Friday 29 January 2016

G.I Joe: A Real American Hero

   Check out my last post here! http://that90sguyreviews.blogspot.ca/2016/01/samurai-jack.html

 Though a bit more of an 80s Cartoon, G.I Joe did air partially in the 90s and i'm sure enough people remember this that it's worth talking about. 


    G.I Joe aired 4 seasons from 1985 to 1992. Notably season 1 and 2 were produced by Sunbow and Marvel, while seasons 3 and 4 were produced by DIC. This resulted in the two halfs of the series being drastically different with the art style and even the voice cast changing between seasons 2 and 3. If you ask someone to remember G.I Joe, they are inevitably going to think of the Sunbow seasons however as they were far more popular and if you look at them on their own, they have a more satisfying conclusion than the DIC seasons, but we'll get to that later.

    The series followed the U.S.A Army Special Unit "G.I Joe" which is made up of the most manly, patriotic, stereotyped, and jingoistic band of men you could possibly find. They were unrealistically muscly men who spoke entirely in forced, clunky expository dialogue and cheesy one-liners. However, G.I Joe existed in a world of programming where if something was marketed towards boys, it was marketed ENTIRELY towards male children and no one else whatsoever. And 10-12 year old boys did not tune in to watch gripping, realistic, and cleverly-written drama, they tuned in to watch cool badasses (that they wanted to be like) shoot things up with lazer guns. 

And by damn, Sunbow was gonna give the boys of America what they wanted even if it killed them

G.I Joe was made up of a WIDE menagerie of characters (that each were cool in their own ways) but a few of the more memorable ones included: 

Duke, the attack leader of G.I Joe and the resident blond-haired, handsome, lady-catching hero (as pictured above). 

Flint: The second-in-command who was also a dashing hero (as pictured with the beret).

Scarlet: The fiesty ginger (who existed to stave away the feminists) as pictured above.

Roadblock: The token black guy who spouted a new catchphrase every minute, as though his purpose was to remind you that THIS CARTOON WANTS TO SELL YOU TOYS!!! (as pictured above)

and Snake-Eyes: The resident ninja (how?) of the team who saved Sunbow a fortune since he didn't speak and therefore didn't need a voice acotr. He too is pictured above, though he probably shouldn't be as ninjas are, as everyone knows, typically invisible. (But seriously, a ninja is an assassin, why would the U.S.A Army ever hire.......nevermind).

    G.I Joe mostly just dealt with one enemy all the time: Cobra, a terrorist organization  dedicated to taking over the world. Cobra also had a huge cast but a lot less of them were memorable. For the most part you simply had: 

Cobra Commander; The always-masked leader of the nefarious organization. Feared by most Cobra, laughed at by everyone from G.I Joe, he was kind of an arrogant brat who was more annoying than threatening half the time. 

Man was he cooler in the live-action movies

Destro and the Baroness: The 2nd-in-command of Cobra who was generally the first to call the Commander out on his shit and his girlfriend (COBRA'S token female)


Zartan: The leader of a gang of self-serving mercenaries who overtime become more and more loyal to Cobra, 

Let's play: Guess the Leader!
Storm Shadow: He's basically what happened when Cobra Commander saw that G.I Joe had a ninja and said to himself "I want one of those!" (NINJAS DO NOT WORK LIKE THAT)

Let's play: Guess the Ninja!

And last but certainly not least the man Cobra LITERALLY CREATED TO LEAD THEM (after they realized the Commander wasn't very good at it).......

Serpentor,
The Cobra Emperor:  
Only villain who was actually intimidating

  As I've gone on long enough describing characters, let's take a moment to describe the plot of the show. Cobra makes super-weapon. Cobra tries to take over the world. G.I Joe does not allow that. Repeat. For Two Seasons. 




    That was the entire show until we got to the movie. Than two more seasons of what was described above, Than two clip shows.........wanna talk about the movie? Let's.

    G.I Joe: The Movie was the crowning moment of the series. It's also where they jumped the shark (backflip). It revealed the Cobra had actually always been SPOILER ALERTasdfghjklacoverforanintraterrestrialsocietyofsnakepeopleasdfghjklSPOILERS END HERE.








