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Archive for March, 2023

Episode 541: That’s Where You Collect Your Bonus

March 31st, 2023 | Robin

In the Gaming Hut we look at the Efficiency Paradox, where players who most effectively grapple with the choices of a scenario are the most likely to regard it as linear.

A Zillow floorplan of a Glendora CA home winds up in the Cartography Hut at the behest of beloved backer Monster Talk, who has spotted some anomalies he needs explained.

The ninth installment of the Cinema Hut Science Fiction Essentials series finds us in the mid-60s, as the genre falls into arty European hands.

On Jan 31, 1914, a meteor struck a torpedo factory in Sistersville, West Virginia, sending an exploding ball of nitroglycerin into the air. We find out what role Ken’s Time Machine played in this unlikely event.

Want to pose a question to the show? Get your priority question asking access with your support for the KARTAS Patreon!

Our Patreon-backed Letterboxd list of all films mentioned on the show is now up and running.

Also check out the Goodreads list of books mentioned on the show.

Snag Ken and Robin merchandise at TeePublic.


In Sunset City, there’s always something fishy going on … and we’re not talking tuna.  The magical kitties of Sunset City have their paws full of mystery. Thanks to our fine feline friends at Atlas Games, Magical Kitties Noir is headed to Kickstarter.

The skies above New Olympus are patrolled by caped crusaders, but these superior beings are far from heroes. They wield their powers with reckless disregard, serving the interests of corporate overseers, and silencing those who oppose their will. You are Klara Koenig, investigative journalist for The Pedestrian newspaper, and you intend to prove the privileged superhuman elite do not yet hold a monopoly on justice. Welcome to Alteregomania: the newest setting for the GUMSHOE One-2-One system.

The treasures of Askfageln can be found at DriveThruRPG. Get all issues of FENIX since 2013 available in special English editions. Score metric oodles of Ken Hite gaming goodness, along with equally stellar pieces by Graeme Davis and Pete Nash. Warning: in English, not in Swedish. In English, not Swedish. While you’re at it, grab DICE and Freeway Warrior!

Put on your flannels, grab your duffel bag of hardware and assemble your fake passports. Alert your retailer to the contents of their favorite unmarked warehouse. Delta Green: The Conspiracy, the revised, updated and declassified edition of the iconic 1990s sourcebook has escaped from Arc Dream Publishing.

Ken and Robin Consume Media: The Last of Us, Cocaine Bear, and Psionic Norwegian Kids

March 28th, 2023 | Robin

Ken and Robin Consume Media is brought to you by the discriminating and good-looking backers of the Ken and Robin Talk About Stuff Patreon. Each week we provide capsule reviews of the books, movies, TV seasons and more we cram into our hyper-analytical sensoriums. Join the Patreon to help pick the items we’ll talk about in greater depth on a little podcast segment we like to call Tell Me More.

Recommended

Aftersun (Film, UK, Charlotte Wells, 2022) As seen through a veil of unanswered adult memory, a young girl (Frankie Corio) vacations with her covertly troubled dad (Paul Mescal) at a disappointing tourist resort. Delicately acted, observation-driven naturalistic drama about the way parents protect their kids by hiding who they really are.—RDL

The Innocents (Film, Norway, Eskil Vogt, 2022) Young kids in an apartment complex develop interconnected psionic powers—but one of them is a bad seed. Horror of high-stakes conflict between children made all the more disturbing by its naturalistic presentation.—RDL

The Last of Us Season 1 (Television, US, HBO, Craig Mazin, 2023) In a post-apocalyptic present stalked by fungal zombies, a smuggler closed off by his tragic past (Pedro Pascal) reluctantly agrees to transport a sharp-witted teen (Bella Ramsey) across country to a lab that hopes to turn her immunity into the plague into a vaccine. Brilliantly realized survival horror built around the unusually clear dramatic arc of its videogame source material.—RDL

Good

Banacek Season 1 (Television, US, NBC, George Eckstein, 1972-1973) Insurance investigator Thomas Banacek (George Peppard) investigates impossible disappearances for a 10% recovery fee while radiating self-satisfaction, romancing suspects, and dropping “old Polish proverbs.” Peppard’s airy vibe still has its qualities, the padded interstitial scenes less so, but the mysteries are genuinely fun and challenging. –KH

