Sunday, May 24, 2020

Retrospective Revisits: The Worst Hit Songs of 2013


Welcome to one of my new music review projects, Retrospective Revisits.   In this project, I will be revisiting years I’ve already done year-end rank downs for on previous sites, but will still be fresh for first time viewers.  Why am I doing this?  Over time, opinions change.  And boy have a lot of my opinions on 2013 changed over the course of time.



2013.  The year I started writing music reviews on an internet forum dedicated to a cartoon show.  Seven years later, I now have my own blog for this.  I was also a recent college grad who had no idea what to do with my life.  And now I have hopes that I can do this for a living to make money.

But enough about me.  When I did my year end retrospectives for this initially, I was heavily under the influence from one of my favorite critics Todd in the Shadows that this was one of the worst music years ever.  Yeah…we were a year away from that being the case Todd.  Honestly, Todd was a major influence in my critiquing growing up in multiple ways.  To the point that I can look back and say that I was ripping off his criticisms a tad.  Now?  I feel like I am my own person.  I have my own writing style.  I have my own format.  And more importantly, I have my own voice.

I don’t think 2013 was a bad year.  If anything, I think 2013 was arguably the most important year of pop music in the 2010’s.  2013 was the start of a lot of the big identities of the 2010’s.  EDM was huge.  Trap music was starting to become mainstream.  Memes started to become more normal in the big hits.  And pop music started to become more critical of itself.  Two of the biggest hits of the 2010’s were about breaking down the norms and basically saying fuck modern pop music norms.  If that isn’t a paradigm shift for what was to come, then I can’t think of a more influential year than 2013.

That being said, this worst list was tough to rewrite.  Honestly, most of my previous frustrations from this year are still the case once more.  Most of what I considered bad music from this year left me feeling absolutely nothing.  A lot of the big hits from this year felt like they were on autopilot without any real ambition to either be great or go all out and suck.  This has been a problem that would reappear especially in the back half of the 2010’s and still going now, so consider 2013 starting that identity too.

Anyway, let’s re-evaluate the year that was once more.  Just hold on, we’re going to reassess…


THE TOP TEN WORST HIT SONGS OF 2013



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So on my previous year end list, my original number ten choice was “Stay” by Rihanna.  An absolute slog of a song that’s absolutely uinispired as hell.  The only thing that it proved to anyone is that Rihanna can sing.  Which we already knew that she had a great voice when she needed to amidst all the autotune pop music she made back then.  I still hate it, but at the end of the day, I can’t place it on here.  Despite how sick of Rihanna I was back then, she sounds great on “Stay”.  If I wanted to find a singer sounding uninspired as all hell, I only had to look further down the year end list for that.

10. “Girl on Fire” – Alicia Keys (featuring Nicki Minaj)



More like this girl is owned by Lionsgate Studios and Scholastic Books.  The moment I heard this song, my mind instantly went to The Hunger Games.  Alicia Keys sat through The Hunger Games, saw Katniss Everdeen get called the Girl on Fire, and immediately thought to herself, time to cash in.  And she sure did cash in to the point of near copyright infringement.  Because Katniss deserves a better tie-in song….oh wait.  This song was never associated with The Hunger Games franchise.  Because not even they wanted to listen to this lifeless drone of a ballad.

This song conveys absolutely nothing.  It feels like it has just twenty words.  Alicia Keys may be a talented musician, but she was never the strongest lyricist.  And this is easily the most useless set of lyrics she has ever written.  This girl is any woman you could possibly imagine because Alicia Keys does a god awful job trying to associate this girl with anything other than fire metaphors.  Which have easily become my most tired metaphor in popular music.  It’s been beaten to death by a bloody pulp and basically nobody tries to do anything interesting with this metaphor anymore.

This boy is bored.  Next.

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If you followed me from my previous writings, you all might know that “Love Song” by Sara Bareilles is my favorite hit song of 2008.  It’s the type of adult alternative pop that I can get behind.  It’s got sharp writing.  A catchy chorus.  Clever wordplay.  I just love it so much.

Turns out that Sara Bareilles is a one trick pony.


9.  “Brave” – Sara Bareilles


And it's not just this song.  I revisited all of her songs since "Love Song" and they are the most bland shallow commercial made pop music.  "King of Anything"?  More like king of whatever product you're shilling.

