Showing posts with label This Is The End. Show all posts
Showing posts with label This Is The End. Show all posts
Sunday, April 5, 2015
The times, they are a changing
Brad and I started this blog as a way to get our dork love out there into the etherspace of the digital world, maybe connect with some other dorks, and generally have some fun. It's been a blast, and we're not done. But, we've moved beyond what this space could do for us. We're more than just a blog now. We've got a podcast (here) and we've recently launched a website (here). Come check it out and thanks for reading.
-Matt
Thursday, December 5, 2013
Brad's Week in Dork! (11/24/13-11/30/13)
Thanksgiving and Black Friday got in the way of some serious movie watching this week. Can't really complain about that though, can I? Life is good. Family is sweet. And Business is a boomin'. Started the week with Matt at The Angelika for Alexander Payne's Nebraska. It's certainly not going to make my Top Ten List this year, but Bruce Dern is a serious contender for the Oscar race. On Wednesday The Wife and I made it over to The Alamo for Hunger Games 2. Better than the first film, but the best part about the night was still the Drafthouse pre-show. SNL skit was actually pretty funny. And we came home from the movie craving real entertainment, so we had ourselves a double feature with the This Is The End & The Word's End blu rays. Before my Black Friday got on the way, I caught both Philomena & Oldboy on the big screen while my Brother-In-Law tagged along for the adventure. Probably couldn't pair two films as different as those. However, the best film I watched this week was Plunder of the Sun. Glenn Ford doing that mean bastard routine. I love it.
While at work on Saturday, I got word that Paul Walker had died. I'm happy to say that I have always been a Walker fan. The man appeared in a lot of crappy cinema (the first two Fast & Furious flicks, Into The Blue, Bobby Z), but he's also rather amazing in Running Scared. I've sung that films praises numerous times on this blog, and I'll take the opportunity again to send you running to your TV set. It is simply an amazing bit of gonzo cinema. A Grimm's Fairy Tale remake of Akira Kurosawa's Stray Dog featuring possibly the greatest tribute to John Wayne this side of Garth Ennis's Preacher comic book series. Not to mention those terrifying Nosferatu Pedophiles!!!! If you haven't seen Running Scared than I demand you drop what you're doing right now and check it out. If you're looking for other great Walker flicks to tribute and you've already exhausted Fast Five, then I also suggest Joy Ride (see below) and the more recent Pawn Shop Chronicles in which Walker plays a buggin' out meth head. The man knew how to have fun on screen. I'm gonna miss ya.
Nebraska: I've been listening to a lot of conversation surrounding Alexander Payne's latest flick. From one podcast to the next - Slashfilm, Operation Kino, Battleship Pretension - one critic blasts it as a mean-spirited mockery of the midwest, and another calls it a searing character study. One thing is certain - Bruce Dern delivers a quiet, painful performance as the senile father determined to collect his million dollar sweepstakes. And as a city slicker kid who occasionally spent his summers in Taylor, North Dakota population 148, I felt a lot of kinship for Will Forte's interloper. Is it mockery? At times. Is that a bad thing? I don't know. I was always told by my teachers that it was cruel to laugh at others, and Nebraska certainly gains a lot of its comedy from pointing the finger. So maybe I'm an asshole. I enjoyed Nebraska. Not the kind of film I'll watch over & over again, and I absolutely prefer Payne's The Descendants, Sideways, About Schmidt, & Election, but I'll root for Dern come Oscar time.
Plunder of the Sun: "How hard can you beg?" Now here is a beastly little diddy that does not get the praise it so rightfully deserves. Glenn Ford, very much in the spirit of Gilda's Johnny Farrall, is an insurance investigator ensnared in an archeological heist when Patricia Medina bats her eyes across the barroom. Ford is an amazing bastard in this movie, delightfully selfish, and cool as ice in the face of danger. I absolutely love how no jackbooted thug can take this man down, and how heartlessly mean he can be to a beautiful woman when she attempts to play villain. Imagine Indiana Jones mixed with In The Mouth of Madness's John Trent and a little of Prime Cut's Lee Marvin and you get Glenn Ford's beastly idol robber.. In 2013, having recently discovered or rediscovered flicks like The Big Heat, 310 To Yuma, Gilda, and Plunder of the Sun, Glenn Ford has climbed himself to the top of my favorite "classic" actors list. He lives proudly next to Burt Lancaster, Henry Fonda, and Lee Marvin. Now it's time to devour the rest of his back catalogue.
Medium Cool: "I understand that you have some problems." Robert Forester is a TV cameraman attempting to navigate the civil unrest of the late 1960s. The story itself is pretty much what you expect, but Haskel Wexler's in-the-trenches documentary direction perfectly mirrors the era's primetime media assault. Remember when journalism could make a difference? Sigh.