Cocaine Bear (Film, US, Elizabeth Banks, 2023) Brave nurse (Keri Russell) tries to rescue her daughter as a cocaine bear tears its way through a string of victims in the Chattahoochee–Oconee National Forest. Horror comedy delights in entropic mayhem; peaks too soon.—RDL

Deliver Us From Evil (Film, South Korea, 2022) Ex-spy turned assassin delays his retirement to rescue the young daughter he never knew he had from Thai organ traffickers, pursued by his last victim’s ultra-violent blood brother. Well-staged hard action follows the recent Asian cinema trope of depicting Thailand as a sun-baked Wild West.—RDL

Okay

F9 (Film, US, Justin Lin, 2020) Dom (Vin Diesel) and Letty (Michelle Rodriguez) come out of hiding to stop his brother (John Cena) from capturing a world-threatening technology. Disquieting nods toward self-awareness deep into a franchise that works when it fully commits to pure stupidity. I can’t tell whether Diesel is becoming a worse actor with each installment or if Lin has stopped trying to pick his less embarrassing takes.—RDL

Episode 540: Kaiju Angering Chemical

March 24th, 2023 | Robin

Things get both creepy and capey in the Gaming Hut as beloved Patreon backer Sean asks how to combine superheroes with cosmic horror.

At the behest of estimable backer Cynistrategus, Ripped From the Headlines finds the gaming potential in recent animal thefts at the Dallas Zoo.

In the Cinema Hut, part eight of our Science Fiction Cinema Essentials series reaches the 1960s as the genre moves to Europe and goes avant-garde.

Finally the Eliptony Hut expands to hide a giant sphere as formidable backer Joshua Randall asks for the true weirdness behind the strange object that washed up on Japan’s Enshu Beach.

Want to pose a question to the show? Get your priority question asking access with your support for the KARTAS Patreon!

Our Patreon-backed Letterboxd list of all films mentioned on the show is now up and running.

Also check out the Goodreads list of books mentioned on the show.

Snag Ken and Robin merchandise at TeePublic.


In Sunset City, there’s always something fishy going on … and we’re not talking tuna.  The magical kitties of Sunset City have their paws full of mystery. Thanks to our fine feline friends at Atlas Games, Magical Kitties Noir is headed to Kickstarter.

The skies above New Olympus are patrolled by caped crusaders, but these superior beings are far from heroes. They wield their powers with reckless disregard, serving the interests of corporate overseers, and silencing those who oppose their will. You are Klara Koenig, investigative journalist for The Pedestrian newspaper, and you intend to prove the privileged superhuman elite do not yet hold a monopoly on justice. Welcome to Alteregomania: the newest setting for the GUMSHOE One-2-One system.

The treasures of Askfageln can be found at DriveThruRPG. Get all issues of FENIX since 2013 available in special English editions. Score metric oodles of Ken Hite gaming goodness, along with equally stellar pieces by Graeme Davis and Pete Nash. Warning: in English, not in Swedish. In English, not Swedish. While you’re at it, grab DICE and Freeway Warrior!

Put on your flannels, grab your duffel bag of hardware and assemble your fake passports. Alert your retailer to the contents of their favorite unmarked warehouse. Delta Green: The Conspiracy, the revised, updated and declassified edition of the iconic 1990s sourcebook has escaped from Arc Dream Publishing.

Ken and Robin Consume Media: Chris Rock, Czech SF, and the Science of Flavor

March 21st, 2023 | Robin

Ken and Robin Consume Media is brought to you by the discriminating and good-looking backers of the Ken and Robin Talk About Stuff Patreon. Each week we provide capsule reviews of the books, movies, TV seasons and more we cram into our hyper-analytical sensoriums. Join the Patreon to help pick the items we’ll talk about in greater depth on a little podcast segment we like to call Tell Me More.