I know you don't actually care and that you can't read that so I'm just gonna tell you anyways: Cobra was a cover for snake-people who desired world domination. I know it sounds ridiculous (it was) but it was actually kinda awesome. 


And that pretty much sums up G.I Joe?  Was i absolutely ludicrous? Yes. But did it give it's target audience what it wanted? Yes. Does that make it a failure or a success? You can believe whatever you want but i'm gonna go with success. 

See y'all next week. 









Friday 22 January 2016

Samurai Jack

    Check out my last post here! http://that90sguyreviews.blogspot.ca/2015/10/my-top-10-favourite-90s-cartoons.html

    First off, suppppppper sorry guys that I've been on hiatus for way too long now, hope to get back on track. Now, this is way overdue, a review for Samurai Jack!

      Samurai Jack was the only cartoon I listed on my 10 Favourite 90s Cartoons list (http://that90sguyreviews.blogspot.ca/2015/10/my-top-10-favourite-90s-cartoons.html) that I hadn't reviewed yet and it 100% deserved to be there. it was an amazing show that was cancelled too early and luckily enough for us, that bad decision is finally being reversed! That's right, on the off-chance that you hadn't heard about it yet, Samurai Jack will be revived later this year. And what better way to celebrate that than by looking back on the original show!

    Samurai Jack aired three seasons from 2001 to 2003, meaning it's technically not really a "90s Cartoon" per say, but I think most of us can agree it was a great addition to our childhoods. The series followed the tale of a Samurai Prince who was thrusted into the far future by a demon and now has to fight a variety of baddies in the cyberpunk dystopia that is the future.We never actually get to know his real name but to the strangers he meets, he goes by the name "Jack".....and Jack is one of the coolest cartoon characters you will ever watch.

And he bares an odd resemblance to a certain Professor who....nah

    Jack's was a show that was pretty unique for the early 2000s Cartoon Network lineup. You had shows like The PowerPuff Girls, Dexter's Laboratory, and Ed, Edd, n Eddy, all of which showed kids doing some pretty crazy stuff that most people probably never would. But they were all very humorous and you almost never had to actually worry about a problem not getting resolved. In Samurai Jack, the problem was already beyond resolution. The world has gone to hell and the only way for Jack to save the world is to get back to his own time and stop his archnemesis, the Demon Wizard Aku, from ever taking over the world in the first place. And speaking of Aku, he was one of very few villains in fiction who pulled off alternating between being an intimidating threat and a comic relief within the runtime of a single episode. 


    Aku had a crazy design and a backstory that basically put him on the same level of evil as the Devil himself (it's so good that I couldn't possibly spoil it), and yet he was hilarious and light-hearted when he felt like it. A lot of credit has to go to the legendary Mako who voiced him. 

    Another unconventional thing the series did was that it really didn't have much of a cast. It pretty much was just Jack dealing with a different sidequest every episode. Helping a new town or something of the like on his way back to the past every day. The only real constant was Jack and the only villain you could expect to survive to fight another day was Aku. Only one stranger Jack ever helped got to get a second (and a third) appearance and that was the big galoot called the Scotsman. 

And damn, did he deserve it, another really funny character who could kick butt.

     Because of the nature of this series, it was one of the only shows that really needed a conclusion....and it DID NOT GET ONE. The series ended in 2004 with a simple episode that really left everything about Jack's quest un-resolved. We thought we might get a more satisfying ending with the IDW Samurai Jack comic book series that ran from 2013 to 2015 but alas, we didn't. Let's hope this upcoming Season 5 can finally give us what we've all been waiting for!

    All in all, Samurai Jack was a very funny series that knew when and how to tell a dramatic story, and if you haven't checked it out you should. It had a kickass opening theme song to boot and the animation is perfectly passable. I'd recommend the three-part premiere episode as well as "the Birth of Evil" Aku's two part origin story, if you're looking for a good starting place, but really this was a series with no truly bad episodes, ask anyone. To all my Samurai Jack fans, let's get hyped for Season 5!