Tag: just
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Just ranting
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Ryan Gosling Isn’t Just Ken
These days, when Hollywood needs an A-lister to play a stuntman, it’s never a bad idea to follow a simple rule: Get the Gosling.
The trend began in 2011 with the neo-noir thriller Drive, in which Ryan Gosling played a man known simply as the Driver: a stuntman by day and getaway driver by night. Armed with a scorpion bomber jacket that is both impossibly cool and nigh impossible to pull off, a brooding Gosling followed the film’s lead by letting the action do most of the talking. Then, in 2013’s The Place Beyond the Pines, Gosling starred as Luke, a drifter who makes a living doing motorcycle stunts for a traveling carnival before learning he has a son with his former lover. Once again, Gosling inhabits a laconic loner who yearns for more in his life, even if he doesn’t always have the words to express it. (There’s also plenty of real-life significance tied to the movie: It’s where Gosling met his partner, Eva Mendes.)
While it’s been over a decade since Gosling last portrayed a stunt performer, he’s back in the saddle this weekend with The Fall Guy, the action comedy hailing from stuntman-turned-director David Leitch. With several large-scale action sequences anchored by practical effects, including one scene that broke a Guinness World Record for the most cannon rolls performed in a car, The Fall Guy is a love letter to one of Hollywood’s most underappreciated art forms. (Somehow, it’s still deprived of its own Oscars category.) As for Gosling, who plays aging stuntman Colt Seavers (side note: incredible name) as he chases down the missing star of a major studio movie, The Fall Guy is a noticeable departure from his previous roles within this niche profession. Colt is a charming daredevil, the kind of dude who flashes a smile and a thumbs-up before hurling himself in the direction of a helicopter. On the basis of one-liners alone, Colt has more to say than Drive’s Driver.
That these stuntmen fall on opposite ends of the spectrum is also reflective of Gosling’s journey as an actor. After a circuitous route to stardom, Gosling has blossomed into one of Hollywood’s most intriguing leading men—someone who’s just as comfortable playing the life of the party as he is inhabiting the quiet weirdo lurking in the corner. And much like his intrepid hero in The Fall Guy, all signs indicate that Gosling is taking his career to thrilling new heights.
For some viewers, their first exposure to Gosling was the ’90s revival of Disney’s Mickey Mouse Club, a variety series in which the young actor shared the stage with the likes of Britney Spears, Christina Aguilera, and Justin Timberlake. Gosling followed his stint with the Mouse House by landing the title role on the Fox Kids series Young Hercules, which was canceled after its lone, 50-episode (!) season. At this point, Gosling was ready to become a legitimate dramatic actor, but he didn’t find the transition easy. “It’s very hard coming from kids’ television to break the stigma,” Gosling told The New York Times in 2011, explaining how his agents dropped him for wanting to pursue more serious film roles. “All you have is a VHS tape of you humping stuff on The Mickey Mouse Club and wearing fake tanner and fighting imaginary sphinxes.”
Of course, Gosling’s big-screen breakout did arrive with 2004’s The Notebook, which supplanted Titanic as the movie that touched the hearts of hopeless romantics around the world. (Gosling and costar Rachel McAdams’s acceptance of the MTV Movie Award for Best Kiss, in which they re-created their characters’ magical smooch, was the best kind of pandering.) You can envision a scenario in which Gosling capitalized on his heartthrob status in the immediate aftermath—leaning into all those “Hey Girl” memes—but instead, the actor seemed to actively distance himself from it. How else can one explain Lars and the Real Girl, the quirky dramedy where Gosling plays a socially awkward dude who develops a romantic relationship with a sex doll? (It’s more heartwarming than it sounds, though it’s certainly not what you expect from the star of The Notebook.)
But the road that’s led Gosling to his current standing as an A-lister was first paved by two disparate roles in 2011: the aforementioned Drive and Crazy, Stupid, Love. Whereas Drive saw Gosling embody a taciturn antihero, Crazy, Stupid, Love required the actor to play a quick-witted womanizer falling in love for the first time. Setting aside the undeniably electric chemistry between Gosling and costar Emma Stone—something they would rekindle in Gangster Squad and, most famously, La La Land—it’s Gosling’s comedic chops that feel like the movie’s biggest revelation. The chaotic third-act reveal that brings the ensemble together is as hilarious as you remember.