Recommended

Chris Rock: Selective Outrage (Standup, US, Netflix, Joel Gallen, 2023) The first three-quarters of this show are “merely” classic-style Chris Rock material (race, sex, family), which is to say a top-three standup doing a somewhat familiar sounding set. The last ten minutes or so, however, respond to the infamous Slap, and here Rock really gets angry again, and as fresh and compelling as when I first heard him. –KH

Desperate Journey (Film, US, Raoul Walsh, 1942) Heroic RAF pilot (Errol Flynn) leads downed comrades (Ronald Reagan, Arthur Kennedy, Alan Hale) to swipe Nazi secrets and escape Germany. Treats a then-current crisis as fodder for rip-roaring adventure, demonstrating the wise-ass sangfroid that won the propaganda war for America.—RDL

Flavor:The Science of Our Most Neglected Sense (Nonfiction, Bob Holmes, 2017) Survey of recent science covers the physiology of taste and the chemistry of the compounds that excite it. My favorite factoids concerns the presence of taste receptors in such disparate parts of the body as the gut and lungs.—RDL

Good Luck To You, Leo Grande (Film, UK, Sophie Hyde, 2022) Inhibited former schoolteacher (Emma Thompson) hires a hunky, kindly sex worker (Daryl McCormack) for a long overdue introduction to pleasurable intimacy. Dialogue-driven two-hander drama was written for the screen using a playwright’s techniques.—RDL

Smilin’ Through (Film, US, Frank Borzage, 1941) Young woman (Jeanette MacDonald) must choose between the beloved uncle who raised her (Brian Aherne) and her American beau (Gene Raymond), whose father killed the former’s bride on their wedding day. Borzage’s emotional commitment, plus touches of the gothic, elevate the third screen version of a once-popular stage melodrama. This is a MacDonald vehicle, so steel yourself for plenty of her dated operetta-style singing.—RDL

Spinning the Tales of Cruelty Towards Women (Film, South Korea, Lee Doo-yong, 1983) The suffering of a daughter of poor nobles begins when she joins a rich family as wife of their deceased son. Restrained period melodrama of social injustice builds to a hammer blow conclusion.—RDL

Good

Ikarie XB-1 (Film, Czechoslovakia, Jindřich Polák, 1963) In 2163, the first interstellar starship heads for Alpha Centauri. Neither cheap nor clunky despite its Eastbloc origin, it plays out (somewhat languidly and sententiously) as a proto-Star Trek, as various puzzles and dangers await our multinational crew. Its final act aims for pure scientific wonder, which sets it intellectually (if not dramatically) above virtually all SF films before Kubrick’s 2001, which it clearly influenced. –KH

Knock at the Cabin (Film, US, M. Night Shyamalan, 2023) The vacation of eight-year-old Wen (Kristen Cui) and her two dads (Jonathan Groff and Ben Aldridge) gets interrupted by the arrival of Leonard (Dave Bautista) and his apocalypse-fearing cult. Despite an actually convincing performance from Bautista, Shyamalan doesn’t hit the needed balance between ambiguity and suspense, thus sort of spoiling his own trick. Jarin Blaschke and Lowell Meyer’s beautiful cinematography continue Shyamalan’s commendable record of not making ugly films, whatever their other flaws. –KH

Episode 539: Players and/or Humans

March 17th, 2023 | Robin

In the Gaming Hut we wonder whether it is always bad for the players to figure out the mystery prior to the big reveal scene.

A relic heist comes under scrutiny in the History Hut as beloved Patreon backer Mark D. Rinna asks why black ops crusaders raided the tomb of St. Nicholas.

Installment seven of the Cinema Hut Science Fiction Essentials series finds us working methodically through the late fifties.

Then the Consulting Occultist enters the Culture Hut at the behest of sophisticated backer Jake Maas, who seeks enlightenment on the Theosophical roots of avant garde artist Yves Klein.

Want to pose a question to the show? Get your priority question asking access with your support for the KARTAS Patreon!

Our Patreon-backed Letterboxd list of all films mentioned on the show is now up and running.

Also check out the Goodreads list of books mentioned on the show.

Snag Ken and Robin merchandise at TeePublic.


In Sunset City, there’s always something fishy going on … and we’re not talking tuna.  The magical kitties of Sunset City have their paws full of mystery. Thanks to our fine feline friends at Atlas Games, Magical Kitties Noir is headed to Kickstarter.

The skies above New Olympus are patrolled by caped crusaders, but these superior beings are far from heroes. They wield their powers with reckless disregard, serving the interests of corporate overseers, and silencing those who oppose their will. You are Klara Koenig, investigative journalist for The Pedestrian newspaper, and you intend to prove the privileged superhuman elite do not yet hold a monopoly on justice. Welcome to Alteregomania: the newest setting for the GUMSHOE One-2-One system.

