Tag: ghostbusters

  • Weekend Shopping Guide 7/1/16: Excelsior, True Believers

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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 can state unequivocally and without doubt that Stan Lee is an icon. Whether it be guiding the birth of the Marvel Comics universe or by being that selfsame universe’s biggest booster, he truly is “The Man”. And considering how many cameos he’s had in Marvel films over the years, it is any wonder your toy shelf can now have its very own special guest appearance from the 1/6-scale Stan Lee ($199.99). Dressed in Stan casual, it features a sculpt that perfectly captures the genial quality of ol’ Stan, right down to the tinted (and alternate clear) glasses perched above his grin. In addition to an number of hands (some of which are in Spidey web shooter position), his chief accessory is a folding director’s chair, very similar to the one packed with Hot Toys’ Bruce Lee figure ages ago. So, bottom line, this figure is great. ‘Nuff said.

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    There is absolutely no denying its iconic status, so it was inevitable that Criterion would eventually get around to delving a definitive high definition presentation of Stanley Kubrick’s Dr. Strangelove Or: How I Learned To Stop Worrying And Love The Bomb (Criterion, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$39.95 SRP). Featuring a newly restored 4K transfer and a remarkable bounty of rare and rarely seen extras, it’s the ultimate edition of a classic.

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    Another new Pixar film means another wonderful new book to devour, and so it goes with The Art Of Finding Dory (Chronicle Books, $40.00 SRP), which does the usual bang-up job of packing its pages with development artwork and interviews chronicling the creation of the much-anticipated sequel.

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    Patrick Stewart as a monstrous neo-Nazi club owner who holds a young band hostage after they inadvertently witness a crime? That powerful performance and white knuckle tension makes Green Room (Lionsgate, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$24.99 SRP) make it a thriller worth checking out. Bonus materials include an audio commentary and a featurette.

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    The kids today. What do they love? We know they love the Minecraft. Oh, how they love the Minecraft. What else do they love? Getting the bejeezus scared out of them while playing the game Five Nights At Freddy’s, whose sole purpose seems to be making kids periodically scream in the dark while playing on for another 17 consecutive hours. Now, those kids can bring the trauma right into their homes with Five Nights At Freddy’s Plush (Thinkgeek, $29.99 each). You can snag either Freddy or Foxy, and each stand a pretty massive 20″ tall.

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    Two thespianic titans as an aging actor and his dresser in a tale of friendship and loyalty? Who would not want to watch Anthony Hopkins and Ian McKellen share the screen for two hours in The Dresser (Anchor Bay, Not Rated, DVD-$24.98 SRP).

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    With Everybody Wants Some!! (Paramount, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP), writer/director Richard Linklater moves his Dazed and Confused coming-of-age nostalgia from high school in the 1970s to college in the 1980s, as a group of friends navigate their way through girls, parties, and problems in the summer of 1980. Bonus materials include deleted scenes and featurettes.

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    While there are showier examples of his filmmaking style, like Conan and Red Dawn, the high-def debut of his John Milius’s first directorial effort, Dillinger (Arrow Films, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$27.99 SRP) is a great way to discover this oft-overlooked little gem about the legendary outlaw.

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    There was always a crazy quality to the Shakespearean machinations at the core of House Of Cards (Sony, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$65.99 SRP), but the fourth season takes the scheming and backstabbing to a frontstabbing new level as it pits the team of Frank and Claire Underwood squarely against each other in a bloody winner-take-all battle.

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    There’s nothing inherently wrong with Whiskey Tango Foxtrot (Paramount, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP). I mean, a film starring Tina Fey as a journalist who trades her desk job in New York for an assignment in Afghanistan? Co-starring Martin Freeman, Margot Robbie, and Billy Bob Thornton? You’d think it’d be a slam dunk, and while it’s certainly amiable, it never quite clicks. Bonus materials include featurettes and deleted/extended scenes.

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    The adult coloring book market is awash with dozens upon dozens of options, including a fair number based on licensed properties. Two of my favorites, though, are decidedly offbeat. To The Ocean Deep (Chronicle Books, $14.95 SRP), which touts itself as the longest coloring book in the world, unfolds to 15 feet packed with intricate sub-aquatic imagery. The other is The Bicycle Coloring Book: Journey To The Edge Of The World (Chronicle Books, $16.95 SRP) which, as you can well surmise, features fantastical illustrations of bicycles around the world.

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    Slowly but surely, we’re getting affordable Star Trek prop replicas that are well-constructed, screen-accurate, and affordable. They’re perfect as either a fun collectible or the final bit of your cosplay. The latest addition is the Star Trek III: The Search For Spock Phaser (Thinkgeek/Diamond Select, $39.99). Featuring authentic lights and sounds, it’s a must-have before you head down to the Genesis planet to face the Klingons.

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    Like Star Trek before it, syndication success helped the castaways of the S.S. Minnow find their way back onto television via a cartoon. In the case of our 7 stranded seafarers, it was The New Adventures Of Gilligan (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$29.99 SRP), which featured the return of all of the original cast members except Dawn Wells and Tina Louise. The 3-disc set contains all 24 episodes, plus the original bumpers.

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    It’s still a very ugly film, but in watching the new anniversary edition of Shrek (Dreamworks, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$19.99 SRP), there’s no denying that its success is because it was a very funny film that still managed a decent amount of heart. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, featurettes, and deleted scenes.

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    There’s no denying that Ice Pirates (Warner Bros., Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$21.99 SRP) is an awful, awful film. But it’s awful in that great, pure cheese cult fashion that makes watching it an enjoyable journey into ersatz mediocrity. I mean, this is a film that actually cast Bruce Vilanch in an onscreen role. Ridiculous.

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    Diamond Select has put out a lot of great figures over the years, mainly through their Marvel license, but they’ve recently picked up the license to produce 6″-scale figures from the original Ghostbusters (Diamond Select, $24.99 SRP each). And boy, have they been going to town. With at least 15 figures planned in the line, we’ve already seen the release of Peter, Egon, Ray, and Winston, as well Keymaster Louis and Gatekeeper Dana. What’s even more impressive about their plans is that each figure comes with a piece of what can eventually be constructed into a massive set piece of the rooftop temple from the film’s finale. Add to that copious amounts of accessories and attention to detail, including the sculpts, and you’ve got a line that begs to be completed.

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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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  • Weekend Shopping Guide 11/13/15: Inside Force

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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…)

    While there are certainly flashier characters from the original trilogy, like Darth Vader or Boba Fett, the true mark of just how impressive Hot Toys’ handling of the Star Wars license is turning out to be is their eerily pitch-perfect take on Obi-Wan Kenobi (Sideshow/Hot Toys, $219.99). From the perfect likeness of Sir Alec Guinness to the expertly tailored Jedi robes, this is the definitive 1/6-scale version of the venerable master. And because we’re gluttons for more, there’s no need to be content with just the figure itself, because they’ve plussed it with a swappable right arm that includes an in-built LED lightsaber that turns your display up to 11.

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    Pixar. Listen. Why do you want to make me cry? You’re absolutely brutal with the feels, and you know exactly what buttons to push. And you push them all with Inside Out (Walt Disney, Rated PG, 3D Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP). From happy to sad and all the emotions in-between, which is rather fitting, as that’s what this film is all about, showing the interior emotional workings of 11-year-old Riley. And I’m not going to spoil any more of it, because if you haven’t seen it already, you should. Bonus materials include the Lava short, the brand new Riley’s First Date short, featurettes, and more.

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    As a new Pixar film hits theaters, that also means we get a brand new tome chronicling the artistic journey from concept to final picture with The Art Of The Good Dinosaur (Chronicle Books, $40 SRP), featuring loads of artwork and insight. And, in a first, a companion book has been crafted for the short subject that runs before the movie with The Art Of Sanjay’s Super Team (Chronicle Books, $24.95 SRP).

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    And because we’re not quite done with Pixar yet, they’ve helped to craft the perfect gift for budding filmmakers eager to have a journal in which to chart the progress of their own creative project’s journey with The Animator’s Sketchbook (Chronicle Books, $18.95 SRP), which contains discrete sections on Concept, Story, Color Script, Characters, and Worlds with plenty of room to doodle and design with helpful words of encouragement and visuals for inspiration along the way.

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    I’ll admit, I got swept up in the emotional wave of celebrating October 21, 2015 – the “future” date Marty and Doc (and Einstein & Jennifer) traveled to in order to do something about Marty & Jennifer’s kids. So, yes, bring on a brand new Back To The Future: 30th Anniversary Trilogy box set (Universal, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$49.98 SRP), which supplements all of the bonus materials from the last release with a brand new bonus disc featuring a Doc Brown short, a documentary on the restoration of the original DeLorean, 2015 commercials for Jaws 19 and hoverboards, and more.

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    The now-yearly specials are certainly building anticipation for a new feature-length adventure while managing to be fun-filled romps in their own right, and that’s certainly what last year’s Toy Story That Time Forgot (Walt Disney, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$14.99 SRP) is, as out heroes are deposited into an 80s action toy world full of delusional peril. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, the animated opening for the fictional cartoon Battlesaurs, featurettes, a karaoke video, deleted scenes, and more.

