March 5, 2014

Blu-Ray Review: IN FEAR

Starring Iain De Caestecker, Alice Englert, Allen Leech. Directed by Jeremy Lovering. (2013, 85 min).
Anchor Bay Entertainment

A damn shame, this one.

Imagine going to a fancy Italian restaurant. The ambiance is perfect, the service is impeccable, the wine list is second-to-none, but when the main course arrives at your table, it’s nothing but a pepperoni Hot Pocket…and undercooked at that.

That’s what watching In Fear is like. I can’t recall the last time a movie started off so well, establishing a subtly foreboding tone, slowly-but-effectively ratcheting up the tension, only to completely fall apart half-way through.

But, damn, does it start off great. Iain De Caestecker & Alice Englert play Tom and Lucy, a young couple driving to meet their friends at a music festival. Before that though, Tom surprises her with reservations at a secluded hotel. All they have to do is find it. After being guided by a mysterious truck driver, they turn off the main road to find the place. However, the signs contradict each other and they become hopelessly lost in a maze of muddy roads and dead ends, almost always ending up at the same place they started…a grimy old cabin in the middle of nowhere. As it gets darker and they run low on gas, frustration turns to apprehension and fear, especially after Lucy sees a masked figure behind Tom while he’s taking a leak. There’s something following them through this wooded labyrinth, and it’s not friendly.

Up to this point, In Fear is atmospheric, suspenseful and well-acted…a low budget gem which uses its Irish country setting to build increasing dread in the viewer. Like so many other movies which effectively exploit the isolation of lonely roads and lone travelers to create tension (Duel, The Hitcher…even Jeepers Creepers), one understandably expects a bit of cat & mouse terror will ensue.

It's also at this point I recommend you shut off the movie and write your own ending, because even if you threw in brain-sucking lesbian zombies with poo-flinging monkeys on their shoulders, it would be more entertaining and less insulting than what transpires next...

This is what happens when Nickelback
 turns up on the radio.
Once our villain actually shows up, the entire movie collapses faster than a stack of Jenga blocks. The characters are suddenly rendered stupid, logic flies out the window and the story itself is undone by plot holes you can steer a semi-truck through. Though totally unoriginal, I’ve got no problem with the idea of a lone psycho in the backwoods, so long as his methods, motives and actions are at-least plausible. But In Fear doesn’t even try to explain how he’s able to effectively manipulate the scenario. In fact, when he does finally reveal himself as the culprit behind their torment (in the back seat of their car, initially posing as a fellow victim), all he does is grab Lucy’s head in his hands, which turns Tom into a blithering idiot on the verge of pissing himself (couldn’t the writer have at least given his bad guy a fucking weapon?). The actions of all three characters becomes more frustratingly illogical as the movie goes on. Too bad…all that effort to create atmosphere and tension, only to suddenly wallow in stupidity, clichés and ridiculous behavior by characters initially-established as somewhat smart and likable.

I don’t often offer my own two-cents worth when it comes to storytelling, but In Fear could have been a low-budget classic if it kept the tone and ambiguity of its first half, perhaps offering no concrete explanation for Tom & Lucy’s wayward journey. Or hell, offer aliens…or a government experiment…anything other than the insulting conceit conjured up here.

In Fear is a real let-down, far worse than a movie which is crappy from the get-go, because this one started off so promisingly.

Again, a damn shame.

EXTRAS:
In Fear: Behind the Scenes

FKMG RATING:
1/2
(OUT OF 5)

March 4, 2014

Blu-Ray Review: THE WRATH OF VAJRA

Starring Yu Xing, Sung-jun Yoo, Yamei Zhang, Matt Mullins, Heon Jun Nam. Directed by Wing-cheong Law. (2013, 111 min)
Well Go USA Entertainment

I should probably confess up-front that my knowledge of Asian martial arts cinema is pretty limited…Enter the Dragon, of course, a few of Jackie Chan’s early Hong Kong films, Stephen Chow’s action comedies and House of Flying Daggers (which I loved)…that’s about it. I’ve enjoyed the few films I’ve seen in the genre, but I’m essentially about as clueless of martial arts movies as my dad is of heavy metal music, even though, as a teenager, I once caught him rocking to Judas Priest’s British Steel when we were in the car together (which I’m sure he’ll deny to this day). But just because Dad liked what he heard didn’t mean he was a converted metal fan. If you were to mention Rob Halford’s name right now, he’d reply “Who?” like the unwise owl in that Geico commercial.

