Tag: Eugene Levy

  • Weekend Shopping Guide 3/16/12: Tintin Time

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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…)

    I’m still not sold on the exaggerated realistic character design they chose for Herge’s famous characters, but there’s enough verve and energy to make Spielberg & Jackson’s The Adventures Of Tintin (Paramount, Rated PG, 3D Blu-Ray-$54.99 SRP) a fun watch, careening from one set piece to the next in a similar vein to Spielberg’s Raiders Of The Lost Ark. And really, the only way to watch this at home, if you have the capability, is in 3D – they did a great job of making the environments immersive, particularly during the big chase near the end. Bonus materials include making-of featurettes and much more.

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    If you want a nice and easy geek-friendly LEGO set for kids who might not have the skill or patience to tackle the larger sets, the LEGO Star Wars Droid Escape ($19.99) features C-3PO and R2-D2 with their Tantive IV escape pod plus a few Stormtroopers and a Speeder Bike to pursue them with.

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    Arrested development and the delusion that goes with it is front and center in Young Adult (Paramount, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP) when writer & one-time prom queen Mavis Gary (Charlize Theron) heads back home and determines recapturing her married high school boyfriend is the way to relive a past long gone. Theron is brilliant, but she’s matched by Patton Oswalt, a fellow classmate who slaps her with the reality stick. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, featurettes, deleted scenes, and more.

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    It seems every month is a holiday for fans of the Doctor’s classic adventures as we get not only a special edition of the 10th anniversary special with Doctor Who: The Three Doctors (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$34.98 SRP), but also a new special edition of 4th Doctor Tom Baker’s Doctor Who: The Robots Of Death (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$18.99 SRP). Both are real crackers, and are loaded with the usual clutch of commentaries, featurettes, knick-knacks, rarities, and more.

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    Ah, but that’s not all of the new classic Who you’re getting this week! Oh no, no, no! There’s also a newly restored special edition of Patrick Troughton’s tin-plated tussle with cyberdoom in Doctor Who: The Tomb Of The Cybermen (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$34.98 SRP) and 4th Doctor Tom Baker’s first encounter with savage companion Leela in Doctor Who: The Face Of Evil (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$24.98 SRP). Again, there’s loads and loads of great bonus material for both. So is THAT enough new Who for you?

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    Anyone who has had a loss that is at the same time sudden yet lingering will understand the power of a film like The Descendants (Fox, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP), that even for its twist and the light it casts on the character who has gone into a coma after an accident, it still makes you feel for the lurch it places family her into. I really don’t want to give away much about the film, but suffice it to say she leaves a husband (George Clooney) and two troubled daughters to pick up the pieces. Just see it. Bonus materials include featurettes, deleted scenes, interviews, and more.

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    It was only a matter of time before Martin Scorsese’s The Last Temptation Of Christ (Criterion, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$39.95 SRP) made it to the high definition realm in a beautifully put together edition, and it should come as no real surprise that it’s from the fine folks at Criterion. Not only does the picture and sound get a healthy bump, but there’s also an audio commentary, interview with Peter Gabriel, location footage, photos, and more.

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    It’s always a delight to get new Wallace & Gromit material, even if it’s in the form of interstitial around a spotlight on r3eal life gadgets and contraptions in Wallace & Gromit’s World Of Invention (Lionsgate, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$14.99 SRP), a 6-part series that does just that.

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    The fine folks at Rifftrax have released a brand new pair of cinematic bombs made wonderfully hilarious – the dime store creature feature The Crater Lake Monster (Legend, Not Rated, DVD-$9.95 SRP) and the nickel store alien flick The Galaxy Invader (Legend, Not Rated, DVD-$9.95 SRP). Should you get both? Yes. You should get both. Right now.

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    You know another installment of a film franchise is in the offing when the back-catalogue is dusted off for release, so it should come as little surprise that the forthcoming American Reunion brings the Blu-Ray debut of American Pie, American Pie 2, and American Wedding (Universal, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$19.98 SRP each). All 3 carry over all of the previous DVD special features, as well as adding a look at the upcoming sequel.

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    They’re certainly not up to the quality of the original, but there’s enough charm and storytelling competence to make both The Lion King 1 1/2 & The Lion King 2: Simba’s Pride (Walt Disney, Rated G, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP each) decent viewing, and will probably hold the attention of most kids. Both have just gotten a full high definition release, sporting featurettes, deleted scenes, music videos, and more.

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    The Warner Archive Collection has dug up a pair of Jim Brown rarities from the 70’s for your viewing pleasure. Tick Tick Tick (Warner Bros., Rated G, DVD-$19.95) finds brown starring as a southern sheriff caught in the middle of a breakdown in race relations, while The Slams (Warner Bros., Rated R, DVD-$19.95) as a jailed criminal who needs to overcome quite a few obstacles to go over the wall and try and recover a hidden stash of cash before the demolition of its hiding place.

