The irreverent and profane adventures of Stan, Kyle, Kenny and Cartman in the town of South Park, Colorado continue in this 19th season of the animated series, as it takes cheeky potshots at Caitlyn Jenner, political correctness, fetishism, gentrification and ninjas. Episodes include "Where My Country Gone?," "The City Part of Town," "You're Not Yelping," "Tweek x Craig," "Naughty Ninjas" and more.
The trailer makes you believe it to be so much better like Snatch or Reservoir Dogs, but it fails to deliver and fools you by describing itself as a dark comedy, which it does not feel at all.
The acting is good despite some people only being used for a scene or two (Tony Shaloub is barely used).
This release collects every episode from the debut season of Star Wars Rebels, a series that continues the saga of a ragtag Starship crew who confronts the evil Empire and attempts to thwart their plans to kill-off the last of the Jedi Knights.
A fan of Clone Wars, I was hooked when I first saw the TV movie they released before the series. While the Rebel characters are written as competent, the Empire characters come off as incompetent and dumb. I don't understand why the writers went this route but the villains need to be written better.
Prima Games' Collector's Edition Vault Dweller's Survival Guide delivers the information you need to survive and thrive in the Wasteland in Fallout 4. With this bundle, you'll receive a host of collector's items to enhance your Fallout 4 experience. Pore over the detailed maps and walkthroughs to uncover all the strategies, locations, items and loot throughout the Wasteland. Study up on all perks, armor, weapons, items and creatures with the specs and reference data for each. The mobile-friendly eGuide provides an easily accessible second-screen experience. With this collector's edition by your side, you'll be fully prepared for the apocalypse.
This release from the sketch comedy series Key & Peele includes all 13 episodes from the show's third season, following the stars through awesome sketches about racist superheroes, ridiculously named NFL players, and much more.
Worth buying if you're a die hard fan of Arrested Development, but you can tell the actors have aged (a couple not so well). The different story lines intertwined together are themselves interesting.
An interesting take on the buddy cop formula, Almost Human is fun with its set of characters and use of futuristic ideas. The show suffers from its episodes not being in the right order, and it's sad that Fox wouldn't fix this like they did with Firefly.
Fans of the Disney era/New Zealand series will enjoy this box set. I'm surprised the special features aren't as extensive as previous sets. SPD gets the lion's share of interviews and extras, and it goes downhill from there.
The crime drama's third season takes on a darker and edgier tone, as it opens with the Machine missing and completely self-governed. Root (Amy Acker) has been confined to an insane asylum but is in constant contact with the Machine, while Finch (Michael Emerson) finds himself in a position where he's no longer the Machine's sole human contact. Meanwhile, Reese (Jim Caviezel) and Shaw (Sarah Shahi) continue their work preventing crimes from happening with the help of their usual NYPD contact, Det. Fusco (Kevin Chapman); and Carter (Taraji P. Henson), who has been demoted from detective to a uniformed police officer, wages a very personal war against the corrupt police organization HR. At the same time, new threats against Team Machine come to light, including Vigilance--a watchdog group committed to exposing overreaching government surveillance methods--and Decima Technologies, who tried and failed to take control of the Machine in the previous season and are now going to extreme measures to bring another surveillance system called Samaritan online.
I've been a Person of Interest fan since the first season. It's fun to watch, the characters are well-written (if you can forgive Nolan for transplanting his Batman characters onto a TV show), and the season's keep building the suspense. It's a show that's best watched instead of someone explaining it.