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Digital Songs & Albums Individual Tracks (Digital Albums & Singles) Music & Radio Shows Pop, R&B, Soul, & Dance Rock & Symphonic/Metal

I HATE MYSELF FOR LOVING YOU {Cover} (by Adanna Duru: American Idol Season XIV)

SUMMARY:                            RUNNING TIME: 4:08 Min.

In 2015, American Idol contestant Adanna Duru covered Joan Jett’s 1988 rock hit, “I Hate Myself for Loving You.  Duru’s rendition was subsequently released as a single and as a track for the season’s Top 11 album.  

Note: Duru finished in 10th/11th place in American Idol’s fourteenth season.

REVIEW:

Despite Idol’s instrumentals reasonably mimicking Joan Jett and the Blackhearts’ hard rock melody, Adanna Duru’s vocals are initially bubblegum tame.  Hence, one is left anticipating a weak rendition of Jett’s tune directed at Disney+ programming.  Yet, once she gets comfortably warmed up, Duru’s second half of the song comes alive.  Duru doesn’t echo Jett so much as she finally pushes her vocal efforts to fit the lyrics, not to mention the song’s energetic vibe. 

Even if her cover doesn’t justify a solo download, Duru’s take on Joan Jett is still fairly solid.   

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                          6 Stars

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Digital Songs & Albums Individual Tracks (Digital Albums & Singles) Music & Radio Shows Pop, R&B, Soul, & Dance Soundtracks (Digital)

NEVER FORGET {Cover} (by Jehramae Trangia: 2017 single)

SUMMARY:                   RUNNING TIME: 3:49 Min.

In 2017, Filipino singer Jehramae Trangia (then a teenager) covered Michelle Pfeiffer’s ballad, “Never Forget,” from the soundtrack of the same-year film, Murder on the Orient Express.  From her ‘music video,’ it appears that Trangia is singing off a pre-recorded instrumental of “Never Forget” (possibly one from the film itself).   

REVIEW:

It is inevitable that the youthful Trangia would fall short of Pfeiffer’s mellow sound imbuing the song’s haunting context.  Still, Trangia’s likable vocals interprets “Never Forget” perhaps more as a tragically-fated young romance.  If so, her version would be hypothetically ideal to accompany a teenage ghost story film.

Overall, with this cover as evidence, then Trangia’s potential suggests a bright future in the recording industry.

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                          7 Stars

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Comic Books & Graphic Novels DC Comics

STEEL (JOHN HENRY IRONS) # 3 (1994 DC Comics)

Written by Louise Simonson & Jon Bogdanove.

Art by Chris Batista; Rich Faber; Pat Brosseau; & Gina Going.

Cover Art by Jon Bogdanove & Dennis Janke.

SUMMARY:

Entitled “Bad Company,” DC Comics released this issue for April 1994. John Henry Irons’ government-affiliated e-employer, Amertek Industries, is illicitly peddling an experimental super-steroid street drug dubbed ‘S-Tar (Super Tar).’ As a dubious double-feature, Irons’ former boss, Colonel Weston, is also selling the potent BG-80 guns (dubbed ‘Toastmasters’) that Irons had unwittingly designed.  Angrily disclosing his secret identity to the corrupt Weston, Irons’ skepticism of the colonel’s professed innocence is stretched to the limit. 

While a bigoted Weston underestimates Irons’ savviness, the armored hero realizes his ex-mentor will inevitably betray him.  Despite his precautions, Irons finds himself in an explosive showdown upon raiding Weston’s Amertek computer.

Meanwhile, Irons’ teen nephew (and street gang associate), Jemahl, faces a close call at the train tracks.  He has been now been targeted by rival thugs deeming him Steel’s snitch.

REVIEW:

Given Louise Simonson’s unremarkable plotting, “Bad Company” comes off as a cliché-fest with next to zero surprises.  Still, the art team’s solid visuals hold up fairly well almost thirty years later.  Steel # 3 provides an okay read, but this storyline is strictly bargain bin material.

ADDITIONAL CONTENT:

The full-page “DC Universe # 16” column is depicted in mock TV Guide form.  

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                      4½ Stars

Categories
Individual Tracks (CD's) Music & Radio Shows Rock, R&B, Pop, Soul, & Metal/Symphonic

THE BEST (by Tina Turner: Simply the Best)

SUMMARY:           RUNNING TIME: 4:10 Min.