Catching Fire: I really just don't understand the appeal of these movies. I've seen dozens of dystopian sci-fi hellholes. Some I idolize - A Boy And His Dog, Logan's Run, Soylent Green, District 9. Some I hate - No Escape, In Time, Johnny Mnemonic. But The Hunger Games and this redo sequel are just soooooo booooooring. Doesn't help that I'm not the biggest fan of Jennifer Lawrence's steely-eyed acting (minus Silver Linings Playbook, which is awesome, and her constant red carpet shit-talking). Seriously, let's see some real deal emotion lady! You just butchered a dome full of kids and all you can muster is some scream dreaming? I dig the gender reversal of asskicker Katniss & Josh Hutcherson's damsel-in-distress, but why rehash the structure of the first film? How 'bout doing something of note with these old ass tributes? Geoffrey Wright is in your movie! Use him! Phillip Seymour Hoffman is in your movie! Use him! How can a film be nearly three hours long and have so little plot? But since this flick just made a butt load of cash at the box office, I must be missing something.
This Is The End: "Call me your Prince of Persia..." This is not sophisticated satire, it's a ferociously obscene assault on celebrity culture as seen from within. I've always been a sucker for Seth Rogen's pothead comedy (Pineapple Express & Your Highness), but I don't think it's ever been funnier than it is in the moment when he & Jay Baruchel return from an L.A. Revelation to find all their Hollywood friends Left Behind at James Franco's house party. One by one, they are either swallowed up by the Earth, impaled on sharp instruments, possessed by Satan, or welcomed into the Donner Party. Their only option for salvation is to learn & live The Golden Rule. It does not go well.
The World's End: "Back to the dark ages." Edgar Wright & Simon Pegg tackle the apocalypse from a much different, far classier, smarter, and typically British perspective. I've watched the film three times now, and with each viewing I love it more and more. I am very comfortable in calling The World's End one of the year's very best films, and even if I rank it at the bottom of the Cornetto Trilogy, it's still one of the finest emotionally wrenching comedies. It also helps that it so easily Out-Star Trek's this year's abysmal Into Darkness atrocity with Simon Pegg expertly Kirking The Computer. The World's End also offers the strongest performances yet from both Simon Pegg & Nick Frost. Pegg's drunkard turned savior, Gary King never quite learns his lesson, but he comes close enough. The apocalypse is not the awful part, it's how the apocalypse warrants his stagnancy. The Loser Reigns! Just what all isolated fanboys dream! But my favorite delight is watching Frost's sober suit transform into the Pink Hulk of robotic destruction. We've all seen the slobby brute, but I don't think we've ever been blessed with a prim & proper Frost. Hard to take at first, but it's all worth it for when the shots hit the table.
The Killers: Using Ernest Hemingway's short story for the opening scene, the rest of the film traces the actions of Burt Lancaster's punched-out boxer that lead to his inevitable assassination. This is solid noir. The flashback structure prevents it from fully capturing my passion, but it's also what gives the overall story its sense of dread. There's no happy ending here. Burt Lancaster dies in the first ten minutes and there's no resurrection. The film has all the genre hallmarks, and Ava Gardner's Femme Fatale is exceptionally venomous with her dialogue. "You touch me and you won't live till morning." Don't mess with this lady folks. She'll drive you to suicide.
Philomena: Who doesn't love Judi Dench? Who doesn't love Steve Coogan? Only the soulless. Dench plays a woman determined to find the son she was forced to abandon when she was barely a child herself. Coogan is the failed journalist plunging the trenches of the human interest story to regain some hold on his career. Philomena manages to be a searing look at the hypocrisy of religion while still managing to not make a mockery of faith. Everybody wins. It's the cliche "You'll laugh, you'll cry" kind of dramedy. Well done, Mr Frears.
Oldboy: A serviceable remake. There are a few changes to the Korean original, but a lot of the horror of that film is surprisingly maintained in this Spike Lee joint. Josh Brolin is pretty damn great as the American businessman kidnapped off the streets and mysteriously imprisoned for ten years. Suddenly released, Brolin beats, bashes, and hammers his way through a variety of thugs until he finds the man responsible for his torture. Along the way he meets Elisabeth Olsen's attractive social worker and does things he shouldn't. Besides being totally unnecessary, I have a few other complaints in regards to Newboy - Sharlto Copley is far too James Bond Villainy as the billionaire beast, the film rushes too quickly towards its climax, and never properly establishes the "love" between Brolin & Olsen. And could we please stop with the CG bloodwork!?!? I hate it sooo much. Still, it could have gone down a lot worse.
We Steal Secrets - The Story of Wikileaks: "I like crushing bastards." I'd love to tell you I was a socially conscious person. But I'm a pop culture freak. I can drone on and on about the merits of Roger Corman, but can barely string a sentence when it comes to the politics of the day. I'm trying to be a better American. I probably should venture out further into the real world than the handful of documentaries I watch a year. I knew very little about Wikileaks before watching We Steal Secrets. Similar to The Act of Killing, I found it to be a rather disturbing viewing experience. What is the truth of the Red, White, & Blue? What can we as Americans accept as collateral damage? Wikileaks is incredible. Too bad Julian Assange is such a hypocritical asshole himself.
