‘Jake and the Dynamo: Dead to Rites’ Progress Update

I just made progress on Jake and the Dynamo: Dead to Rites!

The story now stands at 100,142 words, which puts it 142 words over my last projection for the draft, and it’s still not finished. Heck, it’s still Tuesday, by which I mean it’s still Tuesday in the story. I kind of wanted this novel to end on Friday like the last one did, but I’m not sure if I can pull it off. Week 2 might end up getting stretched across two novels.

I am, however, finally at the scene where I get to introduce Nunchuk Nun.

Jake and the Dynamo: Dead to Rites
Phase:Writing
Due:5 years ago
99.6%

An Archaeologist Plays Indiana Jones, Part 7

I haven’t had much time for this lately, but I was reading Plato’s Meno this morning, and that reminded me of the fictional lost dialogue of Plato from Indiana Jones and the Fate of Atlantis, and one thing led to another, and so here we are. I took a few more minutes to continue the play-through. Enjoy.

Review: ‘Flowering Heart,’ Season 1

Make up! Change!

Flowering Heart, directed by Lee Woo-Jin. Written by Lee Woo-Jin, Kim Hyoung-Kyo, et al. Starring Nancy Kim, Jacqueline Youn, and Dami Lee. ICONIX Entertainment (). 26 episodes of 11 minutes (approx. ). Not rated.

What we have before us is a magical girl title from South Korea. Being a magical-girl franchise from outside Japan, this arguably falls into the same category as such other non-Japanese titles as Winx Club, LoliRock, or Star vs. the Forces of Evil. But, of course, you’ve likely seen plenty of South Korean animation already, as both America and Japan outsource a lot of animation to that country.

Ari with tears in her eyes
Our heroine.

As of the time of writing, this series has two seasons, but as far as I have been able to determine, only the first is available in English. I originally found it on Amazon Prime, which hosts the English dub, but you can also watch for free on the show’s official YouTube channel.

Now here’s the confusing part: There is a dub of the whole season available, as well as a Korean version. But there are also at least a few episodes that have been left in the original Korean but subtitled in English. However, they haven’t been set aside in their own playlist, and their descriptions are entirely in Korean. Here’s the first episode with subtitles. After that … good luck. I’ve been struggling to figure out where the rest of the subs are; at least the second episode is there, and some later ones too, so possibly the whole subtitled series is buried in there someplace.

Continue reading “Review: ‘Flowering Heart,’ Season 1”

I’m Actually Excited for ‘Detective Pikachu’

I don’t think this is going to be the next Who Framed Roger Rabbit, but maybe it will at least be good dumb fun.

Art, Featuring PriyoNewvKy

Featured image: “Mahou-Shoujo” by PriyoNewvKy.

I’m on a writing kick, so you’ll have to excuse the lack of meaningful blog content. In the meanwhile, enjoy this small but highly detailed image of a magical girl.

‘Jake and the Dynamo: Dead to Rites’ Progress Update

I just made progress on Jake and the Dynamo: Dead to Rites! So far I’m 97% complete on the Writing phase. 16 Days remain until the deadline.

There are some matters about which I’d like to post, but I’ve been working on my book instead, which is not exactly time wasted.  I realized that I needed to go back and insert a new chapter into an earlier part in the novel, and I was having some trouble crafting it, but I figured out what was wrong with it, so tonight I’ve completed the draft of that particular section. Still needs a couple of corny jokes thrown in, though.

Jake and the Dynamo: Dead to Rites
Phase:Writing
Due:5 years ago
96.7%

And Now for Something Completely Different: ‘Flowering Heart!’

I have some important things to discuss, but I spent this evening writing Jake and the Dynamo and listening to Rammstein instead, so I regret nothing.

But I am also at present making my way through the Korean magical girl series Flowering Heart, a simple and sweet show for kids that makes for a good palate cleanser after Magical Girl Site.

I’m watching Flowering Heart on Amazon Prime, but the entire show is also available on the official YouTube channel, so you can join me in watching it if you like.

There is both a Korean version and an English version available, but, alas, there appears to be no Korean version with English subtitles, so I’m watching the dub.

