The weekend’s here. You’ve just been paid, and it’s burning a hole in your pocket. What’s a pop culture geek to do? In hopes of steering you in the right direction to blow some of that hard-earned cash, it’s time for the FRED Weekend Shopping Guide – your spotlight on the things you didn’t even know you wanted…
(Please support FRED by using the links below to make any impulse purchases – it helps to keep us going…)
While it’s not the equal of How To Train Your Dragon, I really did dig Dreamworks latest CG-animated flick, Mastermind (Dreamworks, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$49.99 SRP), which concerns itself with the titular supervillain in a world that’s forever been tilted in favor of his superheroic contemporary since their births on nearby dying worlds, Metroman. But then Mastermind succeeds in killing his rival, leaving him in control of Metro City… And I’ll leave the rest to you. Bonus materials include a new short, an audio commentary, featurettes, and more.
It’s not a terribly nice thing to do to a butterfly, that whole putting it in a jar thing. Thankfully, technology has now found a way to created an Electronic Butterfly In A Jar ($19.99) that is creepily realistic in how it flutters about its glassy enclosure, right down to reacting to taps. Spooky cool!
Has it really been 11 years since the release of Memento (Lionsgate, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$19.99 SRP), and its good to know that, even knowing its gimmick and end, it still holds up as a good watch, even more so in high definition. Bonus features include an audio commentary, featurettes, and interviews.
MGM has dipped into their catalogue for a trio of fan favorites and brought them into high definition – Rain Man (MGM/UA, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$19.99 SRP), Moonstruck (MGM/UA, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$19.99 SRP), and Last Tango In Paris (MGM/UA, Rated NC-17, Blu-Ray-$19.99 SRP). Rain Man sports a trio of commentaries, a pair of featurettes, and a deleted scene, while Moonstruck gets an audio commentary and a pair of featurettes.
It’s not nearly as cohesive, heartfelt, or funny, but Due Date (Warner Bros., Rated R, Blu-Ray-$35.99 SRP) clearly owes a debt to Planes Trains & Automobiles, as it pairs an unlikely duo forced together by circumstance (Robert Downey, Jr & Zach Galifianakis) on a cross-country road trip that meets with increasingly outlandish obstacles, the gimmick this time being the need to arrive before the birth of Downey’s child. Bonus materials include featurettes, additional scenes, and a gag reel.
Even if you’re not a fan of the musical, there’s no denying the power of the music – and the performances – in the Les Miserables: 25th Anniversary Concert (Universal, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$39.98 SRP) makes it an epic affair aided & abetted by a beautiful high definition presentation, recorded live at London’s O2 Arena late last year.
Bring a little bit of Zim into your life with Invader Zim: Operation Doom (Nickelodeon, Not Rated, DVD-$16.99 SRP), which collects 13 episodes of alien fun.
Learn more about the formation of this incredible rock we all live on with the complete second season of How The Earth Was Made (History Channel, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$49.95 SRP), which features all 13 episodes covering everything from the Grand Canyon to Everest.
Watch drivers fight the elements with the aid of editing as nothing really happens in the fourth season of Ice Road Truckers (History Channel, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$49.95 SRP). That’s right, you’re pretty much just watching truck drivers drive back and forth and back and forth. Yup. Bonus features include additional footage.
Wrap up another season of the adventures of the legendary gunfighter Paladin in Have Gun – Will Travel: The Fifth Season Volume Two (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP), which contains the last 19 episodes of the 5th season.
I’m sure everyone has hard the story of the rugby players whose plane crashed high in the Andes, and their desperate struggle for survival, including cannibalism. That story is explored in the documentary I Am Alive: Surviving The Andes Plane Crash (History Channel, Not Rated, DVD-$19.95 SRP).
One of those cult classic films, The Last Unicorn (Lionsgate, Rated G, Blu-Ray-$19.99 SRP) is now in high definition, which means you can now listen to the America songs in full surround glory. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, featurettes, and galleries.
I’ve yet to come across one of the DC Universe Direct-to-DVD animated features that could hold a candle to the storytelling we got in the original Batman, Superman, and Justice League animated series, which is a shame, because it makes viewing adapted-from awful-comic-stories like All Star Superman (Warner Bros., Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$24.98 SRP) all the more painful. The sooner Grant Morrison is gone from comics, the better. Bonus materials include audio commentary, featurettes, and bonus cartoons.
So there you have it… my humble suggestions for what to watch, listen to, play with, or waste money on this coming weekend. See ya next week…
I’m Ken Plume, and soon you’ll be listening to “A Bit Of A Chat” with me, Ken Plume.
In this episode, I have another chat with 1/3 of the comedy troupe Derrick, writer and actor DC Pierson, about secret societies, wild speculation, and entirely too much Ed Wynn.
Be sure to visit his official site at www.DCPierson.com, and check out his weekly comedy show, MAGIC BAG, live at SModcastle.
