Showing posts with label comedy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label comedy. Show all posts

Friday, July 24, 2015

Females Are Strong as Hell (Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt - 2015 - TV-14)

Today, I present to you the shortest and giggliest guilty pleasure binge of your life. Just 13 episodes. A Netflix original of comedy to the core. Created by humor junkies Robert Carlock and Tina Fey (both known for their work on Saturday Night Live and 30 Rock). Starring KCMO native Ellie Kemper (The Office, Bridesmaids). Put your hands together for Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt - ooooo dammit!

Image credit: www.vogue.com

The show begins just as four girls are pulled by SWAT members from an underground bunker where they've spent the last 15 years of their lives held captive by a doomsday cult preacher. When the 'Indiana Mole Women' share their story on a TV talk show, Kimmy realizes that she doesn't want to return to her old life in Durnsville. She stays behind in New York City to start a fresh life and somehow catch up on all the adulthood learning she missed. 

GIF credit: tvguide.com

First thing's first, Kimmy needs a job. She starts working as a nanny for local crazie Jacqueline Voorhes (Jane Krakowski - Ally McBeal, 30 Rock) after Kimmy finds her son wandering about the streets of NYC stealing candy. Next she scores an apartment with roommate Titus Andromedon (Tituss Burgess - 30 Rock), a flamboyant struggling actor.

GIF credit: www.tumblr.com

Kimmy starts feeling out her new-found freedom, navigating NYC, boys, friendship, and responsibility. Just when things are going great - she's needed to testify against the crazy cult leader who kidnapped her, Rev. Wayne Gary Wayne (Jon Hamm - Mad Men). Can Kimmy save the day?

Image credit: thedailybeast.com

I love Ellie Kemper's portrayal of Kimmy - her one-liners often come in hilarious comebacks with some childhood flare (remember, Kimmy hasn't seen the outside world since 1995). Plus this chick deserves your respect for keeping herself and her friends safe and sane...ish...for 15 years underground. Never once did she fall for Wayne Gary Wayne's end of the world bullcrap. And when she finally got out, she thrived. 

Video credit: IGN, YouTube

Ultimately this show is straight up entertainment - I giggled from start to finish. Be warned, it's some pretty silly, shallow humor. You won't laugh if you're looking for some intriguing satire. It's an adorable show and intentionally made to be. Not a lot of character development or deep plot, but plenty of goofiness. Rating: 3/5 pints of Ben & Jerry's. 

Tuesday, July 21, 2015

The Precious Butterfly that is Ned (Our Idiot Brother - 2011 - R)

So lately I've been obsessed with this show that only ran for like two seasons in 2000 called Dark Angel - which sadly is not streaming instantly on Netflix. While that is my current binge TV show, I've got a few movies to review for you in the meantime! The first is a film I discovered thanks to Netflix recommendations when I watched a bunch of indie films in a row - I'm so glad I took a risk on Our Idiot Brother. It's precious.

GIF credit: pandawhale.com

Ned, portrayed by Paul Rudd (I Love You, Man, Ant-Man), is somewhat of a clueless hippie with a giant heart. After a run in with the law, Ned decides he needs to finally get his life together. As he puts together some money for a place of his own, Ned couch-surfs at his sisters' in the meantime - played by Zooey Deschanel, Emily Mortimer, and Elizabeth Banks. The sisters struggle with their brother's disruptive presence as he's notorious for making a bit of a mess.

Video credit: Movieclips, YouTube

I found Ned to be a lovable character with a precious soul and a hopeful personality. In my favorite line out of the entire film he says, "I like to think that if you put your trust out there, if you really give people the benefit of the doubt, see their best intentions, people will rise to the occasion." And honestly, that's kind of the message I got out of the film. Ned never loses his faith in the universe and his family. He's the chillest dude you'll ever meet - he's also one of the most positively passionate.

Image credit: richredman.wordpress.com

The film also features characters portrayed by Rashida Jones, Hugh Dancy, Adam Scott, and Steve Coogan, among others. Some goofy, some supportive, some less than... As for the plot, while entertaining, the movie is a little choppy. There are a lot of little bits going on in the supporting characters' lives which tend to pull the movie in a lot of directions at once. Part of me wants to say that this is distracting, part of me wants to say that it works for this film.

GIF credit: pandawhale.com

In the end of course, Ned's homecoming pulls his family closer together - he even gets his dog, Willie Nelson, back! Yay for the good feels! While the film has it's issues mechanically, I found it to be an overall adorable indie flick. Rating: 3.5/5 pints of Ben & Jerry's

Friday, June 19, 2015

Burger of the Day: Katie's Back-to-Back-to-Bacon Cheeseburger (Bob's Burgers - TV-14)

I spent all day Tuesday under the firm assumption that it was Monday. Fellow Netflix-bingers, I know you feel my feels. After a certain while, the hours bleed together and the transition from day to night blurs until you find yourself thinking, "How is it one in the morning? What season am I on? Just five episodes left? I can finish that before bed, easy!" Basically, I've started re-watching the entire X-Files series and it's going to be the death of me.

But never fear! Today is Friday and a new review is here!