The treasures of Askfageln can be found at DriveThruRPG. Get all issues of FENIX since 2013 available in special English editions. Score metric oodles of Ken Hite gaming goodness, along with equally stellar pieces by Graeme Davis and Pete Nash. Warning: in English, not in Swedish. In English, not Swedish. While you’re at it, grab DICE and Freeway Warrior!

Put on your flannels, grab your duffel bag of hardware and assemble your fake passports. Alert your retailer to the contents of their favorite unmarked warehouse. Delta Green: The Conspiracy, the revised, updated and declassified edition of the iconic 1990s sourcebook has escaped from Arc Dream Publishing.

Ken and Robin Consume Media: Bones and All, EO, and the Letters of M. R. James

March 14th, 2023 | Robin

Ken and Robin Consume Media is brought to you by the discriminating and good-looking backers of the Ken and Robin Talk About Stuff Patreon. Each week we provide capsule reviews of the books, movies, TV seasons and more we cram into our hyper-analytical sensoriums. Join the Patreon to help pick the items we’ll talk about in greater depth on a little podcast segment we like to call Tell Me More.

Recommended

Band of Outsiders (Film, France, Jean-Luc Godard, 1964) Pushover Odile (Anna Karina), feckless Franz (Sami Frey), and thuggish Artur (Claude Brasseur) plot to steal a hoard of cash from Odile’s landlord. Godard as usual cares less about the plot than about the dysfunctional interplay among the trio, but hits an ideal ironic distance from which to watch their attempts. The pernicious colonialism of American culture on French youth provides both a running leitmotif and the film’s highlight dance sequence. –KH

Bones And All (Film, Italy, Luca Guadagnino, 2022) Teen obligate cannibal Maren (Taylor Russell) searches for answers and meets other “eaters” including scary Sully (Mark Rylance) and lovely Lee (Timothée Chalamet). Sweet and creepy by turns, Guadagnino’s 80s American road trip horror-romance never stops working, hitting a balance and a vibe his Suspiria remake notably failed to. –KH

Bank Shot (Fiction, Donald E. Westlake, 1972) Seeing opportunity when a bank under renovation temporarily relocates to a modified mobile home across the street, a team of down-at-the-mouth thieves led by dyspeptic planner John Dortmunder resolves to put it back on wheels and tow it away. Second in Westlake’s series of wry, observant heist-gone-wrong novels delights in the procedural obstacles thrown up by its unique premise.—RDL

EO (Film, Poland, Jerzy Skolimowski, 2022) After animal welfare officers remove him from a circus, a donkey, seeking his beloved performance partner, undertakes an arduous journey into the hellish world of humans. Visual language predominates in an inverted quest narrative made poignant by the emotions we project on the large, expressive eyes of its equine protagonist.—RDL

Madeleine Collins (Film, France, Antoine Barraud, 2021) A busy professional (Virgine Efira) struggles to keep ahead of the lies she’s floated to hide the existence of her secret second family. Suspenseful character study wouldn’t work without Efira’s brilliant performance, which keeps us with the protagonist as we discover the full extent of the terrible decisions that have placed her in her worsening spiral.—RDL

Good

Avengement (Film, UK, Jesse V. Johnson, 2019) Inmate hardened by repeated attempts to kill him in prison (Scott Adkins) escapes to settle the score with the older brother (Craig Fairbrass) who put the bounty on his head. Brutal action vehicle for Adkins classed up with a flashback structure and a taste for hard man dialogue.—RDL

Casting the Runes: The Letters of M.R. James (Nonfiction, Jane Mainley-Piddock (ed.), 2023) Collects and reprints 101 letters from M.R. James held in various Cambridge University archives, spanning his life from childhood to c. 1925. (This collection excludes the letters from MRJ to the family of his bff James McBryde, which have been separately published in a now-out-of-print volume.) Readers get a glimpse of James’ personality emerging, and some familiarity with his life thanks to generally excellent annotations by Mainley-Piddock. While still Recommended for MRJ-heads, the near-total absence of insight into his ghost stories from his correspondence must drop it to Good for the casual Jamesian. –KH

Not Recommended

Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio (Film, US, Guillermo del Toro, 2022) Woodcarver mourning the WWI bombing death of his young son gets a second chance at fatherhood when a wood nymph breathes life into a marionette he has fashioned. Grim slog through the Carlo Collodi story trafficks in loaded imagery of fascism and crucifixion without resolving its meaning.—RDL

Episode 538: Perhaps an Exploder

March 10th, 2023 | Robin

We hope you’re wearing headphones for this one because we start in the Gaming Hut with a request from beloved Patreon backer Kevin L. Nault asks us to wrap a campaign around ear-entering, disease-causing ghosts.

