tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11615705037602636022024-03-12T22:51:02.877-07:00The Cheap-Arse Film Review.Not enough money in his pocket. Too much time on his hands.The Cheap-Arse Film Critichttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08211046330068309653noreply@blogger.comBlogger38125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1161570503760263602.post-1849226840318650552011-03-31T18:44:00.000-07:002011-03-31T18:54:24.672-07:00(It's been a long while, hasn't it?)I'm not gonna lie, I pretty much abandoned this place, didn't I? First I got burned out writing reviews in general and just stopped, then I got seduced by other blogging platforms (coughcoughTUMBLRcoughcough) when I decided to give it another go, only to see THAT end in disaster too. And now, well...<div><br /></div><div>... I've started reviewing again. Not written reviews this time, I've decided to go the video route. It's not less work, but it's infinitely more fun. I also shelled out for a domain name, so it makes sense that I use that place to post all my videos on, doesn't it? However, I felt bad for abandoning this place, and the people who followed me and read my stuff when I first started out, so I've decided to use this place again, but in a slightly more limited capacity- when I have a new review up, I'll post the trailer for it here, along with a link to where you can watch the full thing on my site, if you decide you want to.</div><div><br /></div><div>Also, to give you a taste of what I've been up to recently, here's the full version of my latest episode, where I review Eight Legged Freaks (from behind a sofa).</div><div><br /></div><div><embed src="http://blip.tv/play/huZpgqrTXwA" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="640" height="360" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true"></embed></div><div><br /></div><div>If you like what you see, you can find more here...</div><div><br /></div><div><a href="http://cheaparsefilmreview.com/">http://cheaparsefilmreview.com/</a></div><div><br /></div><div>Anyway, as ever, thank you for your time, and I'm sorry.</div>The Cheap-Arse Film Critichttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08211046330068309653noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1161570503760263602.post-37967549559500348792010-11-16T13:15:00.000-08:002010-11-16T13:27:30.432-08:00The Cheap-Arse Film Review iTV. COMING SOON... Well...<object width="480" height="385"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/R8PT8GVEFFY?fs=1&hl=en_GB"><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/R8PT8GVEFFY?fs=1&hl=en_GB" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="480" height="385"></embed></object><div><br /></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span">So, where were we?</span></div>The Cheap-Arse Film Critichttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08211046330068309653noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1161570503760263602.post-30057033595790710442010-03-04T06:49:00.000-08:002010-03-04T06:53:22.728-08:00So...<span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'courier new';">... um, yeah... been awhile, hasn't it?</span><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'courier new';"><br /></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'courier new';">Ha.</span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'courier new';"><br /></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'courier new';">...</span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'courier new';"><br /></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'courier new';">... I'm really sorry. Please go here. All will be explained. Sort of.</span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'courier new';"><br /></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'courier new';"><br /></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'courier new';"><br /></span></div><div><a href="http://cafr2-therevenge.tumblr.com/"><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'courier new';">http://cafr2-therevenge.tumblr.com/</span></a></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'courier new';"><br /></span></div><div><span class="Apple-style-span" style="font-family:'courier new';">Sorry.</span></div>The Cheap-Arse Film Critichttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08211046330068309653noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1161570503760263602.post-67752613659349962152009-07-04T08:13:00.000-07:002009-07-29T20:45:58.692-07:00The Cheap-Arse Film Review #35- " THE LORD OF THE RINGS" (ANIMATED)(MONTH OF FURY: WEEK 1)<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhvNdxtlbfbWH5bVDnfFDb44ZD0AIGh6IyDF5JNyjdYWnbZs2Ih_cAd-8OqP9GxayoCW1Exkhyphenhyphenk48tjaAGPtuYevDZ1OpE6bq4pQG6wZI0hGf76ijWehyphenhyphenz7_kbZYuMGmqOAfcD5GEm4rZQ/s1600-h/Picture+048.jpg"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhvNdxtlbfbWH5bVDnfFDb44ZD0AIGh6IyDF5JNyjdYWnbZs2Ih_cAd-8OqP9GxayoCW1Exkhyphenhyphenk48tjaAGPtuYevDZ1OpE6bq4pQG6wZI0hGf76ijWehyphenhyphenz7_kbZYuMGmqOAfcD5GEm4rZQ/s400/Picture+048.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5364086463434401218" border="0" /></a><br /><div style="text-align: center; font-weight: bold;"><span style="font-family:courier new;">NAME: THE LORD OF THE RINGS (ANIMATED)</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">RATED: PG</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">RELEASED: 1978</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">WRITTEN BY: CHRIS CONKLING AND PETER S. BEAGLE, BASED ON THE NOVELS "THE FELLOWSHIP OF THE RING" AND "THE TWO TOWERS," BOTH BY J.R.R TOLKIEN</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">DIRECTED BY: RALPH BAKSHI</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">FEATURING THE VOICE TALENS OF: CHRISTOPHER GUARD, WILLIAM SQUIRE, JOHN HURT</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">GENRE: ANIMATED FANTASY/ADVENTURE</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">BOUGHT FROM: CEX</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">PRICE: </span><span style="font-family:courier new;">£1.00</span><br /></div><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">Right, where were we?<br /><br />Oh yeah, I was going to start of this review of a movie based on one of the greatest and most beloved novels of all time by talking about "Star Wars." Seems logical to me.<br /></span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">Basically, I don't like "Star Wars." Actually, that's putting it too strong. I don't <span style="font-style: italic;">dislike</span> it, I'm just not what you'd call a "Fanboy." I think some of that may be down to the fact that the first time I watched "A New Hope," </span><span style="font-family:courier new;">I was fourteen, in hospital with an injured back, and obviously in a fair amount of pain. I mean, it's difficult to enjoy <span style="font-style: italic;">anything</span> when you're propped up in a hospital bed with a drip in your arm (and I <span style="font-style: italic;">really</span> hate those things). But if I'm honest, I think it was more my age than anything else. To be a true, hardcore "Star Wars" Fanboy, you have to be introduced to it young, as in single digits. For me at that point, I think it was just too lae for me to be able to build up an emotional connection to it. It was just another science fiction movie.</span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br />Almost all the big movie and TV franchises I love, I grew up with. I proudly consider myself a "Transformers" Fanboy (and yes, before you ask, I enjoyed both live action movies, although the animated one still trumps both of them), an Indiana Jones Fanboy (and yes, before you ask, I enjoyed "Crystal Skull." Indy's a homage to the old pulp heroes, and they all eventually met aliens, so it was only a matter of time before <span style="font-style: italic;">he</span> met aliens)(AND THEY WEREN'T EVEN REALLY ALIENS! SO SHUT UP!), a "Ghostbusters" Fanboy... shit, if I rattle them all off I'll be here all day. I like alot of things, sue me.<br /><br />I also consider myself a huge "Lord of the Rings" Fanboy. I say </span><span style="font-family:courier new;">"consider <span style="font-style: italic;">myself,</span>" because I'm sure I fail most people's definition of what it means to be a <span style="font-style: italic;">huge</span> LotR Fanboy. I've never Cosplayed as any of the characters (and in all honestly, ost of the characters I <span style="font-style: italic;">could</span> cosplay as wouldn't exactly be flattering anyway), for example, and don't know how to speak a word of Elvish, or any of the languages in any of the books, for that matter. But fuck all that, I love the stories, I love the characters, I love the themes of friendship, bravery and sacrifice it preaches, and yes, I love the fact that men fight monsters with swords. It's <span style="font-style: italic;">good shit,</span> especially when you're seven years old, as I was the first time I was exposed to the world these stories took place in, picking up "The Hobbit" at a school book fair. I don't know what it was that attracted me to</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> that book to be honest. I didn't know what a Hobbit was, and if I recall correctly, the cover was the most boring version I've ever seen for any edition. Literally all I can remember is a blue sky and maybe a hill. Thinking about it, it might have been JRR Tolkien's name that interested me. I probably thought it was weird and interesting. Either that or I thought JR from "Dallas" had written a book.<br /><br />Whatever the reason, I picked it up, my parents bought it, and for several weeks after that my Dad would read it to me and my sister before we went to bed. I fell in love with it instantly. I mean, it had wizards and dragons and sword fights and little people and a ring that turned you invisible. At that age, that's all you want out</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> of life, other than maybe a robot and a lazer gun. It was especially potent for a boy like me, who at that point had gone through life quite coddled and was begging to do something a bit exciting and dangerous. Bilbo was a small fellow who'd been thrown into danger pretty much against his will and went through almost the entire story scared to death, and I could relate to that in a strange way. I still can, some days. Once that one was dealt with, the next logical step was to movie onto what me Dad described as the sequel to "The Hobbit," "The Lord of the Rings." I've always liked sequels, and I don't know why. Maybe I have some psychological problem with things ending (ENOUGH WITH THE AMATEUR HOUR PSYCHOBABBLE). Anyway, after being initially disappointed to hear that the next story wouldn't continue to follow Bilbo, but would rather be about some</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> geezer named Frodo that I didn't really care about, I grew excited to hear that, rather than one book, this story took up <span style="font-style: italic;">three,</span> and they were all massive, each one dwarfing (no pun intended)(well, alright, a slight one), "The Hobbit," so I'd get all the things I liked in that book, only it'd last even longer.<br /><br />You'd be right to think that, as bedtime reading goes, trying to get through the entire LotR saga was ambitious, to say the least. It was. And it was also failure. A <span style="font-style: italic;">noble</span> failure, but a failure all the same. They were just too long, and when you add in the fact that my Dad insisted on reading a set amount of pages a night, rather than whole chapters, the fact is he'd probably still be at it now. We</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> never got to the second book (I don't even think we finished the first one). However, all was not lost, as he managed to pick up the complete set of the radio play on audio cassette from a bootsale, and we set about listening to those instead. I've still got that set layin around somewhere, and one day I want to buy one of those machines that converts audio cassettes into MP3s, so I can put it on my iPod.<br /><br />Then of course came the movies. In my house, these films were a big fucking deal. We practically counted down to the release of "The Fellowship of the Ring," and when it came out my Dad insisted on us all going to see it as a family (if you've not worked it out yet, he's a massive fan as well), which we did for the entire trilogy. I</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> love those films, I make no bones about it. I know they're not perfect, and parts of them are easy to make fun of. Hell, I join in most of time, since alot of them are funny, if sometimes a bit obvious and childish. But they hold a special place in my heart. Here I was gonna put that they're my "Star Wars," but I don't think I can, because it's such a cheesy thing to say, and anyway, I don't think that's strictly true, just because my love for the series existed long before the films did, and, hand on heart, I can't honestly say I'd feel the same way about them if I hadn't already been exposed to their world.<br /><br />And so finally we come to this, Ralph Bakshi's (he of "Fritz the Cat" and "Cool World" fame)(although I'm sure he'd like to forget</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> that second one)(as would we all) animated take on the first two books, that I believe is the last thing "Lord of the Rings" related that I have yet to watch/read/listen to. And I've been surprisingly nervous about covering it, because like all things that bare the brand, it inspires great passion in "LotR" Fanboys. I've spoken to quite a few of them about it, and their opinion almost always goes one of two ways- they either think this version is a work of underappreciated genius that eclipses that Jackson trilogy in every way, or that it's an abomination, and everybody involved in the making of it should be ashamed of themselves. So, regardless of what I thought of this, chances are alot of people are going to violently disagree with me, and won't be shy about telling me. I was also afraid that it might be well-trodden ground at this point, as I'm</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> not the first Internet critic to give this the once over. Most recently, The Nostalgia Critic himself put up a video <a href="http://www.thatguywiththeglasses.com/component/content/article/40-front-page-scroller/9755-nostalgia-critic-lotr-animated-vs-lotr">comparing and contrasting this movie with the first two Jackson installments</a>. But in the end it's pull was just too strong. I mean... it's "Lord of the Rings." I <span style="font-style: italic;">have</span> to watch it.<br /><br />Following the credits, the movie opens with some exposition, much like the modern day "Fellowship of the Ring" did. You know the drill, it talks of all the other rings, how Sauron created the Master Ring only to lose it, Gollum, Bilbo, everything. I'm not going to complain about this little bit just for existing, because the backstory for this piece is so dense and potentially confusing that you really <span style="font-style: italic;">have</span> to set aside a small amount of time just to </span><span style="font-family:courier new;">tell the audience all the relevent stuff they need to know. And from a scripting point of view it's a success, as I think if you showed this to a total Tolkien virgin, by the end of it they'd know enough to be able to follow the rest of the film. However, the execution here leaves something to be desired. For a start, other than a couple of instances, this entire prologue is filmed in live action, which seems a funny way to kick off an animated movie to me. Then there's the way it's filmed- all the characters are presented as silhouettes, with the background being blood red. I guess they thought this would be a bold and striking look, but really, all it looks like is a punch of blokes in silly Viking hats (and seriously, even without properly laying eyes on them, you can just tell the costumes these people were wearing were dodgy at best) fannying</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> around in front of a spotlight, being filming through a red bedsheet.<br /><br />Following this, we see Gandulf (voiced by William Squire), making is way into The Shire for Bilbo's Birthday Party, which is already taking place, with no build towards it whatsoever, which I found a little bit jarring, to be honest. Following the prologue, you sort of expect to be given a second to catch your breath and take in what you've just been told, but that's not the case, you're just thrown right into the plot. People who own the Extented Cut of Jackson's "Fellowship of the Ring" and have listened to the director and writer's commentary will know that this scene houses the only reference to the whole film that Jackson admits to making in his</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> entire trilogy, the "Proudfoot/Proudfeet" joke. Jackson's acknowledgement of this 1978 version has always been strangely... oily. At first he apparently claimed never to have seen it, then he admitted he <span style="font-style: italic;">had,</span> but didn't really think that much of it, <span style="font-style: italic;">then</span> he said not only did he like it, but it was this version that inspired him to seek out the books and discover more. I don't understand why he couldn't have just said that to begin with. Maybe he wanted to avoid comparisons between his films and this one (and there <span style="font-style: italic;">are</span> comparisons, as we'll get into later), or maybe he just didn't want to be overly associated with it, as like I said, it's loved and loathed in equel measure. Whatever the reason, it's a shame that he felt the need to either downplay and outright lie about this film's importance to begin with, because it feels ever so slightly </span><span style="font-family:courier new;">disrespectful, both to the film and it's director..<br /><br />Bilbo does his now-famous disappearing act (which I actually don't think looks any more impressive animated than it would have done in live action during this time period) and retreats to his home in order to prepare to leave The Shire for good, sealing the ring in an envelope, then craftily pocketing it, intending to take it with him. In the book I remember this scene being quite shocking, as it did a fine job of revealing just how addictive the power of the ring is, and to what an extent it's seduced Bilbo, making him lie and be combative to people he genuinely loves, just because they dare attempt to take it away from him. Here, it feels very rushed and played a bit wrong- Bilbo doesn't really seem to be addicted to it</span><span style="font-family:courier new;">, he reacts more like a petulent child who's about to have his favourie toy taken away from him. And when Gandulf figuratively gives him a slap, he just goes, "okay," and hands him over the ring. That's it, that's all it took to break the grasp of this evil thing that has driven other souls to murder? I'm not a fool (well...), I know they had to condense two enormous books into one two hour film, and that they weren't going to be able to give some scenes the attention they deserved, but at the same time I'm not saying they should have thrown in a ten minute monologue, just have the scene go a minute longer.<br /><br />Gandulf then leaves, only to return seventeen years later to inform Frodo of the ring's true origin. For some reason I really liked</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> that, that they put an exact time period on how long Gandulf was away aquiring this information. If there's one thing the Jackson movies weren't that great at getting across, it was the movement of time. When Gandulf went away in "Fellowship," for instance, I got the impression that he'd been gone all of about a fortnight before he came back. Here, doing something as simple as having the narrator say how long he was gone goes some way to making things seem a bit more epic, in a strange way. But then there's the scene itself, which always bugged me. I couldn't put my finger on what it was the first time I watched, but as everm when it came time to watch it again to write this, I figured it out- they did the whole bit with Gandulf asking Frodo for the ring, asking if he sees any marking on it, then throwing it into the fire when he says he doesn't. This is</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> the part in the first book and movie where the markings appear. In this version, however, this little aspect is never really brought up. They don't even look at the ring again when they Gandulf pulls it out. This really, really annoyed me. How is it possible to screw that up if you're paying even the slightest bit of attention? It's like they either just forgot about it, or resigned themselves to the fact that they were making this film for fans, and since they already knew what this scene represented, they didn't have to really flesh it out. Plus when Gandulf does the "One ring to rule them all..." speech, he does so whilst performing a dance that can be best described as flamboyant.<br /><br />They the walk about the Shire talking about what they have to do</span><span style="font-family:courier new;">, Frodo offering Gadulf the ring, which he flatly refuses, before deciding the Frodo must leave the Shire, and even though this scene is one of the most important in the film, watching it is really boring. There's no score over it, just ambient sounds, and the staging is pedestian. This would be a tedius few moments for a live action film, but for an animated one, it's almost unforgivable. Some levity is brought to proceedings when Gandulf discovers Sam- he just walks past a bush and casually plucks him out of it with one hand. Unfortunalely, the downside of this scene is that we're <span style="font-style: italic;">introduced</span> to Sam. Sam was one of my favourite characters, both in the books and in the Jackson movies, a loyal, unwavering friend, whose courage and determination kept him by Frodo's side then entire journey. In <span style="font-style: italic;">this</span> version, however, well, Sam has problems. That's the most</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> delicate way I can think to put it. Most of the time he acts like a small child, either prancing around in an overexcited manner, or being unable to do anything for himself. Then there's the way he looks. I showed him to a friend and asked him how he'd describe him. He came back to me with, "inbred," and I couldn't argue. So they took one of my favourite characters in the trilogy, made him annoying, and also made it so it's uncomfortable to even look at him. Marvelous.<br /><br />Gandulf then heads off to speak to Aruman ,and no, that's not a typo, throughout this entire film he's refered to as "Äruman" instead of "Saruman," apparently because the people making this were afraid audiences would get him and Sauron confused. Aruman reveals</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> himself to be in league with Sauron, and imprisons Gandulf in his tower. I have a few issues with Saruman... Aruman... the other wizard bloke. For a start, I don't really like the voice they gave him. I've not really talked that much about the voice acting, because with a few notable exception (which I'll get to in a bit), they're quite unremarkable and plain. Aruman's voice stands out to me, although it's not for good reasons- I found it quite high-pitched and whiney. It didn't really sound like the voice I heard in my head when my Dad read it to me all thse years ago. He was powerful, intimidating... fuck it, he was Christopher Lee. There's also one really strange moment where he bellows that he's "ARUMAN OF MANY COLOOOOOOOURS!" before opening his robe (which is a pimp red colour, I'll give the dude that much), shooting a ball of</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> light at Gandulf, which then explodes and... does nothing to him. And no I'm not making a joke about him flashing him. Grow up.<br /><br />Deciding not to wait for Gandulf, Frodo and Sam set off, now joined by Merry and Pippin. I won't be talking too much about them, as they barely do anything, to the point that I couldn't even tell you which one was supposed to be which. So they're walking through the woodland, singing (well, going "la-la-la," really), dancing, someone's playing a Lute for some reason, it's all very idyllic, when Frodo hears a horse coming and suggests they all hide. Now, if Peter Jackson hadn't 'fessed up to having seen this movie, this is the point in this review that I'd be calling bullshit on that, as what happens next is almost frame-for-frame what happens in his</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> film- the Hobbits leave the frame, it hangs empty and unmoving for a second, then one of the Black Riders ambles into shot on horseback. They even have the bit with the Hobbits hiding behind a tree root as the Rider looms over them, with Frodo trying to decide whether or not he should put the ring on. He was definitely "inspired" by this scene, and with good reason, as it's a good one, full of menace and suspense, and establishes the Black Riders as people to be feared.<br /><br />Once the Black Rider leaves and the coast is clear, the Hobbits pick themselves up and, after a brief tiff based around the other three spying on Frodo, they continue on their journey, reaching an inn. It'shear that I have my first real issue with the animation. I've heard alot of Fanboys bitch about it, but I actually quite like it</span><span style="font-family:courier new;">. It's got a fluid, life-like quality to it, no doubt due to the fact that alot of the scenes were acted out by real actors and then rotoscoped over. For the most part, it works well with the kind of story this is. With that said, this very same way of doing things also sometimes makes it feel like you're not really watching a cohesive, as certain scenes and characters look radically different to what has come before. Take this scene for example- whilst still animation, all the other people in this bar look so lifelike, that the Hobbits stand out a mile. There are other scenes later where this is a problem, and sometimes main characters are affected by it, leading to them going off-model and no looking a thing like they did in the rest of the movie. And for the second time in just under 25 minutes, I wonder why this had to be a cartoon, seeing as they</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> obviously had actors ready to go, and in some cases even in costume.<br /><br />Upstairs at the inn, The Hobbits meet a shadowy stranger who first introduces himself as Strider, before telling them his real name, Aragorn. Aragorn is one of this movie's big wins, alot of that owing to the fact that his voice is provided by John Hurt. They really couldn't have picked a better actor for this role, and he's truly giving it some wellie all the way through. The most wonderful thing Hurt brings to the table is that he's able to portray both sides of Aragorn's personality simultaniously, being bith kingly and dignified, but also intimidating and take-no-bullshit. I have literally nothing to complain about here. Aragorn rules. Together, they all allude the Black Riders with the old "sacks under the</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> covers" trick, and continue on their way, the Riders in hot pursuit. The filmmakers do a really good job of building up the sense of foreboding. You just know at some point, the Black Riders are going to catch up to them, and when they do, all hell's going to break out.<br /><br />And catch up with them they do, as they're all gathered round the fire listening to Aragorn tell a love story (the end of which causes Sam to put his hand on Frodo's shoulder as they gave into each others eyes longingly). Now, I hadn't noticed this until the Nostalgia Critic mentioned it in his review, but looking bacd needingk on it now, he made a dame good point- the Frodo in this movie is ever so slightly tougher than the one in the modern films</span><span style="font-family:courier new;">. During this scene in the recent retelling, Frodo's pretty much useless- he drops his sword, falls over, puts on the ring to hide and then ends up getting stabbed anyway. Here, yes, he still puts the ring on, but when it's obvious to him that the Riders can still see him, he pulls his sword and attempts to combat them. He still gets stabbed, but he didn't just lay there and take it. And then, instead of giving into the sickness and having to be practically dragged across the river like a corpse, he gets there under his own power, taunting the Black Riders as he does so.<br /><br />Frodo finally succumbs to the sickness his dagger wound cast upon him, and the Riders slowly close in around him, before they're unceremoniously flushed way by a massive horse-shaped wave, the</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> result of Elrond and Gandulf's magic (Gandulf boastfully claiming later that he added the horse made me laugh). When he awakes, he's in Elrond's house, and following his reunion with Gandulf (who explains that he was saved from Aruman's tower by a giant eagle)(just go with it) and, briefly, Bilbo (who reacts to being in the ring's presence again by flapping his hands about like he just burnt them on the oven), he attends a meeting to decide what's to be done about the ring. And for the third time watching this movie, I ask, why is this a cartoon? It's men sitting around a table! I mean, fuck a movie, there's nothing going on here that couldn't be done during a fairly low budget stage play. Anyway, Frodo agrees to take the ring to Mount Doom in Mordor to destroy it, and The Fellowship of the Ring is born, as he and his friends are joined by Legolas</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> (and elf), Gimli (a dwarf) and Boromir (a bastard).<br /><br />Their journey is thwarted by snow, forcing them to take an alternate route through the Misty Mountains via Moria, the ancient Dwarf kingdom. They wait around, waiting for Gandulf to figure out how to open the door leading to it, and tere's lots of talking and... Christ, alot of this story is boring when you're just watching it as opposed to reading it, isn't it? It's just people talking and nothing happening, which is all very good on the written page, but doesn't lend itself to be very compelling when you're watching it being acted out. It was a nice change of pace when a tentacle appeared from out of the nearby water and starts attacking them, but it's dealt with far too swiftly. But fear not, as Moria now finds</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> itself completely overrun by Orcs. I know what you're thinking, you're thinking, "YAAAAAAY! THE ORCS ARE FINALLY HERE!" I can understand why you'd be excited, because seeing as this is an animated feature, they could very easily look as hideous as they're described in the books. Sadly, once again, this movie is undone by its own ambition, as the Orcs are represented by real people who arn't so much rotoscoped over, but rather have some kind of effect added to them that almost makes them look like they're made out of newspaper. I feel like grabbing the animators in charge of this and shaking them, all the while screaming, "YOU'RE ALLOWED TO DRAW THINGS! REMEMBER WHO YOU ARE!"</span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br />Obviously, the battle isn't as bombastic or showy as that in the Jackson movie, but it gets by on a certain visceralness. There's actually blood in this fight (that spatters in quite an impressive fashion), whereas there was precious little of that in the modern trilogy, which focused more on thrills than gore. It's also just nice to see something a bit exciting happening for an extended period of time. The Troll and the Balrog (and I still can't hear that said without picturing the boxer character from "Street Fighter</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> 2") make appearances, and yes, they don't look that impressive (the Balrog is especially rubbish), but at least they tried. To save the rst of the group, Gandulf seemingly sacrifices himself, using magic to prevent the Balrog from passing, and falling with it into the depths of the mountain. As with people's reactions to the ring, his death is really undersold. Nobody seems that bothered that they've lost one of their own, never mind arguably the most powerful of their number. Frodo does at least say that all hope is now lost without Gandulf, though he doesn't really sound like he means it. It does give Aragorn an excuse to be all macho and proclaim, "The we must do <span style="font-style: italic;">without</span> hope! There is always <span style="font-style: italic;">vengence!</span>" It's enough to make you go weak at the knees.</span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br />They finally reach Lothlorien, the forest home of the Elves, and meet it's queen, Galadriel. It's not explicitely stated that Elves can read mind but it's implied by the way she looks at all the members of the Fellowship, especially Boromir. I like his reaction here better than I do in the Jackson film, as he hurriedly moves past her, trying to avoid eye contact. In the other film, this is the point where he just burst into tears, and also the point I lost all sympathy for the rest of the group for still trusting him. How much more obvious did it have to be that he had bad intentions? The group rest themselves for a while, before Frodo is brough to Galadriel's chamber to gaze into her magic mirror (it's really just</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> a pool of water, but I suppose "magic mirror" sounds better than "magic puddle"), so that he can gaze into it and figure out what Sauron knows about them and their quest. We don't get to see these visions of course, but rather have them described to us by the person seeing them (it's not like they could have just drawn them or anything, is it?). Frodo then offers her the ring, and... she just laughs. Y'know, I'm beginning to think the addictive nature of this thing is being greatly overstated. He's offered it to two people now, and they've both turned him down without so much batting an eyelid. There are a few Fanboys who feel some of the drama in the Jackson movies was overblown, but I'd personally prefer overblown to this sort of nonchalance.</span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br />The next morning, the Fellowship set off again, and Aragorn asks in what direction they should travel, be it with Frodo to Mordor, or with Boromir to the wars of Gondor, also spectulating alout about whether they should break their fellowship. Why is this even a question? They were assembled to destroy the ring, so that should be the number one priority. Why deviate from that path, especially at the request of someone who's been downright shifty at best? Without Gandulf to guide them, Aragorn leaves this decision to Frodo, who asks for an hour alone to decide. He doesn't get that hour though, as Boromir joins him, at first under the guise of friendship and concern for his well-being, before revealing his true motives, tha</span><span style="font-family:courier new;">t being to take the ring for himself. YES! Finally somebody's who's been driven slightly potty by this thing! Frodo gives him the slip by putting the ring on, and as in both the book and the other movies, they then do a good job of showing that Boromir wasn't quite in his right mind at that moment, and may not have been the entire time he was around the ring.<br /><br />It's this action that sets in motion the events that rip the Fellowship apart. Boromir returns to the camp and tells the others what happened, which of course causes them all to run off looking for Frodo. Of all of them, it's amazingly Sam that's the one smart enough to realise that Frodo would take one of the boats in order to</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> continue to Mordor, and the two are reunited. The others of course don't know this and continue looking, until Merrie and Pippin (Christ, there's two names I haven't typed in a while. I wasn't lying when I said this movie had nothing for them to do) are attacked by Orcs. This is another of those jarring borderline-live action scenes, and as ever it took me out of the movie just because it looks so different to most of what it follows. Still, this is the scene where Boromir redeems himself for his actions, battling to the death attempting to protect them. I always liked that he failed, and in my head I like to think he always <span style="font-style: italic;">knew</span> he was going to fail, but kept fighting anyway because it was the right thing to do. Like when Rocky fought Apollo for the first time. Only with a sword. And set in the past. And fighting a monster, that didn't happen until "Rocky </span><span style="font-family:courier new;">IV."<br /><br />Boromir uses his horn to call the others, but they arrive to late, as he's at death's door, and the Orcs have made off with Merrie and Pippin. Before he dies, he makes Aragorn promise he'll save his people, and also tells him that he doesn't think the Hobbits are dead. Deciding that Frodo can look after himself, he, Legolas and Gimli set off tracking the Orcs on the chance that Merrie and Pippin may still be alive. Then follows lots of shots of them running, some in slooooooow moooooootion for no apparent reason. There's also a shotof Aragorn tripping over. In slooooooow moooooootion. For no apparent reason. Then this is followed by lots of shots of the Orcs running. This film has turned into a track, I swear. And it just</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> keeps going.Out of curiosity, I went back and timed how long these two sequences lasted combined, and it came to <span style="font-style: italic;">just over two-and-a-half minutes.</span> 150 seconds. Eventually one of the Hobbits (I still can't tell them apart), falls over (in slooooooow moooooootion) from exhaustion and gets given a good kicking by one of the Orcs, giving us one of the few close-up shots of the creatures, and I have to say, up close they don't look that bad. I don't undrstand why they have to look so different to the other characters, but hey, small blessings.<br /><br />But back to Frodo/Sam thread, as we get what to many people is the money shot of the whole film- the arrival of Gollum. One of the things that always amazed me about the Jackson movie's visual </span><span style="font-family:courier new;">representation of Gollum was just how close they got the character to what I saw in my head all those years ago. Even back in "The Hobbit," when we first meet him in a dark cave, so the dscription of him was minimal, what they came up with was pretty much what I imagined was there in the darkness. It was amazing. And I'll admit they also do a pretty remarkable job here, although there are subtle difference, mostly around his head and face. I never imagined him having pointy ears or fangs, which I think make him look a bit too much like an elderly vampire caught halfway between it's bat transformation, if that makes any sense. I have no complaints about the voice they gave him whatsoever, as it's provided by Peter Woodthorpe, who also played Gollum in the radio serial, and as such, vocally, he <span style="font-style: italic;">was</span> Gollum to me during the early part of my life. They</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> capture him and, in between his babbling insanity, force him to promise to lead them to Mordor.<br /><br />Amongst the confusion of battle, Merie and Pippin manage to escape their captors and flee into Fangorn Wood,where they meet and are put under the protection of Treebeard, a talking (and walking) tree. Now, this is going to be a bit controversial, but I've felt that Treebeard was one of Tolkien's naffer ideas. He's just always struck me as being a bit silly. He was silly in the books, he was silly in the Jackson films, and he might be the silliest he's ever been here, mostly due to the way he's drawn. He doesn't really look like a tree, he looks more like a giant potatoe. With a beard. His voice is allot less annoying than it is in "The Two Towers," at least. They</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> ask him what side he's on, and after a bit of waffle about how he's not really on anybody's side, he says he's "no fan of these tree-killing Orcs." Which cause Merrie and Pippin to start clapping. Then they stop. Then they start again. And that's the last we see of them. Bye Merrie, bye Pippin, thanks for coming.<br /><br />The remaining members of the Fellowship track the Hobbits to the Wood, but instead of finding them, they find Gandulf, who's been reborn as Gandulf The White, my thrid-favourite Christ metaphore behind the second coming of Aslan and the return of Optimus Prime. He tels them of his battle with the Balrog, of how it pretty much destroyed the mountain, and that he's been sent back in this new form for a brief time in order to complete his mission. Telling the</span><span style="font-family:courier new;">m not to worry about the Hobbits, he leads them instead to Rohan's capital, Edoras, to help the aging King Theoden and his people fight back the Orcs that are coming their way. Thus begins the countdown to this movie's version of The Battle of Helm's Deep. They arrive at the King's palace to find him under the control of Grima Wormtongue, a slimey-looking little fellow who's poisoned the King's mind. When Theoden is told this, instead of becoming enraged, he gived Grima a bit of a cuddle, asks him if it's true, and then tells him he won't harm him even if it is. And then rather than try to manipulate the King into believing him, he hisses at him like an annoyed cat and runs out of the room. That was easy, but then they're running out of both screen time and, probably, money.</span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br />There's some more stuff with Frodo and Sam following Gollum, but if I'm honest, at this point, this thread of te movie is also the least interesting. Then best bit in this most resent sequence is the reappearance of a Black Rider, this time riding a winged creature, which is as good a way of showing that the stakes have been upped as any. There's also a fun Gollum/Smeagol conversation/monologue, and also his indiginty at being accused of "sneaking" is quite funny, but the sooner we got back to Helm's Deep, the better at this point. As with before, in terms of action and wow-factor, this battle really can't hold a candle to what would come later, but at the same time there's a real brutality to it, as once again blood really does </span><span style="font-family:courier new;">fly. It lacks that choreographed feeling that alot of modern fight scenes suffer from (and, if I can be impartial, what some of the scenes in Jackson's movies also sometimes veer towards). The good guys hold off the Orcs as long as possible, and all seems lost, until Gandulf arrives with the cavalry, and they day is, if not quite saved, then is at least rescued for the time being. Before all this, we cut back to Sam and Frodo, so Frodo could make this big speech about how they're probably not coming back from their mission. It's like the movie realised that tey were no longer really the stars here, as the last shot of the movis is Gandulf triumphantly holding his sword aloft, as the narrator implores us to come back next time. Only there wasn't a next time, at least not with this creative team, as Bakshi had decided adapting somebody</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> else's material whilst also being surrounded by people who had no respect for it wasn't for him, so he opted out. "The Return of the King" was eventually made into an animated feature, but... we'll get to that one day, hopefully.<br /><br />So, how do I sum up this movie? I think with the same words I used to describe my Dad's attempt at reading me and my sister the books as children- a noble failure. It's heart is in the right place, and it does some things very well, but in the end, it feels rushed, the animation techniques employed make it look a bit piecemeal, some scenes are undeniably boring, and it's just downright <span style="font-style: italic;">strange</span> in places. In the end, this was not a film that really should have been made in 1978. It needed more time, scope and money than was </span><span style="font-family:courier new;">available to it and it's creators at that time to be able to do justice to it. Nobody involved in this should be ashamed, they all tried their best. It's just in the end, to put it perhaps more bluntly than is stictly nesessary, their best wasn't good enough.<br /><br /></span><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >FINAL VERDICT</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;font-family:courier new;" >BINNED!</span><br /></div><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgvAqmk2n7hah-Ezk8rb9dtTqU2feXASmEh229eS01zBpcV4fim6BHmre6uwpi5YC8bypZn3Or2Zi6wB43FTX2tm00M67O1jUj6sB1PZG76xy1n_j2RArnt4xCCfNiNU_9CkzAccV-a78I/s1600-h/Picture+049.jpg"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgvAqmk2n7hah-Ezk8rb9dtTqU2feXASmEh229eS01zBpcV4fim6BHmre6uwpi5YC8bypZn3Or2Zi6wB43FTX2tm00M67O1jUj6sB1PZG76xy1n_j2RArnt4xCCfNiNU_9CkzAccV-a78I/s400/Picture+049.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5364086458303555362" border="0" /></a><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">Before I wrap this up, I just ant to apologise for how long it's taken me to get this up. I'll level with you all here- I had another writing engagement that needed my attention, so I had swallow my pride, realise I coldn't do both of these at the same time, and shelve this project for a little while. However, once that other assignment was done, I found myself so burnt out on writing in general that I just couldn't bring myself to get back to work here straight away, meaning I got further behind here than I ever intended to. Well, I intend to remedy tis, as this review kicks off the MONTH OF FURY (spot the reference). Basically, for the next month, you're going to be getting two revies a week, one on Wednesday, and one on either Friday or Saturday (more often than no Saturday, if I'm being realistic). Because as a friend of mine says, there's nothing better than fighting back against burnout than keeping to a painfully unrealistic work plan that'll probably kill you.<br /><br />Until next time, I'm The Cheap-Arse Film Critic, and look, there's only one "return," okay, and it ain't of the King, it's of the Jedi.</span>The Cheap-Arse Film Critichttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08211046330068309653noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1161570503760263602.post-57873438388423479012009-05-26T19:35:00.000-07:002009-07-30T08:08:46.258-07:00The Cheap-Arse Film Review #34- "THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE." (2004)<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiXS13MaCsoqOrf4fLTD9uvt1bmgqWslHXFuTwuqUZiMI0l93qb9OjT7vjSQbDjtvGXD7WLhYEcKyyBCRkN7E540p9NkZseZvxX8Oxa-csbFmU0P7Ilc80jsnkgOrL9TJwjqWR6ed0rE8Y/s1600-h/Picture+001.jpg"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiXS13MaCsoqOrf4fLTD9uvt1bmgqWslHXFuTwuqUZiMI0l93qb9OjT7vjSQbDjtvGXD7WLhYEcKyyBCRkN7E540p9NkZseZvxX8Oxa-csbFmU0P7Ilc80jsnkgOrL9TJwjqWR6ed0rE8Y/s400/Picture+001.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5346429506013582850" border="0" /></a><br /><div style="text-align: center; font-weight: bold;"><span style="font-family:courier new;">NAME: THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE (2004)</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">RATED: 15</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">RELEASED: UM... 2004</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">WRITTEN BY: DANIEL PYNE & DEAN GEORGARIS, BASED ON THE ORIGINAL 1962 SCREENPLAY BY GEORGE AXELROD, WHICH WAS IN TURN BASED ON THE NOVEL BY RICHARD CONDON</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">DIRECTED BY: JONATHAN DEMME</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">STARRING: DENZEL WASHINGTON, MERYL STREEP, LIEV SCREIBER</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">GENRE: POLITI</span><span style="font-family:courier new;">CAL THRILLER</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">BOUGHT FROM: CEX</span><br /><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">PRICE: </span><span style="font-family:courier new;">£</span>1.00<br /></div><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br />(Okay, Over a week late. I agree with you, this is shit. And I'm probably more upset about it than you are, one of the things I was most proud about with regards to this thing was that I'd managed to maintain a decent publishing schedule, which I'd never been any good at before. I do havean excuse but... I don't want to talk about it. It's not even that I can't, because I think I can, but I'm just afraid to I suppose, incase doing so causes something to go wrong. I don't know what, really. Maybe I'd burst into flames or something. The short version is- there are several great things going on in my life at the moment, stuff I've been working towards for a very long</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> time, and I'm estatic about it, but the fact is, it's thrown alot of things I was doing previously out of balance, this site included, and I'm fighting hard to try and rediscover that balance. And, well, at the moment, I'm failing. But bare with me, I promice thigs are going to start getting better very soon. Thank you for sticking by me. Normal service shall opefully be resumed soon.)(also this entire thing should be bolded, but for some reason Blogger won't let me do the whole thing. Don't ask me why, Blogger does so many things I don't understand, 've given up asking questions)<br /><br />So, a remake then, the first time I've covered one. Discussing the concept of remakes with people can usually be counted on to stir up great passion, most usually the negative kind. For instance, about a year ago, I was talking to my Uncle, and mentioned in passing that I'd heard a remake of "Lord of the Flies" was being talked about,</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> and this proved enough to make him bellow, with great anger, "OH, AND I SUPPOSE IT'LL STAR LEONARDO DICAPRO AS A MAGICAL SWAN THAT FLIES DOWN TO SEE IF THE KIDS ARE ALL ALRIGHT!!!!!" And he doesn't even particularly <span style="font-style: italic;">like</span> movies. I honestly think that it's just an instant reflex now for some people, to hear that something's being remade and go, "GRRR!" without even really thinking what they're GRRR-ing at. With that in mind, it doesn't take a genius to figure out that me just acknowledging this film <span style="font-style: italic;">exists</span> is going to piss off a fair few people. And I think the next thing I'm going to say will annoy them even more- I've never seen the original "Manchurian Candidate." Yes, yes, I've seen a remake before I've seen the original. I'm well aware how taboo this is. I used to be the kind of person that'd jump all over a person if they admitted what I just</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> did, and denounced them as some kind of failure, as both a cinephile and a human being. But I've really chilled out alot about this particular subject over time. The way I think about it is like this...<br /><br />... every since humanity crawled out of the metaphorical gutter and developed the ability to communicate verbally, we've been telling stories. It's the mark of any intelligent society. And the cinema experience is really just a throwback to those days, us fulfilling our inbuilt desire to sit in the dark and be taken on a journey. All you'd need is a campfire and the illusion would be complete. But it doesn't stop there- it's been well documented that alot of tribes and cultures outright stole stories from each other and subtly</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> altered them, tailoring them to the audiences that were about to hear them, and often to the personality and particular likes and dislikes of the person telling them. And that's all remakes are. That's <span style="font-style: italic;">really</span> all they are, it's a person taking a well-known, beloved story, and putting a new twist on it, leaving a bit of themselves to be seen in the telling, and also making them accessible to a different generation and/or culture. And when you think of them like that, they're not really something to get wound up over, are they?<br /><br />Of course, with that said, that doesn't mean they can't be critiqued like any other film, or indeed that you can't compare and contrast them with what came first. For instance, I think we can all agree</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> that Tim Burton's decision to show Willy Wanka's childhood in his "Charlie & The Chocolate Factory" retelling was a mistake, however well-intentioned. Or that Gus Van Sant's decision to make his version of "Psycho" almost a shot-for-shot duplicate of the original (with the exception of some shots of Vince Vaughn masturbating and some... cows)(I've no idea) is practically the definition of pointless. And don't even get me started on mose of the East-To-West horror conversions. Christ almighty. But if I think a remake manages to surpass the original, I'm not afraid to say so. It's at this point I'm expected to mention "The Thing," as whenever the subjet of good remakes is brought up, this movie is always mentioned. But I'm not going to, not because I don't think it's good, because I do, but because I don't really consider it a remake, but rather another</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> adaptation of the original source material. You know what movie I <span style="font-style: italic;">am</span> going to mention here, though? The 2005 version of "The Amityville Horror." It's not the greatest movie ever made, at best it's a three star flick, and it's blighted by the same things that do in most modern horror movies, that being more of an emphisis on spectacle rather than mood, and feeling overall too slick and polished. But even with all that said, I still think it's still better than the original. And this opinion has nothing to do with the fact that Ryan Reynolds is one of the few men I'd let do naughty things to my bottom (I... legitimately can't believe I just wrote that). Has anybody here actually <span style="font-style: italic;">seen</span> the original "Amityville Horror" recently? Well, I have, and the only way I can think to describe it is as a load of camp old nonsense. There's a reason why, whenever</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> anybody references this film, they always bring up the bleeding walls- it's because that's <span style="font-style: italic;">the only good bit.</span> And the acting... Margot Kidder... poor, poor Margot Kidder.<br /><br />I'd also like to give an honourable mention to the recent (well, recent-ish) "Texas Chainsaw Massacre" remake. I'm not going to sit here and say it's as good as the original, because that'd make me a big fat liar. It's not, and it has a few serious problems. For a start, it's got that whole slick thing going on that I mentioned earlier, but they try to counteract that by making the whole film seem dirty, which basically means almost every frame in it seems to have been shot using a putrid brown filter. It looks like it's being filmed from the inside of someone's arse (it's just dawned on me how</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> anally-obsessed this review is becoming. No more of this, I swear). And secondly, this is a fanboy gripe, I make no bones about it, but I feel so strongly about it that I'm going to mention it anyway... they should never have shown Leatherface's actual face. Never. Never ever <span style="font-style: italic;">ever.</span> The second they did that, all his mystique was gone, and all he was from that point forward was just another disfigured dude killing people in a horror movie. But I watched it, and I have to say I found it alot less painful than I expected. And the reaction from other fanboys on various forums had me in hysterics. One I particularly remember was some guy saying it "desecrated the memory of the original." I just sat there at me computer for a few minutes thinking, "Really? <span style="font-style: italic;">Really?</span>" Because in my opinion, the original had been pretty thoroughly desecrated already by the succession of </span><span style="font-family:courier new;">increasingly diminishing sequels, peaking with number four, which (and I hate saying this, because every desensitized little shit in the world says this about every horror movies that dares not have actual death and humiliation up on the screen) you can't convince me wasn't supposed to be a comedy. If anything, I think the remake redressed the balance a little bit and gave the world one more good movie with the words "Texas Chainsaw Massacre" in the title.<br /><br />I've spent far to much time talking about movies that aren't actually the one I'm supposed to be reviewing. That's a good sign, isn't it?<br /></span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">This will sound like hyperbole, but I've thought about this for a while (and no, before some snark pipes up, that's <span style="font-style: italic;">not</span> why this review's so late), and I genuinely believe what I'm about to type- I think this movie has one of the worst opening credit sequences I've ever seen. This is all it is- the names of the lead actors appear as animated CGI, made so it makes them flap around like flags. Then we get the title, which is doing the same thing. That's it. I just read those last few lines back to myself, and I think I'm really underselling just how pony this looks. I'm starting to think words can't really describe what I'm trying to get across. It just looks so... cheap. And to make matters worse, they make absolutely no</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> attempt to intigrate it into the opening of the film- once the logo flashes (or rather, flutters) up on screen for a bit, poof, it's gone, and we're instantly into the first scene. Even the music that was playing over the top of it suddenly stops, only to be replaced by something completely different. It really feels like something they threw together in an afternoon after leaving it to the last minute.<br /><br />Following this, we then find ourselves in an extremely confined space, watching a bunch of soldiers playing poker. This goes on for a long time. A very long time. Infact it goes on so long, I hit fast forward just to make sure the disc wasn't broken and playing one scene in a continuous loop, as I've had that happen before. We</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> eventually find out this confined space is the back of an army truck (this scene takes place in Kuwait in the year 1991, just so you know) when we cut outside to see the unit's captain, Ben Marco (Denzel Washington), order Raymond Shaw (Liev Schreiber), the only one of his men not inside having fun, to tell them they'll be heading out soon, into dangerous territory. The movie wastes no time hammering home the fact that Shaw is a strange guy, due to the fact that, not only is he not palling it up with his comrades, but he seems content to just sit on a chair in the middle of the desert, staring off into space with a blank look on his face. Without getting ahead of myself a bit here, all of this would be perfectly fine if Shaw was later revealed to be in on the conspiracy the film is built around, but as we find out, he's as much a puppet as any of</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> them eventually become. So this little bit establishes nothing, other than the fact that Shaw is a miserable git that nobody really likes. It all feels a bit tacked on. Like the credits, I suppose.<br /><br />So anyway, they eventually run into trouble, and the shit seems to well and truly hit the fan, with Marco being knocked out after somebody hits him in the face with the butt of their gun. We know Marco survives this though, as he's narrating over the events as they're unfolding (and also because he's the main character of this movie). It's eventually revealed that he's telling the story of what happened that night to a crowd of Boy Scouts, answering questions they throw out, such as whether or not any of his men were killed (as it turns out, two were. Remember that, it's important later)</span><span style="font-family:courier new;">, whilst continually heaping praise on Shaw, telling the boys how he single-handedly held the enemy off and saved the rest of his men, and how he personally recommended him for the Congressional Medal of Honour. It all seems fairly run-of-the mill, until afterwards when he confronted by Al Melvin (Jeffrey Wright) one of the surviving members of his old squad. Melvin looks a complete mess, frankly- like a man who's survived the proceeding years on a combined total of eight hours sleep. I don't know if there's any make-up or production trickery involved, or if it's all down to the actor's performance, but he looks almost deformed, like whatever's going on in his mind has spread to his physical appearance. It's a great turn, infact it may even be <span style="font-style: italic;">too</span> great- when he starts babbling about having two sets of memories, and having dreams about what he thinks</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> really happened the night Shaw supposedly saved them all, you really have to suspend disbelief that Marco would stand there and listen to him say what he has to say, which is some disjointed ramblings about how he thinks he doesn't remember things going the way Marco said they did, but at the same time, he does. So he <span style="font-style: italic;">sounds</span> like a loony, as well as <span style="font-style: italic;">looking</span> like one. He also mentions something about dreams, asking Marco if he has them. Marco says he doesn't, and then sets about fobbing the guy off and pretty much telling him he needs to get help, which, like I said before, is the most natural reaction you could have.<br /><br />Once home, Marco settles down to watch the coverage of some American political party convention, as they hype up the fact that this </span><span style="font-family:courier new;">party's Vice-Presidential candidate will be picked within the next few hours. Notice how I'm not identifying this party as being either Republican or Democrat. That's because the movie never does, either. Infact, not only is it never named, we also don't see any imagery that would associate it to either party. We don't even get a look at the other group in the race, almost as if they did that, people might start guessing which was supposed to be which. I'm in two minds about this. On the other hand, it does away with at least some of the risk of this movie being seen as one big political bitch-slap. On the other hand, by avoiding the issue altogether, it comes across as a little bit, I don't know, cowardly. Like they were afraid of offending anyone and loosing a large chunk of their adience in the process.</span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br />In any event, we're soon whisked to the convention itself, where we once again meet up with Shaw, who is now one of the young, leading lights of this particular party, and are introduced to his mother Eleanor (Meryl Streep), who's a senator (don't bother asking me where, because... well, I'm sure you've figured it out by now). Eleanor, you've met before in a thousand different movies, of almost as many different genres- she's the pushy mother that seems to believe she knows what's best for her child, despite what he might believe (and boy, does this idea take a gross turn later). Shaw's characterisation is a bit more complex, or put more accurately, scattershot- in some scenes, such as the one here with his mother, </span><span style="font-family:courier new;">he's portrayed not as some snivling yes man, but rather as somebody who's got a little bit of a backbone to him. He's going along with what she wants, that being to position himself as the potential VP, but he's not letting her walk over him, and you can see a little bit of ambition in his own eyes as well. Later though, his personality does a complete 180 and he ends up looking weak, fragile and, well, a little bit naive. It could be that they were trying to get across that all these little changes were hypnotic suggestions kicking in (yes, if you've not seen either this or the original before, hypnosis plays a massive part in this movie), but again, it would be nice to have that at least hinted at to us. As it stands, all it looks like is that the screenwriter didn't really have a good handle on who Shaw was as a character, and so just changed him constantly</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> depending on what the scene needed.<br /><br />Shaw of course wins the nomination, but not without a fight, as his party had originally decided to go with Thomas Jordan (Jon Voight, who's in this thing so little I think he barely qualifies as making a cameo). Eleanor sorts them out with a tongue-lashing, and whilst her speech it laced through with thinly-disguised xenophobia, she also makes a few good points about the need for her party (whichever one it may be), to present something new, vibrant and youthful. The fact that I was slghtly repulsed by the things she was saying one minute and nodding with agreement the next is, believe it or not, the closest this movie really comes to complexity.<br /></span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">It's hearing this news that seems to tip Marco over the edge, as when he fall to sleep that night, like Melvin, he has a dream that seems to point to something sinister going on. I was talking to someone online recently about how dream sequences almost never feel like real dreams, and I could think of maybe only a handful that were in any way successful. Well, you can add this one to that handful. It's marvelously done, as it's literal enough to seem like it's posible this may have been the way things really happened, but there's also enough strange, out-of-context things to give it a feeling of unease and menace, such as weird, arabian ladies with tattoos on their faces and men holding TVs for no apparent reason just walking around. Amongst all this, we see Shaw kill an man bu</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> suffocating him with some plastic, and we also get a look at the equipment used to fo the brainwashing, which looks like it was swiped from the set of "The Mind Snatchers." Sadly, as is the case with alot of dreams, whilst there's a hint of truth to these images, they end up being revealed as exaggerations- we later discover that Shaw choked the man he killed with his bare hands, and the brainwashing appears to have been administered through surgery and a constant exposure to propaganda. Shame, I was hoping to see more shots of everybody walking around with giant pipes sticking out of ther heads.<br /><br />Wanting to get to the bottom of what's going on, Marco attempts to make contact with Shaw. His first attempt occurs at a party</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> seemingly being thrown in Shaw's honour, where Marco is (CONVENIENTLY!) working as a "babysitter" for two other arm-types. The meeting doesn't go well, as Shaw snaps at Marco not to touch him when he does just that. In Shaw's defence, he had just made something of a fool of himself in front of Jocelyne, Senator Jordan's daughter (played by Vera Farmiga, who some of you may remember as the shrink from "The Departed." Sadly, like her screen father, she has almost nothing to do), and very obviously the love of Shaw's life, as in a previous scene he'd confronted his mother about sabotaging their relationship, and then here he practically tells the woman herself that the reason all his other relationships have failed is because the women weren't her. This is where the split in Shaw's personalities becomes really apparent, because he</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> goes from gentle and loving, do desperate, to angry in the space of a couple of minutes. Still, I suppose love can do that to you, so I'll let it slide.<br /><br />Following this, Marco is shown in a meeting with his superiors, where the movie actually lets the watcher in on something, which is that in contradiction to what he told Melvin, Marco <span style="font-style: italic;">has</span> been having the those dreams for the last several yeas, he just denied and surpressed them. Revel in this moment of clarification, because this movie really doesn't dole out too many of them. I'm all for not having my hand held and not being treated like an idiot, but the fact is, this movie leaves alot of thing unsaid, and quite a few of them it really could do with saying. Marco shrugs off their belief</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> that he's suffering from, amongst other thing, Gulf War Syndrome, and attempts to convince them that what he believes is true, only to agressively be shot down by one of his superiors (played by That Bald Dude You've Seen In Alot Of Things Whose Name You Can Never Remember), who tells him, "You're telling me an entire squad of US Army Soldiers was hypnozised into believing that Raymond Shaw deserved the Medal of Honour, and somehow thanks to your dream, you're the only one who knows the truth?" Well, when you put it like <span style="font-style: italic;">that...</span> The meeting predictably ends with Marco being told to stay</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> clear of Shaw. Yeah, like that's going to happen.<br /><br />Actually, it does. For a little while at least. The next sequence involves two scenes that we're left to assume are happening simultaniously intercut with each other. The first involves Marco breaking into Melvin's apartment in order to steal the book of scribblings we briefly got a glimpse at during their scene together right at the beginning. For the life of me, I couldn't figure out why this book was so important to the overall plot of the movie, and I still can't now as I'm typing this- it's not proof of anything, it's really nothing other than a bunch of drawings and collages that seem to have been made by a madman. There's one particular image that really bothers me, and that's a collage of Shaw with a Swastika</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> drawn on his forehead. I'd be fine with it if the movie was implying that Shaw was a facist, or even that he was being used in a plot that was in some way mtivated by the thought and beliefs that have come to be associated with that symbol, but it doesn't, it seems like the only reason it's there is because the Nazis weren't nice (understatement of the fucking decade, right there), and neither is Shaw. The fact is, that symbol still represents pain and suffering on a scale few can even begin to comprehend to alot of people still alive today, so I don't like seeing it thrown around without any care or attention. And it definitely should never become shorthand for, "This man's bad." Of course, the filmmakers thought it was either important or powerful, so we see it not just here, but in another scene too later on, too.</span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br />At the same time, we cut back to Shaw's hotel room, where a phone conversation with his mother (Christ, this woman won't leave him alone for five minutes. What is she, in love with him?), is interrupted by another call from a gentleman with an English accent (they try to sell him to us as South African, but that's bullshit, he's English) who's later revealed to us to be the scientist Aticus Noyle, putting him into a hypnotically suggestive trance by saying his full name in a particular way. From this point forward, I'm not sure what's real and what's not, as Noyle has Shaw open his closet and climb through a hole there, in order to bring him to an operating theatre, where they conduct minor brain surgery on him</span><span style="font-family:courier new;">, inserting a new implant. I'm just not sure I buy this, that they'd have this place set up and ready to go at a moment's notice. It doesn't look like the kind of set-up that travels either, meaning this place is just there all the time, waiting for the brainwashed to check in for a tune up. I could believe that this is all going on in Shaw's head, and to be fair to the movie, there's a not-so-subtle hint later pointing to this possibly being the case, but that's about it.<br /><br />It's following these two scenes that the movie begins to move along faster, and it's also around this point that the movie begins to totally lose the plot. Marco meets a seemingly sweet girl called Rosie (Kimberly Elise) on a train, who claims to know him and</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> promptly starts flirting with him in the most obvious way imaginable. As I was watching this little interaction, I couldn't help but remember what I wrote in my "North By Northwest" review, which strangely also featured the main character having an interest shown in him on a train- if you had all this weird stuff going on around you, wouldn't your senses be hightened slightly, to the point that you'd think to yourself that this event is so odd and out-of-the-blue, that you's at least consider that they're connected. I would. Marco doesn't, and seems to enjoy the attention being shown to him. He's not helped by the fact that he's tripping balls practically the entire time he's sitting there though, seeing men sitting opposite him that aren't there a second later, bleeding holes appearing on people's foreheads (which, I'll admit, is an</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> affectively creepy image), and then in the toilet after he's excused himself, he sees Aticus Noyle standing behind him in the mirror, thus validating my belief that the scene with him in the hotel with Shaw didn't really happen.<br /><br />Marco ends up staying at Rosie's place. Hey, he just met this girl, seemed really weird in front of her, and yet she's letting him sleep in her house as long as he needs to! That's not weird at all! I suppose I may as well tell you now- Rosie turns out to be a cop sent to keep an eye on Marco for some reason. Again, it's never made clear why, and at this point other than saying a few odd things he's done nothing to warrant this kind of surveillance. But the movie needed a cop in it to help the god guy later, so there she is. Shaw</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> and Marco meet up again, this time at what looks like the main headquarters of Shaw and his running mate's White House attempt. Shaw at first seems reluctant to speak to Marco, but after he assures him he's not crazy (in a manner that I don't think would fill anybody with confidance that he's telling the truth), they sit down and have a bit of a chat. Shaw ven admits that there are times that he doubts his memories himself. Then, in a move that frankly baffled me, Marco gives Shaw Melvin's book. I mean, how could he have thought this was a good idea. "You can trust me, I'm not crazy. By the way, here's a book full of images of you depicted as the Anti-Christ. Thought you'd like to give that a going over." It's as he reads this that Shaw's whole personality changes once again, this time becoming quite aggressive and assertive, taking back everything</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> he'd said previously and pretty much telling Marco that he's crazy.<br /><br />Marco then throws him across the table, partially rips his shirt off and starts biting him.<br /><br />There is context to this, I swear- earlier, whilst washing in Rosie's bathroom, Marco had found a lump on his back. He managed to remove what was underneath his skin to discover that it was some kind of tiny Microchip, only to drop it down the sink before he can have it looked at by his Tokar (Robyn Hitchcock, playing a computer/gadget wiz that appears out of nowhere with barely any kinfd of introduction just because the film now needs a charact</span><span style="font-family:courier new;">er like that). Determined to get another one, during his attack of Shaw, he discovers an identical bump on his back, and decides to remove the chip. With his teeth. This doesn't sit too well with Shaw's security, who burst in and have Marco arrested. I don't know for sure, but I don't think a guy caught violently attacking one of the men in the running for what is the second most powerful position in the known world would just get arrested. I suspect he's leave the scene in a bag, with several holes in him. And for all the effort he put in, I can't help but think it wasn't worth it, for him as well as us, as (say it with me folks), we never really find out what those microchips are or what they do, nor does removing them seem to have any affect on the hypnosis.</span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br />Marco is now question by police, not just about this incident, but also about Melvin, as he's recently been found dead in a river (suicide? Murder? I like how you've not given up asking for answers yet. It's cute), and the know he broke into his apartment recently. The movie's lone (intentionally) funny moment happens here, as a particularly arseholish cop keeps getting in Marco's face, calling him a psycho and daring him to hit him, until Marco, without so much as a warning, does just that. And then the guy acta all surprised that he's just been punched. It'sa nice moment of levity in a film that takes itself very, very seriously. Marco's soon back on the streets, and Shaw refuses to press charges (okay, so he's off that</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> wrap, but isn't he still technically a murder suspect?), and he enlists the help of his friend to help him straighten out his memories but, as they put it, "rebooting" his mind. When he comes to following this, he's in a park with Rosie standing over him. The effects of the reboot temperarily leave him in a child-like state, but slowly his memories start to come back to him, and we see for the first time what it was really like in the camp where his squad had their minda altered. These brief little scenes are quite effective, as they're shown to us in a very stark, to-the-point manner. In order to prove the suggestion worked, both Marco and Shaw were ordered to kill one of their own men, which both of them do with absolutely no fuss whatsoever. They act like it's the most normal thing in the world, and that in itself is quite chilling</span><span style="font-family:courier new;">.<br /><br />Marco now starts researching into the people who did this to him, and why they would want to in the first place. Which you think would be difficult, but no, he manages to find almost all the information he needs surfing the Internet at his local public library. What he discovers is this- Noyle was hired by The Manchurian Group, an evil (I didn't want to use such an unsubtle word to describe them, but the movie really leaves me with no choice) corporation who seem to have their fingers in several bad-tasting pies, who aspire to be in control of what Marco calls, "The first privately-owned President of the United States." Armed with this information, he uses it to makean ally of Senator Jordan (HEY! LOOK! THEY REMEMBERED THEY HAD </span><span style="font-family:courier new;">JON VOIGHT!), who's had dealing in the past with The Manchurian Corporation, and as such doesn't put anything past them. This part feels so rushed, as stretches the credibility of the characters to breaking point, especially in the case of Senator Jordan- we're expected to believe this intelligent servant of the people buys this, frankly, ludicrous scheme after talking to the person presenting it to him just once? Bullshit. I could believe it if they'd spent most of the second act having Marco trying to convince Jordan of what's going on, coming to him with more and more evidence until he can't dispute it anymore. That would have been great, and the scenes between the two could have been electric. I mean, I know I keep saying it, but... they had Jon Voight. Use him, for fuck sake!</span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br />Voight visits Shaw and Eleanor at one of their homes (I don't know which. Maybe they live together)(Actually, with te bit that's coming up soon, I don't want to even consider that being a possibility), and tells Shaw that he has to withdraw from the race and be tested to see if what Marco told him was true. Or what? You'll go on TV and spill the beans? Yes, because that wuldn't make you a laughing stock that looks bitter at being passed over for nomination, would it. After he's gone, Shaw mournfully tells him mother that he's been having the dreams Marco told him about, and looks set to do what Jordan asked him to, before his mother puts him in a hypnoti</span><span style="font-family:courier new;">c trance, revealing (if you can call it that) that she's in on everything.She then sends her son to kill Jordan and his daughter. No, really. He walks out into the sea near Jordans home, still in his clothes, and drowns both of them with his bare hands. WAT?! Are you kidding? That was her plan? After all these years of secrecy and backroom dealings, she uses his programming to have him do away with two people in <span style="font-style: italic;">broad daylight?</span> And it didn't cross her mind that somebody might have seen one of the Vice-Presidential candidates walking around in a soggy suit and though to themselves, "Wow, that's weird." Infact, this little development is so stupid, the movie actually <span style="font-style: italic;">admits as much,</span> having to people from Manchurian bitch out Eleanor for taking everything they've worked towards and</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> putting it in jepordy by briefly turning her son into The Terminator.<br /><br />So with no other options left, Marco decides to confront Shaw one last time, on the night he attends a rally celebrating his parties victory, now aided by his recently-revealed-to-be-a-cop friend Rosie. Of course, it a trap, as a tearful Shaw (after giving him his Medal, saying he deserves it more) tells him they had him factored into the plan pretty much from the beginning, and soon Shaw finds himself hypnotised into shooting the President, thus making Shaw the Leader of the Free World, and allowing The Manchurian Corporation to... do whatever it is they wanted to do with him (again, never revealed, we're just supposed to assume it's bad because GRRR!</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> CORPORATIONS!), and Marco has now been turned into the trigger man, the guy who'll take the fall. Gee, I bet he hadn't spent most of the movie seeming so crazy now, doesn't he. Eleanor explains all of his to Shaw in a gentle, loving manner, before she... wait, what? She's... she's lingering close to his face as if she's going to... to... no way, they won't... OH GOD SHE'S MOVING CLOSER! CUT AWAY! CUTAWAYCUTAWAYCUTAWAYCUTAWAYCUTAWAY oh thank Jesus they cut away! What was that?! What were they trying to imply with that scene? That she uses hypnosis to... I don't even want to type it! Who the FUCK thought that was a good idea!? "Gee, y'know what this movie needs? Implied incest!" J<span style="font-style: italic;">esus tittyfucking Christ.</span><br /><br />The plot's foiled eventually,when Shaw has an attack of concious and</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> obscures Marco's shot at the President before looking up at him and imploring him to shot him, which he does, taking out his mother as well with the same shot (well, I guess they did get to achieve some form of penetration with each other, eh?)(that may be both the worst and most morally dubious joke I've ever made. Thank you, and I'm sorry). Don't ask me how Marco was able to just shrug off his orders and go into business for himself. I guess it can be broken with willpower, although you have to wonder where Shaw's willpower was when he was killing the only woman he's ever loved. Anyway, Rosie stops Marco from killing himself, news footage is altered to protect his identity (and the way th do that is hilarious, they esentially use a digital eraser that replaces him with a white guy) we're shown a group of people in one of the offices at The Manchurian </span><span style="font-family:courier new;">Corporation watching the news of Shaw's death and looking sad, then we see Marco and Rosie walking amongst the wreckage of the place he was brainwashed. You know, that top secret place that nobody knew the location of. Shaw's last act is to put the medal and a picture of is boys into the sea surrounding the building, as we hear him say in voiceover that there are always casualties in war.<br /><br />I was so disappointed by this movie it's noteven funny. When I found it, I saw all the big names attached to it, and thought there had to be some quality there, and tat it'd be a good movie to base my little rant about remakes around. Sadly, whilst I still stand by everything I wrote at the beginning of this, I'll conceed that this movie may not have been the best to try and make my point with. It's</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> pretty awful. Of the three leads, the only person who walks away deserving any kind of kudos is Schreiber for wrestling manfully with a role that nobody involved creativelyseemed to really understand. But then I expected nothing else from him, as anybody who had the misfortune of sitting through "X-Men Origins: Wolverine" could tell you. All I'll say is, anybody who can maintain an air of dignity and menace when the role occasionally calls for you to <span style="font-style: italic;">run on all fours like a dog,</span> you're clearly talented. Meanwhile, Washington is I think trying to come across as lost and sad, but he just seems really bored the whole time, and Streep, probably the most on-or-off actress there has ever, ever been, spends most of this movie hamming it up so much her character may as well have a snout. I also want to</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> mention the score, and how melodramatic and intrusive it is- tere's barely a scene that doesn't have some mournful horn parping away in the background like a WW2-based First Person Shooter. Humourously, the most emotionally-effective scene in te movie, that being the shots on the brainwashed Marco and Shaw killing the teammates, happen in silence.