This upbeat pop tune was initially recorded by Bonnie Tyler for her 1988 album, Hide Your Heart.  This version was composed by Holly Knight and Mike Chapman.  For her own 1989 album, Foreign Affair, Tina Turner covered the tune, with some creative changes (i.e., including a saxophone solo by Edgar Winter).  At the time, Turner’s track length was 5:28.

For her 1991 greatest-hits album, Simply the Best, “The Best” fittingly served as the album’s opening track.  It was also re-edited to its shorter and most popular length.  Synonymous with Turner, it is considered one of her most famous global hits.            

REVIEW:

Suffice to say, it remains timeless pop dynamite.  There is no mistaking how Tina Turner’s sultry vocals bring the endearing lyrics to life.  Well-synced with Winter’s saxophone wizardry, Turner’s energetic “Best” is absolutely recommended. 

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                 10 Stars

Categories
Individual Tracks (CD's) Music & Radio Shows Rock, R&B, Pop, Soul, & Metal/Symphonic

VERTIGO (by U2: How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb)

SUMMARY:                   RUNNING TIME: 3:14 Min.

“Vertigo” is the opening track of U2’s 2004 album, How to Dismantle an Atomic Bomb.  Released as the album’s first cut in late 2004, the song later doubled as the band’s 2005-2006 worldwide tour name.    

REVIEW:

With an upbeat melody reminiscent of 80’s New Wave rock, there is no mistaking that “Vertigo” resonates as pure U2.  Suffice to say, Bono’s distinctively vibrant vocals are well-synced with the band’s instruments.  The energetic “Vertigo” is definitely worth adding to a favorite rock playlist. 

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                8 Stars

Categories
Comic Books & Graphic Novels DC Comics

WONDER WOMAN # 15 (2013 DC Comics)

Written by Brian Azzarello.

Art by Cliff Chiang; Matthew Wilson; & Jared K. Fletcher.

Cover Art by Cliff Chiang.

SUMMARY:

Entitled “The Burden of God,” DC Comics released this issue for February 2013.  On Brooklyn’s shore, Orion visits his blind transient friend, Milan, who evidently has supernatural sensory powers.  

Meanwhile, in her Manhattan hotel room, Wonder Woman convinces her grouchy brother, Lennox (in the form of a Cockney thug), to help her locate their elusive sibling, Milan.  Reluctantly sharing Diana’s hotel suite are her feuding Olympian houseguests, Zola and Queen Hera, as they keep a low profile on Earth..

In Brooklyn’s abandoned subway tunnels, Diana receives an unexpected upgrade to her silver wristbands from Hephaestus (yet another of her brothers).  Upon locating Milan, Lennox encounters Orion.  In their first encounter, Wonder Woman challenges Orion in combat to defend Lennox.  Elsewhere, in Antarctica, Diana’s foes: Cassandra and the ominous First Born seek out his ‘treasure’ buried beneath the ice at a construction site.

REVIEW:

While the art squad’s visuals hold up alright, writer Brian Azzarello’s scripting is forgettable.  Suffice to say, readers see very little of the Wonder Woman/Orion slugfest.  It would make more practical sense to obtain the trade paperback version to better grasp this storyline.  Overall, Wonder Woman # 15 offers okay reading, but it is strictly a bargain bin find.

ADDITIONAL CONTENT:

The full-page “DC Access” column includes artist Dustin Nguyen’s cast portrait of Lil’ Gotham.  

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                   5 Stars

Categories
Digital Documentaries Digital Movies & TV History & Biographies (Videos) Movies & Television (Videos) Online Videos TV Episodes & Movies TV Series TV Series (Specific Episodes)

IN SEARCH OF: THE LOST COLONY OF ROANOKE {2019} (Season 2: Episode 3)

SUMMARY:                  RUNNING TIME: 42:31 Min.

First airing on The History Channel on October 18, 2019, actor/executive producer Zachary Quinto hosts this episode revisiting the 430-year-old enigma of North America’s first English colony. 

Forced by turbulent weather, John White’s 116 settlers reluctantly settle on Roanoke Island (off present-day North Carolina) in 1587 vs. journeying further north to coastal Virginia.  Several months later, White’s vessel went back to England to resupply the colony, leaving behind his daughter and an infant granddaughter. Tensions between England and Spain subsequently delayed White’s return to Roanoke until mid-August of 1590.