The weekend’s here. You’ve just been paid, and it’s burning a hole in your pocket. What’s a pop culture geek to do? In hopes of steering you in the right direction to blow some of that hard-earned cash, it’s time for the FRED Weekend Shopping Guide – your spotlight on the things you didn’t even know you wanted…
(Please support FRED by using the links below to make any impulse purchases – it helps to keep us going…)
Putting to shame all of the holiday specials before, Steven Moffat hit it out of the park with Doctor Who: A Christmas Carol (BBC, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$19.98 SRP), which brings the Matt Smith 11th Doctor face-to-face with the Scrooge-like Kazran Sardick, whose heart must be melted in time for a threatened interstellar cruise liner to land safely on his planet. What follows is a lovely timey-wimey adventure that encapsulates the irresistible fairy-tale nature of Moffat’s Who. Bonus materials include the Doctor Who Confidential episode and the Doctor Who At The Proms concert.
Leave it to the Japanese to marshal the mighty forces of science and engineering in order to craft a novelty Robotic Chick ($29.99), which cheeps, chirps, flaps its little wings, and even cries when you turn your back. This is what science should be doing, now and forevermore.
I am absolutely loving the rapid-fire release schedule of the beautifully remastered high definition seasons of The Twilight Zone (Image, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$99.98 SRP), the latest being the 3rd. While we still haven’t reached Shatner territory, the 3rd season I still packed with legendary episodes, from Bill Mumy’s creepy kid in “It’s A Good Life” to the aliens with a plan in “To Serve Man”. Bonus features are seemingly endless, including audio commentaries, featurettes, isolated music scores, a Liars Club segment with Rod Serling, a Tell It To Groucho clip, and much more.
Ignore the bastardized American version and dig into the only iteration worth watching – and the original, natch – with Top Gear 14 (BBC, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$29.99 SRP) & Top Gear 15 (BBC, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$24.99 SRP), which features the complete, unedited 14th & 15 seasons of the only car show I watch despite the fact that I hate cars. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, featurettes, outtakes, and more.
It holds absolutely no interest for me, but I’m sure there are plenty of Michael Jordan fans still lurking about out there who will be keen to pick up the 4-disc, remastered, high definition edition of Ultimate Jordan (Image, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$69.98 SRP), full of highlights, 5 full games, his Hall of Fame induction speech, and more.
Another series wrapped, as the second volume of the fourth and final season of The Fugitive (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP) hits, bringing the tale of wrongly convicted Dr. Richard Kimble to a close. Will he finally catch the one-armed man and clear his name? YOU’LL HAVE TO SEE! Or just Wikipedia it. Either way. The 4-disc set also contains a brief featurette on the music of composer Dominic Frontiere.
Runaway train, never coming back. Wrong way on a one-way track. That could pretty much sum up the remarkable boring runaway train actioner Unstoppable (Fox, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP), which manages to make Denzel Washington and Chris Pine’s attempts to safely stop a runaway train full of deadly toxins into a tedious affair.
I have some issues with the picture being painted by Waiting For Superman (Paramount, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP), but there’s no denying that it’s quite a stirring portrait of the state of public education in the United States. Bonus materials include a quartet of additional student/teacher stories, an interview with the film’s director, a featurette on the making of the John Legend title track, and more.
Hot Toys has been producing some incredible 12″-scale Iron Man collectibles over the past couple of years, featuring ridiculously intricate and incredibly screen-accurate versions of the various armors featured in the films. Straight from Iron Man 2 comes the Iron Man Mark IV ($179.99). Not only do you get a swappable Tony Stark head (with optional sunglasses, natch), but fully light-up chest/eyes/repulsors and base, and swappable hands & panels. Oh, and a box of donuts, for when you’ve had a long night of boozing it up.
So there you have it… my humble suggestions for what to watch, listen to, play with, or waste money on this coming weekend. See ya next week…
Welcome to our weekly round-up of featured giveaways here at FRED. Every week, we’ll present a new clutch of DVDs, books, and other cool stuff you can take a shot at winning. All you have to do is click on the graphics below to be taken to their respective contest pages. And good luck!
In conjunction with BBC Home Video, we’re giving away five (5) copies each of DOCTOR WHO: A CHRISTMAS CAROL on both Blu-Ray & DVD.
In conjunction with BBC Home Video, we’re giving away three (3) copies of DOCTOR WHO: THE MOVIE on DVD.
In conjunction with BBC Home Video, we’re giving away three (3) copies of DOCTOR WHO: THE MUTANTS on DVD.
In conjunction with BBC Home Video, we’re giving away two (2) copies each of TOP GEAR 14 on both DVD & Blu-Ray.
In conjunction with BBC Home Video, we’re giving away two (2) copies each of TOP GEAR 15 on both DVD & Blu-Ray.
In conjunction with History Channel Home Video, we’re giving away three (3) copies of JEFFERSON on DVD.