<br /><br />But I think the movies biggest flaw is the fact that it's dumb. <span style="font-style: italic;">Properly</span> dumb. And yet it thinks it's really smart, that it's making some grand points about war and power. It's a silly film, with a silly plot, that it takes far too seriously and has no sense of either humour or awareness of itself. This movie is Paris Hilton going on Larry King after doing time for drink driving and</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> announcing she's going to change the world. Everybody laughed at her. And everybody should laugh at this too.<br /><br /></span><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >FINAL VERDICT</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;font-family:courier new;" >BINNED!</span><br /></div><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEizzbhXnwUpbxQ0gkTAcOONDB2i6qoZuvtxOUYE7vcQrCbSgRkBv9KtnOL9C6p-3-3QuX9PRAN8K-2oKtm28Zth53mIhzJ2BbMa8mfxZ0_5BgOn751Z0UoiYBsbJjALdl4uhCi6WaBIZSA/s1600-h/Picture+002.jpg"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEizzbhXnwUpbxQ0gkTAcOONDB2i6qoZuvtxOUYE7vcQrCbSgRkBv9KtnOL9C6p-3-3QuX9PRAN8K-2oKtm28Zth53mIhzJ2BbMa8mfxZ0_5BgOn751Z0UoiYBsbJjALdl4uhCi6WaBIZSA/s400/Picture+002.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5346429504990786754" border="0" /></a><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">I can't judge it as a remake, but I can judge it as a movie. And as a movie, it stinks.<br /><br />Until next week, I'm The Cheap-Arse Film Critic, and we all go a little mad sometimes.<br /></span>The Cheap-Arse Film Critichttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08211046330068309653noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1161570503760263602.post-65777230059494382522009-05-12T10:10:00.000-07:002009-05-20T11:08:45.553-07:00The Cheap-Arse Film Review #32-33- "FLESH GORDON" & "FLESH GORDON 2."<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEikmSqAuq1RYebF6fMujerlrLaEzeWCZR1XZy0kpSNaj5hv_faOteE_dBIoJnz4jacInXMuEE9R1AazmMc-FUxQVjC01ZKlmg5AWlhO7_OSYolCufC1r3GS9RqGibZR9OmtNL5eNH-3sRM/s1600-h/Picture+282.jpg"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEikmSqAuq1RYebF6fMujerlrLaEzeWCZR1XZy0kpSNaj5hv_faOteE_dBIoJnz4jacInXMuEE9R1AazmMc-FUxQVjC01ZKlmg5AWlhO7_OSYolCufC1r3GS9RqGibZR9OmtNL5eNH-3sRM/s400/Picture+282.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5337962042591878706" border="0" /></a><br /><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-family:courier new;"><span style="font-weight: bold;">TITLES: FLESH GORDON; FLESH GORDON 2</span></span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><span style="font-weight: bold;"></span></span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><span style="font-weight: bold;">RATED: 18</span></span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><span style="font-weight: bold;"></span></span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><span style="font-weight: bold;">RELEASED: 1974; 1989</span></span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><span style="font-weight: bold;"></span></span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><span style="font-weight: bold;">WRITTEN BY: MICHAEL BENVENISTE (FLESH GORDON); HOWARD ZIEHM & DOUG FRISBY (FLESH GORDON 2)</span></span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><span style="font-weight: bold;"></span></span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><span style="font-weight: bold;">DIRECTED BY: MICHAEL BENVENISTE & HOWARD ZIEHM (FLESH GORDON); HOWARD ZIEHM (FLESH GORDON 2)</span></span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><span style="font-weight: bold;"></span></span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><span style="font-weight: bold;">STARRING: JASON WILLIAMS, SUZANNE FIELDS, JOSEPH HUDGINS, WILLIAM HUNT (FLESH GORDON); VINCE MURDOCCO, ROBYN KELLY, TONY TRAVIS, WILLIAM HUNT (FLESH GORDON 2)<br /><br />GENRE: SCI-FI SEX COMEDY<br /></span></span><span style="font-family:courier new;"><span style="font-weight: bold;"></span></span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><span style="font-weight: bold;">BOUGHT FROM: THE SALVATION ARMY</span></span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><span style="font-weight: bold;"></span></span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><span style="font-weight: bold;">PRICE: 33p EACH </span></span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><span style="font-weight: bold;"></span></span></div><span style="font-family:courier new;"><span style="font-weight: bold;"><br />(WARNING: LOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOONG)(Longer than usual, I mean)(That's what she said)(I know I've made that joke before. I'm going to keep making it until somebody laughs)</span><br /><br />Okay, first things first, a couple of things to get out of the way- firstly, these movies actually cost thirty-three-<span style="font-style: italic;">and-a-third</span> pence, as I purchased both of them and a CD for £1.00 altogether. I just</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> rounded up because if I have to start adding fractions and decimal points to these things, I may never be seen again. And secondly,</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> yes, I find the fact that I bought these two particular movies from The Salvation Army as funny as you do. Clearly, standards are not what they used to be for that particular organisation.<br /><br />I've actually had these two movies for a while, but I put off covering them for a really silly reason- I was afraid I was turning into That Guy. You see, there was a point not too long ago where it seemed like I was covering alot of movies with explicitly sexual themes and scenes. "Vampire Killer Barbys." "Cheerleader Massacre." Hell, even "Down With Love" had it's mind completely in the gutter</span><span style="font-family:courier new;">. At the time I was worried that I was doing too many of those sorts</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> of films and that I was coming across as some sort of pervert, but I just shrugged and told myself not to be foolish.<br /><br />Then one of my Facebook friends contacted me to tell me she'd just read one of my reviews. At first I was pleased, because I always get a kick out of knowing one of my friends has read my stuff. And she told me she enjoyed what she'd read, which filled me with pride (my chest may even have swelled, though I can't totally be sure about that one). But then she said that it was obvious I was, "a very sexually-minded person," and my heart sank. All the effort I put</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> into these things, and all she really picked up on was the fact that</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> I make alot of dirty jokes. To me, this was proof that I was turning into That Guy, and I decided to nip that in the bud by being a bit more selective about what I reviewed for a while. Like I said, I was being silly, and almost certainly over-sensitive. I'm over it now, though. Fuck it if I come across as That Guy, films like this are fun to write about, and if I deny myself that because of some stupid complex, then there's more wrong with me than just being That Guy.<br /><br />I think I'm one of the only people I know that hasn't seen at least</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> one of these movies before. I've been aware of them for years, from an early age most of my friends had copies stashed away in some little nock or cranny, hidden away from the eyes of their parents.</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> You could almost subtitle the first movie, "Fisher-Price: My First Porn Flick." But I never had any desire to watch it. I think it's the title, or more accurately, the use of the word, "flesh." It always just made me skin crawl. I know it's supposed to be a parody of "Flash Gordon," and I know what kind of imagery it's supposed to invoke, but whenever I saw that title, all I could see were cuts and gore and slabs of meat (how many times do I have to say this, <span style="font-style: italic;">I was a weird kid</span>). Even today, whenever I hear that word, the first thing</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> that comes to mind is all the psycho-sexual mind-fuckery of "Videodrome." In a way, I suppose that's part of the reason I was looking forward to writing about these two as much as I was- I'm making up for lost time, experiencing something I should have done a</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> long time ago, were it not for my own perplexing hang-ups.<br /><br />The movie begins in a much more sedate manner than I was expecting. The first thing we see isn't really part of the movie at all, but is rather one of those "let's-just-cover-our-arses-just-in-case" disclaimers proclaiming this to be inspired by the great old-school superhero serials, whilst adding a touch of the burlesque to the </span><span style="font-family:courier new;">proceedings. I understand why they did this, but at the same time it comes across as a bit pretentious. Be honest fellas, you're not paying tribute to the swashbuckling superhero genre, you're just making a porno parody of the old "Flash Gordon" serials. Following this, we're quickly thrust into the main body of the plot (such as</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> it is)- a red ray from Outer Space is periodically hitting Earth, causing anybody to be hit by it to be engulfed in a sexual frenzy so rampant that orgies just spontaneously erupt. All is not lost though, as the man who first discovered the Sex Ray, Professor Gordon, alerts the world's media via a press conference that his hockey-player son has somehow made a discovery about the ray (quite</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> how he did this is never explained) and was travelling back to America in order to help combat it.<br /><br />After an animated credits sequence that looks like something Terry Gilliam could have created just by sneezing, we're now on a plane,</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> where the first two-thirds of our heroic trio or introduced to us- Dale Ardor (Suzanne Fields) and, of course, Flesh Gordon (Jason Williams). Like almost everything about this movie, they're both parodies from "Flash Gordon," but the thing is, they've not been particularly clever about it. I keep trying to work out if "Dale Ardor" is supposed to be some kind of play on words, like a double-</span><span style="font-family:courier new;">entendre, but I don't think it is, I just think it's a name they came up with that's close enough to the name of the original character, but different enough so they won't get sued. And with Flesh they got lazy by just having that be his name. In the original movie, it's made very clear that "Flash" is just a nickname. I think</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> the character's name is actually Steve or something like that. But here they can't be bothered with that, so his name's just Flesh. His Momma decided that'd be a good handle for her first-born son. Sure. Why not? It's also obvious from the second he opens his mouth that Jason Williams is so wooden an actor that I'm amazed they allowed him to have any sex scenes, just incase the friction caused him to</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> burst into flames and burn down the set.<br /><br />The plane is of course his by the Sex Ray, and a carnal free-for-all kicks off, with even the pilots abandoning their duties to join in (surprisingly, this scene is the first one to feature nudity of any kind, and we're over eight minutes in at this point). Flesh seems</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> unaffected, however, and tries to save the plane. When it becomes obvious that this mission is a fruitless one, he abandons ship... um, plane, parachuting to an an island with a now semi-clothed Dale (who of course grabbed hold of his waist and started thanking him on the way down by, um... going down). As it turns out, the Island they land on conveniently happens to house the work station of Dr. Flexi</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> Jerkoff (Joseph Hudgins, who redeems himself for his his awful Sean Connery impression by providing the movie with it's lone awesome beard), who, in a classic META OUTTA NOWHERE scene where they spend a good two minutes summing the plot up to each other for no apparent reason, has built a rocket in order to travel into Space and stop the Sex Ray at it's source, and recruits Flesh and Dale to be part</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> of his crew.<br /><br />The ship of course looks like a dick. At first, this wasn't funny, because even in a movie like this, it's a very obvious joke to make. However, as the movie went on, it got funnier, for one simple reason- as soon as the reach the planet Porno (yes, the planet's</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> named Porno), almost everything that looks even vaguely phallic is shaped to resemble penis, and no explanation is given for this, save for the fact that things are now taking place on a planet called Porno, so what do you expect? But here, the screenwriter felt the need to have Jerkoff say the ship's design had been influenced by</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> the effects of the Sex Ray. I found that so hilarious, that everything else was allowed to resemble a cock without so much as one question being asked, but they felt the need to give a reason for why <span style="font-style: italic;">the rocket</span> looks like one, as if that was going too far.<br /><br />So off they go into space, where of course things don't quite go</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> according to plan- first the ship is blasted by the Sex Ray, and I don't think I need to tell you what happens at this point (even Flesh is effected, even though the scene of the plane seemed to hint that it had no effect on him. INCONSISTENT STORYTELLING!). Then, as they approach Porno, they're ship is discovered, and the planet's</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> ruler, for the moment shrouded in secrecy, orders the ship be taken down. They're shot from the sky by a rival craft, and it's only the quick thinking and actions of Flesh fixing the damage that allows them to perform an emergency landing. Once down, they regroup, and Jerkoff finally gives Dale a dress to wear. What does it say about this movie and its effect on me that this women has been standing</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> around stark naked since the Sex Ray incident, and I barely noticed? I was going to make a snarky comment here about how he could have given her that dress ages ago, but as Jerkoff hands it to her, he says the line, "It was my mother's, she was buried in it," and all is forgiven.</span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br />Upon discovering that the planet has a breathable atmosphere (by opening the door to the ship and taking a big lungful of air), Flesh and crew are immediately set upon by three dudes dressed like extras from "Sparticus." Actually, that description in an insult to the production values of that movie. Let's just say they're unbelievably camp (and if their introduction is anything to go by, they have</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> trouble walking on anything that's not a flat, hard surface) and leave it at that. Our heroic trio run into a cave for cover, only to be attacked once inside by one-eyed creatures (shaped like dicks) that Jerkoff christens "some kind of Penisaurus." These creatures</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> are brought to life using stop-motion animation, and call me crazy, but I think they look quite good. There's alot of stop-motion work in this movie, and it's clear that alot of time and effort has gone into making these sequences look as good as they possible can, and it helps to give the creatures real personality and charm. As adversaries, the Penisaurus' aren't really up to much, all they can really do is nuzzle people, especially Dale, who I'm sure I heard tell one of them during her hysterical shrieking, "YOU STINK!"</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> That's just... ew.<br /><br />In the end, they prove enough of a distraction for the team to be</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> captured, and brought before the planet's ruler, Emperor Wang The Perverted (William Hunt). I don't need to tell you who he's a parody of, do I? Actually... the only real resemblance this character has to Ming The Merciless is purely superficial, due to the fact that he's been made to look a bit like Fu Manchu, right down to the fact that he's seemingly puffing on an Opium pipe (that looks like a dick). As a character though, he's a million miles away from the cold, distant and, erm, merciless being that was Ming. If anything, watching Hunt's performance brings back memories of Cecar Romaro's</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> turn as The Joker in the old "Batman" TV series- he's a giggling, insane lunatic, calling everyone who displeases him a "dildo." He's</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> having a blast, and it's quite fun to watch. He has some competition in the scenes set in his Throne Room though, and especially this scene, as there's an orgy going on around him at all times in this location, and in a few of shots, I caught sight of a few couples... really going for it. Know what I mean?<br /><br />It's here that out heroes are briefly split up- Jerkoff is taken to Wang's laboratory, so that his scientific knowledge can be put to use; Dale is to be married to Wang as soon as humanly possible, and </span><span style="font-family:courier new;">Flesh? Well, his fate was initially that he be taken to The Sex Depletor (which I assume is is what powers the Sex Ray, but that's never really revealed. Nor is the reason why Wang is attacking</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> Earth- when asked, his only reply is, "I'll tell you later." He never does), but due to the pleas Amora, Queen Of Darkness and Guardian Of The Power Pasties (I'd say that's a mouthful, but I'm saving that joke for later...), he is instead thrown into the Arena, where he must survive Trial By Ordeal in order to be taken into her custody. The "Ordeal" consists of him being set upon by three scantily-clad (naturally) feral women who claw at him, ripping his clothes from his body (clothes rip really easily in this movie. It's</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> like the were designed by The Chippendales or something). He comes through the other end of this, and Amora runs excitedly towards him, exclaiming, "HE'S MINE! HE'S MINE!" and teleporting away with his naked, unconcious body to her ship. What does she plan to do with</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> him?<br /><br />Fuck him, of course. What else?<br /><br />To be fair, their love scene is actually the only one in the entire film I think comes anywhere near actually being sexy, as they use all the soft porn trick, such as low lighting and seductive music. It almost feels like a scene from a very different movie that</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> somebody edited into this one for a laugh. It couldn't last though, as Wang sends one of his ships to blast Amora's out of the sky, killing her in the process. Flesh survives, and is reunited with</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> Jerkoff after he too manages to escape. They are then visited by the ghost of Amora, who gives to them the Power Pasties, which are basically nipple-shaped diamonds that shoot lasers when worn on somebody's chest, which Jerkoff chooses to brandish (the sight of him threatening people by lifting up his shirt never fails to get a chuckle out of me). Once Flesh has finally been outfitted with the iconic costume he's seen wearing on the box art, they rush back to Wang's castle to try and save Dale, interrupting perhaps the second strangest wedding ceremony ever, behind David Gest and Liza </span><span style="font-family:courier new;">Minnelli's. Then, in the commotion, Dale is whisked away again, by another unknown assailant. This is like Kidnap Tag or something.</span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br />As it turns out, she'd been captured by the The Amazon Underground of Porno (and yes, before you ask, the Amazons <span style="font-style: italic;">are</span> lesbians), lead by Chief Nelly, a cigar chomping woman with an eye-patch and a metal leg. Apparently word had reached her organisation of Dale and co.'s opposition to Wang's rule, and had decided to initiate Dale into her group against her will. And the way they do this is to sexually assault her. Seriously. They strap her to a table and have one of their number climb on top of her and start writhing around. And at one point she's pretty much sitting om her face. I wasn't surprised</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> to see some sapphic action, but... surely it could have been brought</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> up in a... nicer way? It's not like this is some intense, gritty drama. This is Flesh Gordon, for Christ sake. Eventually Flesh and Jerkoff show up to save Dale, and following a fight with another cool stop-motion character, this one looking like a cross between a Velociraptor and a Beetle, they're saved by what is revealed to be the true resistance movement on this planet, lead by Price Precious. Precious, you see, is the planet's true ruler, but was ousted by Wang, who we find out had his package eaten by a Penis Fly Trap (*groan*), and staged an uprising with an army of impotent soldiers. Flesh and his friends decide to join forces with Precious, with Flesh saying he'll do anything to repay Precious for saving his lif</span><span style="font-family:courier new;">e just now. Precious smiles, puts his hand on Flesh's shoulder, then</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> we're on his ship and OH MY GOD HE'S BLOWING HIM! FLESH IS LYING NAKED ON A BED AS PRECIOUS LIES IN FRONT OF HIM VERY OBVIOUSLY GOING DOWN ON HIM! Well... I can safely say I wasn't expecting <span style="font-style: italic;">that. </span>I guess when Flesh said he'd do anything, he was saying a mouthful (see?)<br /><br />Anyway, back at the Forest Kingdom, which is where Precious' resistance reside, a plan is formed to destroy the Sex Ray, involving harnessing the powers of the Power Pasties to blow it up, as he demonstrates on a scale model (shaped like a dick).The plan is</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> foiled however, as a spy Wang has planted in Precious' ranks steals one of the Pasties as they're flying towards their target, and the ship is destroyed, seemingly killing everyone inside. In a clever little wink to tho original source material they're parodying, we get a brief intermission, complete with narrator asking us to tune in soon to see how our heroes get out of this one. We're then shown that, moments before the destruction of the ship, they all managed to bail out, using umbrellas as parachutes. I wish I could come up with a decent Mary Poppins joke to use here. There's a little bit of sword action and fisticuffs with the guards (including a wrestling-style Double-Axehandle being used), and the foursome find</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> themselves back in the castle, only to be flushed down a giant</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> toilet. Believing them to finally be done in, Wang celebrates by putting together a naked Conga Line, singing a song that has only one lyric ("FLESH GORDON IS DEAD!"), and putting the Power Pastie he had stolen... inside someone. Please don't make me go into details with this, you can work out what he did yourselves. It doesn't stay there long though , as of course Flesh and his friends survived their gigantic swirling and retrieved it (by shaking the poor girl in a most undignified manner).<br /><br />It's at this point we're introduced to what I think may be one of the greatest creatures to ever grace cinema. He doesn't have a fancy</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> name, he's just referred to by most fans as The Monster.He doesn't</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> even look all that special, just like a massive Gargoyle. But it's the personality they gave him, coupled with his voice they gave him (provided by Craig T. Nelson), that elevates him to legendary status. He sounds like an aging, slightly bored pick-up artist that knows he can still get lucky with any bright young thing at the bar, and as such everything he says is pure comedy gold. It's really hard to resist the temptation to just transcribe every line of dialogue he utters. Amongst fans, "Up yours, Flesh" (accompanied by The Finger) and "OH THE PAIN! THE HUMILIATION! THE HEMORRHOIDS!" (follow getting shot with a lazer in the arse) are favourites, but to me the character was summed up by two other moments- his exasperated "Oh</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> fuck..." when Flesh manages to evade him, and, once he picks up Dale</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> King Kong-style, he shows off his abode to her with the words, "This is The Tower Of Murder. It's where I hang out." He's so fucking awesome! I was actually sad to see him die, as he's brought down onto Wang's castle, blowing it to smithereens. After that, the movie's over, as Flesh and co. travel back to Earth, with the promise of a sequel, "The Perils of Flesh," coming soon.<br /><br />I had alot more fun watching this than I thought I was going to. I thought I'd find it childish and crass, and I do, I'm not going to lie. It's also not really sexy or arousing at any point, save the one scene between Flesh and Amora. It's no wonder so many of my</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> friends watched it when they were younger, because you really</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> would have to be young to get off on anything here. But beyond that, you can tell that alot of care and attention went into the making of this. It feels alot like an old forties sci-fi serial, just... with full-frontal throughout. In many ways it may be more true to the its origins than the eventual "Flash Gordon" movie was, and this is coming from someone who really loves that film (except for the part where the dude's eyes fall out of his head. That's just gross). It comes across as a real labour of love, and by the end the enthusiasm is just infectious. Plus it had a Monster in it that at one point pleads with his foes to, "Stop... look... listen." I can't throw</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> away a movie where that happens. I just can't.</span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br /></span><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >FINAL VERDICT</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;font-family:courier new;" >KEPT!</span><br /></div><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgO55dFmEoxhNuBUfrGVFt20y8F7WD5jjbLby7M4Ivw2pHYhiePDM6O-JIJCqMeBCtU3vdb0JwIo5d3l_-16iZBswjooc-T-fuIjbjzsKiAsxzFVtITRCUYe9A4mJhsoY-BlYVyEo5RcPw/s1600-h/Picture+283.jpg"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgO55dFmEoxhNuBUfrGVFt20y8F7WD5jjbLby7M4Ivw2pHYhiePDM6O-JIJCqMeBCtU3vdb0JwIo5d3l_-16iZBswjooc-T-fuIjbjzsKiAsxzFVtITRCUYe9A4mJhsoY-BlYVyEo5RcPw/s400/Picture+283.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5337962041821154658" border="0" /></a><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">Until next week, I'm The Cheap-Arse Film Critic, and...<br /><br />... bollocks, I've got another one to do, haven't I?</span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br />Actually, I'm going to slightly break from format and not cover the entire film from beginning to end (I mean come on, seriously, how long do you want these things to <span style="font-style: italic;">be?</span>), but rather, since this is the first time I've watched two films in a series back-to-back, I'm going to compare and contrast the them to try and accurately explain why the second movie fails. And believe me, "Flesh Gordon 2" (or, to give it its full title, "Flesh Gordon 2: Flesh Gordon Meets The Cosmic Cheerleaders") fails. It fails miserably.<br /></span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">But before I get into that, BOX REVIEW! Not of the front of the box this time, as is the usual with these. No, instead, I'm going to write down what's written on the back of the box. Why? Because I think in its own way, it may be genius, and it's also the best thing about this whole film, so I feel I have to bring it up. So without further ado...<br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">"FLESH IS BACK! BIGGER THAN EVER</span> (BA-DOOM KISH)<span style="font-weight: bold;">, RISING ONCE AGAIN TO SAVE THE UNIVERSE</span> (BA-DOOM KISH)<span style="font-weight: bold;">! WHICH IS JUST AS WELL, AS PLANET EARTH IS FACING ITS MOST DEVASTATING CRISIS TO DATE... GALACTIC IMPOTENCE</span> (BA-DOOM KISH)<span style="font-weight: bold;">!! FLESH AND HIS SUCKULENT</span> (</span><span style="font-family:courier new;">see what they did there?)(BA-DOOM KISH) <span style="font-weight: bold;">GIRLFRIEND, DALE ARDOR, HEAD OFF IN DR. FLEXI JERKOFF'S TIT-SHAPED FLYING SAUCER</span> (no, that's not getting a BA-DOOM KISH, because it's not a pun, it's just saying the word "tit")<span style="font-weight: bold;">, TO BOLDLY GO WHERE NO SUPER SEX HERO HAS BEEN BEFORE, THROUGH A BELT OF FARTING ASSTEROIDS</span> (BA-DOOM KISH)<span style="font-weight: bold;">, TO A STARNGE PLANET. THERE THEY MEET THE RAMPANT COSMIC CHEERLEADERS, LED BY BUSTY ROBUNDA HOOTERS</span> (no, this isn't getting one, either)<span style="font-weight: bold;">. TOGETHER THEY CROSS THE MAMMARY MOUNTAINS</span> (nope)<span style="font-weight: bold;">, ONLY TO FACE SUCH CHARACTERS AS THE MASSIVE PENETRATOR</span> (... alright, BA-DOOM KISH), <span style="font-weight: bold;">THE BABY PEOPLE OF THE G-SPOT CAFE</span> (WAT?)<span style="font-weight: bold;">, SLIMEY TURD PEOPLE</span> (ew), <span style="font-weight: bold;">QUEEN FRIDGED</span> (BA-DOOM KISH) <span style="font-weight: bold;">AND HER HUSBAND, THE EVIL PRESENCE</span></span><span style="font-family:courier new;"><span style="font-weight: bold;"> </span>(um...)<span style="font-weight: bold;">, THE COLD BITCHES</span> (BA-DOOM KISH)<span style="font-weight: bold;"> MASTER BATOR</span> (seriously? I thInk we were making that joke when we were 11)<span style="font-weight: bold;">... AND IF YOU THINK THAT'S A MOUTHFUL</span> (STOP STEALING MY GAGS!) <span style="font-weight: bold;">MEET THE OCTOPUSSY EATER</span> (BA-DOOM KISH)<span style="font-weight: bold;">... HAS FLESH COME IN TIME</span> (BA-DOOM KISH)<span style="font-weight: bold;">!? TO FIND OUT, TURN ON AND TUNE IN FOR AN ADVENTURE OUT OF ALL PROPORTIONS</span>(BA-DOOM KISH?)."<br /><br />Okay, with that out of the way, on with the shit.<br /><br />Okay, let's start with the characters. Since this film was released a staggering 15 years after the original, it's perfectly understandable that they had to recast three of the main roles</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> (William Hunt is the only member of the original cast to return, reprising his role as Emperor Wang, although he spends most of the film covered from head-to-toe as the aformentioned Evil Presence). However, it's like they had a checklist of all the things the three original leads brought to the table, and then went out and found three people that had none of those things. I'll start with the least offensive that being Robyn Kelly, replacing Suzanne Fields as Dale. It's not like this role had much depth to it in the first film. Dale was really just there to get kidnapped and fawn over Flesh. However, Fields managed at least to portray the character in a way that didn't make me want to take the disc out of my player and</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> burn it. Robyn, on the other hand, is so fucking annoying, almost from the first moment we see her. All she does is mug in the most over-reactive, bad-sitcom sense of the word.<br /><br />But like I said, of the three, she the least-offensive. I actually can't decide who I think is worst out of Flesh and Jerkoff, I change my mind everytime I go to start typing. I guess I'll talk about Flesh. I know I ragged on Jason Williams' performance when covering the first film, but if I'm honest, by the end, I'd sort-of warmed to the lug and his Oak-like delivery. There was an honesty to his performance, which is a word I wouldn't think for one second to use</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> to describe Vince Mudocco's take on the character. You know those annoying surfer dudes you saw in movies all the time in the eighties? With their grating "Whoa dude!" personalities? Well, that's Vince Murdecco. That's all he seems to be capable of providing at all times. And he's just as wooden as Williams was, but if anything he's worse, because you got the sense at least that Williams <span style="font-style: italic;">knew</span> he wasn't very good. Murdocco however is the kind of wooden you suspects thinks it's being really expressive and characterful. God he fucking annoyed me. I'll give him props for his hair, though. He was sporting one hell of a mullet throughout the entire movie.</span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br />And so finally we come to Flexi Jerkoff. In the first movie, I thought overall Joseph Hudgins did a fine job with the role. He seemed to understand that things are sometimes funnier when you don't play them for laughs, so he went through the whole film essentially playing things straight. But Tony Travis... God fucking damn Tony Travis... he plays Jerkoff as just your typical, borderline mad scientist, to the point that he's practically a cartoon. And his Scottish accent! I'm so sorry I said anything bad about Hudgins' attempt at it in the first movie, because compared to what Travis can muster, he <span style="font-style: italic;">is</span> Sean Connery. Of course no everything</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> that's wrong with these characters is down to the people playing them, alot of it is the the fault of the writing as well. It's like the writers couldn't remember what these characters acted like the first time around, so they created new characters and just gave them the old character's names- Dale is more ballsy, which I suppose is an upgrade, Flesh now has the kind of "Woah dude!" demeanour usually only reserved for surfers and Bill & Ted, and once again, Jerkoff gets it in the backside the worst- he went from being a fairly dignified character that the had to create a reason for why he'd make a rocketship shaped like a penis, to a man who now bills himself as a "Titty Scientist," who ever creates things to improve women's breasts, or makes things in the shape of them.</span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br />So with the characters ruined, lets move onto the overall presentation of the movie. The first one had a very grainy, soft-focus look to it, which I think aided it- it helped in the intergration of the stop-motion effects with the live-action footage, and it also just looked and felt right, considering they were spoofing material from about twenty-or-thirty years previously. Here, you get the feeling everyone involvedwas out to impress, seeing as they were bring the franchise back from the dead, and were aiming high with regards to production values. Which is great.</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> However... it only makes sense to aim high when you have the budget to aim high. The first "Flesh Gordon" managed to look okay because they clearly aimed low and made some good, intelligent choices on what to spend the money on. With the second one, I get the feeling everyone went mental, and as a result you have a film that undoubtably cost more, but feels somehow cheaper. It's just so bright and loud and gaudy. A word of advice- if you <span style="font-style: italic;">must</span> watch this movie, don't watch it on a PS3, or any other upscaling DVD player. I did, and there were some scenes that were so bright they were almost painful to look at. The special effects all look like utter shit, too, to the point where they managed to get something wrong that they got <span style="font-style: italic;">right</span> the last time- they use stop-motion animation for an</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> alien that Flesh fights at the very beginning of the film, but due to it's surrounding, this time it looks crap, and cheap, and totally out-of-place. I felt sad for it. <span style="font-style: italic;">I felt sad for a lump of Play-Dough.<br /><br /></span>And so finally, we come to the plot. Frankly, it's a mess. Like the blurb on the back of the box said, it involves the planet being engulfed by radiation that renders all the males impotent. That's fine, it's sort-of the reverse of the plot from the first one. Just have Flesh go to the planet and destroy the Ray like he did before. Keep it simple. But no, this time, we have people coming after Flesh</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> for their own reasons, most of them involving his cock, which is now massive, despite that never being mentioned in the first one, and infact in the few full-frontal scenes we got of the character back then, he was just a normal dude in that department. But no, the plot calls for him to have a huge dong, so by God, he has a huge dong. The Cosmic Cheerleaders of the title want him because none of the men of their planet can perform anymore, and Wang/The Evil Presence wnts him so he can have it grafted onto himself, so that he now has the only working Willy in the cosmos. See? a total fucking car crash, and needlessly complicated. Not to mention this script is much more foul-mouthed than the first one. It clearly wasn't created as entertainment for the whole family, but I can recall only three</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> curses in the whole of "Flesh Gordon," both at the very end, two of them spoken by the same character. Here, it feels like not a second goes by without somebody saying fuck or shit or cock of something similar. I felt... grubby watching it. I didn't get that feeling from the first one.<br /><br />Oh, and skipping right to the end, they stop The Impotence Ray by putting a condom on it.<br /><br />Heard enough?<br /></span><br /><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >FINAL VERDICT</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;font-family:courier new;" >BINNED!</span><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEicGTE188zy55CfBmBRoZkXX24a6d6K033yFW4wBguIlPgeywBb5eCK9gRgoxnb2T9UOqOU_yLlaN2je2DAu1ULKJdTjMo9S8atfE7KBH-XPW5yZIAQ4_L97PO5Ajbk3tMoN3r4PKHHTjg/s1600-h/Picture+284.jpg"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEicGTE188zy55CfBmBRoZkXX24a6d6K033yFW4wBguIlPgeywBb5eCK9gRgoxnb2T9UOqOU_yLlaN2je2DAu1ULKJdTjMo9S8atfE7KBH-XPW5yZIAQ4_L97PO5Ajbk3tMoN3r4PKHHTjg/s400/Picture+284.jpg" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5337962035697744082" border="0" /></a><br /></div><span style="font-family:courier new;">And with that, I'm out. I really do sincerely want to apologise for this bloody thing taking so long. There were circumstances, some beyond my control, some not, if I'm completely honest. I'm just happy and slightly humbled that you've stuck with me. Now I know I can be a week late regularly.<br /><br />I'm kidding, I'm kidding.<br /><br />... Sort of.<br /><br />Until next week, I'm The Cheap-Arse Film Critic, and long live The New Flesh!<br /><span style="font-style: italic;"></span></span>The Cheap-Arse Film Critichttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08211046330068309653noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1161570503760263602.post-84421624129225823112009-05-05T07:05:00.000-07:002009-05-06T19:57:54.405-07:00The Cheap-Arse Film Review #31- "JUNEBUG."<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh1csmmioVXrv1x6jFG092xqHe_u0WVf8JRpMzwrDrAMiO_vsnS_rBoyMKQvMf2yWCTG32Sjn2EJtHbRvtXMV9Aj2dnF0GEI4oTjLsAxMmFm2MCKDmPAt2GW7ZidL22rIgRnTmcJpHsjLU/s1600-h/003.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh1csmmioVXrv1x6jFG092xqHe_u0WVf8JRpMzwrDrAMiO_vsnS_rBoyMKQvMf2yWCTG32Sjn2EJtHbRvtXMV9Aj2dnF0GEI4oTjLsAxMmFm2MCKDmPAt2GW7ZidL22rIgRnTmcJpHsjLU/s400/003.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5332903842215302722" border="0" /></a><br /><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >NAME: JUNEBUG</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >RATED: 15</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >RELEASED: 2005</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >WRITTEN BY: ANGUS MACLACHLAN</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >DIRECTED BY: PHIL MORRISON</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >STARRING: EMBETH DAVIDTZ, AMAY ADAMS, ALESSANDRO NIVOLA, BEN MCKENZIE</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >GENRE: DRAMA</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >BOUGHT FROM: POUNDLAND</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >PRICE: AN AMOUNT I DOUBT YOU BELIEVE</span><br /></div><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br />Okay, I'm expecting alot of people to call bullshit on me covering this movie. I could see people maybe, <span style="font-style: italic;">maybe</span> buying that I managed to find this second-hand somewhere, like at CEX or a market or somewhere like that. But brand new? From a shop? and the two-disc Special Edition, no less? Again, maybe they'd be willing to except that I picked it up at a discounted price, as part of one of those deals where you buy a certain number of DVDs for £20. I mean, it wasn't a massive hit, more of a critical darling really, so getting it for less than the suggested retail price isn't totally out of the question. But £1.00? I can almost hear what some people are saying to themselves right now- "Okay, now he's just buying movies he wants to talk about and lying to us about how much he's paying for them. Infact, how do we know he bought this recently? It could easily have been sitting in his collection for years and he just feels like talking about it. This is a crock, and I feel disappointed and used."<br /><br />And I wouldn't blame anybody for feeling that way. I'd be suspicious too.<br /><br />Which is why I kept the receipt.<br /><br /></span><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhFhrZcp7CUe9mD2CP9lPzVNtghH1s37hqyeKH_j5TAimHLSchxoewepT6qokmEtgITq1TbmZBn6mpECMLKl2-SeiU1PC63NfrjWtDGTGdlzujfem0xynhjp_Uwr_0vkUSY_lxED0w_G2U/s1600-h/001.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhFhrZcp7CUe9mD2CP9lPzVNtghH1s37hqyeKH_j5TAimHLSchxoewepT6qokmEtgITq1TbmZBn6mpECMLKl2-SeiU1PC63NfrjWtDGTGdlzujfem0xynhjp_Uwr_0vkUSY_lxED0w_G2U/s400/001.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5332903833985872594" border="0" /></a><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg_YxUCTe2th8eFsS63FyM2NQNpStjwAvZbscOWzE4mp7HAvCtXyiol6_IVUvnJAjsUmFNVtoWXigWgkiji2cYSI3BZbPmxDQFpKsU8eyo-ilGwyMoe9MWy_oyNzEOFD_N6TueKYJwGr84/s1600-h/002.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg_YxUCTe2th8eFsS63FyM2NQNpStjwAvZbscOWzE4mp7HAvCtXyiol6_IVUvnJAjsUmFNVtoWXigWgkiji2cYSI3BZbPmxDQFpKsU8eyo-ilGwyMoe9MWy_oyNzEOFD_N6TueKYJwGr84/s400/002.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5332903831565186306" border="0" /></a><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">If I'm honest, I wasn't completely surprised when I eventually found this, as I'd already been told it was out there. For those that don't know, I'm a member of quite a few pop culture message boards and communities, and I'm not afraid to say I pimp this place like a motherfucker on pretty much all of them. Sometimes this doesn't go down too well (I'm very proud of the fact that I've been banned from the Total Film Magazine boards for spamming. I only joined there so I could post the link there, I've not read an issue of their magazine since the gave "The Blair Witch Project 2" three stars. <span style="font-style: italic;">THREE STARS!</span>), but some of the places have been cool with me doing this, and in some cases the people there have gone so far as to pass information onto me regarding deals and films I might be surprised to find. One of the main people I want to thank is Film Brain, who contributes <a href="http://www.thatguywiththeglasses.com/videolinks/fbv/bmbe">Bad Movie Beatdown</a> and has also created a few <a href="http://www.thatguywiththeglasses.com/videolinks/thatguywiththeglasses/5-second-movies">5 Second Movies</a> for <a href="http://www.thatguywiththeglasses.com/">thatguywiththeglasses.com</a>. He'll often send me things through their forum, and I'm always thankful, but... there's a hint of sadness that goes along with my thanks, as the movies he'll draw my attention to are awesome and I'd love to write about them, but they very rarely make it to my branch of Poundland. Yes, I've written before about how you can sometimes find real hidden gems at Poundland, and that's true, but we seem to get only a fraction of what's on offer in most other places.<br /><br />Even this one I didn't find easily- I picked it up not at my local branch in Romford, but rather from a branch in Cambridge whilst I was there visiting a friend for her Birthday. I can't believe Cambridge even <span style="font-style: italic;">has</span> a Poundland. I was told it hadn't been open long. Proof if proof is still needed at this point that the recession is biting hard everywhere. I'm not sure, but I think they may have stuck it where a Zavvi used to be. A true sign of the times.<br /><br />The beginning of this movie was... strange. Very strange. And I don't mean in a wacky, zany, frantic way, I mean... it's dudes yodelling. And from the looks of it, it's not cast members or anybody they brought in especially to do this, it's just old stock footage of dudes yodelling. Then they fade away, and we're left with a static shot of some forestation. A long static shot. Held to absolute silence. Then up on the screen in big red letters comes the word, "Junebug." And that's our opening. They may as well of had a a shirtless man walk out of the undergrowth with the word, "Idiosyncratic Indie Movie" written on his chest in squirrel's blood. Then suddenly we're in an urban setting, that being an art auction. It's been put together Madeleine (Embeth Davidtz, a woman I can only think to describe as looking like a beautiful cartoon Deer), who we later find out specializes is "Outsider Art," that being pieces created by eccentric, self-taught artists. As the auction is going on, she spots a ruggedly handsome man (Alessandro Nivola) across the room, and I swear you can visibly see her knees go weak at the sight of him. Were this a movie from the fifties, she may very well have fainted. She approaches him, they make small talk, and when the auction's over, they go back to her place (actually I'm just assuming that, it's not established where they went. They could still be in the auction building for all I know), and start snogging each other's faces off. It's not a typical love scene though, as they're both really awkward, especially Madeleine, who you get the impression doesn't do this sort of thing very often. They're both also smiling and laughing through the entire thing, which I found to be quite sexy. Maybe it's just a personal thing, but I think laughing during sex or any intimate moment can be quite erotic. This is not to be confused with being laughed at during sex or an intimate moment, which can be soul-destroying.<br /><br />Then, suddenly, they're married. We don't see the wedding, it happens off-screen. It seems like a quick jump for the movie to make, but we later find out that it was a quick jump for the characters as well, as they tied the knot after knowing each other all of a week. We rejoin them six months into their lives together, as Madeleine's scouts are checking out an artist they've discovered in North Carolina, George's home state. The artist in question is a man named David Wark, who specialises in painting depicting the American Civil War and slavery. His interpretations of those events are... unique. For example, there are computers and snakes with human heads and nudity. Lots of nudity. When he's showing his art to the scouts that have come to see it, he say something I didn't quite catch, as his accent is so deeply southern and speaks in this lilting, sing-song drawl. I thought he said he couldn't fit General Custer's cock on the front of the painting, so he had to paint it on the back of the canvas (which all look to be torn-off pieces of cardboard), but dismissed that as being, well, insane. But then he turns the painting over, and sure enough there's General Custer's penis, which if this paining were to scale would stretch at least a good two feet. It's killing a man too, shooting him with a combination of bullets and sperm. Well then.<br /><br />Madeleine is informed that visiting him may be enough for him to sign with her and have his art shown in Chicago, so she and George travel down to see him, and also to stop off and visit his family. The meeting goes well, and Madeleine leaves assuming he's decided to do business with her, calling her business associates in the car on the way to George's parent's house, as... Jesus Christ, is he <span style="font-style: italic;">fingering her?</span> I think he is, he's driving along the road with his hand so far up his wife's skirt that it's bunching up around his wrist as she speaks on the phone. I was actually surprised by how much sex there was in this thing. Okay, the hook-up at the beginning is positively PG, but after that there's painting of shrapnel-spitting wangs and handjobs (is it still called a handjob when a guy's doing it to a woman?), and when George and Madeleine get to his parent's house, they're first caught by his Father getting to second base with each other in their car whilst it's parked in the family garage, then they spend literally every night rutting in a shamelessly noisy fashion. I think the fact that their relationship is so heavily sexual means something- maybe it's meant to imply that their relationship is based more on physicality than it is anything deeper. Or maybe it's due to the fact that George comes from a heavily religious family that, as we find out, are very good at keeping things from one another, so it's supposed to represent that he's pretty repressed, especially sexually. Of course there's every chance I'm completely off-base, and they just love each other so much that they can't be in the same room alone together for any amount of time without wanting to rip each other's clothes off with their teeth.<br /><br />Oh, and there's also a scene where a heavily-pregnant woman pleasures herself whilst looking at a picture of herself and her boyfriend when they were in High School. You don't get to see <span style="font-style: italic;">that</span> in many sensitive independent dramas.<br /><br />I've been trying to come up with the right words to describe his family, or rather, I've been trying to decide how stereotypical I think they are. I've seen more offensive portrayals of southern folk. It's not like they're all wearing overalls and chewing so straw or anything like that. They're all broadly drawn, and on the surface they're pretty stock, with the mother, Peg (Celia Weston), being the worst offender, being judgemental to the extreme, taking something of a dislike to Madeleine even before she's met her, and liking her even less when she does, proclaiming her "too smart and too pretty." But they're all allowed a little depth, and given moments that surprise us. The two most interesting characters in this group are George's brother, Johnny (Ben McKenzie) and his wife, Ashley. Ben McKenzie's portrayal of Johnny is actually really brave, because it's not very often in a film that an actor it willing to play a role in as completely an unlikable way as he does here. There's no other way of putting it, Johnny is a absolute prick for virtually this whole flick. I can't be 100% sure, but I think there's only one scene in this entire film where he smiles, and that's when he's at work with his buddies. For the rest of the movie he abrasive, teenager-level sullen, flying into a rage at the silliest things, like to being able to record a show about Meerkats because the VCR keeps spitting out the video he's trying to put in (to be fair, <span style="font-style: italic;">I</span> fucking hated it when that happened, too). He's repugnant, and you almost don't want to think about why he could be that way, because doing that would mean trying to understand him, and trying to understand him's just took close to trying to like him for comfort. It's one thing he says that gives you some insight into why he's this way, and it's tossed out their so casually that it could be easily missed- Madeleine is trying to help him write a paper on a book he's supposed to have read, and he ends up getting so frustrated that he flies off the handle and starts randomly stewing things that piss him off, including the fact that he could have moved to Washington for whatever reason had it not been for his relationship with Ashley. That when I understood that he's just so fucking angry, all the time, about the fact that he feels so trapped (except when he's at work, which is why he's happy there), that he can't stop himself from lashing out at everybody. And I don't think he has any control over it. The two times he massively blows up, at Madeleine who he accuses of leading him on and thinking she's better than him, and George where he actually throws a wrench at his face and makes him bleed, he looks contrite the second he's alone, as if he's thinking, "Why did I just do that? What's <span style="font-style: italic;">wrong</span> with me?"<br /><br />And then there's Ashley, played by Amy Adams. In alot of ways she's the main event of this movie, as her performance took home the Special Jury Prize at the 2005 Sundance Film Festival, and she also netted the movie it's lone Oscar nomination. She's one of those curious actresses the critics are always going to love, and cinema journalists are always going to predict is going to be the Next Big Thing, but whilst I think she'll probably have a great career, and star in alot of fantastic movies, I don't think she'll ever really rise above the level she's achieved now. I find it hilarious that virtually every one of her films is touted as her Big Breakthrough Moment. This was supposed to be her Big Breakthrough Moment. then "Enchanted" was supposed to be her Big Breakthrough Moment. Then "Doubt" was supposed to be her Big Breakthrough Moment. I can't help but be reminded of a quote by the actress Kelly McDonald, where she made note of the fact that she'd been considered an "up-and-coming" actress for so long, sometimes she thought to herself, "When am I going to come?"<br /><br />But none of that takes away from her performance here, which really is of a superior quality, and deserving of all the awards she picked up for it. On paper, anybody could have looked at this role and thought there was very little to it, as she goes through most of the movie literally barefoot and pregnant (and God bless her, but she's not got very pretty feet)(not that I'm, y'know... into women's feet or anything like that)(... leave me alone), and the character could easily come across as highly annoying. And she does, in all honesty, but Adams manages to undercut that with a layer of vulnerability and sweet-natured charm. Her relationship with Madeleine is particularly cute, as she adores her pretty much on sight and instantly wants to know everything about her, where she was born, whether or not she went to college, what she does for a living. this constant barrage of questions should become annoying, both for Madeleine and for us, but it never does, because Adams makes it so it's almost impossible to look at this character and not want to give her a great big cuddle. If I have to criticize any aspect of her performance though, it's be how she works the bump. She's playing a woman pretty much ready to drop at any second, and yet other then the occasional twinge, she's not acting like it at all. I've been around more than a few pregnant women in my life, and from what I've seen, when they're at that stage of the game, they're not moving around that free and easy.<br /><br />The meet-up seems to be going well, at least on the surface of things. Madeleine in particular tries very hard to get in with her husband's kin, and in my eyes doesn't once come across as somebody who thinks she's better than these people. She does a few things that could be read that way though, such as kissing Johnny on both his cheeks, which is a touch too continental for these folks, and also the reason he thinks she has the hots for him, and calling Peg "Pat" until Ashley corrects her. They take part in a few family occasions, such as Ashley's Baby Shower, which is the where Johnny's Meerkat-induced meltdown occurs, and a church gathering, where George actually performs a hymn. I'm not a particularly religious fellow, if I were asked to give a definite answer either way I suppose I'd say I'm just your bog-standard, boring, confused Agnostic, but even I found this sequence to be quite affecting. It helps that is would at least appear that Alessandro is using his own voice, so the emotion that's coming across feels more real in a strange way. It has an impact on his family as well- Peg starts to cry, Johnny actually straightens his spine enough to look over his shoulder, but it's Madeleine's reaction that I found most interesting, she has a look on her fact that not many of us are ever lucky enough to see, the look you can only get from somebody that loves you, where they obviously already hold you in a high level of self-esteem, yet you've still managed to find a way to surprise and impress them. I'm still waiting on the look myself.<br /><br />Things kick into high gear (well, as high a gear as movies like this ever go up to) when Ashley goes into labour. The event itself isn't treated as anything really all that special, they just get er things together, put her in the car and the entire family, sans Madeleine, drive off to the hospital. Where things become complicated is when them movie throws up what's actually is's most conventional moment- the good old-fashioned moral dilemma. You see, throughout the movie, Madeleine has been having issues with David Wark and his sister, who are being courted by another gallery in New York, and when Ashley's rushed to hospital, she's informed that Wark has agreed to go with the other Gallery. Believing she can talk him back around, she has George drop her off at Wark's place before he goes onto the hospital, believing everything will be fine and that she's not needed there, even though George very clearly believes she should come with him. She meets up with Wark, and discovers all she needed to do to get him to sign with her was to get him a fruit basket.<br /><br />Mission accomplished.<br /><br />She then recieves a phone call telling her Ashley's son was stillborn.<br /><br />This twist didn't come as a total surprise to me, because the filmmakers had been hinting all the way through that Ashley really wasn't taking very good care of herself- she was obsessed with looking like she was fat, bragging at the start of the movie that she'd managed to lose two pounds even in her condition, and that one day she's got by on a bun-less hot do with a bit of Mustard on it. She was also shown doing the kind of exercizes a pregnant woman really shouldn't be doing, involving alot of thrusting and stretching, but even beyond that, she was always bending down and carrying things that looked too heavy for her, and everytime she did something like that I winced and thought to myself, "Sweetheart, please don't do that. It's really not a good idea."<br /><br />Basic human decency is a difficult thing to capture on-screen, because it can easily come across as mawkish. I have to tip my hat to Alessandro Nivola in the scene he shares with Amy Adams in the hospital then, because he manages to come across as a decent, loving human being without inciting a single cynical feeling in me. I've not really written much about his character in this movie, because other than the hymn and all the shagging, he doesn't really do much throughout most of it, he's more the driving force of the whole thing. This then is both the actor and that character's moment to shine, and it's also the moment that I believed that Madeleine could easily fall so in love with this guy that she'd marrying him in a week. Amy Adams is also astonishing, how she goes from being so strong, to falling to pieces and questioning everything in her life from her relationship to her belief in God, do then pulling everything back together again, all in the space of about five minutes. I've made fun of people who do things like this in the past, saying emotions don't work that way, and only the unhinged can switch gears that quickly. Well, I can't make fun of her reaction, because I really can believe the grief of an event like this could momentarily send a person insane.<br /><br />The film's pretty much over after this, as Madeleine and George leave to return to Chicago. Is it a happy ending? Well, not really. Johnny calls Ashley at the hospital and says he'd be willing to try for another baby, which of course makes her deliriously happy. He still doesn't look too thrilled about the whole thing though, as if he's just doing it to make her happy and has resigned himself to the fact that he never will be. You come out of the flick still worrying about their relationship. George and Madeleine also don't appear as strong as they once were. They're still together as the film fades to black, but you get the sense that they now realise how little they actually knew each other (in one of the last scenes, Madeleine has to ask Peg if George likes mayo on his sandwiches, to which she responds, "He eats it with a spoon!"). I'm more hopeful for them though, which gives the ending a bittersweet tang.<br /><br />As you can probably tell by now, this is a deceptively complex movie, and depending on how you watch it, I suspect you'd take home two completely different takes on it. This is not, as I've described some movies in the past, a Sunday Night Movie. You can't really have it playing in the background, as you'd end up missing alot of important things without even realising it. No, this is a movie you need to pay attention to and study. It demands quite a bit of you, more than even most other movies of its sort. But it's worth it, though. If you're willing to put the effort in, this film is a very rich, rewarding experience, and it bares repeat viewing, because I'm sure there are little things I missed or maybe even read the wrong way, and I find this story and the people in it so captivating, that I want to know both it and them as well as humanly possible.<br /><br /></span><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >FINAL VERDICT</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;font-family:courier new;" >KEPT!</span><br /></div><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgyzer-_DWNPDTRfkvzD-WMZ3ESR9Z_lTvDoLHvgSGomB_kiZ0uTyFs0wa1re9G3b4faGGcVeVv2JiEIAZ11gA8HK0LFmARWBSV1MCQ-wE-vE6z_zeXfku5_YWlBMcFR2jFp5k-tE5r2yU/s1600-h/004.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgyzer-_DWNPDTRfkvzD-WMZ3ESR9Z_lTvDoLHvgSGomB_kiZ0uTyFs0wa1re9G3b4faGGcVeVv2JiEIAZ11gA8HK0LFmARWBSV1MCQ-wE-vE6z_zeXfku5_YWlBMcFR2jFp5k-tE5r2yU/s400/004.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5332903825124300882" border="0" /></a><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">Just look at that picture. I've now kept so many films, I'm having difficulty getting Marv in. I don't know how I feel about that.<br /><br />Until next week,I'm The Cheap-Arse Film Critic, and I wouldn't live with you if the world were flooded with piss and you lived in a tree.<br /></span>The Cheap-Arse Film Critichttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08211046330068309653noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1161570503760263602.post-41138654584744929902009-04-28T13:41:00.000-07:002009-05-03T11:50:14.756-07:00The Cheap-Arse Film Review #30- "I'M STILL WAITING FOR YOU."<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhG6XvVoej6ek4X_1vspj5YVp1_O9j3NNhbPOUjcd_GEyhhkx2cTwp4eqNtmXGeEwVJKxFBKPzGk6Weth36nwpOgljxyOtkwgNDVlEMqYP87V7fvhGMP8a1EmJS-xCZI8ji0ob6X-6myVU/s1600-h/003.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhG6XvVoej6ek4X_1vspj5YVp1_O9j3NNhbPOUjcd_GEyhhkx2cTwp4eqNtmXGeEwVJKxFBKPzGk6Weth36nwpOgljxyOtkwgNDVlEMqYP87V7fvhGMP8a1EmJS-xCZI8ji0ob6X-6myVU/s400/003.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5331669619327011362" border="0" /></a><br /><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >NAME: I'M STILL WAITING FOR YOU, AKA LOVER'S LANE</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >RATED: 18</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >RELEASED: 1999</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >WRITTEN BY: GEOF MILLER & RORY VEAL</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >DIRECTED BY: JON STEVEN WARD</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >STARRING: ANNA FARIS AND A BUNCH OF PEOPLE I DON'T GIVE A DAMN ABOUT</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >GENRE: TEEN SLASHER</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >BOUGHT FROM: CEX</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >PRICE: 50p</span><br /></div><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">(See, this is what happens the second I try to apply some order and professionalism to what I do. For those that don't know, I have a Facebook Fanpage, where I post links to new reviews, send out messages to members, get feedback, all that good stuff. It's a laugh, and on my more arrogant days I like to think it's helping me reach a few new people. About a week ago, I decided that, as well as using it the way I was, I could also make it informative and maybe build up some more interest by putting a list of upcoming reviews on there, rather than have each new installment be a surprise. So that's what I did, along with the dates people could expect to see them.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">And as soon as I did that, everything went tits up. The first, as you can clearly see, is that this review is going up late. This is totally my fault for being bloody-minded and stubborn- I've had my busiest and most fun week in a very long time, travelling around, seeing friends, hearing great music, all that good stuff. I knew it was coming up, and I also knew I wouldn't have alot of free time on my hands, but I somehow convinced myself that I'd be able to do everything I planned and still squeeze this in. Well, suffice to say, I was wrong, and I should have just realised this was going to happen and made mention of the possibility at the end of the last review. Then, after I blew the deadline, it turned out I couldn't even cover </span><span style="font-style: italic; font-weight: bold;">the movie</span><span style="font-weight: bold;"> I planned to! This is one of the most overused phrases on The Internet, but I can't think of any other way to describe this as than an Epic Failure. In my defence though, </span><span style="font-style: italic; font-weight: bold;">the movie</span><span style="font-weight: bold;"> wasn't my fault- I was going to review a flick called "El Chupacabra," but that went out the window because, to put it bluntly, the bastard thing wouldn't play. I tried it in my 360, I tried it in me PS3, I tried playing it through my laptop, I even had a go with this little portable DVD player I own that only plays American DVDs to see if it was a Region 1 disc in disguise, and each time I got Sweet Fanny Adams. No obvious reason why either, the disc has practically no scratches on it. I can only assume it came out of the factory defective, and is probably the reason the guy I bought it from was selling it for a quid in the first place. So for the first time since I started this, a movie ended up being binned without me watching so much as a frame of it.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">And to top everything else, thanks to a shelf deciding to spontaneously fall off the wall whilst I was away, my entertainment set-up currently looks like this...</span><br /><br /></span><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhx2782PYJqz-GFPtEa04gt4xzgtOi3JNKnhK69M5jpE9p5s43isFPkJ-2rRetqPwWF3od3hjR7oYdNKAVs8-WqgKEIIbrgi8msSnRh4Nf-3FTbU6_fYPOOSSLZGSFUFa4rjDr8PezYI2Y/s1600-h/002.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhx2782PYJqz-GFPtEa04gt4xzgtOi3JNKnhK69M5jpE9p5s43isFPkJ-2rRetqPwWF3od3hjR7oYdNKAVs8-WqgKEIIbrgi8msSnRh4Nf-3FTbU6_fYPOOSSLZGSFUFa4rjDr8PezYI2Y/s400/002.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5331669615599535554" border="0" /></a><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><span style="font-weight: bold;">I like how the Wii looks all scared and confused, the 360 looks like it's protecting it, and the PS3 is off to the side as if it doesn't give a fuck about either of them.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">Anyway, enjoy)</span><br /><br />I think it's time for a Useless Top 5.<br /><br />Do you think it's time for a Useless Top 5?<br /><br />It's Time for a Useless Top 5.<br /><br /></span><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >INTRODUCING THE CHEAP-ARSE FILM REVIEW'S DEBUT USELESS TOP 5!</span><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >IN THIS INSTALLMENT- THE TOP 5 ACTRESSES I LOVE SO MUCH, I'D WATCH THEM IN ANY OLD SHIT!</span><br /><span style="font-style: italic;font-family:courier new;" >(WITH EXAMPLES OF ANY OLD SHIT)</span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><span style="font-weight: bold;">1. DREW BARRYMORE </span><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">("NEVER BEEN KISSED," "OUR HOUSE" AKA "DUPLEX" FOR MY AMERICAN BROTHERS & SISTERS, "RIDING IN CARS WITH BOYS"</span>)</span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><span style="font-weight: bold;">2. ALYSON HANNIGAN </span><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">("BOYS & GIRLS," "BEYOND CITY LIMITS," "DATE MOVIE")</span></span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><span style="font-weight: bold;">3. ANGELINA JOLIE</span><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">(BOTH "TOMB RAIDERS," "ORIGINAL SIN," "LIFE OR SOMETHING LIKE IT")</span></span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><span style="font-weight: bold;">4. MENA SUVARI</span><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">("TRAUMA," "BEAUTY SHOP," RUMOUR HAS IT...")</span></span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><span style="font-weight: bold;">5. ANNA FARIS</span><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">("SCARY MOVIE 2," SCARY MOVIE 4," "MY SUPER EX-GIRLFRIEND," "THE HOUSE BUNNY")</span></span><br /></div><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br />Of all the movie-related lists I have (and I have <span style="font-style: italic;">alot,</span> believe me) this one lives more-or-less in a constant state of flux. The only two constants are Drew and Alyson, the other three spots change on a monthly, or sometimes even weekly, basis. For instance, Isla Fisher was in there recently, until I realised not even <span style="font-style: italic;">she</span> could could ever get me to sit through "Confessions of a Shopaholic." This list also deals with solo performances only, there are various combinations that could probably get me to sit down in front of anything. I'm convinced that one day the devastating one-two punch of Anne Hathaway and Kate Hudson will be enough to make me give "Bride Wars" a go. God help me.<br /><br />The newest edition to the above list is Anna Faris, and I think she'll probably be around for a while, maybe even becoming another mainstay. I think she's wonderful, and my appreciation of her grows with each movie I see her in. There are very few women who could get me to willingly sit through a movie called "The House Bunny," for example (although, to be fair, this was during my nightmarish trip to Scotland that I've detailed elsewhere, so by that point I guess I could just chalk it up to a desperate need to be entertained by something, anything...), and whilst I wouldn't quite say I liked it... actually, I didn't like it even slightly, I can't even pretend I'm going down that road. It's a terrible and, in many ways, terrifying movie. Utterly horrendous. But I still enjoyed Faris' work on it. She's very likable (actually, I'm almost tempted to say she's <span style="font-style: italic;">too</span> likable, because there's a very good chance any young girls watching this would think she's cool, and if I had a daughter who though that, I honestly don't know what I'd do) and she's a hard worker, to the point that you could almost see her trying to wring some humour out of the awful script they had her reading from.<br /><br />And, yes, she's pretty. Very pretty. Oh fuck it, she's drop-dead gorgeous. I wanted to hold off on talking about her looks as long as possible, because it seems to be the first thing everybody else instantly latches onto. Not just with her either, but with any funny woman who looks halfway decent and knows her way around a one-liner. At first I thought it was just a slightly sexist reaction, but the more I think about it, I suspect it might be a bit more complex than that. I have a theory (again with the theories!), that people like myself, who believe themselves to be... not that physically-pleasing to other people, we've convinced ourselves that all we have to offer is our personalities. However, in an interesting side-effect of this, I think we also believe (sometime so subconsciously that we don't even know we're doing it) that anybody even slightly better looking than us cannot <span style="font-style: italic;">possibly</span> have anything going for them beyond that. I mean, what I'm suggesting here is nothing new. Jesus, "The House Bunny" is built around this concept, and very little else. But I honestly think it's time we put this idea to bed for a while and embraced the fact that human beings are more complex on both a physical, intellectual and spiritual level than we can possibly comprehend. Failing that, can we at least admit that it's <span style="font-style: italic;">possible</span> that good-looking people can be funny and interesting, and not-so-attractive people also have it in them to be horrible human beings?<br /><br />Wow, as tangents go, that was a doozy. Let's lighten the mood with a very brief BOX REVIEW! Well, the front cover art is a bit of a rip-off of the style of one-sheet "Scream" made popular, but at least here the people featured appear to have been taken directly from the movie, and not that photoshoot-style thing where everybody's standing against a black background staring into the camera all serious. Also, I find it interesting that Faris' image is used, but her name isn't given top billing. That doesn't bode well for her chances of surviving to the end, nor does it bode well for my hopes for how much she'll be in this. Finally, and I think this the funniest aspect of the whole thing, we're told that this movie is, "IN THE TRADITION OF "I KNOW WHAT YOU DID LAST SUMMER."" Isn't that cute? The people who made this thought we <span style="font-style: italic;">might not know</span> what they were shamelessly ripping off.<br /><br />The movie begins, and we're told that it's Valentine's Day thirteen year ago (wow, an occasion usually associated with happiness <span style="font-style: italic;">and</span> an unlucky number! they're really not holding back). We're at one of those Lover's Lane places where couples drive to in order to hook-up, which is what the first two people we meet are indeed doing. They're both in the driver's seat, she's straddling him, her bra comes off (first breast sighting: 0:54, beating out "Cheerleader Massacre" by a whopping five seconds), and they're about to take things further (after the guy romantically asks the woman if she wants to "do it"), when a car pulls up behind them. The woman is initially startled and wants to stop, but the guy talks her back around, saying whoever it is in the other car, they're there's for the same reason. Sound logic, and really, if you're going to be getting up to this sort of thing in public, you shouldn't be a jittery as she's being. It's enough to make her recommence with the face-sucking, but then the guy gets out of the other car, and that's the final straw. They're getting ready to leave, when we see a hook scratch against one of the windows, and then seconds later, boom, it's burst through the car's roof.<br /><br />I was going to rant about this, about how hard it would be to essentially punch your way inside a car, but then I noticed it was a soft-top, so I'll let it slide. However, that doesn't excuse the fact that I think a hook is one of the stupidest weapons regularly used in these types of movies. It <span style="font-style: italic;">looks</span> cool, I'll grant you that, but that's the only thing it has going for it. Let's compare it to, say, a Dagger. A nice long Dagger. With that, you have the pointy end you can stab things with, plus the sharp edges you can slash people with. Now let's look at a hook- yes, it's got a pointy end, but other than that, it's pretty much just a blunt instrument. And the pointy end is all curled around, so the only way you can stab anybody is to slash forwards. There's no variety to what you can do. And the real kicker is the fact that your victims can easily grab hold of the thing! As I was watching this attack scene, watching the hook flail around and the two teens scream and fail at being able to open a car door, I kept thinking, "GRAB THE HOOK! GRAB THE HOOK AND HOLD HIM IN PLACE! BOTH OF YOU GRAB THE HOOK AND PULL DOWN WITH ALL YOUR WEIGHT! GET IT AWAY FROM HIM! HELL, YOU'LL AT LEAST SEPARATE HIS SHOULDER OR SOMETHING!" But of course they don't, and somehow the hook manages to cut the dude's face a little bit before the get out of the car and start doing that thing where they're crying and falling over as they're running, which makes sense at the end of a horror movie, but at this point in the proceedings it just feels like a gross overreaction (I've only just realised what a total arse that last sentence makes me sound like. "HOW DARE THESE PEOPLE BE DISTRAUGHT AT SOMEBODY TRYING TO KILL THEM!"). In their desperation, they go up to another car, intending to ask the people inside for help, only to find them dead already. Okay, so, when did the killer do them in? As far as we can tell, he showed up in his car and started attacking the first two almost instantly. Is he The Flash?<br /><br />The place is now swarming with ambulances and police, with one of the officers turning up with his young daughter, her reading him what she's written in a Valentine's Day card she intended to give her mother. Do kids give their parent's Valentine's Day cards traditionally? I never did. My Mum used to send <span style="font-style: italic;">me</span> a card. She tried to hide the fact that it was from her by signing it with question marks, but it was obvious who it was from, and when I was 12 I asked her to stop, my logic even at that age being I'd rather receive none than <span style="font-style: italic;">one from my Mother.</span> So... where was I? Oh yeah, the killings. The officer gets out and, after being told to leave by a guy who turns out to be a therapist, inspects one of the bodies to discover it's (DUN DUN DUUUUUN) is wife. He has a breakdown, which is understandable when you take into account the fact that not only is she now dead, but she was also cheating on him. Surprisingly, they then seemingly find the person responsible for the killings in the surrounding vegetation, a guy with an eyepatch named Ray, who apparently the shrink was trying to help, saying he's built up an "extreme non-parafilic sexual attachment" for the officer's wife, who he worked with. And whilst all this is going on, we see the little girl get out of the care and put the card on her mother's body. Aw.<br /><br />So, with the plot established, we jump forward a thirteen years to the "present day," where we once again met up with the girl from the previous scene, now in her late teens, along with the rest of the cast. As usual with these kinds of films, I'm not really going to try and remember any names, due to the stockness of all the characters involved. I will however be giving them all little nicknames, if for no other reason than it'll help me keep track of who's been bumped off. For instance, the first time we see the girl again, she's sitting on some steps reading a book, wearing glasses with her hair in this weird, cornrows-looking style. I think I'll just call her The Nerd and keep things simple. The school bell rings, and kids start entering the building around her. She only pays attention to two of them though- that being a blond jock with an absolutely amazing haircut that doesn't seem to move naturally even once during this entire thing (I shall call him "Haircut"), and his friend, who you just know is going to be a twat, partly because he's slightly hostile to The Nerd, but also because the clothes he's wearing just make him out as a jerk. Sometimes you can tell things just by looking at people, right? Anyway, he's "Jacket," due to the black suit jacket he's wearing over a V-Neck T-Shirt (see?). During a brief exchange between them, we find out that Haircut's mother works at the school (we later find out she's the principle), and will be giving a lecture in Health Class later that day. It's going to be one long condom joke, isn't it?<br /><br />The rest of the meat gets introduced fairly quickly- we have a horny couple furiously making out ("PDA Boy" and "PDA Girl," respectively), a slightly dorky teen boy in a Hawaiian shirt and one of those bead necklaces ("The Weird One") a cheerleader, played by Faris ("The Cheerleader")(seriously, I'm not trying to win any awards for originality with any of these), and Haircut's girlfriend, who everybody seems to either hate or be a little bit afraid of. I think I'll call her "She-Hulk." They talk about meeting up later for a party... or maybe an orgy, somebody says something about clothes coming off and nobody seems to find this at all strange. I'm lucky I could hear him say that that at all really, because I noticed in this scene how shitty the sound recording and editing is- sometimes characters just sound mumbly, and then there are times when I can see lips moving and, I swear, no sound is coming out. And I'm watching this on my laptop with headphones on and the sound turned all the way up. Anyway, Haircut realises he has to dump She-Hulk, telling this to Jacket, who's exactly the wrong person he should e revealing these things too, as he obviously quite likes She-Hulk (I have to say, these little nicknames make writing about this movie alot more fun), and she also at least has a passing interest in him. So what does he do? He does what any respecting dick would do, he tells the girl the second he gets the chance, and she Hulks up and practically Rugby tackles Haircut into a swimming pool.<br /><br />They both end up in The Principle's office after this incident, which allows the movie to make a few revelations about their parentage, and also tie things a bit more to the set-up of the movie. We discover, for instance, that She-Hulk's father is the Shrink from the beginning of the film, and also that the officer from the beginning is now the town's Sheriff. There's something a little bit off about The Shrink, as he seems quite distant confrontational and just a bit... creepy. He also meets The Nerd (who's become instant BFF with The Cheerleader) and tells her how much she looks like her mother, which you don't need a degree in psychology to realise might be the absolute worst thing you could say to somebody whose mother was brutally murdered. At this point, I was confused (and little did I know it'd get worse from here...), because all of this behaviour is classic of a character it's later revealed is the killer himself, but in a previous scene, we're shown The Shrink working with Ray, who he has chained up to a chair, trying to get him to admit to killing the Sheriff's wife and the other guy. And then when Ray later escapes, he kills an orderly (I'm not really sure how, but his foot appears to have been ripped off), and writes something on the wall in the dead man's blood, which are not the actions of a reasonable man who's been stitched up. Oh, and what is it he writes on the wall? What could this evil, insane killer want to communicate with the rest of the world? Perhaps "I'M STILL WAITING," as an ominous, cryptic warning about what his intentions are now that he's free? No, he writes "PRISON FOOD SUCKS." PRISON FOOD SUCKS. There's also a newspaper clipping with She-Hulk in it on one of is walls which The Shrink is only just now noticing, even though it must have been there for a while.<br /><br />From this point on, we get one main plot and one sub-plot. The main plot involves the kids (even The Nerd, who's going with The Weird One so he can win some kind of bet) attempting to go to the party they were talking about earlier, but then seemingly having their lives put in jeopardy by a cruel prank- She-Hulk wants to get revenge on Haircut for dumping her, so she tells The Weird One to make sure he brings him to Lover's Lane that night, so he could catch her getting it on with Jacket. Strangely, Jacket picks the moment they're in the car together to suddenly think hooking up with his best friend's ex might not be the best thing in the world to do, and she literally has to remove her top and violently question his sexuality before he'll continue. And in the already-discussed-to-death tradition of these kinds of movies, sex and lust is quickly followed by murder and pain, as when the rest of the kids show up, they discover their mutilated bodies dumped outside the car, and are then themselves attacked, with PDA Guy getting a good slashing and being left for dead as his friends peel away in the car, crashing the thing and ending up taking refuge in a abandoned house (don't you just love how there's always <span style="font-style: italic;">one</span> house around that nobody appears to live in that's easy to break into?).