

Despite the fact that the mutant children were once a bargaining chip of Hob's own, he has since come to realize just how much harm he has caused. Not only has Man Ray gone over his head and brought war to Mutant Town, but he has also gone as far as to kidnap Lita and the Weasels as well. He has already been made aware of Man Ray giving the order to open fire on the crowd, but when Hob finally catches up to his lieutenant, he learns how bad things are within his own organization. While the residents of Mutant Town battle in the streets, Old Hob is desperate to get some answers about how this all happened. While the Turtles and their allies are duking it out for the future of their home, Old Hob is getting ready to do the exact same thing in a moment that will define him for years to come, even if it doesn't really matter. During what should have been the biggest show of unity that Mutant Town has ever seen, a vicious attack was unleashed by the Mutanimals. The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles have only recently managed to end the longest fight of their lives, and already they've found themselves right in the middle of another. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles has its ups and downs leaving a picture that just slides on by.WARNING: The following contains major spoilers for Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles #120, available now from IDW. Thanks to the lack of time focused on the turtles, the voice-work takes getting used to however, it is much better than watching any of the human characters. Megan Fox and Will Arnett have terrible characters and too much screen time in comparison to the real stars of the show, the 4 turtles.

The mixture of CG and real life characters don't work all that well.

The CG allows for some adrenaline packed material, but at the same time, there isn't enough down-to-earth martial arts choreography. Highly stylized and heavy reliance on CG is both its shining moment and downfall. The problem is that the back-story is poor, the characters aren't built up, and the plot details are too simple for its own good.Ī ton of action explodes its way onto the screen. Aside from a mediocre 15 minute opening, the pace picks up and moves at a quick stride the rest of the way. Sliding in at a mere 90 minutes, it is a quick viewing. Jonathan Liebesman dishes out the plain old cheese pizza in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.