Filed under: Interviews — UncaScroogeMcD @ 5:10 am
10 QUESTIONS WITH KENNETH MARS
As part of a recurring feature I was doing then, about 10 years ago I did a “10 Questions” piece with the now late, great comic actor Kenneth Mars (The Producers, Young Frankenstein, Fletch, The Little Mermaid and more). I thought I’d pull that piece from the vaults to mark his passing…
1. What is your favorite piece of music?
The operas La Boheme and Madame Butterfly, and anything by Gilbert and Sullivan.
2. What is your favorite film?
Anything by Ingmar Bergman, Woody Allen’s Crimes & Misdemeanors, The Producers, and What’s Up Doc?.
3. What is your favorite TV program, past or current?
Current: Will and Grace. Past: He & She
4. What do you feel has been your most important professional accomplishment to date?
Acting in the film Desperate Characters, directed by Frank Gilroy.
5. Which project do you feel didn’t live up to what you envisioned?
A play which I wrote and produced in Los Angeles called Oh, Doctor. The audience just didn’t turn out for it.
6. What is your favorite book?
The novel Moby Dick and short stories by Paul Bowles.
7. If you could change one thing about Hollywood, what would it be?
The fact that the restaurants close so early here – there is no night life the way there is in New York.
8. If you could change one public perception of yourself, what would it be?
That I am only a comedic actor – I would like to be considered for more dramatic roles.
9. What is your next project?
Re-writing Oh Doctor as a musical, writing an autobiographical novel called Irish as Paddy’s Pig and a theatre piece called Lucy and Cabbage in Nod.
10. What is the one project that you’ve always wanted to do, but have yet to be able to?
Acting in a Gilbert & Sullivan musical.
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Welcome to Hands Down, FRED’s own look into the world of the folks that frequent this sordid world of geekery. Follow Aaron, Brian and Colin (and a menagerie on the way) as they traverse the light fantastic or some such nonsense… What? It’s an online fortnightly comic strip, what kind of description did you expect?
Adult Swim’s Dana Snyder and FRED’s Ken Plume set out to have a literate conversation between two pals, but inevitably devolve into a verbal, and funny, free-for-all full of bickering, infighting, and the special kind of male bonding that comes from conflict expressed through the podcast medium.
Actor/comedian/raconteur Dana Snyder, you’re certainly aware, is Aqua Teen Hunger Force’s Master Shake, Squidbillies‘ Granny, Minoriteam’s Dr. Wang, and The Venture Bros.‘ Alchemist. Available for weddings and bar mitzvahs (bat availability pending), you can keep tabs on him via his website, www.eyeofthesnyder.com.
Ken Plume is the editor-in-chief here at FRED. He is a friend of Dana’s, as well as his arch-nemesis.
The weekend’s here. You’ve just been paid, and it’s burning a hole in your pocket. What’s a pop culture geek to do? In hopes of steering you in the right direction to blow some of that hard-earned cash, it’s time for the FRED Weekend Shopping Guide – your spotlight on the things you didn’t even know you wanted…
(Please support FRED by using the links below to make any impulse purchases – it helps to keep us going…)
The newest clutch of classic Doctor Who releases includes a special edition re-release of the much-requested – and actually pretty decent, despite what you might have heard – 1996 made-for-TV Doctor Who: The Movie (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$34.98 SRP), starring Paul McGann in his only outing as the 8th Doctor. Also getting a release is the Jon Pertwee story The Mutants (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$34.98 SRP). Both feature audio commentaries and a slew of featurettes, trailers, and more.
As a fanboy, you know you’re wont to get just about every doodad iteration of a favorite whatsit in existence, which is why I’m sure you’re likely to pick up the Doctor Who Sonic Screwdriver LED Flashlights ($9.99-$12.99), which are flashlight versions of either the 10th or 11th Doctor’s signature multitool.
Periodically, the fine folks at Rifftrax gift us with another DVD-based collection of the short subjects that have been available for download over the past few months, which brings us Rifftrax: Order In The Shorts & Rifftrax: Shortstoberfest (Legend, Not Rated, DVD-$9.95 SRP each). Both contain 8 shorts, one of which even features a monkey.
Photography buffs will want to pick up Rebel Youth (Rizzoli, $45.00 SRP), which provides an overview and appreciation of the mid-50’s-60’s photography of Karlheinz Weinberger, in which he documented the rough-and-tumble leatherclad youth culture of his native Switzerland. And how can you not pick it up knowing it has an introduction by John Waters?
When I saw Paranormal Activity, I didn’t leave the theater thinking “Franchise!”, but that was obviously on the minds of the executives, as we’ve now got Paranormal Activity 2 (Paramount, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP), which introduces a new set of clueless people and adds a baby to the mix. The unrated edition features additional nutty footage.
It’s a shame the film doesn’t hang together better, because Middle Men (Paramount, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$34.99 SRP) – loosely based on the real-life events around the formation of the internet’s first adult entertainment website – could have played like a carnal version of The Social Network. Instead, leads Luke Wilson, Giovanni Ribisi, and Gabriel Macht sort of meander a should-be-more-interesting tale involving sex, lies, and the Russian mob. Bonus features include deleted scenes, outtakes, and a slap montage.