<br /><br />The Subplot involves The Nerd and Haircut's parents, The Principle and The Sheriff, searching the town for both them and the killer. I think I like this plot a little bit better than the main one, partly because the actor that plays The Sheriff seems to be having fun with his role and not taking things to seriously, but also because we get to see more fun stuff during their scenes- The Principle punches out a drunk teen aged girl who has the balls to insinuate her son might be getting his rock's off at Lover's Lane, and when they reach The Shrink's house, it's all fun and games, as we see glimpses of the killer in mirrors before he seemingly disappears into thin air (so he <span style="font-style: italic;">is</span> magic?), and they find a wonderfully-fake looking Dog's head in the fridge. See? This is fun. Good, trashy fun. It's not hard to do. But sadly we have to return to the kids regularly, where everything's all super-serious and everybody's always shouting or crying. There is one nice little bit, though, where they're about to put The Weird One's leg in a splint. The Nerd tells The Cheerleader to distract him, and when all her verbal attempts to do so fail on account of the fact that she doesn't know him very well, she just lifts up her top. It's funny, and the reaction of the two guys is priceless, but then they go and spoil it when, after The Weird One passes out from the pain of having is bone reset, Haircut drops the line, "Your body's a knockout." Because he <span style="font-style: italic;">passed out,</span> you see?<br /><br />Following this, DRAMA! The Nerd and Haircut, who've had issues with each other the entire movie, finally shout out their problems, with the revelation that his dead father was the person The Nerd's mother was caught cheating with. Actually, it's not a revelation to the viewer, we've been aware of this for quite some time, but it <span style="font-style: italic;">is</span> a revelation to Haircut, which, I'm sorry, I don't buy for a second- they live in what's been presented to us as a very small community, full of people who are constantly gossiping about each other and in each other's business. There's no way, <span style="font-style: italic;">no way,</span> you could have kept something this big from him for this long. Not without either locking him in the cellar or investing in a constant stream of hypnotic mindwipes. The off-shot of all this is the fact that what is supposed to be an emotional scene ends up making one of the main characters look like a bit of an idiot. Plus, there's further nonsense from The Nerd's side of things- she's the one who's been the most hostile of the pair throughout, but during this exchange she reveals that she doesn't and never has believed her mother was having an affair. So, if you don't believe that, why are you giving this poor kid a hard time? YOU HATE HIM FOR SOMETHING HE PLAYED NO PART IN THAT YOU DON'T THINK HAPPENED ANYWAY! Am I the only person who sees the insanity in that?<br /><br />Thankfully they stop talking for a while so we can get a bit more of the distracting action in- The Nerd and Haircut go outside to find a car, leaving the still out-cold Weird one and the reasonably scared-to-death Cheerleader alone in the house, where they're sacrificed. It's during these sequences that it becomes very obvious that there's more going on here than we first thought, as The Cheerleader runs away from the killer to a small upstairs bedroom, only to be killed by somebody under the bed. So, unless he really <span style="font-style: italic;">is</span> magic like I joked about earlier, this makes it clear that there are two killers, the logical explaination being that Ray is working with somebody else. Remember, that's the <span style="font-style: italic;">logical</span> explaination. There's also the film's lone memorable and fairly uncomfortable kill during this bit, as The Weird One finally comes around to find one of the killers looming over him. Unable to move, he's reduced to begging for his life, uttering such pathetic pleas as, "I only wanted to get laid," as the killer runs his hook all over his body, before violently stabbing through both his legs (we're ever shown the knife going through the wood under the table), before being left to bleed out.<br /><br />After a surprisingly tense sequence where The Nerd and Haircut hotwire a car with one of the killers in the barn with them, they return to the house to pick up their friends, only to discover they're too late. It's here that we get the first and last truly awesome moment in this movie- one of the killers returns, and Haircut, now seeking revenge for the death of his father, decides he's going to kill him. Not with a knife or a gun or anything like that. No, completely on the fly, he's come up with the design for a DEATHTRAP! And it's ingenius- it involves filling the house with gas and taping a match to the bottom of a door, so that when that door's open, it's lit and the whole house goes ka-blooey, which is exactly what happens. Of course, the movie's not over yet, because there was about fifteen minutes of screentime left on the disc, so I thought this would be the moment where they let their guard down, and we found out who the second killer was. And I was half-right, because as they're driving along, they find the body of She-Hulk laid out in the road, who's not as dead as she was before. It was obvious at this point that she was one of the killers, and sure enough, as soon as they arrive back at Lover's Lane and The Nerd gets out of the car, she starts attacking Haircut with a hook (and yes, I <span style="font-style: italic;">have</span> wondered where she could have possibly been keeping that thing).<br /><br />And then the movie starts taking the piss.<br /><br />No sooner does this happen, then The Nerd is accousted by aother figure in a hood and forced into a car, where we find out it... The Shrink. Again, this wasn't really a surprise, as we'd cut back to The Sheriff and The Principle as they investigate The Shrink's ouse to find that he has a shrine of sorts to the Sheriff's dead wife (have I mentioned that the Sheriff and the Shrink are half-brothers yet during this? Well, they are. Not that it has any real baring on the script in any way), so at that point it wasn't as great a jump to assume that he's also obsessed with his daughter. And they also explain away what I thought was a masive lapse in logic at the beginning by saying he killed both the other two and then had them planted on the scene. But other than that, everything just becomes so confusing. For a start, why are he and his daughter even going on this killing spree now? She mentions something about him promising to help her get revenge on Haircut and allhis friends for him dumping her. Is that it? Teenage jealousy and fear of abandonment? Was the fact that Ray escaped just a coincidence? And whilst we're on that subject, what <span style="font-style: italic;">about</span> Ray? Was he actually a killer? Was it him that attacked the other couple at the start? Or was it the Shrink in a convolted attempt to cover his tracks? And if so, what was Ray doing at the scene? Did the Shrink just bring him there and tell him, "Stay?" <span style="font-style: italic;">And then</span>, just as I come to terms with he fact that he's got really nothing to do with anything that's been happening, HERE COMES RAY! And he kills She-Hulk, seemingly for revenge! <span style="font-style: italic;">And then</span> I remember there was a random killing in a gas station earlier, which also resulted in a cop being butchered and his squad car being stolen, which would have made no sense if it had been done by either the Shrink or She-Hulk. Then there was the craziness at the Shrink's house, and the dog's head in the fridge. So... there've been <span style="font-style: italic;">three</span> killers running around this whole time, one of them just off doing his own thing, completely disconnected to the plot? What was the point of that? Somebody, please, <span style="font-style: italic;">WAT IS HAPPENING!?</span><br /><br />Things don't go on too much longer from here, as the Sheriff shows up and shoots his half-brother, who then rises from the grave for one last scare, before being killed by one of his own hook (and where are they getting these from, anyway? I can just about buy one, but <span style="font-style: italic;">three?</span>). The sun comes up, all the lies have been revealed, and it looks like everything's going to be alright. And then we se the kids get into a squad car thats door is closed by a hooked hand, and they pull away, presumably to be slaughtered. I'd rathe than then a sequel. On the plus side, Ray drives very well for a hopelessly insane lunatic with one hand. Props for that.<br /><br />This movie is total mess almost from beginning to end, that finally caved in on itself towards the end. Yes, it had a plot twist that caught me off-guard, but it wasn't playing fair. With a good twist, it surprises you, but then when you look back, you see all the signs leading up to it and you're like, "OF COURSE!" With the twist at the end of this one, you're just desperately looking back to try and see where it came from. Yes, there were hints, some of them no very subtle at all, but it just doesn't make any sense. I know I over-analize things alot of the time whilst doing this, but I don't think that's the case here, I truly believe nobody could watch the last fifteen minutes of this movie and really have a clue what is going on. I don't know how anybody could write a script with this many holes in it and consider it a finished piece of work.<br /><br />There were a few other mild complains, such as a couple of continuity errors- for one, only a few minutes after being thrown into the pool, Haircut is shown sitting in his mother's car completely dry. Even his hair has magically gone back into place. Then there's the fact that the movie can' decide how old it's main protagonists are- a very big deal is made of the fact that both The Nerd and Haircut were four years old when the first tragidy occured, which, since that happened 13 years ago, wold make them both 17, right? Well, during the scenes where the Principle and Sheriff are looking for the pair of them, she tells one of the people they stop to question that he son is 16. It's a little thing compared to some of the other problems here, but it's something somebody really should have caught. And finally there's the fact that the Shrink somehow manages to survive being at the very point of a house explosion and end up with little more than some burns on his face. Surprisingly though, for a film that seemed to trumpet a very specific lack of originality on the front of the box, this isn't really a rip-off of "I Know What You Did Last Summer" beyond both those movies having killers with hooks. It's just another example of a slasher with absolutely no ideas of its own to bring to the table. Infact, I can think of only one good thing to come out of this- in one of the most recent issues of Arena Magazine here in the UK, there's a feature on Anna Faris, where they talk about this movie. It's not mentioned by name, but it's discribed as a slasher movie so terrible, it put her off playing it straight from that point forward.<br /><br />Thank the Lord for small mercies.<br /><br /></span><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >FINAL VERDICT</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;font-family:courier new;" >BINNED!</span><br /></div><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhC82VtG3ViX7Yag6S9th1ev8tU7xbgA58QtPQIcJtK20MFKbkks1L2CEYo1-wk3ckHv-cKCIdVh0AsaE7VIGDoWqVcMiD9tn5oidLhhI41818Uj51a_FHh2_hOUTi5fxkW8IFHZsUe0M0/s1600-h/001.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhC82VtG3ViX7Yag6S9th1ev8tU7xbgA58QtPQIcJtK20MFKbkks1L2CEYo1-wk3ckHv-cKCIdVh0AsaE7VIGDoWqVcMiD9tn5oidLhhI41818Uj51a_FHh2_hOUTi5fxkW8IFHZsUe0M0/s400/001.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5331669611198733810" border="0" /></a><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">Two movies, some train tickets, a really shit homemade Hip-Hop CD and a broken Wiimote. I guess it's true, you can tell alot about a person by going through what they throw out.<br /><br />Until Wednesday, I'm The Cheap-Arse Film Critic, and death is the only adventure you have left!<br /></span>The Cheap-Arse Film Critichttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08211046330068309653noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1161570503760263602.post-77219247932828306432009-04-19T13:43:00.000-07:002009-04-22T10:27:15.301-07:00The Cheap-Arse Film Review #29- "HELP! I'M A FISH."<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhkn9MK2Ee4jwdDpify39yDwLK5wvkzRnVjRN0qrLsZAXfKSGXedvGgPVfmxvKNThM91895zO0uJt-WEkcvzMHFS86TJkOGmnbx35k3mOt2zSoGIKuOpF29u2W6lJw45wIlObarNWp2AyQ/s1600-h/007.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhkn9MK2Ee4jwdDpify39yDwLK5wvkzRnVjRN0qrLsZAXfKSGXedvGgPVfmxvKNThM91895zO0uJt-WEkcvzMHFS86TJkOGmnbx35k3mOt2zSoGIKuOpF29u2W6lJw45wIlObarNWp2AyQ/s400/007.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5327568247050892546" border="0" /></a><br /><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >NAME: HELP! I'M A FISH</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >RATED: U</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >RELEASED: 2000</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >WRITTEN BY: STEFAN FJELDMARK, KARSTEN KIILERICH & JOHN STEFAN OLSEN, WITH ADDITIONAL DIALOGUE AND SCENARIO BY TRACY BROWN, FROM A STORY BY STEFAN FJELDMARK & KARSTEN KIILERICH</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >DIRECTED BY: STEFAN FJELDMARK, MICHAEL HEGNER & GREG MANWARING (UNCREDITED)</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >FEATURING THE VOICES OF: TERRY JONES, ALAN RICKMAN</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >GENRE: ANIMATED ACTION/COMEDY</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >BOUGHT FROM: A RECORD FAIR</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >PRICE: £1.00</span><br /></div><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br />I. LOVE. THIS. TITLE!<br /><br />I mean, seriously, it's great isn't it? I think titles are often overlooked by filmmakers with regards to getting bums in seats. Sometimes all I have to do is hear what something's called, and I'm there. I was like that with "Lesbian Vampire Killer," I knew nothing about it other than the title, but I couldn't wait to see it. Then I saw the trailer and all that desire went away, but that's beyond the point. With this one, the title was all it really had going for it, what with the box art looking so generic and uninspired. It's fun to read, it's even more fun to say (I can't help but yell the "HELP!"), and it tells you pretty much all you need to know about the flick before you've even put the disc in your player. A bit like Ben Affleck's directorial debut, "I Killed My Lesbian Wife, Hung Her on a Meat Hook, and Now I Have a Three Picture Deal at Disney" (I assume it's not autobiographical).<br /><br />I didn't realise this until it was pointed out to me, but this has the honourable distinction of being the first animated film I've written about since I started this. I don't actually know why that is, because I love animated movie, and have been known to be the only adult in a cinema <span style="font-style: italic;">not</span> accompanied by an adult to enjoy one on the big screen (and yes, I <span style="font-style: italic;">do</span> get funny looks. Once a woman point-blank told her children not to sit next to me and eyed me in a manner that makes my blood run cold to this day thinking about it. She was ready and more then willing to kill me at a moment's notice). I just hadn't really found anything that looked interesting to me until I stumbled across this. Considering it's the first example of it's medium that will get my usual once-over, I think it's appropriate that it's a little bit different than the usual fair. For a start, it's animated mostly in the traditional, hand-drawn style, which was quickly dying out even back when this was first released (late 2000). It's also not an American production, but rather a <span style="font-style: italic;">Danish</span> one, put together by Denmark's respected "A. Studios" and originally released as "Hjaelp, jeg er en fisk" (that's as close to the original title as I can type. The "a" and "e" in "hjaelp" are supposed to be joined up, but I don't know how to do that, so sod it), which got a release over here with a new English voice track almost a year after it's debut in it's home country, and didn't get a North American release on DVD until 2006.<br /><br />Okay, with that useless trivia out of the way, onto the film.<br /><br />Following some white text on a black background and the logo appearing in all its shiny (and even <span style="font-style: italic;">that's</span> cool- it's shaped like a fish, and it's been designed in such a way that the dot of the exclamation point also doubles up as an eye and the "H" looks a bit like a mouth), we get to see some fish swimming around in the ocean, presented in the customary CGI that all hand-animated films felt they needed to employ the second the technology became available, that always looks out-of-place and never ages well (hello, the ballroom dancing sequence in "Beauty and The Beast"). This doesn't look great either, but I still quite like it, as it's got this quirky, stylised, almost cell-shaded look to it, and I think it's fared better than a film that's nearly a decade old really should (wow, I just realised I wasn't quite 17 when this first came out. That's sobering). Then suddenly we're in the bedroom of a young boy named Fly who's about to go fishing (geddit? Fly? Fishing? Fly fishing?), until he finds out his parents are going out for the night, meaning his aunt and cousin Chuck (fat, genius, you know the drill) have come over to babysit his little sister Stella, and that he's expected to stay at home and keep Chuck company. Of course this doesn't last, as the second his Aunt is asleep, Fly bribes Chuck into going fishing with him and Stella. So far everybody fits into their stereotypes nicely- Fly is impulsive and brash, Chuck is intellectual and cowardly, and Stella is, well, pretty much just a toddler. There's very little depth to the characters, but then there's not supposed to be, there's only supposed to be enough to make it obvious they've Learnt A Valuable Lesson by the end.<br /><br />The fishing trip starts fairly uneventfully, with Fly (and God is that an unnatural name for a character. You wouldn't believe how many time I've put "Fry" down instead and had to go back and edit it once I noticed. And all for a joke that's not even that funny) accidentally catching a Sea Horse that Stella instantly falls in love with and names Sasha, before tearfully returning to the ocean. Deciding the traumatic event is a sign they should call it a day, they go to leave. ONLY THE TIDE'S COME IN! AND THERE'S NO WAY OFF THE LEDGE THEY'RE ON! NOTHING CAN SAVE THEM NOW, EXCEPT... A HIDDEN DOOR IN THE ROCKS!!!!! And of course, this door leads then to the workplace of Professor Mac Krill (geddit? Mac? Krill? Mac Krill?)(at least he's voiced in this version by Terry Jones, so they get bonus points for a Python). His reveal is actually fairly well done- as they wander around looking at all his experiments and artifacts, including a half-fish, half-mouse happily munching on some cheese and a toy Californian Fly Fish hanging from the ceiling that Fly proclaims to be "great looking" (thank you, Troy McClure), he comes lurching at them from the shadows, only to have the light turned on and be shown as a kindly-looking and eccentric (read: completely insane) scientist, who for some reason instantly starts telling these children he's only just met that he's created a potion that turns people into fish, in order to save humanity when the Polar Ice Caps melt and The World becomes flooded (hello, Al Gore). Actually, he doesn't tell them this so much as he does sing them this. Now, I've mentioned before that I love musicals, and I do, but the songs in this film (and mercifully there are only two of them sung by the cast, the rest are just bland upbeat pop played over the top of whatever's going on) are not very good. This one in particular is awful, with Jones trying to save it by being all wacky, but it's no good. At least it's mercifully short. The best part of it is when he says the name of the potion that turns people into fishes is (wait for it...) Fish Potion. That's it. They weren't even trying to be clever or creative. It's Fish Potion. FISH POTION. And it's kept in a bottle with a big fish on it, so there's absolutely no mistaking it for any <span style="font-style: italic;">other</span> kind of potion he'd have lying around.<br /><br />Following this, The Professor is about to use the potion on himself, before he remembers he needs the Antidote (which comes in a square bottle and also has a picture of a fish on the side, only this one has a red cross over the top of it). Whilst this is going on Stella takes a sip of the potion and seemingly starts tripping off her balls- everything starts distorting, there's a smashing glass effect for seemingly no good reason, and she staggers around for a second, disorientated and seemingly in more than a little bit of discomfort, before collapsing (and it's worth mentioning that seeing this happening to a small child, even a cartoon one, is more than a little bit disturbing). The others reenter the room and see that she's disappeared. They start to look for her, with Fly instead finding what he describes as a "strange looking fish." Strange-looking? <span style="font-style: italic;">It's a Starfish with pig-tails wearing a pink skirt</span>! He shows it to Chuck, who says he need to get it into salt water before it dries out (he also misses the unusual traits of hair and clothing this sea creature exhibits). Fly then throws it out the window just as Chuck checks the video camera to see footage of Stella turning into it. Cue them all now sailing around in a tiny boat during a ferocious storm, seemingly sifting through the entire ocean in attempt to find her. Realising this is pointless, Fly and Chuck take the potion themselves, turning into (surprise surprise) a Californian Fly Fish (still wearing his baseball cap) and a Jelly Fish (still wearing glasses) respectively. They now have two days to find Stella, before they're trapped as fish forever.<br /><br />The action now mostly takes place under water, and again the film's a little bit clever with this section of the film. Instead of just having all the creatures be able to talk, they actually make them acquiring this ability into a plot point- the boat Fly and the others were sailing on ends up sinking, and the Antidote goes down with it, opening as it does so and ending up being drank by a Clown Fish and a Shark (who has an Australian accent, which at first lead me to assume they were ripping off "Finding Nemo," until I realised the English-speaking version of this film came out a good two years before that movie did, which is... interesting), causing them to evolve and develop the ability to speak. You see, since the Fish Potion turns humans into fish, that Antidote would have the reverse effect. The Clown Fish is named Joe, the main villain of this film, and he's voiced by Alan Rickman. I love Rickman's voice, I don't know how he does it, but he somehow manages to sound dignified and sleazy all at the same time. He's like a Victorian gentleman who's secretly wearing lady's stockings under his britches. And he's in full swing here, livening up what is a fairly bland script with a his marvelously lecherous delivery. Most of the voice acting in this movie is utterly forgettable (whoever does the voice for Chuck is especially guilty of this), but Rickman has nothing to be ashamed of.<br /><br />After Chuck and Fly find Stella (which seems to happen in about five minutes) and the Sea Horse Sasha (ditto), they begin to worry about what they're going to do now, since as far as they know The Professor went down with the boat and the Antidote is lost. They then stumble across some more talking fish, and after the initial shock, they get on the bus with them (the bus is actually a whale with the number 88 pained on it's face) and are taken to the place where Joe is creating his new society of intelligent fish, which is housed inside a massive sunken tanker. Visually this bit of the film is easily the best- it's surprisingly dark and dystopian, and maybe it's just me, but I thought there was something a bit Third Reich about it all. The crossed-out fish symbol on the bottle has now been appropriated by Joe as a symbol of what he's preaching, and once the three of them get inside the hall, they see him selling addressing row-after-row of fish at what looks, well, very much like a rally. Christ, even the fact that he's trying to make these creatures <span style="font-style: italic;">genetically superior to others of their kind</span> fits in with what I think I'm seeing.<br /><br />Of course this is a children's film, so he's not going to be in front of them ranting and raving. Instead, he starts singing another song about how he can improve their lives. This one is better than the one from earlier, I'll say that much, but I can barely remember anything about it without first watching that scene back, so it's not what you'd call memorable. There also flaws in the presentation, because Joe is telling the crowd that he can make them more human, whereas they <span style="font-style: italic;">already</span> look more human than any other fish I've ever seen, with large expressive eyes and mouths bent into adoring smiles. An annoying moment of inconsistency. Fly tries to make a grab for the bottle, but Chuck screams at him not to drink it, as they're at the bottom of the ocean and would drown. Realising these three know what the stuff he's using is, Joe has them captured and attempts to get them to make more for him, as he's running low, only to become displeased when they say they have no idea how it's made and have them locked up in a cage until they remember. I'd have no problem with this little development, were in not for one small thing- ONE OF THE CHARACTERS IS A JELLY FISH! HE'S AN INVERTEBRATE! HE'S GOT NO SPINE! HE SHOULD JUST BE ABLE TO SQUEEZE THROUGH THE BARS NO PROBLEM! But he doesn't do this, leading me to believe he must be the first Jelly Fish in existence to have achieved something close to solidity. Instead, they escape with the help of Sasha, who tricks the crab guarding them (all the crabs that drink the potion become soldiers and somehow grow helmets, which I thought was wacky but fun), before making a break for it.<br /><br />So now the kids are in trouble, as they don't have the Antidote and they apparently only had twelve hours left before they have to spend the rest of their lives as fish. This film's strength is also up their with it's biggest weaknesses- it's really short (the box says 76 minutes, but really not including credits it's just under 70), so it moves at a brisk pace and doesn't outstay it's welcome, but at the same time it's sense on time and pacing is completely thrown out of whack. I mean, how have these events taken a day-and-a-half? How long were they looking for Stella? How long were they in that cage, for that matter? It doesn't help that we occasionally return to the surface world to see their parents looking for them, and up there all this seems like it's happening in a single night. But I guess the only reason they threw that in was to add a ticking clock to their mission and try to get a bit of dramatic tension going, and in the end decided drama was more important than logic. Fly says they can make their own potion, seeing as all the ingredients are under the sea, and when Chuck says they don't know what was in it, Fly reveals he does, as he remembers the words from the song The Professor sung earlier. Wow, they managed to tie that terrible song into the plot. That almost makes it worthwhile. They collect the ingredients, which mostly consists of them mutilating underwater wild life, with the last one being the ink of an octopus. Sadly, the only reason the octopus was scared in the first place was due to the arrival of Joe, he shark friend and an army of crabs.<br /><br />It's around this time that a mini civil war breaks out amongst the ranks of the supposedly intelligent fish, as both the shark and and of the crabs start to make cases for why they should be in charge. The crab tries to improve his standing by drinking more of the potion and becoming more evolved. Not wanting to give up the potion they've just created without a fight, Fly refuses to let go, only to be struck hard by the crab and... OH MY GOD HE'S BLEEDING! And not from a cut either, like you sometimes see in these films, blood is actually oozing out of one of his gills, implying <span style="font-style: italic;">horrible internal injuries.</span> That's... really rather shocking! They're saved by what at first looks like a tornado (and even the movie is aware enough to have one of it's characters ask if it's possible for tornadoes to exist under water), sucking up and/or scattering all the other fish around them, which is quickly revealed to be The Professor and Fly's Dad (who've now met up) pretty much hoovering the ocean in an attempt to find them. This seems like a brief reprieve however, as Fly is now seemingly at Death's door, and they have approximately 12 minutes before they're out of time. Even Fly, who has been portrayed throughout this movie as a hopeless optimist, has given up hope.<br /><br />And so it's Chuck's turn to prove he's worth a damn and save his friends from eternal damnation (sorry about that, I think I turned into Frank Miller for a second there). He remembers that The Professor had a spare bottle of Antidote in his lab, and comes up with a plan that involves them getting there through one of the many metal pipes he has tapered out into the ocean, flooding the place and opening the bottle, all in six minutes. It's all going well, and many aspects of the plan itself are fairly ingenious, including a balloon to cushion them from hitting anything and using the evil piranhas to block one of the filters and flood the joint. Sadly, Joe had been in hot pursuit the whole time and fowls things up for them, seemingly making off with the Antidote. As Chuck is dealing with the piranhas, knocking them all out one-by-one with a single punch (see? SOLIDITY!), Fly decides to, and I quote, "Use my brain for once," and heads off after Joe. He uses his fatal flaw, that being his need to be more intelligent, against him by asking him questions he doesn't know the answers to, leading to him drinking more and more of the Antidote and continue mutation until he's this grotesque parody of a human. Fly's final question? "Can a human breathe under water?" The answer in no (obviously), and Joe's lifeless body floats silently back down the pipe.<br /><br />So they've got the Antidote, they're about to drink it, when suddenly their parents burst into the room and all the water starts rushing out. Chuck and Stella manage to drink some and become human again (they're also somehow wearing clothes), but we don't see Fly do so, and when the smoke (or rather water) clears, he's nowhere to be found. Chuck starts frantically looking for him, finding the lifeless body of a fish that looks to be him. This scene is actually quite emotive, with Chuck trying to create a new potion on the fly (no pun intended), as his parents and The Professor tell him it's hopeless, and somewhere amongst all this Chuck's mother somehow steps on the fish. There's a squishing sound-effect and everything. Literally one second after this happens, Fly is revealed to be human and pretty much fine, his battered insides somehow translating into only being a broken leg. I found it unintentionally humourous how quickly they went from ultimate despair to Happy Happy Fun Times. It's like they were saying, "Okay, I think we may have gone too far with the Aunt stepping on him, show he's alright before the kids start crying." And what was the other fish, you ask? It was the toy from the beginning of the movie. Continuity! So now everything's alright, the kids have a new found respect and love for each other, The Professor has turned his research equipment into a collection of water slides, and perhaps most bizarrely of all, Stella is reunited with Sasha <span style="font-style: italic;">again</span> (after tearfully saying goodbye to her <span style="font-style: italic;">again</span>), then Chuck and The Professor perform an experiment on her to make her half a <span style="font-style: italic;">real</span> Horse, that Stella rides around on as everybody laughs. Yay playing God! Yay horribly-mutated abominations! YAAAAAAAAY!<br /><br />Once again, I find myself torn over what to do with a movie I've just watched. There were some good things about it. The animation started off looking a little bit ropey, but by the end it looked really good. There are some clever ideas scattered around too. But overall, I didn't really enjoy it all that much. It wasn't for me. And that's just it- <span style="font-style: italic;">it wasn't for me.</span> This movie clearly wasn't made with the intention of entertaining 26-year-old men. It was made to be a fun romp for children. And this isn't like some of the family films I've watched where I've struggled to see how <span style="font-style: italic;">anybody</span> could enjoy them, I could definitely see young kids, from say six-to-ten years old, liking this. And I'm not sure I have it in me to punish a film simply because I'm old. It's like...<br /><br />... forgive me if I lose it, this has been building up for a while...<br /><br />... I love Pixar. I <span style="font-style: italic;">love</span> Pixar. But in many ways, they have alot to answer for, mostly the fact that they've almost single-handedly created a generation of young parents that now think it's their God-given right to enjoy everything their children do. It's like with that film about the talking Chihuahuas that was released last year. I can't remember the title, and I can't be bothered to look it up. Whatever it was called, that film looked awful, I'm not going to say otherwise. And of course The Internet was giddily tearing it a new one in the sarcasting manner that it's known for. However, amongst all the fun, there was a post made by somebody that really got to me. There was a guy on there saying that his son really, <span style="font-style: italic;">really</span> wanted to see this movie. He was asking him literally everyday if he'd take him to see it. And the guy kept saying no, because he thought the film didn't look like something <span style="font-style: italic;">he'd</span> enjoy.<br /><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">BULLSHIT!!!!!</span><br /><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">Bullshit.</span> So he wants to see a bad movie. Big deal. Does this guy think <span style="font-style: italic;">his parents</span> enjoyed all the movies <span style="font-style: italic;">he</span> was taken to see as a child? Of course they didn't. I know <span style="font-style: italic;">mine</span> didn't. I mean, yeah, some of them were good- "An American Tale," "Honey I Shrunk The Kids," "All Dogs Go to Heaven," these are movies my parents remember fondly. But those were not the only movies I watched growing up. Sometimes I went to see boring movies about secret agent frogs with French accents. There was one film I watched on video, I think it was called "Pound Puppies & The Legend of Big Paw," that I watched so many times that I can still vividly remember certain scenes, and even lyrics to some of the songs. And that movie was dreadful. It was pure shit. And yet, every time I was at the video shop, and I came to my parents with that in hand, that's what we went home with that night. Because they loved me and they were willing to sit through that just to make me happy. That's what you do with you're a parent. You take your child to the <span style="font-style: italic;">fucking</span> movie about the <span style="font-style: italic;">fucking</span> talking Chihuahuas and you sit there with a <span style="font-style: italic;">fucking</span> grin on your face pretending to have a good time as the small person sitting next to you laughs their head off. And if you're not willing to do that, well I'm sorry, but you're not a good parent.<br /><br /></span><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >FINAL VERDICT</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;font-family:courier new;" >GIVEN TO A CHARITY SHOP!</span><br /></div><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgUDPsfjRiKUYZBUwSKKgCuCNM0hMegXSoXuSUeTG30Uxfwbo3nkU-jb8x4E8yP3AFjYwStY8Q_A35hxsD5ZcbJs3xImSlZt9db-gtCD9W35K3wgjn96jWLXZt6G4QVVA5Tc6KbbC8MWKY/s1600-h/002.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgUDPsfjRiKUYZBUwSKKgCuCNM0hMegXSoXuSUeTG30Uxfwbo3nkU-jb8x4E8yP3AFjYwStY8Q_A35hxsD5ZcbJs3xImSlZt9db-gtCD9W35K3wgjn96jWLXZt6G4QVVA5Tc6KbbC8MWKY/s400/002.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5327568246270138002" border="0" /></a><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">My disproportionate rage and desire to not be one of <span style="font-style: italic;">those</span> people has seen to it that I show this film more mercy than I have most. This is <span style="font-style: italic;">not</span> going to be the norm, so don't get used to it.<br /><br />Until next week, I'm The Cheap-Arse Film Critic, and sometimes it's better down where it's wetter, take it from me.<br /></span><span style="font-family:courier new;"></span>The Cheap-Arse Film Critichttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08211046330068309653noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1161570503760263602.post-86167518194231366852009-04-12T06:39:00.000-07:002009-04-15T05:11:57.124-07:00The Cheap-Arse Film Review #28- "BOTTLE ROCKET."<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhimjQfbGtivd_iEmACm5DwaJsjiFQ1WW2zoO1BcYBEP9BQ6FOnj1MdUmjCmHoGUEz2dJbvF1MM_qDvHrbPCuw_NDu0ISRTfwpu9xymaswU-ZKe_KzTEqPPMgTPs51_M48zKDcg5sUQNZ0/s1600-h/001.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhimjQfbGtivd_iEmACm5DwaJsjiFQ1WW2zoO1BcYBEP9BQ6FOnj1MdUmjCmHoGUEz2dJbvF1MM_qDvHrbPCuw_NDu0ISRTfwpu9xymaswU-ZKe_KzTEqPPMgTPs51_M48zKDcg5sUQNZ0/s400/001.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5324889311246917442" border="0" /></a><br /><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >NAME: BOTTLE ROCKED</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >RATING: 15</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >RELEASED: 1996</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >WRITTEN BY: OWNE WISON AND WES ANDERSON</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >DIRECTED BY: WES ANDERSON</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >STARRING: LUKE WILSON, OWEN WILSON, ROBERT MUSGRAVE, LUMI CAVAZOS, JAMES CAAN</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >GENRE: COMEDY/DRAMA</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >BOUGHT FROM: CEX</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >PRICE: £1.00</span><br /></div><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br />I think Wes Anderson, or more specifically his movies, or even more specifically one of hi movies in particular, may have saved me from turning into a total prick.<br /><br />I goes something like this- a few years ago, I was... angry. I won't go into details as to why, because they're boring and embarrassingly Emo. But I was angry, for quite a while, and because I'm not really the type to jump up-and-down and shout about things, the anger manifested itself in other ways, one of them being to develop a cartoonish sense of my own masculinity (I'd seen "Fight Club" one too many times, basically), and create a whole bunce of rules I had to abide by in order to be a man, one of which was to show as little emotion as humanly possible, because being overly-emotional was a sign of weakness (Christ...). And my big rule was I would no longer allow myself to be emotionally affected by fiction of any kind, because only a fool cared about the fate of people that weren't real.<br /><br />Enter Wes Anderson. We'll, he'd already entered, I suppose. I'd been a huge fan of his movies ever since I'd seen "Rushmore," which I became interested in when I found out it'd been co-written by Owen Wilson, and was fascinated to find out what kind of movie the laid-back southern stoner dude from "Armageddon" would have a hand in creating. Suffice to say, it wasn't quite the movie I was expecting it to be. But I loved it anyway, and Anderson quickly joined the ranks of my favourite filmmakers, alongside Cameron Crowe and Kevin Smith (wow, that's a shocker isn't it, that a pop culture-obsessed nerd who doesn't know when to stop talking should love Kevin Smith's movies?). I've put this down before, but I saw "The Royal Tenenbaums" in cinemas five times, which is my own personal record (although, if I'm totally honest, three of those time happened when I was stuck on a cruise ship celebrating my sister's Birthday)(I also saw "Monster's Inc." twice whilst I was there). It was neither of those films that brought me out of the wanker hole I was slowly digging for myself, though. The honour belonged to "The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou."<br /><br />Some people really don't like this movie, but I think it's wonderful, for the exact reason most of them don't- the overwhelming fakeness of the whole thing, symbolising the fact that Zissou is a man with nothing real in his life he can be proud of, that is punctured right at the very end by a wave of pure, unadulterated emotion, brought on by both the man himself's sudden epithany, and the compassion of those around him, some of whom he's treated like absolute shit for the entire film. It was this moment, and the key line of the scene, "I wonder if it remembers me," that got to me. I hadn't cried at a movie for about five years at this point. And I didn't cry here, either. I think it'd be more accurate to say that I burst. I started howling, just bawling like a hungry baby screaming for its mother's tit. Infact, I cried so much, afterwards I was so exhausted I needed a nap! It was hysterical, and I can now look back on it and laugh. But at the time I was more than a little bit confused, because I couldn't figure out what about that scene set me off. I still can't really, and now that I've had a bit of time to think about it, I don't think I want to, because whether it's the entire scene or just that one line, whatever it was... I think it might be Pandora's Box. Best left closed, for the time being at least. Anyway, it's not important, because I came out the other side feeling... better. I distinctly remember thinking to myself, "What a silly sod you've been." It's a cliche, but I guess it's true- better out than in. So I had another reason to love Anderson and his films after that.<br /><br />(Humourously, because I'm not a man to do <span style="font-style: italic;">anything</span> by halves, since that day I think the pendulum may have swung a little bit too far the other way, because now I find myself getting emotional at the silliest things. I watched the "Garfield Christmas Special" over the Holiday Season, for example, and when it got to the bit where Garfield was sitting on Granny's lap listening to her talk about her dead husband... oh God. And most recently the trailer, <span style="font-style: italic;">the bloody trailer,</span> for Spike Jonze's adaptation of <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=--N9klJXbjQ">"Where The Wild Things Are"</a> made me go a bit misty, which I blame on their use of emotive music and my own feelings of warm nostalgia whenever I think of that book. Bastards)<br /><br />Considering the utter gangbang of love the above paragraphs are for the man and his work, you have every right to be surprised by the fact that I've never seen this, his first full-length feature, until now. Well, I always told myself tha I was holding out until a version with decent extras had been released (which apparently is now happening in the US as part of the absolutely fantastic Criterion Collections new Blu-Ray line), but the truth is, I was always a bit scared to watch it, because I'd been told by people who had seen it that there's a very good chance I would't like it, because alot of the things I liked about his other movies aren't present. And I didn't like the thought of not liking a Wes Anderson movie. Not at all. But at some point you've just got to suck it up and be, well, a man, haven't you?<br /><br />Normally I would make a brief mention of the credits sequence here, but there isn't one in this movie. Seriously. We get "Columbia Pictures Presents," then we get "BOTTLE ROCKET" in black text on a red background, and then we're straight into the story, picking things up with Anthony (Luke Wilson), who it would seem is about to escape from a psychiatric hospital with the help of his best friend, Dignan (Owen Wlison)(incidently, I find it humourous how, in all the movies they've done with each other at this point, I don't think they've ever played brothers), mirror used as a signal, bed sheets tied together to make a rope, the whole deal. However, as it turns out, Anthony signed himself in at the hospital willingly, and has already discharged himself, but didn't have the eart to tell Dignan any of that, as he was so excited about the plan he'd come up with. So out the window Anthony goes, pausing only to say goodbye to his doctor and some of the other patients. It's never really explained in detail why he was there, but he later mentions questioning his own life to such an extent that he ran away and lived in the desert for a period of time. A bit like Jesus. Hey, managed to find a way of tying this into Easter!<br /><br />It is the next few scenes that the differences people were telling me about become obvious, mostly concerning the dialogue and the way the movie is shot. One of the things I'll accept about Anderson's movies is that they're often not that exciting to look at, most of the time shot in a static, almost storybook way, with the few movements the camera makes being very smooth and controlled. Here, there's a some of that, and it becomes more the norm as the movie goes on, almost as if whilst shooting you could see him decide, "This is how I like doing things," but to me it feels like the camera moves more in this one than it does in any of his other films put together, and it also feels a little ragged in places. Not that that's a bad thing, and it's not a constant distraction (hello, "Bloodrayne 2: Deliverance"), but it felt really odd seeing it in a Wes Anderson movie. Then there's the dialogue. It's not how it's written really, its almost the same as it is in all his movies, that being quirky but not totally out-there and zany, but rather how it's spoken- it's often delievered at a break-neck pace, and alot of the time, especially here at the beginning, there's alot of people talking over each other, which I think is done to better get across both the familiarity the characters have with each other, especially Anthony and Dignan, and also to convey their excitement at what they're planning. Again, it's not a bad thing, it's just different is all.<br /><br />And speaking of their plan, all is laid out to us over the course of a bus journey- they plan to become criminals, thieves more specifically, putting into use all the things Dignan has learnt from Mr. Henry (James Caan), who he claims is a master thief. He has everything planned out for he and Anthony in the most fine detail (it's later claimed that he planning stretches a good 75 years), in a little notebook. He's even colour-coded the thing using different felt-tip pens, which frankly is something I would do. The first major part of this plan involves then performing a practice burglary, and I was amused to find out that the house the do this with belongs to Anthony's mother. It goes well, all things considered, until afterwards when they's discussing what they've just done and where they can improve, Dignan reveals that he stole Anthony's Mother's diamond earrings, the one thing he had promised he wouldn't, apparently.<br /><br />This of course means Anthony has to return the earrings, which he does by giving them to is little sister, Grace (Shea Fowler). They then proceed to have a conversation based around a joke that's as old as the hills, that being the substancially-younger sibling that talks like she's 35. I still find it amusing, though. It doesn't crack me up, but it makes me smile, especially when she sighs at the mention of Dignan's name and explains, "I <span style="font-style: italic;">do</span> like Dignan... but he's a liar." He's also a thief, kid. Speaking of Dignan, as this is going on he's interviewing a guy by the name of Bob Mapplethorpe (Robert Musgrave, who was also like Luke and Owen in the original short this is based on, and looks weirdly like what I suspect you'd get if Justin Long and Jimmy Fallon had a son), about the possibility of him being their getaway driver. I feel for Musgrave, because he's got what is really the least fun role to play, that of the slightly whiney wimp who goes through most of the movie being mocked and/or beaten up by his brother. He does a terrible job of selling himself during his interview, claiming they should use him because he's a risktaker, using the fact that he's growing Marijuana in his parent's backyard as proof of this, and when that doesn't seem to be doing it, he offers, "I really want to be a part of this team... and I'm the only one with a car." That somehow proves to be enough.<br /><br />After Anthony has a small breakdown over his sister's cynical attitude and his belief that she thinks he's a failure (which causes Dignan to hilariously ask what she's done with her life that's so great), a quick stop of at Bob's family's place, some shooting practice out in a field somewhere which proves to be funny just by virtue of watching these three guys who clearly have never held a gun before fire off a few rounds (Bob is especially hilarious with his tiny firearm)(that's what she said), and a final going over of the plan that almost ends in disaster when Dignan and Bob get into a fight over Bob's insistance in touching the gun because he bought it, they perform their first really robbery, knocking over a book store. Their plan is to get Anthony in there first by saying he forgot his sweater, then having him overpower the guy on the door and get Dignan in, too. Amazingly, this all goes off without so much as a hitch. Okay, not totally- the money has to be stuffed into little bags due to the fact that they don't have any big ones, and despite the fact that he's got a gun pretty much in his face, the clerk has no problems calling Dignan a punk in retaliation for being called an idiot, which causes Dignan to go all meek and and refer to him as "sir" from that point forward. But even with those small details, it's a roaring success, and now all tey have to do is get out of town for a little while and wait for things to cool off.<br /><br />It's when they leave town and set up home in a dingy-looking motel that things start to fall apart. For a start, Bob recieves word from his brother that he's been arrested for drug dealing and needs him to come home and bail him out, leaving them without a driver, or even a car for that matter. But before that, Anthony finds himself distracted by (what else?) a woman- Inez (Lumi Cavazos, also returning from the short), their sweetly-pretty housekeeper that speaks virtually no English. Their courtship is fast but rather sweet. Anthony first lays eyes on her when he's taking a dip in the pool and she's attending to her duties, and later that day he just starts following her around like a puppy, helping her out as she cleans the rooms. At first she seems to be bewildered by this attention, but eventually she seems to become amused by it, even letting Anthony keep a picture of her sister she had inside her locket (which he asks to keep even after he finds out it wasn't her, as he first thought, which struck me as a very strange thing to ask, even for a character in a Wes Anderson movie), and then seemingly throwing a party for he co-workers in the guy's room.<br /><br />Over the next couple of days, things really end up in the shitter. Bob's gone, and Dignan ends up getting beaten up when he goes to a bar with Anthony and Inez (who have already kissed and had sex at this point), by a guy who was being friendly to him only a second earlier (sample dialogue- OTHER GUY: "You in the army, yes?" DIGNAN: "No, I just have short hair." Then they both chuckle). At his wits end and desperate to get out of there, Dignan proposes a new plan to Anthony- they use Inez's master key to break into one of the rooms, so they can find car keys and make off with a car. Anthony flat-out refuses to do that, in what I thought was going to be a version of that old sitcom gag where, say, the guy goes, "There's no way I'm ever wearing that chicken suit!" and then in the very next scene you see him in the chicken suit. But no, Anthony put his foot down, and it was never mentioned again.<br /><br />Realising he's totally in love with her, Anthony decides to try and convince Inez to come with them. Realising there's no way he can communicate this to her alone, he recruits one of her co-workers, Rocky (Donny Caicedo), to translate for him. This is a set-up almost guaranteed to have a couple of funny instances, and I wasn't disapponted, getting two moments that made me laugh out loud- firstly, when Anthony is trying to get across how special she makes him feel, he mentions how much he enjoyed the sex they'd recently had, which causes Rocky to stand there looking all embarrassed, not wanting to repeat what he's just heard, only for Inez to insist and then pull a face that's the perfect representation of, "Oh Christ, I can't believe he just said that to somebody I work with." Then later, when she's refused to go with him, Rocky again translates her rejection. It's obvious what she's trying to say is that he's just passing through, but when Rocky tranlates literally, it comes out as, "You're like paper... trash... like paper floating by, y'know?" Then, when seeing the way Anthony takes being told this, he mutters apologetically, "It sounds better in Spanish."<br /><br />The next day Inez is given an envelope by Dignan and suddenly has a semi-change of heart, sending Rocky after Dignan to tell him that she loves Anthony. Of course, upon hearing the guy say, "Tell Anthony I love him," he assumes... oh fuck it, you don't need me to tell you what he assumes, it's obvious what he assumes. But there's not even enough time for him to share this piece of information with Anthony, as no sooner are they one the road in a sweet-but-beaten-up convertable of some kind, than the thing breaks down (well, Dignan <span style="font-style: italic;">did</span> just find it abandoned in some alley...), and they get into a fight, partially over whether or not this great sceme of theirs is worth continuing, but mostly due to the fact that Anthony had just given Inez pratically all them money they had left in the world, around $500, in that envelope. He then gets angry when Dignan shouts, "YOU DO NOT GIVE THE HOUSEKEEPER A $500 TIP!" This is the first time their relationship in any way angers Dignan, as the movie had done a good job of not portraying him as, to quote the man himself, "the jealous best friend," so it's not like this is one of many blow-ups. I can also see his point. I mean, yes, you love the girl, but giving someone you love everything you have, everything you may need just to survive, is stupid, there's no other way of putting it. Plus (and oh Christ, how do I put this...), giving a woman you've just had sex with money is not really treating her like you love her. That's treating her like... something else. It gets physical, with Dignan popping Anthony one on the nose and making him bleed (at first I thought he's slashed him across the face with the screwdriver he was holding, which shocked me a little bit because that would have easily been the most extreme example of violence I'd ever seen in a Wes Anderson movie), and they literally go their seperate ways, both of them walking off in different directions.<br /><br />Seeing as he's the main character, it's Anthony that we follow during this split, as it's shown to us in a montage meant to be the visual representation of a letter he's writing to his sister what's going on in his life right now- he's reunited with Bob, and togehter they're working several jobs and have become productive members of society, even if Bob's dickhead brother takes almost all his money to pay for his legal fees. Anthony seems happy with the way things are going, even if he's still pining for Inez. Which is of course the cue for Dignan to show up again with another plan. However, this time he's bringing his own crew, having reunited with Mr. Henry (it was revealed earlier that Dignan only knew him through his front-business, working as a landscaper, which meant he mowed people's lawns, really). He wants Anthony to come on-board for a job they're planning, and he's initially reluctant. Really reluctant actually, both Dignan and Mr. Henry try to talk him into signing up, and it's only when he sees Bob's brother treat Dignan like scum that he finally agrees. And even then he puts up the stipulation that Bob has to be brought in too, which Dignan agrees to only so his friend will come with him (and the scene where Dignan and Bob make up is hilarious, starting with Dignan offering Bob outside so they can handle their problems like men, saying men don't settle their disputes by hugging, then throwing the towel in when Bob lands one punch and deciding to hug it out with him).<br /><br />I think I should talk a little about James Caan here. He's so fucking cool, without even trying really. And he's probably the best thing in this movie, even with what is basically a glorified cameo. In his brief time on-screen, they manage to work in a few memorable character traits, the main one being his interest in Oriental culture. He's shown training something they try to pass off as a Martial Art that's really just one man pushing another (that happens to be wearing Tighty Whities and not much else), he puts Bob's brother in a submission hold that looks like something we'd put each other in when we were in Junior School (before proclaiming him a "cocksucker")(as in Mr. Henry calls Bob's brother a cocksucker, not that we called each other cocksuckers in Junior School), and then at the party just before the heist, he's wearing... well, it's supposed to be traditional Asian garb, but the way it looks when he's sitting down, it's just a skirt. He's wearing a floaty patterned skirt with sandles and socks. Amazing.<br /><br />Of course, with things going so well, Dignan finally tells Anthony what Rocky said to him, and him being slightly quicker on the uptake than his friend puts two-and-two together and realises Inez loves him. I expected him to run off and abandon the job, but instead they reconcile over the phone, andthe robbery of the warehouse goes off as planned.<br /><br />Well, not quite as planned. Actually, it's a total fucking disaster. Neither Anthony nor the cowardly Bob's hearts are really in it, the safecracker (Kumar Pallana, who caused me to go "YAAAAAAAAAY!" the second I saw him. I mean, I knew he was in this, because Anderson is very proud of the fact that he's been in all his feature-length productions. But still, YAAAAAAAAAY! Also his son Dipak played a book store clerk earlier), can't crack the safe, saying he's lost his touch ("Did you ever <span style="font-style: italic;">have</span> a touch?" Dignan asks), they get discovered by some worker who they sort-of take hostage, and then Bob accidently fires off his gun, causing one of the crew to have a heart attack. Oh, and whilst all this is going on, Mr. Henry is robbing Bob's house, stripping it of practically everything. They make a break for it, but realise they dude who had the heart attack has the keys on him, so somebody will have to go back and get them. Dignan says he will and tells Anthony to run for it, and I can't decide if he was willingly sacrificing himself for his friend, or if he's just an idiot. I could be either. It could be <span style="font-style: italic;">both,</span> in all honesty. So he gets arrested (and beaten up by the cops in quite an excessive manner, I thought), and sent to jail for two years. He doesn't seem to bothered about this to be honest, as when Bob and Anthony come to visit him there's not a hint of bitterness. It's almost as if going to prison may have been part of his plan, as if it makes him a real criminal. That probably <span style="font-style: italic;">is</span> the case, thinking about it. The last scene of the movie involves him punking out (is this still a cool thing to say?) his friends by pretending he has an escape plan all worked out, before walking into the prison in Anderson's trademake slow-motion finish, as his friends look on.<br /><br />I don't really know what the people who kept telling me I might not like this were on about. Yes, if I'm honest, as it stands right now after a couple of viewings, this is probably my least favourite Wes Anderson film. And it has flaws, the biggest being the fact that there's literally <span style="font-style: italic;">no story whatsoever.</span> I won't pretend otherwise, I know this review doesn't feature the most detailed plot breakdown I've ever done, but believe me when I say I didn't really have much to work with. It's just a bunch of stuff happening, then a bunch more stuff happening. But I still enjoyed it, it was fun and quirky, there was wit and charm, and some, if not all, of the trademake Anderson storytelling techniques. Where I had the most fun though was watching one of my favourite directors slowly become the fimmaker he is today, as he discovered seemingly on the fly what he was and wasn't good at, and discovering his style as he went. It's beautiful, really.<br /><br /></span><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >FINAL VERDICT</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;font-family:courier new;" >KEPT!</span><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjm4jkWJLnpK_NVsFvV9VlNauXmKCDmwv2oNARLDZL-QLuWXoR_YxOo3dD_-mMd3iyrZm25CatJbKS6S4MsHHXwrmCQVQA1Dt8XRZUV_065kQs_XyLJ3vNdyw8rdaCa6XFfPbbkROxCTZY/s1600-h/003.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjm4jkWJLnpK_NVsFvV9VlNauXmKCDmwv2oNARLDZL-QLuWXoR_YxOo3dD_-mMd3iyrZm25CatJbKS6S4MsHHXwrmCQVQA1Dt8XRZUV_065kQs_XyLJ3vNdyw8rdaCa6XFfPbbkROxCTZY/s400/003.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5324889294366664370" border="0" /></a><br /></div><span style="font-family:courier new;">Almost beautiful enough to bring a tear to the eye.<br /><br />Until next week, I'm The Cheap-Arse Film Critic, and I just wanted to say I'm sorry I threw rocks at you that day.<br /></span>The Cheap-Arse Film Critichttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08211046330068309653noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1161570503760263602.post-69670663774069889462009-04-05T06:44:00.000-07:002009-04-08T04:24:16.107-07:00The Cheap-Arse Film Review #27- "THE KARATE KID, PART III."<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgOISFAGc5HGJM5VBs1M_i2kl3nQD-gjcU2G7Rtrt6bwkuh-iSt2VefZ25_EyhZWy78V1OQ0lGodTA5V-N4QlPgQG9mVlto1XTo0sasNcNnecIdQjtnLwh1HRCmvoPcOhfYmORyPthb6X4/s1600-h/001.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgOISFAGc5HGJM5VBs1M_i2kl3nQD-gjcU2G7Rtrt6bwkuh-iSt2VefZ25_EyhZWy78V1OQ0lGodTA5V-N4QlPgQG9mVlto1XTo0sasNcNnecIdQjtnLwh1HRCmvoPcOhfYmORyPthb6X4/s400/001.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5322279210342339954" border="0" /></a><br /><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >NAME: THE KARATE KID, PART III</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >RATING: PG</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >RELEASED: 1989</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >WRITTEN BY: ROBERT MARK KAMEN</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >DIRECTED BY: JOHN G. AVILDSEN</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >STARRING: RALPH MACCHIO, PAT MORITA, THOMAS IAN GRIFFITH, ROBYN LIVELY, SEAN KANAN, MARTIN KOVE</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >GENRE: ACTION DRAMA</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >BOUGHT FROM: CEX</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >PRICE: 50p</span><br /></div><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br />We all have a contradiction or two to our natures, it's what makes us interesting. Or annoying. Take your pick. I have a couple of big ones. For a start, I'm very into order, lists and everything being in its right place, but at the same time I can go Caveman at the drop of a hat, usually when I'm unhappy. Another is, I'm a pretty opinionated guy (you're shocked, I can tell), but I will often find myself agreeing with things and opinions I actually don't, for no other reason then to live a quiet life. This is very high on the list of things I hate about myself. But the big one, the one that confounds even me is the fact that I consider myself a pretty gently, placid guy... and I love fighting.<br /><br />Now, when I say I love fighting, that doesn't mean I like nothing better of a weekend than to dress up in my best clothes and go out trawling the streets looking for a good ruck. I wouldn't do that even if I could, which I can't for a multitude of reasons. But I love watching it, something about it always got my blood pumping. I couldn't get into any sport that didn't have some form of combat involved with them. I really didn't like Football for example, and whilst I say I do now, and would even go so far as to say I support West Ham (it's character building if nothing else), in truth there's always this niggling suspicion at the back of my head that I only watch it because it's another excuse to go down the pub. Whereas give me a boxing match, or an MMA fight, or something obscure off one of those fringe sports channels, and I'm happy as Larry, even if I have to stay up until Stupid O'Clock in order to indulge.<br /><br />I've never been that into fighting movies, though. I like a good action film, but I'm not counting them. I mean films like the "Kickboxer" or "Bloodsport" series. I could just never be bothered with them. At first I thought it might be a case of simulated fighting versus <span style="font-style: italic;">actual</span> fighting, but then I remembered I love professional wrestling, and that's simulated violence disguised as actual violence (actually, I think most of the time it would be better described as actual violence diguised and simulated violence disguised as actual violence, but this is not a discussion to be getting into here...). There's only two fighting-based franchises I've followed in an way over the years, and those are the "Rocky" movies, which I don't think you have to like boxing to enjoy, and the "Karate Kid" movies. And of those two, "Rocky" probably takes the top spot, because whilst I watched every installment of that saga excitedly and will still willingly watch them if I find them on (yes, even the fifth one), I could never really muster the same level of excitment about the other "Karate Kid" films. I mean, the fact that I've not seen the third one until now should tell you everything you need to know. I saw "The Next Karate Kid" before I saw this. Think about <span style="font-style: italic;">that.</span><br /><br />I think alot of it had to do with the fact that I didn't really think the sequels were needed. Take the first "Rocky" movie, for example. I understand that the movie was all about believing in yourself and proving you belonged and were somebody, and that the message it was putting across was made all the more powerful by the fact that he didn't win the title (OMGSPOILERZ!). I know, respect and love all this. It's amazing storytelling. But, if I'm honest... I wanted to see him win. I loved that character so much that I wanted to see him achieve his dream. I think everybody did. So with "Rocky 2," you had a reason to WATCH, to see if he could do it. With the first "Karate Kid," Daniel wins the tournament (OMGSPILERZAGIN!!!), and that's it. Instant gratification. No reason to come back even once. But come back I have.<br /><br />We first find ourselves in flashback land, as the opening credits for this movie occur over a montage, explaining the history Daniel (Ralph Macchio) and Mr. Miyagi (the late, great Pat Morita) have with the Cobra Kai, a rival karate dojo, and its sensei, Johnny (Martin Kove). It's a decently-done effort, but it's a little bit patchy and leaves out some things you'd expect to see. For example, we see Johnny make his infamous "Sweep the leg" decree, but then we don't actually see the leg being swept, nor do we see Mr Miyagi healing Daniel backstage following its devastating effects. We do however see the brief scene from the beginning of the second one where Miyagi humiliates Johnny in front of his students, getting him to punch through two car windows and then making it very obvious he could kill him, before deciding not to. It's this, coupled with Johnny's violent distain for his student's failures that presumably landed him where we see him when the film picks up properly, that being the head of a dojo with no students. For a brief moment, he cuts a quite sympathetic character as he listens to an answering machine message from the organisers of this year's karate tournament, who presume he won't be entering.<br /><br />And this continues when he goes to meet his friend, war buddy and the owner of his establishment, Terry Silver, played by Thomas Ian Griffith (who I am convinced is an evil alternate reality version of Paul Rudd), walking in on him kicking the shit out of two dudes during a spot of karate sparring. He has his bags packed and is ready to chuck the whole thing in, but Terry doesn't want to hear it, telling him he owes him his life several times over and pretty much doeasn't expect a penny for him, instead offering to pay for him to go on vacation to Tahiti that very second. So far I was really surprised by this portrayal, as it seemed to geared towards humanising Johnny and making him less of a cartoon. Of course the moment I start thinking something is the second it usually flies out the window, and sure enough, in the next scene, as Terry's driving him to the airport he swears to him that he's going to devote all his time and resources (of which he as alot of, as the movie establishes very quickly that he's a very rich man, dealing dubiously with the chemical industry), to destroying Daniel and Miyagi, proclaiming, "I'm gonna make them suffer, and suffer, and when I think they've suffered enough, then I'm gonna start with the pain!" It's the kind of thing you'd expect a super-villain to say, and as the movie goes on, it becomes obvious that that's pretty much what Terry is.<br /><br />He drops Johnny off at the airport, and as he enters the terminal, who should we see walking the other way but Daniel and Miyagi, returning from their adventure in the Japan! What a coincidence! I want to talk a little bit about Ralph Macchio before I continue with this thing. It's often said that this guy's career was blighted by the Curse of the Babyface, and in nowhere else is that proven more accurate than this film. Within continuity, it takes place about a year after the events of the first one, but in reality that came out in 1984, whereas this one came out in 1989, five years later. And he's not aged a day. Not one. He looks exactly the same as he did in flashback at the beginning. And looking at recent pictures of him I found, he still pretty much does. Well, that's en exaggeration, but the fact is he's two years shy of is 50th Birthday, and I personally think he could pass himself off as being in his mid-thirties (in many ways I'm envious, because I'm in my mid-twenties, and when I recently asked a woman to guess how old I was, she put me at 32. I blame it on being fat). None of this is what blew my mind, though. No, what succeeded in doing that was when I looked up information on both Macchio and Thomas Ian Griffith and discovered that... they're practically the same age. Infact, it gets better- Macchio, playing a kid young enough to just be starting college, is five months older than Griffith, playing a guy old enough to have fought in Vietnam. <span style="font-style: italic;">Five. Months. Older.</span><br /><br />Back to the movie, Daniel and Miyagi's homecoming doesn't go quite as they hoped- Daniel discovers his mother, who he wanted to surprise with his return, has had to leave town to care for a sick elderly relative (a plot device that exists for no other reason than to write her out of the movie, which I'm totally fine with, as she's a terrible actress), and Miyagi finds himself in enforced retirement when his building has been sold. He's of course saddened by this turn of events, but Daniel decides to try and cheer him up by helping him realise his dream of opening a Bonzai store, buying the lease to a building in a "developing" (read: shit) area of town, with the money he had saved to pay for his college education, which is a sweet thing for him to do, but I can't help but think of the spasm his mother will have when she finds out. It almost makes me wish they'd bring her back just so we could have that scene. Almost. Miagi is touched by this, and after some initial reluctance agrees to open the store, with his only stipulation being that Daniel adds his name to the lease.<br /><br />As this is going on, we get updates on Terry and the plan he's formulating. Over a telephone conversation with Johnny in Tahiti as he's getting rubbed down by two women, he reveals he intends to somehow convince Daniel to let him train him for the upcomng tournament, where he'll beat the shit out of him virtually without him knowing it, thus weakening him and sending him into the fight ready to be humiliated. He has a tool (both figuratively and literally) for that too, in the form of Mike Barnes (Sean Kanan), "Karate's Bad Boy," who he brings in especilly for the task with the promise that he'll be a 50% partner in all the new schools Terry intends to open. It was originally supposed to be 25%, but he gets Terry to double his offer by threatening to walk. Mr. Silver would be hopeless on "Dragon's Den." The only way I can think to describe Barnes is that he's fucking psychotic, marching around shouting at things he doesn't like, threatening to either hurt or just outright kill people at almost every turn. Then again, he fits in well with the company he keeps, as Terry assigns him henchmen (one of whom is named Snake)(SNAKE!), who only seem to exist to derive joy from his bastardly behaviour. Terry himself is also starting to seem slightly unhinged, as in the phone scene he debuts his laugh, which becomes his trademark as the movie goes on. Sometimes it's loud and booming as it is here (where it's also accompanied by him yelling, "I LIKE THAT!!! I LIKE THAT JOHNNY!!!" like some S&M freak when Johnny says he wants him to make Daniel's knuckles bleed), sometimes it's a small chuckle, but it's always full of bad intentions and accompanied by a sadistic glint in the eye.<br /><br />Of course the whole plan is built around Daniel agreeing to take part in the tournament, which at this point doesn't seem likely to happen, since for some reason he seems to need Miyagi's permission to take part and the old man won't give it. There are a few issues that come with this permission slip thing, but I'll deal with the one that's brought up in this scene, that being the change in rules that Daniel tells Miyagi about- rather than fight in the entire tournament, the defending champion only has to fight once, in the final. I can see why they did this, because this way they don't have to shoot alot of tournament stuff and can just get straight to the final, but it's stupid on several levels. For a start, no legit tournament that takes itself in any way seriously would work this way, because putting a dude who's had to win several fights to get where he is against a guy that hasn't had to break so much as a sweat just isn't fair. Then there's the fact that this set-up makes the villain, in a strange way, seem <span style="font-style: italic;">more heroic</span> than our supposed protagonist, because he's had to work his arse off to get where he is.<br /><br />In any event, Miyagi says no, and attempts to distract Daniel by, for all intents and purposes, pimping him out. He sends him over the pottery store next door to get pots for the trees, where he finds a girl moulding clay. Her name is Jessica, and she's played by Robyn Lively, who lovers of shit eighties teen movies will know from "Teen Witch" (which I'm very ashamed to say I've seen), and lovers of quality television will know from "Dougie Howser, MD," "Twin Peaks," and more recently "30 Rock." She pretty much throws herself at Daniel the second he walks through the door (she herself admitting she "came on pretty strong" in a later scene), making plans to meet up with him later that night. However, when they meet again, she cools things off almost instantly, saying she's got a boyfriend she's been having problems with that she's decided to give another chance, and will be moving away to be with him pretty soon. I thought this would just be a hurdle in the path of them eventually getting together, but surprisingly they don't, they just become plutonic friends, and Daniel seems more than okay with it. And it's quite nice to see a relationship between a man and a woman presented on screen that's in no way sexually-driven, something unexpected and different, especilly in a movie aimed at a teen audience.<br /><br />She soon learns that hanging around with Daniel might not be good for her health though, as not once but twice are their get-togethers ruined by Barnes and his crew showing up to violently demand Daniel sign the entry form they have and enter the tournament. See, in an earlier scene, Daniel had come round to Miyagi's way of thinking and burned the form, which was witnessed by Terry, who had snuck into Miyagi's place in order to dig up information on him to use to gain his trust. What with the tournament being the main component of his plan, Terry instructs Barnes to terrorize Daniel until he signs. Which is the second problem I have, as it was established before that it was <span style="font-style: italic;">Miyagi's</span> signature that was needed, but now the movies expects us to forget that and go along with the idea that Daniel needs to sign it, ignoring questions like if that was the case, why didn't he just sign it himself to begin with? As continuity mistakes go, this is amateur-hour bullshit, especially for a production like this. The first time they show up at Miyagi's store, Snake (SNAKE!!!!!) does most of the talking, alternating between sneering and smirking, only for Barnes to step in and insist he enter the tournament, then flip out and have to be restrained when Daniel tells him to fuck off. The second time they show up (and both of these happen when the place is supposed to be closed, which begs the question, why don't they just lock the bloody door?) they interrupt a pleasent meal between Daniel and Jessica, where he gives her Maccaroni & Cheese "11 out of 10" (dude, it's Mac & Cheese, the most idiot-proof food in the world. <span style="font-style: italic;">I</span> could make Mac & Cheese, and my idea of being fancy is putting mayo on something). This times things get violent, with them smashing up the store, Daniel getting beaten up, and Jessica actually getting kicked in the stomach. Miyagi himself has to show up and save the day, throwing the little shits out and into Barnes' convertable, where he start doughnutting and screaming about how this isn't over. Yes, that's perfectly rational. Miyagi then says at least they didn't take any of his stock, since it wasn't there (nice attitude there. "A young girl just got assaulted, but at least my business is fine!"). However, once he and Daniel get home, they discover the Bonzai <span style="font-style: italic;">have</span> been taken by Barnes and his goons, who left the consent form behind in their place. It's worth mentioning that the trees had seemingly been left on a table ouside Miyagi's place, and therefore were never all that safe in the first place.<br /><br />Bummed out about the damage and the loss of stock, Daniel decides to help Miyagi make up financially for all he's lost. However, he decides to do this in a very questionable way, that being to dig up and sell the Bonzai tree Miyagi had brought with him from Japan. In an earlier scene, Miyagi had told him about this tree, that it was worth thousands, and that he had planted it in "The Devil's Cauldron," a sort-of bowl-like mountain area that filled up with water when the tide came in. Daniel and Jessica scale down the rock-face to retrieve the tree, only for it to be dropped into the salt water below, which is apparently poison for the roots. They retrieve it and go to make their way back up, only to find their ropes have been pulled up by Barnes and company. Their offer- sign to compete, and they'll throw the ropes back down, otherwise they'll leave them there to drown. With little other choice, Daniel relents and signs, and the bad guys amazingly prove to be good for their word, tossing the ropes back down and even helping pull the pair up. They make their nasty pints back by snapping Miyagi's tree down the middle though, which was a predictable-but-still-dastardly touch. Daniel shows Miyagi the tree and tells him what happened, and for a second there appears to be a crack in the old man's Zen-like attitude, but the he composes himself and accepts Daniel's apology, though he still refuses to train him for the tournament, much to Daniel's dismay.<br /><br />Which is where, <span style="font-style: italic;">finally,</span> Terry's plan kicks into high gear. He had introduced himself to Daniel and Miyagi earlier, claiming he'd come to apologise for Johnny's actions, and that the man himself had passed away of a broken heart due to the failure of his school. He slimes his way into Miyagi's affections by using information about his military background he'd discovered, before setting his sights on Daniel, praising him to the moon. The seeds of trust are then totally sown when he "saves" Daniel from an attack by Barnes, making it as easy as possible so he'd look irresistable as a trainer, which is what he becomes to Daniel following Miyagi's refusal. I have to say, it's quite a sight seeing Daniel in a Cobra Kai uniform. There's something just fundamentally <span style="font-style: italic;">wrong</span> about it. Over the course of their trainning sessions, Terry slowly lets the friendly, cuddly act slip and he becomes more aggressive, as do the things he teaches. There's not much technique to it, all he's really having Daniel do is punch, kick and elbow a wooden dummy to the point that he injures himself and (as Johnny asked) makes his knuckles bleed. Miyagi at first heals Daniel's injuries with magic healing powder (don't look at me like that, that's what it is), but as time goes on and distance grows between them, Daniel starts usng it himself without permission. "Hope confusion end soon, Daniel-san," he says sadly at one point, "Miyagi heart empty without you." AWWWWWWWW.<br /><br />His confusion and confliction about the new methods he's being taught does indeed come to an end soon, as whilst he's out at a dance club with Jessica (the band performing there being fronted by one of the most sorry examples of an eighties fashion victim I've ever seen. Hello, white turtle nuck and polka-dot blazer!), spending time with her before she leaves the next day, Terry gets some dude to hit on her, causing Daniel to punch him in the face, breaking his nose without even thinking and appalling his friend, who storms out. Personally I would have left before then, just after he claimed, "I'm so thirsty I could drink a horse." Seriously, WAT? Anyway, Terry tries to sel it to him that what just happened was a good thing, that it proved he'd developed killer instincts and was now doing these things without even thinking, but Daniel is nothing but ashamed of himself and insists on making things right with all the people in his life. He makes peace with Jessica before she leaves (and she really does leave. I thought she might return for the tournament, but nope, she's just gone), and Miyagi as well, before going to he Cobra Kai dojo to respectfully tell Terry that he won't be training with him anymore.<br /><br />Which is the exact moment the film turns into a nightmare, as Terry not only has Barnes there with him, but also Johnny, back from beyone the grave/Tahiti, to terroize and physically destroy this kid. This parts really makes no sense. Think about it- what were Johnny and Barnes doing there? Logic would seem to say Terry had them come, but how could he have been so sure Daniel was going to show up? And what if he hadn't? What would they have done then? Gone out to dinner? It's ludicrous movie logic, saved only by the three men themselves. Put bluntly, they're... evil. Johnny even growls like a beast at Daniel when he jumps out at him. "ARRRRRGH! ARRRRRGH!" And the laughing. Dear God, <span style="font-style: italic;">the laughing.</span> Even when Miyagi shows up to hand them all their arses, even when you take into account the fact that this great plan is technically a total failure, they're still laughing, <span style="font-style: italic;">cackling,</span> about all the awful things the've done and are going to do. <span style="font-style: italic;">THEY KNOW THEY'RE EVIL. AND IT AMUSES THEM.</span><br /><br />Into the final straight now, as Miyagi has agreed to train Daniel, and we find ourselves at the tournament. It's almost like the writrs knew they fucked up a little having Daniel only have to fight one match, because they then show Barnes employing dirty tactics in his encounters, teeterig on the edge of disqualification before winning, thus making him appear as un-noble as possible. They then have him kick the shit out of Daniel for most fo their scrap. I don't know how the scoring in karate matches is done, and I doubt this is all that faithful to them anyway, but they way it seems to work is Barnes would get a point, before then doing something underhanded and having that point taken away from him. Of course this leaves the door for Daniel to make a comeback, which he does following the rest period, confusing Barnes by waving his arms around a bit, then catching him with a throw and gaining a point. Strangely, this one point is enough for him to win the match. Me no understand. The he and Miyagi celebrate as the bad guys slink off, presumably back to Hell.<br /><br />Mots of this movie had a very "going-through-the-motions" feel about it. The direction is unexciting, most of the performances just there (with the exception on Morita, who's so good he could make an Alien Ant Farm video watchable), and in truth, alot of the time it's quite boring. Except when the bad guys are on the screen. Then, it comes alive. They say all heroes are only as good as their villains, ad that's totally the case here. Griffith, Kove, Kanan, this is <span style="font-style: italic;">their</span> movie, and they save it with their gloriously over-the-top antics. I tell you, after watching this, I'd rather be a Cobra Kai. It looks like so much fun, and who knows, one day maybe I'd get to stand shoulder-to-shoulder with my sensei and chuckle demonically about the misfortunes I've brought down upon others. And also maybe I'd get to sweep the leg.