Tag: Joss Whedon

  • FROM THE VAULT: Joss Whedon Interview

    vaultinterviews.png

    Conducted ~6/2003

    I was a late-to-the-party fan of Buffy The Vampire Slayer, having not begun watching the series until the musical episode. With the availability of DVDs and its recent premiere in syndication, though, I was able to catch up ludicrously fast, quickly falling in love with the show and its troubled spin-off, Angel.

    As is my wont, I decided to do an in-depth interview with Buffy‘s mastermind, and found him to be a fascinating guy.

    You can see for yourself in the interview below, which follows the original introduction for the piece.

    lucyline.gif

    If you’ve been living in a cave (and you know who you are), then you’ll be completely in the dark as to who Joss Whedon is.

    Otherwise, you’ll know him as the creator/producer/poobah behind one of the largest “cult classics” to grace TV screens – Buffy: The Vampire Slayer.

    Add to that the Buffy spin-off Angel and the cancelled-but-not-forgotten sci-fi series Firefly, and you’ve got a bit of a cottage industry. For the longest time, though, Whedon (whose father and grandfather were both highly-respected TV writers) was best known as one of the most sought-after script doctors in Hollywood. If a script needed a fix, you called Joss Whedon – on everything from Toy Story to X-Men.

    While Buffy may be over (Fox Home Video just released Season 4 on DVD, if you’re having withdrawal symptoms), Angel continues to thrive, and plans are currently afoot for a Firefly feature film.

    We recently had the chance to talk rather extensively with Joss about… well… a little of everything…

    lucyline.gif

    KEN PLUME: In the past, you’ve described yourself as a bit of a TV snob, as a child.

    JOSS WHEDON: That’s true.

    PLUME: Was that a reaction against your family’s legacy, or just the environment you were in?

    WHEDON: It was more the environment I was in. When my parents divorced, I lived with my mother. My mother had been with a TV writer for 30 years, with a comedy writer, and although my parents were good friends after they divorced and got along, she wasn’t exactly watching either sitcoms or football after my father left. She really was more into the Masterpiece Theater of it, and I kind of just followed in her footsteps – except for the part where she watched the news, which I didn’t. It was depressing. It was really my mother’s influence… a lot of stuff I do trace back to her. I also thought that, quite frankly, I loved when my father was working on The Electric Company when I younger … I liked the shows he did, but I never thought they were as funny as he was. In my mind, I thought that he was running them, because he’d run The Electric Company. I don’t think he was, but it felt like Alice, Benson, and even Golden Girls – which I think was hilarious and was a classic – this is the wittiest man I’d ever met, and all of his friends were extraordinary, and the sitcoms were never quite the same as my father.

    PLUME: Did you blame the sitcoms as a form, for somehow watering down your father?

    WHEDON: I think to an extent, yeah. And also just classic teenage rebellion. Rebellion and snobbery were both involved. But also that thing of, “I know what my father’s capable of, and I don’t think Alice is up to his level.” So there was a little bit of that, too.

    PLUME: What direction did you start to go in? Did you see a direction for yourself going in a certain path?

    WHEDON: Oh yes… I was going to be a brilliant, independent filmmaker who then went on to make giant, major box office summer movies.

    PLUME: So, Spielberg…

    WHEDON: Spielberg by way of George Romero or Wes Anderson, or a strange combination of the two …

    PLUME: Commercial success with artistic integrity intact…

    WHEDON: Exactly!

    PLUME: So, obviously, you had these dreams of Hollywood which were completely unrealistic…

    WHEDON: Well, you know, you don’t know – it could still happen. I did manage to keep my artistic integrity – I just happened to have to go to television to do it.

    PLUME: Oh, bitter irony.

    WHEDON: Not bitter at all, but definitely irony. The first thing I did when I came out to Los Angeles, on my way to Santa Cruz, where my brother was – where we were going to be independent filmmakers together with no money and no idea how to make a film. Then I ran out of money. Luckily, I was at my father’s house. So, after some great expunging, “I could make some money if I wrote a TV script,” thing sort of occurred to me.

    PLUME: Was it a difficult wall to break down?

    WHEDON: You know, I literally had left college going, “I’m not going to be a television writer.” And my friend would go, “Three-G TV!” Third generation. He’d taunt me all the time. “It’s not going to happen!” A lot of things happened when I got to LA, one of which is my father and I got a lot closer, I spent time with him – which I hadn’t really done as a kid. Which is really nice. I tried to write a TV series, and then I discovered first of all that I love writing more than anything on this earth, and that you could write exactly as well as you want to.

    PLUME: What it something you had explored at Wesleyan?

    WHEDON: I had written the little movies that I’d made, but production was the big part of Wesleyan back then.

    PLUME: Was it more theory, or film study?

    WHEDON: It was really film theory. Watching films over and over again and dissecting them, really understanding what they were trying to do, and all that good stuff. The best film theory study available. But, really, sort of crap production – as my movies evident.

    PLUME: Well, you see the balance the other way in a lot of film schools, which is, “Studying the classics is all well and good, but we’re trying to push you out into production.” Do you think there’s a loss of a sense of place and understanding of the form they’re working in?

    WHEDON: It’s very important to understand how to shoot a movie, if that’s what you want to do. But it’s more important at that age to be studying the meaning thing, to be studying what builds up the great movies. Where the simplicity is, where the complexity is. Anybody can tell you where to point a camera – and quite frankly, nobody can tell you how. You can either do that or you can’t. Learning what a gaffer is, or how to load your own film is great – I actually had to load my own film during my thesis film once, because my crew was too stoned. They just said, “We’re really too stoned to change it.”

    PLUME: Damn those non-union crews…

    WHEDON: Yeah, we were top notch. You get so many people out here with incredible technical expertise who have nothing to say, or no idea of the importance of having something to say, or the importance of understanding what they’re saying.

    PLUME: Do you think, to some extent, those are the kind of filmmakers that the Hollywood executive tends to like – because they’re malleable?

    WHEDON: Yeah. Well, you want somebody who can make it pretty and make it work and give the executive what the executive thinks they want, and bring something to the party. Not just translate the words. If you’re the writer, what you’re looking for is somebody who can convey the actual meaning of the script… and quite frankly, people who are just schooled in production don’t really have that. There’s a lot of people out there who make a pretty frame, that has nothing to do with what is said.

    PLUME: Form over function.

    WHEDON: But you know, there’s advantages to both – don’t get me wrong. There’s a lot of people teaching theory who are filling people’s heads with completely idiotic agendas and not really getting down to the basics of “This is exactly what he was doing, exactly what you think, what you feel.” It hasn’t been accomplished. You need to be looking at that stuff.

    PLUME: What kind of agenda irritates you the most?

    WHEDON: Any agenda. Any agenda beyond what the film itself is trying to say. My biggest concentration was gender studies and feminism. That was sort of my unofficial minor. That was what all my film work was about, but at the same time, somebody bringing the knee-jerk feminist agenda to a text can be the most aggravating thing in the world. Especially if you’re a feminist, because you’re like, “You’re the person that everybody makes fun of. You’re the reason why we’ve got no cred.”

    PLUME: Planting subtext for subtext’s sake…

    WHEDON: Yeah, planting subtext based on everybody brings their own experience to a film – that’s why films are popular, and that’s fine. As long as they’re working from the film outwards, towards themselves. What people with an agenda do – whether it be, like, Cartesian physics or some thing I can’t begin to understand, or feminism, or anything – they try and shove it in. “Look at this this way.” Okay, let’s look at the film as it exists, what it is, what it’s trying to do. We can judge it. But you’re talking to somebody who was raised to be a radical feminist, who thought that liberals were wishy-washy and who loves Seven Brides for Seven Brothers. So you know, this conflicts around always. Take the film at its own value, and then go to the other place.

    PLUME: Was that part of your motivation for taking gender studies for a minor?

    WHEDON: It’s not that I took it for a minor, it’s just like I pursued it in everything I did. It’s always what interested me. But, when you’re dealing with feminism you’re dealing with a lot of people who understand feminism better than they understand film, and again you pose something and that doesn’t just go … the point is, you can have an agenda as long as you let the film come to you and take that out of you. I know a guy who could not get through a paper without talking through Freudian theories of infantile sexuality. And his lecture on the Wild Bunch, in terms of Freudian theories of infantile sexuality, was actually fascinating. Because he loved the Wild Bunch, he understood the movie, and then he let it speak to him. He didn’t try and like shove in a theory.

    PLUME: Meeting his mother would be interesting…

    WHEDON: Yes…

    PLUME: Going back a little bit, was it your choice to go overseas to Winchester – to what, I guess, was essentially high school?

    WHEDON: Yes. My mother suggested it, because she was on sabbatical, and enjoyed England, and didn’t trust the schools in California where my father was. So I was to go for half a year, because she was taking a half a year sabbatical. I bizarrely managed to get into the single best school in the country, through no merit of my own. I really don’t know how that happened. I was lazy, I was terrible, but through osmosis, I was learning more than I ever had before. It was so extraordinary. My family went back to America, and the school asked me to stay along, and I did.

    PLUME: So you got to be the standard there, as the token lazy American.

    WHEDON: I was the token lazy American, except when it came to English class, where I was relentless and unstoppable.

    PLUME: How palpable was the cultural difference, going to that school, compared to the American schools you’d gone to previously?

    WHEDON: Well, let’s see. I went from Riverdale, a fairly progressive private school that my mother taught at, where I’d gone for 10 and a half years, since first grade – because it went all the way through, K-12. I went from that, having never been out of the country, to a 600 year-old all male boarding school where I actually listened to a lecture on why co-education will never work. The cultural difference couldn’t have been huger. The only thing that was the same was that, like at Riverdale, I had no money and was surrounded by very rich people.

    PLUME: That lecture had to appeal to the radical feminist in you…

    WHEDON: Yeah. Well, you know, there’s plenty of arguments that co-education is actually bad for girls in the present state of the country. But that was not his argument. Put it this way – at the end of it, I was like, “Sir, don’t you think if God had wanted man to fly he would have given us wings?” It was very, very strange.

    PLUME: So, technically, you were never in a traditional public school…

    WHEDON: No, I never was.

    PLUME: Did you ever feel, personally, that you missed out on anything? Or do you feel that the course you took was actually a benefit?

    WHEDON: Well, you know, Riverdale was a good school. Winchester was a great school. An incredible school.

    PLUME: What aspects of it made it incredible?

    WHEDON: It was literally rated the best education you could get in the country. I wish that I could have made some moves on a girl at some point in my high school career, but that probably wasn’t going to happen at Riverdale, either. Which is one of the reasons why I stayed at Winchester. Socially, every boy that comes out of Winchester was completely pathetic. Intellectually, it was a staggering gift to be able to be around that much intelligence.