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    Yeah, I’m not entirely sure anyone is supposed to understand what’s going on in Tarsem’s big Greek mythology epic Immortals (Fox, Rated R, 3D Blu-Ray-$49.99 SRP), but it is a captivatingly beautiful thing to look at in 3D, particularly any scene where the gods are doing battle. It’s a crazy flick, but definitely worth a look-see. Bonus materials include featurettes, deleted scenes, an alternate opening, and alternate endings.

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    Director Ralph Bakshi’s animated films are an acquired taste, and one I never have acquired. I can certainly see his passion, but the movies don’t speak to me. But there are plenty of people who have a special place in their heart for his fantasy film Wizards (Fox, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$34.99 SRP), which arrives in high definition for a special 35th anniversary edition containing an audio commentary, featurettes, a TV spot, a gallery, and trailers.

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    As this year marks the 100th anniversary of the legendary maritime disaster, it’s perfectly understandable that the History Channel is collecting together a trio of their best documentaries on the subject into Titanic: The Complete Story (History Channel, Not Rated, DVD-$19.95 SRP). The documentaries in question are Death Of A Dream, The Legend Lives On, and Titanic’s Achilles Heel.

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    Michelle Williams certainly deserved her Oscar nomination for her turn as Marilyn Monroe in My Week With Marilyn (Anchor Bay, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP), which focuses on the memoir of Colin Clark, who as a 23-year-old 3rd assistant director formed a special relationship with the very fragile superstar while she was in London filming The Prince And The Showgirl with the Sire Laurence Olivier (Kenneth Branagh). A lovely little flick.

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    I’m not exactly sure what they were thinking with the overly-slick, utterly baffling new take on The Three Musketeers (Summit, Rated PG-13, 3D Blu-Ray-$34.99 SRP). Well, I do know – they were trying to capture the same teenage audience that flocked to Twilight. And for them, this is probably a lovely bit of fluff. The 3-D edition contains an audio commentary and deleted scenes.

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    Do you like penguins? Do you like them dancing? Do you like them talking with the voices of Elijah Wood and Robin Williams while they’re dancing? Did you like all of this when it was in an animated movie called Happy Feet? Then you’ll like the equally ingratiating Happy Feet Two (Warner Bros., Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$35.99 SRP), as Wood’s Mumble returns with a son in tow. Bonus materials include a clutch of featurettes and more.

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    For Come Fly With Me (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$24.98 SRP) Matt Lucas and David Walliams have followed up their immensely successful run on Little Britain with a brand new series that weaves what are still essentially just recurring character sketches but with the conceit that all of these characters work and revolve around an airport, from ground crews to the rich airline owner. The set features all 6 episodes plus a behind-the-scenes documentary.

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    How do you compress 13.7 million years of Earth’s existence into one concise special? Seems like a tall task, but it’s one History Of the World In Two Hours (History Channel, Not Rated, DVD-$19.95 SRP) attempts to do, from the stellar formation of the planet all the way up to today.

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    It’s still not my bag, but for those that enjoy Adult Swim’s Superjail (Adult Swim, Not Rated, DVD-$19.97 SRP), the complete second season set contains all 10 episodes plus a clutch of bonus materials.

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    In the Tom Baker 4th Doctor story “City Of Death”, our traveling Time Lord encounters an art dealer selling actual originals of the Mona Lisa to fund his time experiments. The seemingly-debonair Count Scarlioni played by Julian Glover, is actually a time-splintered alien named Scaroth, who is eager to prevent the destruction of his ship over primeval Earth – an event that not only flung him through time, but also happened to have jump-started life on Earth. So yes, the Doctor must stop him. The City Of Death Collector’s Set (Underground Toys, $38.99 SRP) contains the Doctor and Cunt Scarlioni – who also has a swappable Scarloth head. Oh, and there’s also a Mona Lisa. Just don’t try to sell it.

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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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  • Trailer Park: Michael Dowse of FUBAR: BALLS TO THE WALL

    By Christopher Stipp

    The Archives, Right Here

    Check out my other column, This Week In Trailers, at SlashFilm.com and follow me on TWITTER under the name: Stipp

    INTERVIEW- MICHAEL DOWSE

    fubar-2-poster632Make no mistake about Fubar: Balls to the Wall, it is hilarious. It is downright funny in a way that Jackass 3 was funny with the exception that the talent of David Lawrence and Paul Spence, who play Terry and Dean, respectively, are comedic actors who are so in tune to these characters that they feel like second skin that’s easily gotten into. They sell their performances by leaning on their abilities and it’s not really the story that’s compelling about this film, it’s them.

