Archive for June, 2009

Retirement of the Router From Hell

Monday, June 22nd, 2009

Random net storms. Super-slow download speeds, worse than a basic 54k phone modem. Pings of 200 to 1,000. Disconnects, where it just decides it’s not going to talk to the DSL modem at all, requiring multiple restarts, resets, and reentry of all the contact data. All-night bittorrent sessions, hours to download game patches. And a history like this and this.

Goodbye, Linksys, you’ve overstayed your welcome. Hello D-Link. You roxxor.

I’d Pay to See THAT in Theaters!

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

I had a really, really silly thought this morning.

Why doesn’t someone do a Lord of the Rings parody…
(more…)

RahXephon, just a note

Wednesday, June 10th, 2009

Ok, I really started getting hooked about the middle of the series, and blew through the last four disks in one night; staying up until ridiculous in the morning doing so.

Anyone who read the complaint about Haruna, and the speculation behind the spoiler tag in my last comment must be laughing their butts off about now.

Schoolgirl crush, indeed. Chicks dig the artsy types, don’t they?

It finally got angsty, right about the time I got interested.

Maybe I’ll do a full write-up on this one. The back-story’s a mess, and it might need a bit of ret-conning. It’s not told in straightforward manner; a lot is merely shown, but not explained, and a lot that’s explained is couched in allegorical terms.

My take: A decent rip-off of Evangelion, less depressing, with music and painting as central themes. (The more I look, the more parallels there are in characters: The Shinji, The Asuna, The Misato, the Rei, The Gendou. Even the Angels are there.)

One nice point: everyone I thought should get their just rewards in the end, got theirs in the last two episodes. Everybody was busy shooting everyone else, but it worked out.

Things I Learned From the First Episode of RahXephon:

Tuesday, June 9th, 2009

Never, ever take the subway anywhere. If you don’t run into a great big pile of rocks, you might just end up in a strange alien temple.

Corpse Princess; er, Princess Ressurection

Thursday, June 4th, 2009

This was supposed to be just a short little comment at Chizumatic, but it got away from me, so there. (Edit: and then I got two similar titles mixed up.)

Corpse Princess Princess Ressurection is not a bad little story. It actually has a plot, although only part of it gets resolved; essentially, it was a shadow hanging over from the backstory that happened just before the series opened (though you don’t discover that for a while.) The long-term plot isn’t resolved, and I don’t think it can be without tearing the series apart.

There are several good characters, who we see face challenges, and each other. There’s some element of Nanoha to it, in how enemies can switch sides… or do they? The story plays with the “who can be trusted?” element quite well; and I found myself sweating if Reiri’s face heel turn was for real or not.

At its core, the setup resembles a magical harem story; there are three girls, and all of them are vying for Hiro’s attention. However, Hiro is pretty much useless; in any combat, he’s a liability, and outside of combat… well, I saw echos of Louise and Saito in his relationship with Hime. I actually think he’d be better off with the vampire, but there’s the slight problem that if Hime ever stops feeding him energy, he’ll die. Permanently, this time.

In the end, although it did have cheap production values (they worked hard within that limit), that wasn’t my big issue. I had two problems, one of which I’ve already mentioned: Hiro is gutsy and willing, but by and large he’s way too underpowered to be where he is and doing what he’s doing. He’s more of a liability than an asset in combat, and that never changes.

The other problem is that the long term plot is”There can be only one.” All the siblings are at war over the succession, and there’s no prize (or survival) for second place. Eventually, Liza and Hime are going to have to turn on each other. And by the mid point of the show, they’re already established as both sympathetic, likable, and even reasonably honorable characters (given who and what they are). That feeling of foreboding significantly ruined the enjoyment of the show for me.

Minor nits were the production values, the way the story didn’t spend enough time on the long term plot, clunky mood changes, and some patently silly villains.

Positive points were the score, how well they did manage to work within the budget, cute girls, characterization, and a decent feeling of suspense in the latter half of the series. There are some genuinely tragic elements to Hime’s story, aside from the fact that she and Liza will eventually have to battle for supremacy. I won’t begrudge the obligation buy, but the rewatch value is middling-low.