    Continued below…

  • Weekend Shopping Guide 9/21/12: Adventure Comes Again

    weekendshopping.png

    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…)

    We’ve been repeating the same waiting game we played when DVD first debuted – the game of waiting for beloved films to finally hit the format – with Blu-Ray. We’ve gotten Star Wars (sort of), Jaws, Superman Blade Runner – just about all of the geek pantheon, really – but one of the most glaring omissions now gets its time to shine, and boy does it ever. To say that the restoration and mastering work done for Indiana Jones: The Complete Adventures (Paramount, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$99.98 SRP) presents high definition presentations of the 3 classic adventures (and that awful 4th adventure we won’t speak of again) that are the best ever seen, and are a textbook example of how to lovingly bring classic films to the format. In addition to all of the bonus materials from the previous DVD editions, the set also includes brand-new behind-the-scenes footage from the production of Raiders, which is absolutely must-see for fans. Are you going to get this set? Why am I even asking? Of course you are. So go on.

    thinkgeek-01.jpg

    Want a blindingly bright 600 lumen flashlight that’s tough and waterproof and will run for hours? The Klarus XT11 ($99.99) is that flashlight, running of a rechargeable li-on battery with 3 lighting modes and 1 flashlight, with tactical switch activation.

    thinkgeek-02.jpg

    I’m all for Shout Factory’s recent forays into archive collections of an artist’s disparate work, starting with their must-have Ernie Kovacs set, and now Steve Martin: The Television Stuff (Shout Factory, Not Rated, DVD-$34.93 SRP), which collects and presents (for the first time since they aired) Steve Martin’s two stand-up specials, his 4 NBC specials, and a bonus disc of bits and pieces, from awards show speeches and tributes to Carson & Letterman appearances and SNL sketches. You even get his very first TV appearance in 1966 on a local children’s show. So, yes. Get.

    blankguide.gif

    It’s been over a decade since Rhino released a handful of episodes, but all these years later hell has frozen over and you can now get your very own complete series set of Chris Elliott’s short-lived cult classic Get A Life (Shout Factory, Not Rated, DVD-$59.97 SRP). That’s all 35 episodes, uncut, plus audio commentaries, featurettes, the 2000 Paletyfest panel, and more. Get it before we all realize it’s a fever dream.

    blankguide.gif

    Yeah, I’m starting to sour on Modern Family (Fox, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$59.99 SRP). And I don’t want to, but the third season started to give me those same anything for a laugh character neglect that felled brilliant starters like Malcolm In The Middle. I really hop I’m wrong, because the ensemble remains strong, and Ed O’Neill should be allowed to work forever. Bonus materials include featurettes, deleted scenes, and a gag reel.

    blankguide.gif

    There’s a delightfully old school fun about the horror of The Cabin In The Woods (Lionsgate, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$34.99 SRP), which Joss Whedon and Drew Goddard have crafted about as well as a horror film can be crafted, with a nice mix of scares and humor draped over enough of a plot to pull the viewer through. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, featurettes, and more.

    blankguide.gif

    Forget the chair crazy man of recent memory and go back to a time when Clint Eastwood was merely ranch foreman Rowdy Yates in the back-to-back release of Rawhide: Season 5 Volume 1 & Rawhide: Season 5 Volume 2 (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$45.98 SRP each). Bonus features are limited to episodic previews for select episodes.

    blankguide.gif

    It certainly doesn’t have the laid back charm of the original, but the new Hawaii Five-O (Paramount, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$72.99 SRP) is pleasant enough as an Aloha State procedural. The second season set contains all 23 episodes plus commentaries, featurettes, deleted scenes, and a gag reel.

    blankguide.gif

    As Halloween fast approaches, Warners digs into its catalogue for a pair of mostly seasonal-appropriate titles to give their high definition debut – Devil’s Advocate and Queen Of The Damned (Warner Bros., Rated R, Blu-Ray-$19.98 SRP each). Devil’s Advocate gets an audio commentary and deleted scenes, while Queen Of The Damned gets an audio commentary, featurettes, deleted scenes, music videos, a gag reel, and more.

    blankguide.gif

    This week’s TV releases also include the complete second season of Dana Delaney’s Body Of Proof (ABC Studios, Not Rated, DVD-$39.99 SRP) and the first half of the 6th season of Army Wives (ABC Studios, Not Rated, DVD-$39.99 SRP). Bonus features on Proof include featurettes, deleted scenes, bloopers, and webisodes, while Wives sports deleted scenes and bloopers.

    blankguide.gif

    The shame about the NBC release of their 2-disc London 2012 (NBC, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$39.93 SRP) is that the London Olympics is one I truly want an HD document of, but the last thing I want documented about it is NBC’s awful, tone-deaf coverage. Shame, really. Best to sit back and watch the pretty pictures on this and wait for the BBC’s superior release somewhere down the road.

    blankguide.gif

    Fans I’m sure will devour the pink frosting puff pastry documentary Katy Perry The Movie: Part Of Me (Paramount, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP), which presents an endearingly upbeat bubblegum portrait of the singer/personality. Bonus materials include featurettes and full concert performances.

    blankguide.gif

    How about a clutch of new releases from the fine folks at The History Channel? History gets covered with Secret Access: The Presidency (History Channel, Not Rated, DVD-$29.95 SRP) and America’s Book Of Secrets (History Channel, Not Rated, DVD-$29.95 SRP). Fake history is covered with an exploration of James Bond Gadgets (History Channel, Not Rated, DVD-$19.95 SRP). Reality with only tenuous historical information is covered by Cajun Pawn Stars (History Channel, Not Rated, DVD-$19.95 SRP). And batshit crazy junk history is covered by the high definition release of The Best Of Ancient Aliens (History Channel, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$19.95 SRP).

    blankguide.gif

    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

    ##

  • Opinion In A Haystack: THE AVENGERS Review

    haystackheader.jpg

    THE AVENGERS ““ Review ***SPOILER FREE***

    e1336059317

    In the western world, in the culture of Hollywood, we have made films the apex of a property’s existence. When any creative, artistic or entertaining endeavor reaches a certain level of popularity, respect, profits or prestige we turn it into a film, or possibly threaten to turn it into a film, if its isn’t already a film itself. So we’ve grown up salivating for certain things to come to fruition. Impossible things. For better or worse many of those things in my generation, due to new technology powered by James Cameron’s ego, have come into being as live action romps of varying degrees of success.

    c79428a9cec6e0cd62cb3fecb244da2a

    Well as far as “things” go, The Avengers is most certainly one of those “things” for me. The good news being that I went completely ape-“fecal matter” for the movie. I sang the praises of Sir Joss Whedon in my Cabin In The Woods review not long ago, and here I’m not even sure that singing is going to do him justice. The man is having a good year, so good in fact that his career is probably going to take a different path from now on. Avengers most certainly has the potential to skyrocket him into the big leagues of Hollywood Event Filmmakers like Michael Bay or Stephen Sommers, but the good news for us is that, unlike those guys, Whedon makes sure to take care of character and story first. However, once those are locked he will let loose on the action spectacle with the best of them. He has the potential to be, and I apologize for saying this, a “thinking man’s Michael Bay.” If you remove all the storied history of the characters involved with the Avengers that is what it boils down to: a Bay film where you actually care what happens amidst all the silliness and explosions. Joss Whedon: Man of Emotional Explosions.

    Unlike Cabin though, Avengers is “A Joss Whedon Film,” written and directed in full. I’ve been yapping to everyone who would listen that my main satisfaction with this movie is that it truly feels like a comic book script, as in, a script written with the intention of being drawn, inked and printed for Marvel to distribute. It’s very comic-book-like. What exactly do I mean by that? Well, I don’t know really. I suppose if my hand is forced to explain I would say that is has that ever so sacred balance of comic book reality, physics, logic, and tone without ever delving into being stupid or silly. It’s not cynical of its own source material, this movie is proud to be sopping wet with comic book mythology and atmosphere. At no point does it shy away from the exaggerated world of comicdom. It’s as big, awesome, and faithful to the source art form as Joss Whedon is a fan of that art form himself.

    the_avengers_by_arco2002-d3h9i2b

    The reason Avengers fires on all cylinders is balance. Whedon is no stranger to the group dynamic in his writing and it most certainly shows here. Thor, Banner, Cap, Stark, Hawkeye and Black Widow all share the screen with things only slightly tipping towards Iron Man. However, that isn’t a problem, this is Iron Man’s film and it makes perfect sense. Cap is still reeling from his 70 years under the ice, his rise to leadership is not cemented especially considering this is an “origin” story of a team. Not to mention, that as far as the public is concerned Tony Stark and John Favreau’s triumphant first Iron Man film is responsible for this whole gargantuan undertaking in the first place. It’s impossible to deny Downey’s presence as well, with a character as “large” as his version of Stark on screen it’s going to take at least two films for the cream, or in this case the Captain, to rise to the top.

    the-avengers-film-images

    It’s an impressive achievement on Whedon’s part as well that Jeremy Renner’s Hawkeye and Scarlett Johansson’s Black Widow not only have presence in the film but actually prove themselves useful and interesting in the face of being over shadowed by a super soldier, a demi-god, a genius billionaire, and the ultimate engine of destruction. Tom Hiddleston proves once again that he was perfectly cast as Loki, at every turn, even when he’s losing he is deep in character without flinching. Chris Evans gives a convincing take on a recently unfrozen and confused Captain America. Chris Hemsworth probably has the most unsung hardship of the entire group as he succeeds in playing Thor with an undercurrent of shame and disappointment in his adopted brother Loki and the horrors he is bringing about on earth. Fans might complain that Thor doesn’t get as much time to strut his powers this time around, but he is mentally focused on his brother and the plot unfolds as such. I think once we get a Loki-free Avengers flick we will truly see Thor cut loose. (Also, I still say that Hemsworth is quite possibly the best casted superhero role ever. The guy just exudes Thor at every turn. Just my opinion.)

    Oh, and Sam Jackson knocks it out of the park playing Nick Fury as”¦well”¦Sam Jackson.

    samuel-jackson-hamburgers-funny

    There were two huge standouts of the film for me. First is Clark Gregg as Agent Coulson. His screen time isn’t long but the little he gets he sells hard, going so far as to give his character a lot of heart and a lot of balls. Second is Mark Ruffalo as Bruce Banner/The Hulk. Now, I admit right here and now that I am a lifelong Hulk fan. The comics, the TV show, the movies, I love the Hulk in all his forms, always have. As a credit to Whedon and Ruffalo I would go as far as saying that with the exception of Bill Bixby, Rufalo might be might favorite live action Banner ever. This is the first time in this new era of cinema tech we get to see the green guy “smash” as a hero instead of a menace and it is incredible (sorry.) That is especially a compliment considering Ruffalo did all the motion capture himself. When Hulk is unleased in this film, especially in the last third of the movie, it takes the “awesome” to a whole new level of incredible (sorry again.) However it isn’t just the smashing that wins me over, it’s Ruffalo as Banner. Much like Bixby, Ruffalo is playing a Banner who was been to hell and back and has begun to live with the curse instead of trying to fight it, this movie particularly furthers that very narrative. Of course all the buzz Hulk is getting from audiences and critics for Avengers is due to the smashing, I’m just saying for the rest of us who love the character this movie has other things to offer as well. Hats off to the design team too, the green guy has NEVER looked more accurate, and just plain perfect, to the source material than he does here.

    the-avengers-movie-hulk-600x337

    Thanks for reading and for the love of Thor: STAY AFTER THE CREDITS!!!