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    Whenever a new home theater technology arrives on the scene, there comes a home video release of a beloved property that’s meant to be the perfect showcase for said technology. With Dolby’s new Atmos sound technology, designed to make the viewer feel sonically immersed in the world they’re watching, the first television series to embrace it is HBO’s flagship show, Game Of Thrones. So what does that mean? That means we get brand new Atmos versions of Game Of Thrones: The Complete First Season and Game Of Thrones: The Complete Second Season (HBO, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$79.99 SRP each), packaged in lovely new steelbook cases featuring magnetic house sigils for the Starks and the Lannisters. Bonus features carry over from the previous releases.

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    While it seems this is the millionth release of the film on various media, you know in your heart of hearts that you’ll be purchasing Monty Python & The Holy Grail: 40th Anniversary Edition (Sony, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$19.99 SRP) because you have always, and will always, purchase another edition of this film whenever the design to lob another one at fans. Which is often. And you know it’s true, and you know they know it. So buck up, and fork over the cash for this new edition, which includes all of the bonus features from the last edition, plus an all-new 30-minute Q&A with the Pythons who aren’t yet dead, hosted by John Oliver.

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    You have a lot of gadgets, gear, and gizmos to be carting around with you as cold descends on the land, so why not face the elements with all of your stuff safely stowed about your person with the SCOTTeVEST Hoodie Microfleece (Thinkgeek, $44.99), a hoodie which packs 10 pockets and a whole lot of warmth.

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    As someone who owns the vintage Making Ghostbusters, which explored the production of the original film, I was waiting for the day when someone would come along and offer up an updated and expanded look at the creation of the franchise as a whole, incorporating both films, the animated series, comics, video games, and more. Ghostbusters: The Ultimate Visual History (Insight Editions, $50 SRP) does just that, while also being one of those books that incorporated reproductions of actual ephemera, including Gozer temple plans, the Ghostbusters’ business card, VFX notes, a Stay-Puft Marshmallows sticker, and much more.

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    You’d think there’d few variations left to mine in going meta on the slasher flick genre, but The Final Girls (Sony, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$30.99 SRP) manages to do it with a wink and heart, as a group of teen friends are mysteriously transported into an 80s cult film, Camp Bloodbath, that starred the late mother of one of the kids. Once inside the film, they must try and survive all of the tropes. Bonus materials include an audio commentaries, alternate endings, deleted scenes, featurettes, and more.

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    Yeah, well, don’t try and make sense of the Terminator timeline. By the time we’ve reached Terminator: Genisys (Paramount, Rated PG-13, 3D Blu-Ray-$52.99 SRP), the continuity is just a confusing mess of who did what when and for why and how does that huh whatever. So, really, the way to approach the return of an elder Arnold Schwarzenegger to one of his most iconic roles is just to take it at face value and ask, “Is it an enjoyable flick on its own merits?” And it mostly is. In an odd, kitchen sink kind of way. But, that’s fine. Just don’t try to make too much sense of it all. Bonus materials include a batch of behind-the-scenes featurettes.

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    There are a lot of elaborate hoo-has on what is ultimately a straightforward straight shooter, which is ultimately the strength of Nerf’s N-Strike SharpFire Blaster (Nerf, $15.99 SRP) – it’s a Nerf dart pistol that shoots pretty darn accurately. And, when you’re locked in heated backyard conflict, sometimes that’s just what you need.

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    Oh, Jurassic World (Universal, Rated PG-13, 3D Blu-Ray-$49.98 SRP). You are such a goofball of excess. While Jurassic Park took the premise of resurrected dinosaurs somewhat seriously, World decides to go full meta B-movie with the whole affair, in the age of Sharknado. I mean, Chris Pratt has a raptor gang. Which is not to say this isn’t all enjoyable. It’s just that it’s pure popcorn, b-movie enjoyable. Bonus materials include deleted scenes and featurettes.

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    Didier Ghez is a brilliant illuminator of the often unexplored corners of the art and artists behind the Disney films, and he’s brought that the unique and wonderful skill to They Drew As They Pleased: The Hidden Art Of Disney’s Golden Age (Chronicle Books, $40 SRP), which explores the works of a quartet of Disney’s first concept artists as the company’s horizons broadened rapidly in the 1930s.

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    PBS’s In Their Own Words is a unique spin on the biodoc format, which as the title suggests relies heavily upon quotes from the subjects themselves to guide the narrative, through archive footage and extensive interviews with intimates. Give a trio of cultural luminaries a spin, with episodes focusing on Queen Elizabeth II, Muhammad Ali, and Jim Henson (PBS, Not Rated, DVD-$24.99 SRP each).

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    I suppose every comic actor should get their chance to stumble into a redeeming dramatic part, and Jason Segel gets his portraying author David Foster Wallace in The End Of The Tour (Lionsgate, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$24.99 SRP), about a road trip during which he’s interviewed by journalist David Lipsky (Jesse Eisenberg). Bonus materials include an audio commentary, deleted scenes, interviews, and featurettes.

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    It got a disastrous blink-and-you-missed-it theatrical release, which is a shame, because Aardman’s Shaun The Sheep Movie (Lionsgate, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$34.99 SRP) is a lovely, delightful little kid’s film that doesn’t feel like a kid’s film. It’s brill. Bonus materials include a flock of featurettes and more.

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    Sadly, it was our enjoyment of bombastic action flicks like Bad Boys 1 & II (Sony, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$26.99 SRP) that fueled the power and enduring pap of Michael Bay, as the seemingly innocuous purveyor of popcorn became the mad blowhard of endless awful pop culture bastardizations. But these two relics of a more innocent age are now packaged together in a 20th anniversary edition, loaded bonus features.

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    There’s nothing like the restoration of a pair of kitschy old-school genre films to make a cinephile go all warm and fuzzy, which is exactly the internal reaction generated by the restoration of the Vincent Price & Agnes Morehead thriller The Bat and Roger Corman’s A Bucket Of Blood (The Film Detective, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$14.99 SRP each).

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    Back when a pair of ideological rivals could have intellectual bareknuckle debates on the airwaves, the two greatest heavyweights were William F. Buckley and Gore Vidal. However intellectual it was, though, their verbal sparring, which began during ABC’s coverage of the 1968 Democratic and Republican Conventions, definitely laid the groundwork for the uncivil cesspit of television discourse we have today. To see exactly what I’m on about, check out the excellent documentary Best Of Enemies: Buckley Vs. Vidal (Magnolia, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$29.98 SRP).

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    I would probably have not given a tie-in book to the show Vikings the time of day if I hadn’t discovered it was written by author, historian, and all-around great bloke Justin Pollard, which automatically elevated The World Of Vikings (Chronicle Books, $35 SRP) into a book worth checking out, as it deftly weaves the historical truth behind the drama into its background on the production.

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    Very few sitcoms have gotten the high definition treatment, and particularly not one that goes back over 10 years, but now you can snag That 70s Show: The Complete Series (Mill Creek, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$149.98 SRP) looks pretty darn good, even more so because it’s presented in anamorphic widescreen. Certainly worth checking out, , as it’s also loaded with bonus materials, including new-to-Blu-Ray featurettes, in addition to the materials from the original DVD releases. Groovy.

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    A powerful look at an all-too-brief life, Matt Shepard Is A Friend Of Mine (Virgil Films, Not Rated, DVD-$19.99 SRP) is a documentary that revisits the events of the tragic hate crime that took his life, but more importantly uses photos and rare footage to celebrate his life.

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    Starting in a small Pudding Lane bakery and eventually engulfing the city of London, the disastrous events beginning September 2, 1666 are dramatized in The Great Fire (PBS, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$34.99 SRP), a star-studded affair that brings the events to life, from the actions and reactions of the common man right up to King Charles II.

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    The main problem with the modern quasi-sequel Vacation (Warner Bros., Rated R, Blu-Ray-$44.95 SRP) is that it has a mighty big family truckster to fill, and never quite manages to make enough of an impression that you’re not constantly thinking back fondly on the original, when Chevy Chase was at the height of his power and all of the creative powers behind the scenes were pure brilliance. So, yeah, while this is an affable trip down holiday road with Rusty Griswold and family, it just further reinforces how remarkable the original was. Bonus materials include featurettes, deleted scenes, and a gag reel.

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    Listen to a rocking set as Martha Davis & The Motels celebrate the legendary LA club’s 50th anniversary with The Motels Live At The Whiskey A Go Go (Vesuvio, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$29.98 SRP), featuring almost 20 tunes plus a clutch of bonus features.

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    SwaySway and Buhdeuce fly their rocket van from their Nickelodeon animated series into brand new comic book adventures in Breadwinners #1: Journey to the Bottom of the Seats (Papercutz, $7.99 SRP), which is just as bonkers as the show itself.

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    This weekend’s turn off your brain and hop on the rollercoaster low-budget action flick is Operator (Alchemy, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$24.99 SRP), as a city devolves into chaos, sparked by the kidnapping of a 911 operator’s daughter and estranged police officer husband. And it also has Ving Rhames in it. Because Ving Rhames.

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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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  • Weekend Shopping Guide 9/19/14: Who Ya Gonna Call?