I honestly didn’t realize until revisiting this year end list that this song is just the absolute worst.  I mean who the hell actually wanted to listen to this false empowerment anthem?  Who wrote this?  An eight year old?  That would explain this line:

Show me how big your brave is

I can’t believe the woman who wrote one of the most mature adult pop songs of the last ten years wrote the most childish adult pop song I’ve ever seen.  When you make Train, fucking Train, of all bands sound avant-garde, you know your pop song fucking sucks.

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The year was 2013 and bro-country was at the peak of its popularity.

Now that the 2010’s are over, I can definitely say that I agree with the consensus.  Bro-country was the absolute worst trend of this decade.  Say what you will about Vine songs and the club boom, at least they were stupidly entertaining.  Bro-country is a fucking embarrassment to a genre that badly wanted to hang out with the cool kids.  And while bro-country has plenty of humiliating songs that represented how bad this trend was, this is easily the worst bro-country song to ever make a year-end list.

8. “That’s My Kind of Night” – Luke Bryan



This marks the fourth time Luke Bryan has ever made a year-end list of mine.  Safe to say that I’m not a fan of the guy.  And it’s not that I don’t get Luke Bryan.  I do.  He’s a male model with enough of a country twang to drive females crazy.  When ABC casted the judges for the American Idol reboot two years ago, they knew exactly what they were doing hiring him.  The same way NBC did with The Voice and Adam Levine.  And despite being on my worst lists so many times, he does have some good songs in his discography.  

But if I’ll ever hold anything against the guy, he is equally as responsible as Florida Georgia Line for modernizing bro-country and all of its awful traits.  The reason bro-country got thrashed the way it did was because it was country music being so embarrassed wishing it was anything else.  I mean listen to these awful lyrics:

Put in my country ride hip-hop mixtape
Little Conway, a little T-Pain, might just make it rain

First off, awful rhyme scheme bro.  Secondly, T-PAIN!?!?!?!  T-Pain hasn’t been relevant in years at this point.  But that name drop just shows how desperate country music’s crush on rap music was at this point.  They can name drop the likes of Lil Wayne and Drake as much as they wanted, but these guys clearly aren’t listening back.  If irrelevant by this point T-Pain didn’t want to be a part of your god awful country song, then that’s telling.  T-Pain isn’t selling out what’s left of his credibility the way Nelly was with the remix of “Cruise”.



And yeah I know, “Cruise” should probably be on the worst list too, but despite being as bad as it was, at least the remix worked and made sense.  This sounds dated and cheesy as hell then and it’s only rotted more the older it’s gotten. 

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This next one might as well be a tie.

7. “Scream and Shout” – will.i.am (featuring Britney Spears)



6. “#thatpower” – will.i.am (featuring Justin Bieber)



If there is one thing I’m glad we left behind in 2013 was will.i.am…



Oh that’s right.  We made The Black Eyed Peas relevant again in 2020.  I still don’t get why we need these guys around.  But in 2013, we were done with anything Black Eyed Peas related.  Especially will.i.am.  Whose production was instantly starting to sound dated in the EDM era of pop music.

It took me awhile to hate “Scream and Shout”.  I didn’t like it, but it was catchy at the time.  But after years and years, it finally hit me.  “Scream and Shout” is one of the most unoriginal songs ever created.  Nobody is giving any effort whatsoever.  It sounds like basically every Black Eyed Peas song of the previous five years.  Multiple artists might as well sue will.i.am for ripping off basically every lyric in the song.  Britney Spears sounds like a poor woman’s Lady Gaga.  When did Britney Spears stop giving a shit about her music?  Even at her absolute personal low point in 2007, she was trying so much harder than this.

And then there is #thatpower.  Which if I had to use a tiebreaker for which song is worse, I would give it to #thatpower solely for that butt ugly hashtag.  I’m so glad we moved past this trend a year after it started because it was insulting to the listening public’s intelligence.  And speaking of insulting people’s intelligence, this is basically the same song as “Scream and Shout”.  Just replace one soulless blonde pop diva for another soulless blonde pop diva.  That’s the other thing that’s more infuriating about the latter.  Justin Bieber once again being an empty vessel where music came from.  I swear it doesn’t matter how old Bieber is.  He simply doesn’t give two shits about putting forth any effort into his guest verses.  If you put Justin Bieber in your song, you want an easy hit.