Joyride: I love Joy Ride. Co-written by JJ Abrams and directed by John Dahl, the film is the closest this century has come to crafting the classic noir screenplay. It's Detour populated with sexy young things. While on a cross country roadtrip, two brothers punk a trucker using sex as temptation, and unleash a nightmarish Duel on the freeways. Paul Walker & Steve Zahn are so much fun to hang out with that you forgive their idiotic prank and cheer them on to victory. Too bad the film doesn't have the grit to adhere to its noir heart, and falters with a too-neat climax. And Leelee Sobieski should totally Femme Fatale these bozos, but is simply relegated to the damsel-in-distress.
--Brad
Friday, August 30, 2013
A Fistful of Summer 2013! (Brad's Picks)
That's it folks. Summer's over. Back to school. So what grade do we give 2013's Blockbuster Season? I'm thinking a big, dud of a C. As always, when April pushed into May, my heart was filled with joyous anticipation for the titanic tent poles Hollywood was churning down their production line. I like all kinds of films, from the smallest micro budgets to the embarrassingly corpulent Baytrocities. I vote YES on Proposition Transformers 4! And with 2013 offering Iron Man 3, Star Trek Into Darkness, Fast & Furious 6, Pacific Rim, The Lone Ranger, Man of Steel, and The Wolverine my fanboy hard-on was throbbing with an intensity not felt since...well, last Summer when The Avengers & The Dark Knight Rises ruled my soul. And frankly the films leading into these Blockbusters only ranged from the "Ok" to the "Pretty good." I needed a great crop of Extravaganza to feel solid about this cinema year. Oh well. Of the bloated behemoths listed above, only one movie makes my Fistful of Summer list. They weren't all bad - heck, some were pretty good - but, nearly every flick this year has left that bitter taste of disappointment on my tongue. None more vile than...
Star Trek Into Darkness. It's been nearly three months since my last viewing, and JJ Abrams's So-Damn-Dumb sequel still manages to enrage this Trekkie. And that's just annoying. I hate being that asshole. Rereading my angry, incoherent review of the film all I can do is shake my head at the fanboy cliche Into Darkness brought out of me. I'm actually looking forward to rewatching the film so that maybe, just maybe, I can find something positive to say about that mess. Is it truly the worst Star Trek film as voted by Trekkies? I don't know about that...Star Trek Nemesis has to be the nadir of the franchise, but it's nice to know that I'm not alone in the disappointment. Does it's lackluster display at the box office mean the end of this lens-flared crew? Probably not, but I smell new director and budget cuts in the Enterprise's future. And that's a good thing.
I think the biggest shock this summer was how much I enjoyed The Lone Ranger. *crickets* Have I lost you? Did you immediately click away at the very idea of a positive word thrown Jerry Bruckheimer's way? Of course not, you're still reading just to see what insanely idiotic thing I'll type next. After all, how could I possibly hate so hard on Star Trek Into Darkness when I had so much damn fun watching The Lone Ranger? I don't have a good answer for you. The Lone Ranger is an absolute train wreck, but I found myself riotously laughing as men had their hearts eaten from their chests, and bandits squealed in joy at the possibility of duck foot rape. What the hell was Disney thinking with this one? It's a horror show, but it's also so damn weird that I found it utterly compelling. If you want to read more of my absurd Lone Ranger praise than click on over to my Daily Grindhouse review. If it wasn't for this past weekend, The Lone Ranger would have certainly made this Fistful of Summer.
Finally, before we get to the Top 5, I just wanted to reiterate how the Blockbuster failed to excite this year. Again, I enjoyed Pacific Rim, Elysium, Furious 6, & Man of Steel to a degree, but all fell short of their source material. Cinema is failing too often to reach beyond simple nostalgia, and that's worrisome. There are going to be fewer and fewer billion dollar returns like The Avengers. The bubble will burst. Wishful thinking? Summer 2015 will bring us Star Wars - Episode VII, Avengers 2, Batman vs Superman, James Bond 24, Pirates of the Caribbean 5, Jurassic Park 4, Independence Day 2, Warcraft, Assassins Creed, The Fantastic Four reboot, and a new Terminator. Will the world show up, or are there gonna be a lot of unhappy suits in Hollywood? I sense some duds, or at least a batch of films that cost too much and make too little. Or maybe that's all bullshit. Maybe, after 34 years, I'm just finally hitting blockbuster fatigue.