    When director Michael Dowse (Take Me Home Tonight, It’s All Gone Pete Tong, the upcoming Goon) sat down to flesh out the second installment he knew what he wanted to get out of his main actors and they, in turn, helped write the story with him ultimately resulting in a six hour cut of improv, riffing, and general hilarity. It was the editing of those six hours to get you the version that will be available, surprise, surprise, on 4/20.

    Michael took some time out of his day to talk to me about the lengths he went to get what he wanted out of this movie, what it meant to be coming back to this well, and the challenges he faced when trying to capture lighting in a bottle with a second installment with characters that ought to be put together more often. If the first Fubar was a labor of love then the second seemed to be a comedic orgy that would not be contained. The finished film is testament to his talents and strengths as a director and writer, to say nothing of how he could make a sequel that stands right next to the first in terms of quality.

    Look for Fubar: Balls to the Wall on DVD and Blu-ray this upcoming Tuesday.

    CHRISTOPHER STIPP:  Hello

    MICHAEL DOWSE: Hey Chris.  How are you?

    CS:  I’m doing alright.  How are you doing?

    DOWSE: I’m doing great actually.

    CS:  I’m so excited to talk to you.  I was a huge fan of the first film and after not being able to catch Fubar 2 when it came around South by Southwest I was determined to see it somehow. I was able to watch it last night and had a wonderful time with the movie.

    DOWSE: Great.

    fubar2CS:  Right off the bat, you are really diverse with the way you built your career.  You came on the scene with Fubar, moved on to the really wonderful It’s All Gone Pete Tong.  Then you did some television and now you’re back to features again. What is it you look for when you are looking for projects to do?  Are you just looking for something diverse or do you get into whatever might strike your fancy?

    DOWSE: I look for something that has a conscience that will elevate it amongst the rest of the rattle.  With Fubar ““ I always had a strong affection for headbangers having grown up around them.  I just thought it would be an amazing concept for a film.  And I felt the same way about Pete Tong. It was my first work for hire where somebody had hired me to write and direct something.  Just the idea of a DJ”¦I thought was interesting. And with Take Me Home Tonight I grew up on those John Hughes films so making something like that was appealing.  I really look for something that has a strong initial concept and then finding the quality as well as the heart I think is important.  For a movie like this I ask myself whether it can it be funny, that when you look at the storyline and look at the third act and give it some weight and some heart, that’s important.  That’s kind of the challenge for me.  I’ve always been a fan of directors like John Borman and John Houston “¦”¦ huge range in their films.  So that’s something I’ve always been driven to as a director.

    CS:  Does it ever intimidate you to go out on a ledge and do something you have not done before?  Like the television series, The Foundation, did you hesitate a bit or was that healthy for you?

    DOWSE: No not at all.  The Foundation was a show that I developed myself.  My production company made it so it wasn’t like I was hired to produce and direct somebody else’s stuff.  It was my baby.  It was something I was excited to try.  I don’t do any other television unless it’s a pilot or something.  I was excited to work on the longer narrative format which would be to try and develop a comedy where you have”¦..just wrapping my head around how do I do something like that and make it funny as well.  Our concept was strong too.  Something I thought could go on forever. We took the notion of a charity event and ripped charity ideas right from the newspapers and got episode ideas from them.

    CS:  Working episodic television, did you find that it pushed you as a writer and a director to make things tight as they can be working with time constraints?  Were you used to something like that?

    DOWSE: It is a little bit more constrained in television.  I guess it is a good exercise to go through but there’s always time constraints.  I have yet to be on a film where I have tons of time so it’s always good to sharpen your skills with television.  But, that was 2 or 3 years ago when we were shooting that.  It was fun to do it and the show really got traction.  It was an interesting experiment.  I would do it again but I’m not rushing to get back to television.  I like feature work.  I like how it’s different every time.

    CS:  And kind of on that same point, time constraints, running and gunning, one of the brilliant things about the first Fubar was that I think I could take any number of my friends who let’s say are not completely into films, I could sit them down and they would believe that Fubar is a documentary. I think it speaks to David [Lawrence] and Paul’s [Spence] selling of those characters.  When you are revisited it, let’s talk about day one when you’re thinking “OK, let’s make a sequel” how did you try and make something that’s faithful and just as good if not better than the first?