And now will.i.am is back again.  Way to go America.  How many times do we have to teach you this lesson, old man?

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2013 was also the year that Ed Sheeran finally crossed over to the United States.  Who would have thought that grown up Chuckie Finster over here would turn into the biggest popstar on planet Earth at the back end of the 2010’s.  And while my feelings for Ed’s music have been a roller coaster over time, I still admire how interesting he is as a performer.  Even at his absolute shittiest, I can say that I’d still rather have Ed around than the millions of performers who would try to replicate his success.

5. “Let Her Go” – Passenger



Say what you want about the many singer/songwriters who have tried to replicate Sheeran over the last couple years.  None of them have sucked as hard as Passenger.  James Arthur?  A little hacky, but yeah better than Passenger.  Dean Lewis?  Very forgettable, but yeah better than Passenger.  Lewis Capal….


…uuhhh…oh fuck it.  I’d rather have Lewis Capaldi around than fucking Passenger.  Capaldi at least put himself out there with his awful musical talent.  There is literally nothing I can recommend about Passenger.
 
This guy just doesn’t have anything to him as a performer.  I use to think his willowy singing was the worst thing.  And it’s still pretty bad, but honestly I think I hate his songwriting a lot more than his singing.  Because this is basically a hair ballad.  Except without the over the top singing.  For someone who is afraid of letting his lover go, he sure sounds like he doesn’t fucking care.  Todd’s right.  You only let her go if you are fucking idot.  And Passenger sure sounds absolutely nonchalant that his love is leaving him.

And just like that we let Passenger go.  And for good reason.  He’s awful.  Next.

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Yeah remember when Lil Wayne had to apologize for this awful lyric he had in 2013?  He should have apologized for the whole year he was about to have.

Little did we know that this was the beginning of the end of Lil Wayne’s title as best rapper alive.  Mostly due to his label troubles preventing him from releasing Tha Carter V for five whole years.  Sure he still showed up on plenty of guest verses over the years to still keep his name out there.  But 2013 definitely felt like the last year of Lil Wayne being the biggest name in rap.  I mean who else would have released this turd and made it one of the biggest rap songs of the year?

4. “Love Me” – Lil Wayne (featuring Drake and Future)



Honestly, I really don’t have much to say about this one.  It’s just a repulsive unpleasant song.  Drake and Future are on the chorus.  Is it a good chorus?  I don’t know.  You tell me how good it is.  All I know is that all of this songs problems fall down on Tunechi himself that Drake and Future are basically an afterthought.

All you need to know about Lil Wayne’s verses is that he loves sex.  He loves gratuitous amounts of sex.  To the point that he gets very explicit about it.  And I’m not a prude.  I like plenty of music about sex and some of my favorite songs about the topic are pretty freaking explicit. 

But it’s the mood that just makes this not even remotely sexy.  Mike Will Made It is the producer behind this.  He’s made some good songs and some bad.  But this is easily one of his absolute worse.  This production is limp and lifeless.  It makes Lil Wayne’s sex talk all the more abhorrent.  He just sounds like the most heinous person to have as a lover.

Can someone get me some Lysol so I can spray it in my ears?  I just feel disgusted while writing about this.  Next.

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“Blurred Lines” by Robin Thicke will not be making this list.



Trust me, it was tempting.  My thoughts on it keep getting worse and worse as each year passes.  I do think the amount of hate it has gotten is completely warranted because man does Robin Thicke come off as an unlikeable shit.  At the end of the day, I couldn’t do it.  It’s three 40 year old men sounding lame more than actively infuriating.  What I’m saying is, fight the real enemy.

3. “U.O.E.N.O.” – Rocko (featuring Future and Rick Ross)



One lyric shouldn’t justify a single song’s placement on a worst of the year list usually.  But my god.  What a lyric this is:

Put Molly all in her champagne, she ain’t even know it
I took her home and enjoyed that, she ain’t even know it

The rest of this song doesn’t even matter.  Rick Ross can go fuck himself in the fiery depths of hell where he belongs.  Ever since those repulsive words came out of his mouth, Rick Ross has actively apologized and went into constant damage control over it.  But he put it out there.  He said those lines.  His handlers let him say those lines.  Nobody involved thought, “Hey Rick.  Maybe you shouldn’t brag about date raping a woman in your guest verse in this nothing of a song.”  I don’t know who is to blame, but it proves that we as a society are fucking broken if we can let a date rape anthem be one of the 100 biggest songs of any year.

