Tag Archives: anime

Space Ace: All The Fun, Less Quarters

Gaming

I decided to drop money into iTunes last night in a fit of shop therapy (read: post-Disney depression) and discovered that Don Bluth’s Space Ace was available for download! Actually it came out in May but I’ve been avoiding money-draining endeavors.

space_ace2

Does my hair look ok to you?

For you younger readers, Space Ace is the second laserdisk game from Bluth Studios as follow up to Dragons Lair, but this time set in space! It’s the story of a dashing blond couple named Kimberly and Ace, unexplainedly menaced by a blue and leather clad, space overlord called Borf  (oh Don! You scamp!) . It’s over the top cornball campy with it’s characters but it’s Ace’s “random” ability to flip back between a muscle bound hero to weed thin child due to exposure to The Infanto Ray, that makes it fun. The beginning of the game lets you choose the difficulty level and in turn, lets you see more of the game the harder you go. It was pretty innovative stuff.

All hunky...

Ace shows an uncanny ability...

...all skinny

...to change. Almost childlike, I'd say

The game play can get tedious (you watch the same video over and over, remembering which way to guide Ace to avoid obstacles to advance the story), and at $0.50 a pop when it came out, your cash would drain out of your pocket fast. The game also tries to mess you up by mirroring or flipping the video so that you don’t become complacent with Ace’s directions. A simple trick in a simpler game era. The animation was top notch and fast paced, often too fast to enjoy the artistry and fluidity Bluth put into his characters.

spaceace3

Ace learns the loud way that Kimberly is a bit of a princess...

I’m glad to report that there are “HEY! I FUCKING CLICKED THAT!” bugs in the game. These are either due to processor speeds of video on the iPhone or they were just there to begin with and were never cleaned out. Even the false “hints” in the way of onscreen flashes are present, resulting in no action on Ace’s part or his ultimate death, tug familiarly on my memory of originally being there, and subsequently aren’t that much of a frustration. Relax and enjoy the visuals!

Borf's been to the gun show

Borf shows us that in space, no one can straighten your teeth.

I’m so caught up in nostalgia I don’t mind repeating it a few times.

$4.99 from the iTunes store. I give it 5 out of 5 for anyone who was old enough to play this originally in a smelly arcade. Anyone else will have been de-sensitized by high brow graphical games and won’t find this amusing at all (some user comments in the app are pretty funny!).

Death Note 2

Celebs and Media

Stay with me readers, I’m going to go all geeky/nerdy/anime on you with my thoughts on Death Note 2: The Last Name, a sequel you’ve probably never heard of. And if you have, you’re cooler than me!

Bit of a back story for you non-Death Noters: The original Death Note movie is adapted from Manga (aren’t they all?), about a young lad, Light Yagami (Tatsuya Fujiwara), who discovers a book dropped to earth by a death god, a “shinigami” named Ryuk. He sees a particular person’s face and writes their name in the book, they meet a tragic end. Light then takes it upon himself to see if he can rid the world of evil with the help of his book. Enter the police (as they do, when their criminals start to die off) who are trying to figure out why their crime rates are dropping, and suddenly you have a Crime and Punishment/Les MisĂ©rables kind of plot twist.

In Death Note 2, Light Yagami joins forces with the police to try to catch the serial killer “Kia” while the super detective “L” still suspects that Light is the killer.

Still here?

Okay so the whole point of this post is that there’s a showing here in town of Death Note 2 at the Empire, December 3rd (see link above!). It sounds like a great chance to see derivative Japanese culture. Seeing how live action movies in an actual cinema setting is so utterly rare here in Toronto, I would say that this will rock quite a bit.

Or you can wait another 3 years and see Sarah Michelle Gellar in it. Trust me, see the originals.