Then the Tradecraft Hut looks up in the sky for the truth about spy balloons.

Finally, the Cinema Hut makes way for our annual pre-Oscars tradition, in which we list our top ten films of the 2022,

Want to pose a question to the show? Get your priority question asking access with your support for the KARTAS Patreon!

Our Patreon-backed Letterboxd list of all films mentioned on the show is now up and running.

Also check out the Goodreads list of books mentioned on the show.

Snag Ken and Robin merchandise at TeePublic.


In Sunset City, there’s always something fishy going on … and we’re not talking tuna.  The magical kitties of Sunset City have their paws full of mystery. Thanks to our fine feline friends at Atlas Games, Magical Kitties Noir is headed to Kickstarter.

The skies above New Olympus are patrolled by caped crusaders, but these superior beings are far from heroes. They wield their powers with reckless disregard, serving the interests of corporate overseers, and silencing those who oppose their will. You are Klara Koenig, investigative journalist for The Pedestrian newspaper, and you intend to prove the privileged superhuman elite do not yet hold a monopoly on justice. Welcome to Alteregomania: the newest setting for the GUMSHOE One-2-One system.

The treasures of Askfageln can be found at DriveThruRPG. Get all issues of FENIX since 2013 available in special English editions. Score metric oodles of Ken Hite gaming goodness, along with equally stellar pieces by Graeme Davis and Pete Nash. Warning: in English, not in Swedish. In English, not Swedish. While you’re at it, grab DICE and Freeway Warrior!

Put on your flannels, grab your duffel bag of hardware and assemble your fake passports. Alert your retailer to the contents of their favorite unmarked warehouse. Delta Green: The Conspiracy, the revised, updated and declassified edition of the iconic 1990s sourcebook has escaped from Arc Dream Publishing.

Ken and Robin Consume Media: Ant-Man, Women Talking, and The Fabelmans

March 7th, 2023 | Robin

Ken and Robin Consume Media is brought to you by the discriminating and good-looking backers of the Ken and Robin Talk About Stuff Patreon. Each week we provide capsule reviews of the books, movies, TV seasons and more we cram into our hyper-analytical sensoriums. Join the Patreon to help pick the items we’ll talk about in greater depth on a little podcast segment we like to call Tell Me More.

Recommended

Athena (Film, France, Romain Gavras, 2022) When the Athena housing project in Paris erupts in revolution after cops kill a young boy, his three brothers (Dali Benssalah, Sami Slimane, Ouassini Embarek) choose their sides. The resulting Homeric drama occurs against a propulsively filmed, jawdropping action backdrop with moments of pure humanity throughout.  –KH

The Fabelmans (Film, US, Steven Spielberg, 2022) Young wannabe film director Sammy Fabelman (Gabriel LaBelle) realizes that his art can immiserate as well as exalt him, not least by revealing his parents’ (Paul Dano and an amazing tightwire Michelle Williams) marital difficulties. Spielberg turns his rollercoaster mastery (and Janusz Kaminski’s luxe lensing) to semi-autobiography, and for about two acts achieves riveting perfection. I was actually relieved when the bones of artifice showed up toward the end, but the final scene may be the best one of the century. –KH

The Green Years (Film, Portugal, Paulo Rocha, 1963) Callow hick (Rui Gomes) arrives in the big city of Lisbon to become a cobbler and woo a thoughtful maid (Isabel Ruth.) New wave observational drama starts out wry and sweet, then takes a dark turn..—RDL

King Con (Nonfiction, Paul Willetts, 2018) From the teens into the 40s, the charismatic, bisexual, cocaine-confident swindler and vaudevillean Edgar Laplante adopts the guise of a Cherokee prince to spend and scam his way across America and Europe. True crime biography presents a particularly egregious example of the still persistent pretendian phenomenon. Notable for its anti-hero’s use of patriotic fervor to grease his marks, which reaches its apogee when he embraces Italian fascism.—RDL

