#i'll be real in that i'm actually really unsatisfied with the artistic quality of these. esp with anatomy and style consistency
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Bless you for the Cat Token invasion, it is so so so lovely to see them everywhere on the dash! 🥺🫶🏻
thank you anon!!!!! it makes me really fucking happy that the general reception is so positive!!!!! I get really shy about posting too much at once, because I don't want to bug people by seeing too much of my stuff on the dash (yes, even little kitties. sometimes I psyche myself out thinking it's kinda gimmicky and people will get bored of it, so I'm unbelievably grateful for all the love. way more than I can articulate). thank you for supporting the fluffy little friends, I hope I can try something like this again in the future!!!
#next round i'm doing 100 and making them actually good quality /srs#its gonna take a fuckload of time but it'll be worth it!!#i'll be real in that i'm actually really unsatisfied with the artistic quality of these. esp with anatomy and style consistency#but really i'm just nitpicking when its actually a “holy shit so many cakes!!!!” sort of situation#idk sorry for the ramble anon i'm just in my typical artist insecurities looooooool. truly i'm so happy to make even a few people smile :)#askkiel#anon.ask
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Comic Log: Kieron Gillen's "Journey into Mystery"
Journey into Mystery #622-645 (2011-2012)
I'll keep this one short because I want to dedicate my writing energy to stuff that I'm more excited about and that warrant longer analyses, like Hickman's Fantastic Four, Aaron's Thor, and Ewing's Immortal Hulk.
The first half of this is really good. It basically follows a precocious tween version of Loki wheeling and dealing his way through the fantasy side of the Marvel Universe, playing various death gods, devils, fire giants, undead cannibalistic shieldmaidens, and fear gods against each other in order to advance the cause of his heroic older brother. It's effectively a much stronger version of the "Fear Itself" event (which I also read - it is boring and you get a much better narrative from this arc). We follow a version of Loki who is at a nadir of respect by virtue of both having recently pissed everyone off AND being comparatively disempowered to his older self, as he uses every scrap of influence he can get to turn the tide, all from behind the scenes. Each issue is also very thematically tight, and the art and narration really capture the tone of the title: it all has a very mythic quality to it.
It also has a cute little epilogue issue with a murderous hellhound puppy:
The second half is meant to pay off a lot of those risky deals and betrayals that Loki made in the first, in a "chickens coming home to roost" kind of way, but unfortunately it's largely unsatisfying. The main problem I have with it is the plots, which are just not very compelling and feel a lot like filler, even if they are technically advancing the main cause of Kid Loki's development. These arcs are especially frustrating because they keep ditching their own premise (Loki being blackmailed by the Asgardian All-mothers into being their secret weapon) and the previously established mythos in order to weave into crossovers with the New Mutants (?), Captain Britain (??), and Daimon Hellstrom (????). Plus, the artists that take over from Doug Braithwaite and company largely can't match his sense of tapestry-like grandeur and instead go for a more conventional, clean, "comic-book" look that feels very out of place (minus Stephanie Hans, who pencils the genuinely great conclusion of the run).
That's ultimately the real disappointment of this second half. I actually really like this character arc for Loki! It concludes very strongly, wrapping up the character's development across the run while setting things up for his next adventures, and has a nice metatextual layer about storytelling, change, codification, and deception. Every moment - even in the second half - that lets us focus on him and his relationships to Thor, Leah, Hela, the Disir, and others, I really enjoy, they're very strongly written. But the journey of getting there requires reading flabby New Mutants and mind-numbing Thor crossovers (uh-oh, fighting Surtur again!) that lack the sense of wonder that the first portion of the run had.
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IAC Reviews #19: Wishbone (2000)
Hey, is anyone still alive out there? I hope so.
Coming off of last year was a disaster, and well, we didn't enter 2021 on the highest of notes. I guess you could say I've been burned out and not having a ton of motivation to do a lot, even with how much I've been grinding on Letterboxd over the past few months. I think I'm ready to come back, and since there's a storm is brewing outside, let's make today a movie night...and boy, do I have a treat for you.