Just as crucially, these movies were critical and commercial hits, proving that beyond The Notebook, Gosling could be a box office draw. And as a performer, Gosling showed he was capable of navigating two extremes: emotionally wounded lone wolves who use their words sparingly and protagonists in knockabout comedies who never take themselves too seriously. Gosling got plenty more reps with the former, though it wasn’t always smooth sailing: The actor reunited with Drive director Nicolas Winding Refn for 2013’s Only God Forgives, which is best remembered for being booed at Cannes. (Fellow Refn-heads, however, will agree that Only God Forgives kicks plenty of ass when appreciated on its own, self-indulgent terms.) But it’s also within this space that Gosling has delivered some of his most resonant work in big-budget cinema.
Playing the protagonist in the legacy sequel to a sci-fi classic would be a tall order for anyone, but Gosling was more than up to the task in Denis Villeneuve’s Blade Runner 2049. As the replicant known as K, who hunts down his own kind, Gosling infuses the character with a similar ambiguity to Harrison Ford’s protagonist in the original Blade Runner—only this time, it’s not a question of whether or not K is human, but how much he’ll divert from his programming. It’s a performance that fits right into Gosling’s wheelhouse—the glimpses of real emotion simmering underneath the surface carry so much weight—and makes him a worthy on-screen partner to Ford, who has long made a living out of inhabiting gruff heroes. (It was also apparent from the Blade Runner 2049 press tour that Gosling and Ford share the same dry sense of humor.)
Gosling’s greatest performance to date channeled the same frequency, with one crucial difference: It was in service of playing a historical figure. In Damien Chazelle’s First Man, we follow Neil Armstrong (Gosling) from his early days as a NASA test pilot to becoming the first person to step foot on the moon. The film’s depiction of the moon landing is a stunning achievement in its own right, but what makes First Man one of the best blockbusters of the past decade is how it digs into the psychology of someone willing to put their life on the line. For Armstrong, who lost his young daughter to a brain tumor, the risk of perishing in space is better than staying at home to talk about your feelings, making him the perfect (and somewhat literal) embodiment of the Silent Generation. Again, Gosling is at his best when those emotions slip through the cracks—most powerfully when Armstrong drops his daughter’s bracelet into the Little West crater after taking one giant leap for mankind. Even if Gosling’s work in First Man didn’t get the attention of Oscar voters, make no mistake: He’s got the right stuff.
But even as Gosling continues to excel at portraying emotionally inhibited men (or androids), audiences have enthusiastically responded to the actor’s embrace of his funnier side. Shane Black’s 2016 comedy The Nice Guys didn’t light up the box office, but it’s endured as the rare non-franchise film that has folks clamoring for a sequel. It’s easy to see why. Following dopey private investigator Holland March (Gosling) as he teams up with low-level enforcer Jackson Healy (Russell Crowe) to investigate a porn star’s disappearance in ’70s Los Angeles, The Nice Guys doesn’t just feel like a throwback to the buddy-cop movies of yesteryear: It can hold its own against any of them. A big part of that comes down to the dynamic between Gosling and Crowe, who make for entertaining foils, especially when Healy is tossing March around like a rag doll. (Sadly, Gosling has recently squashed hopes for a sequel.)
But while The Nice Guys has more than earned its reputation as a cult favorite, its cultural impact is a drop in the bucket compared to Barbie’s. Alongside Oppenheimer, Barbie was the moviegoing event of 2023: a delectable, witty, and occasionally profound dramedy that touched on everything from feminism to existentialism to the patriarchy. And yet, it’s hard to deny that the film’s MVP was the himbo living in Barbie’s shadow. As the Ken whose occupation is, simply, “beach,” Gosling is a scene-stealing delight, fawning over Stereotypical Barbie (Margot Robbie) before his unrequited love devolves into a ridiculous caricature of toxic masculinity. (Shout-out to the Mojo Dojo Casa House.) Gosling’s unbridled Kenergy was so infectious that he didn’t just earn an Oscar nomination: He blew the roof off the ceremony performing “I’m Just Ken.”
