Out Of The Basement Podcast – Episode 34

December 2nd, 2014

The boys get together to talk about various geeky topics, including video games, RPGS, MMOs, movies, comics, etc. In today’s episode, we talk a bit about some new video games that have been released in an Alpha stage of development, and about upcoming movies. One of the hosts makes a shock revelation about a once hated show, which lost its status.

The episode can be downloaded directly from the following link, or automatically downloaded if you have already subscribed to the RSS feed through iTunes or any other feed reader.

Out Of The Basement Podcast- Episode 33

October 24th, 2014

The boys get together to talk about various geeky topics, including video games, RPGS, MMOs, movies, comics, etc. In today’s episode, instead of the usual conversations with our regular co-hosts, we’re discussing the recent Geek Nation Tours Feudal Japan trip. I’m joined by several of the amazing people who joined me in my travel through time to the age of the ancient Samurai, as we joke and drink our way across the country. The episode can be downloaded directly from the following link, or automatically downloaded if you have already subscribed to the RSS feed through iTunes or any other feed reader.

Out Of The Basement Podcast – Episode 32

October 9th, 2014

The boys get together to talk about various geeky topics, including video games, RPGS, MMOs, movies, comics, etc. In today’s episode, we discuss some new movies, and video games that have caught our attention over the past month, and drop some bombshell spoilers on the Hunger Games series, which have thankfully been cut out for those trying to avoid having their viewing experience ruined (and then inserted after the end of the show, for those who still want to find out what we were discussing).
The episode can be downloaded directly from the following link, or automatically downloaded if you have already subscribed to the RSS feed through iTunes or any other feed reader.

Out Of The Basement Podcast – Episode 31

August 22nd, 2014

The boys get together to talk about various geeky topics, including video games, RPGS, MMOs, movies, comics, etc. In today’s episode, Patrick Ramsahoye makes a surprise return, and we mainly about the blockbuster movies that have come out over the past couple months. might be some spoiler warnings if you haven’t seen Guardians of the Galaxy yet, but we tried to keep them pretty vague.
The episode can be downloaded directly from the following link, or automatically downloaded if you have already subscribed to the RSS feed through iTunes or any other feed reader.

Thanos: Supervillain Mastermind or Marvel’s Biggest Loser?

August 6th, 2014

We have been conditioned by the shows we watch and the books we read. Reaction to the villains of the Guardians of the Galaxy movie demonstrates this. Most reviewers love the movie but feel the villains were weak, Thanos especially. Mike Ryan at Screen Crush thinks Thanos is Marvel’s biggest loser. Matt Singer thinks Thanos is a liability for Marvel if he is going to be their heroes’ main threat.

 

It’s easy to see why people feel this way. Thanos is betrayed three times in the movie, twice by his daughters and once by his ally. He has an underling killed in front of him. His reaction to any of this is to sit in his throne with a slightly perturbed look on his face.

 

That is not the way a supervillain should react. Ronan should have been crushed for merely daring to raise his weapon against one of Thanos’ henchmen. Vendettas should have been called against Gamora and Nebula. That’s what we expected to see.

 

This is what I was going to argue when I started to write my last blog post. Luckily Thanos is one of my favourite Marvel villains, so I had plenty of material to research and realize that the heroes, the reviewers, the audience, and even I were being duped.

 

There are some things that need to be considered. First, until Guardians of the Galaxy, none of the heroes knew Thanos existed, let alone was making plays for the Infinity Stones. There is no reason to believe that Loki knows about Thanos, and Loki was working for him. Even after Gamora explains Thanos’ involvement everyone on “Team Good Guys” thinks he was only after the orb.

 

It is very easy to consider Thanos to be defeated and a non-threat. However, I would dare to say that as far as Thanos is concerned everything has gone according to plan. Let’s look at all the movies that feature an Infinity Stone.

 

There will be *SPOILERS*

 

Captain America: The First Avenger: This film introduces us to the Tessearact, the first Infinity Stone. This is possibly the only instance where we see an Infinity Stone and Thanos is not involved in any way. Of course, for all we know his interest was piqued when the Red Skull first activated the Tesseract and this is when he began formulating his plan.

