Wednesday, July 15, 2026

ANI-MOVIES, *Rise Of The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Movie

Being the fourth animated TV series based on the 80s underground comic that was turned into blockbuster franchise, Rise Of The Teenage Mutant Turtles was Nickelodeon's turn at bat with the half-shell heroes. This time, the animation went back to 2D but cranked up the fighting spirit to Gurren Lagann levels. The Turtles are now all different types of turtles, and they all have mystical superpowers in this for some reason. The TV series went on for two seasons, but Season 2 was cut short by half because of low ratings, even though plans for the direct-to-streaming movie was already in the works. Netflix aired it in 2022, two years after the series ended to act as the big finale. The ROTTMNT show had the Turtles fighting and eventually defeating Shredder, who this time was a haunted suit of armor, plus a few other mutant animal bad guys, although the Foot Clan still remained active. The animation was largely done by Flying Bark Studios, but production of the movie was shared between them and Top Draw Animation, and the joint development worked in Nickelodeon's favor as the quality was vastly improved from what was done for the TV series.

Starting out two decades in the future, the Earth has been taken over by the alien brain menaces called the Krang, so Michaelangelo is a sorcerer supreme in this timeline and opens up a door to send teenage wasteland survivor Casey Jones to the past and stop the Foot Clan from unleashing the Krang from their dimension sealed off from the rest of the universe. Because of Leo's bragging, the Turtles failed to stop the Foot from obtaining the key to free the Krang who in this ain't your daddy's Krang. These Krang turn people into grody zombies, spawning their icky biopunk gunk all over everything taking control of machines, and xenoforming everywhere around them, so these aliens aren't just whiny brain monsters but full-tilt Lovecraftian nightmares. Casey along with April, Splinter, and the Turtles manage to get their fighting spirit back after many losses, including temporarily losing their powers, and stop the Krangs invasion by locking them away in another dimension.

Rise Of The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Movie raised the stakes and set the tone for a much more serious tone than how the TV series operated. It isn't totally necessary for you to have watched the show in order to enjoy this, although you will need to have seen some bit of TMNT lore to get the whole idea of mutated reptile ninjas as masked superheroes in New York City. Casey Jones is a good addition, but he's not the hotheaded vigilante you might be familiar with, plus the Krang are for once a genuine threat. They upped the ante for the animation, and the fight scenes look like they're out of Bleach or Jujutsu Kaisen, so anime fans will see this as the shonen epic that you've always wished you could get from TMNT.

ANI-MOVIES, *Megamind

Must have been a big trend for this in 2010 as just a few months after Illumination released Despicable Me, an animated movie about a reformed supervillain, DreamWorks did their own movie, Megamind which was another animated movie about a reformed supervillain. Conceived by Madagascar co-creator Tom McGrath, Paramount seemed to plan this at the exact same time that Universal was starting their Despicable Me franchise, but unlike the overwhelming longevity of that and the Minions spinoffs, Megamind took 14 years to finally do a sequel to it, and only for directly on streaming to act as pilot for a TV series spinoff which most fans seemed to despise. There was already enough working against this when the movie premiered with it seeming like a cash grab of another studio's concept, plus it was at the height of the 2010's 3D craze so it was done in CGI with only a subtle understanding how the theatrical experience worked for someone not used to the format (Thanks again, James Cameron!). Megamind also had much backlash on the character designs as if they were ripped off from Pixar's The Incredibles but with even bigger eyeballs, plus the movie recycled a lot of plots and ideas from other sources like all the needledrop moments and cartoon gags that had already been run into the ground by this point.