The story features a trio of fifth-grade girls who form an after-school club to help people with their problems. They get a magical boost from a flying, talking hamster who grants them magic rings that can turn them into adults. They have to do good deeds to gather “hopeful energy” to replenish the Heart Tree in the Flowering Kingdom, but nefarious forces are working to gather “hopeless energy” to make the tree wither.

It is reminiscent of LoliRock, probably because Flowering Heart and LoliRock both take their influence primarily from Minky Momo, though Flowering Heart appeared in 2016, so it may take influence from LoliRock as well. For reasons I can’t quite explain, however, I found LoliRock to be a slog, whereas Flowering Heart is quite pleasant.

I’ll deliver a full review when I finish the first season. For now, I’ll simply recommend it as entertaining yet undemanding—though keep in mind that it is very much a show aimed at little girls.

 

Anime Review: ‘Magical Girl Site’

Should I be feeling bad? Should I be feeling good?

Magical Girl Site, written by Takayo Ikami and Kentaro Sato. Directed by Tadahito Matsubayashi. Starring Yuko Ono, Himika Akaneya, and Aina Suzuki. Production DoA, 2018. 12 episodes of 24 minutes (approx. 288 minutes). Not rated.

If Magical Girl Raising Project was a poor man’s Battle Royale, then Magical Girl Site is a poor man’s Magical Girl Raising Project. It starts out by trying too hard, though it gets interesting in its second half. In spite of my initial distaste, I found myself getting into it.

A sadist screaming in pleasure
Me, while watching Magical Girl Site.

I’ve previously discussed my reaction to the first episode. That initial hot take, unsurprisingly, contained a few speculations that turned out to be incorrect. But I stand by its overall conclusion: This is a show too desperate to be on the edge, an edge that so many shows have been on already, it looks clichéd rather than groundbreaking.

Continue reading “Anime Review: ‘Magical Girl Site’”

‘Magical Girl Site’ Review Incoming

I finally managed to get through Magical Girl Site. Although I was not impressed at first, I kind of got into it. It’s reminiscent of Magical Girl Raising Project, except with (in my opinion) a more interesting storyline.

Action sequences definitely not as good, though, and it breaks its own rules, and it’s trying too damn hard, tossing in gratuitous sadism for no other reason than to be “edgy.” It does have a few redeeming qualities.

I’ll see if I can write up a full review tomorrow.

The Emperor on Deep POV

I stumbled upon an interesting blog post at The Emperor’s Notepad. There, his imperial majesty addresses the subject of “deep point of view,” a technique of narration that is currently in vogue. His post is entitled, “Deep POV Is Shallow,” and I recommend perusing it.

I can’t recall if I’d heard the particular term before, but I recognize the technique: it means writing in third person, but sticking with a particular character’s point of view and remaining in that single point of view throughout a scene, with no “head-hopping.”

His majesty explains that he believes the technique is over-used because an omniscient third-person narrator can be more useful in many cases for setting scenes with less dreary dialogue and fewer awkward tags. He makes his case well.

As long as we’re coining phrases, I’m going to say that my own preferred technique when writing in third-person is “descending POV.” Readers familiar with my work may notice that I usually begin by setting a scene, and then move in to focus on an individual who becomes the consistent POV character for that particular scene.

But I’m not strict about it. Sometimes I cheat, of course: Jake and the Dynamo opens with an omniscient narrator and then descends into the POV of the Dark Queen for the first scene. In the second scene, it remains in omniscient POV throughout, but sneaks into Grease Pencil Marionette’s head near the end. Most of the rest of the book is from Jake’s POV, with occasional diversions to the Dark Queen, Chirops, and Marionette. A few characters are not allowed, for arbitrary reasons known to the author, to be POV characters at all, ever. Among them is Pretty Dynamo.

My preferred method is analogous to a film setting up with a location shot. The inability to do this is his imperial majesty’s primary complaint about so-called deep POV. So as an answer to both him and the writers he criticizes, I will claim it is actually possible to have one’s cake and eat it too on this matter. Although an admittedly new author, I have never yet received a complaint about the way I start with an omniscient narrator and then focus in, though I did just once receive a compliment for it.