When an actor is having this much fun, who can blame audiences for wanting more of the same? Thankfully, The Fall Guy lets Gosling not only continue to flex his comedy chops amid explosive action sequences, but also play a genuinely charming romantic lead opposite Emily Blunt. (This is the Barbenheimer crossover nobody saw coming.) At this point in his career, it’s clear that Gosling has a lot of pitches in his acting repertoire, whether he’s pulling off slapstick comedy, brooding over inner turmoil, or ranting about the incomparable power of jazz. If moviegoers would rather see Gosling channel some of that Kenergy for the foreseeable future, so be it—just so long as we remember that he’s always been more than just Ken.
Miles Surrey
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intersecting backstage overconfident
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Another Milestone
I started at 370lb on March 22nd 2023. I was 24 and had never been below 300lb since middle school. Just a little past the 1 year mark and I’m 25 and almost into the 240s now. My ultimate goal is 185 and it feels more achievable than ever before. It still doesn’t feel real, I can fit into regular Large clothing sizes now, granted they’re still snug but they won’t be in another 20lb or so. A year ago I was almost fitting just right into 4XL.
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Manhunt’s greatest strength is letting Abraham Lincoln just be a bro
There is a moment that looms large over everything else in the pilot of Apple TV’s post-Civil War drama, Manhunt, a conversation that will haunt Edwin Stanton (Tobias Menzies) for the rest of his life. He’s hard at work in his office, putting together the plans for Reconstruction, when Abraham Lincoln (Midnight Mass’ Hamish Linklater) comes in tossing a baseball and invites him to the theater tonight (Ulysses S. Grant flaked to hang with his wife). Stanton is intrigued, drawn in by his friend’s easy charm, but ultimately backs out — he also owes his wife a night together. And so Lincoln strolls out, bemoaning that he’ll just be hanging out with Mary’s friends as he sees Our American Cousin.
The rest is history: That night, Lincoln would be assassinated at the theater. Andrew Johnson would take the oath of office the following day. And Stanton — as Manhunt depicts — would spend the next 12 days hunting down Lincoln’s killer, John Wilkes Booth, and the rest of his life wondering what would’ve happened if he said yes to an evening at the theater.
It’s no surprise that Stanton might forever ponder the road not taken, even though he made sure someone was guarding Lincoln that night. It’s a thought that’s incredibly compelling as Manhunt turns Stanton’s survivor’s guilt over and over. His connection to Lincoln makes it all the more provocative: Losing a friend like this is a tragedy. But when you’re also secretary of war to one of the most important presidents in United States history, trusted with his security and that of the nation, your actions have larger consequences. Every choice Johnson makes (or doesn’t make) in the postwar panic, every new vector point for the country, hangs on Stanton’s soul, a constant reminder of his failures and what we could’ve had.
As a period drama, Manhunt is tasked with reading viewers in on a lot of vernacular and specific historical context. Too often its script cuts corners, making things as simple as possible, eschewing ambiguity in favor of a tidy narrative. The show grinds to a halt every time someone is forced to underline the point of the scene you just saw. It can be clumsy about working in exposition, or tackling Lincoln as a Great Man™, and big moments often come with the desire to be seen as big moments, rather than feeling like them. It’s hard for there to be enough scenery to chew on when most everyone in Manhunt feels like they have to stop and tell you how it tastes.
Image: Apple TV Plus
But it’s Menzies’ performance that grounds the show even when its dialogue can’t fully connect those dots. Every scene post-assassination has a heaviness to it, even when Stanton is energized on the hunt for Booth. Menzies brings in a sort of lightly manic energy, a ferocity of offense to mask the deeply rooted guilt already taking hold in his soul. It’s his performance that best ensures Lincoln’s loss is felt even when it’s unspoken, or when the show gets too busy. It’s this angle that gives Manhunt its juice, a reminder that Lincoln the myth was Lincoln the man first and foremost, and that he was mourned as not just a compatriot but also a companion.