Two alien babies from separate worlds that were both on the brink of destruction are sent to Earth, one a handsome human-looking boy with superpowers, and the other with blue skin and a large head. The two begin a lifelong rivalry with the good-looking one becoming the hero Metro Man and the blue one calling himself Megamind for his superior intellect. Megamind thinks he finally killed Metro Man in his latest scheme, so the villain now takes over Metro City, although he soon regrets not having a hero to duel with. After taking on the appearance of Bernard, curator of the Metro Man museum, he comes across Roxanne, a TV reporter that was always acting as the damsel-in-distress who gives the disguised Megamind the idea of creating a new superhero. Along with his partner Minion (yes, there was actually another film where the supervillain's assistant was called that!) they plan to give Metro Man's powers to someone who turns out to be Hal, a loser cameraman whose had a thing for Roxanne for a while now. Megamind convinces Hal to use his powers and become the hero Tighten, while at the same time moonlighting as Bernard who is Roxanne's new love interest, even though she eventually finds him out. Tighten knocks Megamind out in their first bout which causes the would-be hero want to become a villain and takes over the town, so Megamind and Roxanne try to find a weakness to Tighten by looking in Metro Man's lair only to discover that the dead hero isn't actually dead and just faked his death just so he could retire. Tighten kidnaps Roxanne and calls out Megamind who gets his stuff together and depowers his mistake, so Megamind becomes the hero of the city while all the citizens are a little too quick to forget all his previous criminal actions.

Megamind is guilty of retreading comic book cliches that have been parodied several times before, so upon first watch you can see quite a few of the punchlines coming. There is some snappy dialogue that is a little above the average cringy MCU quips, plus the comedic cast of Will Farrell, David Cross, and Tina Fey might hold your interest until the end of the movie which of course caps off with a dance number. However, this is another jukebox movie with replayed pop songs and very little originality. The biggest distraction is the soulless look in all the character's eyes and their misshaped facial proportions.

Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Castlevania Nocturne: The New Blood

There are very few good TV shows based on Nintendo games, Netflix however managed to put together a great animated series with their original Castlevania show created mostly with American studios that did give it a serious anime style not unlike the early works of Yoshitaka Amano, plus it had the benefit of being conceived by Marvel Anime writer Warren Ellis. The series ran for four seasons with the first two providing a killer story arc about vampire hunters uniting to kill Dracula, but the last two seasons which were several episodes long seriously dragged the plot out too long which is a trait several Netflix have a habit of doing. Two years after the show’s conclusion, it was decided to start a generational sequel titled Castlevania Nocturne which adapted a 1993 game that wasn’t released in America until 2007, Castlevania: Rondo Of Blood. First premiering in 2023, Nocturne was two seasons long, each one composed of eight episodes, but this time largely created by Clive Bradley who up until then was a screenwriter for British television with no prior experience at handling an animated project, and most of the production being done by Powerhouse Entertainment who had also worked on the first Castlevania as well as Masters Of The Universe: Revelation, plus additional animation was provided by DR Movie.

Castlevania Nocturne received more accolades than the final two seasons of the previous series, although there was a great deal of classic Castlevania fans who thought the series shoved too many plots from various games into a single narrative. Although Nocturne managed to gain many LGBTQ viewers because of its diverse cast, plus despite having this story taking place during the French Revolution it managed to have black and indigenous Latin American characters back when slavery was still active in France at the time. Some accused the series of being too woke, although it’s best to keep in mind that this takes place during an alternate history with vampires and isn’t trying to be accurate.

The story is set in 1792 when village in France is striving to liberate itself from the local royal lord who has allied himself with a vampire clan, plus the church is making night creatures from the corpses of their enemies to add to the vampire ranks. The main leader of the revolutionaries is Maria who can summon spirit animals like her own personal Pokemon, and she is helped by her adopted brother Richter Belmont who is the latest inheritor of the monster hunter line who saw his mother killed by the vampire Orlox that has joined the vampire faction. Richter and Maria get aid from a former slave named Annette who has earth-bending powers, along with her partner Edouard who eventually changes into a night creature. The vampires are ruled by Elizabeth Bathory who was a Hungarian noble that was imprisoned in her own mansion for being one of the biggest serial killers in history. Elizabeth was turned into a vampire by Drolta, an Egyptian priestess of Sekhmet that uses Elizabeth as the reincarnation of her goddess. Things seem bleak until Dracula’s son Alucard finally shows up at the end of Season 1 to help the revolutionaries. Things get darker from then on with characters getting killed off just to advance the plot, while other gain insane power-ups as if they were in Dragonball. Ultimately, Richter, Annette, and Maria defeated the juiced-up vampire goddess and her acolytes with the possibility of a continuation with Richter still having a score to settle with Orlox and Edouard now adjusting to his new life as a night creature.