    DOWSE: There was a long time in between the first and the second for a reason.  I think initially none of us wanted to repeat ourselves and that was always something that was a big barrier to making a sequel.  We wrote other scripts and they never found any traction but when we decided to go back to it we wanted things that were important to us narratively that we wanted to address in the sequel and somehow we found out how to meld all these elements into a plot.  So the process was, “OK there’s an opportunity to make the film, we can pretty much fund the film pretty easily up here because of the success of the first one and it’s a privilege to make a film so why don’t we explore it by writing the first role?” And once we started writing we all came up with an idea we all really liked it had enough of a storyline in the third act.  There is a lot of pressure.  We knew we could not isolate our fans from the original.  We also knew that we wanted to expand that fan base too.

    CS:  Working with David and Paul ““ how is that as a trio?  How do the three of you develop concepts?  Do you all just bring something different to the table, is it all collaborative, are you just throwing things against the wall like what funny things can we put Terry and Dean in?

    paulspencefubariiportraits2010torontod8gkhpetbavlDOWSE: We really compliment each other well.  We don’t write any dialogue so we really just work with what looks like a script without dialogue.  We all bring our own strengths to the table.  I like to think I understand the structure of a film better.  And Paul’s fuckin’ hilarious.  We all add different things to it and we all compliment each other very well.  We come up with an idea and we all laugh at it then we know it’s gold.  It’s an interesting relationship for sure but it’s very rare.  I’ve worked with a lot of writers where we don’t share the same style of humor and it’s extremely awkward when it’s not the same.

    CS:  To that creative process filming comedy, did you find that things you guys thought would be funny on paper, as they started getting fleshed out in person, are there things you scrapped because maybe it didn’t work as well as you thought it might have?

    DOWSE: Always.  I would probably say rule of thumb is 80% of the line or the content we had in the story we thought was “funny” we do it and shoot it and get in the editing room and say this isn’t funny at all, doesn’t work at all, probably because it was too thought out or something.  Definitely.  The way we work it, we know the story, we know where each actor has to go, we know each theme but how they get there is the fun part.  And that’s where you really find the comedy and I think with improve what it lends itself to is honesty because nobody knows really how to react to each other when you don’t know what the other person is going to say.  Because of that you get honest performances and you also get honest comedy.  People are genuinely surprised.

    CS:  You hit the nail on the head.  It’s funny you bring that up.  The Internet du jour when it came to movie talk this week revolved around a discussion about Hangover II and whether it can it recreate the same outrageousness of the first one. The second one doesn’t look like it can because it appears they’re trying to hit some of the same beats over and over again, callbacks if you will.  To that point, I read that you switched up, or at least toned back, the number of times the word Give’r was used again and again.  Were you consciously conscious of these things, that you didn’t want to recreate the first Fubar?

    DOWSE: No.  I wasn’t conscious of the word Give’r until editing.  I remember calling Paul and saying, “I think this is going to be our tagline of the film.”Â  I just noticed the rhythm of it.  But, no, never conscious.  We find things that will make it funny.  Sometimes if it’s funny on set, it’s really not that funny.  We are getting better and better at understanding and interpreting that as we do more films.  But that whole thing about playing to the crew it’s usually too big to work subtly in a film.  We find that a lot.  It’s mostly lines that we think are so funny but don’t work.  Probably because we know about them.

    CS:  David and Paul were the shining lights of the film.  As a director and knowing them now for as long as you have, is your directing of them different than the first one or in the second one were you more apt to say something like, “Well, you guys know what you need to do so just go out there and do it?”

    DOWSE: I think it’s developed because there is much more of a relationship than the first one.  I had known Dave for a couple years but didn’t really know Paul at all.  There is definitely some familiarity there that adjusts how we direct and edit.  It’s just more trust between all three of us.  We’ve all gone through the trenches together so we know what we’re doing and know that if I push them to try something ““ it’s a great relationship and pretty rare.  And the fact that the three of us have all remained friends through two films speaks to how normal we all are.  Ha ““ no big egos.  It’s all about how we approach making the film.  I try to keep the infrastructure really small.  I operated the B camera ““ there’s no egos, there’s no cooks in the kitchen.  If I want them to do something I’m whispering it them.  Having me operate the camera allows me to improvise as much as they can and actually goes hand in hand.  If they want to move and run around we can just switch to that.

    CS:  Do you find that that’s you style?  Do you like to have a more hands on”¦.like you said you have your A’s and your B’s and just let the other directors do what they do but do you like having that intimate “Let me control this the way I think it should be” involvement?

    2ed52fb241fubar2DOWSE: Yes, when you do more films you realize the reality of if you want your film to look good cinematically you’re going to have to deal with the timing and the infrastructure of it.  There’s a big upside to that.  It’s always a balancing act. Getting your film to look good, and giving your actors time on the floor to make it funny and honest is always a battle for me.  Sometimes a more hands on approach works very well where if you want a bigger shoot you just fuck the monitors and go out behind the camera and talk to the people and that’s sometimes the way to go ““ just speeds everybody up.  Lighting can be the biggest antithesis towards honesty and performance.  It eats up so much time sometimes you’re just left with five minutes to get a performance so you have to make sure all that stuff is balanced and I think great directors do that or they just don’t give a shit and they go into overtime.  I’ve got to gross a hundred million before I start doing that.

