Showing posts with label CCGs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CCGs. Show all posts

Saturday, September 10, 2011

Cat of the Geek #127: Cattank

Name: Classified
Stomping Grounds: Internet phenomenon
Side: AMERICA!
Breed: All-American shorthair
Cat Powers: Fully equipped with Kitten Launchers, All-Terrain Treads, and a Flamethrower. Space and Time are no obstacle to Cattank. Cattank is strong.
Skills: Eat 10, Sleep 6, Mischief 6, Wit 3, Cat Lolz 7
Cat Weaknesses: NONE!

Sunday, July 3, 2011

This Week in Geek (27/06-03/07/11)

"Accomplishments"

DVDs: Legend of the Fist is first and foremost a tribute to Bruce Lee. Subtitled The Return of Chen Zhen, it acts as a sequel to Fist of Fury, with Donnie Yen reprising Bruce Lee's famous role. Having survived the original film, Chen Zhen fights with the Allies in France during WWI, and later returns to Japan-occupied China as a member of the resistance. Cue awesome action scenes and another take on the dojo scene, but Infernal Affairs director Andrew Lau also takes the time to explore the historical and political elements of the story and adds the visual richness evident in his other films. The DVD extras are comparatively disappointing, amounting to less than 20 minutes of raw behind the scenes footage, with absolutely no interviews or any kind of commentary on the film making process. Ah well, at least the movie's awesome.

I should preface by saying that I am not particularly a fan of Olivier's acting, but I do find the films he's directed creative and interesting. His Henry V is, in fact, a revelation. Filmed in 1944 in gorgeous Technicolor, it surprises by spending the first half hour as an Elizabethan play, complete with flubs, a rowdy audience and actors winking at it, then takes us into highly stylized scenes that look torn out of Medieval paintings, and then into realistic battle scenes before pulling us out again. Not only does this make the boring parts of the play (i.e. discussions of Salic law etc.) incredibly exciting (that giant model of 1600 London is just amazing) and outright FUNNY (love the bishops), but it also makes the film do what the Chorus asks his audience to do, i.e. imagine the world on stage. Film historian Bruce Eder's commentary track is scripted right down to the exclamations, but it never gets tedious because he's got so much to talk about, from the real history, to Shakespeare to the film itself. The DVD also includes a few production stills, Medieval art and a cursory chronology of England's kings.

Now for some Doctor Who material (not to say the Black Guardian doesn't appear in Henry V, because he does). It was that kind of week. Fan lore would have it that the 7th Doctor's first adventure (with Mel), Time and the Rani, is one of the worst in the program's long history. While I won't try to convince you that it's a masterpiece or anything, I will say I'm not sure why people think it's so awful. I like the clownish 7th Doctor, and his malapropisms here are fun. The premise of a villain disguising herself as a companion has never been done before. And the special effects and make-up are impressive. It comes off as a jaunty romp with a silly comic book plot, and I mean that in the best way possible. It's especially good coming off the 6th Doctor's annoying era, and for a Pip & Jane Baker script (which fare better deprived of Colin Baker's particular affectations for verbosity). Call me pleasantly surprised. The DVD features the usual strong commentaries and making of material, with vintage and contemporary interviews.

Frontios (5th Doctor, Tegan and Turlough), while technically better received, I found a lot harder to get through. This story of Earth's last colony beset by giant woodlouse is uneven to say the least. It has structural surprises, but also subplots that don't pay off. It has some of the wittiest dialog of the 5th Doctor era, but also baffling Bidmeadisms like the the destruction of the TARDIS. The monsters are distinctive, but not really workable. The acting is at time excellent, and at others over-the-top. The direction makes good use of leveled sets, but is also lazy, leaving obvious flubs onscreen and coherence and continuity on the cutting room floor (as shown by the 15 minutes of deleted/extended scenes on the DVD). Even the commentary track is lethargic, the usually excellent Peter Davison failing to animate the other guests. The making of talks a lot more about the production problems than it does any of the story's qualities, which is how it should be.

CDs: While doing some drone work this week, I listened to Marco Polo, the fourth Hartnell serial, since lost to the Great Wipe in the Sky. The 7-part historical on 3 discs uses the original audio, supplemented by narration from William Russell (Ian Chesterton). Even without the images, the story comes across as atmospheric and inventive, mixing drama, comedy, cultural vignette and suspense smoothly. Russell's narration is unintrusive and adds a lot, especially since there a number of scenes that don't have dialog. I wish we could SEE it, but listening to Marco Polo in this format is the next best thing. A 4th disc includes interviews with the narrators of the first few Doctor Who narrators - Bill Russell, Carole Ane Ford (Susan) and Maureen O'Brien (Vicki) - about their time on the program (not about Marco Polo itself). The computer-accessible extras includes the original scripts scanned in pdf format and a map of Marco Polo's journey (with notes).