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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…)

    The 4k restoration done for its 30th anniversary has done wonders for Ghostbusters (Sony, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$19.99 SRP), as it looks absolutely stunning in its remastered form. They’ve also managed to serve up a handful of additional bonus features for this release, like a roundtable discussion with director Ivan Reitman and star/co-writer Dan Aykroyd, alternate takes, plus the greatest treat of all that fans have been begging ages for – Ray Parker Jr.’s music video. And, making its Blu-Ray debut, they’ve also remastered the lackluster Ghostbusters 2 (Sony, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$19.99 SRP). Considering its original DVD release was bare bones, all of the bonus features are new, including another roundtable discussion with Reitman and Aykroyd, Bobby Brown’s “On Our Own” music video, and deleted scenes.

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    Of all Disney’s famous group of legendary animators, the one whose works crosses the most disciplines is the one spotlighted in the excellent new Marc Davis: Walt Disney’s Renaissance Man (Disney Editions, $40.00 SRP). From animating Cruella De Vil and Maleficent to designing theme park rides like Pirates Of The Caribbean and The Haunted Mansion, he was a true original deserving of this must-read book.

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    I’m a big fan of ephemera books that pull together facsimiles of rare materials into beautiful tomes celebrating a given subject, so it should come as no surprise that I really dig Hergé And The Treasures Of Tintin (Sterling, $49.95), which does just that for Hergé’s famous adventuring reporter, with more than 20 removable artworks, sketches, and memorabilia from his archives.

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    I can’t recall a time when Disney opened up the vault and unleashed such a title wave of catalogue titles as they have this week, but animation and just good ol’ Disney fans should be delighted by the deluge, seeing as how it contains beautifully restored high definition editions of The Adventures Of Ichabod & Mr. Toad paired with Fun & Fancy Free (Walt Disney, Rated G, Blu-Ray-$36.99 SRP), Hercules (Walt Disney, Rated G, Blu-Ray-$22.99 SRP), Tarzan (Walt Disney, Rated G, Blu-Ray-$29.99 SRP), Bedknobs & Broomsticks (Walt Disney, Rated G, Blu-Ray-$29.99 SRP), and Mickey, Donald, & Goofy in The Three Musketeers (Walt Disney, Rated G, Blu-Ray-$29.99 SRP). Bonus materials are a close approximation of their original DVD releases, with the only disappointment that Bedknobs & Broomsticks does not present the longer cut of the film in a seamless branching option as the original DVD did, instead relegating all of the excised material to a deleted scenes section. A shame, really, because that longer cut, approximating as best as possible the original roadshow version, is much better than the butchered theatrical cut. But still, everything looks snazzy, and the release of Fun & Fancy Free makes me hopeful we’ll get unaltered versions of the other package films, Melody Time and Make Mine Music, restored to their original form rather than the PC alteration undertaken for their original DVD editions.

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    It’s never too early for Halloween viewing, so make a double feature out of the high definition release of The Adventures Of Ichabod & Mr. Toad with the home video debut of last year’s Pixar special Toy Story Of Terror! (Walt Disney, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$14.99 SRP), as the gang wind up in a spooky roadside motel on a dark & stormy night. The disc also sports a trio of Toy Story Toons, plus an audio commentary, vintage commercials, deleted scenes, and a featurette.

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    Why does Shout Factory remain a fan favorite? Because they consistently cater to fans with wonderful, brilliantly presented, quirky collections like The Marx Brothers On TV (Shout Factory, Not Rated, DVD-$39.97 SRP), which collects over 10 hours worth of rare and obscure television appearances made by the brothers Marx over the years – over 50 in all, from The Jack Benny Show to The Red Skelton Hour and so, so much more.

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    If you’re anything like me (and don’t you wish you were!), then you’re looking for just about anything to reaffirm your faith in all things good and strike from your noggin the horrible vision of Michael Bay’s steroidal Ninja Turtles monstrosity. Guess what? You can do just that with the deluxe coffee-table appropriate Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Ultimate Visual History (Insight Editions, $50.00 SRP). This lavish hardcover tome explores the 30-year history of the halfshell heroes, from their indie comics origins to their toy and animation legacy via copious amounts of artwork and context.

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    And speaking of context, you can get even more of an insight into the Turtles’ history with the brand new documentary Turtle Power: The Definitive History Of The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (Paramount, Rated PG, DVD-$29.98 SRP), which provides a feature-length look at the alchemy between creators Peter Laird and Kevin Eastman and the franchise they wrought, still going strong over 3 decades later.

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    While it is far, far, FAR from the Emmerich/Devlin disaster of the 90s,, the chief factor that makes the newest American take on Toho’s giant lizard a profound disappointment is the decided lack of Godzilla in Godzilla (Warner Bros., Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$35.99 SRP). The big guy is barely in it. “But hey!”, you say, “I saw Bryan Cranston in the trailers! At least we get him to fall back on! He’s great!” Yeah, well, he’s barely there, too. Why tease so much greatness and not deliver? That’s a question you’ll be asking yourself after you’ve seen this. A shame, really. A Godzilla-sized shame. Bonus materials include a clutch of featurettes, and more.

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    If the recent big screen relaunch has whet your appetite to binge on some more classic thunder lizard action, look no further than the high-def debut of not one, not two, but 6 more classic Godzilla films in The Toho Godzilla Collection. Fully remastered, the films include Godzilla, Mothra & King Ghidorah: Giant Monsters All-Out Attack/Godzilla Against Mechagodzilla Re-Birth Of Mothra I/Re-Birth Of Mothra II/Re-Birth Of Mothra III, and Godzilla 2000 (Sony, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$19.99 SRP each). Bonus materials include Commentaries, featurettes and original trailers.

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    Criterion’s banner year for high definition releases with a pair of much-requested, much-anticipated titles – David Lynch’s Eraserhead (Criterion, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$39.95 SRP) and Alfonso Cuaron’s Y Tu Mama Tambien (Criterion, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$39.95 SRP). Both remasters are as spiffy as you would hope, while bonus features for Eraserhead include high definition remasters of 6 Lynch short films, a vintage documentary, a newly produced documentary, archival interviews, and a trailer. Y Tu Mama Tambien contains a pair of new making-of featurettes, an on-set documentary from 2001m an interview on the social and political aspects of the film, deleted scenes, trailers, and a short film.

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    We may still be months and months from the premiere of the final season in 2015, but you can pass the time with the feature-laden sixth season of Parks And Recreation (Universal, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP), which sports deleted scenes, a clutch of featurettes, a music video, the T-Dazzle commercial, a gag reel, and more.

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    Made a few years back but just now getting its home video debut, William Shatner’s Get A Life (E1, Not Rated, DVD-$19.98 SRP) is essentially Shatner’s good-natured dive into the wild and wooly world of fandom, with all of the equally good-natured awkwardness you’d expect. Bonus materials include a sizzle reel, additional interviews, and more.

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    Ignore the profoundly disappointing first 3/4 of the season when so much potential was left on the table in favor of an inert mess and fast forward to when Agents of SHIELD (ABC Studios, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$79.99 SRP) actually started to exhibit signs of the show we were all hoping for, when the events of Captain America: The Winter Soldier filtered in during the engaging last 1/4 of the season. Now, we can only hope that the showrunnuer shave learned their lesson and deliver more of that as we enter season 2. Bonus materials on the 5-disc set include audio commentaries, featurettes, deleted scenes, and bloopers.

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    Thankfully, the Warner Archive continues to offer high definition Blu-Ray releases of their animated series, with the release of Batman: The Brave And The Bold – Season 2 (Warner Bros., Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$29.99), featuring guest stars including Firestorm, Batgirl, and even Plastic Man.

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    For more years than I can recall, the amiable scholars at Twomorrows have been publishing a wide range of magazine and books chronicling every nook and cranny of the comics, creators, characters, and companies fans know and love. They took that love and scholarly approach to the next logical step when they launched their must-have document of four-color history in the American Comic Book Chronicles (Twomorrows, $41.95 SRP), which will eventually chart from 1940 to today. The latest volume, The 1970’s: 1970-1979, looks at the maturation of the Silver Age, as Marvel Comics became the forerunner and DC suffered its mighty implosion, all while the underground scene bubbled. Get this book, then start setting aside shelf space for the rest – which can’t come fast enough.

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    Speaking of Twomorrows and their comics scholarship, they’ve just released Don Heck: A Work Of Art (Twomorrows, $39.95 SRP), celebrating the 40-year career of the well-respected artist’s artist and co-creator of Iron Man, Hawkeye, and Black Widow during his long tenure at Marvel Comics before he moved over to DC in the late 70s, tackling the Teen Titans, The Flash, and more.

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    By all means, watch all of the episodes featured on the new Midnight Special box set (TimeLife. Not Rated, DVD-$59.95 SRP) for all of the incredible music feature on NBC’s vintage rock program – and there’s certainly a lot to be found n the 6-disc set. But personally, I’ll be watching it for host Wolfman Jack. Because how can you not watch the great Wolfman Jack? Bonus materials include a clutch of featurettes.

