Puss In Boots: The Last Wish is cute and occasionally amusing. [i]Wouldn't exactly call it a masterpiece. But at least it's not incredibly boring like the original...[/i] Four episodes in, and Andor is kind of a mess. Better than shit like Moon Knight (and likely anything else they’ve ever made) by a mile. But I’d be hard pressed to call it anything special. There’s nice shots and the set design can be nice. But then the CGI is ugly, and you can always tell when the characters are standing in front of a green screen. (Though it’s passable enough to use your suspension of disbelief.) The acting is a bit wooden, and the dialogue is rarely interesting or clever. The plot is plain and obvious. (Being predictable in a bad way.) Yet several scenes don’t make a whole lot of sense either. (Usually when the conflict is supposed to happen.) And even the ends of each episode feel like the creators didn’t know how to end them satisfyingly. (Or at least on a cliffhanger that made you want to keep watching.) Though I wouldn’t simply call it “boring”. Like I’ve seen so many others claim it to be. [i]Not that the show’s own lines, like “must everything be so boring and sad”, do it any favors...[/i] But for its attempt to be a gritty show with consequences and gravity “because the protag kills two guys, and those deaths really truly matter.” (Rings a little hollow, after he blew up a dozen more people and didn’t care.) So I can only assume it's like a 10 hour version of Rogue One, where the ending is “everyone dies and it becomes ‘adult’ in its body count alone.” Edit: Tried to watch Scooby-Doo! Mystery Incorporated for the hell of it. ([s]Because Velma.[/s]) Since it's so highly reviewed. And um...I guess it's so ridiculous that it can be amusing at times? [i]But it feels like Ryan Johnson wrote these characters. Because it's being praised for being well developed. When they're somehow even more one-dimensional than before, and everyone but Scooby was made to be stupid and unlikeable.[/i] (Because that's clever...somehow...)