Similarly, I don’t know (or care) who Yu Xing & Sung-jun Yoo are. For all I know, they are China’s Bruce Willis & Vin Diesel (Yoo is even built a bit like Diesel), but The Wrath of Vajra is the only thing I’ve ever seen them in. In this one, there’s an evil, Hades-worshipping cult which kidnaps children and trains them to be lethal warriors in hopes of defeating the Chinese during World War II. One of those children (played by Xing) manages to escape and embraces Buddhism’s peaceful ways (though he can still snap your neck if you piss him off). A decade later, the Hades Cult, led by Xing’s former friend/rival (Yoo), is hell-bent on overthrowing China with his trained and psychotic legions. After Xing’s little brother is kidnapped, he returns to the fortress to try and free everyone (kids and POWs). In the interim, there are fight scenes galore, complete with John Woo-style slow motion, gravity-defying stunts and plenty of blood spewing from mouths after every punch.

There is no martial arts skill which can overcome
the power of a well-loaded burrito.
Storywise, The Wrath of Vajra is sorta lame and a bit too serious, serving mostly as an excuse to show guys beating the shit out of each other. But when has actual plot been the driving force behind a martial arts movie? As such, the numerous fight scenes are well-done and expertly choreographed, good enough that you probably won’t give a damn about the story, with its obvious twists and the idiotic ‘Crazy Monkey’ showdown (which we’re led to anticipate as the mother of all fight scenes).

Did I like it? Absolutely. This movie is fun, though ultimately forgettable, much like how my dad felt when toe-tapping and humming along with Priest’s “Living After Midnight.”  He enjoyed the music while it was pumping from our car speakers, but it ain’t like he suddenly became a metal fan. I’m sure he hasn't given Judas Priest a single thought since. Like Dad, I enjoyed The Wrath of Vajra, a lively action fest, but it didn’t suddenly make me a die hard martial arts fan.

However, for those of you already converted, you might consider yourself preached.

EXTRAS:
Making-of Featurettes
English Language Version
Trailer

FKMG RATING:
(OUT OF 5)

March 3, 2014

DVD Review: SEATTLE SEAHAWKS: SUPER BOWL XLVIII CHAMPIONS

Directed by David Platt, Kevin Bushman, John Marsh. (2014, 115 min).
NFL Films / Cinedigm Home Entertainment

It’s probably pertinent to point out that I’m from the Pacific Northwest, a region with relatively few pro sports franchises compared to the rest of the country. In fact, there are only three that really matter…the Portland Trailblazers, Seattle Mariners and Seattle Seahawks (sure, there are a couple of pro soccer teams, but only because some folks are still hell-bent on trying to convince Americans to care about soccer). For those of us who live in the blustery, sparsely-populated states of Oregon, Washington and Idaho, the Blazers, Mariners and Hawks are the closest things we have to home teams.

So it’s understandable if one suspects a bit of bias in my praise of this disc, which lovingly recaps the Seahawks’ 2013 championship season, climaxing in the shocking 42-8 route of the Denver Broncos in Super Bowl XLVIII. It’s also understandable if anyone living elsewhere doesn’t give a damn about a DVD like this, either because they have their own home teams or resent the overt brashness of the Seahawks (mostly Richard Sherman) during the 2013 season. Then there are the loud, boisterous fans (“The 12th Man“), whose behavior admittedly borders on obnoxious at times (especially when the 49ers visit). Heads and bodies painted green and blue, they fill CenturyLink Field every Sunday with a deafening roar that intimidates all opponents who enter (except the Arizona Cardinals, the only team to leave the Hawks’ Nest with a victory in nearly two years).