I certainly needed more protein in my diet, and this year I made more of an effort to hit the art theaters for those hipster, indie darlings. Richard Linklater's Before Midnight, Woody Allen's Blue Jasmine, Joss Whedon's Much Ado About Nothing, Jim Rash & Nat Faxon's The Way Way Back, Quentin Dupieux's Wrong, and a slew of VOD offerings gave some much needed respite from the Summer drought. Still, I'm not an art house goon, and none of these tiny pictures could quite crack my Top 5. So, shall we get on with it -
5. You're Next: Possibly one of the most twisting cinematic experiences I had this year. I just watched it this past Tuesday in a completely empty movie theater, and it took me from an exhausted seen-it-all horror aficionado to a hand clapping, seat jumping, school boy. You're Next has been languishing on the Lionsgate shelf for a couple of years now, and I was sick of hearing about it six months ago. Not to mention that the marketing for the film makes You're Next look like just another home invasion flick a la The Strangers or Funny Games. And for the first twenty minutes, it's just that. The Animals creep along the woods, the kills are fairly ordinary...then Sharni Vinson gets her hands on a meat tenderizer. You're Next shifts a bit; the plot opens up, and suddenly the film is a whole lotta fun. This is not some brooding slasher, it's a very 80s, kick-ass chick movie. Not too many of those around anymore, and I can't help but feel that You're Next gets everything right that the Evil Dead remake gets wrong.
4. Iron Man 3: The First Mega Movie of the Summer is also the only Blockbuster to land on my top five. Forget Avengers - Age of Ultron, Iron Man 3 is the real sequel to last year's Marvel Masterpiece, and even if it doesn't quite reach the heights of that Super Group, director Shane Black still delivers the finest entry in Shellhead's trilogy. The intergalactic destruction brought down on New York City had lasting effects on Tony Stark; his panic attacks deliver a level of humanity to the character in the same fashion his alcoholism did in the comic books (we'll just have to settle on this PG-13, family friendly affliction). Black manages to bring his wit & banter with him, a mean feat not yet accomplished by any of the Marvel Studios henchmen. It's not Lethal Weapon, but there is enough of that flavor to invigorate the franchise. Ben Kingsley's The Mandarin also happens to be the most surprisingly entertaining villain of the Super Hero genre, even if Guy Pearce's wronged scientist is a bit of a dullard and the film's revelations leave ignorant geeks to rage on the message boards. Marvel continues to build its universe, and I'm still giddy for more. Thor, Cap, The Guardians of the Galaxy - I'm all in.
3. This Is The End: The first film this year that left me 100% satisfied was this silly, stoner deconstruction of celebrity. "Deconstruction." That's probably giving the film too much credit. This Is The End is just too damn funny to ignore. Seth Rogen & Jay Baruchel play themselves, a couple of dimwits who use their good fortune to gorge upon Carl's Jr, video games & pot. When Rogen drags Baruchel to James Franco's party the sky opens up and Revelation hits - the good get zapped up to heaven, and the bad are left behind to battle demon dogs as well as each other. This film is bananas. The entire cast has a blast destroying their personas; Danny McBride is exceptionally reprehensible, taking to the new rules of Thunderdome like a cannibal duck to water. This Is The End is dumb, gross, and ignorant. And I loved every second of it.
2. The World's End: And now for something completely different. Edgar Wright, Simon Pegg, & Nick Frost reteam to take on the Apocalypse but from a very British perspective. The World's End still has plenty of silly, but whereas This Is The End often succeeds with stupidity, Wright's screenplay wins on childish wit. There is a difference, a small one maybe, but it's enough to push one film over the other. Several themes and in-jokes are carried throughout the Cornetto Trilogy, but the key ingredient has to be plutonic love. I might still prefer both Shaun of the Dead & Hot Fuzz, but after a second viewing I think The World's End displays the strongest on-screen friendship yet. It's a broken relationship, five friends that drifted apart years ago, but when Simon Pegg reaches a breaking point, the draw of his high school memory pulls the more successful chums back together. A high school reunion involving an epic pub crawl through their home town. Of course, as movies have taught us over and over, you can't go home again. Especially when the body snatchers have set up shop.
--Brad
Sunday, June 30, 2013
Brad's Week in Dork! (6/9/13-6/15/13)
I spent most of this week in my PJs, or at least cinematically wrapped in spandex. Man of Steel marks Warner Brothers desperate attempt to capture that Marvel magic. The company has been raking in Bat-Dollars, but they have yet to establish a superhero cinematic universe. Stinkers like Green Lantern, Jonah Hex, and Catwoman portray a studio with its thumb stuck up its collective asses; a boardroom of nimrod headscratchers utterly baffled by the success of Disney's Avengers Assemblage. Enter Zack Snyder, fresh off his disastrous snoozefest Sucker Punch, and just as equal to prove himself as the suits dropping him at the helm. At its very least, Man of Steel throws a punch and delivers a level of action not yet seen cinematically from our boy blue.