Who the fuck cares about the rest of this song.  Nobody gives two shits about Rocko.  This was probably the start of the 1000000000 Future guest verses.  It’s trash.  It’s abhorrent.  It’s a song overshadowed by an atrocious lyric of problematic behavior.  Eat shit Rick Ross.  Next.

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Come on now?  Really?  The worst band ever?  I wouldn’t go that far.

In the past year or two, Imagine Dragons has developed quite the reputation as one of the worst bands ever.  And to that I say, really?  I couldn’t disagree more.  Sure Imagine Dragons basically sold their soul to commercialism, but they aren’t the first band to do so and they surely won’t be the last.
2013 was the beginning of the commercial success for Imagine Dragons with their commercially successful “Night Visions” album.  And I….loved it.  It’s a great album.  Every song on that album would get at least a 7 out of 10.  Except for one.  And that one song defined this band’s career path from this point forward more than any other.  And I’ve always.  ALWAYS.  Fucking hated it.

2. “Demons” – Imagine Dragons



The commercialization of indie rock in the 2010’s can all go back to this one song.  This one soulless garbage of a track that was meant to commercialize any product.  I’ve heard this song as a movie trailer, a television trailer, a commercial jingle, a white bread retail playlist staple, it is meaningless garbage.

For a song about fighting demons, there is zero punch.  For all I know, this demon he is fighting could be boredom because that’s what Dan Reynold’s voice conveys.  Dan Reynolds isn’t a bad singer by any means, but even on the worst Imagine Dragons song, at least Dan Reynolds believes what he is singing.  I don’t buy that Dan Reynolds believes anything he is singing here. 

This song is as basic as a pop song could get.  It’s not very complex or creative.  No risks were taken.  Even amongst all the shit Imagine Dragons has spewed out over the years, this will forever be their worst song to me.

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I started off this revised countdown talking about my previous #10.  So it only makes sense to talk about my previous #1 as the same objective point towards building up my new number one.



This is Ylvis’s “The Fox”.  It was a god awful joke song that spawned memes for a couple weeks, fell out of cultural relevance and somehow made the year end list.  I hated it so much at the time.  The joke about fox noises is dated now, but I at least get the joke more on a whole other level.  It was a parody of basically every EDM song getting popular at the time.  It wasn’t a funny parody mind you, the joke is still bad.  But at least Ylvis had some sort of ambition behind it.  It’s too bad I got the joke nearly a couple days after posting my original worst list nearly days later.  It didn’t deserve that title.

Here’s the thing about ambition.  It means an artist wants to put forth effort.  To try and make something out of nothing.  Which a lot of this worst list lacks.  And in all my years of covering pop music, my worst hit song of 2013 truly exemplifies what happens when you don’t put forth any sort of effort to make good music.

1. “Come and Get It” – Selena Gomez



Let’s be honest.  The only assessment that I wish I could give this song is that this is one of the most boring songs ever created.  Not a single second of this song remotely sparks any sort of creativity.  Selena Gomez is an empty vessel where music comes from.  I will never get the appeal of her as a performer.  I don’t think she’s untalented.  The complete opposite.  I think she is a good actress who has a good singing voice.  I don’t blame her for trying to do both.

Is it possible to put less effort into a song than this?  This is the Kidz Bop version of itself.  Honestly I don’t think the Kidz Bop kids would change any lyrics.  And this is a song about sex.  The most G-rated version of sex.  She’s ready guys.  Come and get it.  Get a cookie.  That’s what this sounds like.  Not hot love.  A plate of cookies and maybe some milk.  Because Selena is not giving off any emotion whatsoever.

This is just a low-rent Rihanna song right down the faux accent, nonsensical chorus, and subject matter.  Say what you will about Rihanna.  I’ve said a lot over the years, but I’d rather have five more Rihannas than one more Selena Gomez because Rihanna has personality.  The fact that Selena has sustained a career for over a decade without ever really evolving as an artist just pisses me off.  You can’t even tell the difference between her Disney songs and today’s bland same sounding pop.  Your entry into adulthood shouldn’t sound like something a five year old would make. 