Besides, NFL Films produces a disc like this for every championship team. What makes this one so special? My own personal bias notwithstanding, it’s a triumph-of-the-underdog story as dramatic and rousing as any fictional sports film ever made…especially when you take history into account:

  • Since becoming a franchise in 1976, the Seahawks have had more losing seasons than winning ones. Until 2013, they’ve always been underdogs.
  • Prior to 2013, the Seahawks have only made it to the Super Bowl once, predictably losing to the Pittsburgh Steelers in 2005.
  • The Pacific Northwest has always been one of the smaller markets in any professional league. Unless a team is having a stellar year, the amount of media attention has always been pretty small.
  • As a young team on the rise, their 2012 playoff-ending loss to the Atlanta Falcons was heartbreaking. They really had something to prove this year.
  • Prior to 2013, the last time any professional sports team from the Pacific Northwest won a championship was the Seattle Supersonics in 1979, a drought of 35 years. If you take into account the Sonics have-since relocated to Oklahoma City, the only remaining team with a championship under its belt is the 1976 Portland Trailblazers.
  • The weather in the Pacific Northwest is shitty year-round. You may scoff at the Seahawks’ zealous fans, but you can’t deny their dedication when they show up at CenturyLink Field braving sideways rain wearing nothing but body paint.
  • No one expected quarterback Russell Wilson, the 75th pick in the 2012 NFL draft, to amount to anything.
  • Ditto Richard Sherman, the 154th pick in the 2011 draft, who also managed to escape Compton and graduate from Stanford University. You may think he’s a blowhard, but you gotta admit he overcame unbelievable odds to get where he is right now.
  • They played their arch rivals, the San Francisco 49ers three times in 2013. But the Niners aren’t simply rivals because they’re in the same division. Coaches Pete Carroll and Jim Harbaugh have a somewhat-bitter history dating back to when they coached college teams. And even in 2013, the 49ers were generally still considered the team to beat in the NFC.
  • Love ‘em or hate ‘em, the Hawks are never as boring as they used to be (in the days of 'Ground Chuck').

"Dude...we SO spanked you."
The disc itself is a well-edited summary of every game during the 2013 season, featuring highlights presented as only NFL Films can…dramatic music, sparse-but-authoritative narration, on-field & sideline soundbites and dozens of outstanding defensive & offensive plays lovingly rendered in slow motion. The capper, of course, is Super Bowl XLVIII, where the Hawks played about as flawlessly as any team in NFL history (as a bonus for Hawks fans, there are a lot of shots of a dumbfounded Peyton Manning). It was one of the more lopsided Super Bowl games in recent memory (the outcome was pretty-much decided by halftime), and unless you live up here in the Northwest, will probably go down in history as one of the worst.

Even if you can’t stand the Seahawks, their fans or the bravado of both, if you love the game itself, this disc recaps a phenomenally impressive season, depicting a team where anything less than the Lombardi trophy would have been considered a failure. It’s the perfect souvenir for a nearly-perfect season.

I’ll bet it doesn’t sell many copies in Denver, though.

EXTRAS:
Super Bowl Media Day
Super Bowl Post-Game Ceremonies
The Richard Sherman Story (which might change how you feel about him)
NFL Game Day Morning: Russell Wilson
The Journey of Pete Carroll (their gum-chomping head coach)
Ken Norton: Back to the Super Bowl
The Derrick Coleman Story

FKMG RATING:
for Broncos or 49ers fans:

March 1, 2014

DVD Review: TEEN TITANS GO!: SEASON ONE, PART ONE

Starring the voices of Scott Menville, Hynden Walch, Greg Cipes, Tara Strong, Khary Payton. Various directors. (2013, 289 min).
Warner Home Video

Cartoon Network’s second shot at a series based on DC comics’ Teen Titans is cut from a different cloth, but manages to be far more entertaining.

The original show, which ran from 2003 to 2006, was actually kind of a breath of fresh air, differing from traditional DC shows with its anime-inspired style and increased emphasis on humor. As someone who doesn’t read comic books, I don’t know if the show remained faithful to its origins, but it made enjoyable enough television.

While it retains the five main characters (Raven, Robin, Cyborg, Beast Boy & Starfire) and voice actors, Teen Titans Go! is a pretty radical departure. It eschews the original show’s look for an animation style similar to what you see on Disney Channel. It’s also played strictly for laughs, with short episodes focusing on the daily lives of these superheroes (and roommates) when they aren’t busy fighting evil.