  • Comics in Context: Cabin (in the Woods) Fever

    comicsincontext4.jpg

    CABIN (IN THE WOODS) FEVER

    Here we are again, at long last. For those who came in late, as they say in The Phantom, I’m Peter Sanderson, and I’ve been writing about comics since I was a contributor to Silver Age DC Comics editor Julius Schwartz’s letter columns in the 1960s. After doing graduate studies at Columbia University, I planned to become a teacher, but got diverted into the comics business, where I researched and helped write the original DC Who’s Who and Official Handbook of the Marvel Universe. Since then I became Marvel’s first archivist, taught about comics at New York University, helped curate exhibits at the Museum of Comic and Cartoon Art in New York, worked on documentaries about comics, and write and co-wrote a lot of books about comics. There’s even a new one that is just coming out now. Years ago I reviewed the first edition of The Superhero Book, an encyclopedia of superheroes in comics, movies and television, edited by Gina Misiroglu. Years later, Gina invited me to help her revise and update the second edition, and I ended up writing lots of new entries and updating nearly all the rest. You can find the new edition on Amazon here: The Superhero Book.

    In 2003 I started writing a weekly online column “Comics in Context” for my friend and editor Ken Plume, originally at IGN. I followed Ken to Kevin Smith’s Quick Stop Entertainment and then to Ken’s own A Site Called FRED and ended up writing two hundred and forty installments on comics, animation, movies based on comics, and anything else that I thought might relate to these subjects. Eventually, though, I suspended the column, due to various upheavals in my life, including my father’s final few years, the necessity of moving twice, and the Great Recession. I’m still dealing with the problems caused by the last, and, as you will see, looking for a job. But friends have persuaded me that I should start up the column again to increase my visibility and show people examples of my writing. So here I am, and writing the column again feels good. I already have a batch of subjects I want to write about, and I hope you stick around for the ride. And please spread the word!

    WHAT THE OUTSIDE WORLD (STILL) THINKS

    Those of you who read my first “Comics in Context” column a decade ago may recall that one of my motives for starting this column was anger. The current wave of movies based on comics, especially superhero comics, began in with the first X-Men movie, and I was appalled by the incomprehension and condescension with which some movie reviewers greeted them. Besides its alliterative catchiness, that was the reason I named the column “Comics in Context”: to criticize comics and related works in the media from an informed perspective, based on my years of studying the comics artform, the superhero genre, and other fields.

    Lately, in need of paying work, I’ve joined two local support groups for job seekers. At the first meeting of the night group, each of us was asked to tell the group about his or her career. So I spoke about being a comics historian, writing books on the subject, teaching about comics at New York University, curating museum exhibitions on comics, writing reviews of graphic novels for Publishers Weekly, and so forth. The rest of the group was silent, and I got the impression that the founder of the group commented that comics had entertained him in the past. But I got the sense that no one really knew anything about my chosen field. After the meeting ended, my spirits were brightened a little when one of the other participants came up to me and said he had been a big Marvel fan when he was growing up. But he hasn’t come to any of the subsequent meetings.

    At one of these later meetings, with only a small number of people present, we were all asked to do our “elevator pitch” about what we do and what kind of job we’re looking for. I again talked about being a writer about comics and graphic novels. Again most people said nothing, but one of them asked, “What’s a graphic novel? We know what comics are.” I explained, and talked about how over the last few decades comics and graphic novels had received serious attention in mainstream publications like The New York Times and in academia and in libraries (including the one where we were meeting). The man who didn’t know what a graphic novel was said, somewhat disbelievingly, that I was talking in “general” terms and wanted a specific example. So I talked about Art Spiegelman’s Maus, his graphic novel about the Holocaust, and how it had come out over a quarter century ago, had won the Pulitzer Prize, and was widely taught in schools. This came as news to everyone there. “How do you spell that?” the man asked about the title. (There was a copy in that same library!)

    I was finding it hard to keep my temper, and apologized. It was dismaying. It seemed that nobody there had heard of the graphic novel revolution or really understood or appreciated what I did. I mentioned this on Facebook, and one of my Facebook friends asked, in effect, what did you expect?

    I had naively expected more. For a dozen years there has been a wave of movies based on comic books and graphic novels, including blockbusters like Christopher Nolan’s Batman movies and Sam Raimi’s Spider-Man trilogy. But there have also been successful films based on indie comics, like American Splendor. Newspapers including The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Los Angeles Times, and USA Today regularly cover news in the comics industry, so frequently that it has ceased to be surprising. San Diego’s annual Comic Con has become an event covered by mass media throughout the country. The Sunday before this meeting The New York Times had run an article on the front page of its Sunday Arts & Leisure section about a museum retrospective of alternative cartoonist Daniel Clowes’ work; the Times subsequently ran an article about a retrospective of Robert Crumb’s career in Paris. Just last Sunday, as I write this, the Times did a long article about office politics at Archie Comics in its business section, and two pages of graphic novel reviews by Douglas Wolk in its Sunday Book Review. Only a few weekends before I attended “Comic New York,” a two-day academic symposium on comics at my alma mater Columbia University, marking the donation of longtime X-Men writer Chris Claremont’s archives (including my old fan letters to X-Men!) to the Columbia University library. There are graphic novel sections in public libraries now, as well as major bookstores. And how can anyone in America or various other countries avoid seeing the trailers and commercials and magazine covers for this summer’s movies, Joss Whedon’s The Avengers and Christopher Nolan’s The Dark Knight Rises? When I was a student at Columbia, decades ago, that all of these things would happen seemed impossible and unimaginable. Indeed, even when I wrote my first “Comics in Context,” I would not have thought that comics would have this much impact on American culture only a decade hence.

    And yet, in other ways, it seems as if nothing has changed at all, and as if I’m back at Columbia in my student days, trying unsuccessfully to persuade people (even some in the comics industry!) that, yes, comics is an artform and that superhero stories can be taken seriously. As astoundingly successful as various comics-based movies are commercially, and as enormous as the major comics conventions have grown, in other ways comics seem to be in a bad state. So many of my contemporaries have left the business. When comics were below the mainstream cultural radar, I got more paying work consistently than I do now.

    Much of my dilemma is in trying to continue a career writing about comics history, and more importantly, doing comics criticism. Oh, yes, now there are academic conferences on comics, but my impression is that academics may get to include graphic novels in a course that is mainly about non-comics works, or may even be able to teach a course on comics, but that the latter are still rarities. Back when I was a graduate student, Columbia would never have let me do a dissertation on comics; I’d love to do one now, but have yet to find a way back into academia to do it.

    I’ve proposed teaching courses on literary criticism of comics, or on the superhero genre, or on the bodies of work by major comics creators. But I’ve been told that people will not pay money to take such a course. There are plenty of courses about comics, but they’re mostly about how to write or draw comics. I keep seeking to write books about critically interpreting comics, but one editor has told me that no one wants to read books like this. Some academic presses may publish such books, but my former literary agents didn’t want me to deal with them. And, of course, it’s more likely to be alternative cartoonists who receive serious attention than comics writers and artists who work on genre material.

    I am amazed by all of this. I earned three degrees in English literature at Columbia University’s Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, concentrating on the drama of Shakespeare’s time and the 20th century. None if my courses were about how to write plays or novels; if I wanted to do that, I would have gone to Columbia’s School of the Arts. No, these were courses in critically analyzing great works of literature, the sort of courses you will find in English departments at any college or university.

    Similarly, I like to think that comics studies will pursue a route like film studies. In the early 1960s, I’m told, film courses at universities, when there were any, were only about how to make movies, more likely industrial training films that art films. This rapidly changed in the late 1960s. Now walk through the film section of a bookstore, and, yes, there will be some technical books about filmmaking, and certainly books on how to write screenplays. But the majority of the books will be studies of film genres, biographies of actors and directors, tomes on cinema history, guides to films on home video, and, of course, critical writings on the works of significant filmmakers.

    Another important factor in the development of American film criticism is that it had to learn to take genre films seriously. It was the French critics who wrote for Cahiers du Cinema in the 1950s, many of whom became filmmakers in France’s “New Wave,” who pioneered the serious analysis of Hollywood studio films. “Auteurist” critics like Andrew Sarris (one of my teachers at Columbia) and Peter Bogdanovich carried on this work in the United States in the 1960s. And now it is generally accepted that Hollywood entertainments like John Ford’s Westerns and Alfred Hitchcock’s thrillers can be art.

    I would like to think that comics studies will someday reach a similar point. But they haven’t yet. I’ve been working my whole life, from my letters to Silver Age letter columns – my first attempts at comics criticism – to the present, preparing for a kind of career that doesn’t seem to exist yet.

    Well, I can’t wait. I am returning to doing “Comics in Context,” whenever I can find time, because those of us who can do this sort of writing about comics should, to lay the foundation for the golden age of comics studies that I hope will someday come. I’ve done 240 “Comics in Context” columns in the past, all of which you can find on the Internet by Googling. I wish they had a wider audience, but someday perhaps they will. The age of social networking is much more advanced now than when I left off doing “Comics in Context”; maybe some of my new columns will go viral.

    THE CABINET OF DR. WHEDON

    As longtime “Comics in Context” readers know, I use my blog to cover not just comics but all forms of cartoon art, including animation, and also live action movies based on cartoon art. So you can expect over the coming weeks to see me do critiques of Joss Whedon’s The Avengers, Christopher Nolan’s The Dark Knight Returns, the reboot of the Spider-Man movies in The Amazing Spider-Man and Pixar’s first heroine-centric film Brave. I’ll also cover museum exhibitions of cartoon art, and stage versions of comics properties: I expect to write down my memories of seeing the infamous Spider-Man musical sooner or later. Sometimes I will delve into subjects that don’t belong in a column on comics, strictly speaking, if I can find some excuse. I’ve dealt with the classic television series Dark Shadows in the past, with the excuse that it has served as source material for comic books and comic strips over the decades, and plan to review Tim Burton’s controversial forthcoming film version. And I will sometimes critique non-comics works by writers who are also known for their work in comics or animation. So Joss Whedon, creator of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, and overseer and sometime writer of Dark Horse’s Buffy comics, has been a recurring past topic in “Comics in Context,” notably in my critique of the start of his run writing Marvel’s Astonishing X-Men comic.

    And that brings me to this week’s topic. As a prelude to writing about Whedon’s Avengers movie, I want to examine his other film that recently came out: the metafictional horror film The Cabin in the Woods, directed by Whedon’s longtime collaborator Drew Goddard, produced by Whedon, and co-written by both of them.

    Publicity for the movie and many reviewers have cautioned that they dare not reveal any of the plot, apart from the basic premise of teenagers going to stay in a cabin in the woods where Bad Things happen, lest they give away the many plot twists and surprises. As a result I ended up somewhat disappointed, since there were fewer twists and surprises than this secrecy had led me to expect. There is one big casting surprise towards the end though, that I never saw coming and really liked.

