3 Razors

Nashville – Be Careful of the Stones that You Throw

  • Title: Nashville – Be Careful of the Stones that You Throw
  • tv.com: link

nashville-be-careful-the-stones-you-throw

As Juliette (Hayden Panettiere), who returns from her impromptu elopement with Sean (Tilky Jones),  and Rayna (Connie Britton) make final preparations for the tour, Lamar (Powers Boothe) and Tandy (Judith Hoag) threaten to expose Maddie’s (Lennon Stella) true parentage to stop Rayna from taking her girls on the road. Meanwhile, Juliette agrees to a second church wedding to appease Sean’s parents (Boo ArnoldJ.J. Rodgers) before setting out on the road and discovers Sean isn’t the only one with a mother disappointed by news of their nuptials.

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Pretty Little Liars – She’s Better Now

  • Title: Pretty Little Liars – She’s Better Nowa
  • wiki: link

pretty-little-liars-shes-better-now

Pretty Little Liars, ABC Family’s show about a quartet of teens terrorized by the mysterious individual (who turned out to be one of their own), and haunted by the disappearance and murder of the group’s former leader (Sasha Pieterse), returns with the fallout of Halloween night and murder of Garrett (Yani Gellman), and with Mona’s (Janel Parrish) release from the Radley Sanitarium and return to Rosewood High School looking for a fresh start with the people she’s spent the better part of her time on the show tormenting as the mysterious “A.”

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Frankenweenie

  • Title: Frankenweenie
  • IMDB: link

frankenweenie-blu-ray-dvdTim Burton goes back to the well again with Frankenweenie, a remake of his short film and obvious parody of Frankenstein. Set in the town of New Holland, our story centers around social outcast Victor Frankenstein (Charlie Tahan) who sets his genius to bringing his dog Sparky back to life after he is hit by a car.

What follows are the misadventures of Victor, Sparky, and Victor’s various classmates who use his knowledge to bring back other pets from the grave in an attempt to win the school science fair. The film also throws in a preteen love story between Victor and the equally socially awkward Elsa van Helsing (Winona Ryder).

Burton has some fun in casting old friends, particularly with Martin Landau as the school’s science teacher who is attacked after the town discovers what Victor used “science” to do.

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The Shadow Special #1

the-shadow-special-1-coverSpecials and Annuals for ongoing series are always something of a mixed bag, especially (as in the case with The Shadow Special #1) the one-off issue isn’t connected to the ongoing series or even written aor drawn by the current creative team.

“Veterans of a Foreign War” isn’t a bad story, but it probably won’t be of interest to anyone who isn’t a big fan of the character. Lamont Cranston‘s past catches up with him when he reconnects with a soldier he helped train during the war. Knowing the kind of man Howard Griffin became (and the man Cranston was when he used the name “Kent Allard”) Cranston keeps Griffin far away from Margo as The Shadow investigates the current activities of Griffin and some of his war cronies.

Much of the oversized issue deals with flashbacks of Allard and Griffin meaning the story limits the amount of time The Shadow appears, at least until the last few pages when Crantston takes his vengeance on men he once called brothers. It’s a little pricey at $5, but fans should enjoy themselves with this glimpse into Cranston’s past before he could look into the hearts of men. For fans.

[Dynamite Entertainment, $4.99]

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FF #2

ff-marvel-now-2-coverI was surprised how much I liked the first issue of this new Marvel NOW! version of the FF. The follow-up may not be as strong, but fans should still enjoy themselves in a comic that despite Mike Allred only doing the art is feeling more and more like a Madman comic.

After being disappointed when the Fantastic Four don’t return after four minutes, their replacements get to work getting things back to normal at the Baxter Building. This includes Ant-Man explaining to the children why the Daily Bugle refereed to him as a convict, She-Hulk lecturing the children on the finer points of the law, and one member of the team quitting.

When the comic stays with the character dynamics inside the Baxter Building things continue to run smoothly. However, writer Matt Fraction’s choice of villain, in a humdrum homage to the original Fantastic Four #1, doesn’t work nearly as well. For fans.

[Marvel, $2.99]

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