Castlevania Nocturne was well animated with shifts in styles for some flashbacks and battle scenes, so it lives up to being considered as a real anime. The soundtrack music was equally epic, but that pales in comparison to how rushed the story was and how they tried to stuff it with more forgettable secondary characters, side quests, limp deaths, and the cast constantly reflecting on their past instead of just doing some solid wholesome vampire hunting. The fight scenes are at the same level as the previous Castlevania series but doesn’t appear to be physically possible for most of the average humans who might be able to do magic, least of all going up against a final boss in total god mode.

There is some comfort that Castlevania Nocturne managed to keep the IP active new additions to the game franchise have gotten stuck in the mud over the last few decades. However, Netflix’s middle-managing and corporate mandates toward episode lengths seriously bring the show down from what it might have achieved. The story and dialogue are also weak as it was largely handled by someone with no experience doing an animated adaptation of a video game. It’s possible that this might help give further Nintendo properties a chance to gain notoriety as the only one Castlevania had before this was in the horrible Captain N cartoon, but it’s not likely that we’ll get a more serious take on any of the brand video games without Link rehashing outdated Steve Martin jokes.

Thursday, July 9, 2026

Scott Pilgrim Takes Off: A Great Adaptation

Beginning in 2004, Bryan Lee O’Malley began a 6-volume anime and video game-based graphic novel saga titled Scott Pilgrim. The character’s name came from a single by the rock band Plumtree, and O’Malley took the idea of a guy who “fights you for a thousand years” and turned it into a manga-styled comic set in Toronto, Canada. The book series gradually gained great success over the years and as it continued word of mouth helped it became a cult phenomenon. Then in 2010, a live-action movie based on the comic was released by Edgar Wright, the mastermind behind the Three Flavors Cornetto trilogy, featuring an all-star cast with Michael Cera as the title character. The film wasn’t the blockbuster most people wished it was, but if did become a sleeper hit over the next few years, which included a hit video game incorporating elements from the movie and comic as the two storylines are moderately different from each other since the movie came out a month after the comic had concluded. Zoom to 2023, and Netflix airs a genuine anime series of Scott Pilgrim Takes Off that most thought was going to be a straight up adaptation of the comic, but in fact it diverges from the original path and goes in a totally separate direction which seriously split fans down the middle. The production was largely crafted by Dandadan’s studio Science Saru and featured dazzling animation that honors the original comic style plus acts as a reflection of early-2000s pop culture.

Scott Pilgrim Takes Off was a limited series of just 8 episodes which slightly works against it as it would have benefited from having an extra episode or so. The original story has Canadian youth Scott dating the new girl in town, Ramona Flowers from America, and he must defeat Ramona’s seven former lovers called The League Of Evil Exes, although this is happening while Scott is also quasi-dating a teenager named Knives. Scott fights against one or two in each volume of the comic and eventually wins the right to be her lover. The anime starts out retelling the original story and then takes a sharp turn from the source material and has Scott losing the fight to Matthew, Ramona’s first boyfriend, but Ramona doesn’t believe Scott is dead, so she tracks down all her exes to see who was behind Scott’s disappearance. This highlights the background of the League and how Ramona was partially at fault for them eventually becoming a supervillain team, plus it gives the other supporting characters time to expand their horizons and find out what kind of world they would live in if this key role in their lives were removed. It all comes together in the last 2 episodes where we learn that Scott was really taken into the future by his older self and we are given a lot of exposition behind Scott’s disappearance, so Scott himself is largely left out of his own anime if you’re not counting Even Older Scott who levels up to Dragonball Z status and can defeat the Evil Exes at once, and still keep up with his younger self. The series could’ve used at least one more episode to give the main character a little more time to shine and to make the anime somewhat appealing to anyone who hadn’t come across the comic or movie first.

