Showing posts with label Jeff Lemire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jeff Lemire. Show all posts
Friday, September 5, 2014
DC Nations Shorts - Is Green Arrow Cool?
As much as I've detested the latest batch of DC Animated's feature films, I've really enjoyed the DC Nation shorts that have aired on Cartoon Network (or more accurately, YouTube). The 75th Anniversary Batman 'toons are flat out incredible, while the Animal Man & Shazam bits have been just big buckets of win. Their latest subject appears to be Green Arrow. Sigh. DC Comics has been trying real damn hard to make Oliver Queen a top tier character of late. They brought on Jeff Lemire to script the issues (he just left, but I can honestly say that for the first time ever, Lemire made Green Arrow a regular monthly for me), and the WB's constant assault of magazine man-ads for Arrow are lifelessly off-putting. Folks tell me that show's decent these days, but I just have a hard time buying into the trick arrow guy. Yet, on the Marvel side, I regularly enjoy Hawkeye's appearances in Secret Avengers, Deadpool, and his own monthly. What's the deal? I think it has something to do with sense of humor. The coolest & most serious version of Green Arrow for me happened when he popped up in Frank Miller's The Dark Knight Returns; when he helped Old Man Wayne kick Superman's ass. Old. Cranky. One-armed tough dude. But I've been meaning to finally crack into Neal Adams & Denny O'Neal's Green Lantern/Green Arrow comic. So maybe now's the time. Guess all the publicity is working.
--Brad
Tuesday, January 14, 2014
Brad's Week in Dork! (1/5/14-1/11/14)
Blink and you'll miss it. That's what this week felt like. 2014 has barely started and I can already feel it slipping away. I spent a good chunk of it compiling this year's Cinematic Resolutions, but I'm not quite ready to tackle any of them yet - which is certainly foolish if I have any hope in hades of devouring those Godzilla flicks before the latest reboot hits the big screen. Gotta get hot. I did manage to finish off Sweet Tooth & begin Grant Morrison's Animal Man. Feels good to be tackling comics outside of the weeklies, and I hope it's a trend that lasts. I'm tired of looking at all those unread trades piling up next to the bookshelf - Gotham Central, Doom Patrol, Infinite Kung Fu, Rasl, Swamp Thing, Loveless, and our next entry in the Graphic Novel Book Club, Sailor Twain. New Year, and I want to refocus some of my dork energy into the other pop mediums. Let's not forget I'm only halfway through Richard Stark's Parker series, and Darwyn Cooke is already adapting novels beyond my knowledge. That ain't cool.
"What A World!" & "I'm Melting...I'm Melting!" by Jason Edmiston
I'm not bitching and moaning about the week, it just feels like it lacked focus. I want to buckle down, but I guess I'm still decompressing from the massive 2013 movie dump I did in December. This week started with a Late Show Drafthouse screening of Walter Hill's The Warriors. My buddy Herms was in town from Texas, and it was a blast subjecting his fresh eyes to the Gang War crazy of late 70s New York City. Yep. This is the way it was folks. Fact. Matt & I also finally got ourselves around to witnessing the atrocity of the latest 47 Ronin. Oh man. What a waste. So...yeah...the real highlight of the week was easily the Alamo 100 Raiders of the Lost Ark screening. I've seen that film well over a hundred times now (at least 4 on the Big Screen), and it just never gets old. Me & Indiana Jones? It's true love.
The Warriors: "I don't like the way you live." Ok. I don't love The Warriors. It's one of those seminal films of my youth that I just never bothered with. The first time I saw the movie, I was 18/19 and well on my way to being a snooty film freak. My initial thought back then was that Walter Hill perfected this sort of whacko gang land in his rock opera Streets of Fire. Still, this film is a bit of a wonder, and I absolutely love its earnestness. Here's a New York City in which Mimes rove the streets looking for trouble, where Baseball Furies terrify in warpaint, and where hillbillies in roller skates are the toughest dudes on the block. You can't help but chuckle at the sight of skinhead goons marauding about in a Road Warrior wagon. It's all about honor, friendship, and gash....uh...yeah, there are some awkward moments. The Warriors themselves always seem like a bad date away from running a train on their female companion - I know this, cuz our hero Swan says exactly that. James Remar is the angry tough guy that gets taken off the stage when he fails to rape an undercover police woman. So yeah, The Warriors, it's not too PC. It's an icky fantasyland birthed from the same community fear that brought us Bernie Goetz and his cinematic Death Wish. It's nearly two hours of confused, but somewhat intoxicating outlaw philosophy. After all, as The Director's Cut clumsily establishes at the start, The Warriors is a story of courage similar to that of the 300 Spartans......uh....wha?
Sweet Tooth Vol 6 - Wild Game: Gosh darn. I just could not get past how damn sad this series got. In a lot of ways it reminded me of Brian K Vaughn's Y The Last Man. A Post-apocalyptic landscape. An on-the-road quest to discovery the origin of a plague. Bonds of friendship. Bonds of love. Maybe it's Lemire's somber, sometimes morose art-style, but I could never really connect to any other emotion than sorrow. Sweet Tooth & Company finally reach their Alaskan destination, but the answers there are typically more ponderous than narratively satisfying. Lemire writes a helluva page-turner; once I got back into this series, I was racing to the climax. I love the sequential tinkering he puts his story through, and he's obviously having fun with the medium. It's painfully refreshing to witness an artist utterly aware of his medium's visual importance. This is not Brian Michael Bendis with neverending captions and word balloons. Sweet Tooth is art. But gloomy as hell, and I can already feel the story leaving my cranium.