    (Laughs)

    CS:  Well, let me see if I can get you to sell a few more units with this.

    DOWSE: That’ll work.

    CS:  And to that end, the bane of a lot of actors and what have you when it comes to productions are the set-ups, the time spent just trying to get things right so they can film it. In the first one, and it goes back to how it could easily interpreted as a wild documentary about a couple of burnouts, the film was dark, dirty looking whereas part two appears a lot more polished.  Did you want to try to scuff up the corners, sort to speak, to make it look a little bit rough around the edges or did you say, “No, we really have to do this one right ““ get the lighting right, the set-ups right”?

    DOWSE: It’s more than just scuff up the corners.  It’s actually having a bit more money and wanting to do bigger set pieces than stunts and putting that money on the screen, obviously you need a bigger production plan to do that.  We wanted the film consciously to look a little bit better than the first one ““ to be a little bit more polished but without giving away what gave the first one so much energy.  The production on Fubar 2 was really balancing that out as we didn’t want a lot of hair and makeup in the way.  We knew we had to have a bigger production crew because we wanted the film to look a little better.  We wanted to accomplish more ambitious things.  So rather than just scuffing up the edges, it was just polishing what we kind of did on the first one a little more.

    CS:  Did you use the same DPs that you worked with before to get these things right?

    DOWSE: Yes.  We used Bobby Shore who shot The Foundation, that was the first thing I worked with him on, and then I did Fubar 2 and finished Goon. And the same thing with the editor Reg Harkema who now edited Goon. I’m trying to make these guys my core “team”.  Part of the problem is up here in Canada you have to shoot in so many different providences you (go where the tax credit is better).  It’s always better to get your production company locally, I find, when you are under a tighter budget.  They just know where to get all the shit.  Definitely a core crew that’s coming together with me.

    CS:  You raised an interesting point of having these crews around you as you do what you do.  You go into the edit bay, you have what you think is a finished film with all the footage you wanted to take, how is the editing from this one different from the first one in terms of did you see the beats that you wanted to get when you envisioned this project?  Was it just as good as what you thought it was or did you have to go back and say “Nope, didn’t get it”?

    DOWSE: No.  Fubar 2 was a rarity.  I don’t think we did any re-shoots.  If we did anything it was really small.   A shot here or there but I don’t think we did.  We didn’t do another scene that’s for sure.  Which is really rare ““ on the first one we were re-shooting and picking stuff up.  Balls to the wall ““ no pick ups.  We also had a six hour cut.  I shoot the fuck out of my movies.  I started as an editor.  I’m a coverage maniac.  So having a six hour rough cut there was no need to do pick ups.  I don’t feel that we lost any beats at all.  In fact we had too much stuff and had to whittle it down just a bit.  A six hour rough cut is crazy long.  It goes from six hours to two and a half within two weeks.

    CS:  I am amazed.

    DOWSE: You just put up all the jokes next to each other and see what works.  Pretty much the story beats remain the same outside of a few here and there.  The only thing we did pick up was we picked up the picture at the end.  That was it.  Paul just had a baby ““ a son, Adrian, three months old.  We just went to Sears and got a whole bunch of family portrait stuff.

    CS:  I’m ignorant when it comes to this stuff.  You said 6 hours of material.  Is that normal in a comedic film like this?  Do you do multiple takes of different jokes.  Are you the David Fincher now of comedic film where you go take after take?

    DOWSE: No.  I’m working my way up to that.  My films have to gross a little bit more money and then I’ll be able to do that but not quite yet.

    (Laughs)

    Like I said, time is your biggest thing on any film shoot.  So I am still in a position that I can’t talk somebody into a bunch of overtime.  Maybe I’ll get to that but I find that more takes doesn’t necessarily help comedy.  When you work with improv some are better off the top and get worse and then other actors hit their stride after the fourth take.  So it depends.

    CS:  Did you find that David and Paul they like that ability to just start riffin’ extemporaneously, just going with it?

    DOWSE: Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.  But David and Paul just feed off each other so well.  David is a very well trained improv actor at the Loose Moose Theatre up in Calgary years ago, so he was able to jump in and the places where that would go”¦we were dying.  If we were stuck in a car trailing behind them he would have us in tears on the floor.  It was hilarious.  We threw a lot great jokes away because they just were not as good as the best ones.  There’s only room for one or two jokes.

    fubar-2CS:  And this is not anything like false praise but David and Paul, I wish I could see them in more things together.  They have this relationship that doesn’t feel like acting.  It just feels so natural and so honest it doesn’t ever come across as fake or false or put on.  Do the two of them, do they realize they have that kind of chemistry together?