<br /><br /></span><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >FINAL VRDICT</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;font-family:courier new;" >KEPT!</span><br /></div><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi_QiNaqnEc3nd4IP5oYjymexPsZ54-kojoPx2e_UQouc732l_iJN3DoDuCxqP0zOMyQC1gtahG1LUaaKeP3ihRAa9SxFdVrOKv6woXd-0p2sVRjYWjd_G_renwoN0bfzBa1dFkFuOGExE/s1600-h/002.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEi_QiNaqnEc3nd4IP5oYjymexPsZ54-kojoPx2e_UQouc732l_iJN3DoDuCxqP0zOMyQC1gtahG1LUaaKeP3ihRAa9SxFdVrOKv6woXd-0p2sVRjYWjd_G_renwoN0bfzBa1dFkFuOGExE/s400/002.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5322279211558534482" border="0" /></a><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">When it was good, it was really rather dull. But when it was bad, it was <span style="font-style: italic;">wonderful.</span><br /><br />Until next week, I'm The Cheap-Arse Film Critic, and I want Tong Po! GIVE ME TONG PO!<br /><span style="font-style: italic;"></span></span>The Cheap-Arse Film Critichttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08211046330068309653noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1161570503760263602.post-18699198398347869892009-03-31T15:47:00.000-07:002009-04-01T22:11:59.412-07:00The Cheap-Arse Film Review #26- "BLOODRAYNE 2: DELIVERANCE."<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiX8N8dAWCBaI7M8avd3umCywGVbfsVsCPHHEcuKr1AlWLwP5bY0fbhTWsOY1ZCKhyphenhyphenxunMRRaIoapkVwsKiKkLj4XCZ_PKS9tD0gLnr3uCbMU14vnk0TBTh1DXXA4xdonB1dmpd1iK3a8I/s1600-h/001.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiX8N8dAWCBaI7M8avd3umCywGVbfsVsCPHHEcuKr1AlWLwP5bY0fbhTWsOY1ZCKhyphenhyphenxunMRRaIoapkVwsKiKkLj4XCZ_PKS9tD0gLnr3uCbMU14vnk0TBTh1DXXA4xdonB1dmpd1iK3a8I/s400/001.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5319952019457846690" border="0" /></a><br /><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >NAME: BLOODRAYNE 2: DELIVERANCE</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >RATING: 18</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >RELEASED: 2008</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >WRITTEN BY: CHRISTOPHER DONALDSON & NEIL EVERY, FROM A STORY BY MASAJI TAKEI</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >DIRECTED BY: UWE BOLL</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >STARRING: NATASSIA MALTHE, ZACK WARD, MICHAEL PARE</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >GENRE: ACTION HORROR</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >BOUGHT FROM: A RECORD FAIR</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >PRICE £1.00</span><br /></div><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br />I love direct-to-video sequels to films that had theatrical releases, especially when I had no idea they existed in the first place, as was the case with <a href="http://cheaparsefilmreview.blogspot.com/2008/11/cheap-arse-film-review-9-home-alone-4-4.html">"Home Alone 4,"</a> which I reviewed over Christmas. Did you know, for example, that there's a "Cruel Intentions 3?" I didn't. I knew there was a second one, but I didn't have a clue a third one existed until I found it in a charity shop recently (sadly too expensive to pick up. Seriously, £2.50 for "Cruel Intention 3?" I know it's for Cancer and all, but come on...). Even better, remember that movie from the early ninties, "The Cutting Edge?" The one that starred DB Sweeney as a hockey player that gets injured and becomes a figure skater? Well, that has <span style="font-style: italic;">two fucking sequels.</span> No, I'm not lying, go to IMDb if you don't believe me. they were released in 2006 and 2008 respectively, <span style="font-style: italic;">well</span> over a decade since the original came out. What could possibly have been the thought process behind that? What could have made somebody think, after all that time, the world needed another installment in that particular saga? So yeah, I hope to one day review all those, as I have "Home Alone 4," and as I am this. This one is a little bit different to most DTV follow-ups, though. With most diminishing returns, they lose absolutely everything people associated with the first one, from budget to cast to director. Here, whilst almost the entire original cast (including <span style="font-style: italic;">Sir</span> Ben Kingsley, who is currently in his cycle of starrng in good movies in an attempt to make us forget he was in "Thunderbirds" and "The Love Guru") have seen sense and run for the hills, the original movie's director has stuck around.<br /><br />And scarily, that man is Uwe Boll.<br /><br />You don't need me to tell you who Uwe Boll is, if you like movies enough to give what I do a second look, you already know. You also don't need me to tell you that he's not a popular filmmaker, and has a, shall we say, <span style="font-style: italic;">combative</span> relationship with his critics. There's also the long-standing theory that he makes the kind of films he does as an elaborate money-making scam. I don't really understand it myself, so I won't try explaining it here, and it should be easily-findable if you've never been exposed to it, written by people much smarter than me. However, if what these people say is true, then believe it or not, I'm not going to be that fast going after him with the pichforks and torches, because perhaps moreso than anyone else on The Internet, this writer respects your hustle, sir.<br /><br />However, admiring a decent scam and enjoying the fruits of said scam are two very different things. Put delicately, his movies aren't very good. But again, I feel the need to say this... I actually think he's improving as a filmmaker. Now, before you start yelling at me, sit down and think about what I'm saying, and what he's improved from. Let's look at his most famous (though not his first, as some people seem to believe) film, "House of the Dead." I fucking hate that movie, and I'm not alone. It's on a very short list of films I've seen that don't have a single redeeming feature, and no, it's not even "so bad it's good." People throw that term around so much these days I don't think they know what it means anymore. Then we move onto "Alone in the Dark," which is pretty terrible too, although unlike the last one there are a few things to praise. For a start, whereas "House..." looked like a bad student film in all areas of production, this at least looked like a real movie. Sure, the stunts were wonky and the CGI looked nasty, but at least I got the sense that somebody cared. "So bad it's good" lovers were treated every time Tara Reed tried to act rather than stand around looking pretty (remember when she could do that? Poor Tara). And the ending was surprisingly good, like it'd been cut off another, better film and edited it onto this one. Skipping the first "Bloodrayne," which I've not seen, up next is the snappily-titled "In the Name of The King: A Dungeon Siege Tale." I wouldn't even call this one bad, if I'm honest. It's breathtakingly unoriginal, and the cinematography makes it look like somebody smeared shit all over the camera lense, but it's not a <span style="font-style: italic;">bad</span> film, just a <span style="font-style: italic;">boring</span> one, save for a couple of actually-quite-exciting fight scenes. And finally, "Postal," which isn't the last film he's made (he churns them out, I'll give him that), but is so far the last one I've had any exposure to. I've not seen the whole thing, but I've seen clips, and those... were funny. <span style="font-style: italic;">On purpose.</span> I can't say for sure until I've sat down and watched it from beginning-to-end, but there's a good chance that this kind of film, the zany, gonzo, politically incorrect comedy, may be the type he's actually good at, the kind of stories he understands how to tell. Either that or he's just getting better as a director, possibly against his own will. I mean, if you do something consistantly for long enough, you're going to get better at it without even realising, aren't you? So I'm interested to see what I make of this one, as it came out the same year as "Postal" did and could make-or-break my whole theory.<br /><br />The credits are nothing special, just Old West-style font over pictures of Frontiersmen doing Frontier things. Following a lush establishing shot of a forest and some snowy mountains, we meet Pyles (snigger...) played by Chris Coppola. No, not <span style="font-style: italic;">that</span> Chris Coppola, the man responsible for <a href="http://cheaparsefilmreview.blogspot.com/2008/11/cheap-arse-film-review-8-creature.html">"Creature."</a> Don't feel too bad if you made that mistake, I did too, although I couldn't reconcile the pictures I've seen of Christopher Coppola with the man on my television. Let's just say they don't look alike and move one, I'm not opening that particular can of worms, especially due to the fact that I'm <span style="font-style: italic;">one</span> of those worms. He's a reporter from the big city sent to the town of Deliverance to bring back stories of gunfights and crime, but sadly for him he seems to have been sent to the most boring new development in The West, with The Mayor (Michael Robinson) telling him how unexciting things are there, the only noteworthy thing being the new railway that will soon run through there, opening them up to outsiders. You can just see the disappointment on Pyle's face. You normally only see this kind of longing for bloodshed on the faces of newscasters. Then, we're whisked to a shack to meet a man, his wife and their two children, the father is unhappy, he and his wife have a conversation about how times are hard, and then suddenly A NOISE OUTSIDE! Alright, here we go, some excitement. The guy's all, "The fuckin' bear's back," he grabs his shotgun, goes outside and... we stay in the cabin with the wife and kids. Um, okay. Maybe we'll cut outside in a bit. then this strange hissing sound can be heard, and the man's wife decides to go outside to check on her husband. At this point I was torn between wanting to scream, "DON'T GO OUTSIDE YOU STUPID WOMAN! THE WIND IS HISSING AT YOU!" and egging her on because we might follow her. Only we don't, we stay with the kids, who get so scared they hide under the bed. No, don't go under the bed! Go outside! I want to know what's going on outside! Eventually what was outside comes <span style="font-style: italic;">inside,</span> that being Billy the Kid (Zack Ward), who this movie has recast as an evil, centuries-old Vampire with an East European accent. He walks around the place a bit, then sits down at the table the family had just been eating at, his back to the boys. He starts talking to them, asking them if they miss they're parents already, and they they'll be with them soon. Then two seemingly-disinterested henchmen just casually stroll in, drag (or more accurately, gently help up) the boys out from under the bed, as they put up almost no struggle,and take them outside, as Billy sits at the table hissing, blood round his chops. I have to applaude the filmmakers for the previous scene, I really do. They took what is an inherently awesome concept (VAMPIRE COWBOYS!) and introduced it in boring, unexciting way. That takes a special level of anti-talent, to take something like that and totally suck the cool out of it. Well done. To be fair, they make a better impression the second time we see them, which is the next day when they take over the entire town of Deliverance, kidnap more children, then Billy goes toe-to-toe with the The Sheriff (John Novak), taking four bullets in the chest and biting him on the neck. See? That was bad-arse, that's what I want with a film featuring Vampire Cowboys. He then makes the Mayor his bitch just by looking at him, gets invited to stay at his house, and brings Pyles with him so he can "bare witness to the greatest story ever told." "The Lord of the Rings?" (CONFESSION: I had "The Ultimate Guide to Anal Sex for Women" here right up until just before I published this thing, then chickened out at the last moment)<br /><br />It's after this, <span style="font-style: italic;">15 minutes into this movie,</span> that we finally meet the films hero and star, Rayne, played by Natassia Malthe, replacing Kristanna Loken. I recognised this woman the second I saw her on the box (which considering the amount of airbrushing going on was really impressive), but I couldn't place her. So off to IMDb I went to peruse he previous roles, and I've got tell you, the movies she's been in. When I think the best one on the list is "40 Days & 40 Nights," you're in trouble. There's was also a disturbing theme of her settling for Uwe Boll's leftovers, as she's also been in "Alone in the Dark 2" (which Boll didn't direct, but rather was replaced by two people, which amuses me because as it stands right now that film has a 4.4 quality rating, whereas the first one is at 2.2, meaning the doubling of directors also doubled the quality). Then I found the movie I'd seen her in before, and I felt like laughing and crying at the same time- she was one of Jennifer Love Hewitt's friends in <a href="http://cheaparsefilmreview.blogspot.com/2009/03/cheap-arse-film-review-22-social.html">"The Social Climber."</a> This movie. The gift that keeps on giving. I suppose she's not too bad here, but she's not really asked to do much beyond scowl and deliver the occasional quick comeback. She also looks great in a cowboy hat.<br /><br />Her destination is the shack the got attacked earlier, and as you'd expect, finding her friends dead and their children missing doesn't really sit well with her. As she grieves over the bodies, a man sneaks up behind her, and at knife-point tells her this was the work of Billy the Kid, that he's a "creature of the night." This man is played by Michael Pare, and as far as I can tell he's the lone cast member from the original movie returning for this one. He's not playing the same character as he did their though. His character isn't named in this scene, and as far as I can tell it's not mentioned until right at the very end, where it's casually thrown out that he's Pat Garret. Yes, <span style="font-style: italic;">that</span> Pat Garret, recast as a demon hunter. This movie could have been so fucking cool.<br /><br />He tells her that the children have probably been taken to Deliverance, which is where Rayne heads off to next. She arrives at nightfall, and instead of the quite little town we saw before, it's now buzzing with life, especially the bar, which has a new air of menace about it, mostly down to one man, Flintlock Hogan (Mike Dopud), one of Billy's Vampire goons, as he harasses waitresses, tells stories of killing men, even shooting a pint glass out of Pyles' hand (which he loves, as he seems to all of this). He's got a dirty mouth on him too, even going so far as to call Rayne the "C" word. It's his use of the word "cocksucker," or variations thereof, that made my ears prick up (no pun intended). He uses it three times, and by the last one I couldn't help think to myself, "Okay, I get it, you've seen "Deadwood." Well done." The funny thing is, as anybody who's seen Charlie Brooker's excellent show "Screenwipe" could tell you, the foul language in that show was a stylistic choice made by the creative team, done to replace the milder period curses that would more likely be used with modern one in order to help the audience connect with the earthiness and anarky of those times. So, not only have the writers ripped off a product of higher quality than they could ever hope to create, but in doing so they've managed to make their movie even less authentic without even realising it, probably.<br /><br />Flintlock and Rayne have a confrontation after he flirts with her in his own distinctive style (sexual assault), and we discover they have a history, which begs the question of why he didn't recognise her the second she walked in. Rather than kill him though, she briefly give him a stay of execution and even plays Poker with him and boys (one of whom is an Irishman so stereotypical that he may as well be three feet tall and wearing green). Of course the game turns nasty when she whups them all, and soon things are taken outside to be settled with bullets, the cocky Flintlock saying he's not afraid of Rayne, as since they last met he's fought, amongst other things, "Chinamen and Ninjas." VAMPIRE COWBOYS VERSUS NINJAS! THIS MOVIE I WANT TO SEE! Sadly I'm currently stuck with this one. Despite his tough talk, she dispatches with him and his friends rather quickly, using bullets treated with garlic and Holy Water. This angers The Sheriff, who since we last saw him has been Vampirized, and he has Rayne arrested and announces she'll be hung before the night is out. She decides this is bullshit and tries to escape, taking out two of his deputies, the music swells heroically... and then the Sheriff hits her on the head with his gun, knocking her out. Well, <span style="font-style: italic;">that</span> was embarrassing.<br /><br />Whilst in the jailhouse, she meets Muller (Brendan Fletcher), who had also come to town looking to take out Billy, and also like her is a Brimstone, as disinguished by his necklace. It's never explained what being a Brimstone is or entails, which frustrated the hell out of me. I know I just got done savaging "Camp Blood 2" for having too many flashback and exposition scenes, but there's got to be a happy medium between always filling us in on past history all the time, and totally ignoring it. There <span style="font-style: italic;">has</span> to be. They talk for a while, and figure out Billy's plan, that when the railroad is finished he'll have a constant stream of people coming in to turn and thus build up his army, keeping the town as normal as possible between then and now by having his people only feed on the children he's kidnapped. It's an interesting plan, but there are holes in it, the main one being the idea of feeding on the children. There are loads of Vampires walking around at this point, and as far as I can tell they only have something like seven or eight kids stashed away (minus one for the little girl Billy later eats, in a scene that actually managed to shock me, because I didn't think they'd have the guts to show him killing a child), so they would surely run out long before the railroad would be finished, and then what?<br /><br />Then Muller dies by being hung. Again, this shocked me, because I didnt think they'd go to all the trouble of introducing a new character who had important information and ambiguous ties to our heroine's backstory, and then kill him off roughly ten minutes later, but that's exactly what happens, and I can't decide if this is good or bad. It's something, that's for sure. So the time comes for Rayne to hang, but as everybody's busy faffing around, she slips out of her cuffs, does some damage, before diving into the water, which Vampires can't cross (even though they're not supposed to be able to enter people's homes uninvited, and they regularly break that rule throughout this thing), taking bullets as she does so, and having to be pulled out of the water by Garret. The next day, after we're treated to a shot of two Native Americans in a canoe for no apparent reason, was see Rayne lying on the ground by the river being tended to by Garret. We then finally get some backstory on her, that she's half-Vampire, a Dhampir, and that the only thing that can heal her wounds quickly is blood. Taking one for the team, Garret then cuts his arm and les the blood drip into her mouth, which gets her all excited to the point that he has to beat her away and tell her off like a bad puppy. And what does she say to him after he pretty much saves her life. "You could've used a cup." <span style="font-style: italic;">There's</span> gratitude for you.<br /><br />With Rayne on the mend, they decide the best way to save the town is to assemble a crew of people themselves. and by "crew," I mean two other people. The first is known simply as The Preacher (Michael Eklund), a sleazy, vaguely camp man they find in a church giving a fire-and-brimstone sermon, warning of the dangers of things like "the moist, warm lips between a virgin's thighs," before encouraging his flock to give all their money to him so that he may save them, which they all do, with the exception of Rayne and Garret, who just put his folded-up wanted poster in there. They then say they won't turn him in if he agrees to help them fight Vampires and... he agrees. Just like that. Even the characters are surprised. The next person they recruit is Slime Bag Franson (Michael Teigen)(how many Michaels are there in this thing?)(I just went and counted- four. <span style="font-style: italic;">Five</span> if you count Mike Dopud), who they find in a whorehouse. Rayne works her magic on him this time around, pretending to be a hooker and dancing around, with him liking what he sees so much he exclams, "I don't know where to start, the top or the bottom!" I often have the same dilemma. This is the only scene where Malthe gets to exhibit a positive facial expression, and man does she make the most of it. It's like she's so sick of frowning all the time that she's genuinely happy to do something else. She's adorable, frankly. It doesn't last long though, as she mounts him and shoves her gun in his mouth (sometimes a cigar is just a cigar, folks) and gets him to agree to help them pretty much through fear of death. He then asks if they're still going to fuck. I like this guy.<br /><br />With the gang all together, the prepare themselves by all becoming honourary Brimstone members (although Garret may have been one all along, as this is the first scene we see him wearing the Brimstone necklace, and he doesn't need to be given it by Rayne like the other two do. Again, this is never explained). And by having Preacher bless the water to turn it into Holy Water so they can coat their bullets with it. I couldn't make up my mind whether or not Preacher actually <span style="font-style: italic;">was</span> a man of God. At first it seemed like he was only running a scheme, as he curses and kills, and he even nails a hocker at the whorehouse. But here he is doing this for them. So I guess he really is a Preacher just a bad one. And you have to wnder how much weight the words of a man who's Holy in name only actually carries. So anyway, the head back to town, where everybody else is still too scared to do anything (with good reason, if you ask me), and all Hell breaks loose. Well, sort of. This is easily the most action-packed section of the film, but even here things just feel a bit flat and unexciting, which isn't helped by the constant use of slooooooow moooooootion. Boll has a tendancy to fall in love with certain tricks and special effects, and he was really into slowing down time when he made this one. At least there's no Bullet Time. Preacher and Slime Bag die within minutes, it's worth pointing out, so <span style="font-style: italic;">they</span> were worth bringing in. I like how useless all the heroes are in this thing- The Sheriff gets bit, Rayne gets knocked out and shot, her new friend from the prison cell gets hung, and now these two. Even the cowardly Mayor gets shot the second he grows a pair. These are really people worth rooting for. There's one good bit, where Rayne bursts into the room where the kids are being held, only to find them all hanging from nooses rigged to a trap that sprang to life the second she opened the door, forcing here to stay where she is holding the rope in order to stop them all dying. It's quite ingenius really, and one of the kids actually <span style="font-style: italic;">does</span> die because of it, and is then fed on by Billy, as he attempts to goad Rayne into letting go of the rope and joining him. It's spoilt however by how long it goes (over <span style="font-style: italic;">five bloody minutes!</span>), and in the end all she does is jump and cut all the ropes with her blade. Couldn't she have done that right at the start, before the boy died and Billy had a chance to feel up on her?<br /><br />The fight between the two is now on, and it's quite an intense showdown, but like everything else, it goes on too long and is plagued with slooooooow moooooootion. The end is at least cool, with Garret cutting Billy down with A GATLING GUN and Rayne sticking a stake in him. The surviving kids return to their families, and the next day, Rayne leaves to travel to Tombstone to help Wyatt Earp deal with The Clinton Gang (who are also Vampires in this awesome, <span style="font-style: italic;">awesome</span> universe), leaving the town in the hands of Garret and Pyles, who is inexplicably the new Sheriff. The movies last line? "Newton, life is like a penis- when it's hard you get screwed, when it's soft you can't beat it." Actually that's not the last line, the last line is Pyles saying, "I gotta right that down!" So have I?<br /><br />So, does this movie aide me in my theory that Boll improves with every movie he makes? Well... yes and no. It's better than "House of the Dead" and "Alone in the Dark," I don't think saying that would get me into too much trouble. But it still falls foul of the sins that blighted "In the Name of The King," that being terminal dullness, and here you don't have the big name actors to distract you or the occasional fun fight to break things up. The acting is either hammy or vacant, the script outright drops the ball several times with regards to logic (how come tere were any humans left in the town? Why didn't Billy have them all changed?), and don't even get me started on the presentation. Actually, <span style="font-style: italic;">do</span>- the film has some of the most distracting, shakey camera work I've ever seen. You know when you can tell this is happening intentionally, that the director wanted it that way stylistically, so as to give the film a kinetic energy? Well, that wasn't what they were going for here, I'm sure of it, it's just a case of the guy holding the damn thing couldn't stop twitching. Maybe he was bervous, and if that's the case I hope he never works on a big picture, otherwise he may cause an Earthquake.<br /><br /></span><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >FINAL VERDICT</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;font-family:courier new;" >BINNED!</span><br /></div><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiaIzMq2NpyIHN6QqfuPQyiHoLWyyR61RKKhZu0iKuZp16lflacarF0_FHZOGXK-GuH4A-icsl7fjpVysLbDrPMFweBtGHhK5oNuW4et5tYnNkwp1sSdciAWwu1bJm1L-L28xqQQlrmnkI/s1600-h/002.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiaIzMq2NpyIHN6QqfuPQyiHoLWyyR61RKKhZu0iKuZp16lflacarF0_FHZOGXK-GuH4A-icsl7fjpVysLbDrPMFweBtGHhK5oNuW4et5tYnNkwp1sSdciAWwu1bJm1L-L28xqQQlrmnkI/s400/002.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5319952012986724274" border="0" /></a><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">No, I haven't emptied my bin since the last time. It was only three days ago. STop shaking your head at me, you're not my Mother.<br /><br />Until next week (thankfully), I'm The Cheap-Arse Film Critic, and where the hell are you from? Krypton?<br /><br />(PS- First Killer Film review up <a href="http://www.killerfilm.com/film_reviews/read/camp-blood-cheap-arse-dvd-review-6107">here.</a> Y'know, just incase you want to read it. Again, for some of you.)<br /></span>The Cheap-Arse Film Critichttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08211046330068309653noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1161570503760263602.post-5426471613583256392009-03-27T17:20:00.000-07:002009-03-28T23:33:19.599-07:00The Cheap-Arse Film Review #25- "CAMP BLOOD 2."<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEikzF6Y9lJFjPz9ecxhjQZhEBxPNMHFhzkzE4hp4FyIO0p471LjWo7je_2DP2yAL45TZWmnJB-8C2wGm2ifpyUEZFkOwJ5lqsPeTiTXU8gJ6FU-mfdrU3iui3IYxhkFBMuGBzbq3QNSf9w/s1600-h/001.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEikzF6Y9lJFjPz9ecxhjQZhEBxPNMHFhzkzE4hp4FyIO0p471LjWo7je_2DP2yAL45TZWmnJB-8C2wGm2ifpyUEZFkOwJ5lqsPeTiTXU8gJ6FU-mfdrU3iui3IYxhkFBMuGBzbq3QNSf9w/s400/001.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5318488056105032514" border="0" /></a><br /><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >NAME:CAMP BLOOD 2</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >RATING: 18</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >RELEASED: 2000</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >WRITTEN AND DIRECTED BY: BRAD SYKES</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >STARRING: JENNIFER RITCHKOFF, GARRETT CLANCY, MISSY HANSEN</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >GENRE: HORROR SLASHER</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >BOUGHT FROM: POUNDLAND</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >PRICE: EVERY RATIONAL IMPULSE I'VE EVER HAD</span><br /></div><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br />I've seen alot of bad movies in my life. It's just the law oF averages, when you see as many as I do a year, you come to terms with the fact that not all of them are going to be masterpieces. Sometimes I'll even go to see a bad movie <span style="font-style: italic;">intentionally,</span> such as last January when me and my regular cinema buddy (hello Dean)(why did I just say hello to you? You've told me point-blank that you never read these) went to see "AVP2: Requium." We were under no illusions, we knew we were about to see a bad movie, but as he put it, "Sometimes you have to see something bad to remind yourself what good is." As it turned out, that movie was even worse than either of us anticipated and inspired me to write up a quick review and send it to some of my friends in an attempt to keep them from even considering watching it.<br /><br /></span><div style="text-align: left;"><span style="font-family:courier new;">The worst movie I've ever seen goes by the name "Feardotcom." Oh where to start when talking about this one? Well, firstly the plot is about as obvious a rip-off of the "Ringu" movies as you're ever going to see, with the killer video replaced by a kiler <span style="font-style: italic;">website.</span> Then there's everything else. Literally. Everything else. There is nothing good to say about this film. The script is moronic, the acting is atrocious (and in the case of Stephen Rea, provided by somebody who should have known better)(YOU WERE IN "THE CRYING GAME!"). Set design and cinematography combined to give the whole thing a look I affectionately refer to as "Se7en: The Animated Series." And to top it all off, there's one massive medical inaccuracy in there that anybody who knows me knew was <span style="font-style: italic;">always</span> going to get my goat. I don't feel like going into it here, just thinking about it is bringing my blood to a boil. I just wanted to put all that down so you could see what I judge all the bad movie against. If we're going to measure things on a percentage scale, I've probably seen more bad ones since I started this project than I have at any other time in my life. But in terms of actual quality, yeah, films like "Cheerleader Massacre" and "The Social Climber" were bad, but they're not in the same league "Feardotcom." They don't even play the same sport.</span><br /></div><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br />To date there has been only one movie that came in any way close to challenging that giant. It failed, but it at least found a home in my top five worst movies of all time, which even "The Social Climber" couldn't do. That movie was "Camp Blood," and the only reason it didn't take the number one spot is because it was clearly made with no money by people who didn't have a clue what they were doing, and I felt like showing a little mercy. Infact, I recently reread that review, and "merciful" is a good way to describe it, because even though I gave it a bad write-up, I could have gone on for hours savagely ripping it a new one. I think it's because I was still really new to this at that time and, I dunno, I felt bad about shitting on somebody else's work. I'm over that now, don't worry, and I'd actually like to go back and give it the going over it deserves. But it's too late, I've thrown it away, and I'm <span style="font-style: italic;">not</span> buying it again. So I suppose it's sequel will have to pay for its sins.<br /><br />Even before I'd put the bloody thing in my machine, my heart sank whilst reading the back of the box, seeing the running time listed at 90 minutes. "Oh sweet Jesus," I thought, "it's longer than the last one. Nearly <span style="font-style: italic;">twenty fucking minutes</span> longer." Thankfully, when I finally fired it up, I noticed two things- 1) the main menu was far easier to navigate than it was on the first one (I COULD SEE WHAT I WAS SELECTING!), and 2) once the film started I was informed that it actually only lasted <span style="font-style: italic;">73 minutes,</span> which was a pleasent surprise if nothing else.<br /><br />This installment begins almost identically to the last one, with two people, a male and a female, completely unrelated to the plot, walking through a forest. Sadly unlike the last time they're not birdwatchers, but rather just a boyfriend and girlfriend out on a stroll. The dude complains that he's hungry, so they sit down at the side of the trail. He has a drink ("Lemon and Lime! That's my favourite!") and before long he's telling her that where they are right now has a gory history, that it's known an Camp Blood, due to the fact that woman went crazy here last year and killed nine people and NO NO NO NO NO!!!! THAT IS NOT WHY IT'S CALLED CAMP BLOOD!!!! IT WAS CALLED CAMP BLOOD BEFORE THOSE MURDERS HAPPENED, BECAUSE OF A KILLING THAT TOOK PLACE YEARS PREVIOUSLY!!!! HOW CAN SOMEBODY RESPONSIBLE FOR THE SCRIPTS TO BOTH MOVIES SCREW UP THE HISTORY OF HIS OWN FILMS SO BADLY?!?! Oh God, I'm less than a minute-and-a-half into this and already it's got me yelling at the screen.<br /><br />Deep breath.<br /><br />Okay, maybe I flew off the handle needlessly there, maybe the script only had him mention this at all so he could set the practical joke he was about to attempt (more on this in a minute) into some kind of context, but I'm less willing to cut this film any slack because the first one regularly made a complete hash of it's own continuity, and this just seems like more of the same. Anyway, after telling her about the horrors that occurred there, he excuses himself to take a leak. At least thats what he tells her, the truth being he has a clown mask in his bag and intends to put it on and scare the shit out of her. As jokes go, I can appreciate this one. Sadly, he doen't get the chance to extract any fun out of it, as when he gets back to where she's sitting somebody has already got to her and slashed her throat. He looks at her in horror, slowly removing his mask.He then touches her, as if to say, "Are you okay?" only to have her body slump to the side, which made me laugh. He's then killed when the unseen attacker runs him through from behind with his knife. This is worth talking about because they had this exact same effect in the last movie, and when I was talking about the very few things there that I thought deserved some praise, I singled that effect out as looking decent for what they could afford. Here though it looks silly, as they linger on the wound and him grabbing at the knife too long, so we get a good long look at just how fake the torso is in the close-up scenes. So yes, the filmmakers actually managed to screw up something they got <span style="font-style: italic;">right</span> the first time around. The mask the guy was wearing gets trampled on by an unidentified pair of feet, the the camera pans slowly to the left and we see the original mask the killer wore lying on the ground. The Clown From Slipknot has returned!<br /><br />Following the credits (which happen over footage filmed with the mask pulled over the lense in a lame attempt to make this look and feel all first-person), we're reunited from the sole returning, um, star from the first movie, that being Tricia (Jennifer Ritchkoff). She too is walking through the forest, as dry ice swirls around her. She looks confused and upset (get used to this, it's her default facial expression) and appears to be looking for something, eventually finding the Clown mask just lying in her path. She approaches it, reaches over to pick it up, only for A HAND TO COME OUT OF THE GROUND AND GRAB HER WRIST! She pulls away screaming (which she's <span style="font-style: italic;">really</span> good at, it should be mentioned), and then... something comes out of the ground. I think it's supposed to be a zombie, but it doesn't look like one. It looks more the the Djinn from the "Wishmaster" movies. God what I wouldn't give to be watching one of those right now. Anyway, whatever this is, it picks up the mask, puts it on, and then runs after Tricia, knife in hand. She eventually comes to a dead end, that being a cliff, and turns around to see The Clown From Slipknot s nowhere to be found. Okay, killer popping up behind her in three, two, one... THERE HE IS! She gets grabbed, screames and...<br /><br />... back in the room! Or rather the nut house. I didn't really go into much detail about the first film's ending, mostly because I was bloody sick of the thing by that point, but the gist of it is, Tricia was accused of performing the killing herself and locked up in the funny farm, which would seem to be where she still is. Her doctor hears the screaming and comes to check on her, before telling her she has a visitor. She thinks it's "another shrink," but as it turns out, it's a movie director. He goes by the name Worth Milligan (Garrett Clancy), and he's come to Tricia and the whole hospital with a very outlandish request- he wants her to come to Hollywood and help him make his movie in a Technical Advisor role, which he's basing on the tragedy the year before. Yes, this movie is going META OUTTA NOWHERE by having the main plot based around a group of people essentially remaking the first film. Which is exactly how it's presented, as the script we hear people reading from is word-for-word perfect with actual scenes from part one. It's never explained how Worth would know all of this in such fine detail without having been there himself, but to be honest I was just pleased the film didn't use this as an excuse to go down the sub-"Scream" road and be all knowing and wink-wink nudge-nudge.<br /><br />Tricia is reluctant to go along with this plan, asking what's in it for her, his answer being that she could finally get her story out there and have people believe it. When she questions why anybody should believe what she says just because it's now a movie, Worth wheels out, "Two words- BLAIR. WITCH." (wow, this movie just time-stamped itself...). She still doesn't seem convinced, and he becomes more-and-more crazed in his attempts to convince her, at one point telling her she's bigger than Manson (I assume he meant Charlie and not Marilyn), and then telling her he can get her out of there under his supervision, prompting the doctor to step in and tell him he can't, and even if he tries he'll oppose him. THEN WHY DID YOU JUST SIT THERE AND LET HIM SAY ALL THAT THEN?! Surely there's something unethical and a bit dangerous in letting somebody get your patient's hopes up like that, especially when they're believed to have committed brutal crimes. Any doctor worth his salt would have heard the first few words of this pitch and told the guy to fuck off.<br /><br />Tricia is then lead back to her room, where she has a flashback to the events of the last movie. This goes on forever as we're shown what feels like almost whole scenes from beginning to end, but interestingly there seems to be a theme to them, that they all end with somebody telling Tricia she's nuts for believing The Clown From Slipknot exists. It would seem from this that they were trying to plant the seed that maybe Tricia <span style="font-style: italic;">is</span> crazy and that she did really kill all those people last year, which I would be fine with and might even have found an interesting twist... were it not for the fact that <span style="font-style: italic;">we've already seen The Clown From Slipknot kill two people whilst Tricia is still locked up,</span> thus making it impossible for her to be the killer. This movie. Anyway, she has a change of heart and asks to speak to Worth again, and before you know it, we're in LA (as identified by a far-off shot of the HOLLYWOOD sign and some footage of LA traffic)!<br /><br />Worth is going ahead with his movie, holding auditions with actresses in order to fill out his cast, an act he and his cameraman Shemp (the superbly-named Ken X) are carrying out when we catch up with them. The scene is an exact duplicate of one from the first movie, and it's acted terribly, but here's what baked my brain- the scene they're recreating was bad the first time around as well, but there it was <span style="font-style: italic;">supposed</span> to be good, whereas here it's terrible on purpous, so does this mean that this scene is technically speaking an <span style="font-style: italic;">improvement</span> on the first one, just because it's being carried out the way it was intended to be? Is anybody following me here?<br /><br />Wow, Melenie Griffith just appeared on my television selling some kind of Pilates equipment. That was a nice little distraction. Anyway, back to the movie.<br /><br />Finally, Tricia shows up with her doctor. I was pleased to see him there, because I was afraid she'd just show up on her own even though it's believed she's some kind of violent murderess. At least this way she has some supervision, I thought. Then Worth asks the doctor if he'd like something to drink, and he replies, "I won't be staying, I'm just dropping Tricia off." HE JUST DROPPING HER OFF! HE SAID ALL THAT STUFF ABOUT TRYING TO KEEP HER LOCKED UP, AND NOW HE'S JUST RELEASING HER BACK INTO THE WILD WITHOUT ANY SUPERVISION! Dear God, they're not even trying. So she's there, and already she gets freaked out by Shemp fooling around in the Clown mask. This dude, it should be mentioned, is a total charicature, an alcoholic who makes everybody feel uncomfortable from the first time they meet him until he... well, we'll get to that later. The film obviously wants us to think he's the killer, which is why I discounted him instantly. I had my money on Worth at this point, for what it's, um, worth. After the doc is gone (and not seen again), the first thing Worth has Tricia do is go through pictures of actors and choose who she thinks would be perfect for Steve. Of course, being asked to pick an actor that looks just like her dead boyfriend doesn't have a completely positive effect on Tricia's mental wellbeing, and as she's doing this she has another flashback, begins to freak out and says she needs some fresh air, practically running out of the room.<br /><br />It outside on the balcony that she meets Adrienne (Missy Hansen), an actress who says she's come to audition for a role in the movie. They exchange some banal pleasentaries, and by the time this scene had finished I'd decided she's the killer. It all just felt so random and pointless that the only reason for it to exist was for it to later be revealed to have had more importance than anybody realised. So, she turns up to audition, only to be too late, as the last role has been handed out to a really old, haggard-looking woman in a zebra-print top. Don't worry sweetie, happens to us all. So of course the next thing that must happen in the Zebra Lady has to die, and sure enough the next scene starts in her kitchen, with her talking on the phone and chopping up a banana with a very big knife. I don't know wy she's doing this. Maybe she's going to make herself a banana sandwich. I could go for a banana sandwich right about now. We then cut to her bathroom, where she's getting ready to step into the shower, allowing the director to show us he's improved in how he shoots nude scenes by coaxing her out of the <span style="font-style: italic;">bottom half</span> of her clothing, too (also, helloooooo obvious breast implant scars). In between these scenes, the camera work goes all first-person again, showing somebody sneaking into her house, getting as far as her kitchen, before seemingly being scared off by her phone ringing. She gets out of the shower, answers the phone to find nobody's on the other end of the line, drops her towel (of course), bends over to pick it up, and OH MY GOD THE CLOWN FROM SLIPKNOT IS STANDING RIGHT BEHIND HER! Even though she walked into the room in such a way that she'd be looking directly into the kitchen, and there didn't appear to be anywhere for him to hide. So he kills her, choking her a little bit, then stabbing her with the knife she was using to chop up that banana. I wish it wasn't so late, I really fancy that sandwich now.<br /><br />It now the next day, and Tricia shows up at Worth's office to meet the rest of the cast- there's Lance (Mark Overholt), a cocky wannabe ladies man who's playing Steve, Vanessa (Jane Johnson), the initially prim-and-proper object of Lance's affections who's playing Tricia, and Todd (Timothy Patrick), the only person who seems a little bit put out at the thought of being around Tricia, playing Jay. They're one cast member missing due to the fact that she's dead, and Tricia uses this chance to try and get Adrienne in the picture. Worth says sure, and hands her a pile of actresses photos, saying if she can find her amongst those, call the attached number and get her down there that second. Tricia runds off to another room and starts going through the pictures, finding hers and calling her. All seems to be going well, until The Clown From Slipknot shows up and starts chasing Tricia around the building, drawing the attention of the others. This turns out to be a red herring, as it's really that weirdo Shemp behind the mask, who falls to the floor giggling when he's discovered. Somehow this gets smoothed out, and the next time we see Tricia she's in a car with Worth and Shemp, driving to the camp, where Worth mentions that they're really going to be staying at for the entire shoot. This is the straw that breaks the camel's back for her, and she puts her foot down, saying she's not staying there. Like the bastard that he is, Worth says that's and that he'll have Shemp drive Tricia back to the insitution if that's more to her liking, which is enough to bring her back onside. From here the movie grinds to a hault for a bit as the next few scenes consist of then filming a scene that ends with Shemp drunkenly assulting Vanessa during the filming (which I think is supposed to get a laugh, because y'know, alcohol-induced man-on-woman violence is a riot),and then a scene around a campfire where we get <span style="font-style: italic;">another fucking flashback scene,</span> this one narrated by Tricia as she explains the events of the last film to everybody. How much more screen-time are we going to get dedicated to this? Did the people behind this really think there was a chance that they might have a few viewers out there that hadn't seen the first one?<br /><br />There is one mild piece of liveliness in between all this when we're introduced to Patrick (Patrick Thomas, here working under the name Courtney Burr), who's supposed to be an assistant or something. He's a fat, annoying piece of shit, who I couldn't decide was supposed to be a stoner or just suffering from some kind of mental instability, as he yo-yo'd from being stupid-but-friendly one minute to threatening to punch out the entire cast and crew the next. His stay in this film is a short one though, as he's sent off to get food for everybody (where they want him to do this in the middle of a forest, I've no idea), and he decides to slack off and smoke a joint, where he's discovered by The Clown From Slipknot. Thinking this is Shemp, he offers him a toke and ends up GETTING HIS FUCKING HAND CUT OFF, WITH BLOOD SPRAYING EVERYWHERE AS IT NOW LAYS ONTHE FLOOR STILL CLUTCHING THE DOOBIE! Okay, that... that was great, there's no other word for it.<br /><br />More deaths follow, and in traditional slasher fashion, the occur after a boinking, when Lance finds himself in a tent alone with Vanessa and she reveals herself to be something of a sex fiend when she starts peeling his shirt off. He's also not what he appears to be, as he ends up cumming within seconds of her climbing on top of him and being branded "all talk." So she kicks him out of her tent, where he's hacked to death, and she soon meets a sticky end when she has a knith thrusted into her muth and out the back of her head. Believe it or not, I'm going to offer the movie a little bit more praise here- when I covered the first one, I made note of the fact that, for a slasher, there wasn't much slashing going on, and we ended up with the hilariously lopsided situation where the movie had less the twenty minutes to kill off most of the main cast. Here, there have at least been killings, and they've not all happened at the same time, they've been scattered around a little bit. So, yeah, pacing. Seemingly the only thing Brad Sykes learnt in between his first movie and this one.<br /><br />The remaining five wake up the next morning to find Lance and Vanessa gone without a trace, which I don't buy, because I refuse to believe there was no blood or anything to be found. There's some more freaking out, with Todd (not unreasonably) suggesting that Tricia might be behind this. She flies into a rage, and following this the project is abandonned, with Worth the only person remaining at the camp site, where he too meets his end at the hands of The Clown From Slipknot when he gets the top of his head carved open. Tricia returns, feeling bad about leaving him, only to find that he... gone without a trace. Okay, this is getting stupid now. Where's the fucking blood? I saw a large puddle of it collect around Worth's head. You're telling me that was dealt with in this amount of time? Bullshit. From here the kills come thick and fast, with Todd getting his throat slit in a stream, and Shemp, after drunkenly trying to rape Tricia, getting his eyes plucked out byhis own broken booze bottle. Tricia herself is the attacked, but rather than geting killed, she's just knocked out, waking up surrounded by the dead bodies of the people she was working with. Well, almost all of them.<br /><br />Yep, as I expected, Adrienne turns out to be the killer, her reason being that she's the sister of Harris, the killer from the first movie, and refuses to believe Tricia's story. Show reveals her plan (which isn't worth going into here), and how she only originally planned to kill Tricia, but when she killed Zebra Girl, the thrill of the first kill proved addictive and she...<br /><br />... wait... <span style="font-style: italic;">that</span> was her first kill? The woman from the audition, <span style="font-style: italic;">she</span> was the first person she killed? That's what she's saying? THEN WHO KILLED THE TWO FUCKING PEOPLE AT THE BEGINNING OF THE MOVIE?! WHO?! WHO?! WHO?! WHO?! WHO?! WHOOOOOOOOOOOO?!?!?!<br /><br />FUCK!<br /><br />THIS!<br /><br />MOVIE!!!!<br /><br />I'm done with it. Tricia kills her by setting fire to her then hacking her with her own knife. Adrienne then gives her the clown mask in the most casual manner possible under the circumstances, then the movie ends.<br /><br />As much as I freaked out at the end there, to be fair, this is an improvement on the first "Camp Blood." But that's like saying, when the bomb isaboutto drop, blowing your own brains out would be an improvement on having to survive in a post-apocalyptic wasteland. This is an appalling movie and the people behind it's making should be ashamed of themselves, frankly.<br /><br /></span><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >FINAL VERDICT</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;font-family:courier new;" >BINNED!</span><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj1d7mI6XQtw6x08tSzIEbCO1mw6ouDm16VVgUiYoDJcuFHtjX0_BBlPils8nH8r11bUWPG3BXTowJfBNNIGNuDRykfZQ_DNcyRF6JnTWLMjBK3Dqj8WZ6hOKNX0h9YY8sd9m6e1q6_HrY/s1600-h/002.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj1d7mI6XQtw6x08tSzIEbCO1mw6ouDm16VVgUiYoDJcuFHtjX0_BBlPils8nH8r11bUWPG3BXTowJfBNNIGNuDRykfZQ_DNcyRF6JnTWLMjBK3Dqj8WZ6hOKNX0h9YY8sd9m6e1q6_HrY/s400/002.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5318488051343931682" border="0" /></a><br /></div><span style="font-family:courier new;">Thankfully there is no "Camp Blood 3." However, I recently (like, 30 seconds ago) discovered that Brad Sykes is still making movies, is most recent being "Plaguers" in 2008.<br /><br />I think this could be the beginning of an absolutely horrendous friendship.<br /><br />Until Wednesday, I'm The Cheap-Arse Film Critic, and I'm every nightmare you ever had, I'm your worst dream come true, I'm everything you were ever afraid of.<br /></span>The Cheap-Arse Film Critichttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08211046330068309653noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1161570503760263602.post-80715137194111435082009-03-22T03:24:00.000-07:002009-03-25T14:36:38.608-07:00The Cheap-Arse Film Review #24- "HERCULES IN NEW YORK."<div style="text-align: center;"><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj_m2gEOKNNIyYtIWPBB17y2z6Y8JkGhZCo07g858etvode5L30GSunMKnA99WVxJrj01xqxBWqg88dFqTvtn1bfIe6kOzKMx9TWsHBnZsR5YPBlzYi3txfsXmkkU6pF-cVHjoru5-n28E/s1600-h/001.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj_m2gEOKNNIyYtIWPBB17y2z6Y8JkGhZCo07g858etvode5L30GSunMKnA99WVxJrj01xqxBWqg88dFqTvtn1bfIe6kOzKMx9TWsHBnZsR5YPBlzYi3txfsXmkkU6pF-cVHjoru5-n28E/s400/001.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5316936856302671122" border="0" /></a><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >NAME: HERCULES IN NEW YORK</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >RATING: PG</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >RELEASED: 1970</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >WRITTEN BY: AUBREY WISBERG</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >DIRECTED BY: AUTHUR ALLAN SEIDELMAN</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >STARRING: ARNOLD SCHWARZENEGGER (AKA ARNOLD STRONG "MR UNIVERSE"), ARNOLD STANG, ERNEST GRAVES, DEBORAH LOOMIS, TAMMY MCDONALD</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >GENRE: COMEDY</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >BOUGHT FROM: A BOOTSALE</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >PRICE: £1.00</span><br /></div><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br />Okay, <span style="font-style: italic;">that</span> took longer than I thought it would. As did this. The upshot being that this review is going up six days late. A new record. Don't worry, I'm aware this is bullshit and intend to use this week to set it right by getting two reviews up, including the landmark (HA!) 25th edition.<br /><br />What I'm about to say here is 100% legit my opinion. It's not intended to be humourous or sarcastic, and here's no irony in it whatsoever... I believe Arnold Schwarzenegger (or Arnie, or Ahnold, or The Governator, whatever you want to call him) is an inspiration. Some of you may not like his movies, some of you may not like his politics, but the fact remains that he's a living, breathing embodiment of The American Dream, the ultimate immigrant story of a man coming to the US from a far away land and making all his dreams come true. Infact, he probably ran out of dreams some time ago and just started making up new ones for shits and giggles. "Hmmm, today ah think ah shall become governah ov califooorniah." (Christ, even typed out my Austrian accent is offensive. I apologise). And for those of you who believe he's just a talentless chancer who got lucky, well, I don't care if he is, because if I'm honest I think that makes it a little bit <span style="font-style: italic;">better.</span> </span><br /><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">And I don't think he <span style="font-style: italic;">is</span> talentless. I mean, look at the people that most would consider his peers- Lundgren? Nowhere. Seagal? A cautionary tale that is currently being covered by my friend Redunbeck on <a href="http://redunbeck.blogspot.com/">his blog.</a> Van Dam? Straight-to-video Hell, with even his big comeback movie "JCVD" bypassing cinemas over here. Stallone? Making up for lost time by shamelessly plundering his past. And this was a man who wrote and starred in a movie that won <span style="font-style: italic;">Best Picture at The Oscars.</span> The only person I'd even put anywhere near Arnold's level is Bruce Willis, but he was always more than just an action star anyway. I get the feeling that happened to him almost by accident. So with all that carnage behind him, there has to be a reason why he was the last one standing, why even his stinkers like "End of Days," "The 6th Day" and "Eraser" (has anybody actually seen this movie? I've never spoken to a person who has, or at least will admit to it) got the red carpet treatment and were presented as big deals when released. There had to have been something about him that set him apart and made special, that made him... <span style="font-style: italic;">Arnie.</span> And as with most things in life, the best way of understanding something is to go back and see how it began. Which brings me to this, his first movie filmed nearly fourty years ago (and that fact alone nearly sent my head spinning).<br /><br />But first, BOX REVIEW! It's a Boulevard Entertainment release, so I have to, really. Well, at first glance, nothing really jumps out at you. It looks really cheap, but that's par for the course with these guys. The layout's fairly standard, there's no silliness in the credits box. They even managed to spell "Schwarzenegger" right, which makes me want to give them a medal. However, when I looked closer, I spotted something... odd. Not a mistake really, just... odd. On the front cover is a little red oval box thing with text inside it that reads, "FEATURING ARNOLD'S REAL VOICE FOR THE FIRST TIME." This is in reference to the fact that, when it was first released, Arnold's voice was dubbed throughout the movie, and now that has been removed. Alright, fine. Nothing odd about that. What is odd, though, is the fact that the text in the box ends in a full stop.<br /><br />Look.<br /></span><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEga_Du9tvQsqpXg_LvjIk-rg0MZMWNPxIEqn2K3EbrqFIiY9wpuHlqClecGQc7JUx4NfE2BsdUSlgYA3MIS4fDZhW8Ka5M16xa9XRBNVoP3jX2ZxZWvFKJ4A5F74xKv2ziQcDXVGjUwoKM/s1600-h/002.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEga_Du9tvQsqpXg_LvjIk-rg0MZMWNPxIEqn2K3EbrqFIiY9wpuHlqClecGQc7JUx4NfE2BsdUSlgYA3MIS4fDZhW8Ka5M16xa9XRBNVoP3jX2ZxZWvFKJ4A5F74xKv2ziQcDXVGjUwoKM/s400/002.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5316936850568030066" border="0" /></a><span style="font-family:courier new;">That's not usually how these things are done. Usually, when you're trying to alert people to things this way, you either just let the words hang there without punctuation, or use punctuation to imply this is something to get excited about. "FEATURING ARNOLD'S REAL VOICE FOR THE FIRST TIME!" See how an exclamation point changes that whole sentence? Isn't that an improvement? If I didn't know better, I'd say it almost looks like the person in charge of putting together the box art for this thing was subtly making fun of the movie. "Watch this. It's got Arnold's real voice in it. Yay."<br /><br />The actual box itself is worth mentioning too, as it's one of those super-thin ones.<br /></span><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhi5W7EHS5U0trjF_4dTGqdLCVxeqUkNxTPMuPa0KRVIbFKBSSNEJ1ldMqli5Y8s_3DjGsng2xE8D64fFKO3wAY2dK9YORQfdqEG9NhLCzeP_fKLOhZCMnpgYA84Bj5tJc_AVPqJ04E3nc/s1600-h/009.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhi5W7EHS5U0trjF_4dTGqdLCVxeqUkNxTPMuPa0KRVIbFKBSSNEJ1ldMqli5Y8s_3DjGsng2xE8D64fFKO3wAY2dK9YORQfdqEG9NhLCzeP_fKLOhZCMnpgYA84Bj5tJc_AVPqJ04E3nc/s400/009.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5316936849433717362" border="0" /></a><span style="font-family:courier new;">Now, I both like and dislike these. I like them simply because they're easy to store. I did a little comparison once and found that, were all my DVD boxes this thin, I could have got roughly three times as many of them on one shelf. Which is great. But they're <span style="font-style: italic;">not,</span> which is why I hate them, because when I see them sitting alongside all my regular-sized boxes, looking all skinny and different, it makes my OCD want to cry. I just don't like it. I'm the kind of man who has his books on a shelf in height order, there's nothing I can do about this.<br /><br />The film opens with stock footage of some snowy mountains, and a voice tells us the following- "Far in the dim past, when myth and history merged into mystery (I don't know what this means), and the Gods of fable, and the primitive beliefs of man dwelt on ancient Mount Olympus in antique Greece, a legendary hero walked God-like upon the Earth... sometimes." We're then taken to Olympus, which looks like some hippy commune (there's even a girl skipping around waving what looks like a white scarf), and as the box trumpeted, we here Arnold's voice. And by Christ, it's nearly incomprehensible. If you think he accent is thick now, you'd think you were listening to an alien if you watched this. Throughout this entire movie, there were lines I didn't understand, rewound back several times to have another go at, still didn't get, so eventually just said fuck it and moved on. His delivery is also <span style="font-style: italic;">so</span> stilted, and his expression <span style="font-style: italic;">so</span> blank, that most of the time it looks like he doesn't really understand what he's saying. Maybe he didn't, I'm not sure how great his grasp of the English language was at this point. I completely understand why they felt the need to dub him, I'll just say that. I also can't remember seeing him this big on film before, not even in the "Pumping Iron" documentary. He's <span style="font-style: italic;">huge,</span> like uncomfortably huge (that's what she said), which I guess works for the role, but it was probably for the best that he later dropped alot of that mass.<br /><br />I'll also address this before I go any further- yes, I'm aware that the movie totally fucks up the mythology it presents, confusing characters from Greek and Roman religions. For instance, when he appears later, Pluto is obviously supposed to be Hades, ruler of the Greek version of Hell, and Hercules himself should be called Heracles. They even briefly throw in Sampson from The Bible at one point. I know I should probably get all hot and bothered about this, but I can't be arsed, simply because I'm watching a movie called "Hercules in New York." It's not meant to be taken that seriously, so I'm not going to. The only place I wish they'd been a bit stricter is with the naming of Zeus' wife, calling her Hera instead of Juno, because the only thing I can associate that name with now is heavily-pregnant jailbait.<br /><br />He's talking to his father, Zeus (Ernest Graves, who seems to be attempting to make up for the supposed stars lack of presence by being panto-levels of broad with every line he utters), trying to talk him into letting him go to Earth, as he's bored with Olympus and "tired of the same old faces, the same old things." This angers Zeus, and he decides to punish his wayward Demi-God son by... sending him to Earth. Okay then. The way he does this is to strike him with lightening (brilliantly represented by a small metal spear that's been shaped to look all wavy) and teleport him to to Earth in a puff of rubbish fireworks. When I say "to Earth," I mean the basic vicinity around the planet, because the first person who sees him is an old lady on an plane as he falls past her window, waving and smiling (and Arnold's smile is so goofy as he goes past that I couldn't help burst out laughing). She starts to freak out, yelling about what she's just seen, in the manner of somebody trying to impersonate a stereotypical gay man, all high-pitched screeching and exaggerated hand gestures. She's eventually subdued by an oxygen mask, and we move on.<br /><br />Hercules lands in the ocean and is seemingly about to drown. We don't see any of this, it'd be far too expensive to film, but rather we're told this by Zeus and those around him who are watching the action in a big crystal ball thing. They beg Zeus to save Hercules, and he reluctantly does so by having a ship find him and bring him on-board. We don't get to see this, either, the next time we see Herc he's already on the ship towelling off in a manner that allows him to flex his muscles. There's a brief scene of them questioning where he comes from and how he got to be in the middle of the ocean, before we get our first evidence that Herc is, well, a bit of a dick- the Captain insists that he refer to him as "Sir" when he speaks to him, which prompts Herc to tell him that "No men are superior to Hercules." Then in the next scene we join a fight in progress as Herc is beating up the entire crew. What have they done to anger him so, you're wondering? They asked him to do some work. At first it's assumed that because he's a foreigner maybe he didn't understand what was being asked of him, but he himself soon clears things up by saying, "I understood him. He is most disagreeable, and he has irritated me." At least I think that's what he says, this s one of those lines I had to rewind. Either way, what a jerk. The fight scene is laughable as well, like all of them in this movie are, consisting of Arnie chucking men around and throwing lame punches.<br /><br />After that you'd think they'd want him off their ship as soon as possible, but once they dock and Herc tries to leave, they try to put a stop to this, leading to another fight scene where Herc fends off several men with a large piece of wood. It's here the first inconsistancy emerges, as it's established moments later that Herc has superhuman strength when he stops a forklift moving with his bare hands, yet here he has genuine trouble wrestling five men pushing against the wood he brandishes. He's a Demi-God, he should be able to throw them into the sun if he wanted to. It's somewhat redeemed though by the bit where Arnold seems to be having so much fun that he breaks character and starts smiling. He flees the scene with Pretzie (Arnold Stang), so called because he sells pretzels, who gets him into a cab and immediately becomes his best friend. There's so much I want to say about both the man and the character that if I allow myself free reign I may still be sitting here <span style="font-style: italic;">next</span> week, so I'm going to to try and keep this brief. First, his appearance. God bless him, I'm sure he is (or was, I'm not altogether sure about his... living status) a nice guy, but the fact remains, he looks like a cartoon turtle, appropriate for a man who provided the voice for several animated characters (including TOP CAT!). And what a voice. I've been trying to come up with a way to describe his voice that won't offend anybody, and this is the best I could come up with- it is like every neurotic thought and emotion that has every been had or ever <span style="font-style: italic;">will</span> be had has been squeezed into one tiny body. He's like a living panic attack, even when he's happy.<br /><br />In the cab, introductions are made, they make small talk, Pretzie mentions another Greek guy he knew named Apollo, who Herc assumes must have been <span style="font-style: italic;">the</span> Apollo, before they get out and Pretzie asks Herc to pay for the cab. Of course, Herc has no money, has very little knowledge of the concept, and anyway, the man driving the "chariot" should be satisfied with the fact that he's ferrying Hercules around, shouldn't he? As anyone who's ever been to New York will tell you, this was never gonna fly, so Pretzie resigns himself to the cabbie calling the cops, which he says he will, once he's pounded on them some himself. I swear, at this point it's starting to look like Herc's face is magnetic and everybody's fists are are made of metal. The fight doesn't last long, Herc just throws the guy into a bush and then turns his taxi over. I love how the hero of this movie is remorselessly raining down pain and destruction upon the city.<br /><br />As they run away from yet another person Hercles has managed to piss off, he and Pretzie stumble across a bunch of college kids training at baseball and other various athletic events, being watched by Professor Camden (James Karen) and his daughter Helen (Deborah Loomis). Of course Herc once again acts like a total douche to the coach, saying he could do better then all of them, as he competed in the first Olympics in Greece, and instead of just calling him a loony and telling him to fuck off, as would happen in real life, because this is a movie he's invited to compete against his best students in discus throwing, javelling and long jump, trouncing them all and getting the attention of the Professor and Helen. At this point I thought I had the plot figured out- they're going to get Herc into the college so that he can compete in all these sports for them, and along the way he'll fall in love with Helen. Suffice to say, that isn't what happens. All that really comes out of this is Herc and Helen become friends, and that really is all they become. There's a hint of romance at the beginning, but it never goes anywhere, there's no kissing, just a bit of arms around the shoulders action.<br /><br />Their friendship gets off to a rocky start though, due to the fact that Hercules makes a fool of himself (what a surprise!) when invited round the Professor's house. It doesn't start off well, when in the previous scene the Professor invites them round for tea, and Pretzie instantly assumes they want to do drugs (it <span style="font-style: italic;">was</span> the seventies), and continues to degenerate the second they arrive. First Herc tells Helen she reminds him of a God, which is quite a nice thing to tell someone, but only after you've known them for a while. And even then, it's not just something you'd just blurt out. But Herc does and this of course makes Helen uncomfortable. Then Rod shows up. Herc asks if they're "lovers," insisting that it's "unnatural" for a man and a woman to be friends and not be lovers. Didn't Billy Crystal say something similar to that in "When Harry Met Sally?" Anyway, <span style="font-style: italic;">another</span> fight breaks out, ending with Hercules picking up Rod in bodyslam position and just holding him there as he squirms, as Pretzie and Helen practically beg him to put him down. We then cut back to Zeus in Olympus still watching all of this, who uses alot of words to basically say, "Kids, who'd fucking have 'em?" Timejump to the next day, where the Professor and Helen are sitting at their dining table discussing yesterday's "amusing situation," with the doctor finding Herc "original" and "refreshing," wanting to study him further. Helen initially doesn't seem to find it amusing at all, saying how this "crazy," "primitive" man injured her friend... boyfriend... whatever, and then thought nothing of inviting her out on a date. "Well of course you told him..." the Professor says, Helen completing the sentence with "... I would." Yes, he assaulted an... associate of hers, and she found this manly and irrisistable. Dames, eh? She then sits there with a moronic grin on her face as the Professor drinks his tea.<br /><br />And then the movie peaks. It achieves a level of greatness it had no hope of getting anywhere near again. And it does this by having Arnold wrestle a man in a bear costume. It goes like this- whilst Herc and Helen are out on their date, which seems to mostly consist of them riding around on a horse and cart, we cut away to see a zoo keeper discover that one of his cages open, then hear on the radio that a bear is on the loose. This is followed by a shot of the "bear" runnning. Even though it was running away from the camera and thus we could only see it from behind, it was obviously a guy in a suit, and I thought to myself, "There's no way they'll go with that alone. Not even a production like this. They'll save it for close-ups of the two of them fighting, then use stock footage of a real bear roaring and stuff like that."<br /><br />Oh how wrong I was.<br /><br />They have no shame about how shitty this looked. The first time we see the costume from the front and it's revealed just how Mickey Mouse it looks (I once wore a bear costume to school for charity, and I think the costume I wore looked infinitely better than the one they have here), the dude gets up on a rock and appears to start doing The Robot. He then runs in front of the carriage, inciting the wrath of Hercules, who leaps to the ground and proceeds to wrestle it, even managing to work in a Judo chop to the skull, as Helen sheriks and at one point exclaims, "BEAT 'EM UP!" I never thought the day would come when I would bare witness to the Governor of California grappling with a man in a bad fancy dress costume. What a strange and wonderful world we live in. Herc eventually wins the day, the next morning's paper proclaiming him a hero, bringing him to the attention of a local wrestling promoter who wants him to fight for him. It's revealed that Herc and Pretzie have been staying in a hotel, and need make some money in order to pay the bill they've been running up, so they're really in no position to say no. Like before, I assumed I had what would happen next figured out from this point- Herc would become a wrestler, and the rest of the movie would follow his adventures in that profession. As it turns out, I was wrong again. We don't even see him do any wrestling, we see one shot of him with a guy on his shoulders, and that's it. It's like anything vaguely interesting has to happen off-screen (bear fight excluded). This brings Hercules to the attention of some gangsters, who... they're just making this up as they go along now, aren't they? Almost none of the scenes in this movie up to this point really connect with each other in any way you could call a story, they're just random happenings that either feature or are about Hercules in some way. Anyway, the Gangsters (one of whom I was convinced was a young Vincent Pastore, but I can find no evidence of this anywhere), strong-arm Pretzie into signing a contract meaning they pretty much own Herc and make money off his wrestling career. And <span style="font-style: italic;">once again</span> I thought I knew where this was going, that Herc would discover this and go on a rampage (well, as big a rampage as the budget would allow), finding the Gangsters and tearing up the contract. But nope, nothing really comes of this until the very end, and I can assume Herc either doesn't know he's now generating revenue for organised crime, or he just doesn't care. Pretzie becomes depressed due to this, hits the bottle, and... OH MY GOD IT'S A PLOT!<br /><br />Well, a bit of one. Zeus, growing increasingly displeased by Hercules making a fool of himself down below, at first dispatches Nemesis to go after him and punish him by sending him to The Underworld for 100 years, but stays his hand when Mercury pleads with him not to be so harsh with his half-brother, calling him "simple and a bit childish" (that's right, the movie just outright stated it's hero is <span style="font-style: italic;">slow</span>), and that he should go instead and attempt to talk him into returning. After everyone except Juno agrees this would be the better thing to do, Zeus agrees, and Mercury travels to New York, via Helecopter, wearing a pretty damn nice suit. They meet up in Herc's hotel room after he arrves home from another day out with Helen (where the filmmakers find another excuse for him to take his shirt off and start flexing), and Mercury does his best make him come round to their father's way of thinking, only to be totally brushed-off. As far as acting goes, this may be Arnold's worst scene in the entire movie. It's definitely the most dialogue that's been asked of him so far, and he's totally out of his element. I was going to wait until the end of the review to talk about this, but this scene seems like the perfect place to address it... I think I've figured out why Arnold had more of a career that the rest of the action movie old-guard- he was willing to put in the work. Whereas the rest of them found ther level and pretty much stayed there, Arnold actually wanted to improve. He made better contacts, which lead to him making better movies, and even got better as an actor. The whole time I was watching this, I had so much trouble reconciling this hulking, scared-looking lump of wood in front of me with the what he would later become. He was never going to win any awards, but at least he figured out how to bring a little personality to the roles he played.<br /><br />Getting back on track, Mercury reluctantly leaves, flying out the window after telling Herc to be careful. This entire exchange happened in front of a very drunk Pretzie, who had been reading up on Greek myths the last time we saw him, and had pretty much had the fact that his friend is the real Hercules confirmed right in front of him. Of course the fact that he was drunk means means nobody he tells the next day believes him (the scene going on before this is awesome, by the way- it consists of the Professor, Helen and Rod sitting around talking about how there's obviously something psychologically wrong with Herc, but that in spite of that they all like him, even Rod, who claims to do so "even if he did crack two of my ribs." HE LIKES HIM EVEN THOUGH HE CRACKED TWO OF HIS RIBS). Back in Olympus, it's on now, as Zeus has had enough and sends Nemesis on her mission. However, before she can go, she secretly meets with Juno, who gives her a <span style="font-style: italic;">new</span> mission- drug Hercules with a powder that temporarily takes away his divinity, rendering him a normal man, and thus able to die. She does this, slipping the powder into Herc's drinks at a bar, then travels to The Underworld (which is represented by some smoke, a red light and a black metal gate) to speak with Pluto (Michael Lipton), telling him about Juno's plan, and asking him to find a creative way of killing Hercules so that his soul can be condemned. And the plan he comes up with <span style="font-style: italic;">is</span> pretty ingenius, I'll give him that- he travels to Earth from The Underworld (and his arrival is pretty creatively done- he emerges from the the New York subway system and causes a mass blackout), and meets up with the Gangsters who own Hercules, putting an obscene amount of money on him losing an upcoming televised weightlifting contest, knowing that these men would suspect Herc of purpously losing if he did so.<br /><br />So the day of the contest comes, and Herc, due to the fact that he's lost his God powers, loses. I did like the fact that they realised that even though he's no longer superhuman, he's still a big strong guy, and he managed to make two successful lifts before failing. But he still fails, and as Pluto had hoped, the Gangsters suspect a double-cross, and a chase is now on, with them following Helen and the Professor in their car, and Herc and Pretzie in hot persuit of the both of them on a chariot they stole from a man dressed in a tiger-print singlet buying a hot dog (it's New York, I've seen stranger things than that there, believe me). The final stand takes place in an abandoned warehouse, where the Gangster's overwhelm Herc and start putting the boots into him. Everything seems to be going to shit, until up in Olympus Zeus sees what is happening and asks why this has been done to Hercules when it was clearly not what he asked (because y'know, sending your son to Hell for 100 years is a <span style="font-style: italic;">much</span> nicer punishment than making him a mortal). It comes out that this was all Juno's doing, and the Gods then save Herc and his friends, first by sending down two of their own to act as back-up, then with Zeus himself granting Herc back his divinity, just in time for him to be able to push some big but not terribly heavy looking cardboard tubes onto the Gangsters. And that's that.<br /><br />Following this, Herc returns to Olympus without any good reason after defying is father's wishes for the entire film. He doesn't even say goodbye to Pretzie, he just disappears, although he later communicates with his friend through his radio, saying he'll always be there for him. The voice coming out of the radio clearly doesn't belong to Arnold, it's probably the voice of the guy they originally got to do the dub. Pretzie sits for a second, whistfully thinking about all the strange things he and Herc got up to, before suddenly declaring, "I think I'll eat an apple." He then gets up and walks out of shot, presumably to go get an apple. The film ends with Hercules telling his father all about his time on Earth, and his father deciding it might be fun to visit the place himself, which he does dressed in a suit and a bowler hat, scaring a plane full of people as he floats down.<br /><br />I have to be totally honest with you here- I have no idea what to do with this movie. On the one hand, it's clearly not very good. It's amateurishly shot even when you take into account the time it was made and the fact they clearly weren't working with alot of money, the script makes no sense, literally all the fights are terrile, and most of the acting is awful, especially Arnold's contribution. But on the <span style="font-style: italic;">other</span> hand it's got a certain goofy charm, there are a couple of fun turn amongst the dross (most notably Graves, Stang and Michael Lipton, wo makes the most of his brief screen-time), and I got to see The Terminator wrestle a guy dressed as a bear. Plus, the fact that it's Arnold's first movie is a big mark in its favour straight away, as it's worth owning for historic reason if nothing else.<br /><br />I don't know what to do. I'm at a total loss.<br /><br />...<br /><br />... Fuck it, I'm tossing a coin. I am going to let this movie's fate rest on the toss of a coin. I have a 20p piece sitting next to my laptop right now, and as soon as I'm done typing this, I'm going to flip it. Heads I keep the movie, tails I bin it. Okay, here I go.<br /><br />IT FELL DOWN THE BACK OF MY FUCKING BED! Not ever The Fates themselves know what to do with this movie. Right, I'm going to go get another coin out of my jeans, be right back.<br /><br />Okay, got it. One more time. Heads, kept. Tails, binned.<br /><br />Heads.<br /><br /></span><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >FINAL VERDICT</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;font-family:courier new;" >KEPT!</span><br /></div><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgbJEfwXoAYRPJnjJ1pSMTzoAX9OKlSHqbtNpTZWtX2CTkYN2OsrIxk5VdANEVXgcYwWWWxEtUsGEq6GLgfwY6R5407deY6S1gS9i3HzDzRrLCZH4aJU-s-3y6VbywDQTQxssuKnhRVuIQ/s1600-h/006.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgbJEfwXoAYRPJnjJ1pSMTzoAX9OKlSHqbtNpTZWtX2CTkYN2OsrIxk5VdANEVXgcYwWWWxEtUsGEq6GLgfwY6R5407deY6S1gS9i3HzDzRrLCZH4aJU-s-3y6VbywDQTQxssuKnhRVuIQ/s400/006.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5316936848221554466" border="0" /></a><span style="font-family:courier new;">LOOK AT IT! LOOK HOW WRONG IT LOOKS NEXT TO MY OTHER MOVIES! IT'S SO SMALL I CAN BARELY SEE IT! AND IT'LL LOOK WEIRD SANDWICHED BETWEEN OTHER BOXES! I DON'T LIKE IT!<br /><br />Lastly, some notes. As most of you will probably be reading this on the Wednesday (I'm still considering this Tuesday due to my rule that the day isn't over until I've gone to sleep), my first proper review should be up on <a href="http://www.killerfilm.com/">Killer Film.</a> It's a reprint of the second review I ever did, with some slight rewriting and re-editing. I know some of you have already read it, but I knw there's a god chance quite a few of you haven't, so please feel free to go over there and take a look at it. I have to say, rereading it whilst editing it was a strange experience.<br /><br />Finally, I don't usually give clues to what the next movie I'm going to review will be, but I have to say, the review that's going up over there tomorrow is very... fitting, considering what I'll be covering on Friday or Saturday.<br /><br />Until Friday or Saturday, I'm The Cheap-Arse Film Critic, and there <span style="font-style: italic;">is</span> no "us," you psychopathic bitch!<br /></span>The Cheap-Arse Film Critichttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08211046330068309653noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1161570503760263602.post-23479097724696764592009-03-09T08:06:00.000-07:002009-03-11T21:59:05.232-07:00The Cheap-Arse Film Review #23- "NORTH BY NORTHWEST."<div style="text-align: center;"><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg179NpZ8CPbbWzVFdExw8Vd8xD6SD_GWKrg_yGOInND8k-8YfK9AmTb5vngOFxYjDLVjnPQ6X4xKkzCsWfTdXMSOBO3BYc_L2o2vpGXB_oRy7F1WhbJmbC8xmYzcmEq5biso4bWu4MJRA/s1600-h/001.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg179NpZ8CPbbWzVFdExw8Vd8xD6SD_GWKrg_yGOInND8k-8YfK9AmTb5vngOFxYjDLVjnPQ6X4xKkzCsWfTdXMSOBO3BYc_L2o2vpGXB_oRy7F1WhbJmbC8xmYzcmEq5biso4bWu4MJRA/s400/001.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5312160969578866322" border="0" /></a><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >NAME: NORTH BY NORTHWEST</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >RATED: PG</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >RELEASED: 1959</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >WRITTEN BY: ERNEST LEHMAN</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >DIRECTED BY: ALFRED HITCHCOCK</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >STARRING: CARY GRANT, JAMES MASON, EVA MARIE SAINT, MARTIN LANDAU</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >GENRE: SPY THRILLER</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >BOUGHT FROM: CEX</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >PRICE: £1:00</span><br /></div><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br />At this point, there are certain words in the English language that mean absolutely nothing. "genius," for a start, used to be a word that summed up people who were at the very forefront of their chosen field and continuously coming up with things that changed both it and in some cases the very world around us. Now it's used to describe a man in a guerilla suit playing the drums (I'm not hating on the guerilla here, I just want to make sure everybody knows that). "Nazi?" Pfft. The second kids started calling their school dinner ladies this it may as well have been the name of a Care Bear. I have had friends who have been going out with women less than a month before they start introducing them to people as their "fiancee." That one <span style="font-style: italic;">really</span> rubs me the wrong way for some reason. I think it's because is seems like something a child pretending to be an adult would say, which would be fine if we weren't all in at least our early twenties at this point. You planning on marrying her? Got even a rough date in mind? Does she have a ring? No? Then she's not you Fiancee, she's your <span style="font-style: italic;">girlfriend.