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Posts Tagged ‘critique’

Review: Beavis and Butt-head – The Mike Judge Collection, Vol. 1

December 4th, 2005

Being a night-owl, I was up late one evening when MTV2 ran an infomercial for this DVD set.  Remembering all the laughs I got from this series when it originally aired, I decided to buy the DVDs.  The best price I found at the time was on DeepDiscountDVD.com.  Now that it’s been out for a little while, you can probably do better through Amazon.com’s Marketplace (click the picture of the set at the left to visit their site and look at the pricing).

Today I sat through the entire 3-DVD set.  Many of the episodes I remember are here.  Some are not.  For instance, I thought “Frog Baseball” would be here.  It isn’t.  That’s the film that actually convinced MTV to do Beavis and Butt-head in the first place.  You’d have thought it would be on the first set.

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Review: Southwest Specialty Foods’ “Ass Kickin’ Popcorn”

November 29th, 2005

Image of the Chili Mix CanHaving just dinged Southwest Specialty Foods, Inc.’s “Whoop Ass Chili Mix” for being neither “chili” nor “whoop ass” hot, I feel like I now owe it to them to tell you about one of their products I really DO love, which is their “Original Ass Kickin’ Habanero Popcorn“.  And at a retail price of $1.95 (plus shipping) for a bag, it’s not terribly expensive, either.

As you might be able to tell from the picture, this is a microwave popcorn like any you might buy at the grocery.  Unlike the ones you’d buy at the grocery, however, this one includes a moderate portion of habanero pepper to spice it up.

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Review: Southwest Specialty Foods’ “Whoop Ass Chili Mix”

November 29th, 2005

Image of the
Chili Mix Can This could be a very easy review to write. I could sum the whole experience up in just two words… “It ain’t.” But if I did that, you’d wonder what happened to that wordy writer you’ve come to know on this web site. You might also start asking yourself “ain’t WHAT?” Fear not, dear reader, I shall not let you down.

I purchased a can of Southwest Specialty Foods, Inc.’s Whoop Ass Chili Mix directly from their web site a short time ago. I bought it as part of a larger order of their products that I’d placed. I placed that order after having been on vacation in Arizona and picking up some of their spicy microwave popcorn. The popcorn was quite good and had just the right amount of heat, so I was hopeful that this product would be as good.  Sadly, this was not to be.

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Review: Jonathan Coulton’s “Where Tradition Meets Tomorrow”

November 28th, 2005

Album Cover ArtIf you haven’t heard Jonathan Coulton’s “Baby Got Back” cover, stop reading this review right now.  Go to his site, download it, and play it. If that doesn’t convince you that you want to know more about what he’s done, I’m probably not going to do much better in this review.

I’ve heard Coulton’s work described as “geek rock”. That might be the best description.  It’s a soft, melodic, rock sound with great vocals.  The songs on this album are about “geeky” topics like mad scientists and Mandelbrot sets.  While music about these topics might sound like something that will never rise above the level of a “curiosity”, Coulton’s songwriting, instrumentals, and vocals combine to create a sound that is just plain catchy.  You’ll find yourself wanting to sing them not long after you stop listening.  At least, that’s what happens to me and at least a couple of other people I know.

Jonathan Coulton’s album “Where Tradition Meets Tomorrow” is available online through CDBaby.com for the low, low price of $7.00 plus shipping.  Given that there are 5 songs on the album, that works out to a slightly-worse-than-iTunes price of about $1.40 a track.  The nice thing about CDBaby.com’s site is that you can listen to a pretty lengthy clip of each song on the album before you shell out that “buck forty”.  The disc you’ll get back from CDBaby is real, commercially-pressed disc with silk-screened artwork on it that is shipped inside a full-color cardboard sleeve.  (You expected a jewel case for $7?!  I didn’t.)

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Review: Depeche Mode “Playing the Angel” (2005)

November 20th, 2005

Playing the Angel
CD Cover ArtSince the 1980’s, I’ve been pretty fond of the music of Depeche Mode.  Back then, their music was heavily loaded with synthesizer sounds and became pretty mainstream.  This 2005 release, “Playing the Angel” from Depeche Mode is quite a departure from their earlier sound, though the synthesizer element and vocals remain.

