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(168 replies, posted in Off Topic)

Doctor Submarine wrote:
Squiggly_P wrote:

Looks promising. I guess they're saving Rocket for the next trailer.

Gotta reel 'em in with the scruffy, goofball human first. Then hit them with the talking raccoon and the sentient tree.

You guys did watch the trailer, right?

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(2,068 replies, posted in Off Topic)

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/7/7c/Devilscarnival033012.jpg

The Devil's Carnival (2012)

Oooo boy...where do I even start with this? Well...

The Devil's Carnival is about an hour long musical by the same creative team behind "Repo! The Genetic Opera".

And now that I've lost half of you, I'll continue to lose the other 90% of you.

I've been trying to figure out how to describe this thing...and the best I can come up with is what would happen when you slam together Moulin Rouge, the hell scenes from Monkeybone, throw in a little Carnivale and tell the guys who made Repo! they can go full dream logic. It's out there, waaaay out there, it's bizarre, weird, and holy shit did I love it.

The basic premise is something along the lines of the gateway to hell is a Carnival (Hence the title), we follow 3 lost souls down where they become the subject of the Devil's fables. Reliving their transgressions, poked and prodded, and laughed at by the denizens of hell they are tested to see if they will continue their faulted ways, and if they fail sent to the true hell. (I think...)

Yes I did say this was a musical earlier, although it takes a full 10 minutes to get through each souls death scene, into the Carnival where get some music....and whooooboy what music it is. I will say this, the actual songs, for the most part (the Devils number at the end is AWESOME) are not nearly as memorable or singable as Repo!. But I don't hold that against it, the entire tone of the movie is just batshit, bizarre dream logic meant to confuse and torment you (Hey, it's hell, whattya gonna do).

Obviously the music is all very dark creepy Carnival styled, the costumes/character design are all goth/alt/scene/carnie-horror-show-amazingness, and it almost never pulls any punches with what it's trying to do... in short, I love this...thing...so hard.

It's definitely not for everyone, but if you're in, you're all the way in.

As a side note, and I say the same thing about Repo!, I think this thing would be a PHENOMENAL stage show, I would love to see it.

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(23 replies, posted in Off Topic)

Rob wrote:

That's part of what I find so curious. Based on what most people seem to regard as a spoiler, goddamn trailers spoil movies left and right, sometimes in really big ways. It's rare that I hear folks complaining that about a trailer giving away too much. People just kind of accept trailers as they are.

Haaaaaaavvvve you met the FIYH community?

http://stream1.gifsoup.com/view4/3458452/have-you-met-ted-o.gif

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(19 replies, posted in Creations)

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(44 replies, posted in Episodes)

http://quizzicalllama.files.wordpress.com/2013/12/confused.gif

Jimbo wrote:

this is a thread for the Robocop remake this can be spoil fill so you click on it and you don't want to be spoil it is your own fault so chat away

So do you actually have anything to say? Or were you just doing us the arduous time-consuming favour of making a thread for it?

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(22 replies, posted in Creations)

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(38 replies, posted in Off Topic)

Breaking Bad

This mild mannered high school chemistry teacher became a multimillionaire overnight, and so can you! Find out how!

So what's the plan? Are we holding off due to renewed interest, or still going in a couple hours?

fireproof78 wrote:

It is human nature (at least in my experience) to try to classify something in existing categories and when it doesn't fit we question its nature. Minecraft is one of those games that doesn't really fit the mold in the traditional gaming sense and has an interesting learning curve.

So it becomes an argument of pedantic semantics attempting to arbitrarily define some boundaries into which a broad and varied medium can be shoved, and then leave content in the knowledge that anything outside of those boundaries can be easily dismissed?

Or ends with the only definition possible so as to satisfy everyone, that winds up being so broad you may as well just say anything that moves and flashes is inside the box.

Yeah, thanks, but I've got better things to do.

Dave wrote:

Seriously though, what will you discuss if not the questions minecraft raises?

Well that's up to Tom, but I don't think Minecraft inherently raises the question of "What is a game." any more than any other game on the planet.

Doctor Submarine wrote:
Dave wrote:

I don't know that mine craft counts as gaming any more than a community Lego set does.

If we're gonna get into the "what is a game" discussion, I'll be on the panel.

And I will not.