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    Carrie Brownstein & Fred Armisen’s Portlandia (VSC, Not Rated, DVD-$19.95 SRP) just gets weirder and quirkier in the most endearing fashion, as the bizarre little fourth season show in spades with the celery salesman. ‘Nuff said.

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    It’s remarkable just how fast DC seems to churn out their animated comics adaptations when their live action films seem to take forever and a day. The latest toon is Batman: Assault On Arkham (Warner Bros., Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$24.98 SRP), which finds the Suicide Squad (Harley Quinn, Captain Boomerang, Deadshot, King Shark, & Black Spider) sent into the legendary cesspit to retrieve a piece of evidence after the Dark Knight foils a Riddler plot. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, a featurette, and a sneak peek at Justice League: Throne Of Atlantis.

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    The oasis of normality Rick and the survivors established at the prison is threatened by more than just zombies in The Walking Dead: Season Four (Anchor Bay, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$79.99 SRP), as our group faces threats from both outside the walls and within, including an ultimate confrontation with the Governor. Bonus materials include audio commentaries, deleted scenes, featurettes, and a trio of extended episodes. Also available is a Walking Dead: Season 4 Limited Edition set (Anchor Bay, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$129.99 SRP), which comes packed with an exclusive “Tree Walker” statue.

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    After three seasons of increasing battiness, Once Upon A Time (ABC Studios, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$79.99 SRP) has completed its transformation into a bona fide cheesy guilty pleasure that makes very little sense and exists mainly to dump Disney fairytale IPs into willy nilly. And I’m fine with that. Really, it’s only a matter of time until David Spade shows up as Kuzco. You know I’m right. Bonus materials audio commentaries, deleted scenes, featurettes, a gag reel, and a look inside the writer’s room.

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    They’re not quite up to the level of what we see from the BBC, but Disney’s nature documentaries are quite fine in their own right, owing more to the narrative-based tradition the studio pioneered in their “True Life Adventures” series. The latest is Disneynature: Bears (Walt Disney, Rated G, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP), spotlighting a year in the ursine life of a bear family. Bonus materials include a quartet of featurettes and a music video.

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    The residents of Bikini Bottom indulge in ghoulish delights in the Spongebob Squarepants: Spongebob Scarypants Collection (Nickelodeon, Not Rated, DVD-$14.98 SRP), featuring two classic holiday-themed releases, Ghouls Fools & Halloween!.

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    Shout Factory further solidifies their position as the number one purveyor of classic TV shows with another of their lovingly presented complete series sets, this time for the 70s favorite Welcome Back, Kotter (Shout Factory, Not Rated, DVD-$129.99 SRP). The 16-disc set contains all 95 episodes, plus a retrospective featurette and the actors’ original screen tests.

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    Those infuriated by Paramount’s scattershot approach to divvying up bonus features as retailer exclusives for their original release of Star Trek Into Darkness finally have the chance to get all of those bonus features in one place, but only if they buy the film packaged with the first JJ Abrams Trek in the 4-disc Star Trek: The Compendium (Paramount, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$44.99 SRP), which contains the 2-D versions of both flicks. The bonus features from the first film are all from the original deluxe release, while Darkness contains 20 previously scattered featurettes, 2 all-new featurettes, an audio commentary, deleted scenes, trailers, and a gag reel.

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    Sigh. I so, so wanted Muppets Most Wanted (Walt Disney, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP) to be a home run. Especially after the mediocre wrongheaded fanfic that was The Muppets, I wanted these characters to be returned to the quality of the The Muppet Movie and The Great Muppet Caper, the latter of which this film tries desperately to ape. Sadly, they continue to just not get what made the Muppets so appealing, from the likeable goofy wink and a nudge writing to the absolutely genuine emotion, to the fact that celebrity cameos were fun asides, not a game how many can we cram in a film willy nilly. So just sigh. And double sigh. Bonus materials include a much-funnier-than-the-film gag reel, an extended cut of the film, a Statler & Waldorf cut of the film, a Rizzo featurette, and a Bret McKenzie music video.

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    The BBC has opened up its vaults to commemorate the anniversary of WWI with a handful for dramas set around the Great War, most of which are making their DVD debut. Now available are Daniel Radcliffe as Rudyard Kipling’s doomed offspring in My Boy Jack (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$19.98 SRP), the story of the period leading up to the War in 37 Days (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$20.98 SRP), the involvement of the future prime minister in Churchill’s First World War (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$20.98 SRP), a documentary about the interwoven royal houses of Europe pitted against each other in Royal Cousins At War (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$20.98 SRP), and wrapping up with a collection of dramatizations that bring first hand accounts of the war to life in 14 War Stories (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$34.98 SRP).

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    Continue to get your Brit on with a clutch of new BBC releases, including the first season of Father Brown (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP), based on the sleuthing priest stories of G.K. Chesterton and starring Mark Williams, and the second seasons of DCI Banks (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$34.98 SRP), Scott And Bailey (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$34.98 SRP), and Death In Paradise (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$34.98 SRP).

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    It’s a light bit of fluff, but the only reason Think Like A Man Too (Sony, Rated Pg-13, Blu-Ray-$35.99 SRP) exists is because of the infectious comedic energy of star Kevin Hart. Outside of that, it may as well be a warmed-over Hangover, as the gang from the first film reunite for a wedding in Vegas. Bonus materials include featurettes, deleted scenes, and a gag reel.

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    Emily Thorne’s plan for vengeance against the Graysons take a new bent in the third season of Revenge (ABC Studios, Not Rated, DVD-$45.99 SRP), as her war with Victoria escalates to vicious levels. The 5-disc set contains all 22 episodes, plus an audio commentary, featurette, deleted scenes, and bloopers.

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    Patrice Chereau’s cinematic adaptation of Alexandre Dumas’s novel Queen Margot (Cohen, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$39.98 SRP) arrives in high definition courtesy of a new 20th anniversary special edition, featuring an audio commentary, re-release trailer, and a collectible booklet.

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    It tries very hard to recapture some of the affable nature of The Wedding Singer and 50 First Dates, but the re-team of Drew Barrymore and Adam Sandler in Blended (Warner Bros., Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$35.99 SRP), starring the pair as single parents whose families are forced together when both book the same trip to Africa, never seems to have much spark to it. Bonus materials include featurettes, deleted scenes, and a gag reel.

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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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  • FROM THE VAULT: Harold Ramis Interviews

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    Conducted ~5/2004 / ~11/2005

    Animal House. SCTV. Stripes. Ghostbusters. National Lampoon’s Vacation. Groundhog Day. Ghostbusters.

    Whether as an actor, writer, or director, Harold Ramis was a comedy legend.

    I’ve known for a while now that Ramis was seriously ill and would soon be leaving us, but his loss is still a terrible blow, not only for the absence of his keen comedy mind, but also because he was a genuinely decent guy in an industry where such a thing is a decided rarity.

    Over the years, I only had the chance to chat with Ramis on two all-too-brief occasions.

    The first was in conjunction with the DVD release of Analyze That – the sequel to his hit Analyze This.

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    KEN PLUME: You’ve been involved in quite a few successful films as a director…

    HAROLD RAMIS: Yes.

    PLUME: But you’ve tended to avoid doing sequels when those films went on, such as with Caddyshack and Vacation

    RAMIS: Yeah…

    PLUME: So what led to the decision to finally direct a sequel?

    RAMIS: Well, I think with these characters the subject is so rich. I think with both Caddyshack – and I was involved a little bit in the early writing of the Caddyshack sequel – but with both Caddyshack and Vacation, it’s not like the subjects were serious enough that they engaged my interest for another round. I love the characters, and the actors were great, but I didn’t see the need to make another Vacation movie. But here, you have the world of psychology and these characters were so rich, and we really left their story, I felt, at the end of Chapter One – we left with De Niro saying he was quitting the mob – and it seemed like a natural springboard for, “Well, gee… Then what does he do? If he leaves the mob, what kind of life does this guy lead?”

    PLUME: What reservations do you normally have when approaching something like a sequel? Because you’ve been involved on both sides, as a director and as an actor…

    RAMIS: Yeah, I acted in the Ghostbusters sequel, obviously, and wrote that one with Akyroyd. I think we kind of faced it on the Ghostbusters sequel, too – is how do you give the audience enough of what they liked the first time without just slavishly repeating what worked. I remember when we were writing the Ghostbusters sequel, I said to Ivan Reitman – thinking of the Marshmallow Man at the end of the first movie – I said, “Does something have to get big at the end of this?” And he said, “No, no, no, no, no… We don’t have to repeat that.” The longer we worked on the script, finally Ivan said, “Yeah, I think something should get really big.” So there’s that tendency – “Boy that joke worked so well in the original”, you think to yourself. Is there a way to have De Niro shoot a pillow, or do something that he did in the first one that really worked… The challenge really is to remain true to the characters, remain true to the situations that we’re setting up, and then find new jokes that are just as good – that seem equally honest, but try to be fresh.

    PLUME: Were there any lessons that you learned on Ghostbusters II that you applied to Analyze That?

