TV Review – Emmet Otter’s Jug-Band Christmas

Emmet Otter’s Jug-Band Christmas (1977)
Written by Jerry Juhl and Paul Williams
Directed by Jim Henson

There is nothing else quite like the Muppets. Growing up in the 1980s & 90s, the Muppets were a constant presence in the media. Sesame Street lives on, and everyone knows who Kermit, Miss Piggy, and the rest are, but the Muppets and Jim Henson were more than that. You had films like The Dark Crystal and Labyrinth. There were shows as different as The Muppet Show, Muppet Babies, Fraggle Rock, and other less successful attempts. The throughline in all these things was the belief of Henson and his cohorts that incredible storytelling could still be done through the ancient art form of puppetry. Good puppetry completely blows the best digital effects out of the water. How a highly skilled puppeteer can manifest a multi-dimensional character is always more impressive.

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Movie Review – Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale

Rare Exports: A Christmas Tale (2010)
Written and directed by Jalmari Helander

The mixing up of Santa lore is a prevalent trope in modern Christmas fare. While it’s becoming more common to see dark, action-oriented Christmas movies over the last few years, Rare Exports was one of the first. I saw this when it was initially released in 2010, and this was my first rewatch since my initial viewing. I found it to be entertaining & charming on my original viewing, but now, thirteen years later, it has not held up very well. There’s a fantastic kernel of a premise at the center of the film, but it never entirely comes together and commits the greatest sin an action movie can: it becomes interminably dull.

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TV Review – The Venture Brothers Season Five

The Venture Brothers Season Five (Adult Swim)
Written by Doc Hammer & Christopher McCulloch
Directed by Christopher McCulloch

If you make it to season five of The Venture Brothers, you must enjoy the show. Coming off the incredible high of the season four finale, I was interested in seeing where the show went next. Season three had been concerned with building out the world and many supporting players, with Hank & Dean getting little screen time. Season Four allowed the brothers to develop into more complex characters, especially Dean, as he faced the challenges of being a grown-up. Season Five is a happy medium between these: the brothers keep developing as characters, and our supporting players pop up consistently. Doctor Orpheus and his Triad comrades are the only characters who don’t get much attention.

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TV Review – Knowing Me, Knowing Yule

Knowing Me, Knowing Yule (1995)
Written by Steve Coogan, Armando Iannucci, Patrick Marber, and Rebecca Front
Directed by Dominic Brigstocke 

The British have a word: “prat.” The definition I could find states: “very stupid or foolish.” I don’t think many characters could serve as a living definition of that word better than Alan Partridge. Partridge is the creation of actor/comedian Steve Coogan. This perennial television host is meant to encapsulate all the phony, idiotic behaviors your average TV presenter exhibits in the UK. I don’t think it’s too far off from some of America’s hosts.

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Solo Tabletop RPG Review & Actual Play – Dark Space/Cthulhu Dark Part Two

Purchase this game here.

Read Part One here

In the same way, I randomly rolled for crew members, I chose a similar method of exploring the Orpheus Station. On an earlier roll, I failed to get a map of the station from the tight-lipped AI, so our characters would wander through the facility trying to find an explanation for the sudden disappearance of thousands of people & the origins of the strange gray dust littering the floor everywhere.

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PopCult Podcast – Earth Mama/Eileen

The end of the year is approaching fast & with it come some fantastic films. In our first feature, we follow a young woman attempting to navigate an near impossible system to get her kids back. In the second, we see the world through the eyes of a disturbed young woman desperately in need of connection.

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Comic Book Review – Dark Knights of Steel

Dark Knights of Steel (2023)
Reprints Dark Knights of Steel #1-12
Written by Tom Taylor
Art by Yasmine Putri, Bengal, and Nathan Gooden

DC Comics has always loved a “What If?” story. The Silver Age, from the late 1950s to the end of the 1960s, was rife with covers that teased variations on your iconic superheroes. That trend revived itself in the Elseworlds imprint in the 1990s. The Silver Age stories often gave us alternate histories, while Elseworlds placed the heroes in new situations from space and time. Red Son saw Superman’s rocket landing in the USSR instead of Kansas. In Darkest Knight, Bruce Wayne receives the Power Ring instead of Hal Jordan. Batman: Red Rain showcased a world where Batman and many of his allies & enemies became vampires. With the big push for the new Multiverse, DC has recently rolled out more of these Elseworlds-type stories. There is DC vs. Vampires, which I previously reviewed, Jurassic League with humanoid dinosaurs, and this medieval set mini-series.

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TV Review – Tim & Eric Awesome Show, Great Job! Chrimbus Special

Tim & Eric Awesome Show, Great Job! Chrimbus Special (2010)
Written by Tim Heidecker, Jonathan Krisel, Doug Lussenhop, Jon Mugar, and Eric Wareheim
Directed by Tim Heidecker, Eric Wareheim, and Benjamin Berman

I can’t say I “got” Tim & Eric the first time I saw them. That was in the context of their first show for Adult Swim, Tom Goes to the Mayor. It would be discovering their follow-up, Awesome Show Great Job, that cemented them as some of my favorite modern comedians. I would eventually revisit Tom Goes to Mayor and appreciate it immensely. I still see how their tone & style of comedy might not be for everyone, but it certainly keeps me laughing. I decided to revisit this exceptional episode of their series where they invented their own grotesque take on Christmas.

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Movie Review – Klaus

Klaus (2019)
Written by Sergio Pablos, Jim Mahoney, and Zach Lewis
Directed by Sergio Pablas

The origins of Santa Claus have been the fodder for several pieces of modern American media. Rankin-Bass’ 1970 special Santa Claus is Coming to Town sees Santa as an orphan raised by elves. The animation company would do it again in 1985 with The Life and Adventures of Santa Claus, based on the novel of the same name by L. Frank Baum. 1985 was also the year the producing partnership of the Salkinds put out their gaudy Santa Claus: The Movie, which provided its own take on St. Nick’s beginnings. Other films have hinted at the origins of Santa and his elves through worldbuilding, like Disney’s The Santa Clause. So, why would someone else want to tackle this again? 

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Movie Review – Tokyo Godfathers

Tokyo Godfathers (2003)
Written by Keiko Nobumoto & Satoshi Kon
Directed by Satoshi Kon

This year, I wanted to look at some Christmas-themed films & television specials that are not part of the traditional canon but aren’t a garbage fire. Last year, I did a series titled “A Very 2000s Christmas” and found that decade to have some of the most rotten, mean-spirited dreck centered around a holiday that purports to be the opposite. I needed some media that brought me Christmas cheer this year. We start with this animated feature film from Japanese master filmmaker Satoshi Kon. I first became aware of Kon when I watched his incredible psychological thriller, Perfect Blue. When I found out he had made a Christmas film, it seemed like a perfect addition to this list.

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