Film buffs will probably want to pick up the DVD debut of writer/director Elia Kazan’s epic 1963 immigrant tale America America (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$19.98 SRP), which sports a commentary from historian Foster Hirsch.
Yes, it’s been 20 years since the release of Thelma & Louise (MGM/UA, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$19.99 SRP), which means we get a brand new special edition, now in high definition. Bonus materials include audio commentaries, featurettes, the extended ending with optional commentary, deleted/extended scenes, storyboards, and a music video.
The Warner Archive collection drops another pair of catalogue titles to their on-demand service, bringing forth the Cliff Robertson/Jane Fonda romcom Sunday In New York (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$19.95) and Gordon Parks’ adaptation of his own novel The Learning Tree (Warner Bros., Rated PG, DVD-$19.95).
Here’s You Again (Touchstone, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP) in a nutshell – a young woman is forced to re-live her traumatic treatment at the hands of a mean girl when said mean girl gets engaged to her brother, which also brings their mothers into conflict (turns out they were rivals, as well!). And Betty White’s there, too! It’s an amiable enough comedy saved largely by the cast, which also features Kristen Bell, Sigourney Weaver, and Jamie Lee Curtis. Bonus materials include featurettes, deleted scenes, and a gag reel.
It seems that I just really don’t like Katherine Heigl, which makes watching her star in the dramedy Life As We Know It (Warner Bros., Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$35.99 SRP) – about two quarreling people that must come together for the sake of their baby goddaughter – quite difficult. That it’s a turgid film that never quite knows if it’s a frothy romcom or a drama just adds insult to injury. Bonus materials include featurettes and additional scenes.
Thomas Jefferson was not only our 3rd president – He was also a pretty complicated man. You can find out just how complicated in the History Channel documentary Jefferson (History Channel, Not Rated, DVD-$24.95 SRP), which presents the man, warts and all.
Nickelodeon has done another of their theme releases pulling together episodes from a bunch of their shows, this time celebrating Brothers And Sisters (Nickelodeon, Not Rated, DVD-$16.99 SRP), which contains familial episodes of Dora, Diego, Blue’s Clues, Wonder Pets, and Ni Hao, Kai-Lan.
Fans of the 5th Doctor can get an action figure box set commemorating one of his most memorable adventures, Resurrection Of The Daleks (Underground Toys, $59.99 SRP), sporting the Peter Davison Doctor, Davros, a Black Supreme Dalek, and a gray Dalek. Underground Toys continues to release some amazing 7″-inche scale action figure work.
Medicom has been steadily expanding their 12″ Real Action Heroes line beyond the standard Star Wars offerings to include much more fan favorite heroes (who can forget last year’s wonderful Rocketeer?). Just added to the line and available from the fine folks at Sideshow is The One Who Lived himself, Harry Potter ($199), in his Half-Blood Prince-era garb/look. Fully articulated and accurately clothed, he also comes with his wand and Firebolt broomstick.
So there you have it… my humble suggestions for what to watch, listen to, play with, or waste money on this coming weekend. See ya next week…
I’m Ken Plume, and soon you’ll be listening to “A Bit Of A Chat” with me, Ken Plume.
In this episode, I chat with COMMUNITY writer and former ONION editor Megan Ganz about New York vs LA, writing, Chevy Chase, humility, and architecture.
The weekend’s here. You’ve just been paid, and it’s burning a hole in your pocket. What’s a pop culture geek to do? In hopes of steering you in the right direction to blow some of that hard-earned cash, it’s time for the FRED Weekend Shopping Guide – your spotlight on the things you didn’t even know you wanted…
(Please support FRED by using the links below to make any impulse purchases – it helps to keep us going…)
You can take your high definition Beauty & The Best and Lion King – I’ve been patiently waiting to see Disney do another stem to stern remaster of one of their classic titles, and I’m happy to say that their refurbishment of Alice In Wonderland (Walt Disney, Rated G, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP) looks absolutely stunning… I’d even go as far as to say “pristine”. The bonus features – including vintage TV specials, a deleted song, and pencil tests – are carried over from the original DVD release, with the exclusive addition of a Walt Disney introduction to the 1959 TV showing, reference footage introduced by Kathryn Beaumont, and a companion’s guide to Wonderland.
So, what if you’re a Doctor Who fans who wants any fannish material you own to be practical, as well? You get the Doctor Who: 11th Doctor’s Sonic Screwdriver Screwdriver ($19.99), which houses an honest-to-gosh screwdriver within its diecast shell, featuring both phillips and flathead tips. See? Now you can be a DIY nerd.