Science Saru combined their fast-paced hand-drawn animation with CGI for this anime. For better examples of this watch either the movies Riding Your Wave, Inu-Oh, or The Colors Within, all of which utilize various styles of animation that will remind you how groundbreaking anime like FLCL earned its mark, even better than the other FLCL remakes. A few other TV series that Science Saru also applied this special technique to are Devilman Crybaby, Adventure Time, Star Wars: Visions, and the recent Ghost In The Shell remake. Their idiom works like peanut butter and jelly when bringing Bryan Lee O’Malley’s art style to life. This was another attraction to the production as the original character designs from the comics were united with Science Saru’s sensibilities resulting in a winner combo. There is no doubt that Scott Pilgrim Takes Off is a legitimate anime as it was specifically produced first for Japanese language as the dub doesn’t totally fit the mouth movements of the English cast. The anime also managed to get all the original actors from the movie to reprise their roles for the English dub, and these are not smalltime names like Mary Elizabeth Winstead, Chris Evans, Brie Larson, and Aubrey Plaza, so it shows how devoted the cast was to this project.

The anime also had a new story by O’Malley along with screenwriter BenDavid Grabinski. For a long time, O'Malley didn’t just want to do a soulless remake of the comic, so instead he borrowed an idea from Marvel with their What If stories by taking the basics of both the comic and movie and diverted it into a literal alternative timeline. Scott’s older self brings his younger self into the future, so he won’t eventually get married to Ramona and separating years later which sends him into a spiral of depression. O’Malley did update a few things to the script, most of which involve completely rewriting the backstories of some of the Evil Exes, specifically Gideon Graves who was really an old schoolmate of Scott’s antagonist Julie. Plus, the turn of taking the lowest member of the Evil Exes and having him defeat Gideon in the second episode and getting his entire corporate empire. The Exes also get their roles expanded and are not just level bosses, and along with way we learn that Ramona wasn’t totally free of being kind of evil herself when it came to handling her exes. When Ramona can detach herself from the rut her life had become and confront her past lovers she learns more about herself. This redoes Ramona from being the manic pixie dream girl the movie painted her out to be as she takes responsibility for her actions and finds a new purpose as a stunt girl.

Like the movie, Scott Pilgrim Takes Off hosts an awesome soundtrack, most of which was performed by Anamanaguchi, an 8-bit rock band that provided the music for the video game based on the movie, plus its recent sequel game, Scott Pilgrim Ex which acts as a follow-up to the anime. The soundtrack also houses great covers of geek songs like Konya Wa Hurricane from Bubblegum Crisis, and the Mortal Kombat theme with new lyrics to fit the anime cast. The best are the new songs by Scott’s band Sex Bob-Omb with his former girlfriend Knives turning out to be a musical genius and joins the band as a keyboardist. This helped the show become the first anime to be nominated and win the Critic’s Choice Award for Best Animated Series.

Speaking as a fan of Scott Pilgrim whose been reading this since the first volume was released in paperback, the anime was the best possible detour that proves that a premise can be stretched across several formats. If you include the video games, this is a multimedia saga that still has room for more. Hopefully it won’t get too excessively pointless reboots like “Lil’ Scott Pilgrim” or “Scott Pilgrim In Space”. This anime though lives up to all expectations for any other fans of the comic or movie, plus a brilliant throwback to garage band music and underground comics that spawned in the late 90s. Oh, and if you’re a retro-gamer, you’ll find far more treasures here than in Ready Player One or any of the Tron sequels. So, if you can put your inner bickering fanboy on hold for a few hours and just sit down and enjoy a great Netflix binge, then you’ll find it was all really worth it.

