So different animated series, part 3: Stan and Pamela. A good superhero parody, ridiculing both most comic stamps and not abhorring to pour into the action its own, absurd humor. This is the animated series Stripperella, in which a stripper, drawn from Pamela Anderson, deals with evil.
Unfortunately, good does not mean perfect. I personally liked the cartoon, but with kitsch, absurdity and other related things too much. Stan Lee, as someone who has worked in the comic book industry since the early forties, has cleverly ridiculed all the cliches in the picture story industry. But once it comes to its own, non-comic humor, then something is already wrong. Idiot characters who do not see farther than their nose and do not notice ordinary things like the fact that a couple of seconds after running into a phone booth / room without unnecessary windows and doors / locker room, Erotica Jones jumps Stripperella, and wonders who she is.
But some of the taunts were funny to me, others were incomprehensible, some characters like the gay bartender didn't like it at all. And the villains - I can't say anything about them, because they are incredibly faceless. Again, cliches are well played out and every bastard makes plans one more cretinous than another, but from the point of view of charisma and character, all these guys remain uninteresting buffoons. Plus let down artists who did not bother to draw villains memorable costumes.
But otherwise, the drawing did not fail - normal animation, decently drawn characters, mostly female, because the animated series has a healthy share of sexuality and painted charms flash on the screen more than once and not twice, and what you wanted - the name and concept simply oblige.
And although I don’t call Stripperella my favorite animated series, it’s still a little annoying that after the first season, the bench was closed, because the scope for banter over the comics was huge and in subsequent seasons, in my opinion, the project could develop for the better. And so, unfortunately, we have one single season - sometimes witty and funny, but not brought to mind.
6 out of 10