Deceptive Practice: The first time I encountered slight-of-hand artist Ricky Jay was as the narrator of Paul Thomas Anderson's Magnolia. That voice. Once heard it will live in your head. The next time I saw Ricky Jay was in David Mamet's Heist. That lead to an obsession with Mamet's films & plays which in turn lead to obsessions with Joe Mantegna, William H Macy, and Ricky Jay. Now for the first time, director Molly Bernstein takes us inside the tricks of Ricky Jay's trade. No, this is not a How-To on his artistry, but a sort of origin tale - a documentary that will drop your jaw in astonishment while also digging a bit into the history of stage magic. I'm a sucker for this type of thing. Penn & Teller. The Amazing Jonathan. Fun stuff. But Ricky Jay is an artist, a genius, and it feels like a privilege to get a peak inside.
Raiders of the Lost Ark: "You want to talk to god? Let's go see him together." You know the deal. On the verge of another World War, the American Government responds to rumblings of Hitler's Occult shenanigans by recruiting world renowned archeologist/adventurer, Dr. Indiana Jones. It's an absurd premise born from the whacky pulp adventures of various movie serials, and succeeds thanks to Harrison Ford's uncanny badass charm. This is one of those exceptional fits of character & actor. Yes, you can imagine a world in which Tom Selleck traded idol for whip, but that's an offcentered Fringe universe where RC Cola reigns supreme. No thank you. The Big Bang Theory recently postulated that the good professor's presence in the narrative achieves absolutely nothing in the plot, but I actually think the futility of the Nazi's scheme adds an extra layer of apocalyptic gloom. It's not a matter of Indy saving the day, but Indy bearing witness to God's Wrath. Can't shake it. Raiders of the Lost Ark is still the all time greatest adventure story.
47 Ronin: If you're looking for an Asian Adventure with heavy doses of CGI then let me recommend Stephen Chow's Journey To The West. If you're looking for a few against the many samurai slaughterfest then let me suggest Takashi Miike's 13 Assassins or the obvious Seven Samurai. But if you're looking for the 47 Ronin saga told exceptionally then you better go with any other dozen retellings such as Kenji Mizoguchi's double feature or even Mike Richardson & Stan Sakai's recent Dark Horse Comic. Cuz you're not going to want to bother with this one. This film is nearly as lifeless as Keanu Reeves' performance. It's a dull flop destined for banishment in the Wal-Mart five dollar bin or the black hole of streaming services. Maybe some ignorant child will discover a curiosity for the genre after stumbling across it, but that's the best possible future this 47 Ronin can hope for.
21 Jump Street: "They don't serve vegan in jail, bitch!" I lost money on this one. No way did I think a cinematic reboot of a crappy teen beat cop show from the 80s was going to work - especially one fronted by GI Joe's Duke Meathead. Directors Phil Lord & Christopher Miller obviously enjoy a challenge; coming off a hilarious weirdo adaption of the unadaptable children's classic Cloudy With A Chance Of Meatballs, they go foul mouthed, meta absurdist, and weirdly violent for the buddy cop genre. 21 Jump Street is too damn odd to be this generations Beverly Hills Cop, but I appreciate the life & death stakes filtered through a gross-out, silly Superbad sensibility. And Channing Tatum shines with his role. He's an adorable idiot wandering the world of nerdom and discovering humanity while Jonah Hill descends into assholehood via the cool crowd. It's a dumb ass movie with brief hints of legit high school commentary. Something the original show could never claim.
The Other Guys: Playing with the same Buddy Cop nostalgia as 21 Jump Street, Will Ferrell & Mark Wahlberg are the station house dolts that never walk away from explosions while the world champions the heroics of Sam Jackson & The Rock's Lethal Weapons. But when aiming of the bushes results in a Wile E Coyote-styled roadkill splat, Ferrell & Wahlberg rise to the challenge of gunkata gymnastics. Although seemingly impossible, The Other Guys is far stupider than 21 Jump Street, but that's the universe of Will Ferrell, and it's impressive how well Mark Wahlberg inhabits the stupid - "I'm a peacock!!!" The Bernie Madoff social commentary is welcome even when the actual mechanics of the plot get murky. You're really just hear to watch Wahlberg torture himself over Ferrell's sexual ownership of Eva Mendes. "Gator don't take no shit."
Cellular: Based on a story by Larry Cohen (Hell Up in Harlem), written by Chris Morgan (Fast Five), and directed by David E. Ellis (Snakes on a Plane). Cellular is actually an extremely entertaining thriller that fully commits to its gimmick. Chris Evans is dragged all over Los Angeles after he answers an unknown caller, and a weak cell signal keeps him at an arm's distance from William H Macy's savior cop. It all has something to do with corruption, video tape, and Jason Statham's sneering 5 o'clock shadow. Sure, Cellular is disposable, but it's the perfect film to catch on TNT.
