Reviews

5 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
Family Guy: Screwed the Pooch (2001)
Season 3, Episode 13
Good episode spoiled by the unoriginal ending...
21 February 2006
Warning: Spoilers
By Season 3, Family Guy was facing permanent cancellation. Many of the original writers that made the (superior) second season Family Guy at its best had left after a long hiatus from 2000-2001. Of course, I'd much rather watch Season 3 than the new crap they're shoveling out and calling Season 4...

Anyway, this episode. It had its moments, especially the interaction between Peter and Lois's dad. A prime example is when Peter tries learning French to be act more sophisticated around him:

Peter: Bonjour, Mr. Pewterschmidt.

Lois's Dad: Did Peter have a stroke?

But this episode as a whole is nothing special. The basic premise, Brian and his puppies, mirrors the Simpsons episode "Two Dozen and One Greyhounds" which first aired about six years before this one. Some scenes, like the one at the racetrack, are very similar to the ones in that particular Simpsons episode. However, the biggest downer was the ending: the female was carrying puppies that looked like Ted Turner, clearly implying that Turner had sex with the dog. This ending was pretty much identical to a very early South Park episode entitled "Elephant Makes Love to a Pig," which originally aired in 1997. Now, I don't know if the writers of this episode saw that particular South Park episode (I doubt it), but the similarities between the resolutions knocks this episode down a few points for me.

Around this point in Family Guy's original run, the show was already experiencing a slow, downward slide, which had intensified by the end of the third season, and led to its eventual cancellation in early 2002 (along with pitifully low ratings). The resurrection of the show didn't help this slide at all. But, like I previously mentioned, I'd still rather watch this episode than any of Season 4, especially with crap-fests like "The Courtship of Stewie's Father", "The Father, the Son, and the Holy Fonz", "Petarded" or "Brian the Bachelor" being produced. It's too bad popularity ruined a once-great show that at least ended while it was ahead (albeit unintentionally).

"Family Guy" (1999-2002)
3 out of 23 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Chappelle's Show (2003–2006)
One of Comedy Central's Great Tragedies (R.I.P. Chappelle's Show [2003-2005])
19 October 2005
Chappelle's Show took a long time for me to catch on. My friend bought the DVDs and would tell me to watch the episodes on TV, but I was never that interested. Plus, I was only an occasional fan of sketch shows anyway, not really being a fan of SNL or MADtv (esp. after CC started playing reruns for four hours every weekend).

But now, over a year since its last episode aired, over a year since I saw commercials for Black Bush, Sam Jackson Beer and Dave's new season letter reading ("Guess what, bitches? I'm back for an all new season!"), do I realize what I've missed out on. I never stopped to watch and realize that this show's brand of comedy was what really made me laugh. And now that it has been almost written in stone that Chappelle's Show is gone for good, I still continue to watch...and wait.

Anyway, watch this show. It'll crack you up. What? It'll crack you up. What? It'll crack you up. What? It'll crack you up. OK!

****/****
1 out of 3 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Seinfeld (1989–1998)
10/10
Seinfeld - Quite Possibly One of the Greatest TV Shows of All Time
24 September 2005
I was only eight when Seinfeld went off the air. Like The Simpsons, Seinfeld was one of the first adult TV shows that I remember from my early childhood. My parents would watch it regularly and laugh, and even though I had no idea what was going on, I laughed too. I knew who Jerry, George, Elaine and Kramer were, but had no idea that everyone else in the country did, too.

Now, seven years later, I have seen every episode of the show and wish I could have understood how big the show was when it was still on the air. Seinfeld was one of a kind and technically, still is. It left behind a legacy of classic episodes that are still talked about today (at least on the IMDb boards) and unlike many other shows, Seinfeld is one of the few I still try to catch in reruns.

Anyway, I don't want to tell you what the show is about or describe each character, because I'm sure everyone knows that by now. But if you haven't checked out this show, try it out. (It's on TV every night anyway).

****/****
3 out of 8 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Best of the prequels, but not the best of them all...
29 May 2005
Warning: Spoilers
****Some Spoilers*****

I saw this movie twice (after zoning out the first time, I went to see it again with my dad and sister). I was surprised that my dad, who had seen A New Hope, The Empire Strikes Back and Return of the Jedi in theaters, said this one was the best.

But anyway, the beginning starts off very fast, with amazing visuals of the Clone War battles and the rescue of Palpatine by Obi-Wan and Anakin. (I noticed three lines from the A New Hope inserted into the first five minutes: "Lock S {or X} foils in attack position", "Here's where the fun begins" and of course, "I have a bad feeling about this"). Count Dooku bites it after ten minutes, and there is an elevator scene that has a "Die Hard"-feeling to it. After this, we are subjected to an hour or so of Palpatine drawing Anakin closer to the Dark Side, and eventually reveals himself to be Sidious (Who didn't know that already?). The Jedi are wiped out (children, I mean "younglings", too).

The last 20 minutes are by far the best; very intense and they tie the two trilogies together nicely (still a few plot-holes, but I won't dive into that). Padme squeezes out Luke and Leia and they are taken to their future home, while Anakin, deformed after a great lightsaber duel, literally becomes Darth Vader.

High points: Great visuals, the best in the entire trilogy, good acting by Ewan, Ian and Hayden, who I thought did MUCH better than Attack of the Clones

Low points: General Grievous, love story, cheesy dialog ("NOOOO!")

In all, easily the best of the prequels, but still no Episode IV or V.

***/****
1 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
Teen Titans (2003–2006)
This show sucks
7 September 2004
Warning: Spoilers
Nuff said.

I hate the characters and the animation, especially. It is NOT funny and just bugs me a lot. Unfortunately, my sister watches this lame show everyday at dinner and I'm forced to look at these very boring characters defeat the bad guy in an endless, predictable pattern.

The character Beast Boy bugs me the most. He is supposed to be the funny one, but he isn't. Raven, the Gothic girl is annoying, too, but Star-whatshername talks in by far the most irritating manner. "I do not know what we are going to do!" Use contractions!

All in all: 1 out of 10
4 out of 17 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

Recently Viewed