Asking "what is a game" is about as much of a personally differing question as asking which religion is the best. And in my experience, they tend to be about as equally productive. Which I have no interest in being a part of.

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(14 replies, posted in Off Topic)

Ahem...

AshDigital wrote:

Anybody want to play a game. It's something I've done off and on through the years. The game is juxtaposing two tv shows or movies, where you take one show and name/logo from another and mix them together.

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(29 replies, posted in Off Topic)

Zarban wrote:

OR how about this. He likes movies, right?

I totally thought you were gonna go on a Bowfinger thing here...

So I'm gonna say we go on a Bowfinger thing here.

Alright people we need movie pitches, what kinda movie we gonna make Trey star in?

/And then yes obviously we throw a party, screen the movie and destroy his his life etc etc as previously planned... double whammy, destroy his life with shooting the movie, rebuild it at the premiere, then tear it back down again MUAHAHAHAHA *cough* ahem...

If we go at 4pm est, that would give me just barely 2 hours. Starting at 3 would give me just barely 3 hours.

I'll just throw this out there, I am more available next week.

Whattya think Tom?

Oh, I don't know -cracks knuckles-stretches out neck- I think I could handle ranting at Minecraft for a couple hours.

Seems to work well enough for my LP's tongue

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(956 replies, posted in Off Topic)

http://24.media.tumblr.com/96fef717192eae54217f76a2fad95f50/tumblr_n0o7i8ONwl1qdlh1io1_400.gif

If anyone knows what this is from, I would be most grateful.

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(23 replies, posted in Off Topic)

I would definitely go along with adding Dredd to the list. I haven't seen much of anything else lately though.

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(22 replies, posted in Creations)

I could do 1pm, or earlier if need be (10-11am my time, something like that). I can't really go past about 4pm though.

Although I took a look at my schedule and the only days I'm available next week are wed and fri. So not sure if that works for you guys.

redxavier wrote:

But I find the notion that Hermione would get bored with Ron fundamentally flawed, because it weights their relationship as adolescents before they fall in love more than from the point of their love emerging, assumes that the characters don't mature, arguably misunderstands one or both characters, and ignores that the epilogue shows them to have been married for at least a decade.

Not to mention ignores all personal experience. Unless of course every single person you knew in high school is still exactly the same as they were in their last year. Frankly I've known way to many couples that got together in the last years of high school, video game bums, slackers and pairings that would make your brain hurt included, that are now happily married with kids, for R/H to even be close to unbelievable.

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(4 replies, posted in Off Topic)

Withkittens wrote:

Great summary, BDA. I love all of these shows, except maybe This Hour Has 22 Minutes. One thing I would add to that list is Trailer Park Boys.

big_smile Thanks man, it's something I've been wanting to do for a while.

And truth be told, I've never seen an episode of Trailer Park Boys. Do a write up and post it! big_smile

Heh...well hi, Minecraft lp-er here. I guess this up to me.

Unfortunately the only times I could do it are a couple days next week during the day my time (So like late evening/night yours. I'm MST.)

(I'll preface this thread by saying I in no way claim to be an expert, but I grew up with all these and want to share them, I'm sure I'll miss a few key ones that never made their way into my life and feel free to add them.)

In the great discussion of film and TV, Canada has a tendency to get a bad rap, it's often the butt of a lot of jokes. And honestly when it comes to most of the arts i find it hard to counter the claims, the arts scene here, specifically film/tv is a struggling medium. There's a lot of reasons for it, that I won't go into here, my point being however that I think one of the things that gets lost in that conversation is Canada's extensive and excellent history of great comedy.

So I thought I'd compile something of a master list of some of the truly great Canadian comedy shows I grew up with and love, and maybe expose some people to some stuff they've never seen before. So here we go!

First up, The Red Green Show. One of the 2 shows here I basically grew up watching from birth.

The Red Green Show's premise is pretty simple. A men's lodge somewhere in rural Canada (I think it's technically somewhere in Ontario, but it doesn't really matter), has their own cable show, it follows the wacky exploits of the men of The Possum Lodge, dealing with their wives, the weather, and their own incompetence. Specifically Red Green (played by Steve Smith), our middle-aged, Handyman, host and his nephew Harold (Played by Patrick Mckenna. A nerd to end all nerds, who for the first few seasons directs the show until they move on and evolve his character in later seasons). There are also little shorts such as Handyman's Corner (Where Red Green, the host and main character, shows you how to use everyday items in all sorts of new ways, with a liberal use of the handyman's secret weapon....duct tape....to varying levels of success), the Possum Lodge Word game, Adventures With Bill (A silent movie type wacky adventure with voiceover by Red), and a ton of others.

