The Netflix adaptation of *Steel Ball Run*—whose two-part premiere masterfully condenses the first two volumes of the manga—stands as a celebration of Hirohiko Araki’s creative clean slate. While *Steel Ball Run* serves as a highly recommended entry point into *JoJo's Bizarre Adventure* for newcomers, much of its value lies in a prior familiarity with the six-part saga created by Araki. And although the prospect of diving into such a vast and chaotic world may seem intimidating, that very familiarity makes the thematic brilliance of *Steel Ball Run* all the more poignant. Throughout its first six parts, *JoJo's Bizarre Adventure* told a fascinating saga centered on the legacy of the Joestar family. The franchise's seventh installment, *Steel Ball Run*, transports this globe-trotting adventure story to the United States of the 1890s. Araki has crafted a standalone narrative continuity that draws heavily upon the mythology already established within the *JoJo* universe. Star...
With Kimmie now serving as the new CEO—and with all of Horace’s money under her control—things take a turn for the Bellarie family, whose members will stop at nothing to get the money they believe they deserve. Perry deserves credit for consistently devising some of the most absurd and convoluted storylines we’ve witnessed in recent years. *Beauty in Black*—a colossal production featuring an ensemble cast and an excess of plots and subplots—returns with another equally nonsensical season, following a first installment that was, quite frankly, terrible. Creator: Tyler Perry Stars: Taylor Polidore Williams, Crystle Stewart, Amber Reign Smith The thing about this series is that, before diving into its madness, one must lock their brain away; and the second season only heightens this necessity, as—across its 16 episodes—nothing truly noteworthy actually happens. It all boils down to Mallory and Roy treating each other with utter disrespect, Varney acting excessively codependent, and Kimmie...