Yesterday Animation Magazine reported that Cartoon Network had entered into an agreement with several toy companies, including Funko, to begin a Steven Universe merchandising campaign set to begin in the fourth quarter of this year. In the article they note that Hot Topic will be getting these products a month in advance of the planned release date.
We saw it coming with the wildly popular Adventure Times Funko products and numerous other Frederator and Cartoon Network licenses, but now the moment has arrived. While the article only mentions the core cast of Crystal Gems and Steven, I would be shocked and horrified if this was the only wave of products. There’s hope for an astonishing amount of exclusives and variants. By far the most exciting is a Pop! Rides Greg and his Van set, complete with waffle iron.
So avid fans and collectors, which SU Pops are you most looking forward to and what exclusives do you think we’ll see? Sound off in the comments and let us know! Also be sure to check out our Steven Universe Halloween post, and our thoughts on the series as well!
Images courtesy of Cartoon Network
Imagine if all your favorite comic, film and TV characters got invited to a spiffy old fashioned potluck BBQ and ice cream social. Quaint little hand-written invitations arrived to their mailboxes looking like they’re straight from Pleasantville in envelopes with gingham interiors. Absolutely charming Dorothy Gale chic, no question. How sweet is this! We have to go this, it would be like kicking the sweetest most precious child in the face and actually knocking out teeth if we didn’t go! type of party. One caveat; everyone has to bring dessert. Despite there being no indication of an actual host, which suggests Agatha Christie may indeed have orchestrated the entire event from the grave via a possessed Martha Stewart with Jessica Fletcher waiting in the wings, your characters all show up, vaguely wondering why they’re even there and who is that obnoxious person across from them at their picnic table. This is a sampling of their best dishes. Welcome to yet another #FictionalFeasts!
I have been a grump. I have been down. And Steven Universe has helped bring me back.
When you’re in a depression it can take a lot of effort to like things. I’ve always naturally been on the critical side (to protect my gooey idealistic and sorely disappointed core) so it admittedly can take quite a bit to impress when it comes to pop mediums. I am very sensitive to how things are written and plotted and I’ll be quick to point out things I didn’t like or felt should have been different. Sometimes this comes in handy; approaching media critically is important. I am indeed the skeptic. I know that much about myself. But sometimes it can be a bit too much.
Not too long ago I found I was going beyond that and was in a total state of grey. Absolutely uninterested, often irritated and just plain bored. I just wasn’t excited about much, and I had a distinct hard edge. When things that you actually like still don’t bring much joy, you know you’ve hit a wall. I’ve worked hard to remedy it and while you can’t ask for perfection, I am feeling better, and a cartoon show about a plucky half-alien tween with a gem in his belly button helmed by Rebecca Sugar have contributed towards my feeling better. I feel I can like things again a bit easier.
Why? First things first; Steven Universe is just a cool show. It has pretty art, an animation style that allows for a lot of fun deformed “off model” faces and bodies for the sake of comedy and expression, gorgeous backgrounds and palettes, and a surprisingly deep and nuanced narrative. Add to that wonderful poc characters and a majority poc voice talents, nonbinary female presenting characters with tons of body types, a sensitive, gentle pacifistic male lead, canon queer romantic relationships and all played out in short 11 minute segments. It’s fantastic (and easy to binge watch).
I didn’t originally think this way. I caught a few episodes when it first aired and I was a bit tepid. I was expecting something a bit different than those initial episodes and it was okay; but I wasn’t as into it as I thought I would be. I was soon wrong. Very wrong. Initial appearances seem to suggest an Adventure Time via Troll dolls and 80s/90s space cartoon flourishes but as you go along what we’ve got instead is in fact a huge love letter to a lot of 80s and 90s shounen and shoujo anime and action cartoons. The art is stunning.