Books: Time, Unincorporated - The Doctor Who Fanzine Archives - vol.3: Writings on the New Series collects number of articles (from fanzines, of course, but some specially ordered texts as well) that by virtue of the subject matter, aren't as wide-ranging as the first two volumes'. However, it still manages variety with chapters on the spin-offs and the 11th Doctor as well as those on the series' return and the rise of RTD and David Tennant (without forgetting Eccleston and the companions, of course). The tone goes from spoof pieces to scholarly, and passing the ultimate litmus test, it made me revise how I think about the last few years' worth of Doctor Who, and in particular Russell T Davies' writing. Do I even need to say the word "Recommended"?

New Unauthorized Doctor Who CCG cards: Been working on the new rule sheet and new templates. The following are neither final nor actual cards you'll find in the new Basic Set.
Hyperion to a Satyr posts this week:
II.ii. O, what a rogue and peasant slave am I
II.ii. O, what a rogue and peasant slave am I - Branagh '96

Monday, June 6, 2011

Spring Cleaning: Hand-Made STCCG Cards

Here's something dating from the dawn of the CCG era, from the looks of it, just after the Star Trek: Collectible Card Game's Basic Set came out. From the off, it looks like I was interested in designing my own cards, a hobby that evolved into the graphically better made Unauthorized Doctor Who CCG. Of course, these were made using photocopies, colored and written in by hand. Here's a sample of the 16 I did find (click to double in size):
All of my designs were inspired by Next Gen tie-in novels:
-Idun is a bog typical Personnel card from Reunion (her lack of flavor is how I know it was made just after the Basic Set; today, she'd be dual aligned Federation/Klingon).
-The Devil's Heart is from the novel of the same name and works with the concept of "charges", which never existed in 1st edition.
-Q-in-Law likewise takes its title from a novel. It "disables" a skill and ties into Lwaxana Troi, which also appears with Q in the book.
-The Choraii Ship is from The Children of Hamlin and should be pretty easy to overcome (Basic Set again).
-Starbase 193 is an attempt at a different kind of Outpost card (for the time) and has game text mixed in with its lore. It is featured in The Devil's Heart.
-Primitive Society has a fairly fun anti-Equipment mechanic. It's from A Call to Darkness.

These and 10 others were found in a box with a number of graphical dream cards made by others and found on the Internet (but not printed in color), each slip of paper stuck to the front of an actual (common) STCCG. All made by hand. How quaint!

Thursday, April 21, 2011

Sarah Jane Smith Tribute

Liz Sladen was taken away from us too young, but we'll always have Sarah Jane Smith...My CCG tribute to the First Lady of Who.

Wednesday, February 23, 2011

Nicholas Courtney (1928-2011)

My Five Round Rapid salute to the one and only Brigadier.You will be missed, sir.

Monday, August 23, 2010

Unauthorized Doctor Who CCG: My RPG TARDIS Crew Edition

Today, just a little gift for my group of tabletop gamers. We finished our first season of what we ±called The Lambs of Time earlier this summer, and I thought it'd be nice to draw up their characters in the style of my Doctor Who CCG. The Pyramid of Mars icon makes them "rejects", but they are quite playable. Just not at all in the canonical or even extra-canonical realm. All casting by the players themselves. Thanks for the cool sessions, gang!
Official cards, as always, on siskoid.com.

Friday, August 28, 2009

Spring Cleaning: A Romulan Christmas

I'm only assuming August 28th is Romulan Christmas. Or Elvish Christmas. Or whatever that Star Wars script is supposed to be.

This is a Christmas postcard I just found sent to me by Kathy "Major Rakal" McKraken when I used to contribute a lot of wordage to Decipher's boards and website re: the Star Trek CCG.
The silver doesn't show up very well on the scan, but the pure gold does. Man, those were the days! Back when I only had to write ONE article each day.

Tuesday, December 25, 2007

The Hopes and Fears of All the Years

Christmas Post, Supplemental: If you're a Doctor Who fan and haven't read Paul Cornell's 10th Doctor story on the Telegraph's website, do yourself a favor. It's as heart-warming as it is clever. You've done it again, Paul.

It inspired this card from me:
And now all I have to do is wait for this year's Christmas special, Voyage of the Damned, and Christmas will be complete. (No spoilers, thanks.)