Tuesday, July 7, 2026

ANI-MOVIES, *Transformers: The Movie (40th Anniversary Celebration)

"Beyond your wildest imagination," was what this bad boy boasted in 1986, and it didn't disappoint. Coming out two months after Hasbro's first franchise theatrical release for My Little Pony, they went even bigger with Transformers: The Movie, however this was an extension of an animation show whereas MLP only had a pair of TV specials prior to its motion picture, so Transformers had a big leg up continuing an existing series. The film came out after Season 2 of the original Transformers series but shot the story two decades into the future skipping over a whole bunch of history which have never been covered in the Transformers lore, plus quite a few of the characters that were introduced during the latter part of Season 2 were completely left out of the movie since the movie started production sometime at the beginning of that season. The film was written by Ron Friedman who also created the GI Joe series, and it had a gaggle of diverse celebrities voicing the new characters including Judd Nelson, Leonard Nimoy, Eric Idle, Robert Stack, and Orson Welles in his last movie roll appearance, plus the first theatrical appearance of John Moschitta who up until then was the fast-talking guy from Fed-Ex commercials and later became the Micro Machine Man. The other huge selling point was the rocking soundtrack by Vince DiCola featuring songs by Weird Al Yankovic and King Kobra. Since Transformers was a melting pot of different Japanese toy lines put together in a single narrative, the idea for the movie was to introduce an entirely new roster of characters to the same lineup that G1 fans had already become familiar with, so this caused most of the characters to either get brutally murdered or reformed as a totally new one. The effect of this apparently traumatized many younger viewers seeing their favorite Autobot leader die which was retconned in Season 3 taking place after the movie. The movie had a huge effect on the toy industry when the film just swept away the first line of products to show bright shiny new ones, a strategy that caused many toy franchises to eventually collapse such as He-Man and TMNT. However, the film had such lush animation by Toei and Sunbow along with brilliant performances by celebrity and veteran voice actors that the movie became a sleeper hit.

Shooting from 1986 to the year 2005, we find that the Decepticons eventually regained control of Cybertron leaving the Autobots with the task of defeating them with their limited sources, one of which is a full Autobot city on Earth. Megatron leads an assault on Autobot City with fresh-faced soldiers like Hot Rod, Kupp, Arcee, and Blurr to defend it until Optimus Prime arrives with the calvary. Prime and Megatron have an epic duel to the death resulting in Optimus' demise, while Megatron is cast out by the retreating Decpticons along with other damaged warriors. They all just happen to come across the gigantic planet-eating monster known as Unicron reformatting Megatron into his herald Galvatron, plus remodeling the other survivors. Starscream is finally killed by the newly born Megatron, who has to take the Autobot Matrix away from its new owner, Ultra Magnus which is the only thing that could destroy Unicron. The new Autobots along with most of the Dinobots leave Earth to keep the Matrix out of Galvatron's grasp, but are all separated, some of which crash on a huge junkyard planet inhabited by the TV-obsessed Junkions. They all reconvene and head out to kick Unicron's colossal butt from destroying Cybertron, and Hot Rod uses the Matrix to destroy him and become the new Autobot leader, Rodimus Prime.

Transformers: The Movie completely changed the game as far as animated entertainment intended to promote a franchise as after this other toy line-based films like GI Joe: The Movie had to contend with not having any of their characters meet a violent ending. Toei Animation along with Sunbow Productions and Marvel crafter together an eye-popping theatrical experience that was way better than it ever intended to be. Even people who hadn't watched the Transformers G1 series up until then still got a kick out of it, especially since it had one of the greatest soundtrack albums of the entire decade. If your local theater is having a special screening of this, then get your tickets and ride the nostalgia Astrotrain!