    But longtime “Comics in Context” readers know that I can’t do a thorough analysis of a story unless I deal with the whole plot. So consider this your spoiler warning, and let us proceed.

    The first big revelation, which some reviewers have given away, is that the five hapless teenagers are being watched and manipulated by some mysterious high-tech organization, whose principal figures are played by actors Bradley Whitford and Richard Jenkins. There are echoes here of past Whedon projects, such as the Initiative in Buffy, the secret government operation – located beneath a university full of teens instead of a cabin hideaway for only five teens – that held monsters captive, who eventually escape and wreak bloody havoc. Then there’s the Dollhouse, in the TV series of the same name, a secret corporate organization that manipulates young people as if they were slaves. The high-tech organization in Cabin even includes actress Amy Acker in a lab coat, visually echoing her roles in Whedon’s Angel and Dollhouse.

    Who is running this high-tech organization that seems to be experimenting on these victimized teens without their knowledge? If that question was answered in the film, I missed it. Was it the Big Bad Government or the Big Bad Corporation, both of which seem like cliches, albeit effective ones. As a Boomer who recalls the 1960s, I used to think of the Big Bad Government Agency as a bogeyman for the anti-establishment left wing. Chris Carter’s The X-Files did a great deal with the Big Bad Government Conspiracy, headed by the Cigarette-Smoking Man; heroes Mulder and Scully and their boss and ally Skinner seemed to be among the very few truly trustworthy people in the federal government in this series. The limitations of government intelligence and power became clearer in the post-9/11 period. I think it is now harder to imagine an X-Files-style all-powerful government conspiracy that succeeds in remaining secret from the public. The government isn’t that omnicompetent, and the bigger the supposed conspiracy, the more likely people are to talk. In watching 24 I began to think that the Big Bad Government might really nowadays be a bogeyman for the right wing, and maybe, in retrospect, The X-Files had played on such fears from the right. So nowadays we have a left wing that wants to expand the services of government, like through universal health care, and a right wing that insists on shrinking government and that government cannot operate as well as an less regulated free market. In the first X-Files movie we were told that FEMA was the means by which the Big Bad Government would take control of the country; this was before FEMA so famously blundered during Hurricane Katrina. Now in real life there are Republicans who claim that Obamacare is an attack on freedom.

    Since it’s hard for me to imagine a corporation tormenting Cabin‘s teen protagonists without any obvious financial benefit, then I presume that it’s the government running the Cabin experiment; indeed, we are shown that other countries, notably Japan, have their own versions. So I find the Big Bad Secret Government Project something of a cliché, although arguably Whedon and Goddard are counting on its very familiarity. Cabin is a movie that deals with archetypes and tropes of horror fiction, so why not include tropes from other forms of genre fiction as well, like the scientists who manipulate and victimize unwilling subjects as if they were lab rats?

    What Whedon and Goddard have created in Cabin is a work of metafiction, in other words, a work of fiction about the creation of fiction. The five teen protagonists, isolated in a creepy house in the wilderness, beset by threats to their lives, are archetypal figures in an archetypal situation common to a large subgenre of contemporary horror films. Whedon and Goddard appear to be very much aware that they are bringing a different perspective to what have become contemporary horror film archetypes.

    Hence, Whedon said in a recent interview for Salon: “‘Cabin in the Woods is, for me, a way of making the kind of movie that I love and at the same time making another kind of movie that I love. It’s a way of taking the cabin and – not blowing it up, but kind of exploding it. Not just enjoying it, but turning it over in your hand over and over and looking at it. I know that’s not a great sell, but that’s really what it is to me. If you take the premise, and then you take the idea that the premise is a premise – without losing the audience, without winking at them – how much can you do? How far can you take it?”

    So the movie treats the “premise” as “a premise”: the scientists are creating a narrative, using their teen victims as their cast. The scientists put them into this horror movie scenario, watch how they react, and subject them to terrors that cause the teens to suffer and die. And it is indicated that the scientists do this over and over to different sets of young victims, thus staging this narrative, this drama, on a recurring basis.

    The scientists, therefore, can be interpreted as stand-ins for the creators of horror films, who devise these fantasies in which young victims are subjected to suffering and death for the entertainment of the horror film audience. Take the analogy further, and the Whitford and Jenkins characters become stand-ins for Whedon and Goddard themselves, at least in part. In the Salon interview Whedon admits this: “Besides being lovely guys and great actors, Bradley and Richard represent a completely different kind of identification. We are them – and not just me and Drew, although specifically me and Drew – but they are the people who have chosen for what happens to happen.”

    Moreover, the Whitford and Jenkins characters are not only the creators of the horrific story, but also its audience. They and the other members of their team watch what happens to the teens on large viewing screens, as if they were watching a horror movie in a theater or on television. One of the things that most struck me about the Whitford and Jenkins characters was how jaded and even bored they often look, watching these screens. They have apparently watched these horror scenarios they devise so many times that they are inured to the horror, and even the sexuality that they observe. Whitford’s character, for example, waits, seemingly bored, for one of the girls to perform that standard trope of such films, going topless, is disappointed when she doesn’t, and seems mildly relieved when she finally does but more as if he’s checking off a list than being actually aroused by the sight.

    Portraying Whitford and Jenkins’ characters as audience implicates the film’s actual audience in their willingness to torment innocents for its supposed entertainment value. Whedon points this out to Salon as well: “And you, as the viewer, are the person who chooses that, if you have gone to see this movie. The act of walking into the movie makes you the one to see these people suffer. It does not happen if you do not watch.” The interviewer then compares the situation to Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle. Agreeing, Whedon notes that “If you don’t go to the movie, maybe those kids have a really nice weekend.”

    The real target of Cabin, it seems to me, is lack of empathy towards other people. Specifically, it is the lack of empathy by those in power towards those who are out of power, by establishment insiders towards outsiders, by the old towards the young. The scientists have no sympathy for their teenage victims, and no sense of identification with them; they make the kids suffer for the minimal entertainment it provides to their jaded psyches. They even take bets on the outcome. As far as they are concerned, the five teens are the Other, who exist merely to be destroyed in a demonstration of their power to manipulate events.

    This too is an archetypal situation: human history is full of examples of one group in power tormenting a powerless group who serve as unwilling scapegoats. Take, for example, the Romans in the Colosseum taking enjoyment in seeing Christians thrown to the lions. Moreover, it strikes me that this theme of lack of empathy is particularly appropriate to the present day, with politicians campaigning to shred the social safety net, reduce the availability of medical care to the less prosperous, cut Social Security and Medicare for the elderly. Remember in one of the Republican presidential candidates’ debates when people cheered at the idea of letting someone without medical insurance die?

    In Cabin Whedon and Goddard are questioning the motivations of horror film makers, and their audience, including themselves in both categories. Why do you take pleasure in seeing these young people suffer? Why do you enjoy seeing people killed off one by one?

    Perhaps Whedon and Goddard point to a possible answer through the third act’s big twist. It turns out that the scientists are not just staging these horrific scenarios for their own perverse pleasure. Each of the five teens is revealed to be a representative of an archetypal figure: the Athlete, the Whore, Student, the Virgin, ad the Fool. Metafictionally speaking, these are character types in this horror subgenre. Moreover, the scientists’ repeated scenario of having menaces of different sorts attack and kill an isolated group of teenagers is revealed to be a ritual, that has presumably been enacted for millennia. Here Whedon and Goddard are indicating that they are not just dealing with the conventions of a certain type of horror film; they are showing that these conventions are actually modern versions of a mythic pattern involving similarly mythic archetypes. Thus this “cabin-in-the-woods” horror subgenre is a contemporary version of a mythic ritual of human sacrifice, in which the innocent young perish at the hands of dark forces.

    According to Cabin, this ritual is conducted over and over in order to appease ancient H. P. Lovecraftian gods so they will refrain from destroying all of humanity. Does this have any figurative meaning with regard to Whedon and Goddard’s metafictional exploration of horror films? In this case I couldn’t find any clues in Whedon’s recent interviews. Perhaps, though, Whedon and Goddard are suggesting that horror films are the filmmakers’ and audience’s way of dealing with greater terrors than those the films evoke, such as the inevitability of mortality. We cope with our awareness and fears of death by watching inflicted on other people who are Not Us, while we remain safe, like Whitford and Jenkins’ characters watching on their screens.

    At the end of Cabin, the two surviving protagonists decide to allow the Lovecraftian gods to exterminate humanity rather than keep playing the scientists’ game. Can the deaths of billions, the genocide of the human race, really be the preferable solution? The end of the film seems not a victory or restoration of order, but an expression of exhaustion: let the world die, give in to darkness.

    As such, Cabin seems to me to be the most extreme step yet in the continuing darkening of Whedon’s work, ever since the latter seasons of Buffy. Whedon first won his devoted audience through the early seasons of Buffy, which succeeded in combining intense, operatic drama and genuine darkness with a compensating humor and optimism; Buffy was a tormented teen, doomed to be unhappy in love, and yet she was embarked on a heroine’s journey of empowerment, providing a source of hope. The Whedonverse has steadily grown darker and even more despairing at times. I followed Dollhouse but never truly found it appealing; Whedon’s trademark wit was absent or misfired, and the plight of the heroine, unaware of her true identity, manipulated as a slave and prostitute by her masters, seemed dismayingly unpleasant to watch, far removed from the heroism of past Whedon characters. In Cabin even though two protagonists defy the ritual and survive, hope and heroism are absent. (Anyway, the those two protagonists will only survive until the Lovecraftian monsters get around to killing them. too.)

    I wonder if Whedon and Goddard’s revisionist take on horror films even loses its way in Cabin‘s third act. The movie ends with chaos, with monsters loosed from their cages, slaughtering everyone , including all but two of the principals. Blood is literally everywhere. If the filmmakers are questioning why the audience should enjoy watching people suffer and die, then why fill the end of the film with so much suffering and death? Whedon told Salon that he intends for the viewers to care about not only the teen protagonists but also even Whitford and Jenkins’ characters. But recall that he also noted that “Cabin in the Woods is, for me, a way of making the kind of movie that I love.” Maybe the love gets in the way of the critique at the end, since it ends in a universal bloodbath, and the film seems impassive towards the deaths of all the scientists. Just more bloody slaughter to entertain jaded moviegoers.

    Telling The New York Times about his next project, a web series called Wastelanders,-created with Warren Ellis, Whedon said “”It’s very dark and very grown-up,” he said. “But it’s the next thing that I want to say, so I can’t worry about “˜Well, where’s the empowerment narrative that people love?’ “. So the journey into darkness continues. But will this affect the Avengers film, which I would like to think will ultimately be a celebration of the superhero genre?

    Interestingly, Whedon told Salon about Cabin and Avengers, “There’s going to be the people trying to manipulate a situation and controlling it from above, and the people who are actually in the trenches. In that sense, Cabin in the Woods and The Avengers are oddly similar.” Later, he added, “I’m incredibly excited and proud of both of these movies and they have many similarities, but they really couldn’t be more different in so many ways It’s nice to be able to do that.” Well, after I get to see The Avengers movie, you may expect to see me compare and contrast it with Cabin here in “Comics in Context.”