I've got a funny one served up for you today. You have likely already heard of Bob's Burgers due to its popularity akin to shows like The Simpsons and Family Guy. Those comparisons may have either encouraged your interest in taste-testing the show or steered you away if you're not so into the flavor of adult cartoons, but when I started watching the show a year ago, it quickly became a favorite of mine. Seasons 1-4 are currently available for instant streaming.

GIF credit: www.buzzfeed.com

Bob's Burgers centers on Bob Belcher, his wife Linda, and their three kids Tina, Gene, and Louise. The family owns a burger joint through which the show explores workplace comedy, marriage and family dynamics, and awkward tales of childhood and growing up. The show does great work taking an average American family and making them relatable and funny - without dumbing any of them down.

Video credit: Animation Domination, YouTube

If you're looking for a "D'oh!" kind of father, Bob is not your guy. The thing I love most about Bob's Burgers is how far it strays from the typical tropes of TV families. In fact, Bob's depicts a family where members lift each other up and support each other instead of tearing each other down for a joke. The show's humor is based in antics and relatable awkwardness, rather than the expense of a character's confidence and dignity. For example, any time Gene goes through a slight identity crisis his family is pretty supportive, encouraging him to be himself.

Video credit: Qyzbud, YouTube

Each of the characters separately is dynamic as they deal with their own issues - which is a credit to the writers as well as the voice actors developing the characters' personalities. The kids especially crack me up, while still being beautiful souls that I adore for their total quirkiness. Gene walks around the house in his underwear and still demands to be taken seriously. He's always pushing the socially constructed boundaries of gender and expression and he's a cheerleader for his sisters - LOVE. Louise, my personal favorite voiced by Kristen Schaal, believes she could easily conquer the world and she does not take crap from anyone. And of course, there's Tina - the voice of a generation. While Tina experiences the true-life teenage struggles of boys, friends, and fitting in, she's crazy confident with a passion for coffee, butts, and erotic friend-fiction. She's a total feminist and unapologetically unique and people love her for it.

GIF credit: www.pinterest.com

Rating: 5/5 pints of Ben & Jerry's - easy. Coming up next week, I have reviews for Orange is the New Black and Nightcrawler on the menu. I'll see you here next Tuesday and Friday for those new reviews...as long as I can continue to keep my days straight from here on out.

Also, please tell me you thought this post's title was funny...like back-to-back-to-back episodes, get it...?

Also, also! If you're interested in what I mentioned earlier about Bob's Burgers as a cutting edge show breaking away from typical TV tropes and introducing more progressive ideas about family dynamics and supportiveness... YouTuber Laci Green discusses these aspects of the show as well as an added element of feminism in her MTV spot that you can watch below!

Video credit: mtv braless, YouTube

Tuesday, January 20, 2015

Come on, Jerry... (Parks and Recreation - TV-14)

Parks and Recreation's farewell season premiered last Tuesday, Jan. 13. Queue the Andrea Bocelli - it's time to say goodbye. If you are a newbie to the show or just feel like reminiscing about the good ole days (Ron Swanson pre-Doc McStuffins), Netflix has your back. Seasons 1-6 are currently available for instant streaming.

Image Credit: www.imdb.com

Commonly known as Parks and Rec by its dedicated viewers, the show follows the sometimes unfortunate, but almost always hilarious shenanigans of the parks and recreation department in small-town, Pawnee, Indiana.

It includes a most excellent performance from Nick Offerman (21 Jump Street, The Kings of Summer) as Ron Swanson, head of the department and general hater of all things government. Ron's determined to fit every stereotype of the "manliest" of men by being a hardy woodsman, professional chairmaker, and the guy who orders a slab of meat with every meal. Don't let him fool you, though... Ron puts up a rigid front, but he's a wise one with a soft spot for those select few in which he sees potential.

GIF Credit: www.reddit.com

The show also stars Chris Pratt (Guardians of the Galaxy, The LEGO Movie) as Andy Dwyer. Andy's character acts as the slapstick comedy component of the show. He's a half-witted almost-musician with little to no direction in life who starts off the show by falling into a giant pit. It should also be noted that Pratt often adds his own flavor to the show by throwing in impromptu lines from time to time. For example, his line in the scene below was totally unscripted, and I'd venture to say that it is one of the best one-liners in the entire show.

Video Credit: Nailed It, YouTube

And how could one continue without mentioning the spectacular portrayal of Leslie Knope by Amy Poehler (Saturday Night Live, Mean Girls). Leslie's character is convinced that Pawnee is the greatest city in the world and enthusiastic doesn't even begin to describe how passionate she is about upholding that standard of hope in her hopeless community. Poehler has done amazing work with this character by fleshing her out into a full-fledged, dynamic woman in politics.

These are just a few among many fantastic performances by Aubrey Plaza (my personal fav), Aziz Ansari, and others who join in as the seasons progress. Parks and Recreation was easily my favorite binge of winter break. It's humor is clever, often satirizing current events, politics, and the atmosphere of the midwestern small-town. It won my heart forever and I will be sad to say goodbye to its current run on television. Rating: 4.5/5 pints of Ben & Jerry's.