    DOWSE: Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.  And that’s the nice thing to see seven years later come back right away.  The first scene we shot I don’t know quite sure what the crew thought ““ I had never worked with any of these people before – but they immediately picked up like they have never stopped.  They always know how to play off each other because they have been friends for so long.  They grew up together.

    CS:  Was there any sort of temptation to put them in Goon?

    DOWSE: Yeah, I tried to get Paul but he moved and had a baby and didn’t want to leave his family.

    CS:  I know I would be remiss if I didn’t ask about the production of Goon.  I know Eugene Levy is one of the great improv artists. How was it working on that film?

    DOWSE: Amazing and awesome.  It might be my best to date.  I am really proud of it.  It’s powerful.  He is an amazing actor.  I was blessed to work with so many great actors and working with Eugene Levy ““ he’s a hero of mine.  It really was a dream come true.  And the irony is that in Goon he doesn’t play a comedic part, he plays a very serious part.  Yeah, he’s got a couple lines here and there that are funny but he plays the brain surgeon’s father of our Goon.  So, Goon is amazing.  I’m a hockey fanatic.  I love comedy.  So it’s a perfect combination for me and I love my hours and I was excited to make a sports movie something like what Evan [Goldberg] was doing with Pineapple Express where violence is actually treated as physical comedy.

    CS:  And this was something you haven’t written.  Was that odd directing a film you didn’t write?

    DOWSE: No, it’s my second time doing that and each time you develop with them.  You are not writing the physical pages but you definitely help out with the structure and how the story should go.  It was really fun.  It was more enjoyable because I had writers on the set with me.  It was a blast and was really fun.

  • Weekend Shopping Guide 1/8/10: Kung Fu Fightin’

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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 long, long, LONG wait, but the fine folks at Cinematic Titanic make a strong return with their road-tested riff of the awkward merging of both Kung-Fu AND Blaxsploitation, all wrapped in a model of poor filmmaking and worse acting… I give you East Meets Watts (Cinema Titan, Not Rated, DVD-$14.99). Not only is the riffing tight, but this is also the first Cinematic Titanic Live release, which was recorded in front of a live audience. And it works a charm. Now let’s speed up those releases, guys!

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    I’ve never owned a good cooking knife in my life. Usually, I’ll hack meat and vegetables with a steak knife, ’cause that’s all I’ve got. Every time I’ve tried to buy a better knife, I’ve always chosen poorly, and wound up with a quick-dulling instrument that just sends me right back to my trusty serrated hacksaws. Well, now I’ve seen the light – and it’s not metal. No, it’s Ultrasharp Ceramic Knives ($74.99). The blade is sharp – really sharp – and it never dulls. How sweet is that? And not only do you get the blade – you also get a ceramic bladed peeler… You know, for peeling stuff. Stuff! Peeled!

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    It’s not a kiddie movie, but I certainly saw it as a kid, and I still love the anarchic blackness that permeates one of the most offbeat holiday flicks to ever hit screens, Gremlins (Warner Bros., Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$28.99 SRP). In fact, it was this – along with Indiana Jones and The Temple Of Doom (interestingly enough, both Amblin pics) that helped usher in the PG-13 rating. Now in full high-definition, bonus features include a pair of audio commentaries, a making-of featurette, additional scenes, a gallery, and trailers.

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    No one rants with quite the same vigor – and accessibility – as Charlie Brooker. Like a cross between Mark Twain and a riled wasps nest, Brooker’s regular column in the Guardian is an ongoing social commentary that inspires equal parts knowing laughter and sympathetic bile. Don’t believe me? Pick up the latest collection – The Hell Of It All (Guardian Books/Faber & Faber, £12.99 SRP) and read for yourself.

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    How sweet is it that we’re actually a dozen volumes in to the The Complete Peanuts? What seemed like it would take forever to accomplish – the presentation of the entire run of Charles Schulz’s classic strip – now seems to be flying by, as we can all dive into The Complete Peanuts: 1973 to 1974 (Fantagraphics, $28.99 SRP), and cast our vote for Sack. He’s the greatest. Now bring on the next volume!

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    If their continued collections of Peanuts weren’t enough to earn Fantagraphics the love and adoration of comics fans the world over, then their beautiful collections of the EC Segar strips starring his cantankerous, shambling sailor should secure that place within their hearts. The 4th collection – Popeye: Plunder Island (Fantagraphics, $29.99 SRP) – has as its centerpiece the titular adventure, presented for the first time in full color, completely uncut.