I love this show, I really do. The characters are all great, they're wild and wacky. And more than anything it's an INCREDIBLY accurate depiction of a Canadian perspective on a lot of things, I think I've known at least somebody irl who is like each of the characters in this show, and definitely more than a few Handymen.

One of my favorite episodes:

(If you click through to the channel that video is on, it has every episode of every season...if you're you know interested)

Next up: The Royal Canadian Air Farce. The other show that I basically grew up watching, was definitely a family tradition for a while growing up. Unfortunately these days it's become sort of white washed and a pale echo of what it was, but the classic stuff is great.

Air Farce is a sketch comedy show, sort of a -very- Canadian Monty Python. The group spawned out of an Improv Group in the 70's, then started as a CBC radio show in 1973 then made the transition into TV in the 80's/early 90's.

One of the classic characters/sketches, "Get Stuffed" by the incomprable John Morgan.

And John Morgan again with another of the absolute classic characters.

And one from one of my favorite sketch series's.

And one of thier albums with 20 of their classic sketchs.

Every year Air Farce did (And still does) a New years eve special, which includes among other things the Chicken Cannon (Unfortunately to my dismay, they retired the chicken cannon proper in 2008, and now there is something kinda like it but lamer) that effectively...well it's really easier if I just show you...

Unfortunately, it's almost impossible to find full seasons of Air farce anywhere, the CBC has released collections of episodes, but unfortunately not full seasons. So you have to do some digging if you want to find a lot to watch.

Next up, probably the one most people will know. SCTV.

Spawning out of the Second City Comedy troupe in Toronto in the mid-70's, SCTV is a sketch comedy show, sort of Canada's answer to SNL in a lot of ways. It revolves around a fictional television network in the fictional town of Melonville. However all of it's programs and movies, are created by local incompetents and extemely low budgets.

Famously SCTV gave us the comedy giants of Rick Moranis, John Candy, Eugene Levy, Joe Flaherty, Martin Short, Dave Thomas, Harold Ramis, Catherine O'Hara, Andrea Martin... to name a few. And gave us some of the most iconic Canadian sketches ever...of all time.


And then all I can really do is just give a couple of the classics:




Next up: Kids In the Hall. Started by a group of comedy writers in the mid/late-80's, Kids In the Hall is probably the closest thing to a Canadian Monty Python out there, often on the edge of social mores and giving Python a run for thier money in the drag department. KITH gave us Dave Foley and Kevin McDonald among others.





Next up: One of the smaller comedy groups, but a great one. The Frantics. I know them mainly from their sketches, but they had a regular radio show on CBC in the 80's.






Next up: This Hour Has 22 Minutes

If I'm being honest, I never really had any great love for This Hour Has 22 Minutes, it had it's moments, but it never really grabbed me. Although that may just be because I was too young at the time. 22 Minutes is a fictional news broadcast often mocking politcal events or local happenings, mixed with sketches or parody commercials.

(In reading up for this, I actually found out 22 Minutes is still on the air, despite being sure it was cancelled years ago...so hey, this is already paying off)



And 22 minutes leads us into our next one (Seeing as Rick Mercer started out on 22 Minutes)

The Rick Mercer Report.

The RMR's closest analogue would be The Colbert Report or The Daily show with John Stewart, although the RMR is usually played pretty straight.



Rick also has his infamous rants:


And of course, Rick has his talking To Americans series that I highly recommend you seek out and watch.

Next up, shifting away from sketch comedy.

Corner Gas.

Personally in my view, the greatest Canadian...sitcom...for lack of a better word. It focuses on the small fictional Sasketchewan town of Dog River, and it's eclectic small town population.

It's clever, witty, and distinctly Canadian.

The Pilot:


(You can pretty much find all the episodes on youtube if you want)

And that, my friends, brings us to a close. Like I said, I'm sure I forgot a couple that I told myself I wouldn't forget, and I'll update this as we go along if I remember any key ones I missed.

I hope you guys enjoyed and found something new to laugh at big_smile

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(956 replies, posted in Off Topic)

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