MST3K - Warrior of the Lost World: "This isn't Mad Max, it's Sad Max." The Italians know how to pilfer American Cinema better than most modern day Hollywood Suits, but for every Fistful of Dollars or Django, you get two dozen Warrior of the Lost Worlds. Doing his best Blofeld, Donald Pleasence rules over a post-apocalyptic wasteland with the doomsday threat of Mega Weapon. Robert Ginty mumbles his way into the heart of Persis Khambatta, and races through the ashes of exploded henchmen while Fred Williamson's reigns fire from above. I really can't imagine surviving this movie without the Robot Roll Call, and MST3K feasts upon this horrid buffet with great gusto. Lots of cheap shots, well played.
Tropa De Elite: "Put your bad face on." We're just a month away from Jose Padilha's Robocop remake, and as a means of battling my own anxiety, and thanks to my buddy Darren slapping an import blu-ray in my hand, I finally decided to see if all the fuss about Elite Squad is genuine. Turns out, this is not the balls-to-the-wall shoot-em-up I had been lead to believe. Elite Squad is an oppressive cautionary tale destined to keep me the hell out of Rio De Janeiro. After years of battling unstoppable drug trafficking and corruption, Wagner Moura must find a replacement before his baby is born. His options are a couple of kids facing their own hurdles in a vile system, and whatever the outcome the resolution seems utterly pointless. Every Drug War story concludes in futility, but few have achieved such heartbreaking pessimism as Elite Squad. There is plenty of action here, but I left the film more impressed with Padhila's societal assassination than his shaky-cam. Hopefully he can retain that awareness for the Robocop.
Animal Man Vol 1 by Grant Morrison & Chas Truog: I've owned these trade paperbacks for three years. Only now am I tackling them. Why did it take so long? I have no idea. I guess I was just waiting for Morrison to finish up his Batman run before tackling these supposedly iconic stories. I think I was also nervous that they couldn't possibly live up to their hype. Well, I'm happy to report, that the first volume of Animal Man is absolutely, utterly, stupendously fantastic. And weird as hell. Just the way I like my Morrison. In the first four issues, stuntman Buddy Baker finally decides that its time to come out of retirement and embrace his mind-bendingly strange animal powers. He can suck the life essence from any creature in his presence - meaning a bird above can give him flight or an earthworm below can help him regenerate a severed limb. When he's hired by S.T.A.R. Labs to investigate a giant puddle of monkey meat, Buddy Baker comes face-to-face with an even grosser lost hero of the DC Universe - B'Wana Beast!!!!! It's an epic clash of the "Oh Dear God" and it's a sobering warning to any reader not ready for Grant Morrison. This is the deep end kiddies, time to get nuts. The next issue is a one-shot look into God's Lonely Man, Wile E. Coyote. Yep, you read that right. No Looney Tunes character is safe. You also get the apocalyptic art of Hawkworld, a super villain satirizing of Edgar Allen Poe, and a home invasion from Mirror Master. Those looking for Superman should take a hike. I've had a few things spoiled for me, but my understanding is that Morrison's Animal Man only gets better and more bizarre in the next volume. Can't wait.
--Brad
Sunday, January 5, 2014
Brad's Week in Dork! (12/29/13-1/4/14)
HAPPY NEW YEAR! That feels good. 2013 was a gas, but I'm quite pleased to be through the Holiday Hoopla, and I'm looking forward to devoting more attention to the blog. Most of this week was concerned with formulating my Favorite Films of the year as well as the rest of the Dorkies. As I stated there, 2013 ended up being one of my favorites as far as the Pop Culture scene was concerned. Nicholas Winding Refn cranked out his best film yet (Only God Forgives), Martin Scorsese proved that no matter how hard they try (American Hustle) there is still only one guy right for the job (The Wolf of Wall Street), and the more I think on it, Edgar Wright's latest (The World's End) slowly eeks its way to the top of the Cornetto Trilogy.
Not to mention, this year I actually witnessed Martin Scorsese deliver his Jefferson Lecture "The Persistence of Vision," I sat in the front row of Hall H where Samuel L Jackson actually stared me down, saw the 4K Restoration of Lawrence of Arabia at the AFI Silver, met Peter Tork, discovered the surreal genius of Keoma, and won a Tyler Stout Mondo Print signed by Simon Pegg, Nick Frost, & Edgar Wright at the Cornetto Trilogy Screening of The Alamo Drafthouse, which in turn has become my new home away from home. Yeah, I should say that's a pretty good year.
Jaime Foxx Does Django For Spidey (I Took This Photo!!!)
I'm pretty gosh darn excited by the prospect of the new year. How can 2014 top 2013? Dunno, but I can't wait to find out. This particular week in transition began with another bit of cinematic shame finally getting checked off my Resolution list - Singin' in the Rain. How had I never seen this before? Not sure. I was just never much of a musical kid; I'm happy to report that I thoroughly enjoyed it. The last film I saw in the theater in 2013 was David Fincher's Zodiac (again, at The Alamo Drafthouse). One of my all time favorite films, I was a bit bummed that co-dork Matt doesn't seem to quite "get it." My first film of the new year was Man of Steel, the rewatch was prompted by a conversation I had with my brother-in-law at our annual New Year's Party. So much to love, so much to hate. But the first film I saw theatrically of the New Year was Saving Mr. Banks. I enjoyed it, but certainly not as much as The Wife. She got all filled with emotions with this Marry Poppins lovefest.