So it’s no surprise that the moment in Stanton’s office looms large in Manhunt’s narrative. It’s the first scene we get to see Lincoln as just a dude. He comes into his friend’s office, plops his feet up on his desk, jokes around, and bemoans his bud’s need to put in the time. It’s a distinctly casual feel, Abraham Lincoln: The Legend, only in the accurate (if distracting) makeup and costuming the show layers Linklater behind. This is more than a man who could rouse a room and change how we see ourselves as a nation; he was also a pal you could look up to. That’s the loss that Manhunt makes us feel, and what makes the stakes for Stanton’s mission feel so incredibly high.
The first two episodes of Manhunt are now streaming on Apple TV Plus. New episodes drop every Friday.
Zosha Millman
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Austin Pets Alive! | A Day in the Life of “Dr. Harley,” APA!’s…
Hi, I’m Dr. Harley (aka “Dog-tor” Harley). I’m the resident therapy dog here at Austin Pets Alive!, providing a much-needed listening ear, emotional support and calming presence to the humans working hard to get dogs like me adopted. My days are pretty jam-packed and I never know what they’ll bring. Sometimes my clients present with a classic case of separation anxiety, while other times I’m just a sounding board for their doggy drama. I get asked all the time what it’s like to be a four-legged therapist, so I’m pulling back the curtain to give you a glimpse into a day in the life of Dr. Harley. (All names have been changed to maintain client confidentiality.)
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Did ‘Salt Lake City’ Just Drop the Greatest Finale in Bravo History?
Today on this special episode of Morally Corrupt, our Bravo avengers assemble to discuss what might have been one of the greatest finales in Housewives history—The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City Season 4, Episode 16. Rachel Lindsay, Jodi Walker, and Chelsea Stark-Jones give their initial reactions to this epic episode, debate the morality of having a secret finsta dedicated to taking down Jen Shah, break down the social media drama that followed, and more!
Host: Rachel Lindsay
Guests: Jodi Walker and Chelsea Stark-Jones
Producer: Devon Baroldi
Theme Song: Devon RenaldoSubscribe: Spotify
Rachel Lindsay
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Unpacking’s secret messy mode just got a big viral boost
Even small games can reveal delightful surprises years later. Now, roughly two years after its release, Unpacking fans are suddenly discovering a previously revealed secret mode after a TikTok video brought it back into the public eye. The mode is called Dark Star, and it basically forces players to beat the game by tossing objects on the floor instead of neatly putting them away like in the main mode.
In Unpacking’s standard mode, players complete levels by pulling objects out of a box and finding an appropriate spot to store them. If, for instance, you put toilet paper in the kitchen sink, the game will highlight the item with a red line and won’t let you complete the level. However, once you beat the game the regular way, you can enter Dark Star mode, where you beat each level by making sure every single item is placed incorrectly and highlighted in red. Once a player misplaces every single item, the game will award them with a darkened star and let them progress to the next level.
Developer Witch Beam teased Dark Star as a secret mode prior to the official reveal, then shared a video documenting it as part of an April Fools’ Day post in 2022. “So many people thought it was a fake feature for April Fools’ until they tried it for themselves,” Tim Dawson, a co-founder of Witch Beam and technical director of Unpacking, told Polygon via email.
Since that official reveal, some content creators have even streamed their Dark Star runs. Still, it’s clear that many fans didn’t know about the mode. After Dec. 22 Witch Beam TikTok went viral, fans shared reactions like, “THERE’S A DARK STAR MODE?!?!” and “I have 100% this game and I DIDNT KNOW THIS!? WHAAAAAT!?” Another wrote, “dude I beat this game like 10 times and i am just hearing abt this?!”
Dawson told Polygon that the secret mode lets players find new ways to experience the game’s puzzles. In the comments, several fans commented on how difficult Dark Star mode can actually be.
“I think what makes Dark Star so interesting is initially it feels like a gag,” Dawson said. “But after a few levels, it sets in how much work it is, and continuing can feel absurd, transgressive, or cathartic. But in the end, it’s just another way to think about items and how they relate to our lives and the spaces we live in, which is what the game is all about.”