This is similar to how my mom drives.
Though the focus is on irreverent and slapstick humor (much of which is very funny), Teen Titans Go! doesn’t totally ignore its origins. The 26 episodes in this two disc set (half of its first season) are loaded with Easter Eggs, in-jokes and DC comic references. And while the characters are exaggerated versions of their former selves, they still have essentially the same personalities (albeit a bit less mature). The forever-sullen Raven is especially amusing in this context.

Despite its new look and tone, one shouldn’t dismiss Teen Titans Go! as just another cartoon product aimed at the kiddie crowd. It’s a clever, well written homage to its comic book origins, yet irreverent and funny enough to amuse anyone who’s never heard of Teen Titans. It’s currently one of Cartoon Network’s best shows, ranking right up there with the flaky genius of Adventure Time and Regular Show.

FKMG RATING:
(OUT OF 5)

February 25, 2014

MOVIES IN HAIKU, VOLUME 3-D

SATURDAY NIGHT FEVER
Tony Manero
Stays alive on the dance floor.
How deep is his love?

DANCES WITH WOLVES
Dunbar goes native.
He learns the ways of the Sioux.
Goddamn subtitles!

PLANET OF THE APES
A twist we all know...
Taylor's been home the whole time.
Those damn, dirty apes!

BASIC INSTINCT
What? No underpants?
Good thing my remote control
Has a pause button.

JURASSIC PARK
Let's clone dinosaurs!
Bad idea? Perhaps, but...
T-Rex toilet kill!

February 21, 2014

LAND OF THE DEAD and an Ode to KGON

Starring Simon Baker, Dennis Hopper, Asia Argento, Robert Joy, Eugene Clark, John Leguizamo. Directed by George A. Romero. (2005, 93 min).

In the late 70s and early 80s, KGON was arguably the most popular radio station in Portland among most teenagers, and the only one which played real rock, both new (Rush, Cheap Trick, Van Halen, AC/DC) and classic (Hendrix, Sabbath, Purple). It sometimes declared its hatred of disco by starting a Bee Gees tune, then smashing the record and replacing it with The Who’s “We Won't Get Fooled Again.” The station's anti-establishment, long-live-rock credentials were held in high-esteem by nearly every kid with an FM radio in their car or a boom-box on their shoulder. This was an era when one was often defined by his or her musical tastes, and walking my high school halls wearing a KGON T-shirt automatically upped your cool quotient.

KGON’s disc jockeys were almost as cool as our rock gods…Marty Party, Glynn Shannon, Iris Harrison sounded like they partied as hard each day as we did on weekends. Iris’ sultry voice was intoxicating to any impressionable teen boy, while Marty and Glynn had us convinced they played lengthy tracks like Zeppelin’s “Kashmir” to allow them time to fire up a fat one in the station’s storage closet.

Personal circumstances had me leaving Portland for almost twenty years. During that time, a lot changed…MTV took over, rap music reared its ugly head, and pop tarts & boy bands became all the rage. Sadly, a majority of the music artists we used to crank-up in the car while cruising 82nd Avenue either broke up, died or faded away, ending up performing at state fairs and casinos. Rock wasn’t quite dead, but the prognosis wasn’t promising. When I moved back, much of Portland had changed, too. With the exception of my folks, most of the people from my old neighborhood had moved, and many of my favorite haunts (the Galleria, Crystalship Records, my beloved Southgate theater) were long gone. Clackamas High, where I graduated, had since-become a middle school and the Foster Road Drive-In (where I had my first date) was now an industrial park.

I’m not necessarily opposed to change, but it is sort-of sad when formative parts of your childhood get crushed in the gears of time. As I get older, I’ve learned to appreciate the few things which manage to survive unchanged.

Shortly after I returned to Portland (with a family this time…talk about change!), on the way home from work one day, the CD player in my car decided it was tired of Metallica and stopped working, which pissed me off because I had developed a keen distaste for radio over the years. To me, it had become homogenized crap...pop, rap & country with the occasional ‘funny’ DJ trying in vain to be the next Howard Stern. On a whim, I threw the dial to 92.3, where KGON ruled the roost back in the day. I figured it was probably long gone, or changed its format to something more modern. Instead, Thin Lizzy’s “The Boys are Back in Town” roared from my speakers. Other songs from my youth followed…”Iron Man,” “Lunatic Fringe,” “Back in Black,” “Tom Sawyer,” “Bohemian Rhapsody.”