It’s been years since I saw the film – probably since the director’s cut was released on DVD – but I still like Cameron Crowe’s Almost Famous (Dreamworks, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$24.99 SRP), even if it is too often sugar-coated and cute in its period nostalgia and reverence for the music of the era. The high-def Blu-Ray edition of the aforementioned Director’s Cut has finally been released, but only as a Best Buy exclusive, which features an intro & audio commentary from Crowe, featurettes, a music video, an interview with Lester Bangs, Crowe’s Rolling Stone articles, and more.
I found the film itself to be overlong and a bit plodding, but I can find no fault in Jamie Foxx’s performance as the legendary Ray Charles in Ray (Universal, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$26.98 SRP), which makes its high definition debut with a special edition featuring all of the bonus materials from the original DVD release, including an audio commentary, featurettes, deleted scenes, and an introduction from director Taylor Hackford.
Boy, it’s been years since the last season release, but out of the blue comes the complete fourth season of the only helicopter action show of the 80’s, Airwolf (Universal, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP). The 5-disc set contains all 24 episodes.
In the past year, the Saturday Night Live: Best Of discs have been getting a refresher release, featuring additional bonus content like outtakes, dress rehearsal sketches, and just plain more regular sketches. The two newest additions to the refresher course are Saturday Night Live: The Best Of John Belushi & Saturday Night Live: The Best Of Chris Farley (Lionsgate, Not Rated, DVD-$14.98 SRP each).
In the 8th volume of MI-5 (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP), we find the team off to recover a kidnapped teammate after they thwarted Russia’s planned London attack, but as you might expect, things aren’t quite what they seem. Bonus materials include audio commentaries and a pair of featurettes.
While Warners has been a clear forerunner in releasing beautiful high definition special editions of their catalogue classics, but other studios are catching up, and Fox has done so with a pair of very nice releases in An Affair To Remember and All About Eve (Fox, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$34.98 SRP each). Both films look and sound great, and both feature audio commentaries and a clutch of featurettes and documentaries.
Warner’s Archive Collection dips into the vaults and pulls up a collection that just so happens to coincide with the 100th birthday of its star, Ronald Reagan – the Brass Bancroft of the Secret Service Mysteries Collection (Warner Bros., Not Rated, $19.95), which contains a quartet of B-movies wherein Reagan’s Agent Bancroft thwarts spies and smugglers.
I’m not a fan or horror films, but I did enjoy the almost sublime terror that builds up within the vampire flick Let Me In (Anchor Bay, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP), which is due almost entirely to the performance of the preternatural Chloe Moretz (last seen in Kick Ass). Bonus materials include an audio commentary, featurettes, deleted scenes, and galleries.
So there you have it… my humble suggestions for what to watch, listen to, play with, or waste money on this coming weekend. See ya next week…
ROSWELL, N.M. – The aliens have returned! Maybe not returned so much as finally arrived on home video with the release of Dark Skies: The Declassified Complete Series on DVD. Startling enough, the show only lasted a season on NBC in 1996. It gained a large cult with an alternative history of America in the ’60s. “History as we know it is a lie” was the startling series slogan. John Loengard (Eric Close) went from plucky congressional aide to a member of the ultra creepy Majestic 12 run by Frank Bach (J.T. Walsh) to battle the alien menace. An equally bizarre transformation happens to his girlfriend, Kimberly Sayers (Megan Ward). She gets alien abducted and returned. The perky perfect sixties gal goes to dark side. Can he bring her back?
Megan Ward called up the Party Favors hotline for a brief chat about the series, being covered in cow guts, the late J.T. Walsh and Oscar host James Franco. Ward has been acting for over two decades in movies and TV shows. You might remember her from Encino Man, PCU, Freaked, The Brady Bunch Movie and Joe’s Apartment. She’s also been on Class of ’93, Melrose Place, Sleeper Cell and Party of Five. Currently she’s on call for General Hospital as Kate Howard. Even with such a busy career, she still remembers her time being probed by aliens.
“What I found important and moving about the initial script and a good first half of the season that it was as much about the aliens as it was about America,” Ward said. “These two young people reflected where the consciousness was in America. Finding out the truth about the aliens and the conspiracy to conceal them by the government changed them. And it’s the same thing that happened to America…becoming wiser and the American dream slipping through their fingers with the different historical events that happened. It was the human aspect of the show, not just the alien and conspiracy aspect that made the show special.”
The show comes off as a twist of X-Files, The Invaders and Mad Men. Although that last part wouldn’t happen for over a decade. Maybe the aliens saw into the future? In an odd coincidence Mad Men‘s John Slattery gives a non-credited performances as a newscaster in a Dark Skies episode. We didn’t have time to talk about Roger Sterling’s appearance. We did address how Dark Skies had outline for all five season that went from the early ’60s to modern times which would have been the future a decade ago. I asked if she got excited guessing the time period of an upcoming script.
“In the very end is when they sped it up a lot,” Ward said. “In the beginning it was over those few years of significant events from assassination of JFK, Beatles coming to America, Mississippi Burning, and astronaut missions. There really was this sort of compact amount of events during the time. It was an amazing time in history so it was ripe for the producers to start the show during that time.”
