Categories
LEGO STAR WARS-Related Toys & Games

LEGO 75269: DUEL ON MUSTAFAR (STAR WARS: REVENGE OF THE SITH)

SUMMARY:

As part of LEGO Star Wars’ Winter 2020  wave, this duel set is LEGO’s second effort to recreate the iconic battle pitting  Obi-Wan Kenobi vs. Anakin Skywalker during Episode III: Revenge of the Sith’s climax. The set has 208 pieces, an instruction manual, and two mini-figures.  It’s recommended for ages seven-and-up.

REVIEW:

Re: the mini-figures, it’s an inexpensive way to add both Jedi Knights to any Star Wars fan’s collection. Obi-Wan comes in tattered robes with an angry and distressed face. As for Anakin, he, too, has torn robes accurate to the scene, with one solemn face and one with sinister yellow eyes. Both figures also come with blue lightsabers.

As for the set, it’s a mixed bag. Play features include splashing lava bits, a collapsing pillar (that is very scaled down), and rotatable plates for the figures to stand on. The plates actually rotate a full 360-degrees and can slide back and forth.  Better yet, the entire set itself can also be folded up for a more storage-friendly look. The coloring is cartoony, with bright reds and yellow, really making this set a little bit of an eyesore for any collector looking to display this set.

Otherwise, the set is a kid’s dream – sporting play features galore and outstanding figures to boot. As for an older fan, detailing inaccuracies, such as the bridge being smaller, is very disappointing. In the movie, the bridge is proportionally about as big as this entire set is, so it isn’t a shocker to see it scaled back for such a small set.

To be fair, LEGO does a nice job recreating this scene for such a low price point for kids.  Adults, however, may not be quite as satisfied.

BONUS FEATURES:

None. 

ROSCOE’S ODD MOON RATING: 8 Stars

Categories
Basketball Sports (TV & Videos) Toys & Games Video Games

NBA LIVE 97 (SEGA GENESIS)

SUMMARY:

Produced in 1996 by EA (Electronic Arts) Sports, this Sega Genesis cassette is rated ‘KA’ (for kids ages 10+ and adults).  Played in exhibition game mode only, thirty teams (plus create-your-own players) are available for play. 

There isn’t a specified playoff mode, so games can’t be played in tournaments or as a ‘full season.’  Each quarter is evidently limited to three minutes.  Stat sheets and replays are available in game play.  Though a draft mode isn’t available, player trades, waivers, and signings are accessible. 

Due to licensing rights, the likenesses of some players (i.e. Charles Barkley, Michael Jordan, and Allen Iverson) aren’t directly identified — they are instead referred as either ‘guard’ or ‘forward.’  For all game play, it’s a single-camera angle.        

REVIEW:

Its unsophisticated pixilated imagery obviously can’t compare with modern games.  At best, it holds well in line with other games of this series from that era.  Its simple controls are easy enough for those unfamiliar with such games.  It proves a pretty fun game to play with a friend, considering its maximum number is two participants. 

Among its best assets is that participants can feel like they have a fair chance to win.  There are likely better Sega basketball games available, but, despite its limitations, NBA Live 97 is certainly workable.  To some extent, this game even seems ahead of its time, in terms of what it can actually do.  

BONUS FEATURES:

One can ‘create-a-player’ or assign players to one of two custom-built, generic squads.  However, player creation and editing (including for real NBA players) is considerably limited, but it’s is easy to do.    

ROSCOE’S ODD MOON RATING: 6 Stars

Categories
Digital Documentaries History & Biographies (Videos) Movies & Television (Videos)

HOLLYWOOD COLLECTION: WALTER MATTHAU – DIAMOND IN THE ROUGH

SUMMARY:                                               RUNNING TIME: 51 Min.

Produced in 1997, this biographical film from Wombat Productions was produced in cooperation with Matthau and his son, Charles. 

Actor Jack Lemmon starts off with an anecdote about an elderly female stranger complimenting Matthau in a supermarket encounter about his supposed ‘It’ factor after casually dismissing his average looks.  For over ten minutes, Matthau explains his rise from an impoverished childhood in Depression-era New York City; his start in the city’s theatre scene; and then his World War II service.  

From that point on, various interviewees take turns narrating.  Featuring interview footage from: Lemmon; playwright-director Neil Simon; actress Julie Harris; actor Ossie Davis; director Herbert Ross; agent Leonard Hirshan; director Billy Wilder; and both Walter and Charles Matthau, this documentary fondly explores the actor’s life and career up through the late 1990’s, including Grumpier Old Men and I’m Not Rappaport.  Matthau subsequently passed away in 2000. 