Absolutely worthless pop song.  Come and get something, anything, else….na na na na.

Monday, May 18, 2020

Review: Scoob!


I didn’t expect this review to come out as quickly as it did.  It’s funny how inspiration strikes at the least likely of times.



So in my previous review, I went into full detail about how movie studios are trying to adjust to the new normal this pandemic brought onto us.  All of the big blockbusters that were coming out over the next couple months simply got pushed back to a later release date in hopes that the Coronavirus would be gone by the late summer/early fall or in some cases 2021.  Yeah….I wish it was that easy too.  Universal Studios was the first studio to find a way to capitalize on the new normal by keeping some of their projects at their current release date but releasing them on video on demand streaming (VOD).  And some of these projects were recognizable big name properties that have proven to make hundreds of millions worldwide.


That’s why for a while I was planning to review Trolls World Tour, the biggest movie to be released in the past two months.  All for the historical context because all the movie studios had their eyes on this.  Waiting to see how it performed and if it was financially successful enough for other studios to adjust to the new normal or keep pushing their big properties back until the pandemic was over.  But I just couldn’t do it.  I couldn’t spend my money on a sequel that I have zero interest in seeing because the original turned me away from ever wanting to see anything else DreamWorks had in store for it.  It’s a kid’s movie through and through.  I like some of the names involved, but the movie itself is some damn boring and uninteresting for an adult male like me.  I may not be able to go to the movie theaters for the time being, but I’m still selective with what projects I want to see when it comes to spending my money.

I assume Trolls World Tour was successful enough.  Like the article said, it made nearly 100 million without movie theaters being involved.  That’s why Warner Brothers committed to keeping Scoob at its release date for VOD.  Now this was a film I had interest in.  Because I’ve always been a fan of Scooby-Doo.  I love this property with all of my heart.  I became a fan of mysteries due to this show.  This property and premise can be released in any decade and it will still be chalk full of fresh ideas.  Which is why its been rebooted so much for newer generations no matter how many missed steps.  Whether it be two bad live action movies or a Teen Titans Go inspired flash animation series, the Scooby-Doo property will always bounce back due to pure simplicity and endless amounts of goodwill built up over the years.

Keep that last sentence in mind throughout this review because this movie was infuriating to sit through.  To the point that maybe Trolls World Tour might have been a better movie to review instead.  Because say what you will about what I might have thought about that.  At least Trolls is not embarrassed about the history of its IP.  I can’t think of a movie more embarrassed of its IP’s origins than I have while watching Scoob.

Let me get the small amounts of positive out of the way now.  I did like that this movie in essence is about the friendship between a man and his dog.  As someone who is such a dog person, I fully agree with the message of this movie.  Dogs have helped me throughout my life for emotional support and I was very attached to every dog I’ve had in my life because they are comforting and have eternal love to share that makes my heart melt.  Scoob absolutely conveyed that message not just with Shaggy and Scooby, but Blue Falcon and his dog Dynomutt, as well as Dick Dastardly and his dog Muttley.  Also, the movie got a few chuckles out of me.   There are some clever jokes in there when it is not hamfisting you with so many pop culture references.  More on that later.  And Will Forte was a serviceable Shaggy.  He proved me wrong because I was absolutely skeptical when Matthew Lillard was right there for hire.  There’s a reason why Casey Kasam gave him the Shaggy seal of approval.  Oh and Frank Welker (forever so many roles, obviously Scooby in this) is a timeless voice acting treasure who should be preserved for all eternity.

Okay...gloves off.  Scoob is not a true Scooby-Doo movie.  It touches upon the bare minimum to technically call itself a Scooby-Doo movie.  Shaggy meets Scooby.  Those two meet Fred, Daphne, and Velma.  They solve one mystery as kids.  And that’s it.  The rest of this movie is basically anything but a true Scooby-Doo movie.  It basically becomes a superhero action movie chalk full of those clichés with the gang separating and a giant portal in the sky from the bad guy.  And just like a superhero movie…and all the other big blockbusters out there now, it is a building block movie for a cinematic extended universe.  This time, it’s the Hanna-Barbera Cinematic Universe.  Which honestly, I like the idea of that in premise.  There are so many great Hanna-Barbera cartoons out there that I can see building up to a Wacky Races team up film or something along those lines.  I’m all for this idea if they execute it correctly.  And I guess they execute this idea more naturally in this movie with introducing Blue Falcon as an idol for Shaggy and Scooby and having Dick Dastardly as the villain naturally than say Warner Brothers did with the DCEU or 2017’s The Mummy did with Dark Universe. 

But say what you will about DC or Dark, at least I still got a sense that they weren’t ashamed of their origins.  Part of what makes Scooby-Doo so timeless is its self-awareness of the time period it started off in.  When A Pup Named Scooby-Doo came out in the 80s, at least it was aware of what time period it was supposed to be set in with its origins of the Mystery Inc. gang.  I have no idea when Scoob was supposed to start off in.  When they first introduce us to Shaggy, this guy plays “California Luv” from his boombox to make you think its in the 90s.  But then Shaggy pulls out his smartphone and it leaves you scratching your head some more.  Also when the Mystery Inc gang goes trick or treating, Daphne is dressed as 2017 Wonder Woman.  At least commit to your new timeline for this property.  Jesus.

And then we get to the present, where the stupidest of things happens to get the gang to split up.  I’ll give you guys a slight hint.  A certain pop culture reference appears as himself and pop culture references the gang to split up.  This pop culture reference is so fucking dated at this point in time.  It was getting old in 2002 and nearly twenty years after its peak of relevance its getting tired and dated.  All these pop culture references are so fucking tired and dated.  I could make an entire review of how many pop culture references this movie makes.  From the obvious references from the trailer like a dabbing Blue Falcon to dedicating an entire minute to a not funny joke about borrowing someone’s Netflix login information. 

And speaking of tired, let’s talk about the rest of the Mystery Inc gang.  It feels like Fred, Daphne, and Velma are in this movie for like ten to fifteen minutes tops.  And they got some pretty recognizable names to voice these three characters (Zac Efron, Amanda Seyfried, and Gina Rodriguez respectively).  I can’t even judge how all three of these did as their characters really because the sole purpose of these three in this movie is to figure out where Shaggy and Scooby are.  I sure hope they got paid well for doing so little.  In comparison to Mark Wahlberg who voices the Blue Falcon who probably got paid too much because he’s Mark Wahlberg, the biggest name tied to this movie.  And I guess he did fine with how over the top his character is to an annoying degree.

But at the end of the day, all the bad pop culture references and superhero blockbuster plots can’t mask the fact that Warner Brothers was ashamed to make a true Scooby-Doo movie.  Say what you will about those live-action movies.  At least they weren’t ashamed of where the IP came from.  It made plenty of good callbacks to its origins, no matter how bad the results ended up.  And one of the best reviewed movies of 2019 was a mystery movie.  So there is still a market for those.  Hell, an animated mystery movie based off of Scooby-Doo would be huge in this day and age.  If there was a box office, it would make hundreds of millions.  Not to say Scoob wouldn’t do that too.  It still would in this day and age.  But this property deserved better people making a true Scooby-Doo movie.  One that would be everything this IP represented.  Not what we got.

What's my final grade for this misfire?  How about a Scooby Dooby D

And that might honestly be too generous.

Friday, May 15, 2020

Review: Onward


Sorry for the delay everyone.  It’s been a very busy month for me personally.  With working more hours due to being an essential employee as well as a major personal milestone in my life officially on the books (WE BOUGHT A HOUSE!), I really haven’t gotten a chance to write anything in a few weeks.  Will try to be more timely with these posts, but I can’t make any real promises on that since we are in the process of the legal paperwork and getting the place ready to be furnished since we move into it in a month.  What happens happens, but I’ll try to get some more entries written when I can.

Anyway…does anyone remember over a month ago when this came out in theaters with a 40 million opening weekend?  



And now movie theaters are closed for the forseeable future as VOD streaming is about to become the new way for movie studios to profit on our unfortunate circumstances.  What a difference a month makes, right?