The pilot excited her from the page. This was not the normal TV show that had a hour-long pilot script with potential for 99 more episodes.
“It was probably the most dynamic and interesting script I had ever read,” she said. “It really set itself up from the get go with a cover letter from John Loengard to really get you to buy it. I didn’t see any of the tricks along the way because the read itself was compelling. The fact that it was a two hour pilot meant it was a full length movie where you could tell a full story versus the selling points for a new show. It was its own story that ended with ‘Ok, now what happened’ versus ‘I get what this show is about.’ That was exciting to participate in.”
The pilot movie got plenty of buzz with Tobe Hooper directing and Bill Butler as director of photography. The man who brought America The Texas Chainsaw Massacre and the cinematographer that captured Jaws weren’t the usual pilot season tag team. What did she think of seeing them on set?
“Wasn’t that cool?” Ward acknowledged. “It was great. I knew exactly who they were. I was so pleased because it further impressed me to the quality of what this show could be. You knew that hey were going to shoot it well. There was a scene where the ball light is presented in front of her. She’s reaching out and being compelled to touch it and go to Hive. This was such a Tobe Hopper moment. Normally during filming even if there are special effects, you don’t hear anyone talking or throwing directions. He started directing me about what that ball meant. It was really a lightbulb in the actor’s hand. He just started throwing out, “Man, It’s so trippy. It’s so weird” in his hippie speak. It was such a defining moment of “Yes, I worked with Tobe Hooper.” It was really great.”
Because of the digital video effects used on the show, it was hard to tell if she got gooped up. Enquiring minds had to know if she was coated in alien goo.
“I think I did get covered in something,” she admitted. “I also had to do all the casts and make the molds ahead of time. They had to make my puppet that got encased inside some sort of resin or gel. Eric managed to get away with very little special effects stuff. I was the one who was probed, things up my nose, and coughing stuff up. I had all the difficult special effects stuff. But once you do it, you get yourself through it. It’s not as nasty as working with cockroaches or jumping in pits of cow organs – which I’ve done in my past.”
She was the romantic interest in the cockroach heavy Joe’s Apartment. Arcade had her starring with Seth Green, John De Lancie (Q) Peter Billingsley (A Christmas Story) and Chef Chris Cosentino’s favorite cuts. The film was about a kid getting sucked into a video game.
“My character escapes one of the levels through a portal that was a dry ice infused, organ rich, bubbling pond. They literally took innards from the grocery store and had them floating on top. At the end of the scene, I had to jump into it. That’s how dedicated I am to my craft.”
Oddly enough Megan Ward was not a star of Hot Dog…The Movie. She was extremely dedicated on Dark Skies since it wasn’t an easy shoot compared to a sitcom.
“What was difficult about this show was physically accomplishing it,” Ward said. “It was so demanding because we had the Sixties time period. We had historical events. We had action. We had aliens and special effects. It was very challenging show to get all of that in with integrity and authenticity in a regular episodic show. We had an 80 hour week. It was more about getting it done and surviving it because we were so ambitious.”
The 4:30 a.m. call times weren’t the only things taxing Ward’s stamina. “A lot of what Kim did was give the emotional perspective on where they found themselves in the situation. It was a very draining experience,” she said.
But even with the lack of sleep and hitting extreme emotional notes, Ward got pumped up by the historical moments on the set.
“It was quite exciting to say, ‘What event do we get this week?’ When we got the Beatles event, that was so much fun,” she said.
Her favorite location was a simple place. “We were on the beach, It was cold and we were shooting in the dead of winter, but it was so refreshing to be out of the grittier locations and muddy farms,” she confessed.
The ultimate question about working in a show that covered so much of the ’60s; what was her favorite hairstyle?
“I liked my big hair,” she said. “It got too big at times. Some of the stuff I look back and go, ‘That was wrong.’ We always joked that my hair was a helmet and I just needed a chinstrap. it would have been easier if we had.”
J.T. Walsh brought the goods to the series as the mysterious military man. He was a solid actor who had appeared in over 70 movies and TV shows. He seemed destined for a long career like Charles Lane with his ability to project the no nonsense authority figure. It was a shock when he passed away in 1998 of a heart attack at age 54. What was Walsh like at what turned out to be the end of his career?
“He was great,” Ward testified. “He was tough. He knew who he was. He knew what he was doing. He was really wise and smart. He had no patience for time wasted. He could be difficult if he was unhappy with the length of time something took to shoot or if there was some confusion. He was never that way to me. I really looked up to him. I was a young actor and I knew I had a lot to learn. I appreciated working with an actor of his caliber and experience because I always felt very safe with him in a scene. I didn’t have to think for him. He always inspired me as an actor. It was fun to work with him. It was challenging to work with him in the way actors dream of. It was a pleasure and we miss him a lot.”
Was Walsh’s no nonsense attitude part of him or merely him tapping into the characters he was constantly cast as?