    Thinking about Cabin‘s critique of horror filmmakers;’ motives, I wonder if the same approach can be applied to superhero comics. Take the common contemporary trope of continually killing off long-running, beloved characters, sometimes horrifically (consider Supergirl’s demise in Crisis on Infinite Earths, for an early example). Usually the character is eventually resurrected, although readers may have to wait decades for this, as with the Silver Age Flash. Death and resurrection, real or symbolic, are part of the mythic hero’s journey, but how triumphant are many of these resurrections in contemporary comics? Indeed, more and more, these killings and resurrections seem to be devised as cynical ploys to appeal to the jaded palates of fans who have seen too many supposedly shocking scenarios in latter-day comics. Surely no one at Marvel really intended the recent demise of Captain America, whose body was then show decaying on panel, to be permanent, and yet readers fell for it, and even after Cap’s return, readers fell for the seeming demise of the Human Torch in yet another cynical scenario that inevitably resulted in his return. Sometimes I have found myself wondering about the mindset that devises these storylines. When did the superhero soap operatics that Stan Lee pioneered turn into this cold manipulation of heroic icons, dragging them through death and degradation for the entertainment of a generation of readers of “grim and gritty” comics? Are these iconic superheroes inspiring figures, or merely puppets manipulated into increasingly dark and despairing narratives by an industry desperate to keep sales from falling any further?

    “Comics in Context” #241
    Copyright 2012 Peter Sanderson

    CLICK HERE FOR THE COMICS IN CONTEXT ARCHIVES

  • Opinion In A Haystack: CABIN IN THE WOODS & THREE STOOGES Reviews

    haystackheader.jpg

    THE CABIN IN THE WOODS ““ Review
    SPOILER FREE!!!

    cabin-in-the-woods-poster

    Walking out of the theater there was anger coursing through the circuitry that connects my brain to my face to my lips. This wasn’t normal anger, but a very complimentary one. “How did I not think of that?!?!” Cabin In The Woods, a monumentally entertaining romp with a concept so simple, so genius, it’s hell-bent to anger any determined screenwriters out there munching popcorn.

    Joss Whedon, the man, the myth, the soon-to-be legend, how does he do it? That’s what I wanted to know. All the empirical evidence that I have researched is telling me that exactly three to five inches from Joss’s left armpit resides a dark black hole the diameter of a 2-Liter RC Cola bottle. This hole leads to a place that only a few entertainers in history have ever felt the cool caress of on their talented fingertips. This place, this hole, is where a seemingly endless supply of creativity and knowledge of story and character based entertainment is derived. All of it floats freely, you just need to reach in and grab it. Need to create three shows that lead to pulp culture phenomenon? No prob! Just reach in Joss’s nipple abyss and you’ll be writing in no time flat. Stephen King also has a creativity hole, his is located just below his right thigh (the scarier one.)

    If it’s not abundant with clarity yet, I very much enjoyed Drew Goddard’s Cabin. Wait, strike that, reverse it”¦loved. Why? Well I don’t think I can fully answer such a question without spoiling the large meaty sandwich of awesome that this film is. Also I don’t mean to hold Joss high and downplay Goddard’s role here, as the direction, pacing, acting and production are all very effective. This is quite possibly the type of film that will define it’s own Horror/Comedy genre for a generation, much like Evil Dead 2, Ghostbusters, or Dead Alive. While it might be a bit MORE or LESS gore/scare filled than those I mentioned, the spirit and craftsmanship is there. The tone located in the center of Cabin, especially the last third, reminded me of a young Sam Raimi with a dash of Ivan Reitman for good measure.

    What in the heck is it about?”

    How should I put this? It’s a packed-tight meta-horror-comedy with a plot that bows its head to, arguably, history’s greatest horror writer. Cabin is most certainly a post modern take on the horror genre of the last 40 or so years, something we have seen more than a few times in the last decade. The difference here is, the execution is excellent. At no point is the movie “bad for bad’s sake” or pumped with cheese and camp in an attempt at homage. It manages to comment on its own genre using parody, but with no parody of then genre’s low points at all. Yeah, it’s hard to explain without spoilers, give me a break.

    The tagline for Cabin is:

    “You think you know the story. Think again.”

    This is really pointing to everything you get from the trailer, which I’m designating as non-spoiler territory. Kids go to a cabin in the woods. Someone is controlling the horrors that befall them. It’s the “hows” and the “whys” that come into play here that make the film great. The cast is solid, especially with the likes of the now legendary character actors Richard Jenkins and Bradley Whitford leading the way. Their banter anchors the film in it’s comedy-horror roots and was easily my favorite aspect of the whole ordeal.

    This film was supposedly shelved for two years, why I can’t imagine, but since it was filmed some of its principal cast have gone on to do bigger projects, most notably Chris “THOR” Hemsworth. They are all perfectly cast in roles that are themselves “meta” yet there is still personality brought through even in the homage. Fran Kranz being a particular stand out as the staple stoner “with a twist!” (M. Night’s favorite character?)

    You could say I have trepidations about speaking further on the flick. Discussing this film without spoilers is near impossible. If you are a horror fan, I have a hard time imagining you will regret the very overpriced ticket-sized void in your pocket when walking out of Cabin, and to Joss Whedon’s and Drew Goddard’s credit, neither will casual audience members looking for a good time at the theater.

    This is that rare breed of film, like say Hot Fuzz, that reflects on everything that came before but still maintains its own “Ghostbuster-Evil-Deadish” comedy-horror entity in the process. I can’t help but be excited about whatever Drew Goddard is directing next, and of course I’m prepared to be baffled when Whedon blows me away AGAIN this year with Avengers. Whedon, I’m trying to be a screenwriter too, so could I uh, well”¦let me reach into your nipple abyss”¦please?
    The Three Stooges ““ Trailer & Movie Review

    three_stooges_ver3

    Oh man. Where do I begin?

    No, I don’t say that AT ALL because it was, as the COMIC BOOK GUY would say, the “WORST MOVIE EVER.” No, I liked it a lot, damn near loved it, and so did the audience I saw it with. I ask “where do I begin?” because I’m tired. Drained, if you will. I am so utterly disgusted and tired of defending comedy, especially in this world of internet criticism. My brain is tied in a knot so complex that I couldn’t induce a seizure even by fast-forwarding Japanese children’s programming.

    I’ve covered part of this territory before in my review for Macgruber, but I’m not satisfied with my explanation given there. How do I condense what could easily amount to an 800 page dissertation on the misguided modern day view of how comedy and levity in film is viewed by the public, the web, and critics in general? I don’t, I can’t, I won’t”¦I have to keep this smaller. This review is not going to be about the defense of comedy in all its forms, that is just too big and better left to a more eloquent writer to defend.

    The negative reaction to the first two Stooges trailers was one of the more hateful waves of venom I’ve ever seen spewed on the internet. I just don’t understand why. First, if you are not a fan of the original Three Stooges shorts, stop reading right now. For this particular film, I don’t care about a “non-fan’s” opinion, your stance is moot to me, and honestly you are most likely (but possibly not) part of the group that need to read that 800 page dissertation about comedy. I’m not saying it’s wrong that you aren’t a fan of the source material, nor am I trying to force it on you, just saying that what follows is not for you in the least. Thanks for trying to read this review, but please stop. Thank you and goodbye.

    Ok Stooge Fans, now that they are gone please help me to understand WHY you hated those first two trailers so, so, so much. My first question is this:

    “Can you get over the fact that it exists, and that people who aren’t the original stooges are playing the stooges?” AND If I tell you that the directors, The Farrelly Brothers, have considered this a dream project and have been trying to get this movie made for almost 10 years, and it is not just a quick Hollywood cash-in, but a beloved and carefully constructed love letter to their comedy heroes does that help sway your answer at all?

    If your answer is “no” then I will have to ask you to please also stop reading. If you can’t except the above then you can’t accept the movie. I respect your decision, now go on and enjoy the rest of your day.

    We are losing people quicker than Spinal Tap drummers. Alright, so you love the original Stooges, you can accept new actors playing them, and you are aware that the movie isn’t a Hollywood cash-in board-room decision without any passion behind it. Good. NOW. Here are the only feasible reasons I could see you going into this with a negative perspective based on the trailers:

    1) It’s not black and white.

    2) It’s takes place in modern day instead of when the originals took place.

    3) Modern day references that will become dated and seem like a cheap gag and degrade the “timelessness” of the project as a whole. (ala The Jersey Shore cameo.)
    I’ll address these one by one, and I am going to act as though I, assumedly like you, have only seen the trailers.

    “Why can’t it be in black and white?” – Regardless of The Artist winning best picture, do you honestly think any studio is going to fund a black and white summer comedy? There’s a reason it took 10 years to get this made, and why any movie has troubles getting made”¦MONEY. Believe it or not, they don’t make these decisions based on how awesome you personally think it would be.

    “Why can’t it take place sometime before the 1940s, why do they always have to bring them into the modern world?” ““ Money. Money. Money. Once again, I’m sure the Farrellys would have loved the option to make a black and white 1930s period Stooge flick, but NO ONE is going to fund that. It’s either this or nothing, you might prefer nothing but THIS exists. Deal.

    The Jersey Shore? COME ON!!!” ““ I agree with you here, upon seeing the first trailer I could have done without this, but once again: MONEY. Jersey Shore and iPhone jokes are going to bring in the kiddies, sad but true.

    Now, everything I just blathered about is pure common sense, things you already know and are more than capable of figuring out, so what else is left for you to instantly hate on this movie? I’m a lifelong Three Stooges fan, born and raised at the Nyuk Nyuk University of comedy and I’m also a pretty harsh critic when it comes to things I so dearly love. With the exception of the three obvious complaints I made above all I could see was completely, nigh perfect, impressions of the three great ones themselves. Will Sasso, Sean Hayes, and Chris Diamantopoulos are giving their all at every turn and succeeding.

    three-stooges-movie-photojpg-f7ffb266ce60bf70

    Not to mention the film itself looks to stay true in both plot and technical production to the originals. As stooge fans you should be aware that the Three Stooges were never high art, or shot and filmed by Federico Fellini”¦they were broad comedy shorts produced for a broad audience back in their day. So I guess my question to all you venom squirters is”¦what exactly is your argument for all the hate? It looks 100% accurate sans the obvious changes made due to money and of course the deceased original stooges. Why is this the end of the western civilization as we know it? Why is it somehow MORE AWFUL and MORE OFFENSIVE than the original stooge shorts? Are you absolutely positive that you are even a fan? Please, send all explanations to the comment section.

    **********Possible light spoilers ahead**********

    The film itself is actually a very accurate and a damn funny 90 minutes. The overall plot is split into 3 shorts that are loosely connected via a main storyline about saving the orphanage the stooges were raised in. A lot of care was taken to actually replicate the same type of physics, editing, side characters, and cinematography of the original shorts. Most things are shot wide and for the most part static to incorporate the three boys doing their stooge thing all in the frame at once, just like the originals.