</span> Shut up.<br /><br />Those are a few of the famous ones that get mentioned whenever this subject is brought up, but I'd like to throw "ashamed," and variations there of, into the ring. Because think about it, how many times in your life have you ever said you were "ashamed" of something when in reality you weren't? You felt bad about something, don't get me wrong, or you felt that something was really letting the side down, but you were never really <span style="font-style: italic;">ashamed.</span> I don't think alot of people really know what being ashamed actually feels like. I didn't, not until the day I was at a family gathering and heard a relative, who has had a long battle with Cancer that has resulted in several surgeries, talk about how she redecorated two rooms in her house from scratch completely on her own, as I sat there thinking about how there are days I can't even be bothered to make the bed.<br /><br />So I'm not going to say I'm ashamed of myself for not having seen more Alfred Hitchcock movies, but I will I'm... <span style="font-style: italic;">surprised</span> at myself. I can't even be vague about the number, I know exactly how many I've seen- I've seen "Psycho," I've seen "The Birds," I've seen <span style="font-style: italic;">some</span> of "Rear Window," and that's it. Worst of all, I can't really give a decent reason why. There's a chance it could be my contrary nature. Everytime somebody tells me I have to see something, or that I'll love this or that, I suddenly lose all desire to see it. It's probably a layover from me teenaged years when I had to be the first person to discover something, otherwise it was meaningless (yes, we've been over this before, I'm well aware I was a wanker). But I think it might also be because I feel like I've already seen so many of them. I've read about them and heard them talked about and seen clips of them and parodies of them on various TV shows that it's like I've seen them almost throught osmosis. It's not a Hitchcock movie, but take "Citizen Kane." I've not seen that movie... but I have, I <span style="font-style: italic;">really</span> have. But for a pound (and I'm still amazed I was able to find this for that price, but the sticker doesn't lie), there was absolutely no way I was passing this up.<br /><br />When people are asked to describe the kind of movies Hitchcock made, the word that comes up time and again is "crowd-pleasers." I love how this meant something completely different back in Hitchcock's time. Today, if you say this about a director's work, you're accusing them of pandering to the lowest common denominator and producing work of little artistic merit. Back in the fifties and sixties though, when he produced much of his classic work, crowds had grown so bored with the the same old shit that was being presented to them and craved something a bit different. And he gave them that- fascinating and occasionally unhinged characters, complex, thrilling and risque plots, shot in ways that pretty much changed the language of cinema forever. He understood that audiences no longer wanted to be held by the hand and taken on a gentle stroll, they wanted to be shot in the face. They were ready for something a bit more exciting.<br /><br />Before I get onto the film, I'm going to indulge myself with a quick BOX REVIEW! This was released back in 2001, back when DVD was just starting to overshadow VHS, and it's got the same design as most of the boxes from that time, being made entirely from cardboard with the exception of where the disc sits and a little hinge-like lock that you had unclasp to open it. For some reason I've always liked these boxes. I think it's the clasp, and the chunky "CLICK" it make whenever you open or close it. The closing "CLICK" is more satisfying though. MMMMMMM. The one downside is these boxes get damaged alot easier than the plastic ones. It can't double-up as a coaster for instance, at least not without a ring ending up over Cary Grant's face (I literally just spent five minutes trying to come up with a decent gay joke and couldn't think of one. Obviously I'm not that creative tonight).<br /><br />When the movie first started, I thought it was broken, because the MGM logo looked defective. For a start, the background was neon green, and the logo and lion themselves looked a bit like the negative of a photo. Fortunately this was by design, as the logo faded away, leaving just the background, giving way to one hell of a stylish credits sequence. It's really simple, just a bunch of black lines that look like the side of a building that the credits slide up that eventually fades away to reveal an <span style="font-style: italic;">actual</span> building, but it looks so fucking cool. It sounds cool as well, thanks in part to the brilliant score by Bernard Hermann. I really don't talk enough about music in these things. I've said that before and made promises to change that, but the truth is I probably won't, which is weird because I love music and even collect movie soundtracks. The score here though is good enough for me to want to draw special attention to it, just as the disc itself does by ofering a music-only audio track. It's superb throughout, and this opening piece sums it up perfectly by managing to be creepy, exciting and almost whimsical all at once. Following this, we meet the film's main character, Roger Thornhill, played by Cary Grant. Grant's the kind of guy you get the feeling is always playing himself in everything, but like any good movie star, he gets away with it on a mixture of good looks (he's still quite a handsome man here despite his advancing years), charisma and a way with words, even those not his own. And he has a real vitality about him in this movie, you really believe he wouldn't just stand back and let the things that happened to him happen, that he would see them through to the very end. We discover very quickly (and one of the things I like about this script is that it's quite good with exposition and tells us just what we need to know when we need to know it) that he works in advertising, as he leaves a building with his assistant, rattling off a bunch of things for her to do (which includes sending a woman he's seeing a box of chocolates wrapped in gold paper and a not that reads, "Something for your sweet tooth baby, and all your other sweet parts." I may steal this) as they get into a cab that he scams off someone by claiming she's gravely ill. As he gets out to attend a meeting in what looks to be a hotel bar, he tells her to call his mother, only for him to then remember that she's out playing bridge tonight just as the cab pulls away. Feeling bad about his mistake, he calls over the waiter to ask if it's possible for him to seen a telegram to her, with the waiter saying he personally can't, but Thornhill can, pointing him in the direction of where to go.<br /><br />And this proves to be the decision that turns Thorhill's life upside down, because he summoned the waiter at the exact time he's asking if a Mr. George Caplin is in the bar, making it look like he's responding to the waiter calling his name. This leads to two obvious goons, one wearing a hat straight ot of a "Dick Tracy" comic strip, the other with a fantastically square head, assuming he <span style="font-style: italic;">is</span> Caplin. I want to mention how subtly this is all done. The first time I watched this,I didn't notice the waiter asking if Caplin was present, and found the two goons thinking Thornhill was him to be a little bit wacky. But now I'm just in awe of how masterfully done it was. It makes sense that you wouldn't notice it, because Thornhill himself doesn't. This moment is never mentioned again. I do feel a little bit sorry for the people who first watched this 50 years ago. In this day and age, if you missed an important plot point like that, such as I did, you can easily go back an rewatch it to see what passed you by. Back then, if you weren't on the ball, you were fucked, basically.<br /><br />Thornhill gets up to send the telegram and immediately finds himself escorted into the back of a car at gun-point. This is less than six minutes into a two hour movie. Absolutely no fucking around, let's just get into this thing. He's driven to a large house owned by a man called Lester Townsend, and introduced to someone who claims to be this person, although we later find out he's really called Philip Vandamm and is just using this place whilst the real owner is away. Vandamm is played by James Mason, an actor I find it almost impossible to take seriously whenever I watch him. And I'll tell you why, it's because of that one bloody Eddie Izzard gag where he impersonated him. Eddie totally obliterated him, to the point that now whenever he's on-screen, even here, I keep waiting for him to say, "It is my duty as a cockney man," in that strange voice of his. Another example of an actor destroyed by comedy. I will say that he's good here though, suitably oily and unpleasent, and that voice actually works in this role. He should have been a Bond villain, really. Vandamm and Thornhill have a stalemate of a conversation, with Vandamm insisting that Thornhill is Caplin and that he tell him what he wants to know if he's to live, and Thornhill being absolutely adamant that he is infact <span style="font-style: italic;">not</span> this man and doesn't know what he's talking about. This doesn't go down very well, and ends with Vandamm attempting to follow through with his theat to end Thornhill's life. He doesn't do it himself though, he has his goons, lead by Leonard (played by an almost unrecognisably young Martin Landau) do the dirty work, which they go about doing in a very creative way- rather than just blow his brains out, they force Thornhill to drink an entire bottle or Bourbon, then attempt to drive a car into the ocean with him in it to make it look like an accident. It's a decent plan, but it would seem they didn't count on him regaining conciousness at the last minute, as he does, kicking the goon doing the driving out of his car and attemting to drive away. "Attempting" being the word, as he's drunk as a Lord and nearly does their work for them by almost driving off the road himself. He survives though, and a chase ensues, and I think it's safe to say it's not exactly comparable to the one from "Bullitt." A decent job is done of showing that Thornhill is as much a danger to himself as the people chasing him are though, and Hitchcock also comes up with a very creative way of showing the confusion that must occur when driving drunk (and I can only assume, since I don't have a licence and can't even legally drive <span style="font-style: italic;">sober</span>), by super-imposing two roads over each other.<br /><br />It ends with a crash, as these things often do, only Thornhill is unlucky enough to crash into a police car and get dragged to the local court house to spend the night in a cell. Grant is hilarious as a drunk in this scene, being harmlessly belligerant, making wild claims about men trying to kill him with "a gun, some Bourbon and a sports car", and demanding to call his mother, who seems to offer him little sympathy. We actually meet her in the next scene, that being the court hearing the next day when Thornhill makes his admittedly wild claim to the Judge, and she's brilliant, this acerbic, sarcastic woman who's very quick to write her own son off as a lunatic. She briefly teams up with him following this, and their scenes together are enough to make me wish she was in the whole movie. In order to prove he's telling the truth, Frank takes the Judge, his Mother and some other people from the court to the Townsend place, and as you'd expect, he's completely stiched-up. All the physical evidence of his story is gone- there's no Bourbon stains on the couch where it was spilt, there's not even any booze in the little bar, only books. Then things get worse when a woman shows up claiming to be Townsend's wife, who says there'd been a party there last night and that Thornhill had made quite a spectacle of himself. The final nail in the coffin is hammered in when she says Thornhill is a key note speaker of the United Nations that day, leading everybody to now completely write-off Thornhil's story, which none of them were really buying to begin with.<br /><br />But thornhill's not taking this lying down, oh no. The day before in "his" office, Vandamm had read off a list of places Caplin had stayed recently in an attempt to show that they'd had him monitored and knew he was lying when he claimed not to be him. Using this to his advantage, he and his mother get a key to the room (after Thornhill <span style="font-style: italic;">bribes his own mother</span> to sweet-talk the clerk, which is something I find both hilarious and disturbing) and go investigate. Their, they bump into a couple of hotel employees who just assume Thornhill is Caplin because, as they reveal when pressed, none of them have actually seen Caplin in the flesh, even though he has them do things like clean his suit regularly. This is getting curiouser and curiouser, but sadly they don't get alot of time to mull things over, as Thornhil is both silly enough to answer the phone and unlucky enough to have the man on the other end of the line be Vandamm, who's now more convinced that Thornhill is Caplin than ever (he continues to claim otherwise, but Vandamm's all like, "You're in his hotel room, dickhead") and has dispatched two of his goons to take him out (see? Revealing his plan ahead of his time. Total Bond villain). Realising they have to get out of their, Thornhill and his mother hurry, but aren't fast enough to avoid the goons, who get in the same crowded elevator car. He motion towards them for his mother in a "They're the guys!" manner, and due to the fact that she's still not really buying any of this, she brilliantly comes straight out and asks them, "You're not really trying to kill my son, are you?" They start laughing. We'll, what else is there to do? Then <span style="font-style: italic;">she</span> starts laughing, and soon everybody in the elevator is laughing except Thornhill, who dashes out and into the back of a cab the second the door opens, his mother yelling, "WILL YOU BE HOME FOR DINNER!?" after him. This is sadly the last we see of her, although I don't think she could have had a more perfect last line.<br /><br />Deciding to confront the bull head-on, Thornhill goes to the United Nations intent on speaking to the man he believed is Townsend, now armed with a photo of what he thinks is him that he found in Caplin's hotel room. He even goes by the name of Caplin, so he'd have no doubt who it is. In a twist that leaves him completely bamboozled however, the Townsend that responds to the page isn't the man he met the previous evening. He tries to make sense of all that's happening, asking if he's aware if anybody's staying at his house at this time, with him saying only his gardener and his gardener's wife (which we assume is Vandamm, since we see him doing some gardening when Thornhill and the court showed up at the house), and he's about to be shown the picture Thronhill has on him when, BAM! Knife outta nowhere to the back, thrown by one of the goons Thornhill thought he'd lost. This assassination scene is done incredible well. It would have been very easy to have had the two men in shot close enough that all we'd see is Townsend react to the knife and then keel over, but Hitchcock set it up in such a way that you actually <span style="font-style: italic;">see</span> the knife fly in from the right side of the screen and seemingly land in the actor's back. It's a fairly shocking moment that actually go a reaction out of me. Not a massive one, just a little "wow," but a reactions all the same. There would be bigger reactions to come though. So the real Townsend is now dead, and this all happened so fast that all people now see is Thornhill standing over the guy's body with the knife in his hands (why he took the knife out of the poor man, I don't know. I think this was known to be absolutely the wrong thing to do even 50 years ago). You'd think with this being one of the most important buildings in the world security would be all over him, but no, all he does is wave the knife about a bit, scream "GET BACK!" and then leg it out the front door into a cab. This is one of those moments where logic has been thrown out of the window in order to advance the plot, and bless him, but not even Hitchcock was immune to it.<br /><br />We then finally get our first hint to what might be going on when we're taken to the the meeting room where a group of people, who we later find out are part of the FBI, are discussing the Thornhill/Caplin situation, as it and a picture of him has made the front page of every paper in America. It's here we find out the reason nobody has seen Caplin is because there <span style="font-style: italic;">is</span> no Caplin- he's a decoy agent they made up and went to the trouble of establishing patterns of behaviour for in order to draw the heat off the <span style="font-style: italic;">real</span> agent they have within Vandamm's organisation. Rather than come up with a way to help this poor man out, they decide to do nothing, because as The Professor (Leo G. Carroll) puts it, "... we could congratulate ourselves on a mavelous piece of good fortune, our non-existant decoy George Caplin, created to divert attention from our actual agent, has fortuitously become a <span style="font-style: italic;">live</span> decoy." It may seem callus, as one of the women in the room puts it, but I can see where they're coming from here, as they're trying to fight for what they believe is the greater good, and this man is entirely expendable. Not that this helps Thornhill himself though, as when we return to him he's about to attempt boarding a train to Chicago to continue his hunt for Caplin, whom he believes to have travelled there that morning, following one last call to his mother. I thought it might be revealed that she still severely doubted him and was tipping off the police about his whereabouts (which I think would have been hilarious), but the film doesn't go down this road. Instead, the next scene is another example of how Hitchcock loves to try and build tension, turning the walk the now sunglasses-clad Thornhill (that'll fool 'em) has to make across the train station to the ticket booth into something comparible to crossing a minefield- everywhere you look people are reading and holding papers, there are police swarming around, and the place is just packed. It seems impossible that Thornhll should be able to get on this train undetected. And he doesn't, getting placed by the clerk who immediately puts in a call to the police. Having the sense to realise he's been rumbled, Thornhill runs off whilst the clerk is on the phone. Unfortunately in doing this he draws even more attention to himself by attempting to get on the train without a ticket. So now he has not only two police officers after him but an angry ticket collector, too. Things look bleak.<br /><br />Enter Eve Kendall (Eva Marie Saint). She helps Thornhill evade the cops (simply by stashing him in her room and telling the guys after him, "He went that-a-way!" making them look like sub-Keystone Cops buffoons), and then spend the entire journey trying to fuck him. No, really, that's what she does. During some downtime in Thornhill's hide-a-seek with the ticket collectors on-board, he ends up sitting at the same table as her in the dining car, and they spend almost the entire conversation talking about boning. Choice excerpts- Thornhill: "The moment I meet an attractive woman I have to start pretending I have no desire to make love to her." Eve: "I never discuss love on an empty stomach" (note: she originally said "sex," not "love," but the censors made Hitchcock dub over that line). Eve: "It's going to be a long night... and I don't particularly like the book I've started... y'know what I mean?" I love putting myself in the shoes of the people from the time the movie I'm watching was originally released. I can only imagine how shocking all this must have been, and also laugh at the fact that today all it warrants is a PG rating. Eva Marie Saint is so fucking sexy as well. The first time I watched this I thought she was a bit blank and unexciting, but upon second viewing I realised what she brought to the table. She has these amazing eyes and a purring voice that makes you feel like you're being gently stroked by very fine sandpaper (this feels very nice, trush me). They manage to squeeze in a few other topics as well, such as how she knows who he really is and what he's been accused of, but assures him she won't tell anybody because he has, "a nice face." She even hides him again, this time from the cops who board the tran looking for him, and they finally get down to it in her room. This is left to our imaginations.<br /><br />So, as you've probably figured out right now, Eve is, or at the very least <span style="font-style: italic;">appears</span> to be in league with Vandamm, who is also on the train, and whom she slips a note asking what she should do with Thornhill tomorrow. Now, later the film wants us to feel bad for Thornhill and this betrayal, but the truth is he comes across as a bit of a horny moron for falling for it in the first place. I mean, I don't care how beautiful the woman is, at some point you'd think somebody would stop and say to themselves, "Hang on a second here- weird shit is happening in my life, and this is just another example of it. Could it be that these things are related?" But Thornhill doesn't, and as such pretty much walks into a trap crotch-first. The next day, once they've snuck him off the train dressed as a baggage handler, Eve gives him a piece of paper with the time and the place where he can supposedly meet Caplin. This turns out to be a bus stop in the middle of nowhere, surrounded by crop fields, and...<br /><br />... oh shit, I know what happens next. I know <span style="font-style: italic;">exactly</span> what happens next, because I've seen it parodied on "Family Guy." See? See what I mean about having seen movies I haven't seen? <span style="font-style: italic;">SEE?!</span> Anyway, one of the things I loved about this particular scene is how slow it is. Most directors would have been itching to get into the excitement, but Hitchcock understood that it was all in the build and the delay. So we see Thornhill standing by the side of this road waiting, a car passes, still waiting, another car passes, <span style="font-style: italic;">still</span> waiting, <span style="font-style: italic;">another</span> car passes, and yep, still waiting, as a plane flies around in the background dusting the crops. Finally a car pulls over and a man gets out, standing at the bus stop on the other side of the road. Of course, we know there's no chance this is Caplin, because we know Caplin doesn't exist, but Thornhill doesn't know this, so he ventures over to him to have a conversation, only to be disappointed to discover this isn't his man. Before the gentleman gets on the bus, he looks over at the plane, and remarks how strange it it is that it appears to be dusting where there are no crops. He departs, and then the plane suddenly changes course and heads straigh for Thornhill, buzzing him, the pilot even shooting at him. And we know just how completely Thornhill is screwed, because at the beginning Hitchcock had seen fit to give us a wide shot establishing just how open and remote this place is. There's really nowhere to run to (baby), nowhere to hide. Well, almost nowhere, as Thornhill thinks on his feet and hides amongst some dead corn crops, making it difficult for the pilot to spot him. This only works momentarily, as the plane smokes him out by dropping the chemicals it was previously using to dust crops onto him. Desperate, he tries to flag down a passing gas truck, only for it to nearly hit him. It stops so the driver can see if he's alright, then the plane comes hurtling towards them, hits the truck and (this was my genuine reaction to what happened next) HOLY SHIT THE PLANE JUST EXPLODED! I really wasn't expecting that, and due to that fact, for a few seconds I thought this was the greatest special effect I'd ever seen. Some cars pull over to see what's happened, and in the chaos, Thornhill steals one of them and makes off to safety. That was a scene worthy of parody. Awesome.<br /><br />Thornhill reaches the hotel that Caplin is supposed to be staying in, only to be told that he's moved on again, this time to South Dakota, and before he can resume the chase, he see Eve walking through the lobby and gets that squinty, "The Plot Thickens" look on his face. Getting her room number from the clerk (and really, why are the clerks in this film so free and easy with their guest's information? Was it just a different time back then?), he goes up to see her, and after she hugs him in a manner that implies she's relieved he's alive, what follows on the surface is a continuation of their meeting on the trai, only now the delivery of the dialogue and the underlining subtext makes it appear more sinister- he insists on her not leaving his sight, outwardly because he doesn't want to be away with her but inwardly because he no longer trusts her, and she very bluntly tells him to leave, trying to seem like what happened between them meant nothing to her, but in reality probably trying to save his life. In the end she appears to relent, getting him to have his suit cleaned (subtext- so he won't be able to follow her wherever she's going) and taking a note on the phone as he appears tp be in the shower, before leaving. He then does the old "scribbling a pencil over a piece of paper that was under a sheet that's just been written on" trick that all good school children know, and when his suit's clean, he goes to find her and whoever she's with at their place of meeting.<br /><br />Ths turns out to be an auction for fine art, where he finds her sitting with Vandamm. Outraged, he confronts the pair of them, saying such things about Eve as, "Isn't everybody?" when Leonard asks her if he spent the night in her room, reducing her to tears and causing her to attempt to slap him. "Who are you kidding," he says to her, "you have no feeling to hurt." <span style="font-style: italic;">Ouch.</span> Growing tired of this, Vandamm leaves with Eve, leaving Leonard and the goons covering all the exits, ready to pounce on Thornhill the second he attempts to leave. Showing some shrewdness however, he realises the only way he's going to get out of this room alive is in police custody, so he sets about making a mockery of te proceeding, bidding backwards, bidding against himself, claiming the art is fake and finally getting into a fist fight. The police drag him away, and he gleefully informs them that they've hit the jackpot, having nabbed the United Nations killer. They call this in, but instead of being told to take him to the station, they're told instead to take him to the nearest airport, which displeases Thornhill, since he believes the safest place for him right now is in a cell.<br /><br />Of course he's soon told otherwise when at the airport he's met with The Professor, who was in the crowd at the auction, and who fills him in finally on what's been happening in his life, why it's been all but destroyed, and what exactly Vandamm does- turns out he's a Russian spy selling government secrets. He then asks him to come with him to Mount Rushmore and be Caplin one more time to ensure the safety of their agent, who they now believe Vandamm suspects. Thornhill of course at first tells them to get bent, but his attitude soon changes when he's told that (DUN DUN DUUUUUUUN!)(do I do that too much?) <span style="font-style: italic;">Eve</span> is the double agent, and in having her nearly slap him, he showed to Vandamm that she had feelings for him, which now makes him doubt her. So, off they go to Mount Rushmore, where a very elaborate plan is set in motion- Thornhill meets with Vandamm and tells him he knows he's flying out of the country that night, and that he'll see to it nothing stops the plane as long as he leave Eve with him, so he an pin everything on her and make her pay for betraying him. There's some confusion, and the plan seems to go horrible wrong when Eve pulls a gun on Thornhill and shoots him (yeah, I think that classifies as "horribly wrong"). She flees, and he's taken away in an ambulance...<br /><br />... only for them to later meet up in the woods. As it turns out, <span style="font-style: italic;">this</span> was their big plan, their way of stopping Vandamm suspecting her whilst also conveniently killing off Caplin at the same time. The Professor arranges for them to meet up so that they can explain themselves to each other, with Thornhill immediately forgiving her. "All in the line of duty," he says, which I suppose is true, even if she <span style="font-style: italic;">did</span> pretty much sell him down the river to save herself. They kiss, he talks about them being together when this is all over, and then it comes out that she's going away with Vandamm to continue keeping tabs on him. Thornhill goes into a rage, saying how it's not fair they ask her to "bed down" with men like Vandamm in order to win The Cold War, and when he tries to stop her driving away, gets <span style="font-style: italic;">knocked the fuck out</span> by The Professor's driver. We next see him pacing up and down his hotel room in just a towel (steady, ladies...), listening to the radio report on "Caplin's" shooting, before he has some new clothes brought to him by The Professor. He play acts (and even in-character it's obvious that's what he's doing) that he's calmed down and no longer has any interest in saving Eve, but the second he's alone he escapes, climbng out the window, shimmying across the ledge, and climbing through another window to a room that doesn't have a locked door, but <span style="font-style: italic;">does</span> have a woman in it that seems to... instantly fall in love with him. "STOP!" she yells, then puts her glasses on, gets a good look at him and, as he's about to leave, huskily says, "stop." O... kay then.<br /><br />He goes up to Vandamm's place, which appears to be situated on top of Mount Rushmore, and spies on he and Leonard having a conversation about Eve, and how Leonard still doesn't trust her, calling it "women's intuition" (um...). He then pulls out a gun and seems to shoot Vandamm, only for him to reveal that he found it in Eve's bag, and it's full of blanks, meaning she couldn't have shot Thornhill/Caplin. Vandamm responds to his friend making him believe he was about to murder him by PUNCHING HIM IN THE FACE! Most realistic part of the movie, folks. Followed swiftly by perhaps the <span style="font-style: italic;">least</span> realistic moment, when Eve enters the room and asks if anybody heard that noice. Oh come on, a gun just went off in the next room. You're telling me you could only just hear that? Anyway, they decide to take care of her on the flight over, leaving Thornhill with not much time to warn her. He gets into her room by scaling the wall (is he now just a secret agent? Can he do all this stuff because they simply think he can?), but just misses her. He then writes her a warning on the box of matches he owns with his initials stencilled on them that she'd noticed during their first meeting on the train, and throws it at her from upstairs. He misses her though, and there's a tense moment when Leonard sees the box (that really <span style="font-style: italic;">did</span> have me on the edge of my seat), before just casually tossing it onto the table. She sees it, reads the message, and they have a brief meeting upstairs, where he tells her they're going to kill her on the flight, saying he'll help her escape. She leaves with Vandamm and Leonard, and Thornhill makes to be in hot persuit, until the housekeeper spots him in the reflection of thetelevisin and pulls a gun on him.<br /><br />So Eve keeps looking back at the house for him, waiting for him to appear, they're at the plane, he's not arrived, she's about to get on... when two shots ring out and Thornhill runs out of the house, steals a car and whisks Eve away, saying he realised that the gun the housekeeper had on him was the gun with the blanks in it. They drive until they have to abandon the car, and... fuck me, I know <span style="font-style: italic;">this bit</span> too! This is the chase down Mount Rushmore! This was parodied on "Family Guy" as well! Infact, I think it may have been the same episode, the one where Mel Gibson was trying to get back the only existing copy of "Passion of the Christ 2: Crucify This" (which incidently makes my top five list of fake movie I wish were real) from Peter. Sigh. Anyway, for what it's worth, and surprisingly for a Hitchcock movie, there isn't much suspense here. I think it might have something to do with the fact that it's almost <span style="font-style: italic;">too</span> realistic, in that it's slow and features people carefully trying not to lose their footing. The set also looks quite fake, which doesn't help. Anyway, it ends with Eve hanging onto Thornhill's hand for dear life, as <span style="font-style: italic;">he</span> hangs onto the rock face (I suppose there's no other kind of rock at Mount Rushmore, is there?)(geddit?)(because they're faces... carved into rocks). Leonard starts to tread on his hand, it looks like they're both about to fall, until a shot rings out, being fired by the police and The Professor, who have showed up to save the day. Then Thornhill pulls Eve up, then their in a room on a train in their pajamas, he calls her "Mrs. Thornhill," then the movies ends. I'm serious, that abruptly. I know I've reviewed film before where the ending seem to come out of nowhere, but the one doesn't so much end as just... <span style="font-style: italic;">stop.</span> In a way it was hilarious, because it came so suddenly I just burst out laughing. I suppose it fits with the whole "no bullshit" thing I mentioned earlier though, so I guess it makes sense in that regard.<br /><br />I tell you, after the last movie I covered, this one has totally refilled my soul and made me believe in cinema again. It's a great example of a blockbuster, really- it suspenseful, it looks and sounds amazing, it's funny (the best line is when Thornhill's hanging off Mount Rushmore and says to Eve that his previous two wives left him because he lived "too dull a life"), it's populated by a hero you care about, a "boo-hiss" baddie who you want to see taken down, and a beautiful love interest. Shit even blows up! I'm telling you now, this year I will go to see a supposed action movie in cinemas and be able to say that it can't hold a candle to this. At least one. Not "Transformers" though, that's going to be amazing.<br /><br /></span><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >FINAL VERDICT</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;font-family:courier new;" >KEPT!</span><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhumH7SJblnFr53f4hYVVMdAD4FK15OA9ygEKUSZD9qWLsLu2s2rAEgT-9L6Jv4pBeaAwwyjJ0EdGRYj4rSjwxm8fFMMSAFTXlue-grEokFlFKc7sJfH2cpiAGpOxbW93-GE2QP4iHB6bU/s1600-h/002.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhumH7SJblnFr53f4hYVVMdAD4FK15OA9ygEKUSZD9qWLsLu2s2rAEgT-9L6Jv4pBeaAwwyjJ0EdGRYj4rSjwxm8fFMMSAFTXlue-grEokFlFKc7sJfH2cpiAGpOxbW93-GE2QP4iHB6bU/s400/002.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5312160962245313618" border="0" /></a><span style="font-family:courier new;">Alfred Hitchcock, ladies and gentlemen. Genius.</span><br /></div><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br />Before I leave, a couple of things. Firstly, a heads up straight away- there's a very good chance next week's review will be late. I'm going ot try for it not to be, believe me, but the fact is, writing-wise I have alot on my plate at the moment, ncluding something that's very near-and-dear to my heart (anybody reading this who knows me probably knows what I'm talking about), and if anything takes priority, that does at least for a week. It won't be massively late if indeed it is at all, just a couple of days, but since I've been a bit of a prick with my time-keeping over the last few weeks, I thought it only fair that I give a warning if I even <span style="font-style: italic;">know</span> the engine might break down.<br /><br />Secondly, and on a much happier note, a couple of reviews ago, I made mention of some kind of announcment that I had to make. Well, I put off saying anything until it was <span style="font-style: italic;">really</span> official, but as of today I can start talking- I have joined the writing team over at <a href="http://www.killerfilm.com/">killerfilm.com</a>. Don't worry, I'm not abondoning Blogger or anything like that, but in two weeks time they'll start republishing my old reviews every fortnight, and hopefully expose me to a whole new audience. Until that starts, I have a brand new introduction to myself and what I do up <a href="http://www.killerfilm.com/homepage/read/the-cheap-arse-film-review-an-introduction-5446">here</a>, so if you want you can go over there and take a look at it. And whilst you're there, please take a look at some of the other content. The people there seem really nice, and I'd like to see them continue to grow and also be a part of that growth. It's all rather exciting, really.<br /><br />Until next week, I'm The Cheap-Arse Film Critic, and when one is in Egypt, one should delve deeply into its treasures.<br /></span>The Cheap-Arse Film Critichttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08211046330068309653noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1161570503760263602.post-27689247280450231222009-03-03T13:34:00.000-08:002009-03-08T13:04:19.025-07:00The Cheap-Arse Film Review #22- "THE SOCIAL CLIMBER." (RIP WOOLWORTHS PT. 2)<div style="text-align: center;"><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjn55Vtl611O76NLdZnCAMpvanxb4tGQexEqqkI0jjx3zNaogcZYKgoJegBNknKeReJR2V6DwC_iK4JZvV7lQNYk95qaHxH-OQ-aa2rdj5G_yDD183LSFj-FdykhUukylClhqRqm9Bv9zY/s1600-h/001.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjn55Vtl611O76NLdZnCAMpvanxb4tGQexEqqkI0jjx3zNaogcZYKgoJegBNknKeReJR2V6DwC_iK4JZvV7lQNYk95qaHxH-OQ-aa2rdj5G_yDD183LSFj-FdykhUukylClhqRqm9Bv9zY/s400/001.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5310642312291266418" border="0" /></a><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >NAME: THE SOCIAL CLIMBER<br /><br />RATED: 12<br /></span><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >RELEASED: 2005</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >WRITTEN BY: ERIC C. CHARMELO & NICOLE SNYDER, BASED ON THE NOVEL "CONFESSIONS OF A SOCIOPATHIC SOCIAL CLIMBER," WRITTEN BY ADELE LANG</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >DIRECTED BY: DANA LUSTIG</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >STARRING: JENNIFER LOVE HEWITT, COLIN FERGUSON</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >GENRE: ROMANTIC COMEDY, SUPPOSEDLY</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >BOUGHT FROM: WOOLWORTHS</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >PRICE: £1.00</span><br /></div><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br />(Late again. Three days so, just as before. Been ill, but really that's no excuse. I throw myself at your feet and beg you for forgivness, whilst also promising, <span style="font-style: italic;">promising,</span> that next week's review will be up on Wednesday. I know I said that before. Yes... yes I know my word doesn't mean what it once did, but please baby, just give me one last chance. I can change. Please don't give up on me. Remember Rome.)<br /><br />I'm not going to do a big introduction this week. I had one planned. I was going to talk about Jennifer Love Hewitt, and the fickle nature of making the transition from TV to film, and how it works perfectly well one way, but there's still a stigma attached to the other. I was going to talk about how she probably could have made it if she'd just stuck to horror movies, but like so many of her generation she wanted to prove she had range and, sadly, she failed. I was going to mention the fact that she's probably better off on television, and that as research I watched an episode of her new (well, new to me) show, "The Ghost Whisperer," and thought it was... alright. It's not "Buffy," but if you ask me, neither was "Buffy" towards the end. And, yes, I was going to make a few jokes about her breasts. I was even going to call her, "Jennifer Lovely Jubblies" at one point, which I was far too proud of myself for having come up with.<br /><br />I was going to go into all that, in my trademark manner (meaning it was going to be fucking long). But I've decided not to now.<br /><br />Why?<br /><br />I'm going to be totally honest with you folks- I <span style="font-style: italic;">hated</span> this movie. With a seething passion. And I don't want to spend any longer writing this than I absolutely have to. Which, if we're going by my logic, probably means this will end up the longest review I've ever done.<br /><br />It's not even so much the actual movie really, but rather one character in it. Sadly that character happens to be the main one, Katya Livingston, played by the lovely Ms. Hewitt. In many ways, I think she's comparable to Patrick Bateman from "American Psycho," which I suppose is apt due to the fact this is an adaptation of a book called "Confessions of a Sociopathic Social Climber." The only difference is that, within the world he inhabited, Patrick was normal enough to go along undetected, whereas this woman is just... you would believe she was capable of murder. Infact, she <span style="font-style: italic;">does</span> kill thing! I mean, she...<br /><br />... actually I'm going to handle this within the context of the review, because this is coming dangerously close to an introduction.<br /><br />We open at a wedding as the group picture is about to be taken. The bride, Dove Greenstein (Stefanie von Pfetten, who looks a bit like an older version of the twins from "Sweet Valley High"), is wondering where her husband is, as of course he's supposed to be in it. We then cut to Katya, talking on her phone whilst talking to her accountant in prison about his fears that she's about to be audited (which allows them to use her keeping an expenses journal as the voiceover framing device, and also allows them go for that old classic visual gag of seeing the accountant being lovingly caressed by a big bald man with a beard in the only other scene we see him in, because remember kids, prison rape is <span style="font-style: italic;">funny</span>), whilst occasionally giving off little moans. Dove, the other guests and the photogaphers all burst in, and it's revealed that there's a man up Katya's dress, and yep, you guessed it, he's the groom. So a pretty socialite was talking on the phone in a disnterested manner whilst recieving oral sex. Gee, I wonder where they got <span style="font-style: italic;">that</span> one from? Surprisingly, the movie goes out of its way here to try and make this horrible thing she's done seem less awful by having her explain that she missed the ceromony and thought she was copping off with the Best Man. And I say surprising because, as you will soon see, she does alot of other really horrible things throughout this movie, and no excuse is given for them other than the fact that she's just a horrible person.<br /><br />After the credit sequence (JLH dancing around to some music and getting dressed, which is enough to make it one of the best things in this movie), we move forward in time a little bit to see Katya walking to work, getting accousted by a man in a rabbit suit she says she has a restraining order against (Frank, how far you've fallen...), and buying a cheap knock-off of some expensive bag that a dude is just selling on the side of the street (isn't that supposed to be illegal?), who she's also a jerk to by way of bartering him down to way below the price he was asking on the basis of, "every socialite in San Francisco is going to see me with that bag," like the guy selling illegal forgeries really wants to draw that much attention to himself. "Honestly," she continues," you should be paying <span style="font-style: italic;">me.</span>" Oh fuck off. She finally arrives at work, where we're told she the star creative player of an advertising firm, and we meet her co-workers- Eliza (Sonja Bennett), a cute strawbery-blonde hippy who wants Katya to sponsor a little African boy; her bosses secretary, known only as Gatekeeper (Jennifer Clement), who I think we're supposed to think is strange and a bit of a bitch, although she's outdone in that regard by Katya within seconds when she in not-so-many words tells her that her clothes look ugly and cheap; Sebastian (James Kirk)(yes, <span style="font-style: italic;">really</span>), a young, seemingly sweet-natured guy who's been brought in to act as her second in command, only for her to treat him like a personal assistant and constantly makes fun of his age despite not looking all that much older than him (amazing but true- Jennifer Love Hewitt turned <span style="font-style: italic;">30</span> last month); and finally her boss, Alex (Daniel Roebuck), who seemingly has no authority over Katya whatsoever and sits back as she kills his pets (accidently, it's fair to add, as she feeds them the healthy snacks Eliza keeps giving her, but the fact remains that by the end of the film she's responsible for the deaths of several fish and an Iguana, and she barely seems to care. She even tells the lizard he'd make a nice pair of shoes).<br /><br />We've seemingly jumped forward in time again to see Eliza and Katya enjoying a little liquid lunch, where amongst other things Katya finds the time to moan that none of the men she date appreciate he "Inner Goddess," (oh fuck off) that's going to sponsor the little boy in Africa (even though she keeps sayin she's adopting him, which means either the character or the writers themselves don't now the difference between these two things), although she neglects to mention she's only doing it to get on the good side of the IRS, and since the scene wouldn't be complete without her making someone feel bad, she proclaims Eliza's headscarf to be a little too, "Aunt Jamima." I'm sort of with her on that one, if I'm honest. Back at the office, following her completely immasculating Sebastian again just because he dared ask to be allowed to do the job he was hired for, Katya goes on a break once again (at first I thought this must be a different day, but nope, she's wearing the same clothes as in the previous scene), and clasps eyes on a ruggedly handsome man she christens Thor, but it's eventually discovered is called Charles (Colin Ferguson, who my fellow sci-fi nerds my recognise as Sherrif Jack Carter from "Eureka"). She starts drooling all over herself like a dog left in a hot car, imagines him walking straight over to her, and he's about to kiss her when... Sebastian suddenly appears in front of her hold a box of Tampax she asked him to buy, except it's a huge box of maxi-sized ones. HA! Okay, it's a stupid joke, but I enjoyed it. I also got a kick out of seeing Katya embarrassed in front of someone she likes. Yes, I hate this character so much I derive pleasure from her failures, which is the polar opposite of how you're supposed to feel about a main character.<br /><br />Katya is now back at her appartment after a long day standing around sucking on unlit cigarettes, watching an E! Television-style show presented by Melissa Rivers (and it shold tell you something about the target audience for this movie that <span style="font-style: italic;">she's</span> the big celebrity cameo) talking about a big party being thrown by Dove that you need key-shaped invitations to be able to attend, proclaiming it bigger than Oprah's 50th (side note- this movie was first broadcast on the Oxygen! Channel in America, a chanel that Oprah pretty much owns) and Puffy's White Party (and I'm ashamed to admit I know what that is...). When Katya hears she's not invited, she's appalled (yes, that's right, she expects an invitation to a party being thrown by a woman who caught her husband of an hour tops GOING DOWN ON HER), and calls her best friends Frangipani (who I'm just going to call Fran from now on) and Ferguson so they can take her out. Now, the guy playing Ferguson looks really familiar to me, but for the life of me, I can't place him. As much as I've tried to forget this movie, and will attempt to wipe it from my mind once I'm through with this second viewing, I've actually been trying hard to figure out who he is. I fucking hate this, when you're watching something and you know you know the person on-screen from somewhere else, but you just caOH MY GOD IT'S JOEY LAWRENCE FROM "BLOSSOM!" IT HAS LITERALLY JUST COME TO ME! I SWEAR, I DIDN'T LOOK IT UP ON THE INTERNET OR ANYTHING! I WAS JUST WATCHING THIS SCENE, AND I JUST YELLED "WOAH!" AT MY TELEVISION! JOEY LAWRENCE IS IN THIS, AND HE'S PLAYING A BALD HOMOSEXUAL PROSTITUTE WHO FALLS IN LOVE WITH HIS CLIENTS AND THEN TRIES TO KILL HIMSELF WHEN THEY SPURN HIS ADVANCES! Well, this movie just got a little more awesome.<br /><br />I can't believe I've referenced both "Blossom" and "Sweet Valley High" in the same review. I <span style="font-style: italic;">am</span> a man, I just... want to put that out there.<br /><br />As well as existing to give us some exposition we already know, this scene also kicks off a little sub-plot where one of the waiters gives Katya a book he's written to read so she'll give him her opinion on it before he enters it into some contest where the winner gets $25,000. Of course, she just throws it away, telling him she's already entered it for him when infact she's entered something she's written, and over the course of bumping into him at several different locations where he's now working, she feeds him an endless stram of bullshit whilst also bribing him for free drinks. Oh, and she ends up winning the contest, so the lesson there is if you screw over people who trust you, you'll go far in life (the sad thing is that, for all my snark, history has proven that there's an element of truth to that last statement). Her friends then half-heartedly try to make Katya feel better, only for Fran to produce an invite out of her bag for little more reason than to rub the fact that she's going in her face. Up until now, this movie was suffering from the same problem most like this do, which is the morally-questionable main character is surrounded by friends that are miles too nice to want to hang out with her, so it was good to see at least one of her friend be the kind of person you'd <span style="font-style: italic;">expect</span> her to be friends with.<br /><br />Following this, we find ourselves back at Katya's apartment as she wanders sleepily around listening to her voicemail messages. She's wearing pajamas, specifically what looks to be a pink version on the pajamas worm by Calista Flockhart on "Aly McBeal" (I swear to you, I really <span style="font-style: italic;">do</span> have a penis. I've got people who can vouch for me and everything). I have a thing for women in pajamas. Just thought I'd throw that out there. Just as she's about to casually fall asleep at her work desk (why doesn't she just, I dunno, <span style="font-style: italic;">go to bed?</span>), she suddenly remembers she's supposed to have come up with a campaign for a shoe soles company to present the next day, and works through the night to come up with something. I get the feeling this little sequence is supposed to show us that regardless of her personality, she's good at her job. The only problem is, the idea she comes up with seems a bit, well... shit. It consists of her making an Angel costume for herself and proclaiming the product as, "Heaven for your feet." It looks and sounds like something a child would come up with if they were asked to make an ad for a school project. And we're expected to believe she's the best there is at what she does. But the clients like it and she's proclaimed a genius and some kind of hero. Fortunately for me, her high doesn't last long, as she discovers Alex also has an invite to the ball. She moans to Eliza about the situation, and like the stereotypical happy-clappy hippy she is, Eliza suggests she work the party like she. "EW!" Katya exclaims, "Working the event is worse than not attending at all." Oh fuck off. And as she storms off, Eliza just smiles at her and shakes her head, as if to say, "Oh, you!" WHY ARE YOU FRIENDS WITH THIS WOMAN?! SHE TREATS YOU LIKE SHIT! And then she goes back to her office and yells at Sebastian for doing what his boss has asked him to! Yes, how dare he go to work to actually <span style="font-style: italic;">work!</span> Dear God I'm fucking losing it with this movie.<br /><br />Anyway, she leaves work without permission again, but at least this time she has a halfway decent reason to, that being Ferguson has had his heart broken by another client and is threatening to kill himself again. She finds him with his head in his oven, which she quickly points out won't work because it's electric. She wouldn't be Katya if she didn't have an alterior motive for being there though, as she needs him to play the role of, to quote Ferguson himself, "her gay assistant," and call Dove's people to see why she's not got her invite yet. Oh my God, she still thinks she should be invited! This woman operates on a different level of reality to every other person that's ever lived. Even within the context of her own movie! She's really the <span style="font-style: italic;">only</span> person who doesn't get why she's not invited! Dove finally gets on the phone, and following some catty back-and-forth, tells Katya to fuck off. Right, that should be the end of that, shouldn't it? Movie over? Please? Oh, who am I kidding, there's over an hour to go. Hewitt is wearing nice shoes in this scene, I'll give her that (wow, I'll say one thing about this movie, it's just laying all my fetishes out on the table, isn't it?). The scene ends with her putting her own head in the oven. HAHAHAH! IT'S FUNNY BECAUSE SHE KNOWS IT'S ELECTRIC!<br /><br />Only an hour to go...<br /><br />Following this, the movie breaks off into two main plots which eventually converge, and one sub-plot. The sub-plot can be summed up very quickly- Sebastian suddenly stops being a good-goody boy scout and literally turns into a Dark Lord of the Sith- he's wearing black clothes, his hair's all slicked back, and he's now constantly has an evil smile on his face and isn't afraid to tell Katya to get stuffed. While I'll admit I got a kick out of seeing him telling her off, the fact that this transformation comes out of nowhere is just bad storytelling. </span><span style="font-family:courier new;">The closest we get to an explaination is him now claiming this is the "real Sebastian." Um, okay, whatever you say, just place don't crush my throat with your mind.</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> It's an example of a lazy script that has no interest in explaining anything, it just has things happen because we're at the point in the story (and I use <span style="font-style: italic;">that</span> word in its loosest possible sense) where it should. This also fails because I think we're now supposed to think of him as a bad guy, and if you haven't figured out why that doesn't work and you're this far into this, I really don't know what to tell you.<br /><br />The first of the two main plots involve Katya scrambling desperately to get an invitation to the party, as it becomes obvious that everybody she knows is going to this thing except here (this becomes frankly ludicrous when it's revealed later that Ferguson has an invite. I can buy Alex and Fran getting invites, but the emotionally screwed-up rent boy?). Her first plan is to take advanage of Bobby, her ex-boyfriend who we last saw at the beginning of the movie dressed like a giant rabbit, because the last time she checked he was Dove's drug dealer. She walks up to who she thinks is Bobby in the suit in the street, asks him if he wants to "hump like bunnies," and when he nods in the affirmative, waves a giant carrot in his face. How many rabbit-based jokes are they going to squeeze out of this? Well, one more it would seem, as the next scene taes place in Katya's apartment, where Bobby's grinding up against she from behind as she's wearing a Playboy Bunny Girl outfit. But guess what? IT'S NOT BOBBY! It's a new guy in the suit that presumably came straight from work still wearing his costume and just started rubbing against her without so much as a word being exchanged between them. Makes perfect sense. Anyway, Katya manages to get in contact with the real Bobby, and dear God is this guy a mess, a nervous fawn of a man who is reluctant to hook up with Katya because his shrink say she's bad for his "mental wellbeing." She proves too tempting to resist though, and after a sex scene that's pathetic even by TV movie standards (NOBODY IS MOVING!), Bobby drops the bombshell that he's recently come out of rehab, cleaned up his life and doesn't deal anymore, meaning he's not invited to the party. Having slept with this guy for no other reason than to get an invite (and this has dawned on me- if these invites are "plus one," why doesn't she just go with one of her friends?), Katya is undersandably disappointed at hearing this news. So disappointed, infact, that she has the police drag Bobby yelling and screaming out of her apartment, siting the restraining order she mentioned earlier. Poor Bobby.<br /><br />Her second plan is good, old-fashioned blackmail, as she hears that Dove is something of a sasquatch (as a man with hairy shoulders, she has my complete sympathy), and schemes to get a picture of her getting waxed that she'll release to the gossip press if she doesn't get an invite. After both she and Ferguson both fail to use their charms on the male receptionist, she slips the guy a bill, and like that, they're both in. Also the receptionist, who'd previously informed Ferguson, "you're not my type either," now seems to want him. What a ho. After some more scheming, Katya gets upstares and gets a picture of Dove on the waxing table. They're about to do a trade-off, picture for invitation (which Dove just conveniently has in her bag), before Dove changes her mind, saying that the picture is useless for blackmail because her face isn't in it. AHAHAHAHAHAHAHA! AWESOME! WHAT A FUCKINGING MORON! AND THEN KATYA'S DRAGGED OUT BY SECURITY! AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH!<br /><br />Which I guess brings us to the second main plot, that being Katya's infatuation with Charles, and the complications that arise from that. Throughout the film, Eliza tries to hook Katya up with a lawyer friend of hers, only to have Katya constantly blowing her off because she just assumes he'll be horrendous. Eliza even goes so far as to give him her number, which he uses to leave an answering machine message, her mocking him the entire tim he's talking. However, we then cut to the other side of the call, and see that the lawyer Eliza's trying to hook her up with is infact... CHARLES! So Katya's judgemental attitude is fucking her in the arse and preventing her from meeting up with guy she's decided on-sight is the man of her dreams. Her attitude changes pretty quickly however when she's informed by Eliza that he has an invite to the party, leading to her returning his call and agreeing to go on a date with him. So, I suppose you think you've got what happens next figured out, haven't you? She'll meet him, realise he's the guy she's in love with, they'll get on great, he'll find out she was only after him for his invite, and so on and so on. Well, strap yourself in folks, because amazingly I'm going to offer this movie some minor praise, because it takes a twist that actually quite creative- the pair meet up in an elevator after having bumped into each other a couple of times during the movie, usually with Katya accidentally humiliating herself. Charles stops the elevator again and says he'll only start it again if she agrees to go out on a date with him (it's far less creepy then it reads here, trust me). She agrees, and the spend the evening together. Katya is at first put out when he takes her to the park to have a Hotdog, saying she thought he was a five-star restaurant kind of guy. I should be calling her an ungrateful bitch here but I actually don't mind this, because it's been established that this is how her character would initially react, and presenting her any other way would be dishonest. Still, he wins her over as the sit on a nearby fountain, talking about their live and such. Colin Ferguson gives one of the best performances in this movie, which I'll admit is the faintest of faint praise, but it bares pointing out. It's already been established that he's a good looking guy (I find it quite apt that he was originally referred to as Thor, because he's handsome in a manly enough way that I think Marvel could make much worse choices to play The God of Thunder himself), and he's just got this really honest natural likability to him. He's in the wrong movie, basically. So things go so good, they end up dancing in the fountain in their underwear (I did this once)(only I was alone)(and I was drunk)(and it wasn't a pond, it was a kiddies paddling pool), and after he walks her back to her apartment, Charles asks if they can do all this again next week. Katya says yes, but also says first she has to break off a date with some guy she only agreed to see in order to get into some party, that guy of course being Charles and... oh God now he's unhappy to hear this! It's <span style="font-style: italic;">that</span> movie logic again! Dude, you've won! She likes you and wants to se you for you now! What, do you think she just magically fel in love with your voice when you left that message? At best she was going out with you because Eliza was bugging her to! That's how blind dates work! Christ I can't believe I'm defending this woman, but you're annoying me almost as much as she does right now!<br /><br />Actually that's a lie.<br /><br />Katya returns to her apartment riding a wave of happiness, unaware that she's accidentally crushed the man of her dreams until she plays the messages on her phone. See, during the date, Charles left a message on her phone, telling her he's the same guy she's supposed to go out on a date with next week (incidently I found it strange that she didn't recognise him from voice alone, as I think it's fair to say that his tone is fairly distinctive). Realising that she's pissed him off, she slams her fist on the table, hurts herself, and exclaimed, "I DESERVED THAT!" I can't believe I'm about to say this, but no, I don't think you did. We now enter the "downer" section of the movie where everything starts to go wrong for her- Charles won't speak to her because he thinks she's more interested in the invite than him (and I will say she doesn't help herself in this regard when he waves the invite in front of her and she goes to snatch it), everyone's going to this thing except her, and what's more she completely forgets to come up with a campaign idea for the Rice-Roni people. She attempts to quickly throw something together using a globe and a really cheesy catchphrase ("RICE-RONI: AMERICA'S FAVOURITE TREAT!") that no company in the 21st century would take in any way seriously. And thankfully the film realises this, having the company execs virtually laugh her out of the room. Enter Darth Sebastian with an idea of his own. To be honest, his idea's only slightly better than hers, but it's still better, so they decide to go with it. Cue Katya getting chewed out by alex about her poor performance and attitude (and I love how he grows a pair and starts calling on all the shit he was letting her get away with when she was of some use to him), before firing her, just like that.<br /><br />The movie's sort of going in fast forward at this point, as Katya is now lazing around her apartment in the dress she bought for the party (bought with the money she won from the book contest, I might point out), before her friends show up and decide that Ciderella <span style="font-style: italic;">will</span> go to the ball. Getting her in is a mini adverture in itself, as it involves a boat and having to climb a wall, but they succeed. And after a brief meeting with Eliza, her new boyfriend, and Bobby (who's decided he's now gay and in love with Ferguson)(is this another prison sex joke?), she's discovered by Dove, and the pair have a public slanging match based totally around the pair of them point out how awful they are. And that's a very good point, actually- we're about ten minutes away from the end, and Katya hasn't grown as a person even marginally. Normally when the main character in a movie has to learn something, the seeds start to be sown at least by the middle of the second act. Here she's exactly the same person she was at the start of the movie. She hasn't changed or shown any desire to change at all. She's not even at the party to try and apologise to Charles, she's just there because she wants to be there! So I kept wondering when and how they were suddenly going to make her a "good" person, because you know it's coming.<br /><br />And sadly, the writers handle this the same way they handled Sebastian going over to The Dark Side, which is to have it come out of nowhere after a video of the boy in Africa she's "adopted is shown on the screen. This sensitive subject that's still relevent to this day, that being the plight of children in the Third World, is treated as little more than a running gag throughout the entire movie, with Katya sending him letters telling him how great her life is, and he responding telling her how much he's been inspired by her. The video shows he and his family/tribe living like kings off the Rice-Roni Katya mailed to him after she'd been fired, as he proudly proclaims, "WE'VE ALL GAINED TWO POUNDS!" For a start these people don't look anywhere near like they were starving to death to begin with, and secondly no charity would applaud this behaviour, as they insist that they're not giving out charity, but they're helping people help themselves. But still, she's a hero, and she's carried up on-stage by security just after they'd been told to throw her out. And it is here that she suddenly has her big realisation and starts apologising to everyone in the crowd she's wronged. Waiter Guy? Sorry for throwing away your book. Eliza? I fucked your boyfriend. But hey, we're still friends, right. Ex-Bossman? Killed your pets. There's tears and pleas for Charles to forgive her even as he's marching out of the party, which is just delaying the inevitable, as you know they're going to get together in the end. And indeed they do, sitting on the same fountain from their first date, after Charles lists all the bad things about her, then proclaims, "She's everything I didn't want, everything that's not on my list... and I can't stop thinking about her." You deserve a life of misery. Can this get any worse? She's got the man, it's hinted that she'll get her job back after she bumps into the Rice-Roni people at the party (IS THE ENTIRE WORLD AT THIS THING?!) and they tell her that the focus group loved her boring idea. Is there any other way this movie would like to dance on my groin. How about the last line, huh? Can you enspire rage from me?<br /><br />"Cab fare from castle: $35. Rip in gown: $85. Finding happiness that has nothing to do with money, parties or designer clothing: waddayaknow, priceless."<br /><br />OH, <span style="font-style: italic; font-weight: bold;">FUCK OFF!!!!!!</span><br /><br />This is the point where I would usually do a sort of "final thought" and give my verdict on the film I've just watched, but I'm not sure it's needed here. I was totaly up-front about what I thought of this from the word go, and I think we all know what I'll be doing with this movie, so I can't think of anything I could put here that wouldn't be needless padding (and Lord knows my reviews need to be <span style="font-style: italic;">longer</span>). Um... AHA! This is a Boulevard Entertainment DVD, so there must be somthing amusing about the packaging, so... BOX REVIEW! Well, to be honest, in one regard I'm a little bit disappointed, because thre's no spelling mistakes or anything like that, so I suppose I have to say yay pompetancy and knowing hw all your actors names are spelt. There is however something really cheap and thrown-together about the whole layout- the pictures are all grainy and the text is smooshed into really small and strange little boxes. It looks like something I could throw together on my computer. Infact, I'd be tempted to say this was a bootleg, were it not from the fact that I bought it from Woolworths.<br /><br />Anyway, let's stop delaying the inevitable.<br /><br /></span><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >FINAL VERDICT</span><br /><br /><div style="text-align: left;"><span style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;font-family:courier new;" >BINNED!</span><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiDbJQu8afbpOA1pYe2OKF3eRwLbUlfeZOjg3RBaKLy3HVMnS9XawMJd9qJRaKVz7zivz39q7W_pzKa2v6kkCkmiL_0qDhaoOJ579woxj_pVn8BUxlM8EMqveFfkjorfUVc3JaZGnyeWvA/s1600-h/002.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiDbJQu8afbpOA1pYe2OKF3eRwLbUlfeZOjg3RBaKLy3HVMnS9XawMJd9qJRaKVz7zivz39q7W_pzKa2v6kkCkmiL_0qDhaoOJ579woxj_pVn8BUxlM8EMqveFfkjorfUVc3JaZGnyeWvA/s400/002.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5310642305934920194" border="0" /></a><span style="font-family:courier new;">If this is Woolworths' legacy, then maybe its best that it's dead.</span><br /></div></div><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br />Until next week, I'm The Cheap-Arse Film Critic, and I just had to kill alot of people!<br /></span>The Cheap-Arse Film Critichttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08211046330068309653noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1161570503760263602.post-59869120912597577702009-02-21T06:19:00.000-08:002009-02-27T21:24:28.277-08:00The Cheap-Arse Film Review #21- "FEAR CITY." (RIP WOOLWORTHS PT.1)<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgWurytGXd5PT1bm4GktpsPKeFYbXIBCu48aH7pgyE_cABmTKUBHeIorsr8f8ID9xwukd2XUBRtIPWBqHMOW3DdzvwlYLxi3_l7Q7_rW_dSIERLb9ppcX-d38shrtIBmEkXpKimqGJp_Js/s1600-h/001.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgWurytGXd5PT1bm4GktpsPKeFYbXIBCu48aH7pgyE_cABmTKUBHeIorsr8f8ID9xwukd2XUBRtIPWBqHMOW3DdzvwlYLxi3_l7Q7_rW_dSIERLb9ppcX-d38shrtIBmEkXpKimqGJp_Js/s400/001.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5307714170822228130" border="0" /></a><br /><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-family:courier new;"><span style="font-weight: bold;">NAME: FEAR CITY</span></span><br /><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><span style="font-weight: bold;">RELEASED: 1984</span></span><br /><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><span style="font-weight: bold;">WRITTEN BY: NICHOLAS ST. JOHN</span></span><br /><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><span style="font-weight: bold;">DIRECTED BY: ABEL FERRARA</span></span><br /><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><span style="font-weight: bold;">STARRING: TOM BERENGER, JACK SCALIA, MELENIE GRIFFITH, BILLY DEE (BILLY DEE! BILLY DEE!) WILLIAMS</span></span><br /><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><span style="font-weight: bold;">GENRE: URBAN THRILLER</span></span><br /><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><span style="font-weight: bold;">BOUGHT FROM: WOOLWORTHS</span></span><br /><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><span style="font-weight: bold;">PRICE: £1.00</span></span><br /></div><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">(WRITER'S NOTE- AS YOU'VE PROBABLY NOTICED, THIS REVIEW IS GOING UP LATE. THREE DAYS LATE, TO BE EXACT. AS EVER, I HAVE AN EXCUSE FOR THIS. I HAVE TWO ACTUALLY, ONE GOOD, ONE... NOT SO GOOD. THE GOOD ONE FIRST- I WAS ALMOST DONE WRITING ON THE WEDNESDAY WHEN BLOGGER DECIDED TO HAVE A MASSIVE FREAK-OUT AND START SCREAMING "ERROR!" AT ME, CAUSEING ME TO HAVE TO SHUT IT DOWN, ONLY FOR ME TO DISCOVER TO MY HORROR WHEN I REOPENED IT THAT I'D LOST HALF OF WHAT I'D WRITTEN. I THINK I MAY ACTUALLY HAVE SCREAMED.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">"AHA!" I HEAR YOU SAY. "AHA-AHA-AHA! WHY WERE YOU STILL WRITING ON THE WEDNESDAY, THOUGH? SHOULDN'T YOU BE DONE BY THEN?" WHICH BRINGS ME TO THE SECOND, NOT SO GOOD EXCUSE... UP UNTIL ABOUT 4:30 THAT DAY, I THOUGHT IT WAS ACTUALLY TUESDAY, AND THAT I HAD A WHOLE DAY TO FINISH OFF AND EDIT THIS THING. DON'T LOOK AT ME LIKE THAT. I AM NOT YOUR ROLE MODEL. THE REALITY IS, BECAUSE OF THAT, THIS WAS PROBABLY ALWAYS GOING TO BE LATE, JUST NOT AS LATE AS IT ENDED UP BEING, SO I SUPPOSE YOU COULD SAY THAT, WHILE I PUT MYSELF ON THE ROPES, IT WAS BLOGGER THAT DEALT THE KNOCK-OUT BLOW.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;">ANYWAY, IT'S UP NOW, AND THE NEXT REVIEW WILL BE UP ON WEDNESDAY, ALONG WITH POSSIBLY A BIT OF AN ANNOUNCEMENT.WE'LL HAVE TO WAIT AND SEE ON THAT ONE. UNTIL THEN, ENJOY.)</span><br /><br />I never stole any of the penny sweets from Woolworths. I was afraid I'd get caught, even though my friends walked out of there with pocketfuls of fizzy cola bottles and sherbert bubbles without anyone noticing. There was even a theory that they let you steal up to a certain amount so that it encouraged you to go inside and make the place look busy, although I don't buy that, because they eventually did away with the Pick N'Mix, and I think even sited one of the reasons for doing so as it wasn't profitable anymore because of all the thieving bastards nicking everything. I hope you're all proud of yourselves for spoiling a good thing we could all probably still enjoy today.<br /><br />After that, I never really had much of a reason to set foot in Woolworths again. I'd walk around it sometimes just to get myself out of the cold whilst waiting for a bus, and I'd go in there for a drink from time-to-time as they were forever doing two-for-one offers on bottles (not even cans, bottles) of Coke and Oasis (well, I suppose you couldn't do offers on cans there...). On the lead-up to Christmas I'd venture in to see if there was anything decent to buy, toys for my little cousins and the like, but I'd often leave empty-handed as the selection was woefully anemic, or I knew for a fact that I could pick something up cheaper than they were offering. But it was, in a strange way, comforting to know it was there if you needed it. It'd gone through dozens of makeovers throughout the years, but it was still the same place I'd stood outside trading WWF stickers with my friends. I know it's silly to have affection for a faceless corporate entity, but I had affection for Woolworths.<br /><br />And then I heard all the branches across the country were closing down.<br /><br />I won't say I was heartbroken, because that would be over-egging the pudding, but I was taken by surprise, and at first dismissed it as rubbish, little more than a pre-Christmas publicity stunt to pull in punters. But as the days went on and my local created a crude sign displaying how long they had left, I knew I was wrong. And I suddenly became determained to buy something there, specifically a movie to review here. I thought it'd be no problem, as they were absolutely determained to get rid of their remaining stock and were moving things on at prices that can only be described as unhinged (I have friends, not even <span style="font-style: italic;">one</span> friend, but <span style="font-style: italic;">friends,</span> who bought multiple complete "Rock Band" sets with the intention of selling them on and making a massive profit). I already had it planned out in my head, that I'd make a big deal of whatever movie I found and make it part of a "Goodbye Woolworths" event.<br /><br />So, could I find anything?<br /><br />Could I <span style="font-style: italic;">buggery.</span><br /><br />It was amazing. People were running around with armfuls of stuff, and I couldn't find so much as one movie for a quid or less. It was like this was the one place they were trying desperately to still make something approaching a decent profit. Over two days I went to four different Woolworths, and both times came out with diddly-squat. I was disppointed, but what else could I do but shrug my shoulders and say that it obviously wasn't meant to be? So I moved on, reluctantly.<br /><br />Then a couple of weeks ago something interesting happened. Over the time I've been doing this, I've picked up quite alot of movies, and since I can only do one a week most of the time, this has led to an impressive backlogue that I have stored in a box on my wardrobe. I bought them with the intention of reviewing them in the order they were picked up, but as time went on I abandoned that and now just review whatever I feel like that particular week. It's good to have in emergencies, incase I don't find anything that's really excited me whilst out on the prowl, which is exactly what brought me to look through it in the first place. That's when I found them. Two movies marked with the distinctive price sticker of Woolworths. Then it all came flooding back. I <span style="font-style: italic;">had</span> bought DVDs there, when a friend of mine was in the bookies and I was standing around bored. I went to the Woolworths across the road from where we were to kill time, not expecting to find anything, and bought the first two I stumbled across. Then I put them in the box and forgot about them.<br /><br />So this is it. The two films I'm going to be covering over the next two weeks are the last two things I bought from Woolworths. And even though I'm not going to let this fact colour or influence this review in any way, I hope I keep them. I really do.<br /><br />To be honest though, things aren't looking good for this one, as it's directed by Abel Ferrara (confession time- I'd been a bit lax in my research, to the point that I hadn't even read the plot description on the back of the box until I went to watch it, and only found out he directed this when "Directed by Abel Ferrara" came up on the screen). I'm not the biggest fan of his work. I've not seen everything he's done, but I think I've seen enough to know we're not meant for each other, to me most of it either being over-the-top to the point that there should be a Loony Tunes logo shown at the beginning, or ludicrously pretentious. I've felt this way ever since I watched "Driller Killer" back in my teens, when me and my mate were briefly obsessed with Video Nasties and made it our mission to watch them all. If I'm honest, I don't remember much of this movie off the top of my head. I can only remember <span style="font-style: italic;">one</span> kill, that being of a homeless guy with (duh) a drill. There must have been more than that. There <span style="font-style: italic;">must</span> have been. But the two strongest memories I have are of some angry hippy ranting about somethng that seemed to go on for the entire movie, and two naked women making out, which is... <span style="font-style: italic;">great,</span> I suppose, but it's not why I wanted to watch a movie called "Driller Killer." I was hoping to see lots of people get killed with a drill. The only film of his that I've enjoyed up to this point is "Bad Lieutenant," but even there, like with "There Will Be Blood" to a lesser degree, I'm not sure I'd even like that one were in not for Harvey Keitel giving the performance of several careers in the central role.<br /><br />The opening credits role over a montage of urban city life and stippers doing their thing. I'm not going to go into too much detail about the strippers or their routines, because to be honest I've seen so much naked female flesh over the last few films that I'm sort or brested out and was hoping not to see any in this. The font used in the credit is weird, as it's made to look like red slash marks, which I would associate more with a horror flick (another confession- until I read the back of the box, for some reason I assumed this was a low-budget Sci-Fi movie. I have no decent explaination as to why). It makes more sense when you get into the meat of the plot though. The song playing over the top, "New York Doll," by Joe Delia and David Johansen, is also pretty good in a trashy eighties way, even if I think it sounds alot like a slowed down version of "Rebel Yell," by Billy Idol.<br /><br />Following this, we meet Matt Rossi (Tom Berenger) and Nicky Parzeno (Jack Scalia), as they enter a strip club, not before they stop to say hello to one of the girls on the way out. We quickly find out alot about these two during their conversation with the club's owner inside- that they run an agency that provides the local nudey bars of New York City with girls, that Jack used to date Loretta (Melenie Griffith), the girl that's performing there tonight, and judging by the forlorn look on his face as he watches her dance, isn't what you call happy about it being over. The owner of this club is awesome, a small, bald man with a mustache who steals almost every scene he's in through a combination of cracking lines (here for example, he tells the guys he'd "give my only nut," to be able to pay them the money he owes them, before offering them a drink when they agree to extend his loan time, describing what they're about to partake in as, "milk from your mother-in-law's tit")and a voice so gravelly it may be made of pure Cancer.<br /><br />On the stage, Loretta continues her routine in front of an enthusiastic audience. I've never been to a strip club, and I don't really have any interest in going to one, either. I mean, think about it- you're in a room full of beautiful, virtually naked women, all of whom are giving you the eye and making you feel like you might actually be the irresistable stud you pretend to be when you're down the pub with your mates lying about how great your lovelife is... and you can't touch any of them, not even so much as brush elbows with them, without being beaten to a bloody pulp. If you asked me to guess what the level of Hell I'm sure to be cast down into would be like, that would be pretty close. Melenie Griffith the way she is in this movie might be enough to tempt me through the doors though (to a club <span style="font-style: italic;">or</span> to Hell). I'd forgot just how beautiful a woman she was. And no, I'm not going to be cruel and say something like, "what happened?" Because we all <span style="font-style: italic;">know</span> what happened- she got old. And you can blame people for alot of things, but you can't blame them for getting old. Time does indeed make fools of us all. Sadly though, it was her looks that people were hiring her for, and when they went away, so did the offers. I'm trying to think who could be the Melenie Griffith of my generation. For some reason I keep coming back to Orlando Bloom.<br /><br />Following her perfomance, she goes to her dressing room, where she's met by a pretty Hispanic lady who is very obviously presented to us as her girlfriend, and the person she left Rossi to be with, and I've got to say, for an Abel Ferrara movie, this is handled in a very subtle and non-sensationalistic manner. Infact, I'm tempted to say it actually swings the other way (or should that be... <span style="font-style: italic;">both ways?</span>)(I'm so sorry...), by being needlessly coy. We never see them in bed together, nor do we see them kiss. Infact, the only instance of physical contact between them in the whole movie happens in this scene, when the woman puts her hands on Loretta's shoulders. This of course happens at the exact moment that Rossi decides to go to her dressing room to give her a Birthday present, which he decides isn't a good idea after a little spying. He then professes his desire to beat up his exes new girlfriend in the car with Nicky. Actually, the dirct quote is, "I'd like to kick her ass all the way down to (audio incomprehensible due to Berenger being so mumbly)," and as he doesn't really specify who he's talking about, he could easily be talking about Loretta. Either way, it's a classy statement to make (sarcasm, Internet). Nicky cheers him up with a few well-placed Italian jokes, and this is the first time I noticed that Tom Berenger looks angry even when he's laughing.<br /><br />In between the scenes described above, we cut away briefly to see the woman Nicky said hello to outside the club being wrestled into an alley by a guy and attacked with a pair of scissors, although we don't really know what he did to her until Rossi and Nicky come to visit her the next morning, when she tearfully recalls the attack and reveals the guy had cut off two of her fingers. Again, we don't see the event itself, we see the guy go to do it, and then cut back to the hospital where she throws her arms around Nicky, revealing her heavily bandaged hands. This is, again, remarkably restrained for an Abel Ferrara movie, and you know what? It works. This scene is actually rather disturbing and affecting. I found myself feeling for this woman, because the focus is more on the effect the attack had on her more than graphic violence. I have, however, been told that I shouldn't be too quick to praise Ferrara for this, as like almost all of his movies, this one was apparently edited heavily following its showing to various ratings boards, so for all I know there's a director's cut out there where the killer picks up her fingers and sticks them up his nose.<br /><br />After this, the movie tries to add a little depth to Rossi's character by showing us through flashback the defining moment of his life, that being when he accidently killed a man in the ring during his time as a boxer. Over the course of three flashbacks we find out more and more about what happened- in the first we just see Rossi pound this poor kid into so much meat, in the second we see him telling his corner that it's obvious the other guy's done and that the ref should stop the fight, only for his corner man to tell him to shut up and not expect the referee to do his job for him, and finally in the third, after the kid hits the ground, Rossi goes after the ref, screaming, "WHY DIDN'T YOU STOP THE FIGHT?!" It's a legitimate question, because the other guy was getting totally destroyed, but it's no worse than anything you'd see in a "Rocky" movie, and the ref never stopped anything in those, either. Plus, here's an idea, if he knew he was that out of it, why didn't Rossi just <span style="font-style: italic;">stop hitting him violently in the head?</span> Work the fucking body! You'll still win, and your chances of killing a man go down substancially. So yeah, these scenes are alright, but they're not exactly "Raging Bull," and later they're used as an excuse for Rossi (and the filmmakers) to do some truy dumb things.