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    It’s refreshing to upend the traditional romantic comedy formula and look at how unpredictable love can actually be with 500 Days Of Summer (Fox, Rated PG-13, DVD-$29.98 SRP), which brings together Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Zooey Deschanel as the awkward pair. Bonus materials include an audio commentary and deleted/extended scenes. A Blu-Ray edition ($39.99 SRP) is also available with additional featurettes, interview, audition tapes, and more.

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    While Office Space has become an instant classic and even the marginalized Idiocracy has become a cult flick, Mike Judges latest, Extract (Miramax, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP), is a bit scattershot. While the ensemble is top notch – Jason Bateman, Mila Kunis, Kristin Wiig, and Ben Affleck – the story, about the sale of a small-town flavor extract company that begins to fall apart around the owner (Bateman), doesn’t ever really gel. Which is a shame, because all of the ingredients are there. Bonus materials include a featurette and deleted/extended scenes.

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    What do you do when you’re a network with a surprise hit on your hands? You don’t wait around for your debut season to wrap before you rush out a DVD collection featuring the first half of said season – and that’s what we’ve got with Glee: Season 1 Volume 1 (Fox, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP). The 4-disc box set contains 13 episodes, plus audition pieces, featurettes, a casting session, and more. Yes, you know you want this set. You know you’re a fan. ADMIT IT.

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    Catch up on your TV viewing over the holiday break with both the 3rd and final season of the sci-fi show Kyle XY (ABC Studios, Not Rated, DVD-$39.99 SRP) and the 3rd season of The Secret Life Of The American Teenager (ABC Studios, Not Rated, DVD-$39.99 SRP). Kyle XY features audio commentaries, a featurette, and deleted scenes, while Teenager gets the pilot episode and a Q&A.

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    It came and went from theaters with only the slightest of notice – a disappointment, considering it was the theatrical follow-up to Juno from screenwriter Diablo Cody. Which is a shame, as Jennifer’s Body (Fox, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP) is a goofy little bit of teenage horror that brought fond memories of the equally B The Faculty. Give it a spin at home. Bonus features include audio commentaries, deleted scenes, video diaries, featurettes, and more.

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    Check another series off your running list, as we’ve come to the release of the 7th and final season of Mission: Impossible (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$49.99 SRP). Will Jim Phelps (Peter Graves) finally encounter an impossible mission? Or we he wind up doing links on A&E in just a few short years? Watch the 22 episodes in this set regardless of the answer.

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    Oh, what I wouldn’t do to put a bullet through the sadly long-lived American Pie franchise, which has now moved into American Pie Presents The Book Of Love (Universal, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$36.98 SRP), if only to free Eugene Levy from whatever cursed existence binds him to these flicks. Bonus features include featurettes, trivia, deleted scenes, and a gag reel.

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    What was just about the last season of the show turned out to be just another one after it was picked up, so now you can rest easy as you partake of Chuck: The Complete Second Season (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$59.98 SRP), knowing that it’s not the last. Also? 3-D episode! Bonus features include a bevy of featurettes, webisodes, deleted scenes, and a gag reel.

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    It’s the second volume of The Fugitive‘s third season (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP), and we’ve reached the point where Dr. Richard Kimble discovers the identity of the elusive one-armed man, just as pursuer Lt. Phillip Gerard decides to employ… A COMPUTER!… to track the good doctor down. The 4-disc set contains 15 episodes.

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    The regular episodes are often painful scattershot, but the focus of their Star Wars episodes seems to bring out the best in Seth MacFarlane & company, as you can see for yourself with Family Guy: Something, Something, Something Dark Side (Fox, Not Rated, DVD-$22.98 SRP). Bonus features include an audio commentary, fact-ups, a featurette, and a sneak peek at a table read. A Blu-Ray edition ($29.99 SRP) is also available, with identical bonus features.

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    Go all the way back to the days of Wendy, Marvin, & Wonder Dog with the first volume from the premiere season of the original Super Friends! (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$26.98 SRP). Journey back via this 2-disc set featuring 8 episodes plus a newly produced super fan workout, the “Super Friends Trivia Challenge”.

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    I remember when The Green Mile (Warner Bros., Rated R, Blu-Ray-$34.99 SRP) was originally released on VHS, in a bulky 2-tape set during the last gasp of that format before DVDs came on the scene. Even the original DVD release suffered from the film’s length, with a featureless release. Well, now that it’s come to Blu-Ray, it’s all on one disc, which also contains an audio commentary, a documentary, additional scenes, make-up tests, a look at the teaser trailer, Michael Clarke Duncan’s screen test, and more. How’s the for progress?