Last year with the release of the blu ray box set, I revisited the Richard Donner Superman films, and I was saddened to discover that my nostalgia was not strong enough to battle the goof of Gene Hackman or the WTF of Supes's random, do-whats-needed Kryptonian powers. Once I believed a man could fly, now I'm just simply charmed by the joyous energy of Christopher Reeve. His back & forth performance nearly reaches the height of Frank Quietly's presto-changeo transformative design. He achieves with a voice and a head tilt what no other actor ever bothered with before or since (oh, Brandon Routh...you tried...that's admirable...). At the very least, what I pull from the Donner films is the loss of Christopher Reeve's talent. He found stardom in a cape, nearly reached the stars agin with Deathtrap, but never could quite escape the shadow of the icon. Reeve will always be Kal-El. And Routh will always be his shadow. Can Henry Cavil makes a career from the Man of Steel? Maybe. But I have my doubts. He's certainly no Reeve, but is the world more willing to let actors shed their characters? I'm still waiting for Chris Pine, Chris Hemsworth, and Chris Evans (that's a lot of Chrises!) to grow beyond their franchises.
Action Comics Volume 2 - Bulletproof: This is not All-Star Superman. And that's its greatest fault. Not fair to judge a writer's current work to his absolute best, but All-Star's shadow is large and it cast a dark shade over everything found in Grant Morrison's New 52 work. There are some solid moments to be found - "The Boy Who Stole Superman's Cape" and the elseworld adventures of President Superman - however, this second volume of Action Comics is just too disjointed to get on board. And when halfway through the hardcover Grant Morrison disappears and we're tortured with mediocre backup stories. Not cool DC. Volume 1 was a meh. Volume 2 is an easy pass.
Superman - The Movie: How many times have I watched this film? 50? 100? It certainly didn't define my childhood the way Star Wars or even Arnold Schwarzenegger did, but I can't remember a time when I was unaware of Christopher Reeve's Superman. I remember my recorded VHS copy littered with filthy commercials eventually snapping under the strain of rewind. I remember loving Superman's final subway assault on Lex Luthor's underground bunker. I remember blushing at the bounce of Miss Teschmacher's cleavage. Yowza. As stated above, last year's blu ray rewatch tainted the childhood memory a bit. I just can't handle Gene Hackman & Ned Beaty's goofy duo routine. They feel false. Superman falling for the lead box scheme is certainly lame. And Margot Kidder's Lois Lane grates the nerves as cinema's whiniest damsel in distress...and her flygirl inner monologue? Just gross. A year later, revisiting the film with Man of Steel barreling down upon us, I still feel the pang of Hackman & Kidder. They just don't work for me. Christopher Reeve on the other hand? The guy is just golden as Clark. His midwest act is hilarious, and you realize what a perfect disguise it is for these big city Metropolis bozos - especially when Lois can't bare to pull her eyes from the typewriter. And then he turns into the upright Superman. He's all deep voice and barrel chest. It's a great performance, and it's the reason the film has lasted in the memories of fanboys&girls. It's also the reason Superman continues in the public consciousness even when the comic book has sucked the life out of the character for decades. Wal-Mart sells shirts cuz of this guy.
Marc Maron @ Sixth and I: "Jews Are Special!" On Tuesday night, The Wife & I ventured into Washington DC's Chinatown to see stand-up & podcaster extraordinaire Marc Maron read from his new essay collection, Attempting Normal. I have never before seen anyone at the Sixth & I's historic synagogue, and it turns out to be a fantastic venue for something of this nature. Sure, it's a little odd when Maron is ranting about how you don't need god to get sober when the Star of David hangs above his head, but the irony was not lost on him and he seemed to revel in it. Maron shared the joys & horrors of the road, got personal about his father, and reminded the audience of the importance of Thanksgiving. Marc Maron's talent rests in his ability to pull the crowd into the act. This was not a simple dry reading like the dozens of Bestseller bouts I've experienced in the past. He would read a little, ask a question to the crowd, offer a little commentary, and continue on with the essay. Basically a Special Edition DVD experience of his book. Very cool.
The X-Files - Season One: This was probably the first television show that I ever obsessed over, but I had not revisited it since the final episode aired...well, with the exception of that horrid cinematic sequel - yikes! I quickly discovered that I couldn't binge watch The X-Files in the same manner as BSG, or Lost, or even Magnum P.I. This show is wonky. The chemistry between David Duchovny & Gillian Anderson is there from the pilot episode, but Chris Carter's antics are not nearly as thrilling as I once thought. And there is a whole hell of a lot of filler in these 24 episodes. I could not possibly care less about mysteries-of-the-week like "The Jersey Devil," "Ghost in the Machine," or "Fire." So many of these concepts have been explored before in literature and film and often The X-Files can't even scratch the surface of what made the original material interesting. That's not to say there's not good stuff here cuz there most certainly is - "Squeeze," "EVE," "Beyond the Sea," & "Darkness Falls" all offer up some pretty decent scares mixed with solid character work. But I remember this show better. And I'm hoping the next season shines brighter than this dull beginning.