<br /><br />Rossi then visits a club he and Nicky provide with girls to pick up that week's pay, only to be questioned, in a very harsh and confrontational manner, by Detective Al Wheeler, played by Billy Dee (BILLY DEE! BILLY DEE!) Williams, who suspects he knows more about the attack than he's letting on. Now, I don't want to risk bringing down the wrath of the "Star Wars" fanboys upon me by saying this, and God bless Billy Dee (BILLY DEE! BILLY DEE!) Williams, but... he's not very good in this movie. At all. And he's at his absolute worst in this scene, all stilted delivery and shouting for the sake of it. It could easily be the fault of the director he's working with, since I doubt Ferrara has ever told an actor to turn it down a notch in his life. I'll also give him a little credit and say that he's never as bad again as he is here, but he's still not great, and it doesn't help that, as the movie goes on, you realise the character he's playing is completely ineffective and pointless. You seriously could edit out all his scenes and the movie would still make sense. I'm noticing this as a pattern with alot of the films I'm covering lately. It's also never really explained why he hates Rossi so much. He mentions something about the kind of people he associates with, which we later finds out hints to his mob ties, but Rossi himself doesn't seem to have his fingers in any illegal pies. The closest we get is a brief scene outside where Wheeler tells his partner that the main thing he hates about Rossi is that he's arrogant, which I think is supposed to be a joke, as his character is easily the most up-himself in the whole movie. Oh, and he also has a habit of throwing around Italian racial slurs, which is as obvious and transparant an attempt at being subversive and shocking as you're ever going to see. "OH MY GOD! THE BLACK MAN IS RACIST!"<br /><br />Following another performance from Loretta, she returns to her dressing room to find Rossi, who had been in the crowd just a second ago, picking stuff up off her dresser and just... looking at them. Yes, that's <span style="font-style: italic;">not at all</span> creepy and obsessive behaviour. He offers her a ride home, which she turns down as she's supposed to be picking up her girlfriend from the club she's working at that night, only to have Rossi tell her to let her find her own way home. So, your obviously-obsessed ex-boyfriend wants you to get in his car with him, and also clearly doesn't give care about any plans you've made with the person you're dating. Ladies reading this, put yourself in this situation. What would <span style="font-style: italic;">you</span> do? Well, if you're Loretta, you'd get in his car. They make a little small-talk, Rossi asking her if she's still off "The Junk," her saying she is, that sort of thing, before they get down to it and start talking about what went wrong in their relationship. "Don't you understand," she says, "I'm afraid of going to bed wih you again. I loved you too much. You should have talked to me more." Not an unreasonable thing to say (well, other than saying you're afraid of sleeping with someone again, which just leaves the door open for all kinds of jokes), but when Rossi says he had trouble finding the words, she says, "Sometimes there aren't any." Okay, WAT? Didn't she just say she wanted him to talk more? And now she's saying she sometimes there are no words? I'm not going mad here am I, that's a totally mixed signal, isn't it? Christ, no wonder they're not together anymore, it must have been like dating The Riddler. And then she starts to cry! <span style="font-style: italic;">You</span> brought it up!<br /><br />Once Loretta is dropped of, we cut to her girlfriend doing her routine at a club. Se had previously stated that this place caters totally to Hispanic guys, and that's a perfect description of the crowd watching her... except for one lone, blonde white guy, watching her with what can only be described as a murderous smirk on his face. You don't stick out at all, do you sunshine? He's the killer, obviously, and the girl finds herself attacked whilst waiting for a train in a scene that's the polar opposite of the first one. There's blood everywhere, and the camera lingers on it in all it's detail. There's also the first hint of what is later told to us, that the killer knows martial arts. Sadly this hint comes in the form of him waving his arms around slowly like I used to when I'd play "Karate Kid," with my friends growing up. He leaves her to die on the platform, and then we cut back to his apartment/training facility, to see him writing in a book (which is later revealed to have the words "Fear City" professionally stenciled on the front in a font similar to that of the opening credits. I would have loved to have seen a scene of him going into a stationers and askng for that), and hearing what he's writing in voiceover. His motives are never completely revealed, which I don't have too big a problem with. However, what I do have a problem with is that the ones that <span style="font-style: italic;">are</span> hinted at are just so stock and cliche- generic indignant religious rage and a desire to purify the world through violence. This has just been so run into the ground by now that it's what wriers come up with when they don't really feel like trying, and I'd imagine it was at least getting that way by 1984.<br /><br />After being harassed (and there's really no other word for it) by Wheeler and his partner again, Nicky and Rossi return to the club from the beginning of the movie, where Loretta, obviously cut up (no pun intended) by what happened to her girlfriend, can't bring herself to perform. And, if I'm honest, I think she should feel at least a little bit guilty, because what happened is at least partially her fault. And thinking about it... why would she need a lift from Rossi if she was going to pick up her girlfriend? This isn't me making a mistake, she didn't say she'd "meet" her or anything like that, she said she'd "pick her up," which implies to me that she has her own car. So what happened to that? Did she just leave it at the club? This is literally just this second dawning on me. Anyway, Rossi goes to see her and says they'll get another girl there and give her the night off, which she initially says isn't nesessary, only to break down again when she goes to get changed. The whole time this was happening, I couldn't get that Bloodhound Gang song out of my head. You know the one, "A Lapdance is Always Better when the Stripper is Crying." I'm a terrible, <span style="font-style: italic;">terrible</span> person. Nicky writes off the debt the club's owner owes them (what happened to the other girl?), and once back at their office, he pulls out a gun and says they should find the guy and deal with him themselves. Rossi makes no bones about the fact that he doesn't think that's a good idea, which causes Nicky to question whether or not he has it in him anymore and Rossi to have a spasm. Nicky apologises, Rossi accepts, saying they've been friends too long, and that seems to be the end of that. A little more backstory is given to Rossi when we later see Nicky lying on the floor of his bathroom looking through a scrapbook of Rossi's old fight clippings, revealing that the kid he killed fell into a coma first, which doesn't make much sense to me, because in one of the flashbacks it looks like the doctor proclaims the kid dead on the spot. This movie has real trouble keeping it's stories straight.<br /><br />Rossi meets up with one of his mob contacts (who looks alot like Robert Duvall's slightly pudgier brother), and is told that they suspect the attacks are being carried out at the request of Goldstein, Rossi and Nicky's competition when it comes to providing clubs with dancing girls. Rossi outright asks if his people are looking to put out a hit on Goldstein, to which the guy replies, "You're not afraid of the sight of blod are you?" Jesus Christ, this poor guy, having his masculinity questioned twice in what I can only assume is a matter of hours because he'd rather not kill anybody ever again. Obviously thinking, "Fuck this," Rossi goes back to the office, finds Nicky's gun, and confronts Goldstein, who protests his innocence in a convincing enough way for Rossi to let him go, even though he backs away with his hand in his pocket as though holding a gun before doing so. I love stuff like this, it's movie logic that makes people act in ways that no real person ever would. "Eh, I think he's telling the truth, but I'm gonna make him think I'm gonna shoot him for a little bit longer." He then throws the gun into the river. Congratulations, you've just left yourself defenseless in the face of a madman who's killing your friends and is very likely to have you on his agenda at some point. I also don't think it was his to throw away.<br /><br />Following a brief scene of the killer training with Nunchucks (which is fairly impressive and at least shows they're not totally chancing it by claiming this guy has some kind of training), Nicky is shown asking his girlfriend, who I presume is also a dancer, not to go to work anymore out of fear for what's happening. She knocks that talk on the head, saying it wouldn't look good if the bosses girlfriends suddenly had the right to pick and choose when she worked. "You know how much I love you, Rube?" he asks her, before kissing her. At first I thought this meant she was a total goner, but unless I wasn't paying attention, I think she makes it through to the other end of this. She <span style="font-style: italic;">does</span> arm herself with mace though, and I suppose the main reason for this scene existing is to show how on-edge everybody has become.<br /><br />Rossi and Loretta come out of the hospital from visiting Loretta's girlfriend and both spark up cigarettes (ah, the eighties...). Loretta says it looks like she's gettng better, to which Rossi says, "Sure," in a manner that sounds like he really doesn't give a fuck if she lives or dies. He then asks her if she wants to do something, and she says okay. Well, glad to see her being so distraught over the condition of her girlfriend hasn't stopped her being willing to accept the offer of a date from an ex. They walk along the river, where he finally gives her her Birthday present, a spinning necklace that says, "I love you." At least he's not being coy about his intentions. They kiss, end up back at her place (where Griffith somehow makes a Wifebeater vest one of the sexiest things I have seen any woman wear ever), and they have sex. I feel so sorry for Loretta's girlfriend, I really do.<br /><br />There's another attack, and this time the killer actually manages to kill someone, which is good because I was starting to feel weird calling him "the killer," when a more accurate description of him would have been "the maimer" up until this point. He's seen watching a girl going to work in a cab, and when she returns, she hears someone behind her in her apartment block. This spooks her, and she runs to her apartment, looking through her door's peephole to see that it was, infact, an old man. She breathes a sigh of relief, and... OH SHIT HE'S IN HER APARTMENT! And Ferrara can't resist bathing this scene in red light. Yes Abel, we get it, he's about to kill her. The local press are now interested, the mob is spooked, offering Rossi two guys to help him look after his girls (which he at first turns down, because he's clearly doing <span style="font-style: italic;">such</span> a good job on his own), Rossi has a strangely unrelated flashbach to when he was a shoeshine boy and saw two mobsters get killed (the casting of the kid in this scene is amazing, I have to point out, because he looks so much like Berenger I'm tempted to just assume it's his son or something), and Loretta shows up to visit her girlfriend just as she dies, after the doctors take all of five seconds to give up trying to revive her. And then she starts crying again! Sweetheart, you left her to walk home whilst you got a ride with Rossi (even though its been established that you must have a car), leaving her to be attacked, then you spent last night getting it on with someone whilst she lay in hospital slowly dying! You are officially the <span style="font-style: italic;">worst girlfriend ever.</span> At least she has the decency to feel so guilty about it all that she gets straight back on "The Junk," (and I mean straight back on, the next scene is of her walking down an alley and picking some unspecified drug up off a sleazy dealer), and pretty much now disappears from the film until about the last ten minutes.<br /><br />And now onto... a scene I'm not going to dignify with a recap. It involves a booing crowd, an annoyed club owner making an angry phone call, a wooden horse, and a woman being crucified for daring not to look like Melenie Griffith. It took me a while to figure out why this bothered me so much, because I'm far from a politically-correct guy and usually find humour in the cruelest things, plus I'm sure the actress knew what she was getting herself into and was just happy to have a paying gig, but I think I've figured it out. I think it's because this scene doesn't really have any baring on the plot whatsoever. It exists only for the reasons of making fun of this woman. And that's bullshit. Moving on. The killer strikes again (this time using NUNCHUCKS!), and for once the police seem to be doing something useful, like I don't know, doing proper investigating. The cops in the movie really are morons. In a previous scene, Wheeler finally realises (after two women have already been attacked), that not only do these incidents not fit the profile of anything the mob is likely to do, but the fact that Rossi and Nicky are still alive would suggest that they're not the main targets. Well done you. And their suspicions are confirmed when the girl found dead turns out to be one of Goldstein's, and as such now they decide they've got to work quickly before the mob decides to take business into its own hands.<br /><br />OH GOD HE'S DOING KUNG-FU IN THE NUDE! MUMMY MAKE IT STOP!<br /><br />...<br /><br />...<br /><br />... Ahem... Goldstein and the guys work out a deal to make sure their people are looked after, and then set about trying to find the killer. They think they've hit paydirt when Nicky sees a knife in the inside jacket pocket of a huge guy, and has one of his girls coax him into the kitchen, where he's set upon by three men including Rossi, who goes all Incredible Hulk on him and keeps smashing the shit out of him until they discover plane tickets in his pocket the say he's only flown in that morning, and also that he's an arcitect. An arcitect? This guy has be be the largest arcitect I've ever seen. What is he on the weekends, a wrestler? Anyway, during this, another girl is killed, this time with a samurai sword. I know I've gone on about how I find Ferrara's cartoonish violence to be tedious, but in this case I would've liked to have seen more for no other reason than I suspect there would have been a beheading. And beheadings are always awesome.<br /><br />So one man would appear to have brought New York's topless scene to its knees (in a manner it's not used to, at least)- clubs are empty, girls are refusing to work, the agency is on the verge of going out of business. On top of all that, wheeler decides that now would be the perfect time to keep his little vendetta against Rossi alive by arresting him for assaulting the arcitect. Okay, so assault is a terrible crime, especially when one of the men involved usd to be a boxer and is destroying a man with his bare hands, but with the city gripped by a serial killer, you really would think this wouldn't be as big of a concern. But nope, Wheeler hates Rossi, so he arrests him and beats the shit out of him whilst he's tied to a chair. Who's the bad guy in this film again?<br /><br />Hilariously, whilst this is going on, the killer strikes again, this time going after Ruby, who fights back and manages to get away just as Nicky shows up to pick her up, and take a pounding and be put in the hospital. There two things here I'm going to mention- 1) has anybody else noticed that the killer really isn't very good at hiding what he's about to do? I mean, yes, the first time he attacked someone, he took them to an alley, and another killing took place in someone's apartment, but other than that all the killing have taken place completely out in the open, and he's not tried to blend into the scenery. I mean, didn't somebody notice a guy walking around hlding a fucking sword in one of the previous scenes. And 2) after he's fought off Nicky, he runs away, and the way he runs is... words can't do it justice. I rewound the DVD three times, and each time I watched it, I laughed harder. It's the funniest thing in the film, and it's made all the funnier by the fact that the actor playing this role is taking the part deathly seriously, so I suspect it was a concious decision on his part to run like that. God I wish I could find pictures or footage of this to show to you. You'll just have to take my word for it.<br /><br />So now, Rossi has finally had enough. After a brief pep-talk from a gangster, and visiting a church, he makes the decision that he's going to find this guy and deal with him once and for all. He goes back to his place and... starts boxing in front of a mirror? And then we cut back to the killer doing his Martial Arts training? Oh my God, this is a sports training montage. They're playing this up like it's boxing vs. martial arts, east vs. west (with two white guys, obviously). This is either going to rule, or it's going to totally suck. One thing I do quite like about this is that they make it obvious that Rossi doesn't find him that night, but rather it takes several weeks, asshots of him walking the streets dring both the day and night are intercut with shots of Nicky recovering in hospital and Loretta becoming more and more baked. After the motage, Rossi calls Loretta to tell her he loves her, which leads to her wanting more Junk. She gets beaten up by her dealer for not having any money, then manages to talk one of her stripper friends into lending her the money as long as she'll use it to go straight home, which she says she will. Because you can always trust an addict with your money, can't you folks? Griffith, it's worth mentioning, comes across as far too bright-eyes and clear-headed to be believable as a strung-out junkie. She goes back to her dealer, only to find him hanging from a noose, then is attacked by the killer herself. She gets away for a second using Mace (HIS ONE WEAKNESS!), but quickly finds herself in trouble again and it looks brief, until... HERE COMES ROSSI! Siloetted by the light behind him as though he were some kind of superhero, I should add. And now, here comes what the entire film has been building towards, the titanic tussle between good and evil, and... it totally sucks. It's so slow and unexciting. Rossi eventually wins the day, killing another man with his bare hands (um... yay?), then the police show up, including Wheeler. He looks at Rossi all stern and asks him if he's some kind of hero, Rossi says no, which causes Wheeler to smile and say, "You just might be." OH FUCKING COME ON! You dragged him across the coals for beating up a guy not too long ago, and now there's an actual <span style="font-style: italic;">corpse</span> lying on the ground, suddenly you're his friend? Fuck off. Thank God this is over. At least we get to hear that cool song from the beginning again.<br /><br />There were some things that I liked about this. The acting, while not awad winning, mostly isn't bad, with the obvious exceptions of Griffith and Billy Dee (BILLY DEE! BILLY DEE!)(SOMEBODY HELP ME! I CAN'T STOP!) Williams. I also managed to watch it almost totally in one sitting, which may not sound like that big a compliment, but the fact is, some of the films I watch are so bad, I have to pause them and go do something else just so I can mentally prepare myself for watching any more. I've had 90 minute films it's taken me over four hours to watch in the past. So the fact that I watched this pretty much from beginning to end must mean I found it at the very least watchable. But in the end, this movie is just too silly. And I don't have a problem with silly, but this is the bad kind of silly, the kind of silly that thinks it's being really serious. I get the feeling Ferrara thought this movie was a gritty expose of the seedy underbelly of New York, when the reality is, it's a film about a kung-fu serial killer knocking off a bunch of strippers. It's at best generic and at worst completely unoriginal and uninspiring. It's the kind of film you'd find on at five in the moring whilst drunk, and decide to keep flicking on the off chance of finding something better on.<br /><br /></span><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-family:courier new;"><span style="font-weight: bold;">FINAL VERDICT</span></span><br /><br /><span style="font-style: italic;font-family:courier new;" ><span style="font-weight: bold;">BINNED!</span></span><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgenWjmrD0hu1N5k4ORpalXmDemIQgJfz2peE7i9znf4hhyphenhyphenXohS6k4sJZ1yXtsRu73o0GbTJG-uh9Ni2pkKZbmp6UfIQmLxJkxAyN342qhG-DX5-8h3PfoHmULK8SZv70w379zSm9-1MKU/s1600-h/002.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgenWjmrD0hu1N5k4ORpalXmDemIQgJfz2peE7i9znf4hhyphenhyphenXohS6k4sJZ1yXtsRu73o0GbTJG-uh9Ni2pkKZbmp6UfIQmLxJkxAyN342qhG-DX5-8h3PfoHmULK8SZv70w379zSm9-1MKU/s400/002.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5307714160136623042" border="0" /></a><br /></div><span style="font-family:courier new;">Well, there's one of the two remaining remnants of my childhood cast aside. Lets hope the film next week fairs better. Maybe it will. Maybe.<br /><br />Until next week, I'm The Cheap-Arse Film Critic, and I don't need no stripper telling me how to live!<br /></span>The Cheap-Arse Film Critichttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08211046330068309653noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1161570503760263602.post-77028654718596977732009-02-16T10:27:00.000-08:002009-02-18T19:11:02.195-08:00The Cheap-Arse Film Review #20- "CHEERLEADER MASSACRE."<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgZZG272Qhe_0d6jtzTeyHtHSd1hz2mmAkqa7TU2L-xVLge0tHTFcTI09_hiTU0oi1Ir7xAR4BZvOoekS_S3U3V3MqmHRJz7y5MdFK4EHodfb-Mw7WIZgJFJkzDw07Fms4mCIUJokyf1eA/s1600-h/001.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgZZG272Qhe_0d6jtzTeyHtHSd1hz2mmAkqa7TU2L-xVLge0tHTFcTI09_hiTU0oi1Ir7xAR4BZvOoekS_S3U3V3MqmHRJz7y5MdFK4EHodfb-Mw7WIZgJFJkzDw07Fms4mCIUJokyf1eA/s400/001.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5304213964044756802" border="0" /></a><br /><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >NAME: CHEERLEADER MASSACRE</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >RATED: 18</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >RELEASED: 2003</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >WRITTEN BY: LENNY JULIANO & BILL LANGLOIS MONROE (UNCREDITED)</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >DIRECTED BY: JIM WYNORSKI</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >STARRING: A BUNCH OF NONDESCRIPT CHANCERS</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >GENRE: EROTIC SLASHER</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >BOUGHT FROM: POUNDLAND</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >PRICE: A COUPLE OF POM-POMS</span><br /></div><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br />AHA! Bet you thought I was joking at the end of the last review, didn't you? This'll learn ya.<br /><br />I'm just going to come out and say something that will probably end up getting my bloke license revoked- I've never understood the the whole appeal of the cheerleader's uniform, and actually find some men's obsession with it to be a bit... creepy (I sometimes imagine the kind of fanmail Hayden Panettiere must recieve and shudder). Maybe it's because I'm British, and as such didn't grow up with it the same way my American brothers did. To be honest I'm not that into the whole dressing up thing in general. On the days that the planets align themselves in such a way that a woman finds herself struck down with temperary insanity and thinks sleeping with me might be a decent way to spend an evening, I'm more interested in getting her <span style="font-style: italic;">out</span> of her clothes, not convincing her to <span style="font-style: italic;">put more on.</span> But to each their own, I suppose.<br /><br />I picked this up at the same time as "Code 46" and "Vampire Killer Barbys." I think I may have picked this one up first, before spotting "Code" and getting all excited. Those of you that've been reading this from the beginning will know that a movie with a title like that was always going to hit my buttons. It sounds like good, honest, trashy fun, the kind of movie you watch in your car at some run-down drive-in with your girl sitting next to you, her face buried in your shoulder during the scary bits. Whilst researching into it a bit though, I found out that it's got a little bit of history to it, and is part of quite an interesting bloodline, being the third sequel to 1982's "The Slumber Party Massacre," (teenagers, crazy killer, power tools, you know the drill)(heh, "drill") and the first one to do away with the "Slumber Party" part of the equations. The first two sequels also have the distinction of being co-produced by legendary/infamous (delete as applicable) B-Movie creator Roger Corman, which makes me want to see them more than I do the original. I've already watched the forth in the series, may as well work my way backwards. Corman isn't on hand here sadly/thankfully, the only noteworthy member of the production crew being director Jim Wynorski, whose work includes such presumed classics as "The Breastford Wives," "The Lusty Busty Babe-A-Que," "The Davinci Coed," (GENIUS) and "Busty Cops 1 & 2."<br /><br />That should tip you off that this too is, I suppose, technically an erotic horror movie. I say technically because, if you think about it, almost every slasher flick ever made could be called an erotic horror movie, what with most of them featuring (supposedly) teenaged flesh exposed and rubbing itself against other (supposed) tennaged flesh. Infact, it became such a cliche that director Geoffrey Wright decided to subvert the openly conservative nature of these sorts of movies with 2000's "Cherry Falls," which presented to movie fans what he believed was this genres first liberal killer, as he only preyed on people who weren't indulging in these activities (and if you've not seen this movie yet, you really, really should. Words can't do justice to it, believe me).<br /><br />Oh, and one last thing- on the front of the box are positive quote about the movie, one complimenting it for featuring, "hot, and I mean HOT babes!" from something called Biggoria. I tried Googling it to see what I'd find, and got no joy. Never mind, it was probably what I thought it was anyway, and even if it's wasn't, I'd rather go on believing that it was.<br /><br />We open with two people, a man and a woman, camping out in the forest. I think they're supposed to be teenagers, but you know how these things are. The dude seriously looks like he could easily be in his thirties. They're lying side-by-side in their sleeping bags, all cosy and lovey-dovey, when (GASP!) they hear a noise outside. The woman tells the guy to go outside and see what it was, only for him to basically say, "You must be fucking joking." I found myself wanting to cheer at that. How many times have see seen people in these kinds of movies be told to go into the dark tunnel of death, and they just do it? The fact that this dude would rather stay in the tent with his girlfriend is a refreshing change of pace. Of course if he doesn't go outside there's no movie, so in the end she grinds him down with a mixture of questioning his masculinity and showing him her boobs (first nipple sighting: 0:59). He goes outside, sees nothing, but decides it'd be funny to go back into the tent and fuck with her by saying he's seen a bear and they need to get out of there. She's intially pissed off with him, but eventually forgives him as they start kissing and caressing each other, with her breathing, "I hate you... you're an asshole...". I bet this is what sex was like between Madonna and Guy Ritchie towards the end. There's another noise, and once again the guy goes out there to have a look. I really wouldn't have left the tent this time. Anyway, he gets killed, and then the killer turns his attention to the woman, not before doing the old, "using-the-knife-to-cut-open-the-tent" trick. She runs, she screams, she trips, she dies. Cue the opening credits, which for reasons I'm still trying to figure out happen over a spotlight and two angel statues.<br /><br />Even though I was only just over four minutes into it, I have to say, at this point I was pleasently surprised.</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> The only real complaint I had was, in the previous flicks, the killer used drills and things to take out his victims, whereas the killer here just used a knife and a big pointy stick.</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> I mean, yes, staggeringly unoriginal it may have been, but I've seen worse acting, it looks like it's being shot by someone who knows what a camera is, and the writing even managed to subtly poke fun at the stupidity of a classic horror cliche without descending into sub-"Scream" parody. I sat there and thought to myself, "If the rest of it's like this, it might not be too bad." There's a name for what I'm about to experience here. Well, actually there isn't, but I'm about to give it one. I call it the "Halloween: Resurrection Disorder." And the reason I call it that is, when I went to see that particular movie in cinemas (I know...), I had the lowest expectations it's possible to have and still agree to see something. I mean, it had <span style="font-style: italic;">Busta Rhymes</span> in it, for Christ sake. And then the pre-credits sequence, the first fifteen minutes, were <span style="font-style: italic;">phenomenal.</span> I'm not exaggerating. They were tense, well shot, and featured a masterful recon to the last movie that not only gave a good reason for why Jason would still be alive after getting his head cut off, but actually made you slap you palm to your forehead and say, "OF COURSE!" It added a layer to the previous film's ending that made you want to go back and rewatch it. I was hyped, convinced this film was going to rule, against all odds. And then the rest of it, and I mean <span style="font-style: italic;">everything,</span> was utter shit. I was so angry. How could they do that to me? How could they essentially tack a fantastic short movie on the front of this piece of trash? Why couldn't they have just presented me with crap from start-to-finish like I was expecting? Why did they have to get my hopes up?<br /><br />It wasn't quite that case here. I still wasn't expcting anything that great, but now I was expecting something at the very least competent. And did they give me that?<br /><br />Let's see, shall we?<br /><br />We meet the aforementioned Cheerleaders next. We know that's who they are because they're practising a cheer. This is the only routine they do in the entire movie, and that may be a good thing, because to my untrained eye at least, they don't seem to be very good. Their timing's all off and they look a little like they're making it up as they'e going along, which there's a very good chance is the case, thinking about it. They all have names, but I'm not going to use them, because they barely do themselves, and they do nothing character-wise to distinguish themselves from each other, which is more the fault of the writing, to be fair. The only one who's a bit more memorable is the Emo-ish one with jet black hair that looks like she walked off the set of a My Chemical Romance video. They finish and start wooping it up, before their teacher/coach/whatever Ms. Hendricks, tells them to hit the showers and get ready to get on the bus, which is leaving in fifteen minutes. Ms. Hendricks appears to be the same age as the girls she's teaching, incidently. There's a bit of a tiff between Ms. Hendricks and the head of the squad, with her being told that if she's late for practice one more time the Emo Chick will replace her, then they head towards the showers spouting mid-ninties catchphrases like they have strings in their backs that have all been pulled at the same time. "For sure!" "As if!" "Whatever!" Save me.<br /><br />Then we're in the showers, as the camera man slowly pans up one of the girl's bodies from behind as she washes herself, curiously without soap, because that would run the risk of obscruing things. Then he does it again to another girl. There is no talking whilst this is going on. Eventually they do start talking, something about some dude one of the girls is going to hook up with and his tiny cock, but none of this has any baring on the plot whatsoever, it's just there to try and make this scene look a little bit less what it is, which is, "Look at the pretty ladies." We then cut from this to some hard-hitting drama, as one of the other girls and Emo Chick start talking about a girl called Marissa, and how they miss her and how it's been a year since what happened happened. Anniversaries are always a bad thing in slasher movies, have you noticed that. It's always a year after this or five years after that that shit starts to hit the fan. So I'm guessing at this point that this girl's death is going to have a major baring on the plot. This is telegraphed by the rest of the girls, having listened into this little exchange from the shadows (that is to say... from behind something), proclaiming it not good, before asking aloud where another member of their squad was today, with someone saying she'd gone camping with her boyfriend over the weekend. IT HAS BEGUN!<br /><br />Following a brief scene where Ms. Hendrick's catches two guys (in the spirit of fairness and equality I'm not going to bother remembering <span style="font-style: italic;">their</span> names, either) about to start smoking and convinces them to help load up the van, we're back in the changing room, where ominous music is playing as the camera is all shaky and handheld. I wonder, is someone about to die? As it turns out, yes they are, as the lights go out and the girl is stalked before eventually being caught. My favurite part is where a shower spontaniously comes on and the girl just looks at it in horror. "OH NO, NOT THE SHOWER!" I half expected her to somehow end up under it so her top goes see-thru. She's eventually caught, and we don't get to see her death, although later one of the girls comes into the toilet, uses her hairdryer and has a whole conversation with her as she's sitting in a stall bleeding to death. We're later told that her throat was cut and she'd been gutted, which makes no sense, because the other girl looks under the stall to see she's there before asking if it's alright to use her hairdryer (not waiting for an answer, it's worth mentioning), and the blood doesn't start dripping down until after she's looked away. She's been there like that for a while too, so surely by now there'd be blood everywhere. Also the blood looks so fake it's unbelievable. It might just be my set-up, but on my TV it reads almost purple.<br /><br />In between these two scenes we see the two guys who'd been asked to help show up just as the last thing had been loaded in by Buzzy, who's played by the movie's only credited writer (i.e. The one with the least amount of sense), Lenny Juliano, who I think is credited as either Leonard Johnson or Lunk Johnson, depending on where you watch this. Normally I'd skip commenting on this, because it's such a trivial scene, but I wanted to make mention of it because Buzzy is the most memorable character in this movie. He's nothing special, just a quirky horndog, and Juliano doesn't turn in that great a performance (not that he should feel bad, because nobody does), but since all the other characters are so bland, he grabs your attention more than he usually would. It's almost as if the writer saved the best part for himself (Hush your mouth! As if any writer would <span style="font-style: italic;">ever</span> do that!). So congratulations Mr. Juliano, you're the best thing in "Cheerleader Massacre." Also, when they guys are told there's nothing for them to do, they pile into the back of the van, which struck me as strange, because Ms. Hendrick told them to help, she said nothing about them tagging along.<br /><br />The girls miss the bus, so they have to ride up to wherever it is they're going in the equipment van with Buzzy and the boys. They briefly wonder where the girl who's been gutted is, before deciding she must have got on the bus and move on with their lives. The van pulls away as the kids light up their cigarette/joint (I like how they were afraid of getting caught smoking only minutes ago, but now think nothing of sparking up in a confined space with that very same teacher), and then we're taken to the police station where one of the deputies recieves a call telling them that Jeremiah McPherson, an escaped killer, is seemingly on his way to their area, leaving a trail of dead bodies behind him. She then talks to the sherrif about what she's just been told, they talk about roadblocks, and then they head out together. Wow, that was boring. Hope there aren't too many more scens like that. Then there's another killing when a woman jogging is ordered home by her mother who's just heard about the killings, only to fall to her death when the rope bridge she's on whilst trying to take some kind of shortcut gets, um, cut. So a boring death follows a boring scene of exposition. They last few minutes have certainly been boring.<br /><br />And then we're back at the police station! Well, it's a different station, with different characters, but as was said before, everyone in this movie is so bland with the exception of Buzzy, they may as well all be played by the same person. There's more talk about McPherson, and yes, it's still boring. It's all static one shots and no music, which I suppose would be fine if you're trying to make a gritty, realistic cop drama, but this is a movie called "Cheerleader Massacre." They try and liven things up after this by finally revealing what McPherson looks like. At this point we've been led to believe that he's responsible for all the killings, and the fact that we've not seen his face had me believing that there must have been something special about his appearence, like he'd been disfigured or something. But then we see him running through the woods and see that he's... an old white guy with a beard. So they either went to all that trouble for no apparent reason, or they just spectacularly telegraphed that he's not the only killer. Which one are you willing to put your money on?<br /><br />So, we finally come back to the cheerleaders. You know, the ones in the title? I wouldn't blame you for forgetting. They start prattling mindlessly, with The Girl That Misses Marissa Who Died One Year Ago Today and Emo Chick discussing how much they love the snow, and how they'd like to have a cabin out in the mountains with, amongst other things, a fake bearskin rug and, "BRAD FUCKING PITT!" The guys in the back start making fun of this quitely, and I'm sure this is almost entirely improvised, because either they're really good actors, or they're really struggling to come up with things to say, the perfect examlple of this being, "Fake bearskin rug... I'll show 'em a rug... face down...". I chuckled, but I was more chuckling at them trying to think on the fly than I was anything they said. They then encounter one of the previously-mentioned roadblocks, and also one of the most monotone and bored sounding cops I've ever heard. This guy sounds like he's rather be anywhere else in the would than here right now. With their progress stopped dead and the prospect of driving all night looming, they decide to take a shortcut to get to where they need to go. I don't know why they weren't going that way anyway if it's a shortcut, but never mind.<br /><br />We're back with the boring cops next, this time out in the field as they investigate the scene of the killings from the start. I was hoping a change of location would liven these scenes up a bit, but I was wrong. They just go on-and-on about footprints and forensics and how they've not arrived yet and I still don't care. All this is, is flagrant padding. There's no need for this scene to exist, the movie would work perfectly well without it. The only bit of semi-useful information we get is that McPherson would seem to be heading in the same direction as the cheerleaders, but even there, we didn't need to be told that. Oh, and there's a stale doughnuts joke. Because cops <span style="font-style: italic;">love</span> doughnuts, don't they? And we're still not done with this! We get more exposition about McPherson, talking about how he was put away for killing eleven people twenty years ago. They then conclude that he may be heading to Monty Coltrane's place, since he was the sheriff that put him away back then, and decide to drive down there to check on him. Gee, I can't wait until they get there! I bet there'll be even more talking!<br /><br />And it's the next fucking scene! We don't even get a cutaway back to the cheerleaders to break things up, we just see a fade of the cop's truck driving down a country road, then they outside Monty's place! And now they're drinking coffee and talking about Monty's bad leg! What is going on here! Where are the cheeleaders? Where is the massacre? <span style="font-style: italic;">WHY ARE THERE SO MANY OLD MEN WITH BEARD ON MY TELEVISION?!</span> Again, we do get one bit of semi-important information when the sheriff is told about the dead body on the toilet, ad when he tells Monty about the wounds she suffered, he says that doesn't sound like McPherson's style. They're really not trying to hide the fact that there's more than one killer anymore, are they? They gave up on that rather quickly. MORE POLICE WORK!!! This time the girl who discovered the gutted cheerleader is being interviewed by another cop. Actually this scene isn't too bad, if only for the girl responding to being asked if she'd had any grudges or ex-boyfriends who'd be out to get her with, "GRUDGE?! HER INTESTINES WERE ON THE BATHROOM FLOOR AND HER THROAT WAS CUT! DOES THAT SOUND LIKE A LOVER'S QUARREL TO YOU!?" Best line of the screenplay, right there. But still, say it with me folks, THIS SCENE HAS NO REASON TO EXIST. The actress is also terrible, watching her trying to cry and attempt to emote when saying about how tomorrow was the Gutless Wonder's Birthday is embarrassing.<br /><br />Oh look, the cheerleaders! And they're still in that van! And they're now as tired of it as I am, complaing about how long this is taking. Finally, the inevitable happens and the van runs out of gas, leaving them stranded up in the snowy hills. Is it going to get vaguely exciting now? Are they going to get picked off one-by-one as they try to hike their way back to civilisation? We're not going to find out just yet, because (you guessed it) it's back to the fucking police station for more filler, this time with them going through his file and realising that all his past victims were in their fourties. Okay, we get it, he's not the one killing the teenagers. I'm starting to wonder why he's even in this movie. There's finally a little bit of excitement when The bored cop from the roadblock and his female partner are both killed by McPherson (with his bare hands!), who then makes off in their cop car, but this is very brief and I get the feeling it's the most thrilling thing we're going to see for a while.<br /><br />This is the point where things get a little weird, for me at least. The sheriff and his deputy visit the house of Linda, the lone survivor of McPherson's rampage twenty years ago. Now, as I've said before, I've not seen any of the prior movies, but in my research I discovered the killer from the first movie was called Russ Thorne, not Jeremiah McPherson. And it's just been established that McPherson only killed older people during his last reign of terror, so why are they now saying he tried to kill teenagers with a drill? This is just blatant fan service, inserted into the movie with a logic-be-damned mentality. With that said, I like the idea of this, and I think it's cool that they got back Brinke Stevens to reprise her role, even if I can't figure out if her strange, disconnected delivery is a stylistic choice or just the extent of her talents. And the flashback we're given is awesome, because it's actually a clip taken from the first movie, which is a nice touch, although it exposes this one totally, because it looks better (it was recorded on actual film, whereas this movie seems to have been done straight on tape, giving it the kind of look you usually associate with American day-time soap operas), and manages to be more exciting than this movie has been in 35 minutes, with a crazy man slashing at a woman's arm with a drill.<br /><br />With fans of the series sufficiently blown, we find the cheerleaders and company still walking through the snow. They're starting to get worried, before they stuble across this pretty cool house in the middle of nowhere and, finding nobody home, decide to just caually break in. Buzzy looks around and proclaims that nobody's lived her "in a long time," which is funny, because when they look around the kitchen later, they find enough food to last, they say, a couple of days, including a fully-stocked fridge. It was at this point I realised the movie wasn't really trying anymore. Buzzy heads out to check on the propane and the power (the scenes of him doing this are unintentionally hilarious due to the fact that heavy wind sound effects are playing and he's acting like he's walking through a gale, yet the trees and bushes behind him aren't even slightly moving), whilst everyone else splits up to look for a phone which, once found, predictably doesn't work. So they're trapped their, but at least the power works, there's heat, and they've found a game's room, so they decide to hunker down until the storm passes and, dare I say it... have a slumber party.<br /><br />And then, just when the film looks like its about to deliver what it says it wil in the title, just when the lambs have been set up for their inevitable slaughter... back to the <span style="font-style: italic;">fucking cops.</span> This time the sheriff is played a recording of what we presume in McPherson making a threat. It's not just any threat though, oh no. This threat is made in verse.<br /><br /></span><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-family:courier new;">"Once around is never enough,</span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">I'll kill more than my share, it isn't that tough,</span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">This time the bodies will stack up,</span><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">'Cause just like you pigs I'm calling my back-up."</span><br /></div><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br />A lyrcal masterpiece, I'm sure you'll agree. Geniuses that they are, they deduce that the "back-up" mentioned might mean that he's not working alone, only for the sheriff to poo-poo the idea because, "that lunatic always works alone." Always? He went on <span style="font-style: italic;">one</span> killing spree twenty years ago! I mean yes, if you're going to be technical about it, he <span style="font-style: italic;">has</span> always worked alone, but come on now.<br /><br />Following a brief return to the house in the woods to thrillingly see the girls arrange sleeping arrangements, we get more policing, this time with the police talking to the principle of the school about the missing cheerleaders, with the sheriff deciding to go up into the hills and try to find them himself. One man in a "blizzard," against a psychotic killer? Sounds reasonable to me. Back with the sub-plot that's <span style="font-style: italic;">supposed</span> to be the main plot, a mysterious black-gloved hand turns out the lights on the girls, who barely seem to notice. Hell of a way to build up tension. Instead, they decide to tell ghost stories, with Buzzy offering to go first as Ms. Hendrick announces that she's off to take a shower (more on this in a bit...). His story starts out as standard stuff, with two women walking through the snow, get told of a killer that's on the loose, find a girl hanging over a log with amnesia, find a deserted cabin ("Just like us!" one of the girls chimes in for anybody at home who hasn't worked that out yet), start a fire and get changed into some "nice warm clothes," which are actually scimpy pajamas that look like they offer as much protecting from the elements as they would just going naked, they hear a knock at the door, reason that a deranged killer wouldn't just knock at the door (because it's easy to predict what the insane might do), open it to see a man holding an axe, they scream, and then...<br /><br />... suddenly all three girls are unstairs in the hottub, rubbing, kissing and pouring chocolate sauce on each other. And this goes on for over two minutes. Okay then. The thing that got me was, when the chocolate sauce got involved, obviously lots of it got in the water, which set my OCD off something fierce. Just the thought of having to sit there in it, when it's al brown and cloudy, and undoubtably smells all watered down, makes me feel physically ill. I must be the only man in the world who watched this scene and paid more attention to the water than the women.<br /><br />The girls of course call bullshit on Buzzy's story and tell him to get his mind out of the gutter. HA! A move like this suddenly getting all indignant over sexual matters! That's a good one, especially when you take into account the next scene, which is Ms. Hendrick taking off her clothes in order to get in the shower. That's it, that's all it is. And inbetween the next couple of scenes, we cut back to her just to watch her wash herself. Now, I'm not going to stand here and be all self-righteous and pretend that I don't like looking at images of the naked female form, because I'd be lying. However, even within the context of this movie, these little cut-aways are jaw-droppingly gratuitous. Let's compare them to te other nude scenes there've been up to this point- the one with the woman showing her boyfriend her boobs in the tent. Alright, that's fine. She's supposed to be going out with him, and girlfriends show their boyfriends their breasts. Sometimes. If you're lucky. The scene of the girls in the shower... okay, that was pretty gratuitous, but at least there was dialogue there! At least there was a <span style="font-style: italic;">tiny bit</span> of effort made. And the previous scene with the chocolate sauce, well, that was a visual representation of a story being told by a pervert. It was <span style="font-style: italic;">supposed</span> to be absurd. The only reason this exists is to show footage of a woman soaping up her arse!<br /><br />...<br /><br />... I forgot why I had a problem with this. Moving swiftly on.<br /><br />The inbetween scenes are in stark contrast to each other too, with one being Monty and McPherson finally meeting up and having their titanic tussle, and one of the cheerleaders coming onto one of the guys. This is this entire film in microcosm- it can't decide if it wants to be a horny slasher romp, or a serious police drama about an escaped maniac starring two old men with beards. And so begins the build to the final showdown, with Monty being shot by a rifle (which all the girls here), only to somehow survive and get off a shot of his own (which the girls think sounds closer than the last, which is impossible considering neither man had moved from the area of he original shot). Buzzy gets sent out to see what's going down, only to get distracted by the two humping teens that he spies through the window. I'll at least say it's a pretty decent little sex scene. They even start going at it doggystyle, which I'm always shocked to see in anything that's not full-on porn, because ratings boards don't usually like this posiion, because they associate it almost totally with... a sex act that makes them uncomfortable (and alot of other people too, I'm sure)(*rimshot*)(literally)(okay, I'll stop now). Of course Buzzy bites the dust whilst watching this, his blood (which still looks laughable) splattering on the window as the two inside achieve orgasm. Visual symbolism, folks.<br /><br />Still, at least now it's actually something close to a slasher, which it's supposed to have been all along, and now we get the most awesome moment in the movie, which is when they hear a knock on the door and, expecting it to be Buzzy and the other guy the sent out after him, open it to find THE HEADLESS BODY OF THE OTHER DUDE STANDING THERE WITH BLOOD SHOOTING OUT OF HIS NECK LIKE A SPRINKLER AND HIS ARM LOCKED IN PLACE LIKE HE'S GIVING A BLACK POWER SALUTE!!! I mean, think about that for a second- his headless body must have marched up to the house, knocked on the door, stood there for a few seconds, the collapsed when the door was finally opened. That's exacyly the kind of brain-dead insanity I thought I was letting myself in for with this. The shit has now hit the fan, and cheerleader start getting picked off one-by-one. I'm going to skip alot of this, because it's all fairly generic stuff, and reveal who the second killer was working with McPherson- it was (DUN-DUN-DUUUUN!) The Emo Chick! Actually, we never really know for sure if they're working together, as she never mentions him, so maybe it's just a case of two two killers running around independant of each other. And what was her motivation? She's secretly a lesbian, and during a party a party one year ago, she was caught kissing Marissa (see, it all ties in!), who promply ran off and died in a car crash that seemed occur for no apparent reason other than to have her dead. And their way of dealing with her, this slight woman armed with only one gun? BLOW UP THE FUCKING HOUSE USING THE GAS OVEN AND A BOTTLE OF VODKA WITH A RURNING RAG IN IT! Overkill worthy of a Schwarzenegger movie right there, and again, exactly the kind of movie I thought I was buying.<br /><br />So the story would appear to bo over, the girls are giving their stories to the police, and Monty, who was savagely beaten by Ms. Hendricks when she mistook him for the killer, is in an ambulance ready to be taken to hospital. Everything appears to be tied up... except... where's McPherson?<br /><br />He's driving the ambulance, isn't he? and amongst all that carnage, he's foundthe time to shave. To be continued? Christ I hope not.<br /><br />I hated this movie, butI didn't hate it for the reasons I was expecting to ate it. I was expecting to hate it because it would be all seedy and amateurish and just a bad example of low-bdget horror filmmaking, like "Camp Blood" was all the way back in review #2. But I ended up hating it because, for te most part, it was... boring. More boring than a movie called "Cheerleader Massacre" has any right being.</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"> It tries to make up for this bu going absolutely apeshit with the sex and deaths in the last half-an-hour or so</span><span style="font-family:courier new;">, but by then it's too little, too late. I called it filler before, but I genuinely believe that this movie could have been told in a more concise ad focussed manner had they been removed. Problem s the movie movie would have been about 40 minutes then. Not that I'd be complaining.<br /><br /></span><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >FINAL VERDICT</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;font-family:courier new;" >BINNED!</span><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgKtzYYCV0ej8rZsErbNuYadOeR1wljEt-Nxn_85rU6xc4GVV25s9qkDDgniDdGBaGZ6UqpAJ5K3S0z_RUp2SN-_7l1hdJuE5PYQUzHwBIoVFt7GcZvBUwbx0SNG_0mfSiH3WDcQN8r-NM/s1600-h/002.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgKtzYYCV0ej8rZsErbNuYadOeR1wljEt-Nxn_85rU6xc4GVV25s9qkDDgniDdGBaGZ6UqpAJ5K3S0z_RUp2SN-_7l1hdJuE5PYQUzHwBIoVFt7GcZvBUwbx0SNG_0mfSiH3WDcQN8r-NM/s400/002.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5304213948187290818" border="0" /></a><br /></div><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br />Oh, and one last thing- all you guys whofind the sight of a woman in a cheerleader's uniform alluring?<br /><br />The never wear any.<br /><br />Until next week, I'm The Cheap-Arse Film Critic, and there's a formula to it, A VERY SIMPLE FORMULA! <span style="font-weight: bold;">EVERYONE'S A SUSPECT!</span><br /></span>The Cheap-Arse Film Critichttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08211046330068309653noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1161570503760263602.post-50754868767119957482009-02-07T06:24:00.000-08:002009-02-13T06:01:33.676-08:00The Cheap-Arse Film Review #19- "DOWN WITH LOVE." (VALENTINE'S WEEK SPECIAL)<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhq-SUnSbj_is20_q1mlIWu7ZRvYNWJtFRfI4CjWiT01KQyNqR_N2hXie8zUmirM7AxJkTupkMD8pkHN05m6n7JxXFNne5mMbToDI38V6bQffJoaEVhfHYgI3dN1PhV6m-oDICAFgR2czs/s1600-h/001.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhq-SUnSbj_is20_q1mlIWu7ZRvYNWJtFRfI4CjWiT01KQyNqR_N2hXie8zUmirM7AxJkTupkMD8pkHN05m6n7JxXFNne5mMbToDI38V6bQffJoaEVhfHYgI3dN1PhV6m-oDICAFgR2czs/s400/001.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5301654867929441714" border="0" /></a><br /><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >NAME: DOWN WITH LOVE</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >RELEASED: 2003</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >RATING: 15</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >WRITTEN BY: EVE AHLERT & DENNIS DRAKE</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >DIRECTED BY: PAYTON REED</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >STARRING: RENEE ZELLWEGER, EWAN MCGREGOR, SARAH PAULSON, DAVID HYDE PIERCE</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >GENRE: SCREWBALL ROMANTIC COMEDY</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >BOUGHT FROM: CEX</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >PRICE: 50p</span><br /></div><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br />LOKK AT MEEEEEE!!!! I IZ REVUE MOOOVEEE COOLED "DOWN WIV LUV" 3 DAES BEFOUR VALENTINZ DAE!!!! I IZ A JEANEUZ!!! LOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLLOLOLOLOL!!!!!!1!<br /><br />Um... yes, well... I was in two minds about reviewing a romantic comedy this week, for the very reason I eventually decided to do it. I just thought might seem a bit predictable and tacky leading up to Valentine's Day. I mean, Christmas reviews are one thing, but for some reason I thought this might be taking it too far. I got over this eventually for three reasons- 1) the pun of the title just proved too much for me to resist, as you can plainly see, 2) I've not done a romantic comedy during this enterprise, so I thought this would be as good an excuse as any to finally get round to one, and 3) I specifically wanted to cover <span style="font-style: italic;">this</span> romantic comedy, because being totally honest, I've already seen a bit of it. And when say "a bit," I mean <span style="font-style: italic;">a bit,</span> five minutes at the most. It was one of the movies showing during a flight to Florida I was on several years ago. There were literally no other films on worth watching, so I put it on in the hope that it would at least prove a decent distraction. Then I put my head back, closed my eyes to rest them for what I thought was a moment, only to open them again and find we were landing. I managed to sleep through an entire flight <span style="font-style: italic;">and</span> several showing of the same movie. That could be a better review of this than I could ever write.<br /><br />I suppose another reason I didn't want to do anything Valentine's Day-related was because for a very long time I was one of those arseholes who hated that particular day and made damn-well sure everybody knew about it. My hatred came in two distinct phases over the years- the first one was your bog-standard, Emo, "OH WOE IS ME I HAVE NOBODY TO LOVE ME!" kind of thing through my early-to-mid teens, where I'd spend the entire day alone in my room listening to sad music (Christ, just typing this is just making me wish I could go back in time and give my younger self a good hiding...) and cursing anyone and everyone who had somebody. The <span style="font-style: italic;">second</span> phase was slightly more complex, inasmuch as it was built around me telling people that I had no problem with Valentine's Day anymore. And then telling them over and over and over and over and over and over and over again, to the point that it's obvious that I <span style="font-style: italic;">did</span> still have a problem, and was trying so fucking hard to convince everyone, myself included, that I didn't. Oh, and I'd also throw in this long speech about how Valentine's Day is just a holiday created by the card companies to make money and anyody who celebrated it was an idiot. So as well as failing at deluding everyone, I was now implying that I thought I was somehow smarter and more enlightened than them, just because I didn't have anybody to buy a card for (WHERE'S THAT FUCKING TIME MACHINE?!). There are days when I look back, remember how I was and am amazed, absolutely amazed, that I have friends. Nowadays, I just shrug my sholders and go, "eh." If you're with someone, great, buy them a card, take them out to dinner, go all-out. If you're not, big deal. Just treat it like another day and don't sweat it. Just don't be how I was, don't go out of your way to make people feel bad about not being single in a passive-aggresive manner, because trust me, they'll all secretly hate you for it.<br /><br />So anyway, onto the movie. I've noticed recently online that there's bee a real flare-up in hostility towards romantic comedies. It started around the time the "Sex & The City" movie was released. Now, I'm not going to defend or demonize that movie, because I've not seen it. And I'm also not going to say I didn't make any jokes about it or it's actresses leading up to it's release, because I did. I mean come on, they wrote themselves and were fairly obvious (and if we've learned nothing else today, it's that I can't resist an obvious joke). But there's a difference between making fun of a movie, and outright stating you think it shouldn't exist, which is what I saw more than a few people suggesting. They were absolutely outraged that this movie was coming out, and even implied that this somehow tarnished the very history of cinema itself. At first I just thought it was The Internet being The Internet, this sullen, pale creature prone to hyperbole that still thinks girls have cooties. But then I started to notice a real ground-swell of hatred towards <span style="font-style: italic;">all</span> movies that had females as their intended audience, with whole films being denounced as shit just because some dude's girlfriend wanted to see it.<br /><br />I have a theory about this. I have a theory about a great many things. For instance, I have a theory that Jason Statham is the only living example of what all mankind will one day evolve into. My theory regarding what I was just talking about though, is that because it's become percieved (rightly or wrongly) by alot of men that television has become gradually more aimed at women, they've started to see cinema (rightly or wrongly) as the last form of visual entertainment that's mostly <span style="font-style: italic;">theirs,</span> and see anything not aimed at them as evidence that this is now slipping away from them, too. The "Sex & The City," movie must have really pushed a few buttons if I'm right, because here we have a (grrr...) movie aimed at women, based on a (GRRR!) <span style="font-style: italic;">TV show</span> aimed at women. My favourite thing of all though was when it beat the new "Indiana Jones" movie at the box office and I had to watch a whole sub-section of people hate it even more because it dared to beat the mighty Indy, whilst also hating Indy because they were always going to hate it anyway. Hilarious.<br /><br />Not many movies manage to be clever or raise a wry smile with the production company logo at the beginning, but this one does, as they use the vintage 20 Century Fox logo from the sixties instead of the more flashy modern one. I should explain that this is done because this movie is a nostalgia piece, not only set in the sixties, but also filmed in the style of movies from that era, so the logo, along with us being informed that this is a "CinemaScope" picture, helps to add to the immersion. We're then dragged straight back out again by the title sequence, which is a load of animated bangs and whistles too spastic for me to go into in any great detal here. On the plus side, there's a really good swing-tune playing over the top, also called "Down With Love," which I assumed was written especially for this until I saw there's also a version by Judy Garland in there, performed by Michael Buble (or as my uncle likes to call him, "Mickey Bubble") and Holly Palmer. But the animation looks too modern to fit in with the stylistic theme they're going for. If you're going to make a nostalgia piece, you have to commit to it 100%, you can't half-arse it even slightly, which unfortunately is what I think they did here.<br /><br />Following this, we're treated to a very lovely aerial shot of New York City. And this isn't me just assuming all American cities are New York City like I usually do, we're actually told in voice-over (by a man who somehow manages to pull off a period <span style="font-style: italic;">voice</span>), that this is New York City, "The time: now, 1962! And there's no time or place like it! If you've gotta dream, this is the place to make that dream come true! That's why the souring populaion of hopeful dreamers has just reached eight million people! Oh, make that eight million... and one!" It at that point that Renee Zellweger, wearing a pink jacket and frankly terrifying hat emerges from the crowd with a smile on her face. After a few mildly amusing visual gags involving some Ban The Bomb protestors getting scared by a backfiring car, and Barbara Novak (Zellweger's character, I should probably point out) being unable to get in an elevator, we discover that she's written a book called, "Down With Love," detailing how she believes love is little more than a distraction preventing women from achieving their true potential. She meets up with her editor, a fabulous, chain-smoking woman by the name of Vikki Hiller (Sarah Paulson, who, if like me, you recongnised from her role in "Serenity" where she plays a hologram that's on-screen for less than five minutes, I think you'll agree we should all probably go outside and get some fresh air together), and then explains the concept of her book to the old men on "The Lion's Den," which I'm assuming is the board of directors. There's some good, rapid-fire dialogue here based around all the director's being identified by their initials ("O.K.'s can't make it, he's down with T.B." "Oh what a shame, is it serious?" "No, they're just having breakfast."), plus the air of casual sexism from that time is hamered home when the entire board asks Vikki to make them coffee, although I don't think this is the most sexist thing in this scene, I think that belongs to Barbara stating that in her book, she encourages women to fight off carnal urges so that they can eventually experience sex like men by... eating lots of chocolate. I know there's actually science backing that up, but come on now. I also think the board, who are all fusty old men let's not forget, take being told that they're little more than an annoyance that needs to be done away with a little too well. But still, as a fan of economic character development, I like this scene, because in under ten minutes we already know the motivation for and inhabit the head-space of one of our main characters. We also get a funny introduction to what will be the conflict of this film when one of the board members tells Barbara that she may have been able to pull this off in Maine, where all the men are gentlemen, but she'll have trouble doing the same in Manhatten, where he say, "The men are devious! They're dangerous! They'll be coming at you from every angle (Lord does this looks siniser written down...)! When you're watching you're front, they'll attack from your rear (I ain't touching that one)(well... you know what I mean)! And when you're protecting your rear, They'll drop out of the sky!" Which leads us to...<br /><br />... a shot of a helicoptor! Genius! And who should be in that helicoptor but the fantastically named Catcher Block (Ewan McGregor), flanked by at least three beautiful women, who exits the 'coptor by climbing down the dropladder whilst it's still airbourne and landing on the roof of a buliding. That's how I want to arrive at my next school reunion, I've just decided. McGregor is also the perfect guy to cast in this role, a charming, dashing sort with a voice that causes bras to unhook themselves, not to mention that he's also handsome and has a boyish glint in his eye that you just know is going to be there even when he's in his sixties. I should think he's a bastard, but I also get the impression he's a right laugh and would be fun to have a pint with, so I can't.<br /><br />As it turns out, Catcher is the star reporter for Know Magazine ("The Magazine For Men In The KNOW"), and would appear to be a constant headache for the magazine's owner, Peter McMannus (David Hyde Pierce, who's basically playing Niles here, as he often does, but he's so good at it and I enjoy watching him work so much that I forgive him), the son of it's creator, who's therapist says resents Catcher because he's "A self-made man, as opposed to the <span style="font-style: italic;">son</span> of a self-made man." He fires Catcher for not delivering his story on hidden Nazis like he was supposed to the day before, only for Catcher to reveal that he was somehow able to mix business with pleasure and find Nazis hidden in Florida helping NASA put America on The Moon. So he gets to bed three showgirls, discover secret Nazis working within his own government, and then convince one of said showgirls to type up the story for him? With all dur respect to Danial Craig, why wasn't Ewan McGregor cast as James Bond again? It's also here that you realise just how good this movie is with it's handling of verbal humour, when Catcher's secretary listens into he and Peter discussing socks, only for it to sound like they're discussing... something that <span style="font-style: italic;">sounds</span> like "socks" ("What would you say is the average length for most men?" "How would I know? D'you think I spend all my time in the locker room or the club looking around making a comparative study?" "Let me see your again... we can measure, I'll get a ruler." "Better make it a yard stick!").<br /><br />In a cab leaving the publishers, Barbara is furious that the board has no intention of promoting her book. So I guess they weren't too pleased after all. God, Renee Zellweger's cute when she's angry. I feel weird talking about the looks of the women in a film that's all about gender roles and sexism, but I just spent an entire paragraph going on about how great Ewan McGregor is, so I think everything evens itself out. Sarah Paulson's a vision in this movie as well, which I think might be the point, to have these two gorgeous women, one incredibly handsome man and, um, David Hyde Pierce, strut through this movie looking incredible so that the sometimes barbed subject matter can slip down unnoticed. A spoonful of sugar and all that. Vikki tells Barbara not to worry as she has a plan based around her desire to get publicity from as many places as possible, including places she'll mostly be seen by men, meaning an interview with... Know Magazine! Say, I wonder who will be put in charge of this story? Actually, they don't even bother dragging that little "mystery" out, as Vikki says she's arranged for Catcher to write the story mere seconds later, only for us to cut to another cab to see Catcher refusing to do it, saying he has no interest in interviewing "a New England, man-hating, spinster librarian." Well, when you put it like <span style="font-style: italic;">that</span>, it doesn't sound like such an attractive prospect. Peter practically begs him to do it, as he was asked to set up the story by Vikki, who he really likes. When Catcher tells him to get someone else to do it, Peter responds, "The best thing I have to offer a woman is the best thing <span style="font-style: italic;">you</span> have to offer a woman... <span style="font-style: italic;">you.</span>" I had to rewind this scene back twice to get the meaning of that line, which either means it's confusing, or devilishly clever. I'll be kind and go with the second option.<br /><br />After Vikki takes Barbara to her new apartment (which is so sixties-ish I feel ashamed of describing my bedroom as such just because I've painted the walls orange), she recieves a call from Catcher, who has of course changed his mind. They arrange to meet up at The Mahogoney Lounge, where Catcher and Peter already are. Of course things can't go according to plan, that wouldn't be anywhere near screwball enough, so they don't- whilst Peter has excused himself, Catcher sneaks off with a British flight attendant called Gwendolyn (Jeri Ryan... yes, Trekkies, Seven-Of-Nine is in this), explaining to Barbara by telephone that he had to leave when, "a little english foxhound came in and started nuzzling me." I'm not entering into the minefeild that is refering to women as dogs (although the script does, by having Barbara ask Catcher how "the bitch" is now), all I'll say is they arrange to meet up at dinner instead, where he promptly flakes out on her again, this time with a "French Poodle that isn't ready to go in yet." Barbara gives him a little bit of advice, that being that is he "puts a little twig in her bottom, she'll remember why she went out with you in the first place."<br /><br />...<br /><br />... Can I have a moment, please?<br /><br />...<br /><br />...<br /><br />... Okay, I'm good.<br /><br />Catcher's ruse is eventually discovered when Barbara overhears the two flight attentants realising they've both been had (figuratively and literally, I suppose) by Catcher, just when he calls to cancel <span style="font-style: italic;">again,</span> this time over breakfast. To be honest, the fact that Barbara was taken in by this at all makes me think less of her character, and also doesn't really make sense when something is revealed later in the movie, but I am, as ever, getting ahead of myself. So Catcher tries to sell her another line of canine-based bullshit, and she in not so many words tells him to fuck off, before storming out of the restaurant with Vikki and leaving Peter looking like he's about to kill himself.<br /><br />Barbara is taken to a bookshop to discover that they have only one copy of her book on sale. She and Vikki decide they need to get more publicity for the book so more copies will be brought in (didn't they already know they needed to do this? Was getting in Know Magazine the only plan they had?), so they make the only logical decision that can be made, namely trying to get it on The Ed Sullivan show. I love movie logic. Actually I'll give them credit, they realise how silly a notion this is by having Barbara ask how exactly they get a book on a talk show, a problem Vikki solves by having Judy Garland appear, singing the title song from the opening credits. This is straying dangerously close to Meta Outta Nowhere, folks... Of course, their plan is a total success, and now the book is selling like hotcakes, seemingly all over the world (there are cutaways to places such as Britain, China and Russia, which seem to be represented by the same shop front redecorated to look just stereotypical enough to leave you in no doubt as to where you're supposed to be).<br /><br />With the success of her book, Barbara becomes something of a celebrity, and Catcher finally gets a good look at her thanks to a cardboard cut out. Realising she's not the unattractive spinster he thought she was, he now finds himself desperate to meet her, getting Peter to attempt to set up the interview again, only for her to gleefully keep turning him down, then taking it one step further by describing Catcher on live television as a man who "changes women as often as he changes shirts," ruining his lovelife and, essentially, his life. So finally, over half-an-hour into the film, we get the major drive of the plot going, which is that Catcher is now motivated to expose Barbara as a sham by getting her to fall in love with him, agree to marry him, and writing about it for the magazine. He seems to have made this decision at the right time, because Barbara is now at the place where, as she puts it, she can't even get picked up by a taxi driver, instead spending her nights at home alone eating chocolate. I know I've written this before, but I really <span style="font-style: italic;">can</span> relate to this.<br /><br />From here you realise how clever the movie's been with it's plotting, because Catcher uses his contacts to find out where Babara goes and what she does on a daily basis, making sure that he'll be in her local dry-cleaners at the same time she is. When she's standing next to him, at first I wondered why she wasn't freaking out and yelling at him, but then you remember that they've never physically met, they've just spoken on the phone, and as such Barbara has no idea what Catcher looks like (or so we think...), which allows him to assume the identity of Major Zip Martin, Astronaut, and catch her interest by pretending he has no idea who she is. McGregor's southern American accent is terrible, but I think that might be intentional, even though the one he attempted in "Big Fish" wasn't much better, and that definitely <span style="font-style: italic;">wasn't</span> intentional.<br /><br />Barbara takes the bait hook, line and sinker, and is soon inviting him back to her place so that they can "get to know each other," to see "what they have in common... and what they have that's different." I'm actually amazed at how dirty this movie is. We're just under fourty minutes in and the main female lead is so out-of-her-mind horny that she's practically throwing herself at someone she's just met (not to mention that there's been at least one obvious anal sex gag). "Zip" turns her down, saying that he couldn't get to know her "All-The Way Better" until he's got to know her enough in the first place, leading to her asking him out for a drink, using her urges against her and tricking her into taking him out on a date.<br /><br />We briefly re-enter the Peter/Vikki subplot when Catcher, spotting Vikki having a seemingly disasterous date with a football player (and after making a few droll "passes" puns), encourages Peter to go over to her on the basis that she doesn't hate him yet, but she will when he publishes the Novak story. I'll say that nobody plays "lovably pathetic," like David Hyde Pierce, as he demonstrates by at first strutting over to Vikki all cool, before it melts away and he ends up asking her, "Are you in love with that football player?" in a manner that makes him sound like he's about to cry. She tells him she's not, because it turns out the guy was only interested in her professionally, wanting to slip her his manuscript and not his tongue. "The men who resent my success won't give me the time of day, and the men who respect it won't give me the time of <span style="font-style: italic;">night,</span>" she complains, causing Peter to tell her he'll respect and resent her all day and all night long, which as pick-up lines go is at least original. And oddly, it works, which seems a little abrupt and out of left-field, but at the same time heart-warming. I guess secretly we all want the average-at-best looking guy to succeed with somebody way out of their league. It gives us all hope.<br /><br />So Barbara and "Zip" start dating, as illustrated by one of those old-time montages that includes shots of them walking through the dark as neon signs float around. This is probably the most authentic nostalgia imagery in the film, but it's difficult to take seriously at this point because it's been parodied so mercilessly in so many different places. I had one from "The Simpsons" playing through my head the whole time I was watching it. But at the very least it does an effective job of showing that they're growing closer with minimum effort and time. And in a nice twist, it would appear that <span style="font-style: italic;">Catcher</span> is the one falling in love, as the next thing we see is him staring lovingly at some photo booth pictures of the two of them. This doesn't cause him to take his head out of the game, though, as he has a private investigator go to Maine and dig around in Barbara's past, believing that a man must have really hurt her to cause her to believe the things she now does.<br /><br />In the meantime, Peter is spazzing out preparing a meal for Vikki that'll be good enough so he can make his "big move," calling Catcher to his apartment to try his sauce (MINDS. GUTTER. OUT.). Catcher is confused as to why he's putting all this effort in, and also why he's waited this long to make a move, as most "Down With Love" girls are, ahem, open to a move being made after the first date. Peter's response? "These "Down With Love" girls may be used to having sex like a man, but <span style="font-style: italic;">I'm</span> not." I've decided, I love this character. There was a time when I would have related to him enough to have his poster up on my wall. They also address Catcher's situation with Barbara, Peter claiming that Catcher's claim that he's trying to get her to not want to have sex with him as an excuse to hide that he really likes spending time with her.<br /><br />We then have the funniest and lewdest moment in the film, that makes genius use of the splt-screen effect they've been using sparringly throughout. We see both Barbara and "Zip" talking on the phone, every so often something will happen to make it appear like they're doing... things to each other, such as "Zip" turning to the side and undoing his towel just as Barbara has got down on her hands and knees to pick somehing up. I don't think I have to explain what it looks like they're doing. There's also a bit, once the split has switched to a verical line, where she's lying on her front and he decided to start doing some sit-ups (as you do when you're on the phone), so that his head disappears into her groinal area. I'm not going to lie, they're obvious sight gags, and we've seen variations of them a mllion times before, such as in the "Austin Powers" movies, but here they feel a little bit cleverer, as they're used to visually represent the sexual frustration the pair are feeling. He invites her round "his" place to eat a meal "he's" cooked, which it turns out is actually <span style="font-style: italic;">Peter's</span> place and is the meal <span style="font-style: italic;">Peter</span> cooked, as Catcher has offered him the chance to use his apartment for the night in an attempt to really impress Vikki. "So, you'd like to come?" He asks her. "Oh... yes... yes..." she answers. He's doing push-ups on top of her by this point. Then he thanks her for being so flexible, and they both start smoking a cigarette. Amazing.<br /><br />The meal goes well, with "Zip" continuing his masterful teasing, leaning in close, talking about how, as an astronaut, he sometimes wished he had something hot to sink his teeth into, before casually walking away. Smooth operator, this guy. She compliments "his" house, saying it's refreshing to find a place not loaded up with every gadget custom-made to try and get a woman in the sack. This is of course the exact moment we cut back to Peter in Catcher's real apartment, where everything is operated by little switches, confusing the shit out of him, leading to him pressing the wrong button and basically attacking Vikki with an electronic sofa bed. That thing <span style="font-style: italic;">does</span> look cool. ALl things considered, he recovers from this well, but then drops the ball by saying he must have drunk too much Sherry whilst cooking. This impresses Vikki, as she says no man has ever cooked for her before, and that she's famished. OH NO! BUT THE MEAL IS OVER AT HIS REAL APARTMENT, AND CATCHER IS ABOUT TO SERVE IT TO BARBARA! WHATEVER SHALL HE DO?! Well, actually, things don't go as crazy as I was expecting. I was expecting him to run back to his apartment and demand the meal he cooked be returned to him, but instead he just says he was cookng for Catcher's apartment for him. Bit of a missed opertunity there I feel, but it's more than made up for by Peter seemingly setting the house to "Attack Mode," where once again the sofa bed turns hostile and the record player starts spitting albums at them. It's like a kinder, fluffier version of "Poltergist."<br /><br />Back at Peter's apartment, things seem to be going better for "Zip and Barbara, as the meal has been eaten, their shoes have been kicked off, and we here them talking in a vaguely sexual manner as low saxophone music plays in the background. He asks if he's got it in the, "right spot," to which she responds in a breathy voice, "Almost..." They're going to be arm-wrestling, aren't they? As it turns out, she's looking through a telescope up at the stars. That's a new one. Watching her looking at the stars, looking all adorable, Catcher's resolve seems to be fading, even though she still seems to have enough control over hers. Rededicating hiself, he finally says the words that she's been waiting for him to say for a long time, that being that he's ready to go to bed, to which she hastily agrees... only for him to then start calling her a taxi. HA! PSYCHE! As it turns out, it backfires in a spectacular way, as Barbara now decides that she can't be with "Zip," because she's starting to develop feelings for him, leaving Catcher with no choice but to plant one right on her lips, as the grandious music swells. Along with other things I assume (what is wrong with me during this review? I swear I've come down with Double Entendre's Syndrome or something...). She then agrees, weakly, to give him one more chance, before picking up the nearest bowl containing chocolate and making off with it.