I also got off my duff and finally got back into Sweet Tooth comics. Apart from our Graphic Novel Book Club (aka The Ultimate Justice League of Extraordinary Graphic Novel Book Club), I feel like I've been neglecting the comic book medium lately. Sure, I hit up Big Planet Comics every week, but I've got a massive stack of graphic novels I need to work my way through. There's a New Year's Resolution for sure. Not to mention the fact that I've left both my Scorsese-A-Thon & John Carpenter-A-Thons hanging. Gotta find my Elvis dvd or simply buy another one. As far as why I haven't watched New York Stories yet.....it looks dull....but Goodfellas follows that so there are no excuses. Anyway, let's get on with the mini-reviews shall we?
P.S. I'm growing a beard!
Singin' In The Rain: "You're nothing but a shadow on film." I honestly had no idea what this movie was about. I knew there was rain in it. I knew there was singing. Some sorta romance. And yep, all those things are there. But I was kinda flabbergasted to discover that the backdrop for the film was the transition from the Silent Era into the Talkies. That must sound silly to all you die-hards out there, but once the Hollywood biography started to get hashed, my interest immediately perked up. Sure, the big song & dance numbers are fantastic. Gene Kelly is great, but I was even more enamored with Donald O'Connor's sidekick character - the "Make 'Em Laugh" number is joyous, but it also has a nice bit of biting truth to it. What's the next Golden Era Musical I have to hit? Yankee Doodle Dandy? Show Boat? Guys And Dolls? Certainly The Jazz Singer. A whole genre of film missing from my brain. Maybe that's my great quest of 2014.
Pain & Gain: This was mostly background noise while I worked on this year's Dorkies. But what beautiful background noise! Finally all of Michael Bay's weird, misogynistic, homophobic, mocking humor makes all the sense in the world. A "True Film" about a trilogy of dumbbells committing heinous acts in the pursuit of The American Dream. It's a hilarious watch, and a rather painful one if you think too deeply into the real events that inspired this idiocracy. The Rock gives his single greatest performance so far, but Mark Wahlberg should get some serious recognition as well. No one can do moronic earnestness quite like this guy. And I still argue that it has as much to say about our deeply flawed Nation as Martin Scorsese's The Wolf of Wall Street.
Keoma: If I could grow Keoma's beard I most certainly would. Franco Nero is a wild man native returned home after the cataclysmic conclusion of the Civil War. A group of bandits (a perfect collection of pricks one can only see in Spaghetti Westerns) have staked claim over the land, and it's up to Nero & Woody Strode to slaughter their hateful asses. The plot is straightforward, but it's telling is so wonderfully dreamy thanks to its slow-mo gunsmoke ballets, the constant guttural caws of the score, and Keoma's metaphorical ability to walk in & out of his past. When people think of Italy's contribution to the West they think The Good, The Bad, & The Eastwood. If they reach a little beyond that then maybe they think of Sergio Corbucci or Django. But for my money, the niftiest entry of the sub-genre is Enzo Castellari's Keoma. Is it my favorite? Tough call...The Great Silence is sooooo beautifully ugly...but give me three or four more rewatches of this Weird Western and Keoma might very well land on the top.
Haywire: Steven Soderbergh is a fascinating animal. He burst onto the scene with a Sundance Classic (Sex, Lies, & Videotape) that absolutely revolutionized Hollywood and paved the way for indie darlings like Quentin Tarantino, then Sophomore Slumped for a series of films (Kafka, King of the Hill, The Underneath, Schizopolis), knocked one out of the park (Out of Sight) creating a megacelebrity (George Clooney), crafted a brilliant love letter to John Boorman (The Limey), floundered with Oscar Bait (Erin Brokovich, Traffic), made bank on Blockbusters (The Oceans Trilogy), drowned in drivel (Full Frontal, Bubble, The Good German, Che, The Girlfriend Experience), and found new life in his final series of weirdo genre pictures (The Informant!, Contagion, Magic Mike, Haywire, Side Effects). Has there ever been a career with more peeks or valleys? Of his last batch, The Informant! is probably my intellectual favorite, but the one I watch the most is Haywire. I mean - Wow! - that Fight-to-the-Death hotel room brawl between Gina Carano & Michael Fassbender is AWEsome! Possibly my favorite asskicking this side of They Live. The rest of the film is good too, but that Fassbender beatdown....that's some real movie magic. I wish Soderbergh all the best in TV Land, but I doubt he'll stay there for long. The Silver Screen will call you again sir. Whatever type of picture you decide to make should certainly prove interesting.
Zodiac: My favorite film of the last 13 years. This fact seems to baffle Matt. He just keeps saying "it sure is 3 hours long." I tell him it's the best police procedural of all time, he says he preferred The Silence of the Lambs. I'v been thinking about this. I too love The Silence of the Lambs. Great movie. Duh. But it's not really a procedural, is it? I think what elevates Zodiac so high in my pantheon of All Time Favorite Movies is how meticulous the film is with the investigation - and the obsession born from it in Robert Graysmith. There are no real answers here, but Graysmith has to hunt them down. He sacrifices family for the Zodiac. He might even fool himself in the process. It's tragic. It's ultimately pointless. And David Fincher perfects his clinical eye with this film, and it's never been more suited for a subject.