Playing time for the album is about 51 minutes.  Individual tracks range in length from about 1:42 to 6:09.  Most are in the typical 3-4 minute “radio length” range.

For a fan of the 1980’s Depeche Mode, today’s group takes some getting used to.  Along with the familiar vocals and synthesizer sound, there’s a new edge to the lyrics and a screaming guitar sound that is a very sharp contrast to the Depeche Mode of 20 years ago.  I think I still like the older sound better, but I can appreciate that it sounds “eighties” enough that the band would have a very hard time attracting newer listeners to their music without this modern “grunge” element that is popular in a lot of today’s alternative and hit music.  If you’re not familiar with the band’s sound today, this album might be too loud and edgy for your tastes. For me, it’s pushing the limit.

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Review: Bloodhound Gang – “Hefty Fine” Album (2005)

November 19th, 2005

Hefty Fine CD
CoverEarlier in the year I review The Bloodhound Gang’s CD Single “Foxtrot Uniform Charlie Kilo”.  It was definitely a good disc.  Thus it was with some enthusiasm that I fired up this album on Rhapsody and gave it a listen.

This recently-released (September 27, 2005) album is the latest from the group.  It contains the title song of the CD Single I mentioned above as well as a number of other tracks.  Overall it pretty effectively mixes techno sounds with rock and the standard Bloodhound Gang lyrical delivery.

The cover of Hefty Fine, as you can see at the right, pictures a very large and apparently naked man inside a cardboard box, along with a warning to parents that the album contains some explicit lyrics (which it does, and which Bloodhound Gang fans expect).

The album runs a bit under 40 minutes, about 3 of which are silence, and that feels pretty short for a modern release to me.  On the other hand, most of the tracks are quality stuff, so better to have a shorter album with decent music than a longer one full of crap…

The album starts with the track “Balls Out” which starts out sounding a little like a dance track, but picks up.  The lyrics are delivered in a rap-like format for the most part, but the instrumentals feature a strong bass beat and some very jamming guitars.  If you thought the “explicit lyrics” sticker was an exaggeration, this song would convince you otherwise before it’s over.  I think I heard most of George Carlin’s 7 words you can’t say on television in here.  On a 1-10 scale, I’d rate this one somewhere in the neighborhood of a 6, mostly due to the strength of its instrumentals.  The lyrics don’t impress me that much, probably because I’ve grown up enough that it takes more than a stream of 4-letter words in a song for me to get a kick out of it.

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Review: Shaolin Soccer

September 24th, 2005

I recently watched and reviewed Kung-Fu Hustle from Steven Chow.  A friend informed me that Chow had also directed and starred in “Shaolin Soccer”.  Since Kung Fu Hustle was such an incredible movie, I had Netflix ship Shaolin Soccer right away.  I’ve watched it 3-4 times now.

Shaolin Soccer focuses on “Mighty Steel Leg Sing”, a Kung Fu master who is trying hard to increase the popularity of Kung Fu by applying it to everyday tasks that have nothing to do with fighting or martial arts.  He explains that it could improve a soccer player’s kick, prevent someone from falling when slipping on a banana peel, make trimming shrubs faster, etc.  He’s not having any luck selling anyone on the idea, or selling them his Kung Fu lessons, so he’s basically broke.

Sing meets “Golden Leg Fung”, a former soccer star who threw a critical game in 1983 and was brutalized by fans.  Their attack left him unable to play and barely able to walk.  Sing tries unsuccessfully to convince Fung to take Kung Fu lessons from him.  Drunk and offended by one of Sing’s comments, Fung throws his beer can at Sing.  Sing kicks the can what appears to be several blocks away.  Fung is at first impressed by this, then brushes it off as a cheap trick.

Sing continues on his way until he meets Mui, a baker who is famous for sweet steamed buns.  Sing is impressed that Mui uses Kung Fu techniques to make her buns. 

This is exactly the sort of thing he’s been trying to convince people to try (mixing Kung Fu with ordinary tasks).  He sings a song to Mui to show his admiration.  After a while, Sing and several others on the street break into a dance number for no readily apparent reason.