I think I've made it kind of apparent that I have a weakness for terrible, low-budget, trash fires. There's something oddly charming about them where they always find a way to lure me in, and given the scene on Letterboxd, there's a bunch of SOV masochists out there waiting to get their next fix. While digging around for material to cross off my lists on titles to find and add, I was reminded of a terrible, low-budget film that was shot in my hometown over 20 years ago. I'm full of fear for what's to come, and you should be too.
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Wishbone is a 2000 horror film directed by Timothy Gaer and co-created by Michael Fasciana, centering on a woman named Laurie who receives an unusual artifact from her eccentric aunt she acquired from a pawn dealer that causes those around her to disappear when they make wishes on it. Hmm, seems simple enough. Let's what we're in for, and I'm absolutely not ready because the IMDb page says this shit is over two hours long, despite a version on Youtube having it just a bit over 90 minutes. Let us pray.
Wishbone in One Gif:
This acting is might be the death of me, but I'm not sure what's going to be the catalyst that causes me to fall down the stairs and break my neck: the sound quality, the weird editing, or the music...oh, god what the fuck is the music doing? So much noise, noise noise!
Okay, so let's dig into this before I take too long of a break and I don't come back to this. I've already had to pause the movie a few times to catch my breath or just rewind and go back because there's a good amount that I keep missing because, apparently, the star of the film is the score and not Laurie. This is so, so slow. I've seen a lot of long horror movies, but at least with those, it feels like things are happening. Even Blood Lake had filler that did something to some degree, and with that, it was consistently bad. This movie doesn't even know what it wants to do. So, as a disclaimer, there's a good chance I'm probably missing some key details that I didn't hear because it seems that characterization isn't important if the music insists on talking over everyone.
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So, to date, this might be one of the worst horror movies (and movies in general) that I've ever seen and it might be one of the slowest things in the entire megaverse. This is over 90 minutes of, somehow, nothing and something happening simultaneously - if that makes any sense.
This takes its sweet ass time moving along and there's so little pay-off. The majority of the characters are either nameless or we aren't introduced to them in a way that matters enough for us to care about them. It's kind of like with Violent Shit and other low-budget slasher films where the majority of the characters serve no purpose but to be disposable. Next to the two main leads, Laurie and Joe, and maybe a few others, everyone is just forgettable and even then I couldn't honestly tell you anyone's name if it was explicitly brought up. IMDb isn't helpful either, and at this point it just makes me care even less. I'm not sure if my patience has been tested too much with this, but it's kind of sad that I'm more invested in seeing what the background characters are doing than Laurie and Joe - even though I can't really hear what the hell they're saying.
Yeah, I really can't move on without talking about the sound and the music. Why is it always the audio with these movies? This has an estimated budget of $100,000, or $154,779.43 today in August 2021. How do you have the ability to somehow not make this look like a potato for the most part, well for the day shots that is, but you don't have it in you to get a good mic and someone who knows how to mix and edit correctly? I would sort of understand if you spent the majority of the money on talent to cut corners, but this is just ridiculous. Did they use the cameras' built-in mics to catch the audio here?
I feel like I need to interrupt the movie constantly to tell them to speak up because if I turn up the volume, I'm just getting bombarded with this really weird soundtrack that doesn't fit. I shit you not, during one of the kill scenes, the music booming over it sounds like it was ripped from Kevin MacLeod's "lounge" library and then the reverse happens where ominous music is playing over a more touching scene - and that's not even a dig at Kevin as an artist. That's just how inappropriate and unfitting this editing is. The weird fucking thing about this specific kill scene is that it sounds like the audio is stacked, so there are two different instrumental tracks going on.
How do you fuck something as basic as tension up like that? The audio choices are so painfully inconsistent and it doesn't know what it wants to do. There are moments where you can hear the dialogue just fine, but then the music comes in out of nowhere to segway us into the next scene and it starts to muffle things out. If it isn't that, then the dialogue is just so soft that you'd think there was a pillow on the mic or we're hearing them from the opposite side of a sound-dampened room.
This is what I meant earlier when I said I apologize in advance if I miss anything crucial because I can't make out half of these conversations. So, I'm having to keep going back if I care enough or just having to pause and take breaks because there's only so much I can handle. This means that there's a good amount I'll blank on because I have to keep going back because I can't remember the majority of these no-named characters. Who the fuck are you people? Why am I supposed to care?