<br /><br />Catcher later returns to his apartment to find an infestation has taken place, not of rats, but rather of something worse- Beatniks. God, one of them's got an acoustic guitar. Where's John Belushi when you need him? Catcher finds Peter sitting in his bar cross-legged like some white, thin, beret-and-sunglases-wearing Buddah, and not unreasonably asks him what's going on. Peter explains that he took Vikki uptown to a coffee-house, and when the place got raided he just moved the party back to Catcher's apartment. Far from being annoyed, Catcher seems very amused by the whole thing. Seriously, for all his flaws, he seems like a pretty cool friend. And his mood improves even more when he spies a woman walking around wearing her hair like a T-Shirt. "After being grounded for 24 days, the Astronaut is ready to blast off," he announces. I've figured out what the dialogue in this movie reminds me of- a "Carry On" film. A smarter-than-average "Carry On" film, but a "Carry On" film all the same.<br /><br />And then, OH NO, BARBARA IS HERE! I was wondering when they were going to get to the reveal, I think there's only just over half an hour left of runtime left. Turns out Vikki invited her, and instructs her to "throw your coat on the bed and join in the bash." So she heads to THE SAME BEDROOM CATCHER HEADED TO WITH BEATNIK HAIR BRA WOMAN! They're fumbling around on the bed, but because it's dark, she cant immediately see who it is, and due to her being an enlightened 20th century "Down With Love" woman, she's not all that shocked by what she finds, just tossing her coat on the bed saying, "Catch!"<br /><br />To which Catcher responds, "Yes?"<br /><br />Wadda maroon.<br /><br />She leaves in disgust, with Catcher... "Zip"... whoever in hot pursuit. To be honest I would have at least asked why this supposedly southern man just spoke to me in a Scottish accent before I got out of there. Amazingly, he manages to somehow win her back over with tales of being called to the apartment by... himself to do a NASA cover story, only to then be drugged by some wacky-tobbacy and seduced. Still doesn't explain the Scottish accent, pal. His thinking-on-the-fly skills are commendable, though. Tiring of pussy-footing around, and also probably of hearing Barbara talk about how much of a snake Catcher/he is, he finally tells her that he loves her. And how's this for a loophole- Barbara tells him that she has absolutely no rules against men falling in love with <span style="font-style: italic;">her.</span> Atta girl. Sticking the knife in, he says it's possible for him to make heartfelt, passionate love to her whilst she has meaningless sex with him, which she very reluctantly agrees with. This gets a proud salute from the doorman. Me as well.<br /><br />Things don't stay on a high for long, though, as Vikki ends up getting fired by T.B. due to the fact that Barbara's book has ruined his relatioship with his mistress. The next scene is her sitting in Barbara's apartment with all her stuff next to her in a cardboard box, where they both finally admit that neither of them are truly "Down With Love" girls anymore, having both fallen in love with the respective men in their lives. A mirroring scene with the guys sets the scene for what will surely be the home-stretch of the movie, with both of them having their make-or-break nights at the same time. Following a mildly tittilating scene (that probably would have been absolutely scandalous in the sixties, like much of this movie would have, come to think of it) of Barbara getting ready for the night, and a thankfully much less tittilating one of Catcher getting ready (both soundtracked by two different versions of "Fly Me To The Moon," which I thought was a nice touch), they meet up and go back to Catcher's apartment.<br /><br />At the same time, Peter and Vikki are having their night out at a Chinese restaurant, with him looking so guilty about what's going down tonight that you'd think he killed a man. Actually, why hasn't anyone ever casted David Hyde Pierce as a serial killer? I'd totally buy him as one, and I mean that as a compliment. We then finally get the big screwball moment, with Vikki telling his she knows why he's so guilty. I thought I knew where this was going, that he'd accidently spill the beans to her over conversation and she'd be all appalled and run off to save her friends, but as it turns out she believes he's gay and secretly in love with Catcher, based on him cooking for him and the fact that he has a picture of Catcher's parents in "his" apartment. It's a little bit of a stretch, but I guess it might not have been for the sixties. It does throw into question why she's so willing to marry him, though. I mean, who would willingly want to enter into a loveless, sexless marriage? She then goes all <span style="font-style: italic;">META OUTTA NOWHERE</span> by saying she originally convinced herself that he switched pads with Catcher to impress her like in some "zany sex comedy," which leads to Peter blurting out that he <span style="font-style: italic;">did</span> and then reveal the real reason he's so guilty. So in the end we reached the destination I was expecting, but we got there via a slightly different route. Well done for switching things up a little bit.<br /><br />I'm a little bit sad in the knowledge that Barbara and "Zip's" fun is about to be broken up, because they seem to be having a whale of a time. They even use that funky sofa-bed properly, which makes me want one even more than I did before. His plan's working out too, as he's getting her to say all the things he wanted her to, and getting them on record too, when OH NO! HERE COMES SEVEN-OF-NINE AGAIN! She bursts in, finds him and Barbara at it, drops his name a few times so that there'd be no doubting in Barbara's mind that this is Catcher Block she's with, and then promply leaves. She may as well have been wearing a sign that said, "PLOT DEVICE" around her neck. Catcher stands revealed, gloats about his victory...<br /><br />... and this is where things get... screwy. I'm not going to attempt to describe what happened next, I'm going to let Barbara's words do that for me...<br /><br />"I'm not gonna storm out of here, Catch. And I'm not gonna admit that you got Barbara Novak to fall in love... because I'm not Barbara Novak. There is no Barbara Novak. And I didn't fall in love with Zip Martin, I fell in love with Catcher Block. And that was a year ago, when for three-and-a-half weeks I worked as your secretary. I don't expect you to remember me, I wasn't a blonde then, but you <span style="font-style: italic;">did</span> ask me out, and it broke my heart to say no, but I loved you too much. I couldn't bare to become just another notch in your bedpost. With your dating habits I knew even if I was lucky enough to get a regular spot on your rotating schedule, I would never have your undivided attention long enough for you to fall in love with me. I knew I had to do something, to set myself apart. I knew I had to quit my job as your secretary, and write an international bestseller controversial enough to get the attention of a New York publisher, as well as Know Magazine, but insignificant enough that if I went unseen, Know Magazine's star journalist would refuse to do a cover story about it. I knew that every time we were supposed to meet, you'd get distracted by one of your many girlfriends and stand me up, and this would give me a reason to fight with you over the phone, and declare that I wouldn't meet with you for 100 years. And then all I would have to do was be patient, and wait the two or three weeks it would take everyone in The World to buy a copy of my bestseller, and then I would begin to get the publicity I would need for you to 1) see what I look like, and 2) see me denounce you in public as the worst kind of man. I knew that this would make you want to get even by writing one of your exposes, and in order to do that, you would have to go undercover, assume a false identity, and would pretent to be the kind of man who would make the kind of girl I was pretending to be fall in love. I knew since I was pretending to be a girl who'd have sex on the first date, you'd have to pretend to be a man who <span style="font-style: italic;">wouldn't</span> have sex for several dates, and in doing so, we would go out on <span style="font-style: italic;">lots</span> of dates, to all the best places and all the hit shows, until finally, one night, you would take me back to your place, you'd pretend it was someone elses, in order to get all the evidence you needed to write your expose. By seducing me. Until I said I love you. But saying "I love you" was also <span style="font-style: italic;">my</span> plan. I just wanted to tell you the truth so that when you heard me say "I love you" you'd know that I knew who you were and you'd know who I was. And you, the great Catcher Block would know, that you'd been beaten at your own game. By me, Nancy Brown, your former secretary, and I would have once and for all set myself apart from all the other girls you've known. All those other girls that you've never really cared about, by making myself someone, like the one person you really loved and admired above all others- you. And when you realised you had finally met your match, I would have at last gained the respect that would make you wanna marry me first, and seduce me later. I just wanted you to hear all this from me before you hear it from you private eye."<br /><br />I... I don't know what... to say. So, the entire film, the book, the battle of the sexes, the empowering women and making them realise they can do more with their live all that was a plan to... get a man to notice her?<br /><br />There's not a big enough WAT in The World for all this. I mean, go back and read that again. Read it a couple of time, I'm not going anywhere. According to that, she planned... <span style="font-style: italic;">everything.</span> She's a Bond villian. No, she's more than that, she's practically a... <span style="font-style: italic;">God.</span> I honestly don't know how I feel about this, it's either genius operating on a level few can comprehend, myself included, or total, balls-out, writing-on-the-walls-with-your-own-shit insanity. And Catcher's reaction to all this is the same as mine, he's just staring at her with a look of complete open-mouthed confusion. I'll say one thing though, that little monologue showed what a good actress Renee Zellweger can be. Not only did she say all that with a completely straight face, but she managed to instill it with real convictions. There were moments when she looked and sounded like she was about to <span style="font-style: italic;">cry.</span><br /><br />And get this- IT WORKED! He professes he's fallen in love with her, and wants to marry her, very possibly this second. However, Ms. Seven-Of-Nine-Plot-Device, who I can only think was listening in at the door the whole time, rushes in and starts gushing over Barbara (I should probably call her Nancy now, but I can't be bothered), telling her how much she's changed her life for the better, and she realises that she can't marry Catcher, as she would be letting down the millions of women she's become an inspiration to. So her greatest creation has become a curse she must now live with. All very shakesperian. Plus, she now claims out of nowhere that she doesn't really want what Catcher can offer har and has truly become a "Down With Love" girl.<br /><br />So both our male leads or on the outs with the women in their lives, and dealing with it differently- Catcher trying to win back Barbara's affection with gifts, including Peter's telescope which he tells Catcher wasn't his to give, and Peter not knowing where he stands with Vikki, but not being able to turn her down everytime she shows up at his apartment, leaving him crying and feeling used. Peter tries to get Catcher to go back to his old ways, but he just doesn't have it in him anymore. Then Peter tells him something that changes his whole attitude to everything that's gone down- that thanks to him, Barbara has created a world full of women who act just like him, inspiring him to write an expose on <span style="font-style: italic;">himself,</span> as well as the man falling in love has made him become. Surely this has to be enough, right? This is officially now the longest review I've ever written.<br /><br />Nope. As it turns out, Know Magazine has be ground to a sand-still by all their secretaries leaving to gow work for Barbara at her Magazine, the imaginatively title Now Magazine ("The Magazine For Women In The Now").It wouldseem like she's well and truly won, and Catcher is shit out of luck. Except he has one more trick up his sleeve- he goes to her building and applies for a job as one of her secretaries. They exchange some more tricky dialogue, this time constantly using the words "now" and "know" without tripping up, which I'm frankly in awe of, and finally, <span style="font-style: italic;">finally</span> wins her affections by convincing her that he's changed. He also gets her to reveal her teleportaton powers, as somehow she's in the elevator waiting for him. There's too more scenes during the credits, one a cute little epilogue to the Vikki/Peter subplot where they both agree to get married as long as they can continue their respective careers, and Catcher and Barbara doing a song-and-dance routine to publicise their new book, "Here's To Love."<br /><br />Going into this, I was a little bit unconvinced that they'd be able to pull off a film that looks and feel like a sixties production, and in truth they don't really. It's absolutely gorgeous to look at (I'd go so far as to say it's one of the few romantic comedies that might be worth picking up on Blu-Ray), and the costume, make-up and hair are all incredible, but it feels just a bit too slick. And the tone really doesn't fit with what they're going for. I'm not a fan of judging old movies by the standards and attitudes of today, because most of them are like that elderly relative that shows up at family reunions- yes, he may say things that sound a little bit shocking every now and again, but he's from another time, he really doesn't know better. So making a movie that's an exercize in nostalgia and then applying modern sensibilities to it can run the risk of rendering the whole thing meaningless. Thankfully, and in many ways bafflingly, this hasn't happened here. It's a little too knowing and a lot too dirty-minded, but in many ways that just adds to the fun of it. And that's the best way to describe this movie- <span style="font-style: italic;">fun.</span> The script's fun, the concept's fun, and the cast seem to be having the time of their lives. It's a movie with a big grin on it's face the whole way through, and male or female, if you don't get at least a little bit of a kick out of some of it, you're probably not mch fun to be around.<br /><br /></span><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >FINAL VERDICT</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;font-family:courier new;" >KEPT!</span><br /></div><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh9Jb755Rnl5YU6ZllB3PR2U8UYwZdv9Bjw2s0EV97hIuBfFcrYdwt2ajOyf20DzS8MIKkYxoo2eR557r8i5HnPIJXI0dwvZbmmf3HTyCqyZ2d_KdnV3YGu5DPHUGxpPr-7C4jYG3hNt-w/s1600-h/003.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh9Jb755Rnl5YU6ZllB3PR2U8UYwZdv9Bjw2s0EV97hIuBfFcrYdwt2ajOyf20DzS8MIKkYxoo2eR557r8i5HnPIJXI0dwvZbmmf3HTyCqyZ2d_KdnV3YGu5DPHUGxpPr-7C4jYG3hNt-w/s400/003.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5301654865219943090" border="0" /></a><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">This is actually something of a landmark, the first time I've kept two movies in a row. I hope I'm not going soft. A horror movies featuring some cheerleaders next week, I feel.<br /><br />Until next week, I'm The Cheap-Arse Film Critic, and I'm not a smart man, but I know what love is.<br /><br />(also, I'm very proud of myself for going through this whole review without once using the word, "Romcom")(except here)(which doesn't count)(because I say so)<br /></span>The Cheap-Arse Film Critichttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08211046330068309653noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1161570503760263602.post-41201070462115077962009-02-02T06:25:00.000-08:002009-02-03T21:29:40.547-08:00The Cheap-Arse Film Review #18- "THE MIND SNATCHERS."<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg0Qrqdqqy3uWSLNxQ7YnYp1YOWoWoE214pwYCfyXFrU8SD3Hmlh-PzEP1xArrGQFzd59fzgnH4JmSdfJpwFkSSx665-6LWcyVi2Y39-PUYB70vDS7gSRVH9LUFB7XFWZqfN9q41KvNKZw/s1600-h/001.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg0Qrqdqqy3uWSLNxQ7YnYp1YOWoWoE214pwYCfyXFrU8SD3Hmlh-PzEP1xArrGQFzd59fzgnH4JmSdfJpwFkSSx665-6LWcyVi2Y39-PUYB70vDS7gSRVH9LUFB7XFWZqfN9q41KvNKZw/s400/001.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5298809706344427314" border="0" /></a><br /><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >NAME: THE MIND SNATCHERS</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >RATED: 15</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >WRITTEN BY: RON WHYTE, BASED ON THE PLAY "THE HAPPINESS CAGE," BY DENNIS REARDON</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >DIRECTED BY: BERNARD GIRARD</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >STARRING: CHRISTOPHER WALKEN, RONNY COX, JOSS ACKLAND</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >GENRE: PSYCHOLOGICAL DRAMA</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >BOUGHT FROM: POUNDLAND</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >PRICE: MY JOURNALISTIC INTEGRITY</span><br /></div><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br />It's snowing where I am right now. Quite alot. And my people, that being the British, are doing what they do best, which is losing their fucking minds totally and without hesitation. All forms of transport have been rendered useless. Express any desire to go outside and you'll be looked at like you just said you think it sounds like fun to run through the middle of a gun fight. People will open fridges hysterically stuffed with food and exclaim fearfully that there's nothing to eat (hello, Mum). It's the second Ice Age (which lacked the heart of the first one, but at least Scrat was still funny), a nuclear winter, The Lord himself has grown bored with humanity as an experiment and decided to kill us all by sufficating us with his dandraft.</span><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br /><br />With things currently being the way they are, I really wish I had a snow-based movie to cover this week. The only one I had lying around was "White Christmas," which I was foolish enough to cover over Christmas, and as was discussed at the time, didn't really feature that much snow (or Christmas). So instead I've chosen this week to completely go back on my word. Yes, this <span style="font-style: italic;">is</span> the same 4-in-1 DVD that had "Leprechaun in the Hood" on it, the one I said I was going to judge based on the quality of one movie and one movie only. And yet here I am, reviewing another one. Well, obviously I'm a lying bastard and you can never trust anything I say or do ever again. I was actually going to take a bunch of pictures of me using the snow to get free advertising, including one of this place's initials seemingly spelt out in the snow with piss. Unfortunately I didn't have the guts to really get my old chap out in public, so I tried to do it with any fluid I had lyng around that was vaguely urine-coloured, but they all proved useless, so I had to scrap the idea. So not only am I a liar, but in my inability to successfully lie I've discovered I'm also a failure and a coward, too. That's good to know.<br /><br />See, "Vampire Killer Barbys?" <span style="font-style: italic;">That's</span> how you go all meta out of nowhere!<br /><br />Actually, I didn't set out to be a liar with this one. I really <span style="font-style: italic;">do</span> throw away the movies I pan. A friend recently asked me if he could borrow one I'd rubbished, saying I'd made it sound like a laugh, and I had to tell him it was probably at the tip by now. And this one really <span style="font-style: italic;">was</span> in the bin, I swear. However, I was then informed by one of my readers (hello, Dr. Ashens. Please visit <a href="http://www.ashens.com/">www.ashens.com</a> to watch videos of a very funny man from Norwich review electronic crap) that the Christopher Walken movie on here was originally released in 1972 under the title, "The Happiness Cage," which caught my interest enough to make me fish it out of the bin (not even the little one I have in my bedroom, the main house one at this point), wipe it off, and put it back in my "To Watch" box.<br /><br />Christopher Walken these days exists in an area of fame that's difficult to describe. I don't want to call it post-modern, because people who call things post-modern need to be headbutted. I don't even want to say parody, because that's wrong. If you look hard enough on The Internet, you can find a painting of him building Optimus Prime in what looks like a shed. That's not parodying anything, that's just <span style="font-style: italic;">amazing.</span> I suppose the best way of putting it is, he's in the same place now William Shatner is, and has been for some time, that being his actual, real life persona is percieved to be as much of a character as the people he plays on-screen. His facial expressions, the way he dresses, and especially his voice. Everybody thinks they can do a Christopher Walken impression, just the same as everybody thinks they can to a William Shatner impression. The sad downside of this kind of fame is, it can kill an actor's career stone dead, because it makes it almost impossible to buy them in a role. You never fall in love with the characters they're playing, because no matter how hard they try, all you see is Christopher Walken pretending to be somebody else. In some cases it doesn't matter, like with Shatner, because he seems truly at piece with how his career has turned out, and is more than comfortable playing himself in any vehicle that comes his way. It's a bit of a shame with Walken, though, because with all due respect to Captain Kirk, he's a better actor than Shatner has ever been. Take his performance as Leonardo DiCaprio's father in "Catch Me If You Can," where he displays a range of emotions that most of his current fans are unfortunately unaware he's capable of. It's a genuinely moving turn, and when watching him there you can't help but shake the feeling that he probably deserves to be in more Steven Spielberg movies.<br /><br />The movie begins with a monkey, which straight away is a mark in it's favour. Sadly it's a monkey in a cage with a bandage around it's head, but any monkey is better than no monkey. Christopher Walken is looking at it in a sort of passive manner (as you would), then the image freezes and we get the credits, as creepy-yet-strangely-upbeat music plays over them. As openings go, it's oddly unnerving, as you're straight away asking questions. "Who's that?" "Where are we?" "Why does that monkey seem to be suffering from severe head trauma?" All very mysterious, all very much what you'd expect from a movie called "The Mind Snatchers." Or even one called "The Hapiness Cage" really, because, well, there's a cage. The movie then begins with Walken's character, Private James Reese, entering a house party. Seeing Walken this young is quite an eye-opening experience, because you realise what a striking looking man he was. I mean, he still is now, don't get me wrong, but in his youth there were few men who looked the way he did. They say that some people look like animals (I'm told I look like a Mole when I remove my glasses, which is second only to my total blindness in reasons why I don't take off my glasses), well, Walken looks, to my eyes at least, like a lizard. His face is all angles, his mouth is wide and he has these tiny piercing eyes. He looks a bit like Thom Yorke from Radiohead's more attractive younger brother here. And I mean <span style="font-style: italic;">much</span> more attractive. "The brother that wasn't caught in the fire"-more attractive.<br /><br />It turns out this party is being frown by an ex-girlfriend of his, who he finds in her bedroom talking to another man. You should see this fool, he's got long fluffy hair and is wearing a white-checked jacket and sunglasses inside. I hope he gets the snot knocked out of him. Sadly he doesn't, as Reese just throws the woman's present at her, angrily asks her if she forgot his invite as she asks him when he got out (of the army I'm presuming, although as this film goes on it becomes obvious she could have been refering to a great many things), and the proceeds to cause a scene, ask girl he claims is, "sitting there, pretending you don't know me," to dance with him, before either whispering into, licking or biting her ear. He then proclaims her in need of, "a severe tongue-lashing," which it goes without saying doesn't go down to well with her boyfriend, who at first seems like he's about to get in Reese's face, but then thinks better of it. probably a wise move all things considered, as it's established here that Reese isn't all the ticket, and pretty much hammered home when he catches the girl he'd just embarrassed telling is ex she should kick him out and tells her, "I don't care if you're a girl, I'll punch you right in the mouth." He then punches a wardrobe so hard the door comes off one of it's hinges and then...<br /><br />... suddenly he's in bed with his ex? This actually happens quite alot throughout the movie, there's several abrupt, I suppose technically <span style="font-style: italic;">bad</span> cuts, where you'll find yourself shunted from one scene into another that's tonally completely different, sometimes even following the same characters as we do here. I can't decide if this is a stylistic choice, as if the film is visually representing what it must be like to swing from one emotion to another, or if it's just a mistake made by people who didn't know what they were doing. I'd like to think it's the first one, but it's probably the second one. Whilst they're laying there together, she tells him his behaviour isn't normal (no shit), and that she wants to help him. Ah, the old cliche of women being with bad men because they think they can change them. I wonder if that was even much of a cliche back in the early seventies. They're about to start going at it, when there's a loud knock at the door and Reese finds himself being confronted by two soldiers, following up a claim that he'd attacked a woman tonight. Reese tries to get them to go away by telling them he's in bed with someone, to which one of the soldiers responds, "I don't care if you're in bed with a four-star General!" I bet he <span style="font-style: italic;">would</span> care. They manhandle him, and when he gets to the base its revealed that Reese's arm was broken in the scuffle. He continues to be a smart-arse to the person trying to admit him, before signing and then being subjected to what seems to be a psychatric evaluation, where he claims that every night he stays up and prays that the sun will rise the next morning, and sees the fact that it does indeed rise as proof that he's right to do so. I have to say, as portrayals of complete nutjobs go, this is a fairy convincing one. Usually actors take the fact that they're playing somebody mentally unstable as an excuse to g into full-blown cartoon mode, but Walken plays Reese in a very unpredictable, unnerving and occasionally humourous way, but it's funny in a manner you feel a bit uneasy laughing at, just like you would if you really were laughing at somebody like him.<br /><br />We're then shown a room full of men sitting down listening to a recording of this conversation, as well as another between Reese and his ex when she comes to visit him, the reason for this being that they want to see if Dr. Fredrick would be interested in taking on Reese to use in is experiments, which he is, as it's noted that he's articulate and complex, but also shows signs of being a Sociopath and a Schizophrenic. Fredrick is played by Joss Ackerland, who some of you might remember as the dude with diplomatic immunity that Danny Glover shoots in the head at the end of "Lethal Weapon 2," although I very unfortunately recognised him instantly as Hans, Emilio Estevez's mentor from, "The Mighty Ducks." Now, he's a good actor, and I'm sure he gives a very good performance in this film, but I can't say I really noticed, because I found myself distracted everytime he was on-screen by his hair. It's... absurd. There's no other way of describing it. Not so much the cut, but it's colour. Or as I should more accurately put it, <span style="font-style: italic;">colours,</span> because most of it is typical old-man greyish-white, with the exception of the fringe, which is, I kid you not, bright orange. It has to be a wig. It just <span style="font-style: italic;">has</span> to be.<br /><br />So Reese, broken arm and all, finds hmself shipped to this huge mansion, where he finds he is one of only two other patients- Tommy, who lies in his bed groaning and covered in bandages until he finally kicks the bucket on the operating table, and Miles, a Sargent from The South who makes Reese look like a totally rational human being. He's played by Ronny Cox, who in many ways steals the show, because without getting too far ahead of myself, during the course of the film, Miles will say, do, and admit to having done some truly terrible things, and it's a testament to the actor playing him that he remains at the very least engaging throughout.<br /><br />Reese soon begins to smell a rat when Miles automatically assumes that he's dying, because the people they bring here usually are, himself included, and all Reese has is a broken arm. His alarm is raised even further when he discovers that Tommy has a massive hole in his intestines, and for some reason has bandages covering his head. "This place is alot of laughs," Miles says, "and there's only one way out." Sounds like he's describing the plot to "Patch Adams" to me, but never mind. Reese then enters what seems to be his default mode, which is to attempt to annoy anyone and everyone, switching the TV on and off for no good reason. This is the beginning of the love/hate relationship between Miles and Reese, and it's quite fascinating to watch, due in part because they're alot of long scenes together to flesh it out, and also because both men seem to know their characters inside-out and never feel like they hit a false note. Every moodswing feels perfectly judge, as does the other person's reaction to it, as does the other person's reaction to their reaction.<br /><br />Reese attempts to get some information from Fredrick about why he's there, only for the doctor to abruptly leave the room and Reese to claim that he doesn't have a good feeling about him, which upsets Miles as he clearly thinks he's great. Actually, the film's handling of Fredrick is really admirable, as it doesn't stoop to portraying him as an evil mad scientist. His methods and procedures are questionable, but he's still a decent man who who refuses to abuse his power, only performing his experiments on his patients when they give their full consent. How much stock he should be putting into the consent of people who clearly don't have a full grasp on their faculties is never addressed, and the film still feels the need to present us with a remorseless bad guy in the shape of The Major (Ralph Meeker), but it tries harder at complexity than alot of films today do, so I think it should still be applauded. Anyway, following the Fredrick leaving, there's another strange cut as we go from Miles laughing hysterically (and with little reason) at Reese for saying that he studied English at college, to Miles lying in bed reading a book using his overhead lamp. My old Media Studies teacher would have done his nut at a cut like that. Curiosity gets the better of Reese and he decides to explore his surroundings, until he finds a room full of monkeys in cages, all of whom have seemingly had things implanted into their heads. I could go on about how terrible the security at this place seems to be, especially since it seems like they have alot of things worth hiding, but I won't be too harsh because I like this scene, as the footage of the monkeys jumping around, some of them even trying to remove the things that've been put on their heads, as this beautful-yet-sinister music plays in the background, growing gradually louder until it's almost overwhelming, is a very effective and creepy combination.<br /><br />When he comes back to his room, he finds Miles going out of his mind, using a pair of binoculars to spy on Anna Kraus (Bette Henritze), a lovely little Red Cross nurse that plays Checkers with Miles, who he's obviously obsessed with and has claimed is constantly coming onto him. This poor character is, frankly, punished for the sins of the filmmakers, as during her brief time on-screen, she's reduced to tears by Reese and then raped (mercifully off-screen) by Miles. The scene where he's aggressively coming onto her momentarily descends into farce when she tells him there's no way he could love her because she's fat, to which he responds, "Fat girls turn me on." I find this objectionable for a couple of reason, the lesser being that this woman isn't that fat, but the biggest being that the only reason I can see for those two lines being put in there would be to get a laugh, and, y'know, there's nothing I want to do more during a scene where a man is trying to force himself on a woman than laugh (in case you're one of those people who takes everything they read on The Internet literally, that was sarcasm). But again, I have to give it up for Cox's performance, because only a few scenes ago he was essentially an emotional seesaw, talking one minute in an animated fashion about how horny he was, the next sadly talking about how he's been divorced for eight years, how nobody except the Red Cross woman comes to visit him, and how he never thought he'd die lonely. You go from feeling sorry for him to being annoyed by him to being repulsed by him in a matter of minutes. And he still manages to somehow make you give a damn about his plight by the end.<br /><br />I'm getting ahead of myself here, but I think I'm going to end up jumping around alot more than I usually do, because as you've probably figured out, this is a very talky movie ( it was originally a stage play), so I don't feel as bad as I usually would about leaping around and addressing events out of sequence a bit.<br /><br />Following his discovery that the building is surrounded by a fence topped with barbed wire that points inwards, obviously designed to keep people in and not out (although it'd still do a good job of keeping people out), as well as being patrolled by angry guard dogs from the inside (again, this would still be a decent deterent for anybody thinking of breaking in), Reese finally confronts Fredrick properly, telling him he's figured out that he's a "brain doctor," and wanting to know what's going on. Fredrick is amazingly forthcoming, telling him about his experiments on Tommy's brain, done to see if he could stop him experiencing the crippling pain that had him crying out, and also that he died on the operating table ten minutes ago. Reese finds this disgusting, but Fredrick insists that Tommy was with it enough to know what was going on at the time, and was happy to know that the techniques they were using on him could go onto help other people. Again there's complexity here, as you sort of get the sense that the only reason Reese is so pissed of is because he's now terrified that the same thing is going to happen to him. He can't care about Tommy really, because it's been established already that he doesn't really care about anybody.<br /><br />Oh, and after this scene, we get another horrible cut, this time to Miles sitting up violently in bed from a nightmare screaming, "BENSOOOOOOOOON!" "Who's Benson," Reese asks, and Miles tells him to remind him to tell him before he dies.<br /><br />It's not Reese who gets to hear that story though. During a pretty pathetic fight between the two of them following Anna's rape (and again, I didn't buy for a second that Reese was really indignant about that, but rather just using it as new material to get to Miles), Miles starts violently coughing up blood, and is later told by Fredrick that he has a few months to live, tops. Miles then tells him the story of what happened to Benson when they were in Vietnam together ('NAM FLASHBACK!), how he was a "coloured" guy he didn't like much, and that he pushed him onto a live grenade in order to save himself. He'd been so ashamed of himself that he'd told everybody that Benson had thrown himself onto the grenade to save him, leading to him being decorated as a hero following his death. Using this story as leveage, Fredrick convinces Miles to allow him to perform experments on him, so that his life may actually have some meaning.<br /><br />We now discover why Miles and Reese are being kept at the mansion- because Fredrick has a very specific experiment he wants to try out on them, attempting to cure their bouts of anger and violence by implanting something into their brains that stimulates it's pleasure centre whenever a little buzzer is pressed. It's at this point the movie gets a bit silly. The way they stimulate Mile's brain is to implant two mental pipes into his head, and then hook those up to some wires. It looks a bit Mickey Mouse, but then this was obviously a movie made to a strict budget over 30 years ago, so I can't complain too much. However, the way the Miles expresses the pleasure he's getting from pressing that buzzer is another thing altogether- he starts breathing and groaning heavily, holding the buzzer with both hands over his groin, looking like he's, well, pleasuring himself. And that was obviously the point, as when they ask him where he felt sensations the most, he says, "My crotch." I guess it ties in with Miles stating before how horny he is, but it feels a bit crude. And he's given full control over the buzzer, as Fredrick wants to avoid manipulating people as much as possible, which leads to him pressing it continually and becoming hopelessly addicted to it. When Reese finds him and unhooks him from the machine (after he's thrown Fredrick around ina fairly comical manner), he starts bawling like a baby that's had it's bottle taken away, and the sight and sound of it is genuinely disturbing, to the point that I found myself feeling sympathy towards a man who is little more than a rapist and a killer.<br /><br />Seeing the writing on the wall, Reese decides to flee, taking out the main orderly with a well-placed and meaty door to the face. He goes on the run in the forest surrounding the building, being followed by the orderlies until he's eventually recaptured (all this as bafflingly cheerful music plays over the top). The same procedure is then performed on him, but not before Fredrick is told that he was dooped into signing the consent papers the second he entered the place, thus causing Fredrick to have accidently betrayed his principles, which all but destroys him. Being left with no choice though, he tries to convince Reese to push the buzzer (interestingly, in the, I don't know, few hours it's been since they did this to Miles, the technology seems to have moved on enough that it's now portable and Reese doesn't need to be hooked up to anything. I guess it's true what they say about how fast technology becomes outdated), only for Reese to tell him to fuck off with a speech that reminded me totally of that "I NEED MY PAIN!" one Captain Kirk gave in one of the "Star Trek" movies. I can't remember which one off the top of my head right now, which I'm sure is going to have the hardcore Trekkies putting a price on my head. I'm also far too pleased with myself about the fact that I've managed to connect Walken to Shatner within the context of this movie, too. I really need a girlfriend<br /><br />In the end, The Major has enough of all this touchy-feely bullshit and presses the buzzer himself, which brings Reese to his knees, exclaiming, "God!" They then trot him out in front of the press as proof that their experiments are a success, where he's kept in-line with a few strategic presses of the buzzer, as Fredrick looks ashamed of himself and The Major soaks up the praise like a smug bastard. There's no music over the end credits, we just hear them answering more questions, claiming amogst other things that nothing ever went wrong with what they were attempting.<br /><br />I don't really know what this movie was doing on this disc, as by practically anybody's standards, it's not a horror movie. The brief write-up of it on the back of the box compared it to "A Clockwork Orange," and that's also not fair, because while they may share a few themes, it put together with nowhere near the flair and confidence that movie was. Which is not to say it's a bad film, because it's not. Like I said, it's wordy, and if you like your movies to have a little more kinetic energy about them, you'd probably be wise staying away. But the acting's good, especially from Walken and Cox, and the script for the most part does a good job of putting across it's themes and giving the characters individual, interesting voices, which is a must for a film like this. If I had to describe it as anything, I'd call it a Sunday Night Movie, the kind you watch when you're coming down from the madness of the weekend, but not quite ready to snuggle down with something too warm and cosy<br /><br /></span><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >FINAL VERDICT</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;font-family:courier new;" >KEPT!</span><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiy4uespIArQI2fRWLQfrhzoFVY84t6gX6IaQSXVIh-B3hoeQPD-t-9L5pMQTTji5mXm_SIdiYGuby8JOmV741y8QAXRky-FGNs4PmjVDJLD9j_k_m6mCKogliJucIJIef5KTlMAj9ZbnU/s1600-h/002.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiy4uespIArQI2fRWLQfrhzoFVY84t6gX6IaQSXVIh-B3hoeQPD-t-9L5pMQTTji5mXm_SIdiYGuby8JOmV741y8QAXRky-FGNs4PmjVDJLD9j_k_m6mCKogliJucIJIef5KTlMAj9ZbnU/s400/002.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5298809703497878674" border="0" /></a><br /></div><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br />Second time's the charm. I think from now on, if I get anymore multi-packs, I'll probably watch two movies before making a real decision about it.<br /><br />Until next week, I'm The Cheap-Arse Film Critic, and do you know how you got that dent in your top lip? Way back before you were born, I told you a secret, then I put my finger there and I said, "shhhhhhhhh."<br /></span>The Cheap-Arse Film Critichttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08211046330068309653noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1161570503760263602.post-37309060358489996682009-01-23T07:49:00.000-08:002009-01-27T19:02:35.056-08:00The Cheap-Arse Film Review #17- "VAMPIRE KILLER BARBYS."<div style="text-align: center;"><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhnpryWLtnXwetnMIRmk_QvfRlxBSh5dEtqK44A5UiXKcpJCs-F29zeu1yH5VzCQmtThTvBkawuNqypP23wGnDbSbe9lM-k-RmQyRDzwrRBmH3utFtXDm2L1-uF9h0ez6Q1TICDc4LcZJc/s1600-h/001.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhnpryWLtnXwetnMIRmk_QvfRlxBSh5dEtqK44A5UiXKcpJCs-F29zeu1yH5VzCQmtThTvBkawuNqypP23wGnDbSbe9lM-k-RmQyRDzwrRBmH3utFtXDm2L1-uF9h0ez6Q1TICDc4LcZJc/s400/001.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5296058934523046738" border="0" /></a><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >NAME: VAMPIRE KILLER BARBYS</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >RATED: 18</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >WRITTENBY: JESS FRANCO & PATIX IRIGOYEN</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >DIRECTED BY: JESS FRANCO</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >STARRING: SILVIA SUPERSTAR, CARLOS SUBTERFUGE, CHARLIE S. CHAPLIN, ALDO SAMBRELL, SANTIAGO SEGURA, MARIANGELA GIORDANO,</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >GENRE: EROTIC HORROR</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >BOUGHT FROM: POUNDLAND</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >PRICE: MY SOUL</span><br /></div><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">When I was about 11 or 12, realising that girls were <span style="font-style: italic;">not</span> he worst thing in the world and had begun to find myself drawn to them in ways I didn't really understand (and still don't, if I'm totally honest), I would sometimes go into the local independent video rental shop (PIP Tank Video) under the guise of wanting to play the glitchy "Street Fighter 2," machine they had that allowed you to beat your opponent in literally one second if you knew how to exploit it properly (the key was to play as either Ryu or Ken and throw a Dragon Punch the second the round started, as doing that would also throw about a million Fireballs at your opponent), and walk around looking at the back of all the movies rated 15 and up, in the hope that I'd find pictures of women in some state of undress, or if I was lucky the occasional bare boob. And I mean occasional, I think you can count the number of nipples I saw doing this on the fingers of one hand.<br /><br />Why am I telling you this incredibly embarrassing fact about myself? And how does it relate to the movie I'm going to be covering today?<br /><br />Because there's pubic hair on the back of this box. And it definitely isn't mine.<br /><br />I picked this up in the same day I bought "Code 46," and in my rush to get to the counter with that, I didn't really give the box the good once over I usually do. I didn't really worry about it too much because, well, it's called "Vampire Killer Barbys." Who wouldn't want to review a film called "Vampier Killer Barbys?" What more do you need to know? So I'm sitting on the bus on the way home, inspecting my purchases, when I looked on the back of the box for this film and saw a picture of a topless woman running through some forest or something. "Huh," I thought "there's something you don't see anymore in these politically correct times," casting my mind back to the days previously described. So based on nostalgia alone, I already had warm feelings towards this film.<br /><br />Then I noticed she wasn't wearing any jeans. Then I noticed she wasn't wearing... anything. <span style="font-style: italic;">At all.</span> I mean, it's not the largest picture in the world, and it's not like it's one of those "Hustler"-style gynecological centerfolds, but the fact remained, on the back of this movie that I had just bought for a pound, there was a picture of a woman, and I could very clearly make out her breasts and pubic mound. I'm not the easiest person in the world to shock, but I think on this crowded bus, I may actually have gasped. Because this was something new. This was something I had never encountered before. I had never found full frontal on the back of a video or DVD box before (excluding porn. Obviously). And suddenly those nostalgic feelings went away, because even during my bout of puberty-spurred curiosity, I didn't think I would ever see... <span style="font-style: italic;">that.</span> To be brutally honest there's a very good chance I wouldn't have known <span style="font-style: italic;">what</span> I was looking at if I had. It just makes me laugh that we live in an age where everybody is walking around on eggshells terrified of saying or doing something that would upset anybody, and I was able to go into what is essentially a discount supermarket and buy something with a picture of bush on it (and no, I'm not making <span style="font-style: italic;">that joke.</span> One of the <span style="font-style: italic;">many</span> good things to come out of the recent Presidential election is <span style="font-style: italic;">that joke</span> can now go away, hopefully forever). Oh, and there's also a picture of a bearded man holding a scythe, grinning manically, flanked by two dwarfs, who also seem very pleased with themselves. On any other box, this picture would have been the star attraction.<br /><br />This move is the work of Jess Franco, who I've come to discover has something of a cult following amongst horror fans. I was talking about movies recently with a friend down the pub, and totally unprompted she dropped his name as a director whose work she enjoys. He apparently started composing music at age six, before eventually discovering film, where frankly prolific isn't the word- he has a staggering 189 directorial credits listed over at IMDb, dating back to 1957's "El Arbol de Espana," all the way up to 2008's "La Cripta de las Mujeres Malditas," AKA "A Bad Day at the Cemetery." He's also a writer, a composer, an editor and an actor, very often working on his own films under an amazing array of pseudonyms (my personal favourites being Adolf M. Frank and Clifford Brawn). Even "Jess Franco" is a pseudonym, his given first name being Jesus. Alot of his work has been in the Erotic Horror genre, and I'm sorry, but that idea doesn't work for me. I can just about get my head around the concept of Erotic Thrillers, because most of them just feature sexed-up versions of the old Film Noir Femme Fatales, but I don't get the concept of Erotic Horror at all. To me, I don't see how it's possible to be frightened and horny at the same time. They just seem like naturally-opposed emotions. And even if you don't mean it like that, if you just mean it as in blood and guts, then that doesn't work for me either, because without going into too much detail, there's enough blood in my personal life already without me introducing it into the bedroom (that was marvelously cryptic of me, wasn't it?)<br /><br />Also the band featured here is real, and apparently still active today, a Spanish punk-pop band, the only difference being they spell "Barbies" how you'd expect. Apparently the only reason it was changed in the promotional material was because Mattell predictably kicked up a stink. Humourously, the correct spelling of the band's name is all over the film itself, from their drumkit to their van, which just goes to show you just how much attention Mattell's lawyers were really paying. I don't know for a fact if all the people playing the band here are actually <span style="font-style: italic;">in</span> the band, but the lead actress, Silvia Superstar (which I'm also guessing isn't her real name), definitely is.<br /><br />The beginning is like Horror Movies 101- it's dark, the moon is full, there howling somewhere, and we see a large close-up on the face of a stuffed wolf. This happens quite alot during the film actually, we'll suddenly find ourselves zooming in on one of these, as if the director thinks, "LOOK! STUFFED WOLF! SCARY!" Um, no. Real wolf, kind of scary, <span style="font-style: italic;">stuffed</span> wolf, something you're fairly likely to see round your Nan's. A bloodied man runs semi-dressed out of a large building. This is referred to as a castle several times over the course of the film, but it looks more like a mansion to me. I suppose it doesn't matter what you call them, in the end they're the same thing, just big houses. He's running for his life, stalked by Arkan (Aldo Sambrell), a balding man dressed like a butler, and Baltasar (</span><span style="font-family:courier new;">Santiago Segura</span><span style="font-family:courier new;">), the aforementioned bearded gentleman, sadly for the moment without his tiny posse (I said <span style="font-style: italic;">posse.</span> Get your minds out of the gutter). The poor dude manages to give Arkan the slip, only for Baltasar to sneak up behind him and slit his throat. It's one those film school specials too, where the knife leaves a trail of blood across the neck without actually causing a wound. Baltasar cuts off the man's ears, taking it back to his little friends Pipa and Pipo and attempting to decide which of them deserves to have this little treat, before deciding on... one of them (I can't tell the apart, I'm not going to pretend I can), his reason being that "the kindness and gentleness you reserve for me at night deserves a reward." Oh Lord, he's sleeping with them. Even worse, we find out later that these two are in some way supposed to be his children. Erotic Horror, ladies and gentlemen! Arkan then goes to address the lady of the house, The Countess, who's little more than a skeleton at this point in the film. A skeleton in a dress. You cold probably get it a role on "Hollyoaks." He tells her he's got a present for her, that being a jug presumably full of blood, and then say that "He" has returned, and they are once again under his "devilish protection." Who "He" is, we never actually find out, and as you'll see later, his protection amounts to jack shit.<br /><br />Follow the credits sequence that appears to happen over a painting of Vigo from "Ghostbusters 2's" fat sibling, we finally meet The Killer Barbies themselves, performing at a concert, and... they're not bad, amazingly. They don't reinvent the wheel or anything, but they're decent enough, and the song they play in full here, "Love Killer," is incredibly catchy. I caught myself humming the chorus hours after I'd finished watching the film for the first time, which is usually a good sign. We also get a look at Arkan in the crowd, watching them perform with a scowl on his face. He's clearly a purist. After the gig, they take their payment, which they're informed is, "enough for some joints maybe," which is funny, because the next scene seems them turning down a guy who offers to sell them some grass (HA!). Once they get in the van and start driving, the movie briefly turns into a twisted, perverted version of "Scooby Doo." Sharon (Angie Barea), the only other female member of the band, starts openly blowing Billy (Billy King, the only person here using his real name, and I think also the only person other than Silvia actually in the band for real at this point), causing Mario (Charlie S. Chaplin) to comment that "if you're still hungry, my fly is at your disposal." What a charmer. Flavia (Superstar) takes her top off so Rafa (Carlos Subterfuge, who looks just like Shaggy if Shaggy were evil, which is probably the main reason this scene feels so Mystery Machine), will let her drive, causing a man to fall off his bike when he sees her (heh). They're listening to their own music whilst all this is happening, by the way, seemingly the same two songs on a loop, including "Love Killer." What a bunch of nasty little narcissists.<br /><br />At this point I would usually make some observations about the acting talents of those involved, but with this film that's almost impossible, because as you've probably figured out be the names of alot of the people involved, this isn't an English language film, but rather Spanish. I usually like to watch foreign movies with subtitles, partly because I'm just a bit of a pretentious twat, and partly because you get a better sense of the acting abilities of someone when you hear their real voice. On this disc though, no subtitles are available, so all we get is an English dub. And my God, it's horrific. Almost nobody's voice matches up with the character they're playing (Rafa sounds like a cartoon dog, Flavia sounds much older than her claimed 19 years) and the ones that <span style="font-style: italic;">do</span> sort of make sense are ruined by voice actors who either realised what kind of movie they were doing and just phoned it in, or have probably never done this sort of thing before. They even dub over people laughing! "Ha! Ha! Ha!" Is that strictly necessary? Laughter is one of the few things that can be understood in any language (Christ, when did I turn into Bono?).<br /><br />The van predictably breaks down, and Arkan, who had seemingly been riding around on a little boat just to pass the time just moments earlier, shows up to offer them a place to stay until someone can show up to fix it tomorrow. They take him up on his offer, with the exception of Sharon and Billy, who stay in the van to fuck. I'm not being crude saying that. We cut back to them several times, and that really does seem to be all they're doing in there, for hours at a time. They don't even switch positions. Once the others arrive, they all notice a painting of the Countess, presumably done before all her skin fell off. "I've got this feeling I'll recognise her," Flavia says. What do you mean, you <span style="font-style: italic;">think</span> you'll recognise here? You're staring at a painting of her right now, either you recognise her or you don't. "She's as beautiful as she is mysterious," Rafa chimes in. How does he know she's mysterious? He's bee in her house for all of five minutes. For all he knows, she could be on the toilet. "Yeah, she's not my type, but I'd still bang her," Mario offers. Okay, fair enough.<br /><br />Upstairs, Arkan visits The countess' quarters again, and amazingly, she now has flesh. It would seem that drinking blood restores her, and at least we now have a reason for him to want the band to stay, even though it's never revealed why he chose them specifically to be the next victims. He takes the band to their rooms, and everything seems alright with them, until the next scene where Flavia and Mario sneak around and find Arkan seemingly calling for a tow-truck for their van, only for them to discover what he was actually speaking into was an intercom, so he didn't really call anybody. Okay, two things- 1)If he really didn't know they were there, why was he pretending to place a call for a fake tow truck? What was that in aid of? 2) Why were Flavia and Mario even sneaking around? Two seconds ago they were insanely happy with this arrangement, now they're tip-toeing down stairs like like a couple of kids playing detective. It makes no sense. It also doesn't lead to anything, as they go upstairs to tell Rafa what they've seen, he tells them not to worry, so they... don't. Meanwhile, The Countess drinks some more blood and continues to look and act stronger. She asks Arkan how much he loves her, to which he replies, "Madam, listen to me, nobody has ever loved anybody so much, I love you more than Paul loved Virginia, more than Cyrano loved Roxanne, and Romeo loved Juliette." Ahhh, that's actually quite lovely. He's a sly old charmer, that Arkan.<br /><br />Hey, anybody wondering what Billy and Sharon are up to back at the van? No? Well, tough, because you're going to find out, as the movie cuts back to them. And as I said, they're both rutting away like rabbits, Sharon still mostly dressed and very obviously still wearing a thong, as Baltasar, Pipa and Pipo look on. And dear God, they're still listening to "Love Killer!" It's like they're determined to turn me against the one thing in this movie I quite like. The Little guys break into the car, steal the Barbie dolls the band has hanging up as decorations, and also plant a quite disturbing winged thing on the rear-view mirror, all without Billy and Sharon noticing. And Bathasar? He has a wank. Erotic Horror, ladies and gentlemen! Sharon sees the thing hanging from the mirror, and freaked out, talks Billy into coming with her to the mansion. When they get there, they bump into Arkan, who tells them of something that apparently happened there, of a satanic monk that fell in love with an aristocratic lady, tortured and raped her to death, then created a potion made from her blood and his semen that brought her back to life. Billy then asks him what the time is, he says he, "lost track of time centuries ago," and when they're backs are turned, he just disappears. Okay, now I'm confused. From this story, it would be safe to assume that this monk was the "He" Arkan mentioned earlier. However, from all the sledgehammer-subtle hints being dropped, it's <span style="font-style: italic;">also</span> fairly safe to assume that Arkan is the monk, so what sense would it make for him to say "He's" returned, when it seems like he's always been there? It also renders that lovely declaration of love he made earlier decidedly <span style="font-style: italic;">less</span> lovely.<br /><br />Billy and Sharon go in the house, have a brief chat with their bandmates, than suddenly decide not to stay there after all. I can't say I blame them after that story, but it does make me laugh how much of a sheep Billy is. He literally does whatever Sharon tells him to. This proves to be a wrong move, as they are promptly set upon by Baltasar and Arkan, who slit Billy's throat and then chase the naked Sharon (I love how she makes love for hours with her clothes on, and then decides right this second that she's going remove them. It's like she remembered, "Hey, these come off!") through the forest, until Baltasar decapitates her with his scythe, which doesn't best please Arkan, but they're both like, "Fuck it, this'll do." They take her and Billy back to some place on the mansion grounds there a verity of mutilated bodies are hung up in the air, their blood collecting in jugs, that's then added to a pot along with some white stuff that I assume is supposed to be semen. Baltasar actually dips his finger in the spunk and licks it, and even though I know it's fake, this still got a shudder out of me. So well done movie, you managed to at least gross me out using a partially sexual situation. He also handles the most obviously fake dead body I've ever seen. The arms and legs don't move at all, and the arms are straight up in the air, like the guy died doing the YMCA.<br /><br />Having regained her strength, The Countess finally appears, and she looks... alright. She's played by Mariangela Giordano, and she does look damn good for a woman who was pushing sixty at the time. Much like Jennifer Tilly looks damn good for a woman of 50 (I know, I can't believe it either). I <span style="font-style: italic;">will</span> take exception to Rafa calling her, "the most beautiful bitch I have ever seen in my life," though, because, dubious compliment aside, if that's true, he's obviously not lived. He's instantly smitten, and she seduces him into coming upstairs with her, which initially angers Flavia, until she reveals, "I'm just mad because he should have found a way to include me." This movie was very clearly partially written by a very old man. Upstairs, The Countess ties Rafa to the bed, and they start... actually, I'm not sure <span style="font-style: italic;">what</span> happens. She scratches him, then she just starts rolling around on the bed, groaning and moaning. At one point I think the only parts of her even touching him are her feet, and they're just touching his leg. And strangely he seems to be having as much fun as she is. I will say though that the fact that this woman is as old as she is gives this scene a sort of anarchic edge, like the filmmaker is actually trying to make some kind of statement about age and beauty and sexuality. He's probably not, he probably just wanted to see her tits, but it's quite an interesting thought all the same. Eventually they start having something that look like sex, only for The Countess to produce a knife and start stabbing him during the act. This is it. If you were to ask me to close my eyes and come up with a visual representation of Erotic Horror, this is what I would come up with, a person killing another person whilst they're shagging. Erotic Horror, ladies and gentlemen.<br /><br />And also once again the knife produces blood without actually breaking the skin. Maybe it's magic.<br /><br />There's actually a fair bit if runtime left, but if I'm honest, not much else happens. Flavia discovers the bodies and freaks, Mario kills Arkan with a crossbow to the head (where the fuck did he find a crossbow? And if Arkan's supposed to be a ghost, how can he die?) The Countess gets killed being thrown out of a window and being impaled on a spike (I always found it strange why evil monsters would just leave so many spikey things lying around...), and Billy, who is somehow not dead even though he had his throat slit <span style="font-style: italic;">several hours ago</span> now, traps Baltasar in their truck and sets fire to it (using lighter fluid left next to some hay, if you can believe that). He kills himself and the dwarfs, but not Baltasar, who comes after Mario and Flavia, only to be run over by a steamroller. The dummy they used is very obviously a blow-up doll. At one point I think you see one of the arms pop. Flavia and Mario then escape on Arkan's boat, and we're treated to a little spoken-word wrap-up, translating the text that's on-screen...<br /><br />"Flavia and Mario without any further problems returned to the city, where they continued their artistic career. They are still bonded together by a strong friendship"<br /><br />Okay, so that's just a long-winded way of saying they're still making music together. Gotcha, with you so far.<br /><br />"Olga Lujan and Arkan disappeared without a trace. The castle was turned into a first-class hotel for tourists."<br /><br />Um, okay, so their bodies disappeared, that's what you're saying. Still doesn't explain how you could kill a ghost with a crossbow, but never mind.<br /><br />"Baltasar was punished for his crimes and became food for worms and vermin. Then he returned to him mosterous offspring hoping to have one day a new oppertunity."<br /><br />Um... so he's dead? You mean he met up with his kids in Hell? And what kind of oppertunity could he be waiting for in Hell?<br /><br />"Killer Barbies has a new car in which they travel across the country."<br /><br />Thank you, I really wanted to know what you did about the whole wheels situation.<br /><br />"Finally, nobody really died. The proof of that is that we can applaude the group this evening in Velencia. Our story is, in reality, a creation of pure fantasy."<br /><br /><span style="font-size:100%;">...<br /><br />...<br /><br />... WAT?!?!?!<br /><br />That's how youre ending this movie?! "Guess what, none of this actually happened!" Well, DUUUUUUUUUUUUUR! Could never have figured that out without a clearly disinterested voice-actress teling me so! Wow, who would have guess that movies are fake (except for the ones based on true stories, and they're very often faker than they want you to believe)? In all seriousness, I hate it when people try to pull this meta shit completely out of nowhere, it makes you feel like a fool for ever being emotionally invested in the story to begin with. And yes, believe it or not, there are people who could bring themselves to be emotionally invested with even something like <span style="font-style: italic;">this.</span> In many ways, and admire and envy them.<br /><br />As I said before, there are things wrong with this movie that aren't the faults of the filmmakers. I can't hold them responsible for the dub, because they probably had no say in what was done there. And I'll lay off the acting, because the dub is so distracting it's impossible to tell whose good and whose not. However, even with those two small mercies, there are still a crippling amount of things wrong with this you <span style="font-style: italic;">can</span> blame them for, the biggest of all being just how cheap and tawdry the whole thing feels. I get the feeling Franco was trying to give this a Hammer-like quality, but the thing with the Hammer horror movies was, even with all the gore and nudity you'd often see, their productions still managed to have an air of class about them, something this is missing from almost the first frame. It's a mish-mash of horror cliches that have been used better in other movies, with some flesh thrown in to hopefully keep people interested, and it fails because it's not scary, and I personally didn't find it even slightly arousing (I'm not going to go into detail on that one either, use your imaginations if you really need to. Probably better off doing that anyway).<br /><br /></span></span><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" ><span style="font-size:100%;">FINAL VERDICT</span></span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;font-family:courier new;" ><span style="font-size:100%;">BINNED!</span></span><br /></div><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh-x530P57J0MR-pqvqqmRbCAv_6jArFRzt1kl3SVBDskJKw-aIMwY1DoA4bw80rknZNwgPU5n3xuNY0BkuYZ4-DcmzaBjVuqkRN9A5CRAaoVapPh8YTBqknGjUOsJQcf30mydHSCRlTr0/s1600-h/002.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh-x530P57J0MR-pqvqqmRbCAv_6jArFRzt1kl3SVBDskJKw-aIMwY1DoA4bw80rknZNwgPU5n3xuNY0BkuYZ4-DcmzaBjVuqkRN9A5CRAaoVapPh8YTBqknGjUOsJQcf30mydHSCRlTr0/s400/002.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5296058928603217122" border="0" /></a><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;"><span style="font-size:100%;">Before I go, I'll leave you with a gift, the best thing in his movie, so you don't have to even consider buying this to experience it. Don't say I don't ever do anything for you.<br /><object width="425" height="344"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/bMS6y-eKWn0&hl=en&fs=1"><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/bMS6y-eKWn0&hl=en&fs=1" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="425" height="344"></embed></object><br /><br />Until next week, I'm The Cheap-Arse Film Critic, and when I first joined the force, I assumed there was semen on <span style="font-style: italic;">everything.</span></span><span style="font-size:180%;"><span style="font-size:100%;"><br /></span></span></span>The Cheap-Arse Film Critichttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08211046330068309653noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1161570503760263602.post-1316283745236025332009-01-18T06:11:00.000-08:002009-01-20T20:37:02.394-08:00The Cheap Arse Film Review #16- "TOUGH & DEADLY."<div style="text-align: center;"><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgn3SOw0qDbvnrZjjSfHhR_rFem2Rin7SHdPuNaUjC-p37jWnTMs9kHf58izI6VXteuwx9MKHa_j6TUjiT-IIFZmy1P14B6VOl6YktnhpyK2kSu7scmZY2xYpyPfjqjAiXxlBdT4281010/s1600-h/001.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgn3SOw0qDbvnrZjjSfHhR_rFem2Rin7SHdPuNaUjC-p37jWnTMs9kHf58izI6VXteuwx9MKHa_j6TUjiT-IIFZmy1P14B6VOl6YktnhpyK2kSu7scmZY2xYpyPfjqjAiXxlBdT4281010/s400/001.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5293592090298582306" border="0" /></a><span style="font-family: courier new; font-weight: bold;">NAME: TOUGH & DEADLY</span><br /><span style="font-family: courier new; font-weight: bold;"></span><br /><span style="font-family: courier new; font-weight: bold;">RATED: 18</span><br /><span style="font-family: courier new; font-weight: bold;"></span><br /><span style="font-family: courier new; font-weight: bold;">RELEASED: 1995</span><br /><span style="font-family: courier new; font-weight: bold;"></span><br /><span style="font-family: courier new; font-weight: bold;">WRITTEN BY: STEVE COHEN & OTTO C. POZZO FROM A STORY BY OTTO C. POZZO</span><br /><span style="font-family: courier new; font-weight: bold;"></span><br /><span style="font-family: courier new; font-weight: bold;">DIRECTED BY: STEVE COHEN:</span><br /><span style="font-family: courier new; font-weight: bold;"></span><br /><span style="font-family: courier new; font-weight: bold;">STARRING: BILLY BLANKS, "ROWDY" RODDY PIPER</span><br /><span style="font-family: courier new; font-weight: bold;"></span><br /><span style="font-family: courier new; font-weight: bold;">GENRE: ACTION</span><br /><span style="font-family: courier new; font-weight: bold;"></span><br /><span style="font-family: courier new; font-weight: bold;">BOUGHT FROM: CEX</span><br /><span style="font-family: courier new; font-weight: bold;"></span><br /><span style="font-family: courier new; font-weight: bold;">PRICE: £1.00</span><br /><span style="font-family: courier new;"></span></div><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">I have two great loves in my life- cinema, and professional wrestling, both of which took root in my childhood. The first movie I ever went to see was either "Tranformers: The Movie," or "An American Tale," in this old cinema in Romford that is now sadly a nightclub. My family always made a big deal of going to the movies together, which is why when my Dad asks me if I fancy going to see with him and my Mum, I'll still very often say yes, even at the age of 26. My first wrestling-related memory isn't even of anybody wrestling, it's of Hillbilly Jim, this shirtless, overalls-wearing hick, and "Mean" Gene Okerland, a bald man with a killer mustache and a suit, standing in front of a wall of TVs, recapping the week's events in the World Wrestling Federation. They were the strangest pairing I had ever laid eyes on in all my six years on this planet. I was immediately transfixed, and a lifelong obsession had begun. Soon everything I had was wrestling related- I had the toys, I subscribed to the magazines and comics, owned replica title belts, everything in my bedroow was covered by images of gurning men, from my wallpaper to my curtains to my bedsheets. I attended live shows with my family. I watched The British Bulldog (RIP) win a battle royal in the Royal Albert Hall and got so excited I ran out of the booth we were sitting in and collided with another boy, splitting my lip open and spending the entire train journey home holding a Hulk Hogan bandana full of ice on it (probably should have had stitches in that. Still got a scar there to this day, which I can sometimes be seen absent-mindedly chewing on). I also attended "WrestleMania XX" with my Dad nearly five years ago now, travelling to New York, sitting in the crowd at Madison Square Garden (which if you're a wrestling fan is pretty much Mecca), watching Eddie Guerrero (RIP) retain his WWE Title, and Chris Benoit (RIP... anyone noticing a theme here?) win the World Heavyweight Title, and then embrace Guerrero, his real life best friend, as they both stood in the middle of the ring with belts people told them they would never hold, confetti and fireworks going off around them. It was one of my favourite memories, but recent events have seen it become somewhat... tainted.<br /><br />So yes, I do get rather excited when these two worlds collide. I'm giddy like a school girl at a Westlife concert about seeing "The Wrestler," and am elated at Mickey Rouke picking up the Golden Globe for Best Actor. I only hope he turns the momentum into Oscars success too, and that when he gets off stage he grabs Sean Penn by the scruff of his neck, bends him over and then violently sodomises him with the award, as half the crowd gasps and the other half cheers (I really don't like Sean Penn. Is it obvious?). And back when I was a kid, it was a different level of hysteria altogether. As a confirmed Hulkamaniac (something I still am a bit today, even though I'm now what they call a quote-unquote "Smart" fan and should consider Hogan The Devil), I had to see every movie Hulk Hogan was in. My tiny mind couldn't figure out why he wasn't in everything. I saw "Suburban Commando," (which also had The Undertaker in it, with the... voice of a... small child...) and "Mr. Nanny," in cineams, and considered them masterpieces. Of course, looking back on them now, I realise they... weren't. But I still have a fondness for them, and also "No Holds Barred," which I missed theatrically, but later watched on video. To this day I associate Tiny Lister completely with the part he played in that film. Even when he popped up in "The Dark Knight," for a brief cameo, I wanted to scream, <span style="font-style: italic;">"ZEUS!!!!!"</span><br /><br />I wasn't that familiar with the films of Roddy Piper, though. The only one I can remember watching as a boy was "Body Slam," which also featured Dirk Benedict and "Captain" Lou Albano. Even though I've not seen it yet, let's just say I can pretty safely assume it's not "The Wrestler," in terms of quality or realism. Even back then I remember being fairly underwhelmed by it. But then that was to be expected, right? After all, Roddy Piper was <span style="font-style: italic;">nowhere near</span> the star Hulk Hogan was, so <span style="font-style: italic;">of course</span> his movies weren't going to be as good.<br /><br />It would take me until I was 19 to see "They Live," for the first time, and my eyes were opened. In this violent, clever, hilarious B-Movie, he was a movie star. Moreso than Hulk Hogan ever was. If you go back and watch his movies now, Hogan has the look of a deer in the headlights, The World's most famous wrestler finding out, to his horror, just how little that meant when the director called action. Piper, on the other hand, was a charismatic, cocky son-of-a-gun, who may have rivalled even Bruce Campbell with his ability to take even the silliest lines and turn them into catchphrases. As a man, he was also <span style="font-style: italic;">far</span> more interesting than Hogan ever was, a hard drinking, harder partying Canadian with a healthy interest in the white stuff. There are many stories out there about him, but my favourite has to be the one Ric Flair recounts in his autobiography, of the time Piper got paid for a show with a spittoon full of cocaine that he spent the entire car journey back to the hotel shoving his face into like some kilt-wearing Tony Montana.<br /><br />He should have been a star. It should have saved him from the wrestling industry, which he loved as many do, only to have that love repaid with a body that has been utterly smashed to shit, as many have (he continued to wrestle regularly for years with an artificial hip). At the absolute least, he should have had the kind of career Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson now enjoys, that being the best thing in bad movies (a streak he recently broke with "Get Smart," where he fell behind Steve Carell, Anne Hathaway and Bill Murray cameoing as the guy in the tree nobody wanted to talk to, to be the <span style="font-style: italic;">forth</span> best thing in an actually pretty good movie). But instead he had to make do with movies like this.<br /><br />Before I get into the meat of this, I want to first comment on the title of this thing. Basically, I think it's amazing. At first I thought it sounded like a joke, like some parody of an action movie. I wouldn't have been surprised to find out it co-starred McBain. But now I've lived with it a bit, I have a higher appreciation for it, because it's unpretensious, totally without bullshit, an action movie boiled down to it's very essence. If it were a cologne, it would probably smell like a mix of blood, sweat, gun powder, cocaine and both male and female sexual fluids. I'd wear it. Fuck, I'd <span style="font-style: italic;">bathe</span> in it.<br /><br />This horrible and annoying keyboard score kicks in, and then the movie's off, treating us to some aerial shots of a road near a stretch of water, before we settle on what looks to be an old Jaguar driving along said stretch of road. I have no idea where this is supposed to be taking place. I don't think it's supposed to be America though. The car eventually pulls up outside a mansion, and out of it steps a large black man with a buzzcut, wearing a trenchcoat. This is John Portland. Actually, it's not John Portland, at least not at this point, at this point he has another name and goes by the codename Quicksilver, only be given the name John Portland when Roddy Piper's character, Elmo Freech, throws a dartboard into a map of the United States. But he's called John Portland on the box, and the credits have him listed as just "John Portman," so I'm going to call him John Portman. He's played by Billy Blanks, seven-time Karate world champion and a legitimately hard bastard who most people will have the best chance knowing from his range of Tae Bo workout videos. There was a period of my life when I was pretty obsessed with Tae Bo, and would tell people that Billy Blanks was going to reshape my body from the pale, flabby monstrosity it had become into one a Greek God would be proud to own. Then I hurt my leg a bit doing one of the kicks and never watched any of his videos again.<br /><br />No sooner does he enter the mansion and sit down to talk to the person who lives there, who claims to have information Portman's might want to know about, than the residence is set upon by a group of about four people who seem to be dressed like pool cleaners. At first I thought they were the good guys, but then the second they get inside the place they start randomly shooting people in the head, including a woman just sitting at a table reading a book, which doesn't seem like a very heroic thing to do. They drill through one of the floors to use a camera to see if Portland and friend are in the main room, which they are, and I can't help but think that's alot of needless work. I also refuse to believe neither of them heard a bloody drill coming through the ceiling. They try to knock out Portland with a dart and fail, the other poor guy gets a bullet in the head like everybody else, and then we're into the first fight scene on the film.<br /><br />And it's one of the worst fight scenes I've ever seen.<br /><br />This really isn't the fault of any of the actors or stuntmen. They do there bit well, but the shooting, sound effects and especially the editing of this scene just kills it. Blows very obviously don't land, there's horribly cheesy "THWACK!" sound effects, and there are just seemingly random cuts thrown in, and I don't mean in and MTV, ADD kind of way, I mean someone will go to throw a punch or a kick, then there'll be a jump-cut and the punch will have landed without us seeing it. It's a cliche, but it really does look like somebody was let loose on this with a pair of blunt scissors. It happens in other fights too, I'll mention them when we come to them. The only explaination I can think of is that these cuts were made to make the BBFC happy when the movie was brought over here for classification, and because it wasn't going to be a blockbuster or anything, people just hacked stuff away without any care and shoved it out. I can't imagine even a movie of this level doing something like that intentionally. So all this is going on, somebody gets kicked over a balconey in slooooooow moooooootion, until finally somebody gets a dart in Portland and they all beat the shit out of him, dragging away his limp body, because for some reason he needs to be brought in alive.<br /><br />And then suddenly the film comes alive, because finally Roddy Piper appears. It's not like his scenes are any better written or directed than any of the others, but there's alot to be said for star power, and when he's on-screen, boom, star. You're still having shit flung at you, it's just not being thrown with as much force. We discover he's a former-cop-turned-private-investigator when he tries to bring in a large man named Tiny (fiction in general never gets tired of this joke, does it? "Hey, this guys fat/thin/tall/short! Let's call him "Skinny!"/"Tubby!"/"Stubby!"/"Stretch!"), who he finds in some apartment with another dude, doing drugs and watching a show with a guy in a chicken suit in it, as a woman in her underwear lies on the bed seemingly ignored and unfulfilled. Other than the other guy and the drugs, I can totally relate to this. Tiny decides he doesn't want to go quietly, and then there's another fight scene (the second in just under nine minutes) and while I wouldn't call it good, at least it's not affected by the editing problems that blighted the last one. My favourite part is when Piper gives the other dude a two-handed chokeslam onto the bed as if we're expected to believe this will hurt. They somehow end up on the roof of the building, and Elmo bitch slap's Tiny's friend off the side of the building with he falls into an empty swimming pool in slooooooow moooooootion. The police then show up to pick up Tiny, and nobody really seems that concerned with surely dead gentleman, all they do is trade snide comments with Elmo.<br /><br />We then return to Portland's plight, to see his beaten up body is transported somewhere by car for questioning. Sat next to him is a man administering drugs to him to keep him sedated. "He'll be asleep for a long time," he says, and before he's even really finished that last word, Portland headbutts him in the face and we're in yet another fight scene (third in 13 minutes). Its not really much of one, because there's only really so much you can do in such a cramped space and HOLY SHIT PORTLAND JUST KICKED A DUDE THROUGH THE WINDSCREEN WHO THEN GOT RUN OVER BY THE CAR! Okay, I'll give it to them, <span style="font-style: italic;">that</span> was great. It does call into question my theory for all the edits earlier though. I mean, if I was right about the BBFC, wouldn't this be one of the first things to go? I can see a man thrown through glass and left as roadkill, but I can't see someone throw a punch? Also the dude went through the glass in slooooooow moooooootion. Everytime someone dies this seems happens. Watching this movie is like playing "Fallout 3."<br /><br />The car crashes, and everyone dies, except Portland, who's left a bloody heap. He's discovered by a bus driver and taken to hospital, where he's discovered by Elmo, who instantly takes an unusual interest in him. They at least give a reason for this to begin with, that he thinks there might be some money in it for him if he turns out to be a missing person, but when nothing turns up on him, Elmo still sticks around, protecting him from another hit (by throwing the guy out the window in slooooooow moooooootion) and having him hide out in his apartment. And the only reason we're given for this is that, well, that's the plot. We also get the first of a couple of scenes set at the main offices of the CIA, who it turns out Portland works for. These consist of people sitting at a very long table, in a room that seems to be some kind of light vacuum, as all around them is darkness. Maybe they've vampires. CIA Vampires intent on protecting the World so they'll always have a fresh supply of blood on hand. Actually, I'm going to write that down, that's a pretty good idea. Nobody nick it. It's in these scenes that it's established that Portman is almost impossible to track, as he no longer officially exists after he nearly died on a field mission after taking a shotgun blast at point-blank range. Okay, I'll buy alot in movies like this, but I'm <span style="font-style: italic;">not</span> buying that. I refuse to believe that even in a movie called "Tough & Deadly," could a man take that and live. He wouldn't be <span style="font-style: italic;">intact,</span> let alone alive.<br /><br />So Elmo and Portland become instant best friend, with Elmo bringing him to his place of work, introducing him to his assistant/secretary Mo, and deciding to help him heal up. His idea of healing up doesn't involve letting Portland rest up though, no. Instead, we're treated to a training montage! I can't believe this movie was released in 1995, it's so eighties. They run, do push-ups, sit-ups, pull-ups. It's really just an excuse for Billy Blank to show how in-shape and bendy he is, but I'll give it to Roddy Piper, he's cut. He was never really one of those wrestlers who had an amazing physique, but here he looks great. He obviously didn't want to be shown up and put the hours in at the gym. Then, suddenly, Portland is working for Elmo, helping him bring guys in, starting with some drug trafficker. They go to a bar to find him, ony for Portland to piss off a truly wild-eyed dude with long hair in a cowboy hat by accidently knocking his beer over his girlfriend. This leads to (say it with me, children) <span style="font-style: italic;">another</span> fight scene, one that's edited even worse that the one right at the beginning. There's a point where Portland is thrown over the bar, only for hi do jump back over the bar, seemingly about to throw a kick and... suddenly he's standing on the ground and the other guy is selling a blow we never saw land. At the very least everybody fell down in real time.