Tag: Christopher Plummer

  • Opinion In A Haystack: Buck Shots – Round 4

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    Money Shot (Wikipedia): provocative, sensational, or memorable sequence in a film, on which the film’s commercial performance is perceived to depend.

    Buck Shot: moments on which a film’s cheese-factor is based, often underlining the tone of the entire production and providing the viewer with the opposite effect intended.

    Round 4: Christopher Plummer Halts EVERYTHING: A Moment from Star Crash.

    (Here’s Round 1, Round 2, and Round 3)

    Taglines:

    • The ultimate inter-galactic adventure
    • From a vast and distant galaxy… A Space Adventure for all Time!
    • From a vast and distant galaxy – A space adventure like no other!

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    Christopher Plummer dressed as an alien porn star. I’ll say it again. Christopher Plummer dressed as an alien porn star. You should have laughed twice by now. Star Crash is a film peppered to the brim with Buck Shots. This cheap as hell Star Wars rip-off could be the focus of my writings today and for years to come. Here are some reasons why:

    David Hasselhoff fighting robots with light sabers.

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    David Hasselhoff’s Hair.

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    David Hasselhoff. Period.

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    Yet, instead we must focus on a scene sans robot and Hoff. A scene in which one of America’s greatest living actors, Christopher Plummer, stands on an ominous sound-stage amongst a room full of laser-gun-toting men dressed as science fiction porn warriors (and David Hasselhoff.) Plummer looks to the heavens and demands that a spaceship stop time. That’s right, TIME, the whole thing, the concept of time… STOPPED!!! HALTED!!! FROZEN!!! Also, Plummer is dressed like an alien porn star. Correction: a very regal alien porn star. Please note the cape, the glistening cod piece, and the oh-so-stylish boots. This is the kind of garb that one wears when elected Emperor of the Galaxy, which I should mention is exactly what Christopher Plummer is playing here. Emperor of the Galaxy.

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    I stumbled across this particular Buck Shot while trying to ignore it. Hop in the WABAC Machine with me and let’s travel to a time when people still got references like “the WABAC Machine,” before all the VHS tapes on the planet were destroyed by SONY. There my manager and I stood stocking candy at the front desk of a mom-and-pop video store, blissfully ignoring the random sci-fi movie we plopped in to annoy the porn-renting customers. The cover looked enticing enough, could be mildly funny right? Wrong. Spicy as hell.

    Then it happened. Christopher Plummer’s voice rang out:

    “IMPERIAL BATTLESHIP… HALT THE FLOW OF TIME!!!”

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    Our ignorance was brutally slain by the cutting sound of quite possibly the greatest quote in all of b-movie cinema. My manager and I stopped dead in our tracks, boxes of candy in hand, looking into our equally chubby faces we broke down and bust a gut laughing. Ignoring all responsibilities we were getting paid to accomplish, we quickly ran over to the VCR and replayed the quote 20 or 30 times.

    Not only did Plummer actually say that, but what followed was the epic FX shot of a space ship shooting a green ray “thing” out into space. This green thing was of course the time-halting-ray. We could tell because that’s what time-halting-rays look like: huge, thick, rickety, clouds of space-farts flowing into a planet. They come standard with most Imperial class battleships these days:

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    The beauty of course is that post-time-halting, Christopher Plummer goes on to explain that he just immobilized time, so that it can restart, after it restarts “Everything will explode.” Does it get better? Not often. What possesses an actor of Plummer’s stature to do movies like this? Many would say money, I say it’s because great actors don’t often watch their own performances, either that or their agents lie to them. John Malkovich’s agent is actually the demon Kromagamnon, lord of deception, the dark one who approved of the Eragon script. Ben Kingsley’s agent actually experimented sexually with Uwe Boll in college, his failure to convincingly enjoy it led to this:

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    Turning into this:

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    Admittedly, I’ve only ever sat through director Lewis Coates Star Crash (a.k.a. The Adventures of Stella Star) once, and I barely remember why exactly stopping time only so that everything will explode is the appropriate action for the Galactic Emperor to take. At the risk of making an ASS out of yoU and ME, I’m going to assume that this clip is funnier out of context than in, still if you ever get lucky enough to find a copy, sit through it once. Seeing Hasselhoff light saber fight with stop-motion robots will get you more messed up than injecting horse adrenaline into Oprah’s forehead during sex. Enjoy the clip:

  • Weekend Shopping Guide 6/25/10: Cat & Mouse

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    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…)

    It’s been a few years since the wonderful Tom & Jerry collections were released, so it’s a pleasant surprise that there’s a new “greatest hits” set – Tom & Jerry: Deluxe Anniversary Collection (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$26.98 SRP) – which contains 30 shorts spanning their entire film career, plus a retrospective featurette. Now we can only hope that a complete Blu-Ray release is in the cards.

