Movies from 2021 I've seen

How is it that during the Year I decided I was going to watch LESS movies was the year I’ve actually seen the most movies in one year? Out of all the movies that premiered in 2021, I was able to see 187 of them. Around 60 of them were at a movie theater while the rest were from the many streaming services I subscribe to.

First off, I want to give thanks to HBO Max / Warner Bros for providing the day and date releases of their movies. I know I took advantage of that convenience. Appreciate it.

Secondly, I don’t think I’ll ever see a movie theater screening sold out ever again. Spider-Man No Way Home made all the money in the world, and the opening night screening I went to wasn’t even sold out. Compare that to the MCU releases pre-pandemic and it’s got to make you wonder.

Thirdly, due to the delays and the pandemic, the variety of movies released in 2021 was a smorgasbord of a lot of non-blockbuster films. That meant that I ended up seeing more genres and stories that you don’t normally see in theaters. That’s not necessarily an automatic win.

Due to the smaller non-blockbuster budgets, there seemed to be a similar quality among those movies. I feel like I’ve seen the most “B” quality grade films in 2021 than in any other years. In my grading scale, that’s either an “ENJOYED IT” or a “LIKED IT.”

Studios are playing it safer, hence the similar grade in quality? Maybe. Either that, or I need to be more specific with my grades. I know this was the hardest list I’ve ever had to sort through, and I’m still not completely comfortable with where the movies are ordered on this list.

Speaking of which, here’s the list below that shows my top favorite 50 movies out of the 187 movies I’ve seen released in 2021. There are still a lot of films I haven’t seen yet, so this is an incomplete sampling.

  1. Spider-Man: No Way Home  

  2. Barb & Star Go To Vista Del Mar  

  3. NOBODY 

  4. The Paper Tigers  

  5. The Mitchells vs. The Machines 

  6. CODA  

  7. Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings 

  8. Belfast 

  9. Seaspiracy 

  10. Luca

  11. The French Dispatch  

  12. Derek DelGaudio’s In & Of Itself  

  13. Finding 'Ohana 

  14. The Map of Tiny Perfect Things  

  15. Boss Level 

  16. To All The Boys: Always and Forever  

  17. Happy Cleaners 

  18. The Suicide Squad  

  19. Raya and the Last Dragon  

  20. Ghostbusters : Afterlife 

  21. Eternals  

  22. Godzilla vs. Kong 

  23. Happily 

  24. 8-Bit Christmas  

  25. Cruella 

  26. Black Widow  

  27. tick, tick... BOOM!  

  28. Red Rocket  

  29. Last Night in Soho  

  30. The Harder They Fall  

  31. King Richard  

  32. Psycho Goreman  

  33. Zola 

  34. Free Guy  

  35. I Care A Lot 

  36. Untitled Horror Movie  

  37. Encanto  

  38. Evangelion: 3.0+1.01 Thrice Upon a Time  

  39. The Matrix Resurrections  

  40. No Time To Die  

  41. The Green Knight  

  42. Fear Street part three: 1666 

  43. Titane 

  44. Army of Thieves  

  45. Willy’s Wonderland  

  46. In The Heights 

  47. PLAN B  

  48. Ron's Gone Wrong 

  49. Pig 

  50. Rurouni Kenshin: The Beginning

CCSE

Without a huge presence by Movies/TV studios, the big Comic Book publishers, and a lot less outside interactive events, was Comic-Con Special Edition just not as good as it usually is? Yes.

Was Comic-Con Special Edition still a good geeky time in San Diego? Yes.

Do we want Comic-Con Special Edition instead of the regular version? No.

Can both versions of Comic-Con exist? Sure, but that depends on CCI.

The truth of the matter is that while Comic-Con Special Edition was a nice relaxing throwback to the simpler days of Comic-Con, and was still able to offer some familiar entertainment that would be found at the regular summer show, the truth of the matter is that this was just us accepting that CCSE had to be the way it is because we’re still in a pandemic.

For those who prefer the larger event, give them a break.
For those who prefer this smaller event, hope you enjoyed it, because that’s not going to be a normal thing outside of the pandemic. WonderCon also says hi.

Check out my instagram posts from the event linked below…

https://www.instagram.com/p/CW6QS7LPQo_/ 

https://www.instagram.com/p/CWyWMLyvMGw/ 

https://www.instagram.com/p/CWzuCP4r-tb/ 

https://www.instagram.com/p/CW0xXqRpRcH/ 

https://www.instagram.com/p/CW2TqUirBdx/ 

https://www.instagram.com/p/CW3vXh6PnYq/

Brazilian Food Ranking Challenge

It’s not often you’ll see me in a video, and it’s because I much prefer to be a behind the camera kind of guy. I’m not exactly photogenic enough for video, which is why I do an audio podcast! However, our friends from the Grand Geek Gathering invited me to participate in one of their “Most Exquisite Ranking Challenge” on Brazilian food, and I’m not one to turn down free food. So check it out y’all!