Black Rock: Wow. Just wow. I'm not sure what's worse - the utterly boring execution of a totally unoriginal screenplay, or the heinous scream acting of its three leads. Whichever offense wins, the audience most certainly looses. Kate Bosworth tricks her two bickering friends (Kate Aselton & Lake Bell) into a camping excursion on a remote island off the Maine coast. There they encounter high school chums turned combat vets turned rapists. Last House on the Left shenanigans occur from there - rocks in faces, sexual deviance at gunpoint, blah, blah, blah. Black Rock is just the very worst of Final Girl exploitation, and just confused enough to believe itself empowering. Wrong.
Superman Unbound: Loosely based on Geoff Johns' Brainiac storyarc from Action Comics, this latest direct-to-dvder from DC Studios is simply fairly forgettable fluff. The evil Kryptonian computer comes to Earth in an effort to dissect & bottle humanity; Superman gets all self-righteous before doing his whole smashing bit. It's hard to believe that this studio can put out something as innovating & stunning as The Dark Knight Returns and The New Frontier, but still stoop to such a sophomoric snooze. And I gotta wonder why Superman Beyond is sooooo free with the blood? Brainiac is punching tentacles through skulls, gore splashing across the screen. The story is too kiddy or simple to support the violence, and Lois Lane flipping Brainiac the bird is just silly. This film feels very 90s; it belongs polybagged and wrapped in a chromium cover, read once, and put away for good.
Superman Unchained #1: Speaking of the 90s....Scott Snyder & Jim Lee team up to revolutionize the Man of Steel just in time for his new movie. Well, it's not terrible. Someone or something is hurtling satellites towards Earth. Supes goes up to space to smash. But what does it all have to do with the nuclear destruction of Nagasaki? Has the U.S. Government been secreting away it's own super human project for the past 75 years? Well, of course it has! I can't really hate on this issue, but it certainly failed to excite me. Hopefully Snyder has some tricks up his sleeve because as nice as it is too gaze upon Jim Lee's art, that is certainly not enough to keep my interest.
Batman #21: Scott Snyder & Greg Capullo's year long origin story starts here, and similar to Superman Uncahined, it's a wait and see situation. I've said it before and I'm afraid I gotta say it again, Scott Snyder has pretty much lost me since the conclusion of The Court of Owls, and I'm afraid a Frank Miller Year One rehash is not enough to impassion my Bat-Nostalgia. If Zero Year delves deeper into the mysterious dread of Gotham City's past than that might be a fun way to develop what was started with The Court, however, I'm worried this is just going to be another evil mastermind scheme. The big bad revealed on the last pages here is not the shocker or the draw to boost my confidence in Snyder's dwindling run. We will see...
This Is The End: "Fuck Your House Franco!!!" It sorta puzzles my noggin, but the pothead stoner comedy of Seth Rogen & Evan Goldberg seriously pulverizes my funny bone. They did it before with Pineapple Express & Your Highness, and they do it again with this happily hateful satirization of Hollywood. During James Franco's batshit-out-of-control housewarming party Revelation strikes and the narcissistic celebrities are left behind to face the Apocalypse. We're talking sinkholes, burning Hollywood Hills, Old Scratch & his seven heads. It's all in the title. Seth Rogen & Jay Baruchel struggle with friendship as James Franco protects his hipster art from Danny McBride's uncontrollable masturbation. Craig Robinson stands guard with his Teddy Bear flashlight Terrance Peterson, but Jonah Hill uses faith as a weapon only to pay the ultimate price - Rosemary's Baby style! This Is The End is a gross, painful, stupid, and gleefully offensive religious assault. Simply the most fun I've had at the movies this year.
All-Star Superman: "You have given them an ideal to aspire to, embodied their highest aspirations. They will race, and stumble, and fall and crawl and curse...and finally...they will join you in the sun, Kal-El." Spoken by his father Jor-El, the above passage comes late in the graphic novel, but gets right to the heart of the character in a way that no other writer has ever come close to scratching. As Matt stated in his review, Superman is not better than us, but he represents the potential of the human race. He may have had good Kryptonion breeding, but it's his midwestern Apple Pie youth that shapes him into the concrete slab of morality we all admire. With All-Star Superman, Grant Morrison & Frank Quitely plunge the depths of the 75 year old character and reach a final mission statement by exploring the end of Superman. Along the way they celebrate the crazy of classic comics (Lois Lane - Super Woman! Atlas & Samson vs the Ultra Sphinx! Doomsday Jimmy! Zibarro the Bizarro Poet!) that will either alienate new readers or draw them in to the massive but joyful decades of continuity. I've read All-Star Superman a half dozen time now, and it's safe to say that it ranks at the very top of my All Time Favorite Comics. It is a classic, and the ultimate Superman experience.