 

The Avengers: Thanos’ allies actually get a hold of the Tesseract and use it, only to lose it by the end of the film. Most people would consider this a step backward for Thanos. But remember, he was smiling in his end credits scene. The Tesseract was the first of five Infinity Stones. Was it really to his benefit to be holding it while he tried to gather the others? The Tesseract ends up in Asgard.

 

Thor: the Dark Word: This film introduces us to the second Infinity Stone, the Aether. Thanos does not play a role in this film, but the stone ends up in the hands of the Collector. It is hard to imagine that Thanos was not aware of this.

 

Guardians of the Galaxy: Thanos finally exposes himself here. It is interesting that Gamora betrays him with the intention of selling the Orb to the Collector. How did she find out about him? Thanos raised Gamora. I would be very surprised if he had no idea how she would react if she found out his plans. The most likely scenario is that Thanos manipulated Gamora into doing what she did. The Collector would end up with two of the stones and everyone would be satisfied with this. The Collector personifies the activity he is named for. He would hold the stones but never contemplate using them, like an avid comic collector with a mint condition collectible.

 

Nebula betrayed Thanos because he preferred Gamora over Nebula and never missed an opportunity to tell her so. Was he being callous of her feelings or manipulating her to betray him and side with Ronan?

 

If Thanos wanted the Collector to have both stones, why would he allow Ronan to go after the Orb? If Ronan succeeded, the Collector’s defenses would be weakened and the Aether would be vulnerable. If Ronan failed, Thanos would know what to expect when he would raid the collection at some point in the future.

 

The results of the movies are that three of the five stones have been exposed and Thanos knows exactly where to find them. It was never in his interest to collect the stones one by one. The movies make it obvious that while the stones make a person powerful, he or she is not invulnerable. Godlike power does not come until all the stones are gathered together. If he held onto the Tesseract in The Avengers, it is very likely that someone would figure out what he is after and try to stop him before he is ready.

 

Another failure reviewers mention is that at least two teams of heroes have been formed as a direct result of Thanos’ attempts for the stones. I would recommend you read the Infinity Gauntlet comic books. Pay attention to how the series ends. What happens is not so much the heroes winning as it is Thanos losing. He was the most powerful entity in the universe. Once he gathers all the stones, dozens of teams of superheroes would not be a match for him.

Thanos has not been thwarted yet.

Thanos in Guardians of the Galaxy

August 2nd, 2014

Guardians of the Galaxy opened this week. It is one of the most anticipated movies of the summer. Overall it lives up to its potential. It has humour, adventure and vast cosmic vistas. Each character brings something to the story.

 

When I first sat down to write this I was going to be critical of how Thanos is portrayed. He gets betrayed three times and is virtually insulted to his face by an ally and does nothing but sit in his chair and let it happen. This did not seem like the correct response for a character being developed to be such a big villain that it will take the entire cast of heroes from the marvel Cinematic Universe to stand up to him.

 

As I was going over each of those betrayals and how Thanos’ non-responses made him seem less and less like a serious threat, I realized that he was staying absolutely true to character.

 

My first encounter with Thanos was in Jim Starlin’s run on the Adam Warlock series. Warlock is facing a future version of himself called the Magus. The Magus is the despotic leader of the Universal Church of Truth. Warlock is horrified by what the Magus does and what his church represents. Shortly after Warlock begins his war with the Church Thanos and Gamora show up and offer their assistance.

 

With Thanos’ help, Warlock is able to defeat the Magus. Later Warlock discovers that the Magus was to be Life’s Champion against Death’s Champion, Thanos. Warlock’s life path was intentionally and subtly altered so that Thanos would have to face a much less powerful opponent. It took the combined efforts of the Avengers, The Thing, Spider-man, and the ghost of Adam Warlock to defeat Thanos.

 

Thanos came back in the Infinity Gauntlet saga. This time it took all of Earth’s heroes, Galactus, the Celestials, and most of the cosmic entities to defeat Thanos. This defeat convinced Thanos that he was his own worst enemy and he gave up trying to destroy creation.

 

However, as fate would have it, Thanos also served as the defender of the universe on several occasions. He never did it to be the hero. His motivations were always selfish: to preserve his own life or to prevent others from achieving what he could not.

