There’s a battle brewing, and it’s being fought by streaming services, cable TV and Primetime television. If you’re too weak to resist, UnBinged is here to help, telling you what to hate, what to love and what to love to hate.
This week, animated shows of all shapes and sizes are given the UnBinged treatment as funny animal cartoons, stop-motion megalomaniacs, sci-fi series and curmudgeon scientists are up for review.
Rick and Morty (Season 5) – Cartoon Network
Rick Sanchez and his gullible grandson Morty have returned to Comedy Central for a fifth season of intergalactic fist fights, irreverent belly laughs, and pointed jabs at society. And though it all seems business as usual, there is something amiss in the Smith household, but not necessarily in a bad way.
For young Morty, the thrill is gone. He’s no longer a slack-jawed naive kid who haplessly follows his grandpa from planet to planet. He’s a bit older, a bit wiser, and a bit more bitter about the situations Rick continues to put him in. In fact, all of the Smiths seem to have reached the end of their rope, acting out in ways that can only result in turmoil.
Morty is exhausted, Summer is even more of an asshole, mother Beth regrets her terrible relationships, and dad Jerry continues to suck as his family outgrows his hapless antics, slowly realizing how unnecessary he is in their lives.
It is this character evolution that makes each season stand out, creating new dynamics with every episode. The character continuity gives depth to the Smiths as they remember each and every bad experience, forcing them to change, sometimes into the worst versions of themselves.
And that is what elevates the show and helps Rick and Morty escape the drudgery that seems to have caught hold of other long-running animated adventures such as Family Guy and The Simpsons. Yes, Rick is still an old, hardened curmudgeon, but Morty isn’t the passive schlep he used to be. He’s learned, he’s matured, and he’s more tired of Rick’s bullshit than ever, even if fans are not.
Rick’s shenanigans have Morty completely exhausted– from having to destroy countless versions of himself to having to face his own mortality on a daily basis. Even his boyhood daydreams of his crush Jessica are destroyed when she becomes yet another casualty of Rick’s intergalactic nonsense. Nothing is safe and everything sucks for poor Morty.
Thanks to the guidance of creators Dan Harmon and Justin Roiland, the fifth season of Rick and Morty continues to develop while it blows our minds with new universes, timelines and TV-MA situations, making it more than just a sci-fi toon with the occasional dick joke. The characters and their degeneration fuels the twisted humor of the show. That said, the dick jokes are pretty funny, too.
Tuca & Bertie (Season 2) – Adult Swim/Netflix
Two thirtysomething best birdie buddies try to navigate their way through the big city, looking for career success, romance, and the answers to life, all the while thwarted by existential dread. And thus you have Tuca & Bertie, the somewhat overlooked Adult Swim toon about two whimsical feathered friends who might be made of ink, but feel more real than most live-action characters.
At the center of the show is an anxiety-ridden song thrush named Bertie (Ali Wong) and her brash and brassy toucan bestie Tuca (Tiffany Haddish). The two couldn’t be more different, but they are each other’s biggest cheerleaders and at times, biggest obstacles.
When watching the show, it is hard not to draw comparisons to BoJack Horseman, as both use anthropomorphic animals to address serious issues such as abuse and childhood trauma. They also share a similar look (creator Lisa Hanawalt was the production designer for Bojack). But Tuca & Bertie employs a more farcical tone, making full use of its animated surroundings to get a little wacky and give the audience a chance to laugh before it piles on the anguish.
In the first season, Bertie’s workplace maltreatment and Tuca’s inability to connect with others were major plot points. In season two, those themes persist as Bertie’s panic attacks and low self-esteem threaten her relationships and development, while Tuca’s dependence on Bertie and recent sobriety cause her social anxiety.
In the end, Tuca & Bertie is bigger than the cartoon category it is forced to reside in. It’s an exploration of complex emotions and the problems one faces if past issues are not resolved, making it an exceptional animated offering and an example of what can be achieved when great writing and vision is given the opportunity to flourish. Now if we can only get more folks on board.
Marvel’s M.O.D.O.K. (Season 1) – Hulu
Created by Jordan Blum and Patton Oswalt for Hulu and based on a very real, somewhat bizarre comic book character, Marvel’s M.O.D.O.K. is an adults-only stop-motion animation that gives Marvel the opportunity to do something new: get really, really goofy.
Voiced by Oswalt, the titular character is your everyday evil megalomaniac looking for a way to balance his chaotic work life with family, and failing on every front. After bankrupting his evil organization, M.O.D.O.K. (which stands for Mental/Mechanized Organism Designed Only for Killing) is forced to sell a controlling interest of his business to a hipster tech company. At home, his wannabe influencer wife Jodie (Aimee Garcia) has decided to leave the diminutive delinquent, throwing the household in flux just before the upcoming Bar Mitzvah of their son (Ben Schwartz).
Much of the humor here is derived by the ridiculous nature of the character itself. Born from the minds of Stan Lee and Jack Kirby, possibly during a fever dream, the original misshapen imp was a foe for Captain America, but his oddball features and egomaniacal ways made him less of a serious threat and more of an annoyance, like hostile DMV workers or long lines at Starbucks. The Hulu show leans into the absurd nature of the character, whose derrière sits on the same level as his shoulders. Or possibly his knees. It’s hard to tell.
M.O.D.O.K. is a cheeky amusement that reminds us not everything bearing the Marvel name needs to have a message, or push out a theatrical agenda, or raise the bar in audience experiences. Sometimes it can just be a cartoon show featuring comical characters that make you smile.
Love, Death & Robots (Season 2; Netflix)
The first season of Love, Death & Robots was a rollercoaster ride. Featuring extraordinary feats in animation, the series offered original and sometimes captivating sci-fi stories of romance, violence, and of course, robots. And though the series was somewhat uneven in its storytelling, it was amusing nonetheless. With only eight episodes, the second season is no different, a grab bag of tales, tones, and topics to placate any geek in need of a sci-fi fix.
Created by Tim Miller (Deadpool), Love, Death & Robots is a series of “what if” scenarios pushed to the limit. What if people stopped dying? What if Santa was a flesh-eating monster with a taste for naughty children? What if giants were real and occasionally washed up on the local beach?
While the second season shares similar issues of irregular narratives that plagued the first season, almost every episode raises the bar in animation to an astounding level of achievement. Stories such as “The Drowned Giant,” a bittersweet tale that reflects the dregs of society within a preposterous situation, can be considered a benchmark, while other stories range from silly fun (“All Through the House”) to completely forgettable (“Ice”).
On the bright side, at a brisk average of 10 minutes per episode, it’s easy to just wait a beat and move on to the next possible winner or loser. As a whole, Love, Death, & Robots is an array of valleys and peaks that’s nonetheless an entertaining contribution to the sci-fi genre that’s worth each story’s runtime, especially for animation fans.
The post Which Toons are Tops? Reviews of new <i>Rick and Morty, Tuca & Bertie, M.O.D.O.K.</i> and More appeared first on LA Weekly.
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