Starra wrote:Yeah, R&S was too much for me -- never really liked it. Then again, I was probably a bit too young and didn't get it.
Also, I should probably mention that my favourite genre is comedy. I enjoy a good laugh more than anything. Darker things are okay from time to time, but eh, they're not really for me.
Celedam was definitely right about Aeon Flux, then. It wasn't really funny ha-ha at all, just funny strange. I'd still recommend you give The Venture Bros. a peek. It's kinda hilarious. Well, it's hilarious to me, but then again, it's hilarious to me. I introduced it once to a friend and we were very nearly not friends after that, . Anyway, the backstory is this:
There was once a 1960's American adventure cartoon called Jonny Quest which must've been very popular with young boys, because it got replayed for decades and even rebooted a couple of times in the 1980's and 1990's. It was about a kid named Jonny who tagged along on adventures in mysterious savage lands with his genius scientist/adventurer/widower father, a loyal tough-as-nails pilot, a mystical Indian orphan boy, and a little bulldog. And they battled some recurring villains and inhabited this world which was a mishmash of spies, dictators, archaeologists, mad scientists, and aliens. A kind of proto-Indiana Jones universe but with a very 1950's-1960's sensibility.
Now imagine that, in an alternate universe, a Jonny Quest type character grew up, but unlike his genius father, had reverted to the mean and was a man of no particular talent. He eventually inherited all of the toys, gadgets, the fortune, the huge research complex, the oversized ego, and a certain status based purely on his father's reputation. But he never really understood how any of the advanced products and prototypes worked beyond the script kiddie or tinkerer level, and was now just a kind of middle aged has-been/never-was sliding into oblivion; playing at being a distinguished scientist with all kinds of important ideas and arch-enemies, but fooling no-one but himself. He calls himself Doctor Venture. Now he has his own badass sidekick (voiced by Patrick Warburton!) and goes on bumbling quests with two teen boys of his own, who are even stupider than he is. He has one arch-nemesis who is a similarly incompetent evil mastermind, and a motley assortment of other failed super-friends and foes whom he frequently crosses paths with.
He spends his days trying to make a discovery or invention that will finally push him out of his father's shadow, and validate his own super-scientist credentials, but is forever doomed to mediocrity and endlessly whiny self-pity.
So anyway, if that sounds interesting, give it a shot. The first season, though probably necessary, is arguably worst, because (1) certain aspects weren't quite fleshed out yet (2) their writing/animation/voice acting skills were still immature and (3) the writer/creators hadn't quite realized just how far they could turn the knobs on their world and get away with it. Hint: Very far. Very very far.