Superman Returns: "I'm always around." I think it's pretty obvious that Bryan Singer's relaunch is too in love with Richard Donner's original film. As fun as it is to hear John Williams's score or Marlon Brando's Jor-El, Superman Returns can never break free from the memory of a better movie. And yes, Donner's Superman is far superior to this retread. Obviously, a big problem is that Supes never throws a punch. He lifts some stuff. He bounces some bullets off his chest. He flies real fast. But that's about it. Mostly he spends the film being super oogie creepy as he peeps in on Lois Lane & family. Brandon Routh sure cuts a strong Christopher Reeve profile, but he's given very little to perform. Kevin Spacey channels too much of the Hackman's Luthor, hamming his way through yet another real estate scheme. There really is only one moment to cherish, and that's Eve Marie Saint helplessly attempting to be near her son Clark as he lies poisoned in a hospital bed. That's the closest this film comes to plucking a heartstring.
All Star Superman: "It's time to get serious about killing Superman." Stripping away a lot of the crazy side stories, and struggling to maintain the philosophy of Grant Morrison's original novel, the All-Star Superman animated film succeeds more often than if flounders. Lex Luthor boobytraps a mission to explore the sun, and successful poisons Superman's cellular structure. Supes has one year to live, and he must attempt to leave the planet Earth in strong standing as well as say goodbye to the one woman he's ever loved. There is still plenty of heart and morality in the film, but there's no fooling that this is first and foremost an action cartoon. The Parasite prison breakout is certainly the hightlight, but I'm also stunned at how well they were able to pull off the climactic world eater battle. Not quite the genius of the comic book, but All-Star Superman still feels like the most solid adaptation of the character.
Watchmen: I am an Alan Moore fan. I read comics, so I have to be. However, I've never been than much of a Watchmen freak. Frankly, I'll take From Hell, The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, Tom Strong, Promethea, and Swamp Thing any day over Watchmen. Blashpemy you say...oh well. That is until I saw Zack Snyder's film. Yes, I did not appreciate the story until I saw it on the big screen. There is a coldness to the performances as well as Snyder's fetishizing camera, but it all pretty much fits the tone of Alan Moore & Dave Gibbons' post-modern sendup. Jackie Earl Haley's Rorschach is probably the easiest performance to love, his guttural "Hurms" of contempt almost as pleasurable as the dead delivery in which he dispatches justice. With each new Silver Screen Superhero we see, Watchmen becomes more and more relevant. Double Bill this with Joss Whedon's The Avengers and you've gotta a helluva night. It's still a hate letter directed at Thatcher/Reagan politics, but it's nice (or utterly depressing) to see that these issues are still ripe for ribbing to this day. And I don't miss the Squid. Fanboys go on raving, but Snyder's ending feels sound with the setting he erected. After Watchmen, Snyder could have made ten more Sucker Punches, and I would have been perfectly happy with his career.
Superman vs. The Elite: This short film attempts to address the godhood of Superman, and the consequence of his heroics. A punk rock super being known as Manchester Black is tired of giving bad guys second chances. How many times can Lex Luthor break out of jail and kill dozens of people before Superman drops him in a volcano. Black is disgusted by Kal-El's snooty ethics, and with the aide of his mutant goonsquad, he's gonna right Big Blue's wrongs. There is an interesting idea here, and I would be curious to read the source material. However, the film itself is far too banal. The animation boring. The voice work tepid. About the only aspect of this movie that I liked was the opening credits seen below. Silly punk rock.
Man of Steel: "This Man Is Not Our Enemy." There is a lot to enjoy about this Christopher Nolan Production of a Zack Snyder Film. The opening twenty minutes are a sci-fi feast of Krypton. This is not the Ice Castle set of the Donner film or the CG mystery of television's Smallville. David Goyer's script establishes an alien landscape with its own government, status structure, and wildlife. Russell Crowe's Jor-El is a desperate scientist beating upon the arrogant certitude of his people. The Birth of Kal-El is as important to the Krypton people as it will most obviously be for the citizens of Earth. These are ideas explored previously in the comics, but will most likely come as huge surprises for modern movie going audiences. Jor-El's final moments with his wife & son before the rocket launches into space are heartthumping, and I was moved to tears before the prologue could even finish.
Screenwriter Goyer pretty much mimics the structure he used so well in Batman Begins, hopping from Clark Kent's present day hoboing to his childhood farmland memories. If it ain't broke don't fix it, and I appreciated the loose storytelling as opposed to the A to B origin building. However, my problems start to arise with The Kents. Kevin Costner's Pa is another strong father figure and he mirrors well with Crowe's space daddy, but I found his fear - or distrust - of man to be unsettling. Pa Kent is The American Way. His staunch ethics and middle American nature should instill a faith in humanity not dread. And his inevitable end handled in the film robs Clark of the lesson of human frailty. It's a Marvel Comics moment, an Uncle Ben, and not the big universe idea of DC Comics.