All that White’s party subsequently found was a tree with the cryptically-carved letters “CRO,” along with the defensive wooden fence once surrounding the colony.  The colonists (and even their homes) had vanished.  White’s efforts to investigate the colony’s fate soon ended in failure, again due to weather conditions.  For more than four centuries, speculation, rumor, and scant archaeological evidence have left the Roanoke colony’s fate one of the nation’s greatest unsolved mysteries.

Historian/author Andy Gabriel Powell and Fort Raleigh park ranger Josh Nelson provide initial analysis and tour the traditionally-accepted site of where the Roanoke colony once existed.  Quinto’s In Search Of then explores an alternative hypothesis: could historians and archaeologists have mistaken the colony’s location?   

Specifically, is the colony’s true location, due to erosion of the island’s shoreline, underwater?  Video footage documents the Lost Colony Research Group (including its director: Anne Poole; members George Ray, Dawn Taylor, & Robbie Burton; and divers Duncan Pinnock & Randy Glaze) methodically mining this alternate watery locale for archaeological proof. 

A centuries-old map that White himself evidently modified is re-examined providing potential clues that, for survival’s sake, the colony sought to sail north through the Albemarle Sound for a safer relocation.  This theory corresponds with the direction in which the “CRO” carving was found on one side of the island.

Others, including historian Scott Dawson of the Croatoan Archaeological Society and archaeologist Mark Horton, explore tantalizing evidence that the “CRO” abbreviated ‘Croatoan’ all along.  Specifically, Dawson advances the hypothesis that the colonists (or at least some portion of them) shifted the opposite direction by assimilating into the Native American tribe known as the Croatoans on what was then known as Croatoan Island – it is present-day Hatteras Island. 

Note: It is not explained as to whether the colony possessed its own ship. Given the absence of their homes, one might wonder if a makeshift vessel could have been constructed.

In apparent conjunction with this theory, genealogist Roberta Estes and DNA lab director Dr. Connie Bormans conduct DNA testing of potential 21st Century descendants with potentially dual English and Native American bloodlines.  Due to the necessary technology involved, only the DNA of male subjects can be affirmatively examined. 

It is also emphasized that, for innumerable generations, locals curiously bearing surnames matching those of known colonists still reside in the area.  The initial test results for one male subject are briefly discussed.      

Note: For 144 episodes, Leonard Nimoy was the franchise’s original host from 1977-1982.  Preceded by Mitch Pileggi’s brief 2002 revival, Quinto launched his own History Channel incarnation in 2018, consisting of eighteen episodes over two seasons.

REVIEW:

Without judging the watchability of Zachary Quinto’s In Search Of, overall, as a series, this installment is remarkably good.  Providing articulate in-studio narration only, Quinto conveys a welcome asset shifting from one segment to the next.  Even more so, the program’s production values (i.e., brief reenactments, CGI, etc.) are top-caliber. 

While it is unclear if the Lost Colony Research Group and the Croatoan Archaeological Society are rival factions, their theories make logical sense  – especially given the absence of evidence grimly suggesting a massacre.  More so, one could reasonably assume that some of the colonists either perished from disease or at sea amidst a journey towards safer living conditions.

Above all, Dawson’s discovery of a burnt piece of English-treated copper on Croatoan Island and the unsurprising DNA results do not end this mystery.  They, however, provide a likelihood of its general solution.

Note: Dawson’s discovery does not actually preclude the possibility that the copper came from misappropriated property.

Ultimately, for armchair historians, this episode of Quinto’s In Search Of delivers excellent TV viewing.       

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                     8½ Stars

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Comic Books & Graphic Novels DC Comics

BATMAN: SHADOW OF THE BAT # 39 (1995 DC Comics)

Written by Alan Grant.

Art by Kevin Walker; Curt Shoultz; Frank McLaughlin; Sherilyn Van Valkenburgh; & John Costanza.

Cover Art by Brian Stelfreeze.

SUMMARY:

Entitled “One Night in Slaughter Swamp,” DC Comics released this issue for June 1995.  Set in 1895, the prologue depicts despised banker Cyrus Gold’s murder by extortionists (one of whom may be pregnant with his child) in Slaughter Swamp.  In the present-day, an amnesiac Solomon Grundy’s resurrection in Slaughter Swamp upends a tourist boat, as he kills at least four innocent civilians.  The only escapees are a female park ranger and a now-orphaned young boy.