<br /><br />The next day, Elmo asks Portland to show him some of his newly-discovered fighting skills. At first he's reluctant to, but Elmo talks him into it, there's a misunderstanding, that then we have <span style="font-style: italic;">another fight scene.</span> Well, it's not really a fight scene, it mostly consists of Blanks and Piper falling in and out of shot, presumably after taking blows off-camera. What I like to imagine happened before they filmed this was Roddy made it clear that he wasn't down with taking that kung-fu shit, and this was the best compromise they could come up with. The cheapness of the whole production is exposed here too, because not only do some walls wobble when they crash into them, but Elmo also falls into a radiator, and it's immediately noticable that, not only is it not attached to the wall, or even made out of metal for that matter, but it also seems to come in two parts. After their horseplay, they follow up a new lead on the guy they were looking for the night before, this time taking them to a pool hall, where <span style="font-style: italic;">yet another fight scene</span> breaks out. I've properly lost count of how many there have been at this point, and we're not even halfway through. There's also more shitty editing. This time we're not allowed to see a pool ball thrown by Portland collide with someone's head. Anyway, they find there, and the guy Elmo'd been fighting with only seconds ago stands up as if nothing happened and informs him that "Mr. Milan ain't gonna like you busting one of his family like that." Thank you very much for coming back from your severe beating to drop a name that's sure to be important in a little while, strangely camp thug.<br /><br />Infact, it's going to be important right this second, because in the very next scene we meet Milan, discover that the guy they just picked up is his nephew (even though the guy from the previous scene actually looks older tha this guy, at least to my eyes), and sends a couple of boys to administer some "dental work" to Elmo. The thugs turn up in Elmo's office, and... you know. Elmo disposes of them quickly, shooting one in the knee, the other in the foot, kneeing him in the face, and then we get another horrible edit- this time he's holding the guy as if he's going to punch him, and then the next second the guy's staggering backwards as if he were drunk. Hell, that's all I have to go on. It's not like I actually <span style="font-style: italic;">saw</span> anything done to him. We then find out the men Elmo and Portland have pissed off are the same men who had Portland beaten at the beginning of the film, and that they also have people within the CIA, who are now actively trying to kill both of them.<br /><br />Portland and Elmo discover someone spying on them as they head out of Elmo's apartment for somewhere a little bit safer. Elmo appears to be in trouble for a second, until Portland FLIES IN OUT OF FUCKING NOWHERE WITH A BODY SCISSORS! It's not cool on the same level as kicking a man under the wheels of a car he was riding in is, but it <span style="font-style: italic;">is</span> cool. They don't get anything out of the guy, but they note that he didn't fight like one of Milan's guys, so he must have ties with someone else. They reach Elmo's friend's place, where for some reason they seem to think the coast is clear. The guy eve says, "Peaceful here, isn't it?" He may as well have heard a twig snap and said, "I'll go and check that out," because he ends up dead about a minute later when the bad guys unload a machine gun into the house. Portland makes the guys think he's dead so he can get the drop on them, taking them all out single-handedly taking the last guy out by kicking him through a window in slooooooow moooooootion, and then off a balconey (lots of balconies in this movie...) in slooooooow moooooootion. I have no idea where Elmo was during all this, or why he doesn't seem too upset that his good friend is now dead when we finally see him again. All I know is they now end up on the doorstep of his assistant, Mo. "Guys," she tells them, "I am really tired. One of you is gonna have to watch."<br /><br />...<br /><br />"Guys, I am really tired. One of you is gonna have to watch."<br /><br />...<br /><br />"Guys, I am really tired. One of you is gonna have to watch."<br /><br />... Speechless.<br /><br />So the rest of the movie is them now taking on the might f the drug runners and the corrupt forces within the CIA, as John starts to slowly regain his memories. They use Milan's phone records to discover Milan has been calling an old army base and a number in Washington (the number is 555-0000, if you need any more proof of how litle effort was put into this script). They go to one of Milan's warehouses, where more fights happen, and Piper gets to pull off the obligatory wrestling move all wrestlers have to do when in movies like this by body slamming someone. Milan slips away during all this. Do they follow hot on his heels? No, they go back to Mo's apartment and nearly come to blows over music. You see, Elmo wants to listen to a country CD, whilst Portman wants to listen to a rap one. Isn't that <span style="font-style: italic;">funny?</span> A black man and a white man both like two totally different types of music!<br /><br />Fuck this movie.<br /><br />Eventually John remembers everything, and this leads to one last big battle at the CIA army depot that was listed amongst Milan's phone records. He heads out alone, and predictably he's captured, but overwhelms his guard with both his hands in cuffs. I think he may also kill one of them with his chair, as he lifts it into the air with a dramatic flourish and starts to bring it down in slooooooow moooooootion, before we very abruptly cut to a shot of Elmo's car pulling up after he's realised where Portland's gone. He sneaks up on one of the bad guys and...<br /><br />... puts him to sleep with a Sleeper Hold. I've... never experienced anything like this before. I'm literally so happy at what I've just seen that I'm actually afraid to express that happiness, lest I do something silly like run out into the street naked reciting passages from The Bible in song.<br /><br />Portland goes fucking Terminator on everone, taking them all out with fists and feet and guns even though he's been shot, discovering how Milan is working with the CIA to smuggle drugs into the country on military flights, and that he was taken out after he discovered this. There's some more fighting, Portman looks like he's about to be killed, before the <span style="font-style: italic;">good</span> CIA show up. The bad guys are taken down, Portland has his memories and his job back, Elmo, who stopped seemingly the only small truck full of drugs there was on the site, that also happened to have the drug lord himself riding shotgun, is told he'll be nicely financially compensated for helping out, and they finally take Portman to the hospital. The End.<br /><br />I don't feel like mincing my words tonight- this movie was awful. It's badly written, badly directed, and features almost universally bad performances, the worst coming from Billy Blanks himself. I really wanted to avoid making any puns based off his last name when talking about his acting abilities, but... there really is nothing there. He's beyond wooden. He barely has anything to say in the whole movie, other than lines that only exist to push the plot along, so I'll give them credit for seemingly realising what they were working with, but he's so bad he can't even do <span style="font-style: italic;">that</span> properly. And the one thing he <span style="font-style: italic;">can</span> do, which is fight, is sabotaged due to him working with a director who doesn't know how to shoot a fight scene, and an editor who doesn't know how to edit. The one good thing about this movie? Roddy Piper, so I guess he <span style="font-style: italic;">was</span> trying to follow The Rock's career model, the only problem being he chose to appear in bigger turds than The Great One <span style="font-style: italic;">ever</span> has.<br /><br /></span><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >FINAL VERDICT</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;font-family:courier new;" >BINNED!</span><br /></div><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhWGXzbZA4PWTbu6bz4dh39lhu7PlFI8bAPdldTbUOVd3ooqaHTkk9GZSZ4AATrEh6-CdZnqveUSi6ifXvuvuLHh7VAGwDb0SMIpSfiUPZBl5V4DEEV71kM5wYHnvqGJ3RwtTZyW9DLIBg/s1600-h/002.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhWGXzbZA4PWTbu6bz4dh39lhu7PlFI8bAPdldTbUOVd3ooqaHTkk9GZSZ4AATrEh6-CdZnqveUSi6ifXvuvuLHh7VAGwDb0SMIpSfiUPZBl5V4DEEV71kM5wYHnvqGJ3RwtTZyW9DLIBg/s400/002.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5293592083096246994" border="0" /></a><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">Oh well, at least I've still got "The Wrestler," to look forward to. I'm going to go see that with my Dad for his Birthday.<br /><br />Until next week, I'm The Cheap-Arse Film Critic, and I was <span style="font-style: italic;">frozen</span> today!<br /></span>The Cheap-Arse Film Critichttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08211046330068309653noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1161570503760263602.post-42872158740842062952009-01-10T07:54:00.000-08:002009-01-14T04:36:11.148-08:00The Cheap-Arse Flim Review #15- "CODE 46."<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEizXwwP13cnSWVm-y_Q2CqXtLFdOgUfEHYS2aguV2NeF1ZPEKzXQcQ4eiJz2oot5DUXxaLTWBIIscqxgfHUp_eLFF_9n007zp6eLfLqJeIeWtHTDrSS5L9DWS7GXXqR9_mgj984yxG7AIE/s1600-h/001.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEizXwwP13cnSWVm-y_Q2CqXtLFdOgUfEHYS2aguV2NeF1ZPEKzXQcQ4eiJz2oot5DUXxaLTWBIIscqxgfHUp_eLFF_9n007zp6eLfLqJeIeWtHTDrSS5L9DWS7GXXqR9_mgj984yxG7AIE/s400/001.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5291126781284744066" border="0" /></a><br /><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >NAME: CODE 46</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >RATED: 15</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >RELEASED: 2003</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >WRITTEN BY: FRANK COTTRELL BOYCE</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >DIRECTED BY: MICHAEL WINTERBOTTOM</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >STARRING: TIM ROBBINS, SAMANTHA MORTON</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >GENRE: SCI-FI/ROMANCE</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >BOUGHT FROM: POUNDLAND</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >PRICE: NOPE, NOT DOING IT</span><br /></div><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br />Okay, here's the thing about Poundland- as far as their DVDs go, they sell <span style="font-style: italic;">alot</span> of shit. Shit with awesome titles that often look like they'll at least be fun to watch and write about, but shit all the same. But every now and again, I'll be skimming the shelves, and I'll stuble across something genuinely interesting, that may actually star people I know, be made by someone I've heard of and have been financed and distrubuted by a production company that doesn't operate out of its Dad's shed. I mean, up until recently they were selling the single disc version of "Donnie Darko," which, if you're reading this and for some reason you've never seen it, I can't recommend doing so enough. And their four-in-one collections usually have at least one film on them that's worth a peak at.<br /><br />But even taking all that into account, I was shocked to have found this. I mean for a start it stars Tim Robbins and Samamtha Morton, who I'll admit may not be massive draws to the casual movie fan, but they're very respected in their field, and most people will at least know Robbins from "The Shawshank Redemption." It's also directed by someone of note, Michael Winterbottom, who's up there with the most respected British filmmakers working today. He's not quite the draw that, say, Danny Boyle is, but unlike him he's not really succeeded in making himself one of the top draws for the movies he makes, a brand if you will (And I mean "brand," in the possible way, I want to point out, I mean it in the way Kevin Smith, Spike Lee, Quentin Tarantino and, on a <span style="font-style: italic;">much</span> larger scale, Steven Speilberg are brands. Most people aren't going to see "Slumdog Milionaire," they're going to see, "The New Danny Boyle Move"). But he's still made some wonderful movies, such as "24 Hour Party People," (also written by the writer of this one), and "A Cock & Bull Story," both starring Steve Coogan, and both probably finding their way past the halfway mark in my top 100 movies of all time (although "... Party People," would be placed above "... Cock & Bull Story," if I'm honest). And even the films he's made that <span style="font-style: italic;">weren't</span> as well recieved, like the sexually explicit "9 Songs," (which I've not seen, so you know what that means...), he's still found himself given respect for being willing to take chances. And there was one of his films, sitting sandwiched between two low-budget erotic horror movies (more on them another time). Suffice to say, I picked it up and ran for the counter like I was afraid it would turn to dust at any second.<br /><br />Prior to the film starting properly, we're greeted, as we were with the last movie I covered, to more text, informing us of the following...<br /><br />CODE 46<br /><br />ARTICLE 1<br /><br />ANY HUMAN BEING WHO SHARES THE SAME NUCLEAR GENE SET AS ANOTHER HUMAN BEING IS DEEMED TO BE GENETICALLY IDENTICAL THE RELATIONS OF ONE ARE THE RELATIONS OF ALL<br /><br />DUE TO IVF, DI EMBRYO SPLITTING AND CLONING TECHNIQUES IT IS NESCESSARY TO PREVENT ANY ACCIDENTAL OR DELIBERATE GENETICALLY INCESTUOUS REPRODUCTION<br /><br />THEREFORE:<br /><br />i. ALL PROSPECTIVE PARENTS SHOULD BE GENETICALLY SCREENED BEFORE CONCEPTION<br />IF THEY HAVE 100%, 50% OR 25% GENETIC IDENTITY, THEY ARE NOT PREMITTED TO CONCIEVE<br /><br />ii. IF THE PREGNANCY IS UNPLANNED, THE FOETUS MUST BE SCREENED. AND PREGNANCY RESULTING FROM 100%, 50% OR 25% GENETICALLY RELATED PARENTS MUST BE TERMINATED IMMEDIATELY<br /><br />iii. IF THE PARENTS WERE IGNORANT OF THEIR GENETIC RELATIONSHIPTHEN MEDICAL INTERVENTION IS AUTHORISED TO PREVENT ANY FURTHER BREACH OF CODE 46<br /><br />iv: IF THE PARENTS KNEW THEY WERE RELATED PRIOR TO CONCEPTION IT IS A CRIMINAL BREACH OF CODE 46<br /><br />As you can plainly see, that is alot of text, and also alot to take in before the credits have even rolled. I find myself slightly more forgiving of this technique than I was when it was use in "Stag," because whereas that movie used it so it didn't have to bother establishing who any of the characters, here it's used to illustrate what will undoubtably be one of the main plot points of the movie. However, I can't help but think they could have just had a character at some point explain what Code 46 is, in a more efficient way than this does. All you really need to know is that, in the future, there are lots of people walking around unknowingly related to each other, and Code 46 exists to stop them reproducing. And even if you <span style="font-style: italic;">did </span>feel like going into more detail than that, it's not like this movie was running long, including the credits it lasts a little less than 90 minutes.<br /><br />So the movie starts properly now, and we see Tim Robbins' character, William, arriving at Shanghai by plane and being driven to the city, as we hear a woman's voice speaking over the top of what we're watching, speculating about what he must have done to reach his destination and eing proven write with every jump-cut. Some people feel the same way about voiceovers as I do about needless text, but I've never minded it really, especially not when it's used properly, which I feel it is here. It's not really used to fill in plot holes as it is to give us an insight into the mind of another character. When the car reaches the one of the checkpoints into the city, it is accousted by those that live (or as William's driver puts it, "just exist") in the desert surrounding it, attempting to sell them things. William takes a shine to one of the Outsiders, buys two sherbert fountains off him, and then gently lets him down when he says he can't get him into the city, telling him not to give up trying. This gets him telling off from his driver, who informs him that he shouldn't give out hope like that, as people who can't get in places usually can't for a reason. See? Something was established within the movie using characters, dialogue and actions! That wasn't so hard, was it?<br /><br />Following this we meet the woman who was providing the voiceover for the proceeding scenes, Maria, played by Samantha Morton, when a talking screen near her bed wakes her up and wishes her Happy Birthday. I'm a huge fan of Samantha Morton. She's an amazing actress, but that's only part of it. In all honesty, I suspect she may be an Angel. I mean, she's not a typically attractive woman. "Quirky," I suppose is how most would describe her. But she just radiates this... it's difficult to put into words, but... she gives off this luminous, frail beauty, in every role she plays. You can't take your eyes off her, and you don't really want to. She... I'm going to stop now, because I've just read this paragraph back to myself and it's coming across as really creepy, and I've a feeling it'll only get creepier. She's fucking wonderful. Let's get back to the movie. Maria tells us via voiceover of a dream she has every year on her Birthday, that she's on a train, walking from carriage-to-carriage, looking for someone, she only has twenty stops to find them, and every year the train makes it to another stop. She tells us tonight she's down to the last station, and that if she's allowed to sleep, maybe she'll discover what she's who she's lookng for, or at least where she's going. It's all very cryptic, as you can tell.<br /><br />Over the next few scenes we discover Michael's job, which is that of insurance freud investigator, and that he has been called in by The Sphinx, a company that makes insurance cover documents, or "Papeles," that allow people to travel to places they wouldn't normally. Apparently, someone has been creating forged Papeles for people, and the company would like William to discover who the culprit is. We also find out that William is able to read people's minds when they give him a piece of information about themselves, which is why he's so good at his job. He has this ability through the use of a specially created "Virus," that allow the people that are infected with them to do things they normally couldn't. I like the whole virus concept, and I also like that it's implimented in a very real-world way, with people not looking to become superheroes or anything special, but just to be better at their jobs. There's also a funny line later where Maria tells of how she was once infected with a virus that allowed her to speak Mandarin, only for her to not know what she was saying afterwards.<br /><br />The Sphinx has already narrowed down a list of suspects for William to interview, based on the printer the forgeries came from, and he interviews them one-by-one, getting them to tell him something about themselves, leading to some very good pieces of dialogue, especailly from the woman who admits to having a fetish for freckled skin, which is made even funnier by William's amused reaction. I think I'm halfway with her on that one. Whilst I don't think I have a <span style="font-style: italic;">fetish</span> about it, specifically, I do think freckles are nice. The only person who gives him any trouble during these interviews is, predictably, Maria. He takes this as a chance to flirt with her in a roundabout way, asking her what she's doing tonight, which lead her to tell him it's her Birthday, which of course lets him into her mind and causes him to look sternly at her and almost growl, "Happy Birthday." Now, we know why he's suddenly turned like this, because he's obviously just found out something about her that he'd rather he hadn't, but she doesn't know that, and if I were her, this sudden change in demeanour would have me slowly backing towards the door.<br /><br />So once it's established that it's obviously Maria doing the dirty work, William goes and intentionally fingers the wrong man (I hate it when the wrong man gets fingered...). And he does this so he can transparently get into her knickers. Actually that's not fair, this is a classier movie than that, I suppose you could say that he's drawn to her in a way he's not used to, and in looking into her mind maybe he feels like he's made more of a connection to her and all that. But the problem with making small movies like this is that often, alot goes unsaid, and sometimes people's actions can feel like they come right out of left-field. So alot of the time you're left to just assume people's motivations for things, and I don't think it makes you a bad person if you assume that a guy who just let a woman he's just met that he's obviously attracted to off a fairly serious crime because he's horny.<br /><br />He follows her onto a train, they talk some more, and agree to go and get something to eat. I have to say, there's real chemistry between them, they have this warm fondness when they look at each other that you see from people who find each other attractive and enjoy each other's company (and it is possible to have one without the other, believe me). It goes along way to counteract the age difference between them that can play on some people's minds. I've met people who just outright refuse to watch "Lost in Translation," because the find the thought of Bill Murray romancing Scarlett Johansson repulses them, makes their flesh crawl. It's not as extreme here as it was in that movie, Tim Robbins would have been in his mid-fouries when this was filmed as opposed to his early-fifties, and Samantha Morton isn't as young as Johansson was, but I know some people will stii hae a problem with it. To me it also helps that Robbins looks remarkably youthful for a man of his age, whereas Murray... to put it politely, he appears to have lived a hard life.<br /><br />They go to karaoke bar, which bizarrely has Mick Jones from The Clash up on-stage singing, "Should I Stay or Should I Go?" (I can't decide if this joke is clever or <span style="font-style: italic;">too clever</span> for it's own good). Here William and Maria meet up with one of the people she's sold a Papele to, Damien, who intends to use it to travel to Delhi to study bats. Oddly, William picks this moment to become stern again, parroting what his driver said earlier about how there's usually a very good reason for people not being given permission to go to certain places. I mean, seriously mate, make up your fucking mind. You can't suddenly go all authoritarian. You've already let her off and pretty much defanged yourself in front of her. You gave her a sherbert fountain for her Birthday, for Christ's sake. She even pretty much confirms this when he asks her why she's showing him all this, saying he could have her arrested at a moment's notice, and she just casually says, "You won't." So just chill and have a dance. Oh good, you are.<br /><br />William ends up back at her apartment, where they keep up up their friendly chatting/flirting. She tells him that one of her figers is younger than all the others because of a childhood accident that caused her to have to grow it back. William jokingly suggests maybe he should have the same thing done to get rid of his old face, but she tells him he doesn't need that done. That's nice. She shows him her moving image scrapbook made up of her memories, including some of her parents. She falls asleep where she's sitting (CHARMING!), he carries her to bed, and she begins to have the train dream... only for him to wake her up with coffee. She get up, and they both start singing Bob Marley's "No Woman, No Cry," her on the toilet at the time, and of course, they have sex. I talked to a friend of mine about this movie, and mentioned this particular bit to him to him as I thought it was profoundly strange, and in his opinion this sounded like the most realistic part of the movie, because, and I quote, "Most women take a piss when they know for a fact that they're going to get laid, so they don't have to stop in the middle." I love my friends.<br /><br />There are a couple of sex scenes in this movie, and both of them are a bit, well... yuck. The second one is yuck for a couple of additional reasons, but they both share the same basic problems. I think it's the way they're shot, as though we're seeing the act from William's point of view, which in theory should be okay because we get to see none of his obviously gurning face. But the thing is, I don't think Sam Morton really knows how to do sex acting. She's just sort of writhing around almost as if she's in pain, and if something off-shot is biting her legs off. It's really not erotic at all, which would be fine if that were the point, but I don't think it is. If the crtics are to be believed, this scene may have been an indicator of things to come for Michael Winterbottom's career...<br /><br />They wake up later that night, and William is now quite abrupt and hurriedly getting ready to leave. You could chalk it up to him only having a 24 hour pass, and there's some cuddling between them, but you can clearly tell he just wants to get out of there. And when he gets home, we discover why- not only does he have a son, who he's already mentioned, but he also has... A WIFE! I'll admit that maybe I'm a little naive, but I was actually a bit shocked at this reveal, inwardly going, "OF COOOOOURSE! HE HAS A WIIIIIFE!" I mean, yeah, he'd mentioned the kid, but having a son doesn't mean you have to be married. And of course this information colours the previous sequence of events a bit. Before, he was a guy who found himself strangely drawn to a woman he's just met in a way that confused him. Now he looks a bit like a letch who used his position to get himself some from someone he knew for a fact that he'd never see again. Bad form.<br /><br />The movie has the sense to realise people may feel this way about the character now, so William is shown attempting to call Maria, only to get no answer, and is also seen looking up information about her and her family on his computer. His virtual stalking is interrupted when he's informed that Damien, the guy he met in the bar with Maria, has been found dead in Delhi. This part of the movie I really like because it portrays the Power That Be as more than just evil megalomanics that want to control everybody. Damien was denied access to Delhi because he had a genetic weakness to Wards Disease, which causes the sufferer to bleed to death. We're told that it's rife in that area of the world, but most of those that live there are immune to it. So there was a real, legitimate reason for him being told, "no." It adds a level of complexity to things that I approve of. It's now obvious that William has fucked up on a rather grand scale, and he's reluctantly sent to bring in Maria.<br /><br />One problem though- she seems to have disappeared, taken away by oficials due to a "body issue." Using his empathy, he discovers that Maria is pregnant, and has been taken to a clinic "Outside," for violation of Code 46. Almost halfway through this movie and finally the title and all that stuff at the beginning make sense...<br /><br />... wait... if they've violated Code 46, then that would mean...<br /><br />... no, I'm not gonna think about that, not until I absolutely have to.<br /><br />He finds the clinic, only to discover that his empathy is useless here, as the place is filled with "Anti-Viral Bacteria," that cancels it out and also gives him a cold (I like the ideas this movie has, and the way it impliments them), preventing him from guessing the password of the woman on the desk (played in a cameo by Nina Wadia, who UK readers may recognise from "Goodness Gracious Me!" amongst other things). However, instead of turning him away, she tells him, "Here on The Outside, we do not have access to some of the pleasures freely availiable on The Inside." Taking the hint, he tries to bride her, only for her to inform him, "I don't need wealth, I just need... a little encouragment." Now, maybe it's my dirty mind, maybe it's the way she says the line, or maybe it's just the coy-yet-knowing smirks both people have on their faces but... I think she's saying she'll let him in if he has sex with her. And the next scene is his walking around the clinic talking to a doctor, so use your imaginations. <span style="font-style: italic;">This guy.</span><br /><br />William is finally taken to see Maria, only to find out that she doesn't remember him. He's finds out that this is due to the fact that, as always happens when Code 46 is accidently breached, the woman is taken into custody, the pregnancy is terminated, and the memory of the person she was with (i.e. William) is removed. Under the guise that he needs her for his investigation, he takes her from the clinic and back to her apartment, where he uses her memory scrapbook to show her that he knows her, that he fell in love with her, and that the memories of him have been taken from her. She freaks out. Who wouldn't? I would. Thought not as much as I'd freak if I discovered what William does next- he takes a sample of Maria's hair to a genetic screening clinic, has it compared with his own, and finds out the inevitable, that they're (gah...) technically related. Worse, she's (GAH!) a 100% genetic match with his mother. Oh dear Lord. His next course of action is to get the fuck out of Dodge immediately, driving to the airport and trying to get on the next plane back home, only to find that he can't leave, as his cover has expired, leaving him with no choice but to ask Maria to get him a forged Papele, which she does with great difficulty, as she's practically been rumbled and relocated to a new position.<br /><br />On the train to meet him, however, she flashes back to her Birthday dream, and suddenly her memories of him come flooding back. She tells him this, and he decides to use his cover not to go home, but instead to go to a place called Jebel Ali, taking her with him. I'm not sure if I buy this scene, to be honest, it's another point whee we're just left to assume things. For William to go from being so desperate to get back to his family, to deciding that he'd rather be with Maria, just because she remembers him, doesn't ring true to me. I mean, I know he loves her, but it's just such an abrupt turn. In any event, they arrive, do some sightseeing, find a place to stay, and then...<br /><br />... oh no. Oh nonono. Maria wants them to have sex again. And he want to, too. I think I'm going to be sick. Worse, the people who erased her memories also gave her a virus which would make her physically fight back against having sex with him if they ever tried, which since she's insistant they do so, she gets him to tie her wrists to the headboard of the bed with their belts. So this scene is going to feature, for lack of better words to describe it, the consentual rape of a woman who is genetically the guy's mother, with light bondage thrown in for good meas...<br /><br /><span style="font-size:180%;">... VAGINA!!!!!</span><br /><br />Ahem.<br /><br />Sorry.<br /><br />I was just... caught off-guard for a second there, because William just removed Maria's skirt, and there was a long, lingering close-up of Samantha Morton's... vagina. I didn't even know you could do full-frontal in a 15-rated movie. Actually scratch that, I recently saw "Forgetting Sarah Marshall," for the first time, which is also a 15, and was surprised by the amount of Jason Segal's penis that was in it. But still. Anyway, this sex scene's no improvement on the last one, only this one comes with added Oedipus complex. In an interesting twist, the next day it's revealed that the virus comes with a failsafe built into it, which causes the person infected with it to call in and report the offence they've just comitted, and then not want to leave the scene of the crime. Camly, as if accepting his fate, William convinces her to leave, buys a car, and they begin to drive of into the desert, being followed by another car. It's here I was expecting, well, maybe not a big stand-off, but maybe something a bit dramatic, last standish. But that's not what happens at all. What happens is, William and Maria are involved in an accident when he suddenly swerves to avoid people riding camels on the road. That's it, that's the big climax. They're both captured, William has all the memories of Maria erased and is sent back to his family, where he's shown being very happy, and Maria is exiled to The Outside, her memories left intact, as she now no longer matters. The last line of the film is delivered by Maria in voiceover- "I miss you."<br /><br />I know some people will make it to this point and decide they're never going to watch this movie just because of that ending. And I can understand that, I can understand people thinking it sounds totally unsatifying. Even I'll admit to watching the credit start to role and thinking to myself, "... Huh. Okay. That really is it, then?" But still, I liked this movie. I liked the performances from the two leads, even if I have no idea what kind if an accent Morton was attempting. I liked the cinematography, this really is a beautifully-shot film, even moreso when you take into account that they probably didn't have alot of money to work with. I like the music. I don't talk about music enough in these things, but I'm going to start doing so from now on. The score's great, emotional without being cloying or cliched, and they even manage to use a Coldplay song at the end and not make me want to roll my eyes. I like the version of the furure put across. Most films either go the route of everything being drity and in a state of disrepair, ala "Blade Runner," or go the clean-and-clinical "Brave New World" way. This one takes elements of both, and smooshes them together in a way that seems more realistic. I could believe that this is what the future could be like. But most of all, I liked how... warm this movie feels. Looking at the box are and the title, I expected this to be very detatched, but instead it's a remarkably human story full of love. Love that doesn't win out in the end, but love all the same.<br /><br /></span><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >FINAL VERDICT</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;font-family:courier new;" >KEPT!</span><br /></div><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhgTMu8-q8gl3whCIEnhpU0SrPG84FoUvfHfwA-Y3N0ya7vq5Sc-rdv3U8VgE_JrXMUedPDrc12yyAUIqSQp9aMUdCxFnZzygEqYtn25FiD1Gmwqmx5LswMeQPSgr5ZryVP5-VbhZs0ZZg/s1600-h/003.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhgTMu8-q8gl3whCIEnhpU0SrPG84FoUvfHfwA-Y3N0ya7vq5Sc-rdv3U8VgE_JrXMUedPDrc12yyAUIqSQp9aMUdCxFnZzygEqYtn25FiD1Gmwqmx5LswMeQPSgr5ZryVP5-VbhZs0ZZg/s400/003.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5291126777987917234" border="0" /></a><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">A rare victory for Poundland. Savour it, boys and girls, because I think it's going to be something of a rarity.<br /><br />Until next week, I'm The Cheap-Arse Film Critic, and forget it Jake, it's Chinatown.<br /></span>The Cheap-Arse Film Critichttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08211046330068309653noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1161570503760263602.post-40424504693474919302009-01-04T06:36:00.000-08:002009-01-07T11:13:29.394-08:00The Cheap-Arse Film Review #14- "STAG."<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj2BUUISgvbQhE6QPtYGDNyMPAADFmYswMDbqc2Gu5G-xhVVgu5lzoeD5fjYk_Zf80uAkl_XEc7okXA5xNGZFUZ6LBhcCZg2V8Pn4oT2QoM8HyrXBmjZV6AGQocag5eon01mXsItyldKhA/s1600-h/009.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj2BUUISgvbQhE6QPtYGDNyMPAADFmYswMDbqc2Gu5G-xhVVgu5lzoeD5fjYk_Zf80uAkl_XEc7okXA5xNGZFUZ6LBhcCZg2V8Pn4oT2QoM8HyrXBmjZV6AGQocag5eon01mXsItyldKhA/s400/009.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5288631672315052386" border="0" /></a><br /><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >NAME: STAG</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >RATED: 18</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >RELEASED: 1997</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >WRITTEN BY: PAT BERMEL & EVAN TYLOR, FROM A STORY BY JASON SCHOMBING</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >DIRECTED BY: GAVIN WILDING</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >STARRING: </span><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >KEVIN DILLON, MARIO VAN PEEBLES, ANDREW MCCARTHY, JOHN STOCKWELL, TAYLOR DAYNE</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >GENRE: DRAMA/THRILLER</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >BOUGHT FROM: SOME VIDEO GAME SHOP IN SCOTLAND. I DON'T REMEMBER THE NAME. I WAS VERY ILL AT THE TIME.</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >PRICE: 99p</span><br /></div><span style="font-family:courier new;"><br />"But Daddy, why'd you have to call it... "Stag?""<br /><span style="font-style: italic;"><br />"STAG?!"</span><br /><br />That's a reference not many people reading this will get, but I had to get it out of my system. Sorry.<br /><br />So, the nineties. They were odd, weren't they? I had a problem admitting that for a while, partly because I'm a sentimental bastard and look back fondly on alot of my childhood and early teen memories from that time, and partly because, unlike the other decades that my ilk readily make fun of, like the sixties and seventies, or even the eighties, I was there in the thick of it, a willing participant in the insanity. I owned one of those T-Shirts that changed colour with your body heat that never worked properly again after one wash. I had a line shaved into my head like Vanilla Ice. I fancied all the Spice Girls (yes, including Sporty, and I wouldn't say no to any of them now, thinking about it). <span style="font-style: italic;">I THOUGHT DAVID BADDIEL WAS FUNNY</span> (strangely though, he's now one of my favourite writers and opinionists. I wonder if I'll change my mind about <span style="font-style: italic;">that</span> in ten years time...). So in laughing at the nineties, I would have been laughing at myself. And I took myself far too seriously for far too long to be able to do that. But now, fuck it. Alot about that decade was absurd, and so was I. Still am. Look what I do for fun.<br /><br />It was also the decade when we collectively seemed to become bored with happiness. Let me tell a story from my youth. When I was about 14, I was in Drama class, and we were all split into groups of about four or five and told to come up with a silent performance about a boxer and his girlfriend. To be original, our group thought it would be fun to have our version end on downer, with the girlfriend leaving with the boxer's opponent after the poor guy had been beaten. So the time came to show what we'd come up with to each other, and we went first. We did our bit, got a round of applause, then walked off stage. The then next group then went up and, other than a few minor details, performed the exact same story. So did the next group. And the one after that. The last group, I'll never forget this, actually had the boxer <span style="font-style: italic;">beaten to death</span> as his girlfriend laughed at him from ringside. And when we were done, our teacher, and eccentric-but-lovely lady, sat silently in her chair for a few moments. I half expected her to start literally weeping for the future. She may have unknowingly witnessed the birth of Emo, come to think of it.<br /><br />My point is, it was very trendy back then for stories to be depressing, and cinema wasn't immune to this. From about the mid-to-late nineties, we saw the brief rise of the misanthropic, occasionally mysoginistic, "Feel-Bad" sub-genre of dramas and dark comedies, such as "In the Company of Men," (two men plan to seduce and then destroy a deaf woman), "Your Friends & Neighbors," (this is the entire one-line synopsis from IMDb: "Unhappy couples fall apart and hop into other beds with other people." That pretty much sums it up</span><span style="font-family:courier new;">. Also this movie and the last one were both written and directed by Neil LaBute, which pretty much sums him up, too) "Very Bad Things," (which has more than a couple of things in common with the movie I'll be covering today, which is interesting because apparently "Stag," came out first...), before reaching it's logical conclusion just before the end of the century with "Fight Club," which somehow managed to find hope and optimism in nihilism, self-loathing and the end of the financial world (Christ, now <span style="font-style: italic;">there's</span> a movie that's as relevent today as it ever was...). Sometime amongst all that, this movie was released, and true to form, it's plot isn't exactly rainbows, unicorns and hand-holding.<br /><br />We begin with some aerial shots of a city somewhere in America. I don't know what city. I'm tempted to say New York, but that's what I'm always tempted to say, and one day I'm going to get it wrong and and get an angry email off someone. Tom Jones is playing over the top of this by the way, singing an upbeat, happy ditty which really does nothing to tell you what kind of movie you're about to watch. We then follow a car in the same manner until it pulls up outside a house and two men, one black, one white, both dressed in suits, get out. The white guy then waves to his neighbor as he's bringing down his American flag. We know this is his house because as he waves, he says to his friend, "That's my neighbor," which straight away seems like an odd thing to say, because if this is your your house, of course the person livng next door to you would be your neighbor. That's what neighbors are.<br /><br />They go inside the house, and are talking about some kind of business they're doing, and the white dude suddenly finds himself in the middle of a surprise stag party with his friends old and new. The laugh, they hug, they share oddly sexualy-charged looks with each other, you know the drill. At this point, the movie introduces us to all the characters by way of freeze-framing on them and putting up a some text telling us who they are and some additional information. This is what we learn...<br /><br />VICTOR MALLICK (John Stockwell); Entrepreneur of the year, groom<br />MICHAEL BARNES (Mario Van Peebles); Victor's business partner & attorney, candidate for City Council<br />TIMAN BERNARD (John Henson); Accountant, author of "Ethics in Business<br />TAYLOR RUNDGREN (Greg Alan Williams); Former football star, child care worker<br />JON DICAPRI (William McNamara); Soap oprah star, spokesman for "Stars Against Drugs"<br />PETE WEBER (Andrew McCarthy); Drug dealer, extortionist. Self-employed<br />DANIEL KANE (Kevin Dillon); Gulf War veteran, post traumatic stress disorder<br />BEN MARKS (Mark Blum); Owner of "Happy Home" greeting card chain<br />ED LABENSKI (Gerald Anthoney); Contractor, church treasurer<br />FRANK GRIECO (Ben Gazzara); Restauranteur, grandfather<br /><br />I'm in two minds about this technique. On the one hand, I'm a fan of economic character establishment, of getting the basic nuts and bolts of who someone is out there as quickly as humanly possible, and this certainly does that. But at the same time, it feels a little bit, I don't know, <span style="font-style: italic;">lazy.</span> Like they couldn't be bothered to establish who these people were within the context of the movie, so they just put some words up on screen and that was the job done. The only person during this sequence who really gets any additional development is Timan, who Pete discovers is secretly gay and leading a double life when he goes through his wallet. Some of them also either really signpost a few upcoming plot points (I wonder if the one that's the spokesperson for "Stars Against Drugs," will be revealed to have a habit?) or are just oddly worded, like when we're told that Daniel is "post traumatic stress disorder." What, is that his job now? Does he just walk around being Post Traumatic Stress Disorder? Would it have been too hard to have stuck the word "sufferer," on the end? We find out that Ben Marks owns the "Happy Home," greetings card chain after he's said he's going to destroy his wife during their divorce, which was at least an amusing sight gag.<br /><br />So the party goes on, there's drinking and other debauchery, and... WAT? Ed is now running around in women's underwear and suspenders wearing a red curly wig. Okay, what's going on? This is the forth dude dressed like a woman I've seen reviwing the last two movies. Is the cosmos trying to tell me something? Anyway, like with any good stag party, the strippers (played by Kelly McShane and Taylor Dayne) eventually show up, along with their male escort, all dressed like cops. I've been accused a couple of times recently of having a thing for, and I quote, "dirty blondes." And whilst I will hold up my hand and say a few of the women I find myself drawn to sexually fit into this category, I don't think it's fair to say they're my type, because these women right here really <span style="font-style: italic;">are</span> dirty blondes, and I don't find myself attracted to them in the least. They both look a bit ragged and older than they probably are, which to be honest is probably good, because alot of stripper and/or hookers in movies look far too fresh-faced and chipper to have been doing what they do for any length of time. It's a hard life, and puts years on a woman very quickly. They start to perform, sucking on their chocolate guns (no, that's not code for anything, they really do have chocolate guns), remove their clothes, there's lap-dancing, some actual fucking, and I can't help but think this whole spectacle looks really... gross. They're all just a bunch of baying drunk idiots, some of whom are old enough to be my Dad. Being at a stag party is definitely more fun than watching one, I've decided.<br /><br />Everything's going good, the guys are all getting their jollies in one way or another, then someone goes and does something stupid like accidently killing one of the girls whilst throwing her up and down in a blanket over a marble floor. There was no danger in doing that at all, was there? Their escort freaks out, and we find out that his gun isn't made of chocolate when he starts firing it, tagging Daniel in the leg, before he accidently shoots himself in the struggle. So this party now has a bodycount of two. We're really rocking now!<br /><br />Her sister (oh yeah, I forgot to say, the strippers are sisters), comes back downstairs from fucking one of the old dudes after hearing the gun shots and, upon discovering the bodies, understandably begins to have something of a conniption. Do they attempt to calm her down and explain what happened? No, not really, it seems like a better idea to them to take her upstairs and duct-tape her to a chair whilst they figure out what would be the best course of action for them now. As was established by the text near the beginning, these people aren't Average Joes, most of the are very successful and have alot to lose, so the thought of just calling the cops isn't all that attractive to them. It's at this point that Pete really takes center stage as a complete and utter... I want to use the one curse word I've sworn to myself I'll never use, just incase my Mum ever reads any of these. You all know what it is. That dude behind the glass told Jodie Foster he could smell hers in "Silence of the Lambs." Getting back to Pete, from here on in he's the closest thing this movie has to a real antagonist, which is to say that whilst everyone else now turns into a dick, he turns into a great, big, <span style="font-style: italic;">swinging</span> dick. When he first showed up, he looked just so stereotypically bad news, with a tattoo on the side of his neck and these horrible yellow teeth, that I thought it might be a red herring and that he'd actually end up being the hero. But no, the movie had his role all planned out, and he seemingly just dressed the part. Infact, he's <span style="font-style: italic;">worse</span> than he looks, if that's possible. He's more than just a horrible person, he's virually a personification of pure evil, goading people to give into their dark desires and using their dirty little secrets against them. There's a bit later on where he's playing the piano with this massive grin on his face, and I swear, he looks like Satan himself. And the only real explaination for his behaviour we're given is that he was raped in prison on his Birthday. "Happy Birthday, bitch," one of the other characters mutters upon hearing this. Lovely.<br /><br />From this point on, the movie becomes talky. Very, very talky. I suppose that's why the first 15 minutes or so were so gimmicky and frantic, because they felt that they had to hook the audience before the main body of the film began. Quite clever, really. But I will say this part of the movie isn't that interesting to recap. I tried, but I then reread what I'd wrote and realised all I was doing was making a transcript of the screenplay. There are a couple of moments worth mentioning, like Frank recalling the time he and a friend of his got away with shooting a man dead during an armed robbery in his youth (whilst staring at the thong-clad backside of the dead girl, for reasons I really don't want to think about), and Daniel telling Taylor about his experiences in Iraq (to which Taylor responds, "Man I don't need to be hearing this flashback bullshit," which I think may be the best line in the screenplay). You also get a good look at the acting abilities of all the men really for the first time. Most of them just give eh performances really, nothing special. There are a couple of good ones. Kevin Dillon's alright, although this movie is a testiment to just how typecast he now is, as I'm not the biggest "Entourage," fan in the world, I've probably only seen a couple of episodes, but when I saw him on the front of the box, I found myself thinking, "Wow, Johnny Drama's in this." And Andrew MaCathy has a ball as Pete, but then playing the panto villain who gets to munch on the scenery is always fun. There are also some real stinkers, too. Ben Gazzara as Frank is awful, every line of dialogue he utters is so over-laboured and filled with BIG DRAMATIC EMPHASIS. I cringed everytime he said something. William McNamara doesn't come across much better either. Some of that might be down to the character he's playing, who might be the biggest loser of all of them, but his big puppy-dog eye and the open-mouthed, gormless facial expression he wears in every scene makes it hard for me to give him the benefit of the doubt. And Mario Van Peebles... I can't decide if he gives a bad performance or not, in all honesty. He plays William in a very reserved, constantly nervous way, even before the shit hits the fan. I don't know if it's a strange performance, of if it's just strange seeing him play a character like this, which isn't something he normally does. It's <span style="font-style: italic;">memorable,</span> I'll give him that.<br /><br />Its during these scenes that Daniel is positioned as the sort-of hero of the film, by making everyone agree that they all have to agree with whatever plan is proposed before they go along with it. Victor's first idea is to blame the whole thing on Pete, but when that results in guns being pulled everybody quickly moves on. The best they can come up with is to dispose of the bodies and then pay the woman upstairs to go away and keep quiet, which she's not down with because, 1) these bastards just killed her sister and her friend, so fuck them, and 2) she has a son and isn't willing to uproot him. As this is going on, there are more deaths- Timan jumps into the swimming pool, drowning himself for apparently being so pathetic, and Daniel and Frank, who start being hostile to each other out of nowhere, get into a scuffle, with Daniel using his military training to overwhelm the old guy, causing him to have a heart attack (thank God). That's your hero, right there.<br /><br />So things go on like this for a while. The neighbor we saw earlier comes over twice, both times setting off the alarm, causing them to have to shut it off and get rid of him. Incidently, the neighbor's played by Jerry Stiller, father of Ben, who seems really confused in this role, like he had no idea he was supposed to be in this movie until he was called to the set. Daniel finds the woman attempting to escape, and perhaps out of guilt over what he's just done, starts untaping her. This causes his supposed friends to turn on him and now tie <span style="font-style: italic;">him</span> up. They're both brought downstairs, and what the've been uneasily dancing around for the last hour or so is finally verbalised- they kill the surviving stipper, and blame the whole thing on Frank, whose death is no being treated like an early Christmas present. They all go along with it, some of them reluctantly, except Daniel, whose vote they decide no longer counts. As a last resort, Daniel proposes aplan that lets her live, and it's this- they use their collective power to have her son taken away from her, have him placed in foster care, and if she ever says anything, they'll have him killed. I'll say it again, <span style="font-style: italic;">THAT'S YOUR HERO.</span> His idea of saving this woman is to take away the last thing she has left to live for! And she says as much when he puts the idea to her, before telling them all to get bent.<br /><br />Hearing enough, Pete goes to finisher her off, before Daniel breaks free and rushes him, seemingly kneeing him in the nards and taking his gun. He then offers it to all the other people in the room to se if they have the balls to shoot the girl themselves. They all say no, with the exception of Victor, who snatches the gun off him, says he has too much to lose, proclaims her, "just a fucking whore," and is about to pull the trigger when... his phone goes off. He answers it, and it's the alarm company, informing him that they've had the cops dispatched to his place due to his alarm going off. He tells them that it's nothing, and to call the police off, but they still pull up in his driveway anyway. The watch through the window, trying frantically to come up with a plan for when they knock, when they get a call on the receivers not to bother going in. They turn back, the guys celebrate, and the woman bursts into tears. She then notices that, like a bunch of morons, they've put down not one, but both of the guns, which she picks up and turns on them, shooting Pete in the knee and then firing both point-blank into his chest. The police then burst in (and inexplicably there's now alot more than the two there were just a second ago), shoot the woman, who dies in Daniel's arms as he looks at a picture of her son in a locket she had around her neck, and arrest everybody else, who are all blaming each other for what went down. As it turns out, it didn't matter what they said, as we find out that the last twenty mintes or so of them planning had been accidently recorded on the video camera they were using to record the festivities earlier, and we are informed by Daniel via voiceover that they all served jail-time, the harshest sentences going to Victor and William, who serve seven years. Daniel apparently uses the tape to get off with no charges, even though the tape must have recorded him proposing they kidnap her son, which must have broken some kind of law. We're then told that he feels bad about the woman's death (although he hasn't expressed any remourse for Frank, I want to point that out) that she shouldn't have died, and that he thinks about that every time he sees her son. Whether he now has care of the boy or if he just kept her locket, we're never told. Not that it matters.<br /><br />I've said before that it's possible to make a cynical, spiteful movie that's actually entertaining to watch. And I stand by that. But if this movie proves anything, it's that there's an art to it. It is possible to write a morally repugnant character that it's fun to spend time with. Take, and this might not seem fair to some people, but take Daniel Plainview from, "There Will be Blood," for example. He's not a nice guy. He's a greedy, manipulative arsehole. But you enjoy watching him, because he's so charasmatic, and he's allowed a little complexity, especially with regards to the relationship he has with his adopted son. Or Tyler Durden! He puts across ideas and makes the case for things that most upstanding citizens would be repulsed by, but everyone who loves "Fight Club," be it the movie or the book, loves him, because he put forward said ideas in such a compelling way. Or... or... THE JOKER! Which one? Doesn't matter! Be it Nicholson or Ledger, he's a murderous psychopath, and he's adored. I went to see "The Dark Knight," with my family, and my mother- MY MOTHER!- said at the end that she thought The Joker was great and that he was her favourite character. So it can be done.<br /><br />But it's not done here. Here, almost every single character is loathsome, and I hated every second I was in there company. I couldn't wait for this movie to end, and I couldn't wait to throw it away.<br /><br /></span><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:courier new;" >FINAL VERDICT</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;font-family:courier new;" >BINNED!</span><br /></div><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj1MMFHjLAcEZZjLxmCrQOFTLaqE9ZLzdIbsZ-zn5OIkeSFyd472zgOzopnqrzY5YHG7sv-4L3-1zum2TwBqFu2EcsF9i2q4I6-3niPRS-eqoqmrZzFXgxEuJbc97-ZpePNJv2R0A35CyM/s1600-h/001.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEj1MMFHjLAcEZZjLxmCrQOFTLaqE9ZLzdIbsZ-zn5OIkeSFyd472zgOzopnqrzY5YHG7sv-4L3-1zum2TwBqFu2EcsF9i2q4I6-3niPRS-eqoqmrZzFXgxEuJbc97-ZpePNJv2R0A35CyM/s400/001.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5288631659018803154" border="0" /></a><br /><span style="font-family:courier new;">I'm actually surprised I'm binning this. I really thought I'd end up keeping it, because whilst I was looking over the box, I saw that my beloved Empire Magazine (and it <span style="font-style: italic;">is</span> love, if I could marry one monthly publication, Empire would be the one, moreso even than Playboy, because I don't think I'd have alot in common with Playboy) had at the time of it's release given it four-stars-out-of-five and proclaimed it, "the best thriller of the year."<br /><br /><span style="font-style: italic;">That,</span> ladies & gentlemen, that is what you would call a sign of the times.<br /><br />Until next week, I'm The Cheap-Arse Film Critic, and <span style="font-style: italic;">you're</span> a hooker!<br /></span>The Cheap-Arse Film Critichttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08211046330068309653noreply@blogger.com8tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1161570503760263602.post-55423277043983479732008-12-28T09:47:00.000-08:002009-01-03T00:54:46.765-08:00The Cheap-Arse Film Review #13- "LEPRECHAUN IN THE HOOD."<a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhLXtXmkpqVcqy8UXO2SZ1kRV-Jb0GOpp0hhwiBGbWoaBPpHtEKeha_kl0IX9UjMamoT6SUhv3xuxpHklSROpwvloUxwKTLXy83ugCp6HQNgshMPXrVipX1OP7khFgdVWGO3W1lUNAzh5E/s1600-h/004.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhLXtXmkpqVcqy8UXO2SZ1kRV-Jb0GOpp0hhwiBGbWoaBPpHtEKeha_kl0IX9UjMamoT6SUhv3xuxpHklSROpwvloUxwKTLXy83ugCp6HQNgshMPXrVipX1OP7khFgdVWGO3W1lUNAzh5E/s400/004.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5286848292340854770" border="0" /></a><br /><div><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:Courier New;" >NAME: LEPRECHAUN IN THE HOOD</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:Courier New;" >RATED: 18</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:Courier New;" >RELEASED: 2000</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:Courier New;" >WRITTEN BY: DOUG HALL & JOHN HUFFMAN, FROM A STORY BY DOUG HALL, ALAN REYNOLDS, ROB SPERA & WILLIAM WELLS</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:Courier New;" >DIRECTED BY: ROB SPERA</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:Courier New;" >STARRING: WARWICK DAVIS, ANTHONEY MONTGOMERY, RASHAAN NALL, RED GRANT, ICE-T</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:Courier New;" >GENRE: COMEDY-HORROR</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:Courier New;" >BOUGHT FROM: POUNDLAND</span><br /><br /><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:Courier New;" >PRICE: £1.00 (DO I REALY NEED TO DO THIS WHEN I'VE BOUGHT ONE FROM POUNDLAND? WHAT OTHER PRICE IS IT REALISTICALLY GOING TO BE?)</span><br /></div><span style="font-family:Courier New;"><br />(Yeah, this one's going up late as well. Three days late at that. I have no excuse, other than this time of year is mental. Normal service shall be resumed this coming Wednesday. Promises)<br /><br />"So," I can hear you say, "No New Years themed review?"<br /><br />In a word, no.<br /><br />In <span style="font-style: italic;">two</span> words, bugger that.<br /><br />The Christmas reviews were fun to write, and I'm pleased people seemed to like them (if we're going on comments alone, the "Home Alone 4," review is the most popular one I've done so far), but putting the thing together was a bloody nightmare. When I started, I had three films already in place, but I wasn't worried about finding a forth one, because hey, it's December, how hard could it be to find a Christmas movie? The answer, as it turned out, was "borderline fucking impossible." There was nothing out there, at least not in my price range. I lost count of how many times I cursed myself for not making the price limit £2.00. If I'd gone to £2.50 I could have covered "Black Christmas." It was total dumb luck that I found "<span style="font-style: italic;">White</span> Christmas," in my local CEX, not even out on the shelves, in a bleeding box that I started digging through because I was totally out of options and this close to knocking on my friend's doors and asking if they had any Christmas movies they felt like selling me for a quid. So I'm going to enjoy being able to review whatever I want to for a little while.<br /></span></div><div> </div><br /><div><span style="font-family:Courier New;">But after having said all that, there is a slight method to my madness with regard to this film. Now, I'm not a particularly superstitious person, at least not to the level of my sister. She once screamed for me to come into the kitchen like she'd just had something terrible happen to her, I ran in there expecting to see blood and possibly a missing limb of some sort, only for me to find that she'd dropped a knife on the floor, and wanted me to pick it up for her, as she'd heard that it's unlucky for you to pick up a knife you've dropped. WAT? But at the same time, I don't have the best luck in the world, ask anybody that knows me (actually, don't), so I'll admit I was a little bit nervous going into my 13th review. I mean, what if my fingers seize up, or I make even more spelling and grammar mistakes than usual (or the review goes up late...)? So I decided to counteract any possible bad luck by invoking The Luck of the Irish. Hence, a movie with a Leprechaun in it.<br /><br />The "Leprechaun," series is legendary amongst people who love cheesy horror movies, usually from an ironic standpoint. The first one however is on the radar of anybody who calls themselves a cinephile, as it features Jennifer Aniston in her first feature film role (and maybe her first role in anything, I'm not too sure), in which she does a topless scene, causing some of the bawdier denizens of the Internet to refer to it simply as "The movie where Rachel gets her tits out." When asked about it today, her stock answer is to jokingly say she wasn't in it, in a manner that makes it obvious she wishes she wasn't joking. There were three straight sequels to this, the last of which taking The Leprechaun where all great B-Movie horror icons must go- Space. Then the franchise took a four year break, only to come roaring back to life with an urban makeover.<br /><br />You'll also have noticed from the picture at the top that this film comes as part of one of those value "4-in-1," DVDs. And no, I'm not reviewing all of them. I considered it for about a second, but in the end it would be a pointless venture, because say I did and I really, really liked two movies, and absolutely hated the other two. What would I do then? Cut the disc down the middle and throw half away? No, it's better to just let the hopes of the disc ride on one movie, that way if I do like it and keep it I can consider the other movies a bonus, and not feel too bad if/when they turn out to be shit.<br /><br />The movie begins with The Leprechaun (who I'll refer to as Lep, as he he often does in the movie) walking down a stone spiral staircase, before reaching a pot of gold. As he does this, we hear him recite a rhyme in voiceover: "Death to he who sets a Leprechaun free, steal his gold, it will corrupt your soul you see. For many a moon, the legend has grown, death toll increases, solution: unknown. Beware the evil wanderer in search of his loot, lest ya suffer the wrath of his golden flute (must... resist... dick joke...). Flee while you can, the futures not good, for no one is safe.. from a Lep in the hood." I have to say, this is an awesome use of economic character establishment, telling you all you need to know about Lep in about 30 seconds- he's an evil little bastard, and if you touch his gold, he'll kill you. By the way, he's played by Warwick Davis, the guy from "Willow," who was probably The World's best known Dwarf actor until Vern Troyer turned up. Having never seen any of the "Leprechaun," movies before (so yes, I can review all of them if I find them cheap enough), I assumed Lep would be represented by puppetry or bad CGI, so to see him on-screen as a guy in make-up was a nice surprise, and finding out Davis plays him made it even better.<br /><br />Then, following the credits, Ice-T smashes through a wall dressed like a pimp with an Afro. I can't believe I just typed that, but there it is. I like Ice-T, both as a rapper and an actor. He doesn't exactly have what what you'd call range, and this part doesn't stretch him even if he did, but he's a very charismatic guy, and unlike alot of rappers who take a stab at acting, he seems to be willing to pay his dues, not just appearing in movies, but also securing a regular gig on one of the seemingly endless "Law & Order," spin-offs. And as for this movie, well, like I said, dues need to be paid.<br /><br />Judging by the attire worn by he and his cohort, who doesn't have a name so he'll obviously be dead soon, we're left to asume this is taking place in the 70s. They've seemingly broken into an abandoned subway station looking for someone... or something... I'm not really that sure. I think gold is mentioned. Anyway, all they find is some Colt 45s and fast food of the fried chicken veriety (HELP! I'M DROWNING IN RACIAL STEREOTYPES!), which causes Mack Daddy (Ice's character, which I forgot to mention in te previous paragraph), to throw his friend through another wall when he makes a joke about their situation, which seemed a little harsh to me. Anyway, on the other side of the wall, the find not only the pot of gold, but also a really creepy looking statue of a Leprechaun wearing a gold medallion. I wonder if that medallion thing has been in any of the other movies, or if they just decked him out in it to make him fit in a bit with his 70s surroundings. They celebrate their find, then Mack finds what I presume is the Golden Flute mentioned by Lep before the credits, and doesn't seem all that interested in the rest of the gold, leaving his bitch (what else am I supposed to call a man who gets thrown through a wall and then acts like nothing happened?) to collect the rest.<br /><br />Does he take the medallion off the statue? And does it come to life and kill him? Yep, on both count. Kills him with his Afro comb too, which was a nice touch. Mack Daddy and Lep then have a stand off. He comes at him with a gun, which Lep quickly disposes off with his magic. Mack then... pulls a flick knife out of his afro? Um... okay, I'll go with it, it's wacky but not totally unbelievable. Lep gets rid of that too, so Mack... pulls a baseball bat out of his fro?! I... I don't know if I think that's fantastic or not. That too proves useless, and Mack finds himself at Lep's mercy. "Stealin' me gold's no way to grow old," he informs him, "now me little room shall become... your.. tomb." Oh Jesus, is he going to speak in rhyme the entire movie? It was fine at the start, but I can see that growing highly annoying as this thing goes on. Thinking on his feet, Mack opens a conveniently-placed steam valve in Lep's face, causing him to fall back on a piece of wood that had been conveniently placed on a brick, conveniently making it a sort-of seesaw that the magic medallion had been conveniently dropped on, causing it to fly up into the air and conveniently land around Lep's neck, tunring him back to stone. I was going to make a joke about how there was so much convenience in this sequence that you could open a Convenience Store and sell it, but I thought against it as it wouldn't have been funny.<br /><br />As you can tell, the first seven minutes of this movie (and yeah, all that happened in seven minutes) are pretty damn awesome. And I hope you enjoyed reading about them, because that's basically your lot. From this point forward, the film can't sustain that level of awesome for any prolonged period of time. There are sporadic fits of awesome here and there, but they're overshadowed by everything else. The first thing that drags it down is the fact that the opening scene, and the front of the box, which has Ice-T's name and Ice-T's name alone listed next to the movie (poor Warwick Davis doesn't even get a mention), sold us something of a red herring, as he's not the main character. He's an important character, the secondary villain, but I was really hoping we'd be following him all the way through this film. I mean, I just watched him pull an arsenal out of his hair! How could I not want to film to be about him? But sadly it's not to be, and from this point on we're supposed to care about a bunch of geeks in a socially conscious rap group, made up of Postmaster P (Anthoney Montgomery), the only one who seems all that interested in putting a positive message out there, Stray Bullet (Rashaan Nall), the ambitious would-be Gangsta who's more than happy to get rid of all that hippy crap if it'll get them signed, and Butch (Red Grant), the fat smart virgin. When we first meet them, we see them on a stage auditioning for some contest that'll supposedly get them signed. They sound alright in an old-school way, but they don't exactly blow your skirt up. Maybe that's the point. Anyway, they're doing their thing, Butch seems to be mesing around with chemicals on the mixing desk for no reason I can think of, and then suddenly there's an explosion big enough to send P and Bullet flying off the stage and through tables. That was... unexpected.<br /><br />So now they have to replace the recording equipment they destroyed, which they do so by trying to flog a bogus Jimi Hendrix guitar to a couple of stores, one owned by a stereotypical asian named Chow Jung Pi that there's not really much to say about, the other by Jackie Dee (Dan Martin, who anime nerds might be interested to know has provided voicework for "Trigun," and, "Akira," amongst others), who is a living, breathing example of one of those sporodic fits of awesome I was talking about. He sees through the guys scheme, tells them to fuck off, calls P's message wack and informs Butch, "Boy you need to get yourself some pussy, before you blow your dick off messin' around with all those chemicals." All in a voice that sounds like Darth Vader decided to become a lounge singer. He's in this movie nowhere near enough.<br /><br />Eventually we finally get to see Mack Daddy again, and discover in the proceeding 20-plus years, he's given up pimping and appears to own his own hip-hop label. "Gangsta Hip-Hop," P informs us, in a tone that lets us know this is supposed to be A Bad Thing. He also doesn't seem to have aged at all in all this time, although he has lost the 'fro (BOOOOOO!). The movie makes no atempt to explain why he still looks the same. I mean, it would have been pretty easy, they could have just said that the Golden Flute he carries around with him prolonges his life Master Ring-style, but no, we're just supposed to believe getting a haircut equals getting old. He talks to the guys, and they manage to arrange a meeting with him to play one of their tracks. He listens to it for a couple of seconds with a look of pure distain on his face before having it shut off. His verdict is, "It's not much, but it's not the worst," which sounds pretty fair to me. He then says he'd be interested in signing them if they knock this positive message shit on the head and start rapping about firearms and vaginas. This doesn't go down too well with the the group themselves. Well, in all honesty, Postmaster P's the only one who has a real problem with it, Stray Bullet in particular seems like he's been waiting for someone to say this for a very long time. There's a little bit of in-fighting, Mack Daddy hears enough and tells them they've blown their chance, insinuates that he's had sex with Stray Bullet's mother, blah blah blah. It ends with them being no better off than they were that morning, not signed, broke and still without recording equipment, which causes Stray Bullet to suggest for them to rob Mack Daddy's home, that way they can buy new equipment with what they find, and make him pay for dissing them, with P once again being the only person person not down with this. I really don't get how P and Bullet are even friends, let alone how they can co-exists musically, they're such diametrically-opposed people.<br /><br />Anyway, he eventually comes round to Stray's way of thinking, and next thing you know, they're in Mack Daddy's house turning shit over. Seriously, that's the next scene. And you'd think it wouldn't be that easy either. I mean, not only is Mack Daddy a very rich guy, ut he's a very rich guy with <span style="font-style: italic;">magic artifacts lying around.</span> You'd think he'd at least, y'know, have security cameras or a front door with a decent lock. Mack Daddy comes in and finds them there, and then P accidently shoots him. I'll give the movie some credit here, it goes out of it's way to get accross that the shooting is an accident, done with a gun that P didn't bring with him, but found on the scene. However, once they're about to make off with all the gold they've found, which of course includes the medallion from around Lep's neck that causes him to return to life, and they turn round to see this strange little man rhyming at them (and name-dropping Tiger Woods, too), their first instinct is it PUMP THE LITTLE FUCKER FULL OF LEAD! Including P, who I guess thinks, "fuck it, I've already killed one person, may as well keep going." They shoot him so much, his arm flies off. It's...amazing.<br /><br />Of course, neither Mack Daddy nor Lep are really dead. There's still over an hour of run-time left, after all. Mack is saved de to a piece of jewellery he's wearling (CONVENIENTLY!) stopping the bullet, and Lep, well... he's magic. No explaination needed. They make a deal in the men's room of a club over a shared joint ("A friend with weed is a friend indeed," Lep says. "Oh fuck off," I said) that Mack is to bring back all the gold P and his riends stole and return it to him, otherwise he'll kill him. Actually, that's not rally much of a deal, is it? He then shows he's serious by ripping off one of Mack's fingers, one that had a ring on it that was presumably originally part of his pot. The best thing about this scene is that it's very obvious watching it that this isn't the first time Warwick Davis has smoked a joint. He then leaves the stall and discovers rap music, and...<br /><br />... oh God, he's going to rap at some point, isn't he? Sure, why not? If the Scottish can claim they invented rap (because white people absolutely positively need to believe they invented everything!), then why can't the Irish get in on the act too? It never hurt Everlast.<br /><br />The guys use the gold they've found to buy new equipment off the same people that shunned their scam earlier. I love that, the fact that these places just accept gold as currency no questions asked. During both these scenes, P is scene mourfully hanging out in the background, obviously troubled by what he's done, playing around with the Golden Flute he took off Mack Daddy's body (obviously he wasn't remoursful enough for it to prevent him from robbing the presumed dead), and blowing into it. Both time he does, a strange tune plays, and the other three people in the scene turn to look at him, all slack jaws and dead eyes. They then shake it off and nothing comes of it. It's later explained that the flute can be used to make people think their music is better than it is, which would also explain why Mack Daddy is so desperate to get it back, but here it's just strange. Especially the fact that they feel the need to do the same thing twice. What were they, afraid we wouldn't notice the first time of something? Lep then goes on a rampage, killing the store owners that now have his loot (including using the image of Jackie Dee's dead wife, Jackie Cee, to seduce him), before deciding to go after Postmaster P and friends to get his flute back.<br /><br />They've got problems of their own already though, as what they believe is the ghost of Mack Daddy has come looking for them to get the Flute back, causing them to take refuge in the one place he wouldn't think to look for them, that being with the outrageously gay crossdresser Fountaine Rivera (Lobo Sebastian). It's a one-note joke that's only funny if you find the sight of bulky, in-no-way feminine-looking men prancing around in pink dresses and wigs amusing. Facinatingly, this movie seems to find this concept the funniest thing in the world, but we'll get into that more later. Lep shows up and is greeted by Fountaine, who he initially dismisses with the pithy line, "I didn't come to play with fruit, I only came for me Magic Flute." I'm ashamed to admit it, but I chuckled. Anyway, Lep kills him (in a manner that makes it look like he's having sex with him, because there's no way they could pass up the chance to make <span style="font-style: italic;">that</span> joke), before getting set on fire when Butch finally gets to put his knowledge of chemicals to good use.<br /><br />Finally realising they're up against dark forces, they decide their nextport of call should be a church, specifically the one run by Reverend Hamson (Ivory Ocean... the actors in this movie have fantastic names), who agrees to let them stay one one condition- they must provide the musical entertainment for that day's sermon. They reluctantly agree, and predictably they don't go down that well, which probably has something to do with them singing about hoes. P uses the flute to bring the congregation back, including Coolio...<br /><br />... wait... Coolio? Yeah, Coolio. Standing in the door of the church, looking as confused as I'm sure I do now. And then he's never seen again. This is one of the most random movies I've ever seen. The celebrations prove shortlived however, as both Mack Daddy and Lep show up to claim what they both believe to be theirs. Lep blows a hole in Mack's bodyguard using his magic (which makes me wonder why he doesn't just do that all the time), Mack Daddy runs for his life, and the guys outsmart Lep by trapping him in a safe. I've just noticed that at this point this film has become an adult Looney Toons cartoon.<br /><br />Thinking the coast is now clear for a while, the boys decide to refocus on the audition that's going to take them to Vegas, with them using the Flute to win over the crowd. Again, it's amazing just how fast Mr. Positive Message is willing to sell out his beliefs and cheat to get ahead. Lep meanwhile finally remembers he can use magic, and summons help to get him out of his trap. Brilliantly, he calls on the help of "The Zombie Flygirls." I was hoping they'd be all rotting and slow walking, but sadly they turned out to just be normal (though attractive) women with green glowing eyes like they'd been exposed to too much Gamma radiation (sorry, geeky reference). One distracts the Reverend whilst another frees Lep, who then kills him by shoving his entire hand through his stomach from behind. I could complain about this and say that Lep's arms are far too small for him to be able to stand next to the Reverend with his arm through him, but you know what? Fuck it. It's a cool death scene and at this point I'm going to try and find enjoyment in this movie anywhere I can.<br /><br />The guys are told be the owner of "Dope Disc Productions," (who's for some reason played by a chubby white guy in a cowboy hat) "The biggest Hip-Hop Label in history!" we're told by Stray Bullet, that they're going to the finals in Vegas. The Lep once again shows up to rain on their parade, forcing them to hand over the Flute, then using his magic to make Stray Bullet turn is gun on himself.<br /><br />Not wanting their friend's death to be in vain, P and Butch come up with a plan to get the Flute. Are you ready to hear what their plan is? Their plan is to dress up as women to get close to Lep, who they've established has a thing for shemales from earlier, and get him to smoke a joint full of Four-Leaf Clovers. I didn't make a single bit of that up, I swear. They first convince the Zombie Flygirls to take a toke, and once they've turned back to normal (m, aren't they supposed to be dead? Shouldn't they just fall to the ground when the magic wears off), P gets them to tell him where Lep is. They go to him, get him to smoke the joint, and... oh Christ, he wants P to give him a handjob. I don't need to see this, if I wanted to see this I could type a whole bunch of keywords into Redtube...<br /><br />... phew, he passes out before the deed is done. Butch and P then try to escape, but who have they forgotten about? Mack Daddy, of course, who turns up and shoots Butch, who mournfully begs his friend, "Notin a dress, Dawg," before uttering his last words, "They got pussy in Heaven, right?" I hope so, son. God, do I hope so. P, who had his back to us during this, then turns to face the camera, and... YES! YES! HE'S CRYING! THE MAN IN A DRESS IS SHEDDING ONE, LONE, MANLY TEAR FOR HIS DEAD, DRAGGED-UP FRIEND! STOP THE FILM! IT'S PEAKED! It's worth mention at this point to just how seriously the three man leads have taken this movie. You'd really think they were in "Menace 2 Society" or something similar, and I have to sayb I have grudging admiration for them because of that. Their efforts are misguided, but at least there was effort there.<br /><br />P then decides being a Gangsta is the only option left to him at this point and shoots Mack Daddy twice in the chest. Strangely, this doesn't kill him. If anything, it makes him stronger, as he rises up laughing like a madman and actually helps P fight Lep, who finally does away with him by making his stomach explode (WHY DOESN'T HE DO THAT ALL THE TIME?! SOMEBODY EXPLAIN THIS TO ME!), and then it gets... confusing. Once again the medallion ends up flying through the air, and once again we assume it lands on Lep, freezing him. However, we then cut to a scene of P performing on stage (and I use "performing" in the loosest possible terms, because all he does is come out and chant the same line over and over again), in a black suit and shades, which once removed, show his eyes are glowing green. Lep is then shown in the crowd grinning, and informs the audience, "I taught him everything he knows." So... did Lep kill P? Is he now controlling him? Did they cut some kind of deal? None of this is made clear. The last thing we're presented with is Warwick Davis performing the song, "Lep In The Hood." And I don't even really care that much, I'm just glad it's over.<br /><br />I can't really put into words how strange a movie this is. I mean, it's obvious what they wanted to do, they wanted to do what was trendy at the time, which was a horror-comedy. And if that <span style="font-style: italic;">is</span> the way you want to go, then you can have worse starting points then having a killer Leprechaun going after some rappers. But the thing is, it doesn't work. As a horror movie it fails because it's just not scary. It's <span style="font-style: italic;">gory,</span> I'll give it that. It doesn't skimp on the gore. But gore does not a good horror move make, at least it shouldn't. As a comedy it's vaguely more successful, there were a few moments that made me titter, but it's never really of the laugh-out-loud veriety. And it's hung up on the oddest things, like crossdressing. This movie, and presumably the people behind the making of it, seems to think that a dude in a dress is the funniest thing in the world. Now, I'm not going to say it's not funny, because it can be, but when you have three guys dressed up as women in the whole movie, and the entire ending is based around it, then I don't really know what to say.<br /><br />Other than...<br /><br /></span><div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-weight: bold;font-family:Courier New;" >FINAL VERDICT</span> <span style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;font-family:Courier New;" ><br /><br />BINNED!</span><br /></div><a onblur="try {parent.deselectBloggerImageGracefully();} catch(e) {}" href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiWgY9ViaLMSLTXzNc7he6dHCKwG9eJLTfz8l79INJ_mat8G9o0wr-eWQYXNQNdk8vhRYsIoWmju1l86vl1AqEKOa1uQsglE6Ii5j6Wt7K7tquy1NBrknuW2JpgnrzCmfKaw5V3tQO4pxQ/s1600-h/005.JPG"><img style="margin: 0px auto 10px; display: block; text-align: center; cursor: pointer; width: 400px; height: 300px;" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiWgY9ViaLMSLTXzNc7he6dHCKwG9eJLTfz8l79INJ_mat8G9o0wr-eWQYXNQNdk8vhRYsIoWmju1l86vl1AqEKOa1uQsglE6Ii5j6Wt7K7tquy1NBrknuW2JpgnrzCmfKaw5V3tQO4pxQ/s400/005.JPG" alt="" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5286848290519725170" border="0" /></a><br /><span style="font-family:Courier New;">Get away from ye, ya shitty movie. Ya not that good and ya... smell of... doodie?<br /><br />Okay, that's nt as easy as it looks.<br /><br />Until next week, I'm The Cheap-Arse Film Critic, and my Grandpa asked me one time if I care whether I live or die. Yeah I do. Now it's too late.<br /></span></div>The Cheap-Arse Film Critichttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08211046330068309653noreply@blogger.com12