    RAMIS: Uhhh…. Well, we should have had something get big at the end of it. Cathy Moriarty…

    PLUME: Three stories high, it would have been the perfect capper…

    RAMIS: True. Well, you know, it’s true, actually – we have a big action climax to this movie. It turns out to be a ruse – a decoy. It’s like the old rule – if you introduce a gun into the first act of a play, it’s going to be used in the third act. So if you do a movie about criminals, you have to accept there’s going to be a big crime. There’s going to be some gunplay. Some action, if not true violence.

    PLUME: When you’re planning out your course of attack on a given project, how do you gauge the X factor of audience reaction?

    RAMIS: You really can’t. You just can’t. You don’t have the audience. You have your own taste and judgement, you have the people around you, you have great actors with real taste and intelligence – but what you don’t have is the audience. First and foremost, you have to make the movie for yourself. And that’s not to say “To hell with everyone else”, but what else have you got to go on but your own taste and judgement? Then you realize, “Well, that’s why they hired me – because they like my taste and judgement.”

    PLUME: In what areas does the audience reaction tend to surprise you the most?

    RAMIS: Sometimes it’s not surprising at all – you have what you know to be a great joke or a great moment, a great situation. You just make sure you don’t screw it up. It’s going to work as long as you don’t mess it up. Hopefully you have plenty of those moments in a big comedy. Then there’s always things we call “mystery laughs” – where the audience laughs really hard at something you didn’t think they’d get, or that you didn’t even know was funny. There’s just something about it. There’s always a couple of those… I can’t remember what they are in this particular movie. I also had a great comedian in Billy Crystal, who knows how to make people laugh. He’s got 30 years on stage… there’s no telling him what’s funny. It comes down to good, healthy, mature collaborations.

    PLUME: I know this is often a contentious issue for many directors, but how important to you is the preview process?

    RAMIS: Oh, very important. For better or worse, that’s the audience, you know? You tell the studio what audience you want recruited, and they recruit half men/half women from 18-40. If they don’t like it, you get another audience. If they don’t like it, you get another one. And if the third one doesn’t like it – as someone once said, “If six Russians tell you you’re drunk, you’d better lie down.”

    PLUME: And then open in France.

    RAMIS: Well, yeah. As much as we’d like to believe that our work is great and that we’re infallible, we’re not. Hollywood movies are made for the audience. These are not small European art films we’re making.

    PLUME: Which of your films would you say was shaped the most by the testing, or post, process?

    RAMIS: The movie Vacation had a whole different ending. They never even got to the amusement park, Wallyworld, at the end of Vacation. The last almost like 20 minutes of the film was entirely different – and bombed so badly that the audience was laughing for 80 minutes and then just stopped cold.

    PLUME: What was the original ending?

    RAMIS: It was the original ending of John Hughes’s short story. They find the amusement park closed, and they practically killed themselves getting there, so he buys a pellet gun – which we kept – and then he goes to the home of Roy Wally, the Walt Disney character, takes him hostage along with several of his executives, and makes the Walt Disney character perform for him. “I want my dime’s worth of entertainment.” And it just was lame… it fell really flat.

    PLUME: So it just wasn’t the Marshmallow Man…

    RAMIS: No, no… it was nothin’! It was really disappointing.

    PLUME: This begs the question – will we see this ending on the upcoming special edition DVD?

    RAMIS: That ending? I hope you’ll never see that ending! It forced me to sit back and look at the film and think, “Well, why did they hate it so much?” Well, it wasn’t that funny. I thought, beyond that, the next question is, “What do we do about it?” So the studio said, “You shoot something.” So do you go back and reshoot what you had and try and make it better, or is there some conceptual flaw? In that case, I thought, “People have waited the whole movie to get to Wallyworld, and we’re going with the joke of frustration. Alright – we’re telling the audience, ‘Well, you waited the whole movie for it – you’re not going to get it.’ ” And I thought, “Oh, that’s wrong. That’s really wrong…”

    PLUME: “We really shouldn’t slap them like this…”

    RAMIS: That’s like telling the kids, “Kids, by the way, we’re not going to Disneyworld.” So I said, “Well, what if he hijacks the park?” You know, instead of hijacking the Disney character. Much better.

    PLUME: So if it weren’t for that testing process…

    RAMIS: We wouldn’t have found that out, no. In the movie Bedazzled, we had a sequence that audiences were really not liking…

    PLUME: Was this the “Rock Star” sequence?

    RAMIS: Yeah…. It really made them uncomfortable.

    PLUME: Even watching it on DVD, it made me uncomfortable.

    RAMIS: Yeah, it’s raw. It’s really out there. Brendan loved it. It was some of his favorite work… I mean, he really enjoyed doing it, but the audience did not want to get in touch with his dark side. And they told me that very clearly. And we went and shot the Abe Lincoln sequence.

    PLUME: Speaking of Bedazzled, what are your thoughts on the influence of the internet on the filmmaking process?

    RAMIS: I didn’t read anything on the internet. The print critics were, like, really nasty. Nasty in a way that didn’t seem to me related to the movie. In this case, we were tremendously encouraged by the testing of Analyze That. Audiences loved it. They were telling us that they liked it as much as the original and – in many cases – better than the original. The numbers were great… as good as any comedy that I’ve ever worked on. And even anecdotally, we recorded the laughs in the theater. They were huge laughs, and they were consistent through the whole picture. So we went into the opening process thinking, “Boy, people are going to love this movie.” And then the critics – it felt to me that they weren’t reviewing the movie, they were reviewing the showbusiness aspects of the film… what De Niro got. Whenever a critic mentions the salary of an actor, I’m thinking, “He’s not talking about the movie.”

    PLUME: And then they pull out the “Sequels Stink!” boilerplate…

    RAMIS: Oh yeah! I thought, “this is not a fair shake for this movie.” It seems to me they’re working off some kind of residual resentment – either they’re tired of Bob doing comedy… Maybe there’s some kind of puritanical streak in the critics where they just want him to go back to being the distinguished American actor that they’ve put on a high pedestal.

    PLUME: Or they’re exorcising leftover pain from Rocky and Bullwinkle

    RAMIS: Yeah – that it was cute the first time he did a comedy and, okay, it was cute the second time, but enough. Let’s get him back into Travis Bickle mode.

    PLUME: Before he becomes Leslie Nielsen…

    RAMIS: Yeah. So I though there was a fundamental disrespect in that aspect of the reviews.

    PLUME: Which affected the box office?

    RAMIS: Well, I think the critics hurt us, and the box office was kind of lackluster. There was kind of a doldrum period in there, and it wasn’t until after the movie opened that the studio told me that, traditionally, that was one of the worst weekends in movie history. That that’s traditionally an awful weekend. Truthfully, I think I’m still gun-shy about the marketing process in general. I don’t want to know too much about it. But even prior to the reviews, we weren’t tracking that well. The tracking was telling us that people had reservations about going to the sequel, or that they were more interested in other movies that were coming out around the same time.

    PLUME: Just a confluence of bad events…

    RAMIS: Yeah… and I’ve seen that kind of train wreck before. Multiplicity was a movie that tested really well. People seeing the movie really liked it, but then the studio couldn’t market it. We opened on a weekend with nine other films. We never tracked better than the Shaquille O’Neal movie Kazaam.

    PLUME: A bit of a black mark on the career there…

    RAMIS: I know! But, you know, you’re tracking along with Kazaam – it’s not a comment on the work, it’s a comment on the marketplace.

    PLUME: But now, with the afterlife of DVD…

    RAMIS: That’s the good news, is that people who I think shied away or were skeptical of the sequel, but liked Analyze This, I think now will get a chance to see that this is, indeed, a really good sequel, and really worth it.

    PLUME: So what’s next up on your plate?

    RAMIS: I’m looking for something that I care about, you know?

    PLUME: So it’ll be Ghostbusters 3

    RAMIS: Oh yeah! But I never work just to work. It’s some combination of laziness and self-respect.

    PLUME: Is there any one project that you’ve personally wanted to get off the ground?

    RAMIS: Actually, there’s a personal story of my own that I will write at some point, and it’s a film that I will happily make. It could very well be the next thing I do, unless someone shows me something great. It’s a personal story of a time in my life, in 1967, and it’ll be funny and poignant, and really good.

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    I also had a chance to chat with him about his film The Ice Harvest, a darkly comedic noir starring John Cusack as a mob lawyer who rips of his boss (Randy Quaid) with the aid of Billy Bob Thornton – which means they’ve got to get out of town, fast. Unfortunately, an ice storm hits – making for a complicated night, to say the least.

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    KEN PLUME: It’s interesting to note the reaction that Ice Harvest is getting…

    HAROLD RAMIS: I haven’t read any… I’ve only read one rave review – and that’s how I’m keeping it!

    PLUME: It’s seems that people are surprised by how dark the film is…

    RAMIS: I’ve been hearing that a lot, yeah…

    PLUME: But looking back over the films you’ve done, there’s always been an edge to the comedy…

    RAMIS: Yeah, well, for me, the best comedy – if it doesn’t have an edge, then it’s not for me. I see a lot of sweet, family comedy out there, and I’m not going. I’m not interested. Life is interesting *because* it’s light and dark, you know?

    PLUME: Do you think that, in some ways, people misunderstand the films you’ve done in the past, in treating the tone of Ice Harvest as a surprise?