    The physics are “stooge physics” applying to everyone, not just Larry, Moe and Curly themselves. There’s no blood, no reality, and absolutely no permanent effects of violence. An example of this is when Craig Bierko is in a full body cast with a stick of dynamite shoved in the head area, when it explodes, he floats off the bed, smoke shoots out the holes and he sticks his head out with black ash stains all over his face. This isn’t reality. The effect, like this one, was even filmed and executed in such a manner that with the exception of being IN COLOR it felt like it was filmed in 1940. Die hard fans with a keen eye will completely appreciate the filming, editing, physics and FX.

    The performances are amazing, not just because the three leads have the look and the voices down, but they are believable as a cohesive comedy trio. The story itself actually is a pretty cliché, on purpose no doubt, but it’s a sweet story with some heart. Larry David as the cantankerous Nun who is often screaming at everyone steals every scene he’s in just for the utter absurdity of”¦well”¦Larry David in a Nun costume screaming at kids.

    As for the Jersey Shore cameo, yeah I was dreading it like one does. Little did I expect it to be one of the funniest parts in the movie, it’s almost cathartic seeing Moe slap the tan off their skin for 5 minutes. Sure I would probably prefer it not to be in the flick, but I’d be telling a stone-cold lie if I said I wasn’t laughing.

    This whole write up has been way too long and rather on the defensive, which I fully admit. I’m also admitting that this movie isn’t for cynical post-modern internet trolls or Stooge Fans who can’t adjust. Sure, it is a valid point to wonder if this whole venture is disrespectful to the original actors and I agree that it totally could have been, and in fact it was a very high probability it was going to be. After seeing the flick, and especially seeing it with such a satisfied crowd of critics, I must say that I felt no disrespect, and in all honesty it’s a rather harmless, sweet movie that is faithful as all living hell. In this guy’s humble opinion I think the Farrelly Brothers accomplished what they set out to do. They made a pretty darn good Stooge flick, still that doesnt mean it will appeal to the “twitter” generation one bit (I guess that’s why the Jersey Shore is shoved in there.)

    Thanks for your eyeball time! Bob Rose signing off!

  • Weekend Shopping Guide 10/15/10: Go Go Gadgets

    weekendshopping.png

    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 ended before its time, but fans can now pick up the 3rd and final volume of John Byrne’s Next Men: The Premiere Collection (IDW, $50.00 SRP), which collects issues 21-30 in an oversized, hardbound presentation. Oh, and that whole “ended before its time” thing? IDW has convinced Byrne to bring the series back. Huzzah!

    thinkgeek-01.jpg

    Nobody does fantasy drinking quite like the inhabitants of Middle Earth, and you can booze up in the same style with the Lord Of The Rings Etched Bar-Ware, allowing you to get a pair of pint glasses etched with the logos from either the Prancing Pony or the Green Dragon ($29.99), or a single large stein etched with same ($29.99). Now you too can drink a dwarf under the table.

    thinkgeek-02.jpg

    If you’re like me, you have far too many wires and plugs in your life. From cell phones to mp3 players and gaming systems and bluetooth headsets… There’s a seemingly endless list of devices in need of charging or communication. And if you’ve ever tried to travel with that mess of cables, you know how frustrating it can be. Eager to streamline things a bit, I went hunting for a solution – And found the fine folks at Gomadic. Gomadic has designed a system of standardizes chargers that are universal for nearly every device, meaning one wire for everything. How do they manage this? By introducing an exchangeable tip system. That means you have small tips specific to each device, which can then plug into the universal wire – wires available for car charging, USB, wall socket, or even multiple devices at once. This is brilliant. After recently purchasing an HTC Incredible Droid phone, I was kitted out with tips, wires, and even universal in-cupholder/adhesive device stands for the car (equally brilliant, equally useful). The bottom line is this – Go explore Gomadic.com, and make your life a whole lot easier.

    blankguide.gif

    Essentially a combination of both the rated & unrated editions in one disc, the Hangover: Extreme Edition (Warner Bros., Rated R, Bly-Ray-$35.99 SRP) also adds a CD sampler and an album of wedding photos, while retaining he same bonus features as the previous releases.

    blankguide.gif

    Another catalogue title makes its way to high definition with the release of David O. Russell’s Three Kings (Warner Bros., Rated R, Blu-Ray-$24.98 SRP), whose political satire on the first Gulf War is even more powerful today. Bonus materials include a pair of audio commentaries, additional scenes, featurettes, and interviews.

    blankguide.gif

    While it’s not the American adventures of Derren Brown I would hope for, the second season of The Mentalist (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$59.98 SRP) is still a fun little procedural, starring Simon Baker as the titular former “psychic” aiding the California Bureau of Investigation. The 5-disc set contains all 23 episodes, plus featurettes and deleted scenes.

    blankguide.gif

    It came and went at the box office with barely a gurgle, but the big screen outing for DC Comics’ Old West-ern vigilante Jonah Hex (Warner Bros., Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$35.98 SRP) is an ok little flick, carried along mostly by Josh Brolin’s take on the grizzled bounty hunter. Bonus materials include a pair of featurettes and deleted scenes.

    blankguide.gif

    Supplement your recent Blu-Ray Beauty And The Beast purchase with the definitive making-of book – Tale As Old As Time: The Art And Making Of Beauty And The Beast (Disney Editions, $40.00 SRP). As you can probably guess, the copiously illustrated tome presents an inside look at the film’s creation.

    blankguide.gif

    Flawed in conception and just plain boring in execution, it’s little wonder that Joss Whedon’s Dollhouse (Fox, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$59.99 SRP) only made it 2 seasons, the second of which makes its home video debut featuring all 13 episodes, plus audio commentaries, deleted scenes, featurettes, and outtakes.

    blankguide.gif

    When reading Walt Disney: His Life In Pictures (Disney Press, $14.95 SRP), which is a pretty quick read, but loaded with amazing, often rare photos, I’m reminded of those famous people biographies one would find in an elementary school library. It’s great for kids, but animation buffs and Disney fans will want it for the photos.

    blankguide.gif

    Criterion has always done right by Ingmar Bergman, and they continue to treat his catalogue with exquisite gloves in this era of high definition. Bergman’s The Magician (Criterion, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$39.95 SRP) looks and sounds beautiful, and features a 1967 video interview with Bergman, a rare audio interview, and a massive supplementary booklet.

    blankguide.gif

    Mill Creek has been steadily releasing a slew of budget-priced titles that are must-have for someone who wants a quick, cheap way to load up on TV series, documentaries, or cult films. On the cult side of things, you can get the 16-film Fists Of Vengeance: Martial Arts Collection (Mill Creek, Not Rated, DVD-$9.98 SRP), the 12-film Ten Thousand Ways To Die: The Spaghetti Western Collection (Mill Creek, Not Rated, DVD-$9.98 SRP), and the 12-film Rare Cult Cinema (Mill Creek, Not Rated, DVD-$9.98 SRP). For documentaries, you’ve got the series Birth Of Flight: A History Of Civil Aviation (Mill Creek, Not Rated, DVD-$9.98 SRP) and Native America: Voices From The Land (Mill Creek, Not Rated, DVD-$9.98 SRP).

    blankguide.gif

    Take an okay 80’s cult film (The Lost Boys) and make a wrongheaded attempt to catch lightening in a direct-to-video bottle and you get an awkward sequel like Lost Boys: The Thirst (Warner Bros., Rated R, Blu-Ray-$35.99 SRP) which brings the vampire-fighting Frog Brothers back for another round. Bonus features include a trio of behind-the-scenes featurettes.

    blankguide.gif

    As sci-fi horror goes, Splice (Warner Bros., Rated R, Blu-Ray-$35.99 SRP) is engaging enough to at least keep your interest, with all of its Frankenstein-like creation of life that goes awry, but the real reason to watch is the performance of Sarah Polley as the creature’s laboratory “mother”. Bonus features are limited to a behind-the-scenes featurette.

    blankguide.gif

    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

    ##

  • Soapbox: Gleeful

    soapbox-header.png

    Gleeful

    lucyline.gif

    There are a number of rules and codes that I try to live my life by and to be fair; I’ve broken most of them. But the one rule that I rend to follow as often as possible is “if it’s good enough for Joss Whedon, its good enough for me”. I’ve watched most everything that Joss has been involved in and I have to admit that it took the involvement of Joss Whedon and Neil Patrick Harris to get me to finally watch an episode of Glee, despite the encouragement of my friends since the start of the show. Joss Whedon is the man responsible for two of the best forty five minute musicals in history. My friends know my tastes; this is why they’re my friends, so when they told me that I’d love Glee I should have known that they were right. My friends know that I’m a fan of musicals and indeed it’s only because of my friends that I was lucky enough to have been exposed to musicals at all.

    Like most things in my life, my exposure to musicals is due to the folk from the View Askew Message Board. In 2007, when tickets were bought for Kevin Smith’s 37th birthday party in New Jersey, plans were immediately made, and one of those plans was to stay in New York with some friends for a few days before going to New Jersey to connect with the main contingent of Boardies.

    I’ve always been a huge supporter of the principle of compromise. Well, I’m a supporter of the part of compromise where I get to do the stuff that I want to do. The part of the compromise where I have to do what someone else wants to do; I’m not the hugest fan of that part. In New York with my friends before Prom, I certainly got to do a lot of stuff that I wanted to do, the funnest part of which was a brilliant night in a pub called “O’Lunney’s” on West 45th Street just off Times Square. But the time came as all times must when I had to do something that I didn’t want to do, and what I did not want to do was to endure Legally Blonde: The Musical. I’d love to be able to say that I was graceful in compromise, but I wasn’t. I really didn’t want to go to see the musical and even though I’d already paid for the ticket, when the time came to go to the venue I was trying my best to think of ways to get out of having to endure the show and even the possibility of faking a heart attack wasn’t out of the question.

    generic-broadway

    I mean, if I was being forced to sit through a musical, wouldn’t you think that at least I’d be forced to sit through a good musical. Legally Blonde was a musical based on… Legally Blonde and lets call a spade a spade here, it’s not exactly Shakespeare. But all narrative problems aside, Legally Blonde: The Musical is what every musical should be, it’s incredibly enjoyable. Within ten minutes of the show having started, I was in love with the show and by the time the main cast started doing a fair approximation of Riverdance, there was a good chance that my heart would explode with joy. When the show ended I was fully converted, and for the next week I took every opportunity possible during the festivities leading up to Prom to tell people about this life changing experience. Also, I couldn’t stop myself from singing part of the opening track of the show. “Never Say Goodbye” is the song that will forever remind me of Prom night but “Omigod You Guys”, the song that opened the Legally Blonde show is the official song of that whole holiday for me.