Dawson also says that while the mode “started as a joke,” the developers now appreciate it as an extension of the game. “Because we decided not to extend Unpacking with DLC or a sequel, we often mention Dark Star mode when fans contact us asking if we’ll make more levels,” he said. “In many cases, it gives them another way to experience the game.”
Personally, I think Dark Star mode speaks to the ways our own media diets and specific bubbles of the internet can sometimes preserve a sense of surprise in a game. For Dawson, this kind of surprise can lend a sense of character to a game.
“I think secrets help give games their personality,” he said. “They’re the twinkle in the eye that suggests that these virtual worlds we spend time in might just be a bit bigger than you think. I love that we were able to come up with a good one for Unpacking.”
Ana Diaz
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dirtier divergent pushy
It just honestly seems like search engines are getting worse in general. Whether it’s the fact their primary focus is on ads, or maybe it’s the websites they link to just trying to show up, but it just seems like you can never actually find what you want when you search, just someone selling something.
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I Regret To Inform You
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Doctor Who time traveled back to 2008 to save the show in 2023
The hero of BBC’s long-running sci-fi series Doctor Who is, famously, not a real medical doctor, but they have been a bit ill. What should have been a promising changing of the guard in 2018 — with new showrunner Chris Chibnall and the first woman cast as The Doctor since the series’ 1963 debut — only served to accelerate a gradual downward slide that began in the latter half of previous showrunner Steven Moffat’s seven-year tenure.
In response, the BBC has decided the cure to The Doctor’s ails lies with the man who revived the show from a 15-year coma in 2005: Russell T. Davies. And with his first episode, last weekend’s hour-long special “The Star Beast,” Davies has delivered the goods. “The Star Beast” isn’t quite the reboot Davies is here to deliver — that’ll come in 2024 when Ncuti Gatwa takes over as The Fifteenth Doctor. Instead, “The Star Beast” is meant as catnip for lapsed and disappointed fans that were introduced during Davies’ first Who revival. It’s a blatant nostalgia play that, hilariously, carries on as if nothing has happened since Davies left the show in 2008. And you know what? It kills.
Loosely based on “Doctor Who and The Star Beast,” a comics serial by Pat Mills and Watchmen co-creator Dave Gibbons, the new special pulls triple duty: delivering a snappy, classic Doctor Who adventure, introducing an overarching mystery that will tie “The Star Beast” to two more specials coming in following weeks, and briefly introducing the Doctor to newcomers. It excels at its first two tasks, and stumbles pretty extravagantly at the third. Luckily, there’s so much charm here that “The Star Beast” never feels anything other than delightful, even at its clumsiest.
That charm is essential, because Davies’ first Doctor Who episode in 15 years is lampshading what, in most circumstances, would read as desperation. The mystery at the center of “The Star Beast” and the specials that follow is why — and how — did The Thirteenth Doctor (Jodie Comer) regenerate back into the same body she had as the Tenth Doctor (fan-favorite David Tennant). For a show built around a time-traveling humanoid alien who never dies but instead “regenerates” into a new body with a new personality so the show can explain away recasting its lead, “continuity” has always been more a suggestion than a rule. But Davies bringing back Tennant as the newly-christened Fourteenth Doctor and also Catherine Tate as beloved companion Donna Noble is extravagantly cheeky, even for this show.
Image: Disney Plus
What reunites them is the eponymous Star Beast, a giant Furby-lookin’ guy called The Meep, who crashes on Earth and befriends Donna’s daughter, Rose. The Meep is being hunted by insectoid soldiers who look like Power Rangers villains, catching Donna and her family in the crossfire and bringing The Doctor back into their lives again.
It’s all very silly, and an astonishing display from two actors who do not seem to have missed a beat since they last played these roles in 2008. Even with its messy exposition and open, lavish courtship of fans that grew to love the show during the first Davies era, “The Star Beast” is a good reminder that Donna and The Tenth Doctor were popular for a very good reason. Doctor Who has never had the biggest budget or the slickest sensibilities; it was and remains a childrens’ show that fans happily carried into adulthood. The most beloved of Doctors — Tom Baker, Matt Smith, David Tennant, and a few wild card picks — made this text, imbuing the character with a childlike whimsy, playing a very old man who never stopped believing there was magic to be found in the universe.
