Dark Knight Detective Volume Three (2020)
Reprints Detective Comics #592 – 600
Written by John Wagner, Alan Grant, Sam Hamm
Art by Norm Breyfogle, Irv Novick, Eduardo Barreto, Denys Cowan
Unlike Superman, Batman didn’t have a hard reboot following the continuity shuffling Crisis on Infinite Earths. Superman got a stand-alone mini-series, Man of Steel, that retold his origins and reshaped his supporting cast. Batman did get Frank Miller and David Mazzuchelli’s Year One arc, but it didn’t wipe the slate clean like DC did with Superman. Superman also had a reasonably solid writing team during this period, helmed by John Byrne and Roger Stern. Batman has creative teams rotating in and out on his two monthly books in shorter runs.
Continue reading “Comic Book Review – Batman: The Dark Knight Detective Volumes Two & Three”