Saturday, July 4, 2026

MISC. MANGA, *The Great Yokai War: Guardians

During the late 1960s, director Yoshiyuki Kuroda created a movie trilogy titled Yokai Monsters, and in 2005 Takashi Miike of Audition fame put together an homage to the original films called The Great Yokai Wars. Shoot ahead to 2021 and Miike did The Great Yokai War: Guardians which acted as a reboot of the franchise and only tangentially a sequel to the 2005 movie. There was also a 3-volume manga series adapted by Sanami Suzuki who also did the manga retelling of The Colors Within, although the manga went has an appearance by the giant Daimajin from his own movie franchise.

In modern day Japan, a colossal culmination of evil called the Yokaiju is planning on laying waste to Tokyo. The local spirits known as yokai want to prevent this disaster, so they take their case to the World Yokai Conference to get the help of monsters from other countries, but they decide that Japanese yokai are seen nowadays as cute mascots instead of monsters, so they leave Japan's yokai to deal with this threat on their own. The only hope they have is in young Ken Watanabe who is the descendent of infamous yokai slayer. Ken turns the yokai down, so they talk his younger brother Dai into becoming their savior, but Ken knows this will lead to Dai's demise, so he heads off to the spirit world to find him. With the help of Koko the kitsune, Ken embarks on a crusade to save his brother and possibly help the yoaki with their impending threat.

The Great Yokai War: Guardians is a feasibly likable manga that a reader can check out without having to see the motion picture to like it. Sanami Suzuki is a great artist, although it's hard to say if his writing is up to specs, or if the English translation by Titan Manga wasn't Americanized a step too much. There's plenty of laughs and sight gags to find enjoyable, although nothing as dark as some of Takashi Miike's prior movies. For a lighter view of natural spirits trying to defend their homeland, then this is one spooky army you'll want to sign up for.

Monday, June 29, 2026

ANI-MOVIES, *Predator: Killer Of Killers

After 5 live-action movies and 2 crossover films, we finally get a full-length feature of the Yuatja. Predator: Killer Of Killers follows the path that The Animatrix and Batman: Gotham Knight did before it and took an established media franchise and made an anthology movie about it with most of the stories tying together into a single narrative at the end. We've seen this before in other productions like Halo Legends, however this one is actually canon to the Predator series, either that or it's in a parallel universe. This was directed by Dan Trachtenberg who had already done Prey, and then followed that up with Predator: Badlands, plus he wrote the screenplay for this with Micho Robert Rutare. 20th Century Animation created a gorgeous production, although the constant low frame rate gets tiresome with every animated movie trying to keep up with the Spider-Verse movies.

The first chapter is The Shield where the viking warrior woman Ursa takes her son on a quest to avenge her father's killer, only to be interrupted by a Predator, and she is taken prisoner by the other Yuatja after killing the alien hunter. Next is The Sword about the samurai Kenji who has a duel with his brother to settle a decades-long feud over their father's armor, but they end up working together to stop another Predator with Kenji's brother dying to save his life, although Kenji himself is also collected by the Predators and put on ice along with several other humans for centuries. The third story is The Bullet which is a WWII tale where a young American pilot named Torres manages to shoot down a Predator airship only for himself to later get abducted sometime after the war. All three heroes are awakened on a different planet where they all have to fight to the death to have the honor of taking down a Predator champion. However, the trio of Earthlings ally themselves to escape on a spaceship, but only at the sacrifice of Ursa becoming a captive again. The film ends with some other Yuatja taking some frozen leftovers from past Predator movies hinting that there will be a big future team-up for survivors in another installment.

As a Predator movie, this was pretty good, but as an animated action flick it's a little below average with its graffiti-styled graphics. The action is turned up to 12 compared to the other Predator films, but that's mostly when the humans are fighting other humans, with the viking chapter being especially gory, although that might have been the reason this didn't get a theatrical release and went straight to streaming. Pred-Heads will more than likely to get their blood pumping on this, but it doesn't have the lasting power of the previous good Predator movies.