This is not terribly surprising. Many new animated shows, being made by creators who grew up during or witnessed the 90s anime explosion have been creating work with Eastern animation influences for a while. Dexter’s Lab, Powerpuff Girls, and Samurai Jack were ahead of the curve; their looks owed quite a bit to retro anime from the 60s to 80s. After the huge late 90s anime craze series like the original Teen Titans while good in their own right played the current anime stylization of the time straight and tried to ride that wave pretty overtly. I feel culturally we’ve matured since then a little. Shows like also amazing Bee & Puppycat would be an example further up the notch from Teen Titans in terms of filtering stylization and influence. Still very clear anime influence but also it’s own thing. I’d place Steven Universe next in line; its references (Utena and Dragonball Z are numerous and quite prominent) are clear and Pearl is a walking shoujo action trope but it is, more so than the other two series, its own style and is not defined or limited to the expected stylization of the genre which the other two adhere to more.
Ultimately, animation style or not, the characters of Steven Universe, their earnestness and the core theme of “love” and compassion are what affected me the most and cracked my hard shell during an ongoing recovery. Steven’s father Greg, and Steven himself are both earnest and sensitive characters, neither afraid to cry, and are overall amazing and something we desperately need more of to teach boys its okay to be “soft” and romantic, pacifistic and good natured and work towards getting rid of toxic masculinity that teaches otherwise. Seeing how other people reacted to the show and it’s slow burn to blaze is also inspiring. Seeing what characters like Garnet (and by extension Ruby and Sapphire), Amethyst and Pearl, Lapis, Connie, Lars, “The Cool Kids” and above all Steven himself actually mean to people and what they’re doing for them by existing, just speaks spades. It’s really inspiring me to be…softer. Just a little bit. In any case it’s made me feel better.
Please watch it if you haven’t fallen for this show yet. It’s on a summer break too right now so it’s a great time to catch up. Maybe it can help make you feel better too.
Max Eber
Staff Writer
@maxlikescomics
At 11:11 PST, Cerulean City Comic-Con announced their cosplay guest and panelist line-up for their upcoming Pokemon themed convention. Panels include, but totally aren’t limited to, “What Not to Do With Your Water Stone,” by Lindsay Elyse, “Is My Pokemon a Ditto,” with Variable, and the highly anticipated 18+ panel, “I’m Not Gonna Raichu a Love Song,” hosted by Kohalu. Over 100 cosplay guests will be debuting the extremely under appreciated Misty costume and can be found crowded around Booth #1337 in Rocket Hall.
Beautiful Cerulean City hosts this special Pokecon, with performances by the Sensational Sisters, and is on April 1st, 2016.
It’s been over a month since Disney’s first Marvel property adaptation of Big Hero Six directed by Don Hall and Chris Williams entered theaters and thus far domestically in the US it has made around $186,474,712 dollars. For a film that cost $165 million for production budget it made back the money and a nice lump of $21 more million dollars stateside. These aren’t Frozen numbers at all and some probably would consider this borderline but it’s definitely not a flop, and it’s definitely not terrible. I was finally was able to see it last Saturday, and for me, it’s a suitable franchise launcher but it’s admittedly not perfect. So let’s go through the motions shall we?! (WARNING SPOILERS AHEAD)
The world in which it was set was gorgeous, populated, and looked intricate and lush, a sharp contrast to Frozen‘s backgrounds and environments which seemed flat, and unfinished. The animators weren’t kidding with this one, or rather, they were given much more time to finish their work and the cinematography was much, much better. Lighting effects, shadow (is that scatter effects? Particle effects?) and people’s elasticity were all far better than Frozen. Hiro (Ryan Potter), and Tadashi (Daniel Henney) were in general pretty great characters and I liked their designs. I could tell they were mixed race according to their names and designs, particularly Tadashi. The “team” of Wasabi (Damon Wayans Jr), Honey Lemon (Genesis Rodriguez), GoGo (Jamie Chung) and Fred (T.J. Miller) were likewise extremely likable if not underwritten (more on that later). Baymax (Scott Adsit) was of course a scene stealer and what people in our audience most reacted to, aside from Mochi the cat.
I liked the situational humor vignettes with Baymex in between the action, I liked the personalities of all the cast. Aunt Cass was extremely funny and also a minor scene stealer. The action; pretty good too. It’s fun and relatively safe. It’s not without it’s problems however.
THE QUESTIONABLE
I won’t say “bad” because in general the film was solid; but ultimately the writing and some choices did hurt it. I think the film fell to quite a few cliches (rainy funeral, sleazy CEOS) and had many elements that other films like The Iron Giant and The Incredibles (Hmmm Brad Bird) have already tackled and already did better.