TBT

If you follow my instagram, I’m going to start being a little more active with “ThrowBack Thursday.” Primarily because I have all these photos from past events that never made it onto my instagram, until around 2012-ish. They were usually found via my old xanga blog and photobucket, and those are all done with. So follow along by looking at my past.

23 movies

In the Month of August, 2021, I was able to watch 23 movies. All recently released stuff. Out of those films, two of them were via Video On Demand, eight of them were seen In Theaters, eleven were from streaming services (Netflix, Prime Video, Hulu, Apple TV+), and two were movies that were released on HBO Max and in Movie Theaters simultaneously.

That’s a lot of movies in one month.

I need to watch less movies.

MOTU

So Netflix and Kevin Smith released the 5 episodes “Master Of The Universe : Revelation.” There are those that are happy with what they saw, and then there are those who are losing their shit and vehemently hating on it. The disparity between those who actually liked it, compared to those who hated it, is visualized via the Rottentomatoes score.

Where do I fall on this? Did I like it, or did I hate it too? Well, as somebody who grew up on the original MOTU animated run in the ‘80s, but actually really liked the 2002 remake of He-Man, and as somebody who is a veteran of The Last Jedi defense team, I have to say that I did like “Revelation.” That subtitle is part of the reason for that.

I’m all in with what Kevin Smith envisioned with this incarnation. This is his version of Avengers Endgame and the Justice League Snydercut, but done with the MOTU franchise. “Revelation” is after all the part of the Bible that talks about the end of the world. Basically, this is the supposed ending to this He-Man story.

With the end of the world, the stakes has to be raised, and what better way to do so than “kill off” He-Man and Skeletor in the first episode. What better way to start the final story of the series, but by actually revealing all the unresolved plot threads that the original series left hanging, like Skeletor actually getting to the secrets of Greyskull, or Teela finally finding out Prince Adam’s secret identity, and the results from those big events.

Those are story threads that I’ve been waiting to see play out for over 35 years now! Toss in characters you’ve never seen animated before in the original like Andra, or Scare Glow, and Netflix’s MOTU has a lot to offer fans of the original like myself. However, that’s not what happened is it? There’s a lot of “I wanted more He-Man, not a bitchy Teela,” complaints, and completely ignores all the good the show actually does.

He-Man and Skeletor finally had a real fight against each other for a change! Significant team-ups between the bad guys and the good guys. Preternia! Subternia! Characters actually dying! Actual logical reactions to the big reveal that Prince Adam is He-Man! How are these big significant changes something a “true fan” wouldn’t want to witness?

Maybe that’s it. Change. Adults and man-children don’t like change. They fear it. Somehow the changes supposedly ruins what they liked when they were kids. They don’t really want their children shows to grow up like they did. They want to just wear their rose-colored glasses and bask in the nostalgia of a comfortable time when they don’t have to be reminded about how life sucks now.

You know what I say to that? GROW UP! No seriously. There are literally two reactions to this “Masters of the Universe: Revelations.” You like it enough to keep watching, or you don’t like it and stop watching. But wait, there’s that third option that some people have gravitated towards in that “you hated it, you whine about it, attack those who like it, and feel smug believing that your opinion is the only valid one.” C’mon guys, don’t choose the third option.

Now for those who claim that this was a bait-and-switch, I’ll say it to you as well. Grow up! Either you are pleasantly surprised at the big shift in premise at the end of the first episode, or you hated it and moved on with your life. Seriously now, don’t choose a third option!

You genre fans going into fits about changes ruining your childhood, seem to be forgetting about a particular animated movie from the ‘80s that not only killed off favorite characters, but completely forced new characters to a much loved franchise. I am talking about The Transformers The Movie from 1986. If that came out today, so many people would be so angry with what happened in that movie. Back then when I saw it as a kid, I just took it as a continuation to the whole story, and not some kind of affront to this franchise that I loved.

All the outrage over a TV show are the definition of being childish. Which is an insult to all children everywhere. All this negativity only further gives Nerds and Geeks a bad name. Stop it.

P.S. Why is there not enough He-Man in this show? The obvious answer is that it’s called “Masters of the Universe” and not “He-Man and the Masters of the Universe.” Secondly, look up the “Superman Problem,” and you’ll see why the writers avoided having too much He-Man on this show.