Meanwhile, Nick is both a straight man to Juliet and the stand-in for the befuddled audience: Zombie farmers? Zombie quarterbacks? What's happened to San Romero? Riddled with convincing quirks and warm humour, she's also surrounded by a supermodel rockabilly family that's every bit as engagingly nutty. Juliet is smart, breezy and confident, yet quietly prudish with it on occasion. It's the script that provides most of the real charm, however, drawing its lovesick leads with surprising bite, and offering everyone a selection of decent lines as the adventure rattles along. A little light cel-shading and handfuls of quirky, colourful effects do much to disguise the cheapness of the production. In its corner-cutting and jerry-rigging, it feels like a true punk aesthetic. Visually, Lollipop Chainsaw is appealingly ropey, with blurry, fairly simplistic assets, naff physics, and only Starling's astonishing animation standing out as she dispatches ghouls with star-jumps and spinning head-stand kicks. The couple - Juliet keeps Nick's head on a keychain tagged to her belt - bicker and flirt while she hands out gas-powered justice with a tree surgeon's favourite accessory, and he gets dropped onto headless zombies for the occasional rhythm action mini-game, or swings by in special attacks. With the undead spilling into town in unprecedented numbers, the stage is set for a weirdly romantic action game. The set-up is pure Buffy, as Juliet Starling admits to her - sadly decapitated - boyfriend Nick that she's a secret zombie slayer as well as a star cheerleader. It's typical Suda 51 stuff: a muddle of pop culture nods, scattershot puns and antic gore.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |