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Showing posts from September, 2025

Time Drops #120: Week of September 28, 2025

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Content Calendar Announcement, Week of September 28, 2025 by Sean Wilkinson, a.k.a. The Ticketmaster. I've kind of hit a point of aimlessness, Ticketholders. Like, I know that I'm going to review the two good Urban Legend movies in October, and I have the whole Wonderland thing scheduled for the rest of the year, plus X-Men and the It's Alive! movies for December...but with I Know What You Did Last Summer behind me and 2026 looming in the distance (and so many shows, anime, and movies that I want or "need" to catch up on, and the major projects that I have allowed to languish on my list), I feel that dangerous mix of "what next?" and "why bother?" gnawing at the back of my brain. So it's time to start slowing down so I can catch up, and get things in a more organized state than just a list. That means a scant few Anime Spotlight entries and only one Just the Ticket in October and nothing but Zenescope content in November. Otherwise...

Just the Ticket #195: I Know What You Did Last Summer

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Article by Sean Wilkinson, a.k.a. The Ticketmaster Who Doesn't Know What You Did Last Summer. I did not like these movies, Ticketholders! I mean, I liked the first two when they came out almost thirty years ago, which is why the third one disappointed me so much that I only ever watched it once and didn't even want to watch it for this review (but I watched the Children Of the Corn franchise and most of The Curse movies, so it's nothing by comparison). The second time I watched the first two movies, I thought the core four were unsympathetic, the villain reveal came out of nowhere, the second movie was obvious and stupid, and Julie James was the worst final girl of all time. But has my opinion changed with time, book knowledge , and exposure to eight hours of Amazon-produced zoomer torture ? Let's find out, and then check out this year's legacy sequel to see if it's as bad as everyone says. Directed by Jim Gillespie ( Joyride —not to be confused with Joy Ri...

GFT Retrospective #108: 2012 Wonderland Annual

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Article by Sean Wilkinson, a.k.a. The Retrospective Ticketmaster. Remember, Ticketholders: the people and things in our immediate lives, and in the larger world, can only affect us (for good or ill) if we grant them the power to do so. I know that I'm attributing a metaphysical philosophy to real, tangible things and that it sounds like I'm boiling broad, complex global issues down to "ignore it and it will go away," but what I'm really speaking to is our rights as people to reinforce what makes us happy, to make choices that benefit ourselves and those we love, and to withhold support from that which means us harm. Evil triumphs where good men do nothing, and the most insidious trick of evil is convincing the world that it doesn't exist. The means by which my country came to be what it was may not have been the most noble, but the intent behind looking at the rest of the world and saying, "we don't want to be that because we've been on the bad ...

Cover Charge #10: Call Of Cthulhu

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Article by Sean Wilkinson, a.k.a. The Pagemaster. If there are any three words or phrases that I find myself using on repeat lately (not counting the copypasta method I have used for my Time Drops posts since their inception), they would be "aristocratic," "I'm in charge here, so I can do whatever I want," and "to be brutally honest." Now, the last one I think I've only used once in recent memory, but it feels like more than once, and not only am I about to say it again, but I was so aware that I'm about to say it again that I opened this post by drawing attention to it. With that said, to be brutally honest, I didn't want this  to be the subject of my tenth-ever issue of Cover Charge (so named to keep in the theming of tickets, admission fees, movies, and stagecraft that I have mostly built the blog around since before it existed in the form you see today), but since I promised to deliver it as a slightly delayed companion piece to my C...

Anime Spotlight #63: Wistoria Wand & Sword

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Article by Sean Wilkinson, a.k.a. The Animeister. It's been quite awhile since I watched today's anime up for review, but I'll try to include and elaborate on as much opinion as possible. And, as you'll see in my initial thoughts on the series FROM Anime Spotlight #41: Spotlightning Round IV (August 5, 2024) , said opinion was mixed at best and ascerbically cynical at worst: Wistoria - Wand & Sword : What if Mashle wasn't funny or trying to say anything meaningful about brutal, class-based societies? What if Black Clover was boring? A guy with no magic who's really strong with a sword and almost useless otherwise enrolls in a magic school so he can be a strong mage and protect the world with his childhood friend. The animation and fight composition are pretty peak so far, but I don't expect to be invested in this for very long. Wistoria - Wand & Sword the anime is based on a manga  by Fujino ÅŒmori ( DanMachi , which has a new season I should prob...

Time Drops #119: Week of September 21, 2025

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Content Calendar Announcement, Week of September 21, 2025 by Sean Wilkinson, a.k.a. The Ticketmaster. Apologies for not doing the  TBT '25  push this past week. I've been working on content in the mornings  for this fully packed week, and professional and family obligations ate up the day such that I didn't have time to hit social media. And for reasons I mentioned in last week's Time Drops , I can't count on young men half my age to have an intelligent work ethic, I still can't count on them, I'll always not be able to count on them, and that will probably hold true even if I get asked to come back to my job for a legacy sequel in twenty years. If you couldn't tell, that's a clue to what I'm reviewing on Friday. Also, my workplace is aware of the incompetence of others, so I get to wash my hands of that and work where I'm needed for the near future, so I'm relatively happy from a professional standpoint. Otherwise, nothing in my life has...

Zenescope - Omnibusted #35: Call Of Wonderland

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Article by Sean Wilkinson, a.k.a. The Omnibuster. Barring any recent expressions of madness (that is to say, anger, rather than insanity) on my part, you may also recall from Saturday's Time Drops post that I began reading this miniseries (only four issues, plus the bonus Wonderland Annual from 2012 that was previewed in this Volume, but I will be reviewing it on its own next week) and felt compelled to "read" the Lovecraft story from which it derived its name. I will review that in a Cover Charge post next Tuesday, but you'll also see me make comparisons or point out allusions to the work as I go along because Lovecraft plays a big role in this story. Call Of Wonderland doesn't appear to have any graphical discrepancy between the ComiXology version and the scanned version (save some ad wierdness toward the end of the ComiXology edition and the absence of a Cover Gallery title page in the scan), but the general compilation effort seems low compared to Alice ...