Man of Steel: 2013 marked the 75th anniversary of Superman. A milestone for capes & spandex. But he's never been a character I've really gravitated towards. I guess I enjoyed the Christopher Reeve films as much as any kid my age, but when I rewatched them earlier this year they didn't have the same shine I once remembered. Reeve himself is astonishing as the character. It's a great performance. But there's plenty of room for improvement as far as the script and side characters are concerned. I thought Bryan Singer's love poem, Superman Returns was fairly fun if not utterly forgettable, and I was soooooo ready for Zach Snyder to add a little freeze-frame punch to the franchise. I am, after all, not a Snyder-hater (yes, yes, yes, Sucker Punch sucked). What I love about Man of Steel: Russell Crowe's Jor-El & his holo-ghost, Pa Kent's barnyard revelation to young Clark, Amy Adams's plucky newswoman, and the Metropolis Holocaust (yep, two gods meet in an American City...we are fucked). What I hate about Man of Steel: Pa Kent's utter fear for his son culminating in his final act, Michael Shannon's Screaming Zod, the kissy face in a crater of human ash, and the neck break. I could probably handle most of my beef if not for Pa Kent. His parenting seems all wrong for the character. That being said, there is enough here for me to enjoy the film for years to come. I can't really say I'm stoked for Batman vs Superman, but I'm certainly curious to see what they cook up, and how all these icons are going to fit with each other. But if you really want to get to the heart of the Man of Steel, and you've always had trouble like me, then please read Grant Morrison and Frank Quitely's All-Star Superman. It's a beautiful depiction of Supes as well as that Golden Age of Comics.
Furious 6: Not the Action-Packed Roller Coaster Revelation that was Fast Five, this film still manages to pack more fun into car crashes than it has any right. Frankly, I'm still just shocked at how much of a fan I've become of this franchise. It wasn't too long ago that I was mocking the first film and downright being a jerk towards 2 Fast 2 Furious. Now it's 2014, Paul Walker died tragically, and I'm desperately awaiting word on how they'll honor him in Fast Seven. This series is a goof. A lark. But there is something so absolutely charming about the intensity in which they support the notion of family. We all might be thieves and gunrunners, but we love each other and we know how to crack a skull when we have to. Fast Five took the franchise into the realm of the unreal, and Furious 6 practically throws a cape over The Rock while he's tossing thugs across rooms. Don't fool yourself. This is the very best of Comic Book Cinema.
Saving Mr. Banks: "The Mouse is Family." I was a little nervous going into this one. A friend shot me a link to Harlan Ellison's latest rant, and his tirade nearly brought me into a frenzy against The Disney Machine. How dare they purport PL Travers's complacency for Mary Poppins when she most certainly did not appreciate the adaptation. And maybe this film doesn't go into her eventual contempt for the film, but it also doesn't reveal her to be joyous either. This is a nifty, surface level exploration of the writing process, and the romance one can have with their creation. Emma Thompson starts this film as a shrill, nearly psychotic "Writer" battling it out with the Keeper of Dreams, Walt Disney. A cynic could easily tear this film apart. But there were several moments in the movie where I thought it understood and appreciated PL Travers's preciousness for her character. One scene (where musical & biography collide) that nearly brought me to tears in my seat. Is it the best film of 2013? No. Not even close. But I imagine if you (like my wife) already have great affinity for the Disney Film then you'll just adore Saving Mr. Banks. And when is Harlan Ellison not ranting? - don't sue me!
MST3K - I Accuse My Parents: "Can I interest you in a size of ME?" For the new year, The Wife & I have committed to watching as many episodes of Mystery Science Theater as we can. When I hear Joel, Tom Servo, and Crooooooow snicker and jeer their way through some shoddy movie it immediately takes me back in time. I'm 12 years old, it's way past my bedtime, and I'm snorting up a bowl of CT Crunch as The Killer Shrews shuffle about my tv screen. Ah...bliss. I Accuse My Parents is one of those terrible cautionary tales in which a teenage shoe salesman goes on a kill crazy rampage because his mom was a drunk. Boo hoo, kid, it's tough all over. Good jokes, but also not the finest hour for the Gizmonic Institute. Looking forward to the next one.
Sweet Tooth Volumes 3-5 by Jeff Lemire: My goodness, these are some wonderfully sad comics. Volume 2 left poor Sweet Tooth in the hands of some diabolical scientists, and Volume 3 picks up with Mr Jeppard marching to the rescue before Doctor Singh can gut the deer boy open, and dissect just how these hybrids avoid The Sickness. I enjoyed the first few chapters of this series, but once Jeff Lemire gets these guys out of the camps and on the road of discovery, the saga really begins to take shape. What is Sweet Tooth? A man made creation or some ancient god of the earth? I don't know, but I'm betting whatever the answer it's a depressing one. Not for the faint of heart...or the squeamish, Sweet Tooth is an apocalypse story drowning in dread. And I love it. One trade to go, should be done in a few days.
Drew - The Man Behind The Poster: If you're in your mid-30s and you love movies then you love Drew Struzan. The premiere illustrator who birthed countless posters for such films as Star Wars, Indiana Jones, The Thing, Big Trouble In Little China, Back to the Future, Harry Potter, Masters of the Universe, and Police Academy. I've been collecting his work since I was fourteen. Behind every framed poster in my house, you can probably find a Struzan buried behind whatever current obsession. This is a typical talking-heads documentary, but I was pleased to discover how in-depth it goes into some of his creations. And I certainly appreciated hearing the praise coming from such icons as George Lucas, Steven Spielberg, Michael J Fox, Ken Kelly, and Steve Guttenberg. Harrison Ford at the junket, though? That's awkward. It's currently on Netflix Streaming, give it a whirl.