    RAMIS: Well, the most extreme example is there are people who saw Groundhog Day and immediately recognized what the movie was about – that it was kind of a very thoughtful exploration of the meaning of life, in a certain way. And there’s no answers for this, but it was a thoughtful film. But there were others who came away, having just enjoyed it as a comedy, and then several days later came up to me and said, “You know, I think there was something else going on in that film”… You know? So much about what’s important to one person is just not important to someone else, and what’s insightful to one person is just patently obvious or pedestrian.

    PLUME: Is there a difference between what attracts you to a project as a director, as compared to what attracts you to actually sitting down as a writer to craft a script yourself?

    RAMIS: Well, the investment that a director makes in a film is huge in terms of time and energy and commitment, so I really have to believe in something if I’m going to work on it. I’ll throw writing in there, too. It’s not that I’m so rich that I don’t have to work, but I don’t have to work on stuff I don’t want to do. And I don’t have to work at my “craft” to make a living, so I only do the things that deeply interest me… Because I just can’t seem to find the energy to do things that I’m not really committed to.

    PLUME: Do you feel that there’s a perception within the industry of a “Harold Ramis” type of project that is brought to you?

    RAMIS: Well, you know, it took a long time for my agents to kind of get it – I’ve had only two agencies in 20 years – and eventually they kind of figure, “Okay, this project will interest Harold, because there’s something going on…” Something more than what’s on the surface, or there’s some big idea kind of at stake in the script. It doesn’t mean that because the ideas are big that the movies have to be serious – but if there isn’t an important idea behind it, then I kind of lose track of why I’m doing it.

    PLUME: Is there any film that didn’t have that important idea, that you regretted doing after the fact?

    RAMIS: Well, I mean, sometimes it’s a bit of a stretch… They’re not films that I’m responsible for – but even having worked on the Caddyshack sequel was a big mistake… (laughing) I worked on the script when Rodney Dangerfield was going to do it, because Rodney was a friend and really wanted to do it. And we did a movie called Armed & Dangerous, which I produced, which… you know… no one would have cared if it hadn’t gotten made. At least there was kind of a news event behind that story…

    PLUME: And it had a good cast…

    RAMIS: Yeah, with John Candy and Eugene Levy…

    PLUME: You don’t seem to have had the greatest of luck with sequels…

    RAMIS: Well, actually, the two big ones – Ghostbusters and Analyze That – were both driven by what I thought were worthy follow-up ideas to the original movies. To some extent they got a little twisted in the execution. Ghostbusters II I didn’t direct, so I was a writer in service of the director, Ivan Reitman, and the actors. Analyze That got bashed a little bit, and it got a little out-of-hand in the last act, but I actually thought that that movie was driven by something really interesting and important.

    PLUME: When you come to a project like The Ice Harvest, that has a strong script behind it, what component do you bring to the table that makes the project your own? Specifically in this case, what did you do to personalize the project for you?

    RAMIS: For me, a movie is a set of opportunities… And I don’t mean that in any kind of – there’s no false humility here. You’re working with other people – you’re working with other writers’ ideas – and in this case, I feel an obligation to the writers to make the movie that they envisioned. Especially when the writers are this good – especially when one of them is a Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist and the other has 3 Academy Awards… And (Robert) Benton, himself, has directed some great, outstanding movies. So I wanted to make a movie that they’d be proud of, and that they thought reflected what they were going for in the script. And then you have actors you’re responsible to, to make them look good – and you can’t do that by dominating them or forcing them to be something they’re not. It’s a series of agreements that you make, all along the way, with everybody. And sometimes it’s purely your vision, and sometimes it’s a vision you’ve adjusted to accommodate someone else’s visions – and sometimes it’s something that you never would have anticipated, that resulted from just the reality of doing it… the existential circumstances around it.

    PLUME: Being both an actor and a writer, how much of an influence do you think that has on you as a director, in both how you interact and the choices you make?

    RAMIS: I’m probably more solicitous of actors than some directors might be. I both love them and fear them…

    PLUME: In what circumstances do you fear them?

    RAMIS: Well, I fear conflict and disagreement, you know, because in one way you’re at the mercy of the actor. If he’s angry or pissed off or doesn’t feel he’s being heard, he can really kind of sandbag the production, you know?

    PLUME: Where does conflict generally arise, do you find?

    RAMIS: Truthfully, I think it happens when the actor doesn’t trust the director, or doesn’t feel like he’s being well-served in some way, or he feels manipulated. I start out by making an alliance with the actors – I want them to know that my only interest is in making them look good. Because actors – they’re very vulnerable. They take a huge chance. They expose themselves in public, and they know they can look bad – it’s always the possibility. They rely solely on the director, when they’re doing it, to tell them if it’s working or not – and if they don’t trust that *you* know if it’s working, then you’re going to have some conflict… they’ll stop listening to you, they’ll start asking other actors on the set… they may find passive-aggressive ways to just start sabotaging the production. Because if they think it’s going to be bad, then they just start distancing themselves right away, you know – like, “I’m not going to take this seriously, because it sucks,” and they’ll start denying their own work, in a certain way. So you want to keep actors engaged and believing that what they’re doing is valuable and good – and I know what that feels like, having been an actor, and I know what that requires.

    PLUME: What’s been the biggest confidence curve you’d had to overcome with an actor on a given project?

    RAMIS: Well, usually they’re trusting me… ummm… Maybe it starts early, maybe it’s something in my demeanor – I’m kind of like part-shrink, part-rabbi, you know? I remember I was doing Multiplicity with Michael Keaton, and I didn’t know Michael really well. Before we started shooting the movie, we were going to do a test on the very complicated compositing effects – because he was going to be playing multiple clones of himself. So for the sake of the effect that we were testing, I asked Michael to get up and walk across the stage, and he said, “Why would I do that? Why would my character get up on that line?” And I thought, “Oh boy. This is like a test, right now.” And I said, “No… All right. Don’t. Don’t do it.” I said, “I’m never going to ask you to do anything you don’t want to do – because my job to convince you that it’s the right thing, and if I’m not convincing you, I’m not doing my job. So if you don’t want to do what I want you to do, and I can’t convince you to do it, we’ll find something that you do want to do, that I like.” It just kind of tumbled out of my mouth, you know? But I believed it, as I said it, and I never betrayed him – for 100 shooting days. He never had to do anything he didn’t fully believe in. And that’s a big confidence builder -then you’re the ally of the actor, not the enemy of the actor.

    PLUME: You’ve had this experience with a few actors – is there a difference between the rapport you have with an actor when you’re acting alongside them, as opposed the rapport when you’re directing them?

    RAMIS: Well, for better or worse, I try to be the same person – no matter what I’m doing. And I mean no matter what – whether I’m talking to my kids or talking to the president of a movie studio or the president of the United States, you know?

    PLUME: But when you send the studio head to their room…

    RAMIS: (laughing) I don’t send my kids to their rooms! Reality is hard to know sometimes, especially in entertainment. It’s so easy to delude yourself. Paul Shaffer – the bandleader of the Letterman show who used to work with us at the Lampoon and stuff – but Paul was the first among many people that got famous… Paul went to LA to do a pilot, before any of us went – before Belushi or Gilda or Chevy or Chris Guest, or anyone, got well known – and when Shaffer came back, everyone was asking him, “What’s Hollywood like?” And he said, “Well, it’s like people on either side of you whispering bulls*** into your ears at the same time.” So it’s very hard to come by the truth. No one wants to tell you bad news, everyone wants to flatter you, and you could really delude yourself, you know? It’s like, when you’re in the meeting with the executives or the producers, you know – “You’re a genius! What a genius! Oh, this is going to be so great!” And then the meeting breaks up and they say, “Oh, you go ahead – we’re going to stay and talk for a minute.” And you know what that meeting’s like.

    PLUME: Was there any point that you fell under the Hollywood delusion, or have you always kept a level head about the business and exactly what you’re dealing with?

    RAMIS: Well, I came into it strong. We came into the film business with Animal House. We came right from new York with a script that turned into the biggest comedy ever, so we were, in a way, writing our own ticket. I was able to say, “I want to direct the next movie I write.” Which was Caddyshack. So all that was solid – we weren’t asking for favors, we weren’t depending on anybody. To the extent that I’ve always just taken the approach that, “I’m gonna do what I wanna do, and they’ll get on board or they won’t. Or I’ll find a place that will let me.” Of course I want to hear legitimate feedback and intelligent responses to what I’m doing – and it’s they’re money, of course, so they can always say no… But they can’t make me do what they want me to do.

    PLUME: I was speaking to Rick Moranis a few weeks back, and it seems like there’s a definite independent streak to the performers that came out of Second City and SCTV and made their way to Hollywood – performers like you, Rick, Dave Thomas, Martin Short, Eugene Levy, etc. It seems you’re people that aren’t easily pushed into doing a project if it’s not something you don’t want to do.