David Tennant is still remarkably good at this, and “The Star Beast” makes as good a case for The Doctor as any. He’s endlessly curious, always a little odd, and trusts that kindness and intelligence will win the day over violent antagonists. Tennant’s Doctor is not afraid to treat every square inch of ground as a stage from which he will play to the back of the room. There is no line too silly for him to bellow with conviction. There is no creature too strange for him to care about.
Image: Disney Plus
“The Star Beast” takes a little bit longer to recapture what makes Donna Noble such a great presence, but when she finally gets going, Catherine Tate is a force of nature: Never that impressed with The Doctor, happy to argue with him even with armageddon on the line, and fully capable of steamrolling anyone who looks askance at her or her loved ones.
It is hard not to love these two characters, to not want to travel all of time and space with them again. In a way we have, from 2008 to 2023, in a transition so seamless it’s shocking. Perhaps this shouldn’t be such a surprise. When Doctor Who is at its best, it’s like The Doctor has always been there: an old imaginary friend that still charms you as an adult. The earnest wonder and curiosity the character represents never really gets old. This is why the show endures: You don’t need a season of Doctor Who to be won over, you just need a moment. Those moments can come at any time, during runs both maligned and excellent. The Tenth Doctor and Donna Noble were incredibly good at making those moments in their time together. Here’s to a few more, before it’s someone else’s turn.
The Doctor Who 60th Anniversary specials are on Disney Plus, with the first now streaming and two more premiering weekly. Previous seasons of Doctor Who are available to stream on Max.
Joshua Rivera
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Austin Pets Alive! | Common Misconceptions About Adopting an Older Dog
Nov 17, 2023
While age is just a number, senior dogs are often overlooked for adoption due to misconceptions about what having an older dog means. November is Senior Pet Month and we’re working to shine the golden spot light on these amazing animals by breaking down some common senior pet misconceptions! Seniors like Abby want you to know that entering their golden years means these pups at heart deserve more than ever to spend their days in a loving home. In return, they promise to shower their human companions with affection and live each day to its fullest potential.
Misconception #1: Old Dogs Are No Longer Energetic
One of the most prevalent misconceptions about older dogs is that they become lethargic and lose their energy as they age. While it’s true that older dogs may not have the same boundless energy as puppies, they can still be quite active and enjoy physical activities. In fact, regular exercise is essential for maintaining their physical and mental health. Adjusting the type and intensity of exercise to match their age and health status is crucial. Consult with your veterinarian to develop a suitable exercise routine for your senior dog.
Misconception #2: You Can’t Teach Old Dogs New Tricks
The old adage “you can’t teach an old dog new tricks” couldn’t be further from the truth. Older dogs are just as capable of learning new things as their younger counterparts. While it may take a bit more time and patience, training an older dog can be a rewarding experience. In fact, older dogs often come with the advantage of being calmer and having better attention spans, making them more receptive to training.
Misconception #3: Older Dogs Are Not Suitable for Adoption
Many people believe that older dogs are not ideal candidates for adoption and that puppies or younger dogs are better options. However, older dogs can make fantastic pets. They often come already house-trained and have established personalities, making it easier to find a dog whose temperament matches your lifestyle. Adopting an older dog can also be incredibly rewarding, as you provide a loving home for a dog in its golden years.
Misconception #4: Older Dogs Don’t Need Social Interaction
Older dogs, just like their younger counterparts, benefit from social interaction and mental stimulation. Isolation can lead to anxiety and depression in older dogs, so it’s important to provide opportunities for socialization and playtime. Consider arranging playdates with other dogs, taking leisurely walks in the park, or engaging in interactive games to keep your senior dog’s mind and body active.
Older dogs are often misunderstood and over-looked at shelters due to misconceptions about their behavior and needs. It’s important to recognize that older dogs can lead happy, fulfilling lives with the right care and attention. By dispelling these misconceptions, we hope more potential adopters will consider making a senior dog part of their family. APA! has successfully placed many wonderful seniors in foster or adoptive homes where they continue to thrive and bring joy to their new family.