--Brad
Monday, September 2, 2013
Brad's Week in Dork! (8/25/13-8/31/12)
I caught my last film of the summer this week (You're Next) and I'm thankful that this latest horror gem made its way onto my Fistful of Summer 2013. But the real big screen treat was catching Razorback at the AFI Silver. Yeah, you read that right. The Australian Giant Pig movie played this week at The American Film Institute. What next?!?!? Dead End Drive-In!?!?! Uh...that's next week. Ha! We certainly do live in a Brave New World. I've never been happier as a film fan living in the Washington DC area; this may not be L.A. or New York, but we're on our way.
The rest of the week was filled with blu rays and VOD. Rewatched a couple of 2013 releases, and both Pain & Gain and Trance have shot to the top of my favorite films of this year. The Rock and Rosario Dawson certainly deliver fun genre bending turns with their respective roles. Very different, but bother are equally as demented. The less said about Nicolas Cage in Frozen Ground the better. How the mighty have fallen (I know, old news, right?). Matthew McConaughey is certainly making a play for this year's Actor of the Year...too bad none of his movies are quite as good as his performances. On two separate nights I fell asleep watching Eddie Murphy in Beverly Hills Cop 1 & 2 - it's what Netflix was born to do. And the absolute best movie I watched was A Boy And His Dog. Holy cow! It had been a while since my last viewing, and that little beast of a flick floored me. Truly one of the best blu ray releases of the year.
Razorback: "Somethin' about blowin' the shit out of a razorback brightens up my day!" This is not simply a Jaws knockoff - it's the ultimate Jaws knockoff! Forget Piranha, forget Orca. They might have the marine life, but Razorback takes the Man vs. Evil Nature plot and uses it to propel its narrative down a music video dreamscape so smokey & cacophonous Tony Scott & Terry Gilliam wake from terror sweats contemplating their failure to capture it's insanity. Bill Kerr is Jake Cullen, a Kangaroo hunter who trades one killing spree for another after a boar the size of a rhino carries off his infant grandson. Partnering with Canadian blank slate Gregory Harrison and wildlife tracker Arkie Whiteley, Kerr navigates an endless display of foreground skulls to rid the outback of the great beast. But is Razorback the real threat, or does the true face of pockmarked evil belong to Dicko Baker and his piggy pleasure squeals? A lost 80s classic well worth your attention.
You're Next: This was a deceptive little movie. After years of the internet hype machine, and a batch of mediocre-to-terrible trailers from Lionsgate, I was ready to dismiss You're Next as just another slasher flick in an already redundant genre. And for the first twenty or so minutes, I did not give a good god damn about anything happening on screen. Disgruntled family bickering, killers attack, yawn. But then Sharni Vinson (so bendy and proud in Step Up 3D) reveals herself as one tough cookie, her John Carpenter theme starts thumping, and suddenly I'm cheering for a Final Girl in a way I haven't since Ellen Ripley. You're Next is not a dour, dumb teen slasher. It's a crowd pleaser. A violent, root 'em toot 'em siege film that's got more in common with Assault on Precinct 13 than The Strangers. It's fun! And that's the message that's getting lost in the marketing.
The Frozen Ground: A couple years back I was really championing the mega acting talents of modern day Nicolas Cage. The man was devastating the silver screen with mountaintop performances in The Bad Lieutenant, Kick Ass, The Sorcerer's Apprentice, and Drive Angry. The internet had turned against Cage, but I was right there with him as he sank into Season of the Witch and Ghost Rider 2. Just fun goofy movies elevated by his commitment to absurdity. But then came Trespass. And Seeking Justice. And Stolen. Yeash. Just absolutely boring direct-to-dvd dreck. Sadly, that trend is not broken with The Frozen Ground. It's a far too serious and dull serial killer pursuit picture; it plays like an A&E attempt at The Silence of the Lambs. And haven't we had enough of those already. Cage is mundane and checked out. I'm sure John Cussack is having a ball playing Next Door Evil, but it's a character we've seen a dozen times before and often better. The Frozen Ground is going to be one of those movies I forget fifteen minutes after I write this sentence. Oh yeah, Vanessa Hudgens is a stripper/prostitute damsel. So what? She's abysmal.
Beverly Hills Cop: The 80s Action Comedy was born with this Don Simpson/Jerry Bruckheimer production, and Eddie Murphy has never been better than he was here as the wisecracking fish-outta-water Axel Foley. His black man assault on rich white society is infectious. Axel Foley is the cross hair on Reagan Era consumption, but Beverly Hills Cop is too damn funny to be a genuine cultural critique. Great music, great one-liners, great violence, great Bronson Pinchot. Anything beyond that is just the cherry on top.
Sweet Tooth Volume 1 - Out of the Deep Woods: Here's a strange one I've been hearing good things about for quite some time now. Given the fact that I've recently enjoyed Lemire's Underwater Welder, Trillium, and - *gulp* - Green Arrow, I thought it was high time that I tackled his weirdo post-apocalypse book. The funny thing is, it's not that weird. Sure, the world has gone to pot. Children are born these days with antlers, hooves, and snouts, but so far Sweet Tooth displays some fairly typical world-gone-by tropes. After his pop slips into the nether, our hybrid hero Gus attempts to break free from his religious fear with the help of sharpshooter woodsman, Mr. Jepperd. But do friends exist in the Apocalypse? Volume 1 certainly doesn't leave Gus in a better place than where we met him, and by all accounts life is going to get a whole helluva lot rougher before this series reaches its end. The rest of the Sweet Tooth volumes are at the top of my shopping list for this year's Baltimore Comic Con.