Whereas the last cinematic adventure was afraid to throw a punch, Man of Steel is almost all action. From the moment Michael Shannon's Zod arrives on Earth, Superman is caught in one fiery explosion or another. Smallville, IHOP, and Metropolis have never seen so much devastation...in fact, has an American city ever been as punished as much as Metropolis is here in Man of Steel's final moments? A lot has been made of the destruction, but honestly, other than it droning on for a bit too long, I really enjoyed seeing two super beings bash the living hell out of one another. If two creatures of this godlike strength ever came into contact with each other, our cities would certainly crumble. It's a politically correct post-9/11 world, but at the end of the day, this is just a movie and Comic Book flicks demand Comic Book Destruction. But maybe Superman, you could hold off your Lois Lane smooches until you step out of the crater made from human ash.
300: "Tell Xerxes that he faces free men here!" I was so taken aback by Zack Snyder's Paul Greengrass turnaround in Man of Steel that I wanted to return to the film that made him the mockery of hipster haters everywhere. I so love Frank Miller's 300. It's jingoistic, absurdly exploitative, historically embarrassing, and utterly entertaining. And Snyder shoots it warts and all. Gerard Butler is the proud King Leonidas, ruler of the Spartan people, defier of false gods, and champion messenger punter. Everyone involved refuses to bat an eye. 300 succeeds because it's earnest almost up to the point of hilarity, and it's one of the few films to use cgi as an artistic choice rather than an escape route.
JAWS 3D: "You're talking about some damn shark mother?!?!" Steven Speilberg's JAWS is one of my all time favorite films (number 5 to be precise), and it's the blockbuster turning point that paved the way for Transformers & Battleships. But before we could get to the current summer climate, we all had to suffer through the bastardization known as the Jaws sequels. Seriously, is there a worst film franchise out there? I dare you to pit The Texas Chainsaw Massacres against Jaws - The Revenge or this beautifully wretched 3D excursion. Of course, that being said, I had an absolute blast at The Alamo Draft House last week. Chomping down on Fish & Chips while basking in the Sea World glory of the Spanish Galleon was a real hoot. Dennis Quaid is a rather impotent leading man struggling to steal the frame from a pair of dolphins (don't worry, he does better in Dreamscape & Inner Space), and Louis Gossett Jr holds a cut like his life depends on it...which it most certainly does! The very notion that this is the fishy runoff of the perfect popcorn confection that launched America's most beloved filmmaker is completely baffling.
Flex Mentallo - Man of Muscle Mystery: "Acid, all day, every day...." I think to fully appreciate this graphic novel you need to also read Grant Morrison's comic book history lesson, Supergods. I certainly didn't understand this drug fueled nightmare of funny pages insanity until I experienced Morrison's peyote awakening in the outskirts of Nepal. Flex Mentallo is a fictionalized icon of the four color form who sometimes breaks into our reality when his suicidal creator slips into coma rants. Yeah, I don't know what that means either. Flex is our "Hero of the Beach," an Atlas strongman investigating the reappearance of an old chum simply known as The Fact. Along the way he senses the hand of his creator, discovers the pleasures of spandex sex bars, and contemplates complex issues of gender & sexuality after being exposed to Pink Mentallium...Yeah, this ain't your daddy's comics.
Your Highness: Danny McBride's pothead appreciation for shitty 80s fantasy films a la Barbarian Queen, The Warrior & The Sorceress, Death Stalker, and Death Stalker 2. And I love it. Which seems to be the minority opinion, but all you haters out there obviously don't understand the subtleties of horrendous ADR ("Jumping!") or "Punch & Twist" puppets. James Franco has never been more dense or adorable as McBride's much beloved brother Prince Fabious, and I'll take this dimwitted nimrod any day over Blockbuster paychecks like Oz The Great & Powerful or Rise of the Planet of the Apes. Not sure what Natalie Portman is doing in this movie, but she does add to the overall absurdity to the film, and her theatrical delivery of potty mouth insults makes schoolboys giggle. And let's not forget the confidence of a good butt shot, putting many an ass in seat. Like their other collaborations, Your Highness is joyfully dumb and gleefully violent. But it's a special brand of base fanboy humor that I certainly endorse. So, grab your Blade of Unicorn & swing for the Minotaur's johnson!
Shoot First, Die Later: Fernando De Leo enjoys the pain and absurdity of violence. He's Italian. They know how to do death. Shoot First, Die Later is the story of good cop turned vigilante after the mob attempts to hook him into their payrole. That old tune. It succeeds in its perverse enjoyment of violence, and manages to up the ante with each gonzo set piece. None of these actors are taking home the SAG award, but Luc Merenda has mastered the stern face and when he sets his sights on his gangster prey you believe his passion for strangleholds. This film is getting a lot of love on the internet these days, but I don't think it's as punishing or as delightful as De Leo's Live Like A Cop, Die Like A Man, which was released earlier last year.
--Brad
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