“I don’t know,” Ward said. “The truth of the matter is that actors can only play a part of themselves. I think it just zeroed in on who he was. He was a wonderful storyteller. He had this other side to him that you would see once and a while. When it came to the work, he was fairly disciplined. He wanted to get it done and get it over with – which is a good thing. But you had to be careful around him because you could set him off. He could get upset very easily. He wasn’t as kind to other people on the show as he was to me.”
The boxset for Dark Skies: The Declassified Complete Series has commentary tracks along with a documentary about the series featuring producers & creators Bryce Zabel and Brent Friedman. For a show that was filled with government secrets; was she shocked to learn information about the show from the bonus features?
“It’s interesting looking back on something where you have so much more information than at the time,” she said. “It’s funny that being on the set 80 hours a week and being the female lead of a show, you’d think I’d know everything going on. But you don’t know that much unless you’re intentionally included on information.”
Did she know that the producers had sped up their outline when they knew NBC didn’t want to renew the series?
“I knew that Kim’s role had changed through the course of the end of the season,” Ward said. “I was really uncertain how she’d come back since she ended as a villain.”
There was no hint to her that the season ending episode would be the last.
“A producer can’t really tell an actor that it looks awful that the network isn’t supporting us and returning my calls. It wouldn’t be good for an actor’s morale to know all that ahead of time.
Last year James Franco became a sensation for his short tenure on General Hospital. His clips shown on Talk Soup didn’t hint he’d cut off his arm in quest of an Oscar. What was Ward’s opinion of the star of His Royal Highness
“It’s funny because my character actually introduces James Franco, but we’re never on screen together because I had a scheduling conflict,” Ward admitted. “So I had to shoot all of my stuff the day before his character arrives. He came in the next day. My character introduces him to the town of Port Charles where General Hospital takes place. I’m in some other room and everybody is going into the room where he is. Our storylines never coincided again. He plays an artist and my character’s a fashion editor. She hosted an art show featuring his character’s art which is how he came to town. That was the closest I got to James Franco.”
Now that Dark Skies: The Declassified Complete Series has been released; Ward is eager to see a few other of her shows on DVD.
“I have two. One is Four Corners which was a short lived series I did with Ann-Margret and Sonia Braga. I’m so proud of it. Such a great, cute family drama. There was only five shows so they cut it down to a TV movie. So I don’t think that will ever happen. The one I really want to come out is Class of ’96 which was a show about a freshman class. It was in 1992 when Fox went seven nights a week. It was very sentimental and thoughtful with really great characters. We did 17 of those shows. I’m trying to get Shout! Factory to do that one.”
I WROTE THAT
Will the press quit playing the game of guessing who wrote O – the novel about Obama running for re-election. I wrote it. I’m Anonymous. I was keeping it on the down low since I don’t need the Secret Service all in my business. Why break my silence? I’m hearing all these big name political writers hinting they might have done it. But they won’t say it was them. And they can’t it because it’s me. You might as well take a silver Sharpie and write my name on the spine. I was quite upset that my editor did force me to rework the original title: “O: The Erotic Journal of a President Campaigning from DC for a Little AC.”
JUST GIVE OUT THE TROPHIES
This year’s award season has me rather bored. It’s a relief that they’ve moved up the Oscars to Feb. 27 from its old date in April. There’s no sparkle or glamor this year. Did people show up at the Golden Globes wearing cords? There’s no nasty blood feuds being played out in public. For a bunch of dramatic people, it’s too calm. Does everyone now live in fear of opening up their yaps and getting shot down like Mickey Rourke on The Wrestler‘s failed run for glory? Why isn’t James Franco trash talking Colin Firth? A little speech issue is more award worthy than cutting off your arm with a Swiss Army knife?
The only film I’m rooting for is Restrepo since we did cover Sebastian Junger in the column. It’ll keep Party Favors as the good luck charm for Best Documentary winners.
DVD SHELF
Black Panther revives the African superhero using Marvel Knights animation to bring movement to Reginald Hudlin’s reboot. The director of House Party had taken over the series in 2005. A few years later he became President of Entertainment for BET. The channel asked him to develop his version of Black Panther as a network cartoon. Like previous Marvel Knights projects, they bring the panels alive. John Romita, Jr’s original art gains motion. Although since this was a done for a TV show, there’s more in these six episodes than the first six comics. There’s a whole subplot involving Black Panther and the X-Men’s Storm. They are a natural fit since she’s also from Africa. The events covered deal with Prince T’Challa (Dijmon Hounsou) winning a tournament in Wakanda. His prize is the role as the new Black Panther. His first gig in the new job – fight against Klaw, the guy who killed the previous Black Panther. There’s a major battle as Klaw invades Wakanda with a team of super villains. Lot of good explosions in the exotic location. Stan Lee has a vocal cameo. The bonus features include a documentary about making the series, a music video and a trailer.