REVIEW:

Imbued with Matthau’s distinctive wit, this fawning biography relives the actor’s days in obscurity as a Broadway and live television actor before his legendary movie career. 

For instance, who knew that Matthau’s Hollywood presence was launched by early villainous gigs playing opposite Burt Lancaster and Kirk Douglas and then a heroic turn against Andy Griffith in A Face in the Crowd?  Or that Matthau would have actually preferred the “Felix Unger” role in The Odd Couple because it offered a more interesting acting challenge?  These little-known trivia bits are terrific.     

Long-time friends, such as Ossie Davis and Jack Lemmon, elaborate on how Matthau’s unique down-to-earth look, in addition to his improvisational and writing skills, boosted his big-screen opportunities.  Considering that he once subbed for a retired Cary Grant in 1969’s Cactus Flower, this documentary labeling a suave Matthau as the “Lithuanian Cary Grant” is a hoot.  Matthau’s Best Supporting Actor Oscar win for The Fortune Cookie and his various movie roles in the late 1960’s and into the 1970’s are also casually discussed. 

Yet, Matthau’s credits from the late 1970’s and the entire 80’s are ignored before the narrative resumes with the 1990’s.  It’s inexplicable that his top-notch work in memorable comedies, such as House Calls and Hopscotch, isn’t deemed worthy of mention, but his role as a crotchety Mr. Wilson in a forgettable live-action Dennis the Menace film somehow is.  

The only remotely critical hit re: Matthau’s personal life (of what little is revealed) pertains to a lifelong gambling habit.  Matthau downplays it as a hobby, which makes the topic instantly forgettable.  Instead, one is left to ponder why only a passing reference of Matthau’s two older children (and none re: his two step-children) is made. 

Per the interviews and photos of Matthau with his son, Charles, this film inexplicably conveys that Charles is his only offspring (per Matthau’s second wife).  It just seems awkward watching the two Matthaus speak exclusively of one another. 

Aside from some evidently deliberate omissions, this autobiographic film is worth viewing to remember an irreplaceable Hollywood icon.  His acerbic true-to-life charm remains sorely missed in today’s cinema.    

BONUS FEATURES:

None.

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING: 6 Stars

IMAGE NOT AVAILABLE

Categories
Decorations LOONEY TUNES-Related

SYLVESTER & TWEETY MUSICAL SNOW GLOBE

SUMMARY:

Produced by the San Francisco Music Box Company, this standard-size musical snow globe features Sylvester in his usual perch above Tweety’s birdcage.  Appropriately, its wind-up tune is “Bird in a Gilded Cage.”   

REVIEW:

Impressively designed!  Its gentle melody makes for an amusing treat.  Though there are other Sylvester & Tweety snow globes, this one enjoyably combines innocent kiddie humor with elegance.  It’s an ideal decoration for a bookcase.   

ZAN & BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING: 10 Stars

Note: Zan (above) eyes the snowglobe.

Categories
Agatha Christie-Related Anthologies Books & Novels Mystery & Suspense

MALICE DOMESTIC 9

See Writing Credits Below 

SUMMARY:

Published by Avon Books, Inc. in 2000, this short story anthology’s 214-page ninth installment has a decidedly British flavor.  Consisting of fourteen original tales, most of them either play off an Agatha Christie title or offer her some form of homage.  Mystery author Joan Hess provides an introduction. 

Leading off with a classic Parker Pyne reprint, the mayhem is as follows:

  • “The Case of the Discontented Soldier,” by Agatha Christie (1932).  Upon hiring Parker Pyne, a retired soldier finds himself rescuing a damsel-in-distress from a nefarious criminal gang.
  • “Nothing to Lose,” by Robert Barnard.  A British retirement facility’s daily bliss is threatened by a self-righteous newcomer, who is accustomed to playing troublemaker to get her overbearing way.
  • “The Man in the Civil Suit,” by Jan Burke.  The demise of local eccentric Pythagoras Peabody and his fascination with the Museum of Natural History is recounted by his sister’s long-suffering suitor.
  • “The Murder at the Vicarage,” by Kate Charles.  Guilt-ridden by her own conflicted emotions, British cozy mystery author Margo St. James ponders the murder (many times over) of her rural village’s vicar.
  • “Peril at Melford House,” by Marjorie Eccles.  In 1948, at an English country home, an elderly heiress suffers a fatal household mishap.  Her college-age niece ponders if there is something more insidious to this tragedy.
  • “Drawing to a Close,” by Teri Holbrook.  In a rundown post-war London hotel, an introverted cartooning student suspects that she has inadvertently overheard a murder conspiracy.  Yet, she only has her imagination and a drawing pad to decipher what two supposed suspects even look like.    
  • “The Dark Tower,” by Gwen Moffat.  Along with amateur sleuth Miss Pink, a wealthy British mystery novelist’s assistant worries that someone in the household may soon incur a fatal ‘accident.’  
  • “Conventional Wisdom,” by Marcia Talley.  As guest presenters for San Diego’s MysteryCon, two of Tommy & Tuppence Beresford’s adult grandchildren: twins Stephen and Caroline Greene, witness a murder.  
  • “What Mr. MacGregor Saw,” by Dorothy Cannell.  A young British couple visits a hotel to confront a horrific childhood nightmare haunting the wife.       
  • “The Man Who Never Was,” by Charles Todd.  World War I battlefield investigator Ian Rutledge must unravel a dead soldier’s hidden true identity.
  • “Murder at Midday,” by Ann Granger.  A middle-aged British female artist probes the death of her village’s resident busybody.
  • “A Mishap at the Manor,” by Walter Satterthwait.  The literary worlds of Christie and Edgar Rice Burroughs wildly converge, as the British police contends with some unwanted amateur competition solving the homicide of publisher Lord Greystoke.
  • “Oh, To Be in England!by Carolyn Wheat.  A British tour bus conductor finds herself up against a serial killer preying upon her unruly passengers. 
  • “Oliphants Can Remember,” by Susan Moody.  After the suspicious death of a fellow hotel guest, British mystery novelist Antigone Oliphants does some sleuthing into the past of the scandal-plagued, high-profile victim.          

Note: All the original stories are copyrighted as of 2000.

REVIEW:

Virtually all of these tales merit multiple reads, if only to pick up scattered clues one didn’t spot before.  Hence, an unusual aspect of this compilation is not all the endings divulge a clear-cut culprit or resolve lingering plot holes.  Wisely selected as the opener, Christie’s underrated Parker Pyne appears in one of his best outings.  While there aren’t any surefire original gems, “Oh, To Be in England!,” “Peril at Melford House,” and “The Man Who Never Was,” merit consideration as this anthology’s best capers. 

Others, such as “Nothing to Lose,” “The Dark Tower,” “Conventional Wisdom,” “Murder at Midday,” and “Drawing to a Close,” won’t likely dazzle anyone, but they deliver some entertaining fare.  In terms of wacky comedy relief, “Mishap at the Manor” serves up this book’s most outrageous effort.

Hampered by far too many deliberate Christie references, “Oliphants Can Remember” is still a decent mystery meant to be reminiscent of Christie’s Ariadne Oliver and Murder, She Wrote’s Jessica Fletcher.  It’s not likely a coincidence that three of this compilation’s stories feature cozy mystery novelists as sleuths.  To each author’s credit, all three tales are sufficiently well-played. 

The same applies to Marcia Talley conjuring up a plausible MysteryCon whodunnit hosting two of Tommy & Tuppence Beresford’s grown grandchildren.  Yet, Walter Satterthwait’s wacky send-up of the mystery publishing industry leaves a last impression for its sheer audacity.

Frankly, that’s where two vastly different tales offer extremes within Malice Domestic 9.  The morose “What Mr. MacGregor Saw” explores a domestic violence-related plot that is tough to plow through.  If any of this book’s tales isn’t worth revisiting, make it this one.  In contrast, “A Mishap at the Manor” darkly skewers some of detective fiction’s best-known sleuths, and, for good measure, Burroughs’ Tarzan.  Imagining Satterthwait’s macabre parody along the lines of Neil Simon’s Murder By Death film would be its best comparison.  

Unlike some hit-or-miss volumes in this series, the content of Malice Domestic 9 is consistently on its game.  As all but one of its fifteen stories is average or better, this collection makes an ideal fireplace-style read.  By creatively updating some of Christie’s concepts, Malice Domestic 9 impressively invites casual fans.  Most significantly, this anthology is an ideal sampling of some of the mystery genre’s better talents. 

ADDITIONAL FEATURES:

After the table of contents, the insipid foreword entitled “The Four H’s: Hearth, Health, Home, and Homicide” is written by Joan Hess.  Concocted as a mock e-mail exchange with a buffoonish fan, her intro, unfortunately, proves a waste of time.  Each tale offers a mini-bio introducing its author.    

BRIAN’S ODD-MOON RATING: 8 Stars