I don't care if it's live, animated or simply just audio, I enjoy it and will continue to spread the word and allow others to feel this enjoyment with updates, reviews, first impressions and so much more. Favorites include Doctor Who, Psych, Fullmetal Alchemist, Suits, Arrow, Fairy Tail, Ghost Hunt, Monk, Charmed, Attack on Titan and so much more! You can read my contributions to @DoctorWhoTV or catch up on what I do by following me on Twitter at @Avatar_Gustaff.
Friday, 19 August 2016
Wednesday, 17 August 2016
REVIEW - UNIT: SHUTDOWN
Strength to strength is perhaps the best way to describe this box
set. Big Finish continues their Doctor Who rollercoaster year with Kate
Stewart, Osgood and the new (more competent) UNIT team. From shop window
dummies to ninja aliens, UNIT continues the fight in Shutdown!
But let’s do away with the bad first…because there isn’t much of it. In fact, a lot of the things I mentioned in the last review
seem to have been mended this season. For instance, the “Kate Stewart
is related to the Brigadier” references are almost non-existent. It’s
almost like everybody understands that we get it now. Unfortunately Kate
as a character isn’t developed that much, but listeners are treated to
her struggles with higher-ups and the bureaucratic red tape she has to
contend with from time to time.
For those interested, this series takes place after The Day of the Doctor,
though we aren’t clued in to which Osgood we’re dealing with here, but
that just doesn’t matter as she continues to impress me. Osgood is
constantly put in alien environments by the writers, either physically
or emotionally, and that does wonders for a character I once considered a
‘cardboard fangirl stereotype’. Her budding, steadily
will-they-won’t-they relationship with Josh Carter is some of the
series’ highlights. I am very much on the Josood bandwagon.
Speaking of, my absolute favourite character continues to be Josh
Carter. He may be the stereotypical action hero, but James Joyce is just
so entertaining and the material is just so rich that I don’t mind.
This series partners him more with Kate and through that dynamic
presents us with a very unique-ish Brigadier/Benton relationship that a
joy to hear.
Not necessarily a bad thing, but Sam Bishop still hasn’t made much of
an impression on me. So little in fact that I’m not saying anything
more about him. Moving on!
The threat this time around is the Tengobushi, a race of ninja-like
aliens. Whereas the Autons were slow and uncoordinated, the Tengobushi
are lightning bruisers that, while not quite on the level of Weeping
Angels, still manage to give the UNIT team a run for their money. I
should mention that they only become entertaining at the halfway mark.
Before that, they kept reminding me of the Autons in that they didn’t
seem to do much except be minions for somebody else. Thankfully this
changes in episode 3.
If you’ve listened to UNIT: Extinction, then you’ll have noticed that
a lot of the same plot formulas get recycled, albeit in more inventive
ways. Because of this, the box set does run the risk of alienating
listeners who want something completely new every season. But hey, if it
ain’t broke…
So which set is stronger I hear you ask? Well unlike Doom Coalition
where S1 was excellent/S2 was meh and The War Doctor Adventures where S1
was meh/S2 was phenomenal, I can honestly say that UNIT: Shutdown
carries the same creativity and entertainment value that it’s
predecessor does. It is thoroughly entertaining, it is spellbindingly
fun to listen to and I highly recommend you pick it up. You won’t be
disappointed.
In November the UNIT folk get their ‘mind wiping’ comeuppances when
they take on the…the…sorry readers. It’s just that…I seem to have
forgotten the name of UNIT’s next adversary. Give me a moment of Silence to jog my memory…
Don't forget to pick up your copy of my new novel "Deathday Clock".
Sebastian Strange comes under attack by a mysterious assailant with resources both financial and temporal. The only thing keeping him alive is a fob watch which can predict his time of death.
Available now at Amazon for $6,83.
Monday, 15 August 2016
REVIEW - TORCHWOOD: MOVING TARGET/BROKEN
Moving Target
Episode 4 of Big Finish’s second season of Torchwood brings back Indira Varma’s Suzie Costello in Moving Target,
written by Guy Adams. It also features Alex, played by Naomi McDonald, a
human caught up in an extraterrestrial game hunt. Her only hope of
survival? You guessed it.
I’m going to be brutally honest and say that choosing Suzie Costello
to return feels like scratching the bottom of the barrel. I never liked
the character on television. Suzie made so little impression on me that I
had to go look up who she was on Tardis Wikia when it was announced
she’d be returning. But Big Finish has turned redeeming nonredeemable
characters into an art form so I was willing to give Moving Target a shot. Suffice to say they missed.
This story’s biggest flaw is perhaps the fact that it makes a really
unlikable character the star and partners her with an equally annoying
co-star. But credit where it’s due. Naomi McDonald plays a really
realistic Alex. To the point where I wish she’d been a little more
animated. Alex at times made the story feel like a gritty reality show.
Nicholas Burns plays the Referee, really pompous, but tremendously
entertaining character who mocks and ridicules the cast in a very Dream
Lord-esque manner.