Converging on Slaughter Swamp, Batman follows Detective Montoya & Bullock’s GCPD team to rescue Grundy’s hostages.  Despite the ranger’s compassionate attempts to reason with Grundy, the monster rages over his previous betrayal by Jade (not to mention, his hatred of Alan Scott’s Green Lantern and now Batman). 

The Dark Knight desperately takes on Grundy, knowing full well it may be futile.  Tragedy strikes amidst Batman & Grundy’s showdown.

REVIEW:

In a manner reminiscent of classic Universal monster movies, writer Alan Grant’s work is solidly plotted.  One loose thread that Grant neglects to explain is what exactly prompts Grundy’s return – that is, unless Grant meant to leave this vital element to his audience’s imagination. 

Either way, Grant delivers the necessary gothic storytelling, including a chilling irony (read into it whatever you think) at its conclusion.  Matching Grant’s creativity is the art squad’s appropriate visuals; after the first few pages, the artwork slips to about a B- caliber, but this crew still gets the job done.

For Bat-fans who like gothic horror (not to mention, the Batman vs. Solomon Grundy match-up), then Batman: Shadow of the Bat # 39 is worth tracking down.   

ADDITIONAL CONTENT:

At a single page, there is a letters-and-answers column.  

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                 7 Stars

Categories
Comic Books & Graphic Novels DC Comics

BATMAN: SHADOW OF THE BAT # 35 (1995 DC Comics)

Written by Alan Grant.

Art by Barry Kitson; Ray McCarthy; Adrienne Roy; & John Costanza.

Cover Art by Brian Stelfreeze.

SUMMARY:

Entitled “Troika, Part 2,” DC Comics released this issue for February 1995.  Interrogating the dying Russian thug known as ‘Dark Rider,’ Batman & Tim Drake’s Robin confirm that a Russian terrorist Cell, the Troika, will imminently threaten Gotham City with a plutonium bomb. 

While Batman has no success probing Gotham’s Little Odessa neighborhood, the Troika (including KGBeast, Colonel Vega, & Romana) scheme to extort a billion dollars from the city.  The problem is neither Batman nor the Troika know where Dark Rider’s baseball-shaped mega-bomb is hidden.

Having located the elusive Vega, the Dark Knight gets a master class in Vega’s techno-powered disruption weaponry from his goon squad.  Yet, the ruthless Troika will not tolerate failure should he not eliminate Batman.

Elsewhere, as the overworked Gordons experience some marital strife, Robin leaves Batman short-handed having to safeguard his recently-threatened friend, Ariana.  Worse yet, an overwhelmed Bruce Wayne is sorely missing Alfred – it’s up to him to hire a limo service, order pizza delivery, and that worst nightmare task of all … doing the laundry.  

Note: “Troika, Part 3” shifts over to Detective Comics # 682.

REVIEW:

Devising a solid second salvo in the “Troika” storyline, writer Alan Grant gets this art squad’s reliable visual support.  Taken as a solo read, however, this Bat-caper frankly is not a must-have.  To enjoy “Troika” in its four-issue entirety, then obtaining Batman: Shadow of the Bat # 35 within a trade paperback makes the best consumer sense. 

ADDITIONAL CONTENT:

A single-page letters-and-answers column precedes “DC Universe # 27,” which teases visual clues of the in-production Showcase ’95 mini-series.

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                   6 Stars

Categories
Agatha Christie-Related Digital Movies & TV International/Foreign-Language Television Movies & Television (Videos) Online Videos TV Episodes & Movies TV Series TV Series (Specific Episodes)

AGATHA CHRISTIE’S LITTLE MURDERS: THE KNIFE IN THE NECK {aka LORD EDGWARE DIES} (Season 1: Episode 11)

SUMMARY:                RUNNING TIME: 1 Hour, 35 Min.

The French translation of the series title is les petis meurtres d’Agatha Christie. First airing in France on September 14, 2012, this episode loosely adapts Agatha Christie’s 1933 Hercule Poirot novel, Lord Edgware Dies. The version is entitled “Le Couteau sur la Nuque” (aka “The Knife in the Neck”).  Produced by Escazal Films, Renaud Bertrand directed this installment.