RACE AND REPRESENTATION
First, while beautiful, the fictional San Frantokyo is questionable at best, it seemed like “Let’s make it Japanese but….not too Japanese” which is an attitude that is generally applied to the entire film. The original comic, which admittedly is pretty awful and racist, was set in Japan (for the most part) and did feature an entirely Japanese and Ainu (a native Japanese people) cast. For their version Disney racebent all the main characters into a Half-Japanese, Half-white main lead, an African-American, an average white guy, supposedly Korean (not Japanese) and implied Latin-American. This kind of diversity is awesome, but it almost felt like the wrong movie to do it for. It’s Japanese themed but no one in the film is 100% Japanese. Aside from the moderator at the battle bot ring I don’t think any other Asian characters, Japanese or otherwise were given speaking roles? Did the cop at the police station have to be white? Granted the crowd scenes are very diverse and hip but it’s still somewhat suspect. That’s kind of…eh.
I understand why they did however, because American tastes and I can’t complain about the diversity it does provide for the Western market, it just feels a bit erasing when Western media is particularly not very serving to Asian characters to begin with, particularly male leads. Hiro nevertheless is one of the few Asian-American male leads in any Western movie, like, ever since forever and probably not again for a while. That fact is really disappointing
Having Aunt Cass be from their white side of the family (but apparently not because her last name is Hamada too!) while innocuous wasn’t particularly needed; they could have easily made her Japanese and not have changed a thing script or personality wise. The person I was with, most likely because of Aunt Cass, did not realize Hiro and Tadashi were mixed because of this. Honey Lemon while I figured she was Latin-American due to her accent, she is pretty white passing so they could have easily snuck in a line to make it clear that she’s not white or not fully, at least. She’s loads better than her comic iteration in how they treated her, however. I will give them kudos for cleaning up a pretty problematic comic into something digestible.
REUSING CHARACTER MESHES
To me it was pretty clear that Aunt Cass’s head mesh was a variant of Rapunzel/Anna/Elsa and their mother of some kind as was Honey Lemon’s though hers was less so. Honey Lemon was rather controversial, her design was criticized for looking quite like the last three princesses and while her design is safe and does look a lot better and different on film (she’s tanner, with darker/oranger hair and willowy looking on the verge of extremely stylized in film), she’s still pretty “typical” and definitely of the mold. Surprisingly Aunt Cass I think is much more of a copy-paste and the oddest of choices GoGo also seems to have a lot of her mesh based on Elsa’s face. There are times when it was clear they worked on all of these ladies further, but I couldn’t help but seeing a lot of similarities and I feel they need to give these base face meshes and that style a rest.
UNDERWRITING
I really enjoyed the “nerdy” team of Tadashi’s classmates and their role in forming the team, and I loved it when they stopped him and Baymax from literally going villain. But in general they were there to advance Hiro’s plot and the whole “team” film is a bit of a misnomer. It is Hiro’s film, and did that well, to the expense of the rest of the team.They’re not particularly round characters. The character we find most about is Fred, the slacker white dude who slums it and watches everyone do science because he loves it and, as we learn, he can afford to. We see them at Tadashi’s funeral, we see them leaving messages for Hiro, we see them picking Hiro up in the car. What we don’t see for any of them were their own independent struggles with Tadashi’s passing or any particular narrative struggles or insecurities of their own that they overcome by the end of the film. They had no independent narrative arc outside of helping Hiro besides Fred finally becoming the fire breathing dragon like he always wanted to be. Helping Hiro is a good main narrative, but they could have had more to it. GoGo could have a chip on her shoulder for a reason. Honey Lemon feels like no one takes her seriously because she’s girly (etc). Compare the character growth you see in Dash and Violet in The Incredibles to the growth for the team in Big Hero Six and it becomes pretty clear they’re lacking.