 

Whether he was trying to destroy everything or save it, he always used the same strategies. He would manipulate others to arrange the playing field to best suit his strategies. He would only come out into the open once the situation was as much to his advantage as he could make it.

 

This is the Thanos we see in GotG. He is not one to get all emotional and egotistic when things don’t go his way. He would rather let a minion be killed in front of him than distract an ally from the objective. Each betrayal was a setback, but they never brought the final objective out of reach.

 

Thanos’ inaction was not a sign of weakness. Rather, it was a sign of his cunning, resolve, and determination to be victorious at all costs. It shows just how dangerous a villain Thanos really is.

A 10% Solution

July 30th, 2014

I saw Lucy yesterday. I liked it overall, but had a hard time getting around its use of the 10% brain myth. I enjoy sci-fi and fantasy, so suspending my disbelief is pretty easy, but I have a hard time when a major plot point is something we know is untrue for the world in which the story is set.

 

I have been thinking about how the story could have gone forward without relying on a false premise. Here is what I came up with.

 

An aspect of our brains that we do not use to full capacity is networking. We communicate through language, written and oral. What if we could actually connect brain-to-brain? Certainly our ability to accurately communicate with each other would improve drastically. Could it be like networking computers? Would our computing power increase with each brain in the network?

 

The movie would start with Lucy able to make the connection through touch. With her increased brain power she works out how to network with nearby brains without physical contact. As the movie progresses she is able to extend her range. By the end of the film she at the apex of a global network and can connect with any organism that has some kind of brain. Otherwise the plot moves along the same as in the theatrical release.

 

As an aside, this movie has a strong female lead, so the Bechdel Test is going to be applied to it. Does it pass? I’d have to say yes and no. There are a total of four women with speaking parts (unless you want to count the extras talking on cell phones). One of those women is the voice of Lucy’s mother on the phone. Another is a nurse who has two lines that she speaks to a male doctor.

 

That leaves just one conversation between two women, Lucy and her friend Caroline. Caroline’s side of the conversation is all about a guy she met. Lucy is using her new-found abilities to multitask, and seems distant from the conversation. However, she is participating, and does not talk about any men other than a brief mention of her boyfriend in response to one of Caroline’s questions. Can a conversation half pass the test?

Out Of The Basement Podcast – Episode 30

June 10th, 2014

The boys get together to talk about various geeky topics, including video games, RPGS, MMOs, movies, comics, etc. In today’s episode, our good friend Dwayne joins us for some comic book talk, mainly about the blockbuster movies that have been and are still yet to be released this summer. There’s a huge spoiler warning about the new Spiderman movie… we end up accidentally talking about the ending, and going into a bit more detail than originally intended. If you are looking forward to seeing the movie, and don’t know about the ending, I would suggest waiting until after you’ve seen it before listening to this episode.

The episode can be downloaded directly from the following link, or automatically downloaded if you have already subscribed to the RSS feed through iTunes or any other feed reader.

Doing the Best With What You’ve Got

June 4th, 2014

I saw X-Men: Days of Future Past over the weekend. I really enjoyed it. It strayed from the comic book storyline it was based on, but did so in a way that was consistent with what had already been established in the previous movies and with more substance than two issues from a comic book series could give.

Now that I’ve had a few days to think about the movie, I can see some problems with the plot. I’m not talking about technological anachronisms or continuity errors. It’s just that given the resources at hand, the characters could have accomplished their goals much more effectively and efficiently than they did.

Since I’m about to analyze and discuss aspects of the plot, expect major *SPOILERS* if you haven’t already seen the movie.

Quicksilver

Bryan Singer has set a high bar for Joss Wheadon. Quicksilver’s scenes were some of the best in the movie. Jim Croce’s Time in a Bottle was the best use of music I’ve heard since Helix ended its first season. But these scenes also showed that Wolverine really didn’t need anyone else to change the timeline.

Since Mystique’s actions were history to Wolverine, he already knew everything he needed to be able to stop her. He just couldn’t do it alone. That’s why he sought out Xavier and Magneto. But Quicksilver could have handled things all on his own.

