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DVDs/Blu-rays Reviews TV

“Robot Chicken: Season 6” DVD, Blu-Ray Review

 

For years, Adult Swim’s stop-motion sketch comedy show Robot Chicken has skewered everything from toys, video games, and other cartoons to movies, TV shows, and celebrities. But the reason it works so well is because it’s made by people who are big fans of the things they’re skewering. Which is good for fans of this show since it means their DVDs and Blu-rays are put together by people who know what fans of Robot Chicken would want on their DVDs and Blu-rays.

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Music Reviews

Rush’s “Vapor Trails Remixed” Review

 

Many creative people — be they painters, poets, or piano players — look back at their older work and see things they wish they had done differently. Most just don’t do anything about it. But with Vapor Trails Remixed (CD, vinyl, digital), Rush are fixing what they regard as one of the biggest mistakes of their forty-five year career.

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Movies Reviews

“Man Of Tai Chi” Review

 

Since wrapping up The Matrix movies in 2003, Keanu Reeves has avoided anything to do with the martial arts. But with directorial debut, Man Of Tai Chi, and the upcoming 47 Ronin (out December 25), the once and future Ted “Theodore” Logan returns to movies in which he gets to kick people in the face.

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DVDs/Blu-rays Reviews TV

South Park: The Complete Sixteenth Season Blu-ray, DVD Review

In the South Park episode “Simpsons Already Did It,” Professor Chaos (y’know, Butters) keeps coming up with evil schemes, only to be told by his sidekick, General Disarray, that all of them have previously been done on The Simpsons.

Watching South Park: The Complete Sixteenth Season, though, it’s hard not to wish the people who put it together had watched some of The Simpsons DVDs and Blu-rays because, then maybe, they might do theirs like The Simpsons did it.

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PC PlayStation 3 PlayStation 4 Reviews Video Games Xbox 360

“Diablo III” (PlayStation 3, Xbox 360) Review

 

Sixteen months. That’s how long it took Blizzard to do a console version of their hack & slash action game, Diablo III. Which may be small potatoes when you consider it took them twelve years to make this sequel to 2000’s Diablo II in the first place, but still, taking sixteen months to do bring a PC game to consoles — where, it could be argued, it should’ve been all along — that’s a long time to wait.

But now that it’s finally available on the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3, with a PS4 edition due out next year, it’s hard not to think that if there was any sequel worth waiting sixteen months for, let alone a dozen years, this would be it.

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Music Reviews

MUSIC REVIEW: Carla Bley, Andy Sheppard, Steve Swallow’s Trios

With a jazz trio consisting of Steve Swallow on bass, a pianist with the last name of Bley, a horn player, and no drummer, it’s understandable that the new album Trios (ECM) by Swallow, pianist Carla Bley, and saxophonist Andy Sheppard might make some fans of dark and moody jazz think of the Jimmy Giuffre 3, the early-’60s trio which consisted of Swallow, pianist Paul Bley (Carla’s then husband), and Giuffre on clarinet. But while Trios has a similarly dark mood and palette, that’s where the similarities end.

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PlayStation 3 Reviews Video Games

GAME REVIEW: Puppeteer

With lots of running and jumping in a two-dimensional world so photorealistic that it looks like it’s made of wood, cloth, and Elmer’s glue, Puppeteer is going to remind a lot of people of the LittleBigPlanet games. Heck, it’s even got a British narrator. But this adorable and inventive platformer from SCE Japan Studio (which Sony is publishing for the PlayStation 3, naturally) is different enough that both lovers and haters of L.B.P. might get a kick out of it.

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PlayStation 3 Reviews Video Games

GAME REVIEW: Killzone: Mercenary

In their continuing quest to show that the PlayStation Vita is a viable system for first-person shooters, Sony proudly presents Killzone: Mercenary, a sci-fi shooter from Guerrilla Cambridge (the studio formerly known as SCE Cambridge). But while fans of this long-running series will think this portable edition feels just like the home games, that same feeling will be an issue for those who’ve had problems with this series in the past.

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Music Reviews

nine inch nails hesitation marks review

A sonic architect in the true sense of the word, nine inch nails mastermind Trent Reznor has always done what he can to push his music and the tools he uses to make it. Which he proves once again with hesitation marks, his first album as nine inch nails since 2008’s the slip. But the problem with being a mad musical scientist is that not all of your experiments work as well as the others.