    RAMIS: Well, Second City… I don’t think Rick did the stage show, but he did SCTV… and in almost every case, anything associated with Second City – we had directors, but we were responsible for generating our own material. And we also had a rule – “Always work from the top of your intelligence. “So there was kind of an autonomy that developed. We became self-validating, somehow, and that’s real important. It’s hard enough being a performer or being in showbusiness, because our success is dependent upon the approval of others. But the approval of other people can be a very hollow thing if you’re not self-validating at the same time. If I like what I do, then I’m fine, for the most part. Of course I want other people to like it – but if they don’t, it doesn’t make me question my own taste or ability… It just tells me what’s real – not everyone gets this, not everyone likes this. And it’s very hard to do something that everybody’s going to like. So if you live and die based on other people’s approval, your life can be a roller coaster of illusory pain, or of illusory grandiosity. I just try to trust the people around me that I really trust, work for the smartest, most tasteful 5% of the audience, and hope everyone else comes along.

    PLUME: How would you compare the director you are today to the director you were 25 years ago?

    RAMIS: I feel like I’m the same guy, with a lot more technical craft experience. The man I am today versus the man I was 25 years ago – life is the great teacher, obviously, and experience has taught me a lot of things about being a person. And it’s not that what was important to me when I was starting out – those things are still important, but just developmentally, other things become important… as you age, as you have children of your own, I’m in a long-term committed relationship with my wife… all these things change you from when you’re 21 and starting out. As Oliver Platt says in our movie, “The only thing left for men is money and p***y.” Well, when you’re young, that’s all you’re working for. If you’re still doing that when you’re 60, you should probably see a therapist.

    PLUME: Or get a smoking jacket…

    RAMIS: Right! That’s true…

    PLUME: And I hope we eventually see that film you were talking about a few years back, based on that even in your life, from 1967…

    RAMIS: That would be cool… Somebody asked me about that recently. I’m looking at it again and seeing what I would need to do to turn it into a film.

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    If you enjoyed this interview, please take a moment to DONATE.

    You can also find more of my interviews by clicking HERE.

  • Weekend Shopping Guide 6/28/13: Oceanic Lanes

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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 realize now I read a Neil Gaiman story for the places you shouldn’t go but must, the innocence gained in innocence lost, and the light lurking about in the darkness. All of those elements are woven into the fabric of The Ocean At The End Of The Lane (William Morrow, $25.99 SRP), a tightly told tale that ranks among his best. So just go read it. Now.

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    Daleks! You can never have enough Daleks! Small ones, big ones, plastic ones, metal ones – even inflatable ones. Measuring an impressive 47″ tall and available in a variety of colors, the gents at Thinkgeek are stocking an Inflatable Dalek ($39.99). That’s right. AN INFLATABLE DALEK. You know you want one. Or a dozen.

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    If the 4th season was Walter White extricating himself from the dangerous position he had gotten himself into, the first half of Breaking Bad: Season Five (Sony, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$65.99 SRP) finds the unpredictable Heisenberg taking the reigns of a full-fledged drug empire on his own terms… For better or worse. Which, granted, we won’t know for sure how it all winds up until the show wraps this Fall. Bonus features include audio commentaries, behind-the-scenes featurettes, and a gag reel.

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    Hey hey hey! Another childhood favorite gets the deluxe special edition treatment from the fine folks at Shout Factory with the debut of Fat Albert And The Cosby Kids: The Complete Series (Shout Factory, Not Rated, DVD-$119.99 SRP). While there has been a previous release of the show, this iteration gets a full remaster – looking and sounding better than it did in its original network airing. There’s also a snazzy new documentary on the making of the show with creator Bill Cosby.

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    As much as can be said for the uneven show, the 3rd season of MadTV (Shout Factory, Not Rated, DVD-$29.93 SRP) is probably its strongest, with a strong cast (including Phil Lamarr, Nicole Sullivan, Debra Wilson, Will Sasso, and Alex Borstein) that came to play.

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    The lasagna-loving tabby is back with a whole new fixation in the latest collection of episodes – The Garfield Show: Pizza Dreams (Vivendi, Not Rated, DVD-$14.93 SRP), featuring six episodes plus a handful of shorts.

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    A comedy about an aging magical double act whose friendship since childhood splinters when a new stunt-based act comes on the scene? You’d think there’d be plenty of comedy to mine with a cast that includes Steve Carell and Steve Buscemi as the duo and Jim Carrey as the stunt performer, but except for Carrey’s inspired turn, The Incredible Burt Wonderstone (Warner Bros., Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$35.99 SRP) never manages to reach the heights it should, which is a shame. For a better take on the same material, take a look at Magicians, starring David Mitchell & Robert Webb. Bonus materials include deleted/alternate scenes, featurettes, and a gag reel.

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    And now, your comedy album round up for this week brings Bob Saget: That’s What I’m Talkin’ About (New Wave Dynamics, $13.89 SRP), Brian Posehn: The Fartist (New Wave Dynamics, $12.99 SRP), Owen Benjamin: High Five Til It Hurts (Comedy Central, CD/DVD-$14.98 SRP), and Kumail Nanjiani: Beta Male (Comedy Central, CD/DVD-$13.99 SRP).

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    Inspired by actual events, Phantom (Fox, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$29.99 SRP) is a Cold War game of cat and mouse aboard a missing Soviet sub between a battle-hardened captain (Ed Harris) and a rogue KGB agent (David Duchovny with the fate of the world in the balance. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, featurettes, and a music video.

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    Still reeling from an attempt on his life, Detective Mac Taylor (Gary Sinise) begins the march towards closure in the final season of CSI: NY (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$64.99 SRP). Bonus materials include featurettes, the CSI crossover episode, the Vegas/NY crossover, featurettes, deleted scenes, and a gag reel.

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    When it comes to affordable entertainment, no one beats the economy-priced fare from the folks at Mill Creek. The latest batch of titles are an eclectic mix, with standard DVD releases of the SyFy Channel miniseries Tin Man (Mill Creek, Not Rated, DVD-$25.00 SRP) and the documentary The United States Military: History Of Heroes (Mill Creek, Not Rated, DVD-$9.98 SRP). They’ve also got a clutch of high definition releases, including the double feature titles The Nines/Slipstream and Universal Soldier: The Return/Second In Command (Mill Creek, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$9.98 SRP each), and the documentary JFK: A New World Order (Mill Creek, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$14.98 SRP).

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    For the past few years, the fine folks at Diamond Select Toys – purveyors of pop culture collectibles – have been putting out a range of items based on the most seminal of comedy-horror films, Ghostbusters. The latest batch of times sure to tempt even the most casual fan include a faithfully-sculpted 8″ Slimer Bank ($19.99 SRP), a party-ready Slimer Gelatin Mold ($14.99 SRP), and a Ghostbusters Silicone Tray ($14.99 SRP), which perfectly crafts ice ready for your next spooky cocktail.

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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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  • Opinion In A Haystack: UP Makes Children Cry

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    Hollywood hates children. Well, nowadays, for the most part. The past decade has seen a decline in the realm of family films so drastic it’s almost embarrassing to behold. A constant barrage of sub-par, placating, dreck that insults the intelligence of the child and the adult they will one day grow to be. Substance and craft are no longer the main concerns for children and families, simply be garish, be happy, and NEVER be realistic in tone (DEATH DOESN’T EXIST, ONLY iPods DO!!!) The youth of today have virtually nothing to grow up with and rediscover as surprisingly well-made entertainment, all they have is films equivalent to my generation’s Masters Of The Universe (great for nostalgia, not so great for adult criticism.) They need, and deserve, more fare like Beetlejuice, Return to Oz, Gremlins, or The Neverending Story (yes, I’m bias)… films where they grow up, re-watch and think “Holy hell! This was for kids?” They are feeding them messy piles of sugary air such as Alvin and the Chipmunks, Beverly Hills Chihuahua, or Night At The Museum (1 or 2, take your pick), which are so hackneyed and sloppy that the slightest hint of adolescent logic or understanding of story structure forces them to collapse under their own faulty welds and lashings. However, in a world of film that treats kids like permanently-imbecilic-spider-monkeys, there is still Pixar.

    And Pixar has balls. SEXY. PLUMP. BALLS.

    Not even going to bother jumping on the Pixar worship-wagon here. You know, as well as I do, about their reputation and their increasingly growing catalogue of well-crafted films that are arguably genre masterpieces (Wall-E, The Incredibles) or great against all odds (Cars: completely entertaining in spite of stilted-premise and Larry The Cable Guy.) Up continues this trend, possibly in the animation house’s greatest triumph of supremely original ideas and adult-story-telling-for-kids.

    The film opens by following the life, from pre-adolescence to golden years, of Carl Fredricksen (voiced by the great Ed Asner.) He is an old man with an unfulfilled dream of adventuring in the South American wilderness and a home that is being strangled by industrial development. In short, he ties thousands upon thousands of balloons to his house and floats away, toward South America, on what is to be the last adventure of his life, one that he is forced to share with a young boy who inadvertently is on his porch during take off. Simple right? Odd right? Confusing right? Right, but it’s the approach that matters.

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    Amongst the fantastical elements in the film, the ones that can be seen in the trailer, like a house being floated by mere balloons, talking dogs, or elderly men being WAY too physically active for their own good, Up has a grounded heart and realism in place that metaphorically punches the adult-mind in the gut, and righteously, yet not viciously, sprays pepper-sauce in children’s faces (the kid next to me in the theater cried A LOT.) The movie deals with death, abandonment, and the loss of heroes at the fore front of its surface.

