Totenkindly
@.~*virinaĉo*~.@
- Joined
- Apr 19, 2007
- Messages
- 52,149
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Love, Death, and Robots (Season 2, Netflix)
The entries this time (while also being far less in number than Season 1) also tend to be more thoughtful and less about videogame violence and sex, even though they have elements of both throughout. Maybe a more mature offering than Season 1 in some respects.
Automated Customer Service: Quirky style, amusing, but nothing surprising / we've all seen it before
Ice: Maybe the most unique animation style in Season 2. Lots of backstory unexplained, but I would watch a longer feature expanding on these concepts. Reminds me a bit of Aeon Flux in terms of the elongated styles. Beautiful in its own way.
Pop Squad: One of the most human stories in the bunch, a blend of Blade Runner just aimed in a different direction. The sad shots get old / didn't quite evoke as deeply as more unique ones, but the story is interesting.
Snow in the Desert: Maybe the most like Season 1 in theme but with an interesting subplot. (Or maybe that is the plot and the violence arc is the subplot.) The setting / tone reminds me of Tattooine.
The Tall Grass: A bit more unique art style, and easily more unsettling than Netflix's "In The Tall Grass" which bored me so much I couldn't even finish it. The end feels a bit of a copout and also kind of just trails off, but the meat of it is pretty scary.
All Through the House: This is amusing, and it also doesn't overstay its welcome. It has one punchline in mind and makes it and then gets out.
Life Hutch: Pretty straightforward action excerpt that feels like it belongs in part of a bigger story. yeah, I think that is Michael B. Jordan there. So it's well-done for what it is, yet feels incomplete.
The Drowned Giant: No punchline, no quirky ending, nothing really unexpected. Kind of a throwback meditation pieces that generates its own feelings of antiquity and loss and makes you wonder whether we are the giant or the little people and what that means for us as a people.
The entries this time (while also being far less in number than Season 1) also tend to be more thoughtful and less about videogame violence and sex, even though they have elements of both throughout. Maybe a more mature offering than Season 1 in some respects.
Automated Customer Service: Quirky style, amusing, but nothing surprising / we've all seen it before
Ice: Maybe the most unique animation style in Season 2. Lots of backstory unexplained, but I would watch a longer feature expanding on these concepts. Reminds me a bit of Aeon Flux in terms of the elongated styles. Beautiful in its own way.
Pop Squad: One of the most human stories in the bunch, a blend of Blade Runner just aimed in a different direction. The sad shots get old / didn't quite evoke as deeply as more unique ones, but the story is interesting.
Snow in the Desert: Maybe the most like Season 1 in theme but with an interesting subplot. (Or maybe that is the plot and the violence arc is the subplot.) The setting / tone reminds me of Tattooine.
The Tall Grass: A bit more unique art style, and easily more unsettling than Netflix's "In The Tall Grass" which bored me so much I couldn't even finish it. The end feels a bit of a copout and also kind of just trails off, but the meat of it is pretty scary.
All Through the House: This is amusing, and it also doesn't overstay its welcome. It has one punchline in mind and makes it and then gets out.
Life Hutch: Pretty straightforward action excerpt that feels like it belongs in part of a bigger story. yeah, I think that is Michael B. Jordan there. So it's well-done for what it is, yet feels incomplete.
The Drowned Giant: No punchline, no quirky ending, nothing really unexpected. Kind of a throwback meditation pieces that generates its own feelings of antiquity and loss and makes you wonder whether we are the giant or the little people and what that means for us as a people.