If I'm understanding the non-existent rules of the wishbone, you're connected to whoever dies in some way. So, why is any of this relevant to what's going on? If it's random, then it's another reason for me not to care just because some frat kids made a wish at some point. Again, who the hell are you and why am I supposed to lament over them? Why is there so much useless filler here? Did I mention that this is over 90 minutes long and there are *three* fucking party scenes? Party scenes are to Wishbone as ten-minute-long jetskiing and beer game scenes are to Blood Lake.
Oh, speaking of other shit that's annoying. Let's talk about general editing because the sound isn't the only thing that's a mess here.
I swear that almost every single scene in this ends with a fade-out/fade-in shot. Only one or two scenes come to mind where this doesn't happen, and the first time it did I thought my browser was freezing because it abruptly cut to black and then smash cuts to a party scene. I've never, ever seen a movie that abused this that much before and it's on par with something I would have seen made by a bunch of high school kids. So, when we have a moment where this doesn't happen and it plays out normally, it feels like a breath of fresh air. I'm sure this movie's run time could have been shaved down by at least a minute or two if this wasn't a problem, along with all the useless close-up shots that serve nothing to the plot.
It's such a waste of time. I'm so fucking tired. How was this movie's budget $100k? Did they spend most of it on renting the Scranton Police Department for a few shots or did it go towards their impromptu trip to Party City? I'm so tired and I don't care anymore.
Do you want to know what the real kicker is? With just barely twenty minutes left, the whole lore about the monkey's wishbone paw comes back and that's when Laurie and her friend Karen think something is weird. Isn't this whole realization trope that happens within the first or second act, not now with your Great Value brand version of the Dream Warriors?
Also, it's not specified how much time has gone by since the start, but it has to have been at least a week or two. It's incredibly weird how they paint the main characters and the unnamed background ones as such good friends that they don't think it's weird how almost all of them have disappeared - especially one girl who doesn't seem off-put that her boyfriend (or ex) disappeared after getting into an argument at one of the parties and none of his friends could reach him either at his own house.
The final showdown is an utter pain in the ass to get through because the conflict ends as abruptly as it starts and it's so unsatisfying. We get to see the face of our villain, I guess, and then more or less cut to our leads holding hands down the street set to the same looping lounge music we've been dealing with for over 90 damn minutes. Is everyone else who went with them dead? Did they live? Who cares! That's one thing the movie and I can agree on since we never see them again. We end on a shitty cliffhanger that's supposed to prepare us for a sequel, which thankfully never happened.
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And that was Wishbone. Holy fucking shit, I've never been so thankful for a movie to be over in my life. It's 11:07 PM as of tinkering with some minor revisions and I've been in purgatory with this for over five hours, and yet, it feels like an entire lifetime has gone by.
I've raved about how bad Blood Lake was with its incredibly bad pacing, but this is next level awful and a testament to bad filmmaking if I've ever seen it. I expect a lot of the things I complained about from super amateur filmmakers who are shooting on an actual shoestring budget, not people who had that much money to fuck around with. How did they have that kind of a budget, and the most they can give us is bad audio, Windows Movie Maker levels of basic editing, three wrap parties, and a few crumbs of gore that we could see?
This was physically painful to see and I'm in much worse shape having endured it than I would have been if I sat through something liked Boardinghouse, and that has a two-and-a-half-hour-long version tied to it. This is just a marvel and I mean that in a so-bad-it's-bad way, not like how SOV enthusiasts who love this stuff pine over. If I had to give one thing going for it, one single granule of gold that I enjoyed from this, it's the limited shots we get of the area so I could make a game out of seeing what local spots I recognized. If playing I Spy is the only way for someone to endure your movie, then I don't know what else to say.
Wishbone is a hot mess where shit's happening, but also nothing is happening at the same time. I wouldn't wish this on anyone. In fact, I wish this movie never existed or would die in the ether and never return to our mortal realm ever again. Now, if you'll excuse me, I'm gonna go have a smoke and hope I don't get run over by a hearse tomorrow.
RATING: 0.5/10
#wishbone#wishbone 2000#film#horror#horror movies#horror film#iac reviews#horror review#review#low budget horror#sov#shot on video#sov horror#shot on video horror#2000s horror#2000's horror#00s horror#00's horror
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