    ******************SPOILERS START HERE**************************

    This blunt realism kicks right off, as the beginning of the film introduces us to the epitomes of pure cuteness and naivete that are young Carl and Ellie (his future wife.) They both seek adventure and have the same hero, Charles Muntz (voiced by the legendary Christopher Plummer), and we are treated to a montage of their life together. We witness their marriage, their home life, their romance, their laughter, and eventually, their inability to conceive children (yup,) and ultimately their parting. THAT’S RIGHT. Ellie dies. Not just dies, but dies in a montage around 20 minutes or so into the film… Pixar sets you up, and knocks you down… all to the loving tunes of a soothing and sad score. All that went through my mind was “Holy hell! This is for kids?” Which, trust me, is a huge compliment.

    Pixar’s balls, by this point in the movie are already huge and pulsating, but they still get even bigger. The reason Carl even floats his home in the first place is because the government is taking it away and forcing him into a retirement-home due to him attacking a construction worker with his cane (drawing blood!) Through the course of the film we also see Carl discover that his (and Ellie’s) childhood hero is a deranged, psychopathic, MULTI-murderer and that the kid, Russell, has a deadbeat dad who basically wouldn’t care if he lives or dies… we even see dogs getting hurt and possibly killed (due to their own actions, its not Pixar’s Hostel.) Topping off the dark tones found here is a joke played on the audience that is so genius, cruel and hilarious that scriptwriter Bob Peterson must have been laughing since the day he put it on paper. I won’t spoil it for you. Heh.

    ******************END SPOILERS*******************

    Up‘s realism, risks, and complimentary attitude toward the audience is not the only positive however. In no way am I trying to sell it on the merits of making children cry alone… ok, maybe a little. It is also quite successful on all other standard fronts, and it’s got plenty of well-executed laughs and a grand vibrant color scheme. The script is extremely original, not to mention the cast of characters which includes a huge bird, Dug the Dog, and his fellow army of talking K-9 brethren. Dug is the comedic stand out of the movie, as his dialogue perfectly plays out the awkward nature of how dogs would actually sound if they could miraculously speak English. All the main players in the movie get their own small, but useful, character-arcs… even the bird (oddly the only character not able to speak.)

    The fantastical elements are handled in a way that doesn’t grate the logic. Unlike sloppy piles of confusion like the continuity, rules, or consistency of the magic tablet in Night At The Museum 2, the material here is given mystery and logic where it needs it, and glazes over where it doesn’t… which is why you wont be questioning how Muntz (Christopher Plummer) invented a collar that translates dog speak to English, or how those balloons wouldn’t remotely lift that house, let alone tear it from it’s foundation (I believe Mythbusters tested a similar idea, and it was only picking up the weight of a single child)

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    The triumph of the animation here is that Pixar does make art, but they don’t try to re-invent the wheel when the wheel is working just fine. The movie is absolutely beautiful, not as visually breath taking as Wall-E, but still it looks fantastic. The blocking of some of the scenes is incredible, the little house mushroom-topped with a cloud of balloons floating across a vast blue sky in an ultra-wide shot is iconic and slightly haunting, especially considering the “rainbow” visual of the balloons. Up, much like most of Pixar’s flicks, excels in its craft (from all angles, writing, direction, choreography) and not merely in the technology of the craft. The digital 3D print is especially gorgeous, and is highly recommended.

    It’s not often that a bitter old grump like me sees a film and can’t find too much negative to say about it. If I had to really rack my brain, I guess I could say the only problem was that maybe the movie makes Carl too much of a physical action hero at times, considering his age, but it’s handled with such care in the narrative of the movie, so its not a big deal, and certainly not out-weighing the good. This is probably Pixar’s least marketable film yet, being so morbid an odd. The less broad they get, the better they get…which is kind of a mind boggler when concerning Pixar… how do they continue to get better? How? In this case most of the praise should be directed toward director Pete Doctor, who some how improved on his wonderful Monsters Inc. with this new offering.

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    Also, just to put things into perspective, this review was written by someone who doesn’t even honestly like computer-generated animation at all, and who has really never publicly “sucked off” Pixar. Up was just class-A entertainment, and perhaps an arguable masterpiece in the family film genre. It’s good to know that this generation has at least a few movies, like Up, to grow older with and re-watch and see the adult themes, the quality craftsmanship and exclaim “This was for kids?”

    QUICK THOUGHTS AND RANDOM BITS

    Star Trek: a few weeks later…

    J.J. Abrams’s Star Trek was great fun. As a die hard Original-Cast-film fan, still have no debilitating complaints… except, upon further reflection… it was great, but it really just isn’t Star Trek. Long Live Shatner.

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    Annoyed at “revisiting” reviews

    Something that grates on the nerves is when an old franchise is resurrected (Terminator) or announced to be resurrected (Ghostbusters) and we have to sit through a plethora of reviews, rants, and ravings by young-ins saying how the originals (T1, T2, Ghostbusters) are overrated in the first place. Just want to say: SHUT UP JUNIOR! Your ill-informed meandering is not making your CGI-raped re-imagining any less horrendous.

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    What’s in a name?

    If you hate McG, director of Terminator Salvation, simply because of his name then your opinion is invalid. First, his real name is McGinty, “McG” is the nickname given to him by his family… it’s not a self-chosen moniker due to douchebaggery. Second, hate him because his movies are sub-par… even though to hear the guy talk it really seems like he is actually trying, just failing miserably.

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    Exterminators exterminate… so Terminators should… ?

    If you are going to make Terminator 4, if you just can’t help but do it, and you have to make it a heaping pile of poorly constructed blandness… could you at least follow the one rule that even the hokey Terminator 3 didn’t break? If a Terminator, no matter what make or model, gets its hands on a human, don’t let the machine give a dramatic pause, don’t let the machine just “play around” with them, let them INSTANTLY kill. Terminator 1-3 never let the villains even touch the targets… why? Because they are terminators, they would terminate at all costs. Why couldn’t you at least follow this logic? Why sir?

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    It works in Reno, but not at the multiplex.

    Robert Ben Garant and Thomas Lennon, You were great writers on The State, and are hilarious writers on Reno 911!, so how come every time you make the leap to film its completely dreadful? Taxi (the Queen Latifah movie), Balls of Fury, The Pacifier, Let’s Go To Prison, Herbie Fully Loaded, Night at the Museum, Night at the Museum 2: Battle for the Smithsonian… Your film work reads like the listings for a multiplex in the deepest circles of hell… what is going on there guys?

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    There is always room for Jell-O… and more Bitterness!

    Got into an argument with a young “film buff” who was saying that The Dark Knight and Iron Man are better films then The Outlaw Josey Wales, Akira Kurosawa’s Seven Samurai, and Apocalypse Now. Is there any hope for the future?

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  • Contest Round-Up: 2009-05-06

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    Welcome to our weekly round-up of featured giveaways here at Quick Stop. Every Wednesday, 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 Paramount Home Video, we’re giving away two (2) copies of CSI: SEASON ONE on DVD.

    In conjunction with Paramount Home Video, we’re giving away three (3) sets of both THE BEST OF STAR TREK: THE ORIGINAL SERIES & THE BEST OF STAR TREK: THE NEXT GENERATION on DVD.

    In conjunction with Dreamworks Home Video, we’re giving away three (3) copies of GALAXY QUEST on DVD.

    In conjunction with Walt Disney Home Video, we’re giving away three (3) sets of the 6 titles comprising THE DISNEY ANIMATION COLLECTION: CLASSIC SHORT FILMS: THE THREE LITTLE PIGS, MICKEY & THE BEANSTALK, THE RELUCTANT DRAGON, THE PRINCE & THE PAUPER, THE TORTOISE & THE HARE & THE WIND IN THE WILLOWS on DVD.

    In conjunction with Time Life Home Video, we’re giving away five (5) copies of THE REAL GHOSTBUSTERS: VOLUME 1 on DVD.

    In conjunction with Fox Home Video, we’re giving away three (3) copies of SETH MacFARLANE’S CAVALCADE OF CARTOON COMEDY: UNCENSORED on DVD.

    In conjunction with Fox Home Video, we’re giving away three (3) copies of TAKEN on DVD.

    In conjunction with Warner Bros. Home Video, we’re giving away three (3) copies of TWO AND A HALF MEN: SEASON 5 on DVD.

  • Win THE REAL GHOSTBUSTERS: VOLUME 1 on DVD!

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    In conjunction with Time Life Home Video, we’re giving away five (5) copies of THE REAL GHOSTBUSTERS: VOLUME 1 on DVD.

    Contest ends at 11:59pm EST on Wednesday, May 27th.

    CLOSED! THANKS FOR ENTERING!

    Official Rules

    No member of Quick Stop Entertainment or their immediate families may enter.

    No Purchase necessary to win.

    Must be 18 years of age or older to enter.

    One entry per day, per person.

    All submitted entries must be received by 11:59pm EST on Wednesday, May 27th.

    The winner must allow 4-6 weeks after notification of win to receive the product.