Not only was it KGON, it was the same old KGON, with the same Glynn Shannon, piping-in every third song or so. Upon other commutes around town, I discovered Iris was still there, too, though Marty Party apparently partied hard enough that he had to finally retire. To this day, I seriously doubt they’ve played a single song recorded after 1990. KGON found their niche in the 70s and stuck with it through thick and thin, inevitably becoming ‘classic rock radio.’ I’m pretty certain the only thing they’ve done to keep up with the times is make the switch from LPs to CDs.

I find comfort in that, the same comfort I felt after nestling into my theater seat in 2004 to watch Land of the Dead, the oft-rumored, long-awaited fourth film in George A. Romero’s apocalyptic zombie saga.

HIGH-STAKES MARCO POLO
Romero is, of course, the godfather of the zombie genre. He didn’t invent it, but Night of the Living Dead, Dawn of the Dead and Day of the Dead are the genre's unholy trinity, because everything we currently know and love about the zombies can traced back to these three films. They were made decades apart, and while Romero directed numerous other films in between, no one really cared about them. Whether he likes it or not, when we hear Romero’s name, we immediately think of hordes of drooling, shambling corpses.

Ironically, Romero hasn’t really reaped the benefits of his creativity. Even though Night of the Living Dead is an all time classic, he and his production team neglected to copyright the film, which is why you see it in DVD budget bins bundled with other movies that became public domain. He didn’t make the same mistake with Dawn of the Dead (widely considered his crowning achievement), which was pretty successful. When he got around to making Day of the Dead, he was forced to compromise his original epic (and expensive) vision in order to retain complete creative control. It’s considered a classic today, but back then, Day of the Dead was a critically & commercially disappointing conclusion to what we assumed would remain a trilogy (by the way, his original script for Day is still floating around on the internet, and if you ever get the chance, check it out…it’s amazing).

Romero kinda disappeared for awhile, occasionally making forgettable flicks like Monkey Shines and The Dark Half to pay the bills. Meanwhile, the monster he created back in ‘68 began to bloom. Zombies exploded in popularity in both movies and video games. All of them (from the Resident Evil franchise to 28 Days Later to the remake of Dawn of the Dead) took Romero’s initial conventions and sped them up, resulting in once-shambling zombies able to run the 100-yard dash in nine seconds. Whether or not this trend was the result of a creative desire to add something new to zombie lore or appease the video game crowd is debatable. Admittedly, the remake of Dawn of the Dead is actually really good, even if old-school zombie fans found some of its 'upgrades' to be somewhat sacrilegious, prompting the question, “What does George think of all this?”

Dead Reckoning...the ultimate road rage vehicle.
After years of rumors and false starts, we actually got that answer when he unleashed Land of the Dead. As usual, he had a lot to say…about culture, about our government, and most definitely about how fast zombies are able to move. The imitators who followed in his wake may have upped the ante in special effects and bloodletting, but one thing they could never duplicate was Romero’s use of zombies as a platform to satirize societal ills. His movies were never simple gut-munchers…they were allegories on racism, politics, consumerism, economics or anything else culturally relevant to the decade in which they were released. Similarly, Land of the Dead, his first zombie movie in 19 years, had a lot to say about our post 9/11 country (it isn't complimentary).

More importantly, Romero went old school. Sure, he had major studio backing this time, a big budget (for a zombie flick, anyway) and a cast of known actors. And yeah, he was forced to reign things in a bit to earn an R rating, using some clumsy CGI for zombie headshots (which Tom Savini used to pull-off more convincingly with just a blood-filled condom). But other than that, he presents his zombie hordes as he always had - slow, lumbering creatures whose sheer numbers are far scarier than a single angry ghoul sprinting in your direction - and despite its R rating, Land of the Dead is still loaded with plenty of Romero’s trademark gore gags.

Sitting alone in a theater watching this in 2004, I felt the same way I did when discovering KGON was alive and well, exactly the same as when I last left it. These were the zombies I grew up with, and Land of the Dead was the same type of cynical, nasty, mean-spirited and uncompromising zombie movie which made me love Romero’s original trilogy to begin with.

Among all that gore, I found further comfort realizing some things never change.