Breaking into the most secure prison in the US showed us that getting into a hotel conference room would have been child’s play for Quicksilver. He was fast enough to divert dozens of bullets fired by the prison guards. He could easily have used the same trick to protect Bolivar Trask and keep Mystique from being tasered by Stryker. The way he ran with Magneto to get past the first wave of guards would also work to get Mystique out of the room so that she couldn’t be captured and her DNA used to create the Sentinels.

In fact, there wasn’t a single challenge in the movie that Quicksilver couldn’t have solved on his own. He was like Star Trek: TNG’s transporters, the universal problem solver.

Mystique

Mystique’s mutant ability is to impersonate anyone almost perfectly. She is a formidable fighter, but infiltration and deception are her specialties. Why did she see killing Trask as her best option for stopping his Sentinel program?

At the end of the movie we see that Trask was charged and convicted of selling technology and weapons to hostile nations. That is exactly what he was doing when Mystique tried to assassinate him. He tried selling his plan to the US, but was rejected. So, he took the opportunity provided by the Paris Peace Accords to bring his ideas to the USSR, China and North Vietnam.

Mystique knew what Trask was doing. She had already impersonated him to get at his plans. That is how she knew how to find him. Wouldn’t exposing his intentions to the American authorities have discredited him without exposing mutants as threats? And she could have done this without revealing her activities. This tactic would have been much more effective, and more importantly, right in line with how she was used to dealing with problems.

Of course, if the writers had used Quicksilver and Mystique in these ways, the movie would have been much less entertaining.

Has Big Bang Theory Lost It’s Geek Cred?

May 21st, 2014

 

This post is inspired by a discussion on our Facebook page. Patrick Gleason is of the opinion that Big Bang Theory has jumped the shark. While I still enjoy watching the show, I think he has a point.

When Big Bang Theory started, the humour was about the divide between mainstream society (typically the high school trope of jocks and popular girls) and geekdom. The show poked fun at both sides in almost equal measure. It certainly began with the idea that it was okay to be a geek. They were different, not inferior. I think one of the highlights of the show was when Penny realised she couldn’t date the men she had because she was now aware of their ignorance.

The show’s low point came when the guys were on their way to a convention. They were dressed as Star Trek characters and stopped at Vazquez Rocks, the setting for many scenes in various Trek episodes. While they were taking pictures their car was stolen. Leonard, Sheldon, Howard and Raj found themselves in a diner trying to get help. For the first time the show had the guys completely embarrassed to be geeks. From that point on their geekiness became the source of most of the humour. It stopped being okay to be geeky.

Leonard, Howard and Raj have all expressed some regret at being geeky. The only character who always wears his geek with pride is Sheldon, and he is the main laughingstock of the show. At best he can be described as an eternal child. At worst we wonder if he is even human.

Two of the three women, Bernadette and Amy, can be seen as bridges between geeks and the mainstream. They are both successful scientists. However, Bernadette has always identified with the mainstream, and Amy is more of a nerd than a geek.

Bernadette pursues science as a means of achieving success. She makes more money than Howard. She enjoys the feeling of power she gets from playing with deadly pathogens. The pursuit of knowledge is probably low on the list of reasons she followed her course of study.

Howard is the clown in their relationship. He is the less successful opposite of Bernadette. He has an engineering degree from MIT. He has designed tools for NASA and even been to the ISS, but he is usually shown to be subordinate to her. The most obvious difference is that his career is based on a love of knowledge. He works in academia. If money is as important to him as it is to Bernadette, he easily has the knowledge, experience, and achievements to earn more than her if he moved into industry.

Amy is the female character that is supposed to be most like the men. She was introduced as essentially a female Sheldon. They are supposed to be perfectly suited to each other. But really, the only thing they have in common is their love of science. She doesn’t understand any of his other interests. She even went so far as to ruin Raiders of the Lost Ark for him by pointing out that Indiana Jones had absolutely no impact on the outcome of the movie.

Penny has more geek cred than Amy does. At least Penny collects Hello Kitty.

The only geek on the show who is not a scientist of some sort is Stuart. He is the ultimate looser. He can’t find happiness anywhere he looks. His business is a failure. Even his cat spurns him.

The message of the show has changed to “geeks are amusing, but it’s not cool to be one.”