The plot is really creative I will grant you. Freezing time so a
bunch of alien game hunters can hunt down a human prey for sport feels
ordinary, but I can’t recall another Doctor Who story which featured
this as the main plot. Unfortunately, the story contradicts itself
really badly when Suzie questions the legality of killing people all
willy-nilly. The Referee answers that they are within their legal
rights, but the story ignores the THING which sent the Atraxi packing in
The Eleventh Hour: Earth is a level-5 world. Hunting for sport
should be illegal given this status and for some reason this stayed
with me throughout the episode.
The narrative itself is quite predictable. It doesn’t take a genius
to predict the climax, but I will toot my own horn and say I got to the
answer roughly thirty minutes before it actually happened. If you’ve
watched episode 1 of Torchwood, you should be able to as well.
The story itself drags in the middle, as though the writer wasn’t
sure how to move the narrative from its current point to the next. This
makes Moving Target feel like a much longer story than it actually is.
In fact, this story could’ve been condensed to thirty minutes. It
would’ve done wonders for the pacing.
Moving Target provides a lot of foreshadowing to Suzie’s eventual fate, to the point where you could say that the reason They Keep Killing Suzie happened is because of Moving Target.
For the most part, this story is filler, but not one of my
favourites. It would be worth your time if you’re a fan of Suzie
Costello, but you don’t run the risk of missing any important
information regarding the Committee, who seem to be slowly transitioning
into a throwaway line as opposed to an actual character(s).
Broken
Joseph Lidster presents…Broken! A better name for this story
would’ve been ‘Fixed’ as this is exactly the kind of story I needed to
hear to get those Torchwood juices flowing. Broken in many ways
embodies what Torchwood is about. It has heart. It has soul. Great
character dynamics, real world problems and a careful handling of
sensitive matters. I’ve never been that hardcore of a Jack/Ianto fan,
but I suspect had this story made it into Season One in 2006, I might
just have turned out to be one.
Ever wondered how Ianto forgave Jack for killing his Cyber-girlfriend
in that ridiculously stupid Cyber(wo)man episode? How do the Torchwood
team cope with and adjust to the things they’ve seen? If a bunch of
cannibals almost cut you up, would you be able to brush it off and head
back into work the next morning with a huge smile on your face? Probably
not, but how long would it take? What would it take? Broken asks and answers most of these questions in an emotionally fragile, but sympatric story which did make me bawl at least once.
The majority of this story takes place in a pub with a glass of
alcohol in hand, but quickly takes the listener on a trip inside the
mind of one of the most messed up characters in Torchwood – Ianto Jones.
Broken highlights just how miserable, depressed and frustrated
he really is, as well as people like him. At times it may come across
as a grown man whining and complaining about stuff adults should be used
to, but aren’t we all like that? How many days end with us complaining
about our boss to our family and friends? Well Ianto doesn’t really have
much in the way of family (or does he), so he does what any other
person in his position has been known to do…complain to the girl who
serves you your drinks. And I must say that the conversations between
Gareth’s Ianto and Melanie Walters’ Mandy Aibiston were really good.
Real, proper, 3-dimensional discussions. It’s sort of the opposite of Moving Target
which somehow tried to be too realistic and gritty. Broken always feels
like a piece of fiction, but a really believable, ‘real’ piece of
fiction.
I didn’t listen to the trailer for Broken so I had no idea
what it would be about, but Lidster’s script succeeds in making you feel
so many different emotions, all at the right time. It really is one of
the best character stories we’ve had.
And that’s not even touching the plot twists. While not as plentiful
as some others, Lidster’s script did manage to throw me for a loop more
than once. The man has a way with a narrative curveball, but that’s no
surprise given his previous scripts such as The Reaping (darkest Cybermen story EVER), Master and The Nightmare Man.
I highly recommend you pick up Broken, but be warned it’s even more completely standalone and filler than Moving Target. But at least the characters are more likable.
Don't forget to pick up your copy of my new novel "Deathday Clock".
Sebastian Strange comes under attack by a mysterious assailant with resources both financial and temporal. The only thing keeping him alive is a fob watch which can predict his time of death.
Available now at Amazon for $6,83.
Sunday, 14 August 2016
Tuesday, 9 August 2016
NOW AVAILABLE: DEATHDAY CLOCK!!!!
Hey guys!
Just wanted to share the good news. My novel "Deathday Clock" is finally available on Amazon for $6.83. This Murder Mystery/Time Travel adventure revolves around Sebastian Strange who invents the Deathday Clock, an instrument which can predict his exact time of death. This is awesome as someone is stalking him in not just three, BUT four dimensions.
Official synopsis reads:
"Fifty years ago, the Pride murders began. Men, women and children were brutally massacred in their homes and in the streets.
Twenty years ago, Sebastian Strange is born, signalling an end to the killings.
Five years ago, having survived numerous attempts on his life; Sebastian develops the Deathday Clock: An instrument capable of predicting his exact time of death.
Now, Sebastian finds himself attacked by friend and foe alike. Matters turn dire when the Deathday Clock keeps defaulting to the same ninety day period. Sebastian only has three months to discover how and why this is happening or risk a final, permanent end."
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