February 20, 2014

THOR: THE DARK WORLD - Q&A with Natalie Portman

Marvel’s Thor: The Dark World continues the adventures of Thor, the Mighty Avenger, as he battles to save Earth and all the Nine Realms from a shadowy enemy that predates the universe itself. In the aftermath of Marvel’s The Avengers, Thor (Chris Hemsworth) fights to restore order across the cosmos… But an ancient race led by the vengeful Malekith (Christopher Eccleston) returns to plunge the universe back into darkness. Faced with an enemy that even Odin (Anthony Hopkins) and Asgard cannot withstand, Thor must embark on his most perilous and personal journey yet, one that will reunite him with Jane Foster (Natalie Portman) and force him to sacrifice everything to save us all.

With the Blu-ray and DVD of Marvel’s Thor: The Dark World about to be released, we chat to actress Natalie Portman to find out more…

Kenneth Branagh famously directed the first Thor movie. What was the biggest different between working with him and Alan Taylor, who is the director of Marvel’s Thor: The Dark World?
Ken was phenomenal to work with, and he was so much fun. I think a big part of the reason that so many of us wanted to get involved with this franchise was because it was an unusual and cool idea to have someone like Kenneth Branagh make a movie like this. Alan Taylor is wonderful in a very different way. He has a PhD in Philosophy, so we would be talking about a scene and he would say something like, “This can’t happen; it’s not Hegelian.” My response would be, “I don’t know what you are talking about!” [Laughs] Alan came at the movie from such a different angle, and he has such expertise in creating these fantastic universes from having worked on things like Game Of Thrones. It was really interesting working with both of them. They are both wonderful directors. 

Marvel’s Thor: The Dark World producer Kevin Feige says that your character – Jane Foster – is a fish out of water in the movie. Would you agree?
Jane Foster doesn’t fit in. She’s a short brunette in a world of blonde Amazons; in a place where magic is reality and there’s all of this advanced technology that she’s never seen. The people speak like they are in a Shakespeare play, but she’s like a character from Bill And Ted, walking around saying, “Like, what’s going on dude?” It’s fun.

How would you describe Jane Foster’s relationship with Thor in the second movie?
Thor came to Earth to help The Avengers save New York, but he never called to say, “Hey, what’s up Jane?” So when they first reunite in the second movie, she is pretty angry with him. It’s a funny situation that many of us can relate to; when the guy that stole your heart reappears. They start out at quite a contentious place.

How much danger does Jane Foster face in Marvel’s Thor: The Dark World?
Jane is in quite a bad situation. There’s a very mysterious weapon that the enemy is using on her, so part of Thor’s quest to save Earth is also about saving Jane, which is something that Odin [played by Sir Anthony Hopkins] objects to. 

Can you talk about the relationship between Jane and Thor’s father, Odin?
Jane is clearly a thorn in Odin’s side, but it was such a great honor to get to work with Sir Anthony. He’s the loveliest, loveliest man. 

Was it fun to be yelled at by Sir Anthony Hopkins?
Oh yes! [Laughs] I will take anything from Sir Anthony. If he is nice enough to be in the same room as me, I will take it. 

Thor often rebels against his father in Marvel movies. What can you tell us about your rebellious side when you were growing up?
I wasn’t very rebellious at all. To be honest, I wish I had been a little more rebellious. It’s interesting figuring out who you are, and a lot of it has to do with your parents. You try to figure out how much you are like them and how much you are different from them; what you want to take and what you want to leave behind.

Why do wish you had been more rebellious? What do you feel you missed out on by not rebelling?
I feel like a lot of not rebelling was the desire to please, the desire to be good, and the desire to fit in. During those years, when you are at your most creative and imaginative, someone with a strong sense of self often rebels. The kids who were bad and rebellious were the real artists in our school. 

What do you enjoy the most about working as an actor?
The greatest thing about my work as an actor is to be exposed to incredible charity organizations that do really, really meaningful work. I have recently worked with Free The Children, which is a group that provides education in developing countries. They are different because they cushion it with water, sanitation, health care and alternative income for the mothers so that the kids really do go to the school. Once the school is built, the kids actually continue to attend.

What other charity work are you involved with?
The other group I have worked with for a while is Finca, which provides micro loans. These are small loans primarily to women in developing countries so they can start their own businesses, which is a wonderful idea. It’s been a complete privilege to get to meet many of these people, and to be inspired by their generosity and kindness. I couldn’t be happier to be involved with projects like these.

