Briefly: It may not be as surprising as the Metro: Exodus reveal, but the surprise first trailer for the I-never-thought-it-would-happen Life is Strange prequel, Life Is Strange: Before The Storm may have been my favourite part of the presentation.

Yeah, the oddly named Xbox One X looks pretty incredible (I’m already trying to convince my fiancé to let us get one), but Life Is Strange is one of my favourite games of all time, and I never, ever thought that I’d ever have more Max and Chloe in my life.

The trailer takes us through some of the tough moments we saw or heard about in the 2015 game, and I really, really cannot wait to see what’s in store for us this time around. Life Is Strange: Before The Storm will span three episodes, and will kick off on August 31st.

For now, watch the trailer below, and let us know what you’d like to see in the title!

Before the Storm is set in Arcadia Bay, three years before the events of the first game in the series. Players will take on the role of a rebellious 16 year-old Chloe Price who forms an unlikely friendship with Rachel Amber; a beautiful and popular girl destined for success. When Rachel’s world is turned upside down by a family secret, it takes this new-found alliance to give each other the strength to overcome their demons.

https://youtu.be/Dj-2Q4nCMAw

At the D23 Expo this past weekend, the cast of A Goofy Movie, the mid-90’s father-son film that has since become a cult classic, reunited to discuss the film 20 years after its release. Bill Farmer and James Marsden, who played Goofy and Max respectively, took the stage alongside the rest of the voice cast while the folks in the crowd got their own cans of Cheese Whiz to craft their own leaning towers.

But more importantly than all of this, (if that wasn’t awesome enough,) Powerline himself took the stage with a full performance of I2I from the film! 90’s R&B singer Tevin Campbell, flanked with a set of backup dancers, reenacted the final moments of the film in what was the most amazing thing to happen at D23, if not ever.

Watch the performance and tell us how much you agree! Any fond memories of A Goofy Movie? Comment below and see if we see eye to eye!

 

Wow. What a rough week. In the past few days, I had to say goodbye to Adam “MCA” Yauch and was reminded of how tragically short Keith Haring’s life was (he would have turned 54 the day MCA died).

Waking up to the news that Maurice Sendak has passed away is particularly hard.

I am immediately brought back to kindergarten. I’m sitting, Indian-style (what an awful phrase when you think about it), on the rug of my school’s library as Mrs. Durkin reads Where The Wild Things Are. While the other kids “listen”, I am enamored. Just like Max, I too escape to this vivid world. The story and artwork immediately grab hold of me. Not having the knowledge that nearly 20 years later I would be working on creating my own worlds, I experience one of the most formative events of my life.

Shortly after we would hear the book on tape but nothing is a replacement for reading the story to yourself, hearing the waves crashing against Max’s vessel and the pounding rumpus of Carol and the other monsters. This was how Maurice intended it.
His uncompromising vision of how to properly enrich and entertain young readers is something that is often lost on cartoons and books today. Sure, they find clever ways to teach children the arms of the clock or shapes or colors. Maurice’s books taught us about acceptance, love, bravery, sadness and all of the truths we would need to learn to go into this often harsh world of adulthood.

His imagination and effortless grace at executing story and art are the reasons why I can still vividly remember every detail of that library. The rug, the shelves, the windows looking out into the courtyard where the nuns would sometimes sit and maybe try to remember their childhoods as well.

I will never know him personally. Never meet him. Never get to thank him to his face for everything he didn’t realize he had done for me. That may sound like the hardest part but I know it isn’t. The hardest part is knowing that the light of true imagination just dimmed a bit.

Today, I’ll lift my legs a little higher so my steps make just a bit more noise. With love and bittersweet joy and rumpus, I can be a monster today because Maurice said it’s ok.

Maurice Sendak (1928 – 2012)