This could have been easily fixed a little with a short scene showing them struggling with their schoolwork or independent projects following Tadashi’s death. GoGo is uninspired and can’t work, Wasabi starts becoming messy or disorganized, Honey Lemon starts making rather scary compounds, Fred just doesn’t show up anymore. Something to show that they were affected and despite moving on (unlike Hiro) as they are shown as doing, they too have their share of problems. Had they been able to pull off full character arcs for all the characters, it would have been really good writing and probably a richer viewing experience. Disney is confusing personality and quirks with character. They ran into this problem with Anna and Elsa, and they ran into it again here.
THE BAD GUYS AND THE DAMAGE THEY MAKE
I was iffy on the bad guys. There are only two options, the person who went with me guessed wrong, I guessed right. I admit since I work at a library I was spoiled by a picture book but it was pretty easy to see where it was going. I would have liked more choice or red herrings and more sense of danger and immediacy. I really wish there was just a bit more to the plot. How? Not sure. But let’s take a stab; The world of Big Hero Six seems like it’s pretty comfortable with pretty advanced technology, are other superheroes already a thing? Or is them suiting up highly irregular? Judging by Fred it’s irregular. But technology is pretty advanced.
I think rewriting the island experiment with Abigail as causing much more damage (a la Evangelion’s finding Adam at the South Pole; the experiment already was an obvious nod to Yui Ikari to me) to the entire area about ten years prior, and have Hiro and Tadashi’s parents being involved as scientists on the top secret project and dying in that incident might have been a way to help the film’s plot. This would explain the adoption by Aunt Cass and some of San Frantokyo’s current infrastructure. The swallow symbol could then have been more mysteriously ubiquitous in Hiro and Tadashi’s life and a further mystery to unravel when it starts appearing again. I think if the recorded footage showed the Hamadas helping shut the experiment down as best they can to save Abigail at the cost of their own lives (possibly activating her sleep stasis mode) it could have immediately threaded everything together and gave Hiro an additional personal connection to what he was viewing.
I noticed that the movie also lacked some response from the city regarding this creepy dude with a wave of nanobots destroying a lot of property while he chased Hiro and the gang, which was conveniently lacking a lot of cars and pedestrians. A little more reaction from the city around them would have done wonders, although I will admit the action in that scene was far better animated and “shot” than anything in Frozen was. Also when the large building was being sucked up, some shots of civilians responding in horror would have been nice to see. You really can’t skimp on these reaction shots!
TADASHI
I almost want to say they shouldn’t have killed Tadashi?! I understand it produced an awesome example of how adolescents deal with grief gives weight to Tadashi being recorded (and thus living on) and having his name on Baymex’s chip, but in a way it felt excessive particularly with their parents having already died and with the Abigail narrative feeling like an incomplete juxtaposition to something. I think I’d have preferred the explosion leaving Tadashi in a coma (one of the few times the coma trope I think could work) instead and possibly have him lose a leg. Having Tadashi there but “gone” and showing no signs of waking up (and Baymax unable to help him) could be just as hard on Hiro with more or less the same reaction as seen in the final product. Pulling Abigail out of the dimension could have offered a great parallel “coming out of it” moment as well if you wanted to be sentimental. A wheelchair bound Tadashi being outfitted by GoGo and the others during the credits with super wheels etc would have been amazing and also a great example of visible disability on film. He could also have been their “gadget guy” in future films too.
I feel there was just a lost opportunity there regarding his character and this is coming from a guy who killed an adolescent in his own film script to send his friend, the lead, a boy a little younger than Hiro, reeling. Perhaps my total dislike of him dying is exactly what they intended. They succeeded in creating a character we do care about and don’t actually want to see dead, which is somewhat the point. It was rather melodramatic, nevertheless, and I think I heard some snickering between gasps when it occurred. I do think a gentler less…fatal approach could have really worked.
VERDICT
I know. I know. That’s a lot to ask for when it comes to a children’s film. This makes me seem like I didn’t enjoy it much, but I did. I just wish there was more. I’m curious to see what the sequels will be like! I think this go around while they got the technical stuff much better, the writing is what still needed a few more drafts in order to be really great.
As is Big Hero Six was about a C+ to a B-. I think the script could have had a few more drafts to really be….super…..(groan). I anticipate sequel or serialized sequel material where everyone can grow and get additional narratives!
Max Eber
max@sub-cultured.com
Twitter: @maxlikescomics