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Will the Real ‘Scott Pilgrim’ Please Stand Up?
Were we to outline the millennial canon—a collection of works that illuminate the generation’s character—then surely Bryan Lee O’Malley’s Scott Pilgrim would rank rather prominently. Scott Pilgrim is the story of a dweeby Canadian bassist who meet-cutes his mysterious American dream girl, Ramona Flowers, only to discover that in order to date Ramona, he must first defeat her “seven evil exes” in a series of boss fights across the mean streets and concert halls of Toronto.
These graphic novels, serialized in six volumes, released from 2004 through 2010, were a new sort of coming-of-age saga—a cute but also quite moody comic about love and video games and rock music. While O’Malley was still writing Scott Pilgrim, Edgar Wright directed a largely faithful live-action film adaptation, Scott Pilgrim Vs. the World, starring Michael Cera and Mary Elizabeth Winstead as Scott and Ramona, respectively, alongside a weirdly stacked cast of once and future stars: Chris Evans, Aubrey Plaza, Anna Kendrick, Brie Larson, Kieran Culkin. Scott Pilgrim Vs. the World was a box office flop in its opening weekend but then a weirdly resilient cultural object in the following decade, spawning so many GIFs on Peak Tumblr as the movie matured into a nerdy cult classic. Now, the acclaimed anime studio Science Saru, in conjunction with Netflix, has reimagined the comic as an eight-episode series, Scott Pilgrim Takes Off. O’Malley wrote this new series with BenDavid Grabinski, and he also made a point to recruit all of the actors from Scott Pilgrim Vs. the World for the voice cast of Scott Pilgrim Takes Off; Edgar Wright also returns as an executive producer.
But Scott Pilgrim Takes Off, rather unlike Scott Pilgrim Vs. the World, is a smorgasbord of creative liberties. O’Malley was still writing the comic while Wright’s live-action adaptation was in postproduction, and he’s recently talked about how the performances in Scott Pilgrim Vs. the World gave him a new perspective and new ideas for several characters—possibilities he now gets to pursue in the anime.
Scott Pilgrim Takes Off was billed as an adaptation but turns out to be a meta sort-of sequel or reboot. This is the story of Scott Pilgrim in fact losing that first fight with Ramona’s first boyfriend, Matthew Patel, at Club Rockit. In this version, Scott seemingly dies in battle before Ramona discovers that Scott hasn’t been killed, but rather kidnapped. Now, Ramona must confront her own exes and solve the mystery of Scott’s disappearance.
Accordingly, Scott Pilgrim Takes Off features a lot less Scott and a lot more Ramona, especially, but also everyone else in revised capacities. The League of Ramona’s Evil Exes is in disarray, as early on Matthew leads a coup against the group’s founder and the final boss of the original series, Gideon Graves. The other exes, absent any reason or opportunity to battle Scott, instead spend much of the series catching up with Ramona. Scott’s band, Sex Bob-Omb, is suddenly without a bassist, until drummer Kim Pine recruits Scott’s first girlfriend and Sex Bob-Omb’s no. 1 fan, Knives Chau. (Knives is surely the most improved characterization in Scott Pilgrim Takes Off, compared to her role in Scott Pilgrim Vs. the World, as Ellen Wong really leans into the new format and voices the character with yandere gusto.) As a reboot, Scott Pilgrim Takes Off gets to preserve these characters in adolescence but otherwise give them new glimpses and alternative arcs. The original premise is certainly more compelling for Scott’s intense and singular determination—beat the exes, win the girl—but Scott Pilgrim Takes Off is a refreshingly loose and playful take on these character dynamics.
The very fact of Scott Pilgrim enjoying a 2020s revival isn’t so surprising, given the unkillable nature of IP these days. And the revival coming in the form of a somewhat subversive reboot also isn’t so surprising, given the meta humor of the original comic. But why anime? And why would O’Malley and Grabinski go through the trouble of reuniting the actors from the live-action adaptation for the voice cast? The answer, in both cases, is nostalgia. Scott Pilgrim and O’Malley’s other works are chock-full of homages to video games, anime, and manga; in fact, Scott Pilgrim is in large part distinguished in balancing its more novelistic aspects with good ol’ fashioned superhero action.