Matlock: The Sixth Season serves up more sweet Southern justice. “The Witness Killings” gives an unexpected sour homecoming for lawyer Ben Matlock (Andy Griffith). Turns out his relatives hate him for going to Atlanta instead of being the town lawyer. He’s given his chance to practice in hometown as locals are being murdered. “The Marriage Counselor” has the professional therapist get killed. Turns out the guy has been “helping” his clients by seducing the wives. Bryan Cranston (Breaking Bad) gets his freak on. “The Picture” brings back Don Knotts as the neighbor. Although I get major rush with the arrival of Doug McClure on “The Outcast.” Matlock retires when he screws up a case. Will he ever return to the bar or will we drink to his demise? The big finale is “The Assassination” with a local mayor getting plunked. There’s plenty of killing for a movie length episode. This was the final season the series aired on NBC and shot in Los Angeles. Next season moved the show to ABC and Wilmington, NC.
Freakonomics brings the theories of Steven Levitt and Stephen Dubner from the best selling book to the screen. This is a magazine style adaptation of the book with an all-star documentary team creating the segments. Morgan Spurlock (Super Size Me) ponders if fancy naming your kid matters. Why We Fight‘s Eugene Jarecki distills the radical relationship between crime rates and abortion. Jesus Camp‘s Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady follow high schoolers that have a chance to make money for good grades. Does cash turn bad grades into Harvard ready GPAs? Client 9‘s Alex Gibney’s piece on cheating in Sumo wresting could have been expanded into its own movie. There’s a lot of shocking revelations spinning out of a simple case of people letting their friends share in the paydays. Did you know the police in Japan will report your homicide as natural causes if they don’t have an immediate murderer? Don’t die in Tokyo. The film comes off as a great start to a continuing TV series. There needs to be more exploration of their odd theories. I knew Dubner from his previous life as a guitarist in the Right Profile and an entertainment writer. Strange to see him now in this role. Although nothing in this film is as freaky as his hair back in the ’80s. This is a must see for people who like odd connections.
Client 9: The Rise and Fall of Eliot Spitzer explores what the hell happened to the former governor of New York. How did a guy on the political rise allow himself to become ruined by a prostitution scandal? He’s not completely ruined since he got his own show on CNN. This isn’t a single narrative. We get a view from Manhattan from the view of hookers, investment bankers and Spitzer. The movie explores how this guy was supposed to be a hero. Director Alex Gibney has become the documentarian who has a way of distilling the most complicated of characters and scandals. He’s done it with Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room, Casino Jack and the United States of Money and Taxi to the Dark Side. He’s created a team that rivals 60 Minutes at its prime. There is more information here than your average news network that reduces coverage to cartoonish pundits screaming opinion disguised as referenced facts. It’s hard to say that the Sheriff of Wall Street was set up. He knew he was marked. Spitzer upset wealthy people and their corporations. He went after AIG before it needs nearly $200 billion of our money for their outrageous business practices. His enemies do have their say in the film. They were ready to pounce when Spitzer’s vice was revealed. Spitzer allowed himself to be destroyed. The film makes us realize that you have to be a monk if you wish to rally against dangerous players. If you need to see prostitutes, why not go visit Bunny Ranch where it is legal?
Down Terrace is a British family crime comedy that reminds you why it stinks to work for relatives. Bill and Karl swear there’s a rat in their operation. They get sprung from jail and immediately sniff around for the cop lover. They run their operation out of Brighton. Oddly enough, Bill and Karl are played by a real life father and son team. There’s a bit of natural truth in their bickerings. It captures the charm of The Sopranos without so much marina sauce on the action. Down is my favorite English crime flick since Sexy Beast. This deserves a spot in your overlooked film night.
Clover sticks Elizabeth McGovern (The Bedroom Window) in a tricky racial situation. She marries Ernie Hudson (Ghostbusters and Oz) which seems fine. She doesn’t quite get along with Ernie’s daughter. But it’s nothing beyond the normal stepmom friction. There’s no time for things to ease out since Ernie drops dead. She’s legally the child’s sole guardian now. His side of the family isn’t happy that Elizabeth wants to raise the daughter. Will anyone let her be a mom? This Hallmark TV movie is much more masterful in the treatment of the subject than a Tyler Perry film. Zelda Harris is fantastic as the girl trapped in the middle of a family loyalty struggle.
Erich Segal’s Only Love brings together the charming couple of Rob Morrow and Marisa Tomei. This is a nearly three hour-long Hallmark presentation that goes for the sentimental. Rob Morrow is a doctor who reunites with a lost love (Life Force‘s Mathilda May) when she needs his help with a deadly tumor. Decades before, the duo had survived a war in Africa. Now he has to find a way to stay focused and professional. He can’t afford to destroy his marriage and kill his old flame. Luckily he’s married to Marisa Tomei (The Wrestler) so it’s not that tempting to cheat on her. This is a perfect DVD to give the wife while you retreat to you hidden fortress to watch exciting college basketball action. Morrow and Tomei need to play a married couple again.