Set in 1930’s Northern France (in proximity to Lille), a lovestruck female fan expecting a clandestine meeting with acting heartthrob Julien Sobel (Alluguette) is brutally murdered.  Her severed foot is subsequently mailed to Police Superintendent Larosière (Duléry) to chillingly taunt him. 

After locating and identifying the victim’s corpse, the police descend upon a troubled stage production of Don Juan featuring Sobel.  Primarily, the play’s two major stars are long-estranged spouses – one is aging bombshell Sarah Morlant that Larosière admires and the other is a wretched alcoholic far past his vaunted prime. 

Expecting to promptly re-marry a wealthy French count, the self-involved Morlant (Detmers), is shocked that her decrepit husband (Winling) is then bloodily murdered.  Worse yet, Morlant finds herself identified as the prime suspect despite a high society alibi supported by at least a dozen witnesses.  Making seemingly little progress sleuthing multiple murders, Larosière, due to his long-standing familiarity with the play, reluctantly consents to fill in as the title character at the next performance. 

Meanwhile, the Superintendent’s runaway teenage daughter, Juliette (Isaaz), seeks to finally spend time with her workaholic father.  Initially helpful the case, Juliette’s whirlwind romance with Sobel makes her the serial killer’s next target following another backstage homicide.  With his daughter’s life at stake, Larosière and his faithful subordinate, Inspector Lampion, must now thwart one, if not two, ruthless killers stalking the theater.     

The episode’s language is French with easy-to-follow English subtitles.   

Superintendent Jean Larosière: Antoine Duléry

Inspector Émile Lampion: Marius Colucci

Ménard: Serge Dubois

Dr. Verdure: Olivier Carré

Juliette Larosière: Alice Isaaz

Sarah Morlant: Maruschka Detmers

Raoul Cochin: Guillaume Briat

Julien Sobel: Julien Alluguette

Lurie Fremont: Vinciane Millereau

Pierre Fougères: Jean-Marie Winling

Antoine Marin: Frédéric Longbois

Lilas: Flora Thomas

Comte (Count) de Tercoignes: Hervé Hague

Madame de Rémincourt: Barbara Monin

Lisa Debauche: Coline Marescaux

Charlotte: Victoria Quesnel

Other Cast Members: Thomas Debaene & Adrien Calandre

Play’s Production Staff: Uncredited

Theater Attendees: Uncredited

Note: The American title for Christie’s novel is Thirteen at Dinner.

REVIEW:

Given it is the last episode with the original cast, this incarnation of “Lord Edgware Dies,” unfortunately, is a mixed bag.  By shifting Christie’s storyline entirely into the theatrical world, the good news is that some plot elements now make better sense (i.e., co-mingling the personal and professional frictions between Sarah Morlant and her estranged husband). 

As for the script’s originality, the premise of befuddled father Larosière contending with a rebellious teen daughter while indulging a fantasy of playing Don Juan onstage is superbly conveyed by Antoine Duléry.  For such scenes, he and co-star Marius Colucci get terrific help from their guest stars, especially Alice Isaaz as an effervescent “Juliette.’  Hence, the delightful last scene speaks for itself.   

The flip side, however, is the lowest-common-denominator junk disguised as a fresh sub-plot.  Instead of Christie’s tongue-in-cheek jabs exploring British high society love affairs, this adaptation resorts to a deviant strangler, whose identity viewers know from the get-go. 

Wasting a potential second mystery, this gratuitous sub-plot is padding relying upon genre clichés – i.e., where the Superintendent pursues the culprit to save his abducted daughter.  Even worse is the unnecessary inclusion of ghoulish details (i.e., the severed foot sequence; a character bloodily impaled with a pitchfork, etc.) just for the sake of adding more grisliness.

Unlike other first season episodes, ”The Knife in the Neck” borders on R-rated material, in terms of its visual imagery.  In that sense, such sensationalism mirrors the glossier later seasons of Agatha Christie’s Poirot (not to mention, Agatha Christie’s Marple) where spicing up Christie’s old material meant pushing tawdry sexual themes to lure in more of a supposed contemporary audience.  Instead, this trashy creative risk affects a turn-off (or, at least, an incentive to reach for the fast-forward button).    

For adult fans, this season finale presents a potentially worthwhile whodunnit.  However, the program’s innate charm is sabotaged by one too many cold-blooded killers.         

BRIAN’S ODD MOON RATING:                   6 Stars

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