Anime, if anything, ends up feeling like an inevitable format for Scott Pilgrim, even if the production is something of a fluke: this sort of crossover is pretty rare, and if Netflix didn’t have this particular relationship with Science Saru, then I can’t imagine this particular anime would’ve been made some other way. Which is doubly fortunate, really, as these days I can’t imagine many other studios tackling Scott Pilgrim as capably as Science Saru, a studio renowned for its saucy and surreal depictions of young adulthood.
Scott Pilgrim is in many ways a nostalgic tour of its author’s formative influences, e.g., Scott wears an Astro Boy tee, and he’s constantly talking about Sonic the Hedgehog. This explains the conspicuous effort to hire the old cast for the new series. Wright’s cast may not have been a part of O’Malley’s original vision for Scott Pilgrim, but the cast has, with the passage of time, added a new layer of nostalgia—not for Wright’s live-action adaptation per se, but for the whole cultural peak of Scott Pilgrim in 2010. O’Malley says he was prepared to produce a version of this anime with an original voice cast, in the event that he couldn’t get each and every one of the notable actors from Scott Pilgrim Vs. the World to return for Scott Pilgrim Takes Off. I’m sure his backup plan would’ve worked out well enough, but the returning cast really does bolster the series and create the illusion that not much has changed since the release of O’Malley’s final volume and Wright’s adaptation of the comic.
As I was watching an advance screener of the anime, I encountered some online speculation that its release might mark the beginning of a whole new era of Scott Pilgrim content from O’Malley—a Scott Pilgrim Cinematic Universe, even. It was an interesting thought, but also one that, if anything, underscored the limitations of these characters. Scott Pilgrim is such a distinctly adolescent saga, and it’s hard to imagine Scott and Ramona maturing into their 20s, out of their bombastic courtship and into a real relationship or, alternatively, to imagine Scott moving on from Ramona Flowers and wooing some other girl in some later phase of his life. Scott Pilgrim is these characters in this particular time in their lives.
Indeed, in Scott Pilgrim Takes Off, Scott and Ramona both confront much older versions of themselves. Older Scott is still rocking out in a ridiculous band, Older Ramona is still turning her hair purple and pink, but they’re both clearly the worse for wear, and they’re both still reeling from the later, harder work of trying—and for a period, failing—to build a life together. But O’Malley will only go so far in subverting the canonical love story of Scott Pilgrim and Ramona Flowers. It all ends with a kiss, and while O’Malley’s comic and Wright’s movie are both invaluable artifacts of the Tumblr Era, the anime makes for a fantastic epilogue.
Justin Charity
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Austin Pets Alive! | Austin Pets Alive! Earns 99% Score and 4 Stars…
Oct 06, 2023
The new Charity Navigator scores have been released — and not only has Austin Pets Alive! maintained our 4-star rating for the 6th year running (the most number of stars that can be awarded), but our overall score has increased from 95% to 99.2%, our highest score yet!
Charity Navigator is one of the nation’s most trusted nonprofit ratings organizations, measuring nonprofits’ effectiveness and reliability so that donors can feel confident about their giving decisions.
The percentage of our expenses spent on programs remains high, at just over 74%, which is one of the reasons many donors trust us when giving.
We received a perfect 100 score in the Accountability & Finance category. Charity Navigator’s assessment also shows that we spend just $0.15 in fundraising expenses for each dollar raised, which is another excellent indicator of how we use our funds.
Our score was 92 in the Culture & Community pillar, and 100 again in Leadership & Adaptability.
APA! saves the lives of 12,000 pets per year, who come through our Austin shelter — and countless more with our outreach to animals and organizations throughout Texas and the country.
We couldn’t save these deserving lives, without the collaboration of our community and supporters. Thank you for being an integral part of these pets’ lifesaving stories, and the APA! family.
If you have questions about how we’re putting your dollars to work for animals in need, please reach out at [email protected].
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