4 Razors

Warehouse 13 – 3… 2… 1

  • Title: Warehouse 13 – 3… 2… 1
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Warehouse 13 - 3... 2... 1 television review

Throwback Tuesday takes us back to a top-secret storage facility in South Dakota known as Warehouse 13. The reemergence of Joshua’s Trumpet offers a Warehouse tale that takes place in three different time periods and offers the return of multiple characters. Helena (Jaime Murray) is let out of her prison, albeit only in holographic form, to help in the current search for the artifact and elaborate on her first encounter with it back in 1893. The appareance of the trumpet in 1962 also brings back Jack (Chad Connell) and Rebecca (Alex Paxton-Beesley). “3… 2… 1” offers a chance to redeem Helena a bit as she’s able to talk down a confused man (Martin Doyle) from trying to find the aliens who stole his father decades before (when he was dissentigrated by the horn, crashed back to Earth on Helena’s rocket). Even Pete (Eddie McClintock) eventually warms a little towards the woman who tried to destroy the world just a season earlier.

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The Flash – Kiss Kiss Breach Breach

  • Title: The Flash – Kiss Kiss Breach Breach
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The Flash - Kiss Kiss Breach Breach TV review

With Barry (Grant Gustin) and Iris (Candice Patton) heading off on a weekend getaway (likely the last before her husband disappears from all existence), “Kiss Kiss Breach Breach” leaves the other characters free to pursue their own adventures. The main storyline features Cisco (Carlos Valdes) investigating the death of his ex Gypsy by a notorious criminal known only as Echo. All evidence points to Cisco, enough that even Cisco begins to question himself, but in the multiverse there’s almost always an alternate explanation. For an episode without the Flash, and really the first of the season not to be strongly influenced by the impending Crisis, it works fairly well as the show continues to prepare the supporting characters for life after the Flash.

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Motherless Brooklyn

  • Title: Motherless Brooklyn
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Motherless Brooklyn movie reviewWith Motherless Brooklyn, Edward Norton stars, directs, and adapted the novel of the same name. It’s in his choices, and likely his performance, where you will decide what you think of the film. Moving the events back in time allows the story to be reframed as a noir fitting our detective’s narration and the style of a gumshoe tale.

Motherless Brooklyn is shown from the perspective of private detective Lionel Essrog (Norton). Despite being burdened with tics he cannot control, Lionel is the star of Frank Minna’s (Bruce Willis) P.I. business (and car service). But when something goes wrong on a case it falls to Lionel to step-up and unravel a web of criminal conspiracy and murder.

If you can accept Norton’s showcasing Lionel’s tics the film will likely work for you, as it did for me. The character is fascinating and we do see how his nature helps him in other aspects of his job, while admittedly leading to some problems dealing with people. Norton builds on his performance and the strengths of a novel to create a smart and entertaining film (even if it isn’t quite as clever as it thinks it is).

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Hellmouth #1

Hellmouth #1 comic reviewHellmouth #1 officially begins the five-issue crossover event that has been building in both Buffy the Vampire Slayer and Angel. Drusilla has the key and the Hellmouth is open. Get ready, ’cause Hell is literally set to break loose. And if you missed anything, Cordelia is here to sum up things for you.

The first issue of the mini-series offers the first official meeting of Buffy and Angel as the ground underneath Sunnydale cracks open and all manner of creatures begin to pour out. Hellmouth #1 also explains why Drusilla needed to stab Spike with the key (other than her being bat-shit crazy).

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Titans – Jericho

  • Title: Titans – Jericho
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Titans - Jericho television review

Another flashback episode, “Jericho” finally reveals the events surrounding the Titans befriending and using Jericho Wilson (Chella Man) in order to find Deathstroke (Esai Morales). Long alluded to, fans finally see the sequences of events which led to the end of the Titans. There does seem to be a disconnect between Dick‘s (Brenton Thwaites) admission to Jason Todd (Curran Walters) at the end of the previous episode (saying “non one” knows the truth) and the events shown here (where all of the Titans are aware of what happened). That rather clumsy inconsistency aside (which has shown up before, I’m guessing because the show’s writers didn’t make a definitive decision until this episode), “Jericho” does more than any other episode of the season to frame Deathstroke as a legitimate threat to the team as he is able to take down both Robin and Donna (Conor Leslie) separately.

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