Pain and Gain: "When it started, America was just a handful of scrawny colonies. Now it's the most buffed, pumped up country on the planet. That's pretty rad." I've never cared for the Mark Wahlberg tough guy routine. I just don't buy it. At the same time, I'm not sure there are too many other actors out there that can achieve the comic heights of his self deprecation. Boogie Nights, The Other Guys, Pain & Gain. When he's playing dolts with delusions of grandeur, Wahlberg is your guy, and his Daniel Lugo just might be his greatest bonehead creation yet. Too bad he gets completely overshadowed by Dwayne Johnson's coke fiend Jesus freak, El Dad. His weak-link convict earns more laughs out of the depravity displayed on screen than any other Bayified scumbag. And speaking of Michael Bay, Pain & Gain is his crowning achievement as well. Where we've all chastised the fratboy for his homophobic, sophomoric, and misogynistic sight gags in the past, his pretty picture fart joke sensibilities are essential to Pain & Gain's success. Based on True Events? Yeah. Crime for laughs? Yeah. Awkward? Yeah. But it's damn entertaining.
Mud: The Matthew McConaughey renaissance continues with this Southern Gothic coming-of-age story. Two boys dealing with their own family melodrama discover McConaughey's cross healed hobo living in a boat in the forest. Jeff Nichols, the director of Shotgun Stories & Take Shelter, certainly knows how to pull great performances from his players, but I've found his screenplays lacking in the climax department. The narrative twists are telegraphed a mile out, and I'm more than a little full of the innocence-lost plots. McConaughey makes it work, but the story is too rote to be memorable.
Beverly Hills Cop II: "You can never have too much firepower." After their successful collaboration on Top Gun, Jerry Bruckheimer, Don Simpson, and Tony Scott reteam for this hit-the-beats sequel. Eddie Murphy is dragged back into Beverly Hills after Rony Cox's Captain Bogomil is gunned down by a member of the Alphabet Gang. Again we get the Axel Foley ogling of swimming pools and strip clubs, but the one-liner attacks seem less important than the sunsets and explosions. The comedy comes from the back & forth banter between Judge Reinhold, John Ashton, & Murhpy but this sequel is an action film first solidifying the Bruckheimer/Simpson formula that would go on to bust blocks with Bad Boys, The Rock, and even Pirates of the Caribbean. It's a slick flick, and a lot of fun, but it's certainly not as refreshingly humorous as the original.
Scott Pilgrim vs The World: Edgar Wright's bombastic celebration of all things geek - video games! comics! anime! music! movies! manga! hair dye! - is also our generation's answer to The Graduate. Michael Cera is another lovelorn misanthrope struggling with his apathy when Mary Elizabeth Winstead's roller blading Amazon literally steps out of his dreams to wreak emotional as well as physical havoc. If Scott Pilgrim wants to get with this beauty he must battle & defeat her League of Seven Evil Exes. This brilliant structure centered around Street Fighter kombat allows for one hilarious gonzo encounter after the next; the highlights being Chris Evans's skater stunt team and Brandon Routh's telekinetic, vegan douche bag. You probably have to be of a certain age to appreciate the surreal landscape, but for those folks in the know, Scott Pilgrim vs The World is a biting mockery of our pop culture obsessed lives. Love & Self Respect may be the answer, but can you achieve such goals while swamped in the imagination of others? At the very least, Scott Pilgrim proves that Edgar Wright is more than just a Cornetto man, and he's probably the most visually enticing director to land under the umbrella of Marvel Studios. Forget Avengers 2 and Batman vs Superman, Edgar Wright's Ant-Man is certainly the most fascinating superhero film of 2015.
Trance: "Bring it to me." A second viewing of Danny Boyle's latest sealed my appreciation for this neo-noir. Trance begins as one of those long-con mindbender movies, but as the screenplay works its way to the end, the film reveals itself not as an M Night Shyamalan twister concerned with plot-flipping but a villainous deconstruction of character, proud in the onion its peeled. The film has heists, gangsters, amnesia, violence, and quite possibly the most interesting Femme Fatale I've experienced (neo or otherwise). And the fact that this Femme Fatale is played by Rosario Dawson, an actress I've adored for years but who never seems to get the right part, is a real treat unto itself. This is not Kiss Me Deadly or Chinatown. Trance is very much a Danny Boyle film, shot with vibrant digital photography and crafting a style decades removed from Sam Spade. Boyle may have gotten more acolades for his last couple of Oscar baiters, but for my money Trance is the most exciting film he's made since 28 Days Later.
Welcome To The Punch: I was hoping to follow one dashing James McAvoy scumbag with another, but unfortunately, this Cops & Robbers saga is nothing more than a long snooze. Mark Strong is a gangland daddy drawn out of the underworld when his son catches a bullet. It's McAvoy's job to bring him in, but when the boys in blue reveal themselves to be the true villains, the two rivals must team-up John Woo style. 'Course Eran Creevy is no 90s era John Woo, and the action is nothing more than quick cutting and smokescreen i.e. boring.