I could turn this entire post about COVID-19 and how this pandemic is going to affect the forseeable future once the curve flattens.  It’s very hard not to at this point in time because that’s going to be the talking point for everyone for quite some time even after its all said and done.   But we’ve all had to learn to adapt to it.  Figure out what this new normal is going to be for the forseeable future.  Every last one of us.  Including movie studios.

Here’s the thing about movies.  For the past hundred or so years of movies existing, studios have always utilized movie theaters as the go to for viewing films.  Eventually technology had to keep advancing so movies did as well.  With that came ways to view movies from your home with video tapes on your television and eventually DVDs and Blu-Ray.  It’s what we like to call first run.  And then streaming came along and changed that as well.  Streaming services like Netflix and Hulu started to release original movies that you can view from the comfort of your home.  But now that we are stuck to the comfort of our own homes, movie studios are learning that they have to adapt with the times once more.  Instead of major studios releasing their films in theaters, some are starting to send them straight to streaming.


So now I get the chance to view some of these movies I’ve missed out on when they were in theaters or have to pay a small surcharge to watch theatrical movies from the comfort of my own home.  So kind of like paying for a movie ticket, right?  Studios are still going to make revenue off movies.  Just in a new format.  We’ll have to wait and see in a couple years if this is the new normal when this pandemic is all said and done.

…okay now I promise no more pandemic talk in this review.  What I’m getting at is that I missed Onward while it was in theaters and now I finally caught it two months later thanks to Disney sending it to Disney+ over a month after its theatrical release.  So how was it?

Honestly, I was a tad disappointed.  For being Pixar’s first original film in years, I was admittedly expecting a lot more.  Because this is Pixar we are talking about.  The most critically praised animation studio of the last twenty years.  The gold standard when it comes to what other studios are aiming for with their animation companies.  And when the trailers first came out for this, I thought 
this premise had a lot more potential than what we got from it.

That’s not to say this is bad mind you.  Pixar has had only two bad movies for me in its over twenty five years of partnership with Disney.  That’s a pretty damn solid track record.  And honestly, a lot of this movie does work.  This is some of the best animation I’ve ever seen in a Pixar movie.  So many sequences to me felt like they blurred the fine line between computer animation and reality.  I felt like I was living in this world they were setting everything in.  It’s voice acting is top notch, with Chris Pratt and Octavia Spencer being its two major standouts of the bunch.  And I absolutely bought into the emotional hook of a pair of brother who grew up most of their lives with one parent.  Even though I didn’t really relate due to me being fortunate enough to still have both parents in my life, I know plenty of people who grew up in this scenario and I believe the movie did a good job conveying this as such.

To me, what doesn’t work nearly as well is this story.  It’s as basic as it gets in terms of buddy adventure comedies with medieval times characters and scenarios living in the real world.  I thought there would be a tad more magic than that, pun intended.  But the magic didn’t translate nearly as well on screen as they probably thought.  If this was any other animation studio, I feel like I would be a tad lighter on this issue, but this is Pixar we are talking about.  The same studios that gave multiple dimensions to toys.  They made us care about a plastic fork come to life just last year.  Heck in their last original movie years ago Coco, they did an amazing job making the afterlife feel larger than life.  How can they be this uninteresting with medieval times in real life?

And speaking of this story without going into spoilers, the ending left me wanting a lot more than what the payoff gave us.  You spend all movie building up to this one thing rooting for it to happen, and what we got was a swerve, but it didn’t work nearly as well.  I mean I get exactly what it was going for and I didn’t hate it, but it was definitely a problem for me because I really wanted to see this character get what he’s wanted the entire movie.  And while it was addressed in some fashion, it wasn’t the payoff I was hoping for.

I think the real telling sign that this movie was only okay in my books was that the emotional 
moments where Pixar usually gets a few tears didn’t get a single drop from me.  It has been since 2011 where that has happened for me personally from a Pixar movie.  Granted not every Pixar movie has those moments.  You won’t see me crying during Jack-Jack vs The Raccoon from The Incredibles 2, which was a scene of modern art.  But this was a bit of a misfire on my end if I couldn’t tear up once, yeah I’m sorry it didn’t connect.

Like I said before, I didn’t hate this.  This review probably sounded a lot more negative than it had any right to be because it was okay.  But I hold Pixar to a much higher standard than what I felt like we got from Onward.  Oh well, they can’t all be winners.  It’s worth watching once at least.

C+