How much do you think Marvel movies empower women?
There are definitely many strong women in these movies, and I think that’s a testament to the people who run Marvel. They have a respect for women with the way they want to characterize them. I think it will be exciting to see a [Marvel] movie with a central female character, which I think is coming. At least, I have heard it’s coming. And, of course, a central nonwhite character would be exciting to see, too.

COMING TO BLU-RAY, DVD & DIGITAL HD 2/25
There were a lot of strong female characters in superhero franchises in the 1950s and 1960s…
That’s true, and some of them were really remarkable for their time.

What are your thoughts on the notion that superheroes and comic books are a male-centric interest?
I think many women are into it, too. You just have to go to conventions to see how many women love this world. It’s fun to play a woman who is a scientist in these movies. I think the more variation of what women do in the public eyes is good for young girls to see.

How much are you aware of the Marvel cinematic universe? Do you watch the Iron Man films and Marvel’s The Avengers
I watch all the films. I don’t watch them ten times; I go once at the theater. But I love them. I think they are really, really fun. 

What are your thoughts on the new Star Wars movies?
I am so excited about them. I think J.J. Abrams is such a talent and I can’t wait to see what he does. I am only sorry that my character died, which means I can’t be in them. I saw him somewhere and I said, “How did this happen? I can’t believe I’m not going to be in the new movie.”

Do you have any desires to work in the theater?
I would love to work in theater. However, it would have to be the right place and the right time. I love the theater and I love going to see plays, but I don’t know what’s next for me right now. I guess we’ll have to wait and see what’s around the corner.

February 12, 2014

MOVIES IN HAIKU, VOLUME II

SEVEN
Deadly Sin killer.
Oh my God, what's in the box?
Bet it's not cookies.

JAWS
Great White on the prowl.
Gonna need a bigger boat
Or we'll be shark snacks.


PSYCHO
Hey, Marion Crane...
Shower your troubles away!
Ignore that peep hole.


APOCALYPSE NOW
Dark jungle trip to
Kill a mumbling fat guy.
Sweet morning napalm.


FARGO
Kidnap plan gone wrong.
A sleazy spouse; two dumb crooks:
Some wood-chipping fun.


February 9, 2014

Blu-Ray Review: JUSTICE LEAGUE: WAR

Starring the voices of Sean Astin, Christopher Gorham, Justin Kirk, Michelle Monaghan, Shemar Moore, Jason O’Mara, Alan Tudyk. Directed by Jay Oliva. (2014, 79 min).
Warner Home Video

This latest DC movie is based on the comic, Justice League: Origins, part of an ongoing New 52 series, which chucks aside previous issues and relaunches the DC universe with new origins, costumes and backstories. If it sounds like I know what I’m talking about, think again.

I had to Google all that because I’m not a comic guy, I’m a movie guy. I couldn’t tell you squat about any of these characters other than what I’ve seen on TV and in movies. In my world, Wonder Woman is Linda Carter threatening to burst from her brassiere, Shazam is a crappy 1970’s kids’ show, Cyborg trades wisecracks with Beast Boy on Teen Titans and Green Lantern reminds me how much I hate Ryan Reynolds.

So for all I know, the whole DC relaunch pissed-off die hard fans worldwide. But maybe this latest direct-to-video DC epic is intended more for folks like me, who’s never purchased a comic book in his life, because I like this movie quite a bit. Aside from the limited-animation style similar to various DC series on Cartoon Network (a style I never cared for), Justice League: War is a fast moving, funny and interesting take on how these iconic heroes assemble for the first time in order to save the world from malevolent aliens.

"Hey...my fly ain't open! Not funny, Clark!"
The story is pretty perfunctory - I’ve yet-to-see a Justice League cartoon where the fate of the world wasn’t at stake - but what makes this movie work so well are how the characters interact. First of all, this is a DC universe where superheroes aren’t exactly embraced by the public (upset at the collateral damage their actions cause). Not only that, they don’t like each other too much either, and their snarky banter is pretty damned funny (especially between Green Lantern and Batman). Their overall competition with each other almost recalls the long-running gag in The Tick, which  features a city rife with too many superheroes.