A Boy and His Dog: You know how critics (and know-it-all bloggers like myself) will say, "They don't make movies like that anymore?" And often times you can just simply dismiss that as the bullshit it truly is. However, with A Boy and His Dog, that annoying sentiment is most certainly the case. In fact, the real answer is that there is only one A Boy and His Dog. In the year 2024, World War IV granted the Earth the Nuclear Wasteland it always feared. It lasted four days and by the end of it all, the only occupations in existence were marauder and rapist. Unless you're a telepathic dog, then you also have the option of being a female hunter. That's right, A Boy and His Dog is the story of Don Johnson's rapist and the dog who helps him get his prey. It's an ugly, mean, angry film. A movie that could have only come from the mind of science fiction writer Harlan Ellison, and its a miracle that character actor LQ Jones managed to bring it to the silver screen. Jones had directed only one other film before this, and would only direct an episode of The Incredible Hulk after this. It is a masterpiece of the genre. Yes, yes, yes A Boy and His Dog is the precursor to Mad Max and a half dozen other Apocalypse stories. But this is not anti-hero cinema. Don Johnson is an evil little shit. But he's the product of our ignorance, our need for war. Sure, it's all very hippy dippy, but you gotta respect the rage behind the pen and behind the camera. Watching the special features on the Shout Factory bluray, you get an understanding of the massive quest it took to get the film adapted, and I am so excited for all the new fanboys this disc will certainly create.
--Brad
Tuesday, May 21, 2013
Comic Reviews: Animal Man 1 & 2
Volume 1
I had a harder time getting into this than the recent Swamp Thing. Part of it is that the Animal Man character doesn’t capture me at all. He feels like the victim of decades of bad writing or at least inconsistent writing. He was a super hero, a stunt man, an actor, and who knows what else. None of which seems to lend him any depth. Nor does the tale of his daughter being the avatar of the Red raise any especially interesting story potentials. In fact, it feels like the same old, same old. If she were ten years older, it would start smelling of Joss Whedon (he tends to limit his idiot savant/ultimate engines of destruction who only look like unassuming young women to the hormonally confused and terminally hipstery teen years). Actually, it already smells of Joss Whedon. His daughter spouted plenty of snarky comments that didn’t befit a kid of four years.
However, I’m still interested in this whole Green-Red-Rot conflict and what might happen when Animal Man and Swamp Thing come together. Or, Animal Man’s daughter and Swamp Thing, as she seems to be the real power player here (of course). In this volume, we’re introduced to the Hunters Three, a triumvirate of hungry monsters looking to get their rotten claws on young Maxine. Blah, blah, blee, blee, and they’re riding away in an RV with a mystical cat, being chased by a hoard of monsters. OK. Sadly, there’s not much to it.
The art is disgusting. Now, the art is supposed to be disgusting, but even getting past the content of the images, I found the art distractingly unpleasant. Characters rarely look the same from panel to panel, and I had to go on costume cues to keep track (Animal Man is even suddenly bald in one panel…though that may be in volume 2). Large sections looked like the artist spilled his inkwell all over the page and didn’t bother to clean it up. The four year old girl seems to shift ages from 10 to 30 with every panel (never looking like a four year old). At least there’s shading, I guess; something that seems to have become hip to skip in a lot of comics.
Volume 2
Not far into the second volume, I was getting sick and tired of every one of the characters. Animal Man is a sniveling cry-baby. His wife is a fickle moron. His kids are idiots. And his mother-in-law is an old hag. While basic plot idea is interesting, I don’t want to read about these people anymore. It suffers from the same issues too many comics suffer from, especially those that have family dynamics. The characters seem to spend most of their time bitching and moaning at each other, and not enough focused on what’s happening. When the hoards of monsters are at the door, it may not be the time to bring up a bunch of family problems.
I did enjoy the flashback story in the middle, about the Rot incursion in 19th century Canada. It has a nice Lovecrafty vibe to it at the beginning. However, it wraps up too quickly and seems to have nothing much to do with anything.
Otherwise, while the general story builds toward the team-up with Swamp Thing and the eventual war of Rotworld, Buddy’s family becomes somehow more infuriating. By the end of the volume I felt like I was watching the worst X-Files episodes, where Scully is staring at an alien spaceship and denying that aliens are possible. Buddy’s wife has got to be about the worst character I’ve read in a good long time. She’s the worst 70s movie cop-wife, who hates everything her husband does and makes everything imaginable somehow about her (see Vic Mackie’s wife on The Shield for a modern equivalent). He needs to go to work, she feels abandoned. He tries to save people from monstrous beings, she demands he walk away. The apocalypse is happening around them, and she’s upset that he’s not spending enough time at home. Rotten animal demons just ate a cop in front of her and her kids, and she’s blaming it on her husband’s decision to try to help. Everybody is trying to protect her daughter, and she’s complaining that she doesn’t want to be involved in other people’s problems. I’d say throw the bitch to the Rot, but I don’t hate the Rot enough to subject them to her. Obviously, I would not recommend reading this one. However, it seems to have a fairly devoted fanbase out there, so maybe there’s something in it for people that I’m not picking up.
Animal Man Volume 1: The Hunt
Author: Jeff Lemire
Artist: Travel Foreman
Publisher: DC Comics
ISBN: 978-1-4012-3507-9
Animal Man Volume 2: Animal Vs. Man
Author: Jeff Lemire
Artist: Travel Foreman, etc.
Publisher: DC Comics
ISBN: 978-1-4012-3800-1
-Matt
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