    Folk who know me can attest to the fact that when I find something that I like, I’m not shy about talking about it to anyone who’ll listen and I spent a long time telling every person that I met about how much I enjoyed the show, how surprised I was by that fact and how I was looking forward to seeing more musicals in the future. And I think that by the time March of 2008 rolled around and I was in Orlando with the same group of friends, my musical-hysteria had just about died down. So you can imagine my surprise when I walked into the kitchen of the condo I was staying in with my friends and I saw a custom made “Legally Simon” magnet stuck to the door of the fridge.

    legally-simon

    To make matters worse (or possibly better), I found out that a whole batch of these magnets had been produced and were being handed out to the rest of the group later that same night. Despite my initial embarrassment at seeing this particular image of myself, it’s become a reminder of a great time with good friends and I’m fairly proud of the fact that every single time I’ve gone overseas since then and have been invited in to a friend’s house, a Legally Simon magnet has been there to greet me. That makes me smile almost as much as the original musical did.

    Since then, I’ve been lucky enough to see a few more musicals with my friends. I’ve been able to see The Wedding Singer, Flashdance, Legally Blonde (again), Avenue Q and most recently, Wicked. Wicked stands out a little bit from the rest of the group in that it almost is Shakespearean in its themes and narrative, based on the fantastic book by Gregory Maguire. It’s been recently announced that a movie based on the musical version of Wicked is currently in development and we can only hope that the powers that be have enough common sense to cast Idina Menzel in the role of Elphaba.

    wicked

    Musicals on-screen don’t have the same impact that a stage musical has, and no matter the quality of the acting or the singing or the production values of what you see on screen, you just can’t beat the feeling of being part of an audience and getting caught up in the emotion of the moment. Having said that, every so often the on-screen musical does come close.

    Before providing me with a reason to watch Glee, Joss Whedon already had two very successful forty five minute musicals under his belt. One was the “Once More With Feeling” episode of Buffy The Vampire Slayer and the other was Doctor Horrible. The episode of Buffy in particular is notable for taking a group of actors, most of which had little or no musical experience (or talent) and being able to produce what it arguably one of the best episodes of the series’ seven year run. We knew that the songs would be catchy and we knew that it would be funny in places, what we didn’t suspect at all was that that one episode of would bring to bare the inner secrets of almost every character and turn the songs into confessions. Also… it has a training montage.

    If OMWF was a risk for Whedon, then his next attempt at a musical, Doctor Horrible was possibly an even bigger risk, but it was also a bigger success. The initial internet release proved to be wildly popular. It was followed by releases on CD, MP3 download, DVD as well as prequel stories in comic form. It’s also been confirmed that a sequel of some description is in the pipeline. Nobody was quite sure what to expect when Doctor Horrible first went live on the internet, but it only took one viewing to fall in love with Neil Patrick Harris’ not so villainous villain and Nathan Fillion’s not so heroic hero. Personally the biggest revelations from the first Act of Doctor Horrible were that the man who played Malcolm Reynolds could play sleazy so well and that he is a pretty great singer. “A Man’s Gotta Do”, the song that Nathan Fillion and Neil Patrick Harris share towards the end of Act One actually led to me almost being arrested one night on a busy Dublin road. Let’s just say that Nathan Fillion is a much better crooner than I could ever hope to be, and when a police man asks you what you’re doing, telling him that you’re trying to do an A-Flat isn’t the best answer to give.

    drhorrible

    But despite my slight Whedon-related brush with the law, it did take the combined presence of Joss Whedon and Neil Patrick Harris to finally convince me to watch an episode of Glee. And through the entire episode, I couldn’t help but smile. More than any other on-screen musical that I’ve come across, Glee embodies Broadway and almost makes you feel like you’re watching a stage production, wrapped in the awe and the emotion of a crowd of people. It’s cheesy at times, and in fairness, for every four or five amazing songs there’s the occasional clunker. But that, in my opinion, just adds to the authentic and spontaneous feeling that the show has, making it like Broadway-in-a-box. Glee does exactly what a musical is supposed to. It makes you feel gleeful.

    Simon Fitzgerald

  • Weekend Shopping Guide 5/28/10: When Penguins Fly

    weekendshopping.png

    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 the first volume could be a bit rough going, as the strip was still finding its footing and voice, Bloom County: The Complete Library Volume 2 (IDW, $39.99 SRP) is Berke Breathed really hitting his stride and crafting the comic that a generation (including me) fell in love with. Combining gut-level comedy with brilliant satire, its absence from the landscape is still a loss, but I encourage everyone to pick this up and re-live the good times.

    thinkgeek-01.jpg

    It may seem a bit pricey, but considering what a real pain it can be to keep monitors and TV screen clean and dust-free, finding a solid product that quickly and effectively does that cleaning with no fuss certainly makes the cost worthwhile. So what is this great product? The TV Clean Electronics Duster ($59.99). Essentially, it’s a spiffy lint roller for your gear.

    thinkgeek-02.jpg

    Forged in the fire of the Writers Strike of 2008, released on the internet to rabid fan acclaim, and long available on that selfsame net, you can now get Joss Whedon’s online musical, Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog (New Video, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$19.95 SRP) in high definition. Bonus features include a musical studio commentary, a standard commentary, making-of featurettes, and Evil League Of Evil application videos.

    blankguide.gif

    It’s an uneven affair, but Mystery Team (Lionsgate, Rated R, DVD-$27.98 SRP) – about a trio of high school seniors still lodged in their childhood fantasy as white bread investigators suddenly in the deep end of a murder mystery – is still smart enough to be a worthwhile watch. It certainly makes me interested to see what else Derrick Comedy – the troupe behind the flick – have to offer in the future. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, featurettes, a comedy short, and a gag reel.

    blankguide.gif

    New to Blu-Ray from the fine folks at Criterion is By Brakhage: An Anthology – Volumes One and Two (Criterion, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$79.95 SRP), whose 3 discs contain a collection of the often bizarre, but always fascinating, experimental short films by Stan Brakhage. By tinkering with exposure, painting, editing, and more, Brakhage presaged much of what we see in advertising (and even MTV) today. Bonus materials include video encounters with Brakhage, audio remarks, a video interview, a short film by his wife, footage from his Sunday salons at the University of Colorado, audio recordings of his lectures, and an essay-filled booklet.

    blankguide.gif

    It’s nice to see that IDW is continuing to give love to John Byrne’s creator-owned venture all these years later with the 2nd volume of their Next Men Premiere Edition (IDW, $50.00 SRP) – a deluxe, oversized, hardcover presentation of issues 11-20, including the Mark IV back-up features. Definitely a must have addition to any true comics fan’s library.

    blankguide.gif

    It’s big 50’s filmmaking at its finest, it contains one of the most memorable sequences ever set to film, and I’m delighted that Spartacus (Universal, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$26.98 SRP) has made its way to high definition that ports over all of the special features of the standard special edition from a few years back – including featurettes, archival interviews, newsreels, deleted scenes, and galleries.

    blankguide.gif

    Admittedly, it’s squirm-inducing car wreck TV, but I can’t help but be riveted by Hoarders (A&E, Not Rated, DVD-$19.95 SRP), which looks at – and ostensibly helps – those who compulsively, and detrimentally, retain everything from magazines to trash. The 2-disc 1st season set also contains additional footage.

    blankguide.gif

    Long one of those classic shows that has been absent on DVD, the complete first season of The Virginian (Timeless Media Group, Not Rated, DVD-$79.98 SRP) is now available in full color, fully restored. With a guest list that includes the likes of Bette Davis, Lee Marvin, George C. Scott, Robert Duvall, Ricardo Montalban, and more, TV’s very first western is worth a look-see. The 10-disc set contains all 3 episodes, plus a bonus disc with exclusive cast interviews.

    blankguide.gif

    If you’ve been ensnared by the bayou vampire drama True Blood (HBO, Not Rated, DVD-$59.99 SRP), then you’ll probably be snapping up the complete second season, as a new threat to the sleepy southern town of Bon temps rears its ugly head. Bonus materials include audio commentaries, featurettes, and a special edition of the Vampire News.

    blankguide.gif

    The modern day Robin Hoods of Leverage (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP) return in a second season that finds them without a base of operations and within even bigger greedy prey in the offing – everything from Ponzi schemers to a rival crew of thieves. The 4-disc set contains all 15 episodes, plus audio commentaries, featurettes, a spoof video, and a gag reel.

    blankguide.gif

    Made for the UK’s ITV, both The Glory Boys & The Contract – available together in a box set (Acorn, Not Rated, DVD-$39.99 SRP) – are true relics of the cold war era, with a cast list that includes the likes of Rod Steiger, Joanna Lumley, and Anthony Perkins. They’re both worth a spin.

    blankguide.gif

    Oh yes. It’s that time again. Are you ready for it? Are you sure? Because you have to make sure you’re ready for a new David Cross comedy special, and David Cross: Bigger And Blackerer (SubPop, Not Rated, DVD-$14.98 SRP) is a fitting follow-up to his two previous releases. To describe the material is to ruin the surprise. Just get it.

    blankguide.gif

    Wil Wheaton brings his evil, evil presence to the 3rd season of The Guild (New Video, Not Rated, DVD-$14.95 SRP) as the leader of a rival group of gamers know as the Axis Of Anarchy, which face off against a Guild left in tatters after the party that ended season 2. Bonus materials include audio commentaries, music videos, featurettes, interviews, gag reels, and more.

    blankguide.gif

    For anyone interested in exploring the origins of the amateur literary jam session that is The Bible, take a look at the impressively researched documentary series Testament (Acorn, Not Rated, DVD-$59.99 SRP), which explores the writing, revisions, translations, and misinterpretations of the tome.

    blankguide.gif

    The History Channel packages profiles of history’s most naughty rulers in the 2-disc Ancients Behaving Badly (History Channel, Not Rated, DVD-$24.95 SRP), featuring Caligula, Alexander The Great, Julius Caesar, Attila The Hun, Hannibal, Cleopatra, Ghengis Khan, and Nero.

    blankguide.gif

    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

    ##

  • Contest Round-Up: 2010-05-20

    contestheader.jpg

    Welcome to our weekly round-up of featured giveaways here at FRED. Every week, we’ll present a new clutch of DVDs, books, and other cool stuff you can take a shot at winning. All you have to do is click on the graphics below to be taken to their respective contest pages. And good luck!

    In conjunction with New Video, we’re giving away three (3) copies of DR. HORRIBLE’S SING-ALONG BLOG on Blu-Ray.

    In conjunction with Sony Home Video, we’re giving away two (2) copies of THE YOUNG VICTORIA on Blu-Ray.

    In conjunction with Warner Bros Home Video, we’re giving away five (5) copies of INVICTUS on DVD.

    In conjunction with History Channel Home Video, we’re giving away two (2) copies of ANCIENTS BEHAVING BADLY on DVD.

  • Win DR. HORRIBLE’S SING-ALONG BLOG on Blu-Ray!

    contestheader.jpg

    In conjunction with New Video, we’re giving away three (3) copies of DR. HORRIBLE’S SING-ALONG BLOG on Blu-Ray.

    Contest ends at 11:59pm EST on Wednesday, June 2nd.

    CLOSED! THANKS FOR ENTERING!