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    I’d like to say that Mel Brooks’ Spaceballs: The Totally Warped Animated Adventures (MGM/UA, Not Rated, DVD-$19.99 SRP) is a glorious disaster, but it’s not. It’s just a sad, poorly written series that sullies the memory of Brooks’ 80’s guilty pleasure. Unfortunate.

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    Christmas is dead and buried, so that means we start getting releases like a special edition of Winnie The Pooh: A Valentine For You (Walt Disney, Not Rated, DVD-$29.99 SRP) which, as you can imagine, is the 2/14 themed outing for that willy nilly silly old bear. As far as bonus features go, it’s pretty much just an episode from The New Adventures Of Winnie The Pooh.

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    It’s all hit the fan in the third season of Big Love (HBO, Not Rated, DVD-$59.99 SRP), as Bill Henrickson’s carefully constructed family and business ventures begin to erode from pressures outside and in. The 4-disc set contains all 10 episodes, plus a trio of mini-dramas and four direct-to-camera videos from Bill and his three wives.

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    Wrap up the season that brought in Rob Estes, Alyssa Milano, and Lisa Rinna (and showed the door to Grant Show, Marcia Cross, & Laura Leighton) with Melrose Place: The Fifth Season Volume 2 (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$36.99 SRP). The 3-disc set contains 13 episodes, but zero bonus features.

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    It’s not good cinema, but the flicks contained in Roger Corman’s Best Of The B’s Collection 1 (Infinity, Not Rated, DVD-$29.98 SRP) certainly are memorably bad. This 4-disc pack contains seven remastered Corman films starring the likes of Gary Busey, Jack Nicholson, Scott Glenn – Naked Angels, Bury Me An Angel, The Fast And The Furious, The T-Bird Gang, The Wild Ride, The Winner, and Angels Hard As They Come.

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    It never fails to bring a warm feeling when one of those Sunday afternoon flicks that used to permeate my youth gets all cleaned and gussied up and finds its way into high-definition. Certainly those warm feelings come from The Green Berets (Warner Bros., Rated G, Blu-Ray-$28.99 SRP), starring John Wayne in the first feature to focus on the Vietnam War. Bonus materials include a vintage featurette and the original theatrical trailer.

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    It doesn’t happen often enough, but Taxi (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP) managed, with its fifth & final season, to go out on a strong note without anyone feeling that the show overstayed its welcome. The cracks were showing, granted – and Any Kaufman’s off-camera behavior was causing some issues on set – but it remains one of those timeless, character-based sitcoms that are just as funny today as it was over 25 years ago. The 3-disc set also contains episode and series promos.

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    David Tennant’s era as The Doctor has just come to a close, but there’s still plenty of classic Doctor adventures still in the pipeline. The newest releases to keep you warm (if the scarf isn’t enough) is the William Hartnell era Doctor Who: The Keys Of Marinus and the Colin Baker era The Twin Dilemma (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$24.98 SRP each). Both discs are packed with bonus materials, including featurettes, audio commentaries, galleries, and more.

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    It’s not for your younger kiddies, but there’s enough inventiveness and beauty of execution to make 9 (Universal, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$39.98 SRP) a film worth showing to kids. It’s post-apocalyptic world and ragtag band of decidedly non-traditional survivors are that special kind of inspiration that will spark a child’s imagination. Bonus materials include the original 11-minute short, an audio commentary, featurettes, deleted scenes, and more.

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    With the resurgence of 3-D, particularly in horror films, it was only a matter of time before the Final Destination franchise decided to go all cine-poky with The Final Destination In 3-D (New Line, Rated R, DVD-$28.98 SRP). You pretty much know the deal by now – it’s a pissy Death getting all postal on some young schlubs. Bonus features are limited to some additional scenes. A Blu-Ray edition ($35.99 SRP) is also available, which adds a pair of alternate endings, a pair of featurettes, and a look at the atrocious-looking new Nightmare On Elm Street.

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    You can feel the end coming on as the 9th season of 7th Heaven (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$49.99 SRP) rolls along, as members of the Camden clan come and go, many no more than glorified recurring characters or cameos. The 5-disc set contains all 22 episodes.

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    Since getting the Disney license, the fine folks at Electric Tiki (distributed by the fine folks at Sideshow Collectibles) have been making some unique choices for their statue line. First there was Darkwing Duck, then Jessica Rabbit in an unused costume from one of the Roger Rabbit shorts, then the Rescue Rangers. Most unique, though, and welcome is Alice In Wonderland & The White Rabbit ($124.99), done in the style of Disney designer Mary Blair (perhaps most famous for designing the It’s A Small World attraction).

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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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