Son of the White Mare (Film, Hungary, Marcell Jankovics, 1981) Aided by his only somewhat less awesome brothers Stonecrumbler and Irontemperer, the hero Treeshaker ventures to hell to rescue the princesses of the three good seasons from the many-headed dragon husbands who keep them captive. Animated feature tells a myth of the steppe peoples with graphic, boldly stylized visuals.—RDL

Women Talking (Film, US, Sarah Polley, 2022) With the men away bailing out the community members who repeatedly tranquilized and sexually assaulted them, the women of a Mennonite community collectively decide whether to leave, or stay and fight. Drama of passion and ideas features heightened dialogue, a mastery of cinematic space, and stunning performances from an ensemble headed by Rooney Mara, Jessie Buckley, Claire Foy and Sheila McCarthy.—RDL

Okay

Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania (Film, US, Peyton Reed, 2023) An experiment gone awry drags the whole ant-clan into the quantum realm to face Janet Van Dyne’s (Michelle Pfeiffer) past and Kang the Conqueror (a morose Jonathan Majors). By-the-numbers plot deliberately ignores everything interesting, original, or specific to the quantum realm (and Kang) on its way to flabbily set up the next endless cycle of MCU film and TV. Michelle Pfeiffer gets to act, though, which is nice. –KH

Lake of Dracula (Film, Japan, Michio Yamamoto, 1971) A young woman clashes with her envious sister when the events from a vividly terrifying childhood dream acquire prophetic reality. A step less eerie than its predecessor, the second in the director’s vampire trilogy preserves the barest bones of the Stoker novel. Notable for Dracula’s sinister plan of having himself FedExed to his victim’s home.—RDL

Mondocane (Film, Alessandro Celli, Italy, 2021) In post-collapse Italy, a pair of young teen pals put their mutual loyalty to the test when they join a murderous communal gang. Dystopian social realism kept in second gear by weak staging and composition.—RDL

Episode 537: Bring Me the Incompetent Laggard File

March 3rd, 2023 | Robin

We appear to be stuck in the Gaming Hut as beloved Patreon backer Walter Manbeck seeks tips on scenarios set in confined spaces.

In the Tradecraft Hut estimable backer Dan L seeks gaming inspiration from Operation Pedro Pan, a covert effort to migrate unaccompanied teens and kids to the US from early 60s Cuba.

The Cinema Hut Science Fiction Essentials series reaches the mid-1950s and some all-time classic creature features.

Finally Ken’s Time Machine travels to and interferes with the early 20th century French political scandal known as the Affair of the Cards.

Want to pose a question to the show? Get your priority question asking access with your support for the KARTAS Patreon!

Our Patreon-backed Letterboxd list of all films mentioned on the show is now up and running.

Also check out the Goodreads list of books mentioned on the show.

Snag Ken and Robin merchandise at TeePublic.


Rejoice, fans of Atlas Games and Ken and Robin. Atlas Games is running its most Ken and Robiny promotion ever. Atlas publishes books from both of us and for a limited time only you can get 20% off those books with the promo code KENANDROBIN23 at the Atlas Games store: https://atlas-games.com/product_tables/.

The skies above New Olympus are patrolled by caped crusaders, but these superior beings are far from heroes. They wield their powers with reckless disregard, serving the interests of corporate overseers, and silencing those who oppose their will. You are Klara Koenig, investigative journalist for The Pedestrian newspaper, and you intend to prove the privileged superhuman elite do not yet hold a monopoly on justice. Welcome to Alteregomania: the newest setting for the GUMSHOE One-2-One system.

The treasures of Askfageln can be found at DriveThruRPG. Get all issues of FENIX since 2013 available in special English editions. Score metric oodles of Ken Hite gaming goodness, along with equally stellar pieces by Graeme Davis and Pete Nash. Warning: in English, not in Swedish. In English, not Swedish. While you’re at it, grab DICE and Freeway Warrior!

Put on your flannels, grab your duffel bag of hardware and assemble your fake passports. Alert your retailer to the contents of their favorite unmarked warehouse. Delta Green: The Conspiracy, the revised, updated and declassified edition of the iconic 1990s sourcebook has escaped from Arc Dream Publishing.

Film Cannister
Cartoon Rocket
d8
Flying Clock
Robin
Film Cannister