Sing ends up eating more of the girl’s sweet buns than he can afford to pay for, so he offers her his shoes as payment.  She doesn’t accept them, but he leaves them anyway.  The shopkeeper Mui works for tells her to throw the shoes out, but she doesn’t.

After his musical number on the street, Sing comes to the conclusion that what he needs to do to sell Kung Fu lessons is to do it with song.  When one of his Kung Fu “brothers” needs to hire entertainment for a night club, the two of them perform a song and dance number in the club that ends in violence being done on them.

A while later, Golden Leg Fung has stumbled on the can that Sing kicked away earlier.  The can is embedded deeply into a brick wall. 

Needless to say, the power of such a kick impresses Fung.  He removes the can from the wall only to see the wall crumble.  On the other side is Sing, who’s using a soccer ball to defeat a number of hoodlums who are threatening him. 

Fung and Sing realize that by combining Kung Fu and soccer they could field a winning team, one that would challenge Fung’s former boss (and the guy who convinced him to throw the game that ruined his career), Coach Hung of “Team Evil”.

Before Sing can play soccer, though, he needs shoes.  He left his with Mui at the sweet bun shop.  He goes back to ask for them, and she eventually tosses them back, showing him that she’s repaired them to make them better for him.  I’m sure he was thrilled to see the “Hello Kitty” style patches she put on them.

Sing and Fung try to convince Sing’s former Kung Fu brothers to join them in forming a soccer team that uses Kung Fu skills to help them win.  While the brothers initially refuse the offer, they each decide their life isn’t going so well and that the soccer team represents a chance to make things better.


The “Brothers” in the past


The brothers now

After teaching the brothers to play soccer and control their powers, Golden Leg Fung sets up a game between the Shaolin team and “Team Gangster” (a soccer team known for cheating and playing dirty).  Team Gangster mops the floor with Team Shaolin for most of the game, until each of the brothers’ Kung Fu power comes back to him.  The situation is so bad that Sing hallucinates that he’s fighting in a war.

They are then able to beat Team Gangster very easily.  Team Gangster begs to join Team Shaolin and the team is complete.

Fung and the team go to register in the soccer tournament but run into opposition from the registration staff.  The registration staff call in Coach Hung, who is also the commissioner of the league.  At first concerned that Golden Leg Fung has put together a potential winning team, Hung asks to see them.  Once he’s had a look at them, he laughs and says that not only will he let them play, he’ll even pay their entry fee.


The team waiting to register for the tournament


What Coach Hung thinks of Team Shaolin…

We learn that Coach Hung is using some very unorthodox methods for training his team, which apparently includes playing underwater soccer against stainless steel refrigerators…

Because Mui helped Sing get to the tournament by returning the sneakers he needed to wear in order to play, he tries to help her, too.  He takes her to a fancy department store and shows her the beautiful dresses there, telling her that when he wins the tournament he’ll buy her anything she wants.  She tells him she only wants a new pair of sneakers.  He does his best to convince her that she’s beautiful and tells her she needs to get the hair out of her eyes.  She appears amazed that he can see her beauty through the very unsightly skin condition she has.

Mui, apparently smitten with Sing at this point, goes to “Manny’s” beauty salon to get a makeover.  This, I assume, is Manny (who is named quite appropriately):

After getting the “Manny treatment”, Mui shows up to see Sing in her new makeup and purple dress.


Mui shows up looking like Connie Chung as a drag queen…
Amazingly, Sing doesn’t seem to notice that Mui now looks like a drag queen impersonator.  They talk for a bit and when she asks Sing if he’s in love with her, he asks her if she’s crazy (as any woman would tell you, this is exactly the wrong response).  Her heart is broken.  

Team Shaolin goes on to win its way through the tournament.  Apparently, so does Team Evil.  The final match, of course, is between Team Evil and Team Shaolin.  Apparently Coach Hung has added a special element to his training, described as “American drugs”.

Team Evil, hopped up on illegal drugs, is more than a match for Team Shaolin.  The Shaolin players find themselves defending against flaming soccer balls and being knocked down so hard they end up embedded in the field.