Comic purists may disagree, but the movie also does a great job introducing Cyborg (the only character whose true origins are depicted). As a college athlete whose gridiron heroics are belittled by his estranged scientist father, the irony of how he becomes Cyborg provides a bit of unexpected drama. On the flipside of the coin, you haven’t lived until you witness Wonder Woman’s reaction when an angry citizen says she dresses like a whore.

Warner Brothers has long-threatened to make a big-budget, live-action Justice League film to answer Marvel’s success with The Avengers. Funny thing is, if they’d have used this story and script, they probably would have had that answer. This animated film may not be as ambitious, but it is a hell of a lot of fun, and probably the closest we’re gonna get to a full-blown Justice League movie in the foreseeable future.

EXTRAS:
DVD Copy
Digital Copy
Creating Heroes: The Life and Art of Jim Lee
Justice League: War Act D - From Animatic to Pencil Test
Deconstructing War with Jay Oliva & Jim Lee
4 DC Comics series episodes
Preview of the upcoming DC movie, Son of Batman.

FKMG RATING:
1/2
(Out of 5)

February 6, 2014

Blu-Ray Review: SCORNED (2013)

Starring Billy Zane, AnnaLynne McCord, Viva Bianca. Directed by Mark Jones. (2013, 86 min).
Anchor Bay Entertainment

What happened to Billy Zane, anyway? He was so disturbing in Dead Calm, despicable in Titanic, wickedly funny in Demon Knight and the only good part of The Phantom. Sure, he’s stayed gainfully employed since then, but look at his films…Blood of Redemption, Scorpion King 3, The Employer, Mercenaries, Sniper Reloaded, Blue Seduction, Surviving Evil…just a few selected titles from a resume consisting almost entirely of direct-to-video junk. Zane may never be mentioned in the same breath as DeNiro, but he’s always been a good character actor (and great villain). Is this junk all he’s being offered, or does he simply have a hard time saying no?

Whatever the case, Scorned is yet-another direct-to-video, low budget thriller which may help pay Zane’s mortgage, but doesn’t stand out from any of the other anonymous flicks acquired by premium cable channels to fill-out their late night broadcast schedule. Similarly, Scorned offers nothing we haven’t seen before in the bigger & better movies it emulates. Zane plays Kevin, a philanderer whose girlfriend, Sadie (AnnaLynne McCord) discovers he’s been cheating on her with her best friend, Jennifer (Viva Bianca).

Billy Zane reflects on the good times...when he
was an A-list actor.
The problem is Sadie is also a murderous psycho, flipping-on the crazy switch faster than Jack Nicholson in The Shining. She then manages to trap them both in Kevin’s secluded vacation home and commences torturing them. While some of these scenes are violent and cringe worthy, like when she rips out one of Jennifer’s teeth and re-enacts the hobbling scene from Misery on one of Kevin’s ankles, there is no real suspense. What starts as a Fatal Attraction knock-off devolves into mild bout of torture porn that’ll still disappoint those looking for big-time bloodletting.

Then there’s McCord as Sadie, who chews up the scenery like a rabid dog. Right from the get-go, her performance is so over-the-top that she’s more of a cartoon than an actual character. But maybe that isn’t her fault, because it’s obvious Sadie is the only character director/co-writer Mark Jones (he of Leprechaun fame) put any thought into. Billy Zane may be the most recognizable name in the cast, but his role could’ve been played by anyone with the ability to limp and scream.

I actually find this a tad ironic…Zane first gained fame in Dead Calm as one of the more disturbing and evil psychos in modern movie history. Now he’s playing the helpless victim to a character he could have arguably influenced. While I doubt that connection occurred to anyone involved in the film, this bit of irony does add a bit to its entertainment value. For everyone else, Scorned is a forgettable and derivative composite of the erotic thriller and torture porn genres, one which won’t likely appease fans of either.

As for Billy Zane…maybe I’m being too harsh. Maybe he truly likes doing this stuff. Maybe he likes being a B movie icon with a steady paycheck (I know I would be). Maybe he’s so difficult to work with that movies like this are all he can get. Still, stuff like Scorned is a waste of his talent.

But wouldn't it be great if someone were to cast Zane as a Marvel super villain?

FKMG RATING:
1/2
(Out of 5)