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    Like most of the items they offer, you really don’t know you need a borescope until you get one, and then you wonder what you ever did without one. Thinkgeek’s literally named Handheld Video Inspection Camera ($99.99) is both useful and fun, with a 3ft length of flexible cord featuring a wide-view camera and led light, optional magnet and hook tools, and even the ability to do video out.

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    Just in time for the M. Knight thing, the original Avatar Book 1 Collection (Paramount, Not Rated DVD-$55.98 SRP) is being re-released via a 6-disc, feature-laden box set that adds a brand-new bonus disc with retrospective featurettes and a preview of the Art Of Avatar: The Last Airbender book from Dark Horse Comics. For those unfamiliar with the show, it’s a layered, action-adventure-mysticism-based mythology that’s a beautifully designed, engaging series worth checking out, regardless of your age. The original bonus features include a behind-the-scenes featurette with the cast & crew, commentary on the pilot, and two making-of featurettes focusing on the sound and the Korean animation studios.

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    The Roger Corman “classics” continue to pour out in fully restored, better than they’ve ever looked form with the release of Death Race 2000 (Shout Factory, Rated R, DVD-$19.98 SRP), starring David Carradine & Sylvester Stallone as participants in a brutal 3-dat transcontinental race where points are gained by killing spectators and pedestrians. The disc is loaded with bonus materials, including featurettes, interviews, an audio commentary, interviews, and more.

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    The gimmick of Hung (HBO, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP) is that Thomas Jane is a down-on-his luck high school gym teacher and single father, who’s physical endowment opens up the door to a new life as a service technician for the local ladies. The 2-disc first season set contains a trio of audio commentaries, a pair of featurettes, and the character’s personal ads.

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    When it comes to high definition restorations of their classic library, few companies are doing work as magnificent to behold as Warners. Case in point is their new special edition of the Judy Garland/James Mason A Star Is Born (Warner Bros., Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$34.99 SRP), which looks and sounds stunning. As far as bonus materials, you get rare recordi9ng session music, alternate versions of musical numbers, deleted scenes, the Hollywood premiere telecast, a newsreel, the 1954 Studio Exhibitor reel, pot-premiere party footage, trailers, and more.

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    We’re now 6 seasons into Entourage (HBO, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP), and I still find it to be a smug, tedious, unwatchable collection of cameos and characters I really don’t want to spend time with. For those that do like it, the 3-disc set contains audio commentaries, featurettes, and a mock PSA directed by Matt Damon.

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    Christopher Plummer and Helen Mirren grab hold of the screen in The Last Station (Sony, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$34.95 SRP), starring as an elderly Leo Tolstoy and his wife, who becomes enraged after he plans to leave his immense royalties to the Russian people. There’s also a love story with James McAvoy, but it’s really Plummer and Mirren who you’ll watch. Bonus materials include audio commentaries, deleted scenes, outtakes, and more.

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    A creepy horror film about a magician, an accident, a murder, and an inheritance starring Cesar Romero, Dean Jones, and Connie Stevens? Sure, I’m there. The Warner Archive Collection pulls another overlooked catalogue title from the vaults with the remastered Two On A Guillotine (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$24.95).

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    If films like Psycho and Jaws proved anything, it was that horror that’s plausible is much more resonant in an audience. Though it’s got rough edges, Thirst (First Look Studios, Rated R, DVD-$24.98 SRP) certainly falls into that category, as it tells the tale of a pair of couples who find themselves stranded in the desert and exposed to the elements.

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    If Robert Pattinson ever wakes up and remembers he’s supposed to be acting in a film – and maybe choose his projects a bit better – he might actually be worth watching. Otherwise, he’ll keep doing yawners like Remember Me (Summit, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$34.99 SRP) about an emotionally damaged college student who discovers something or another through love. Bonus materials include audio commentaries and a behind-the-scenes featurette.

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    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…

    -Ken Plume

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