Ouch! That’s gotta hurt…


Needless to say, the greenskeeper is going to be ticked off…

When they break for half-time, the Team Gangster members of Shaolin make a break for it.  They’ve seen teammates being hauled away on stretchers and they definitely don’t want to go through that. 

Team Shaolin has just enough players left to continue the game.  If they lose one more, they forfeit and Team Evil wins.

Summoning up their courage, Team Shaolin tries some of the toughest Kung Fu tricks, like the “Shaolin Barricade” pictured below:


Didn’t I see this move in “Bring it On”?
(Well, OK, if I’d WATCHED “Bring it On” would I have seen it?)
This is not enough to stop the Team Evil players, who end up hospitalizing another of the Team Shaolin players.  Just as it looks like they’re about to forfeit, Mui steps on to the field to join them.

Ever the sensitive one, Sing tries to talk Mui out of it.  He also comments on her newly shaved head, telling her she looks like E.T. and should phone home.


Way to win a girl’s heart there, Sing…
Mui stays and puts her own Kung Fu skills into the mix, defending the Shaolin Goal. 

After successfully defending the goal, she shows everyone that she once played for the Harlem Globetrotters…

At an appropriate point, she flashes a smile at Sing and they fall immediately in love. (Ain’t that Hollywood somethin’?)  They work together to produce one final kick that is so powerful it knocks the Team Evil goalie’s clothes off, then puts him, the ball, and most of Team Evil through the goal, just in time to win the game.

Team Shaolin celebrates their victory.


This must be the lightest trophy in history.
Sing and Mui go on to become a worldwide Kung Fu sensation, apparently winning multiple bowling tournaments in the U.S. as well, and getting on the cover of TIME magazine (Why not Sports Illustrated? Beats me.)

As with Kung Fu Hustle, Shaolin Soccer provides an excellent mix of action, comedy, and special effects.  While the actors and actresses seem to take their work pretty seriously, the movie itself doesn’t try to be a serious martial arts movie, in much the same way that Jackie Chan movies aren’t especially serious movies.

The plot in Shaolin Soccer is more clearly developed than that of Kung Fu Hustle.  The story line stays focused, and the effects help to keep it all interesting and fun.

All things considered, it’s a great movie.  I’m not sure I like it quite as much as Kung Fu Hustle, which I gave an 8.5 out of 10, but I like it a lot.  I’ve decided to give it an 8 out of 10.

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Review: Colin Hay – “Man at Work”

August 4th, 2005

Release Date: July 22, 2003
Label: Compass Records
ASIN:
B00009Y3OF
Approximate Price as of 8/3/2005: $14
new, $13 used

All right, I admit it.  I am a child of
the 80’s and 20 years later I still have a soft spot for the music of
the group “Men at Work”.  It should come as no surprise,
then, that I seized the opportunity to listen to Men at Work’s former
front-man Colin Hay performing his album “Man at Work”. 
I wasn’t sure I was going to like it, though.  All too often I’ve
found that when a member of a popular band goes off on his or her own to
record an album, you realize that what you liked about that band wasn’t
the lead singer, but the combination of the singer and the rest of the
band.

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Review: Colin Hay – “Transcendental Highway”

August 3rd, 2005

Released: June 1, 1999
ASIN:
B00004TLWM

Having just reviewed Colin Hay’s “Man at
Work” album from 2002, I decided to give another of his albums,
“Transcendental Highway” a listen.  Unlike “Man at
Work”, this album contains nothing from his “Men at Work”
days of the 80’s.  It is entirely new music of his own.  After
a few spins, here’s what I think of the album…

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Indian Tabac Fire Cigar Review

July 27th, 2005

A while ago I purchased an entire box of Indian Tabac’s “Fire” cigars.  I bought
them having never had a cigar by Indian Tabac before, and of course
never having had the Fire line either.  Based on what I’d been
reading in the forums, Indian Tabac makes some good cigars, so I figured
it wouldn’t be a huge risk.  I just had my first one of them
tonight, and I’m pleased to say they were a good choice.

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