    Official Rules

    No member of FRED 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, June 2nd.

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

  • Win THE GUILD: SEASONS 1 & 2 on DVD!

    contestheader.jpg

    In conjunction with New Video, we’re giving away a five (5) copies of THE GUILD: SEASONS 1 & 2 on DVD.

    Contest ends at 11:59pm EST on Wednesday, October, 7th.

    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 October, 7th.

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

  • Weekend Shopping Guide 7/31/09: Turning It To Eleven

    weekendshopping.png

    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 Quick Stop Weekend Shopping Guide – your spotlight on the things you didn’t even know you wanted…

    (Please support Quick Stop by using the links below to make any impulse purchases – it helps to keep us going…)

    After what has seemed like an endless series of delays, the mother of all mockumentaries has finally made its way to high-def with the release of This Is Spinal Tap (MGM, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$ SRP). Picture and sound are as good as they’re ever going to get, and bonus materials include much of the same that we found on previous releases – including an audio commentary with the band (sadly, still no commentary from the old Criterion release), deleted scenes, featurettes, a quartet of Tap videos, outtakes, and a bonus DVD with their performance at Live Earth and the National Geographic Stonehenge interview with Nigel Tufnel.

    thinkgeek-01.jpg

    As someone who prefers quiet walks at night when traffic isn’t quite as busy, it’s nice to have a practical hat like the Solar Light Cap ($34.99). With multiple brightness settings and the ability to recharge the cap in the sunlight (each charge provides 2-18 hours of light, depending on the brightness setting), it’s a nifty, all-weather safety accessory.

    thinkgeek-02.jpg

    If you’re only exposure to Life On Mars (Acorn, Not Rated, DVD-$59.99 SRP) is the awkward US version, please put that out of your mind and dive into the complete first series of the UK original, about a modern-day police detective (John Simm) hot on a killer’s trail who gets hit by a car and wakes up in 1973. Yes – you read that right. Is he a time traveler? In a coma? Delusional? This is a ride worth taking, so do so. The 4-disc set contains all 8 first series episodes, plus audio commentaries, a behind-the-scenes documentary, featurettes, and an outtake reel.

    blankguide.gif

    The episodes have been released in single-disc releases thus far, but now you can get The Spectacular Spider-Man: The Complete First Season (Sony, Not Rated, DVD-$25.95 SRP). So far, it’s the closest Marvel has come to capturing the quality of the animated DC universe. The 2-disc set contains a pair of behind-the-scenes featurettes.

    blankguide.gif

    It’s the beginning of the end as the first of showrunner Russell T. Davies’ four telemovie swan songs comes to DVD in the form of Doctor Who: Planet Of The Dead (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$14.98 SRP). It’s certainly a rousing adventure, even if it falls short of the best of new Who. Still, best get your David Tennant fix satiated while you can. Bonus features include an hour-long behind-the-scenes special. And, for the first time, a Blu-Ray edition ($19.89 SRP) is also available.

    blankguide.gif

    Oh, Torchwood– you are such a flawed little spin-off. So desperate to be adult and differentiate yourself from parent Doctor Who, you’re just a mess of poorly realized characters, awkward writing, and unrealized potential. Still, fans can pick up The Complete Second Season (BBC, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$79.95 SRP) in high definition, with behind-the-scenes featurettes, deleted scenes, and outtakes. That’s something, right? Slightly better but still not what the show could be is the 5-part Torchwood: Children Of Earth (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$29.98 SRP), which acts as the show’s 3rd season and acts as a bit of house cleaning. Bonus features include a behind-the-scenes featurette and an audio clip. A Blu-Ray edition ($34.99 SRP) us also available, with identical features.

    blankguide.gif

    It’s my second favorite Irwin Allen disaster flick (after the wondrous Poseidon Adventure, but The Towering Inferno (Fox, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$34.98 SRP) is the first to actually be released on Blu-Ray. After seeing the lovely print and hearing the crisp sound, it makes me pine even more for my favorite to get its time in the sun. Bonus materials include audio commentaries, deleted/extended scenes, featurettes, the AMC Backstory, interviews, the NATO presentation reel, and more.

    blankguide.gif

    Ever since being informed of its existence by the great Graham Linehan, I’ve been dying to see Big Man Japan (Magnolia, Rated PG-13, DVD-$26.98 SRP) – a delightfully bizarre flick about Japan’s plus-sized superhero defense against bizarro monsters, the titular Big Man Japan. Really – you just gotta see it. It’s hilarious. Bonus features include a making-of and deleted scenes.

    blankguide.gif

    Joss Whedon lost my trust during the abysmal final season of Buffy. I never got into Firefly, and every time I tried to watch his latest, Dollhouse (Fox, Not Rated, DVD-$49.98 SRP) – starring Eliza Dushku as a blank slate, programmable, expensive call girl, essentially – but couldn’t shake the impression that it was a muddled mess that never gives the audience a reason to care about anything or anyone on it. The 3-disc season set features the original pilot, an unaired episode, audio commentaries, deleted scenes, and featurettes. A Blu-Ray edition ($69.99 SRP) is also available, with identical bonus materials.

    blankguide.gif

    Weaving seldom-seen interviews, footage, and interviews with those who knew him, How Bruce Lee Changed The World (History Channel, Not Rated, DVD-$19.95 SRP) is a loving portrait of the martial artist, actor, husband, and father.

    blankguide.gif

    Though many will get their stuff in a bunch, I thought the finale of Battlestar Galactica was a big, awkward disappointment that jumped from “Huh?” to “What?” moments with reckless abandon. Still, fans are sure to snap up the final set, Battlestar Galactica: Season 4.5 (Universal, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$49.98 SRP). The 3-disc set features the final clutch of episodes, plus audio commentaries, deleted scenes, video blogs, featurettes, and more.

    blankguide.gif

    There are a lot of catalogue titles making their way into the Blu-Ray roster, but it’s always nice when the films of a personal favorite filmmaker get a spin – such as Terry Gilliam’s 12 Monkeys (Universal, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$29.98 SRP). Even though he didn’t write the film, his signature style is all over the production, and it most definitely fits into what I define as “Gilliam-esque”. The Blu-Ray ports over the audio commentary, featurettes, and Hamster Factor documentary from the original DVD release.

    blankguide.gif

    Quirky and fun, The Middleman (Shout! Factory, Not Rated, DVD-$39.99 SRP) was a show destined for cancellation. But now you can pick up the complete series focusing on the “exotic adventures” of the titular hero and his brand new protégé. The 4-disc set features all 12 episodes, plus audio commentaries, deleted scenes, featurettes, a table read, audition footage, and a gag reel.

    blankguide.gif

    I guess the best way to describe Miss March (Fox, Not Rated, DVD-$29.98 SRP) is as a tepid, watchable, raunchy road trip comedy about a pair of friends who embark on a cross-country road trip to the Playboy mansion in order to find the girlfriend who has become a centerfold. You know how that goes. Bonus materials include a clutch of featurettes. A Blu-Ray edition ($39.99 SRP) is also available, with identical bonus materials.

    blankguide.gif

    Before Polanski went mainstream with Rosemary’s Baby, he was spending the 1960’s making chilling cinema like Repulsion (Criterion, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$39.95 SRP), his follow-up to Knife In The Water. It’s also just gotten a scrubbed and spiffy high-def transfer featuring an audio commentary, a documentary on the making of the film, a rare 1964 French TV special on the film, and trailers.

    blankguide.gif

    Of all the direct-to-DVD DC animated adventures to come down the pike thus far, Green Lantern: First Flight (Warner Bros., Rated PG-13, DVD-$24.98 SRP) is the first one I’ve actually enjoyed. It’s essentially an origin story, explaining how test pilot Hal Jordan came to possess the power ring that would make him a Green Lantern, one of an army of peacekeepers under the leadership of the Guardians Of The Universe. It also sets up the fall of Green Lantern Sinestro, who’s secretly plotting the overthrow of the Guardians. Lot of stuff there. The 2-disc set features featurettes, bonus cartoons presented by Bruce Timm, the episode of Duck Dodgers featuring the Green Lanterns, and more. A Blu-Ray edition ($29.99 SRP) is available with identical bonus materials.

    blankguide.gif

    It went out with a bit of a whimper, but fans at least can now pick up the wrap-up with Prison Break: The Final Break (Fox, Not Rated, DVD-$26.98 SRP). Bonus features are limited to deleted scenes. A Blu-Ray edition ($29.99 SRP) is also available, with the same single bonus feature.

    blankguide.gif

    Besides featuring an early TV performance from a young Ian McKellen, Armchair Thriller (Acorn, Not Rated, DVD-$59.99 SRP) was pretty typical of the mystery/suspense tales being cranked out in the UK during the 70’s, many of which found their way to PBS’s Mystery!. This inaugural set collects a quartet of stories (including the aforementioned one featuring McKellen).

    blankguide.gif

    I never cared for The Fast & The Furious, but even I could see diminishing returns in its sequels. So, too, did the studio, who decided to go back to basics – cast and all – with the cleverly named Fast & Furious (Universal, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$39.98 SRP), which has more cars. Fast cars. And Vin Diesel. Doing whatever the hell he does. Bonus features include featurettes and a short film from Diesel.

    blankguide.gif

    When Jon & Kate Plus Eight: Season 4 (Genius, Not Rated, DVD-$19.95 SRP) decided that the theme of the season was “The Big Move”, little did they know just how accurate the term would become to that rolling clusterf*** of a marriage.

    blankguide.gif

    Oh, relaunched Knight Rider. You were so very hopeful that your self-important, lackluster new take on the 80’s hit would actually have a future, you didn’t even bother to call your DVD release The Complete Series even though you’ve been cancelled. So now people can buy Knight Rider: Season 1 (Universal, Not Rated, DVD-$59.98 SRP). The 4-disc set features all 17 episodes plus the TV movie, as well as commentary on the pilot and featurettes.

    blankguide.gif

    The film is one of those cult faves, and Lalo Schifrin’s score to Sky Riders (Aleph Records, $14.98 SRP) is one of those fun, overlooked little gems that has thankfully gotten a release. Get it.

    blankguide.gif

    Gary Hobkins and his rather unique ability to foresee and hopefully avert the future – literally, he’s delivered the next day’s edition of the newspaper – returns with the complete second season of Early Edition (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$45.98 SRP). The 5-disc set features all 22 episodes, plus original promos.

    blankguide.gif

    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

    ##

  • TV Or Not TV: Dollhouse “Epitaph One”

    tvornottv-header.png

    Welcome to another special edition of TV or not TV where I admit that I am a Whedon-holic.

    This past spring long time fans of the brain behind Buffy The Vampire Slayer, Angel, and Firefly were given the gift of another TV show from the mind of Joss Whedon. I admit to both excitement and trepidation in knowing that this new show, Dollhouse, would be on FOX after already having gone down that road with Serenity. I feared not enough  network support, I feared network interference and on at least one of those accounts I was right. Thankfully as the show progressed through it’s season the latter was overcome and the show went from mediocre to amazing in a very short amount of time.

    Today I’m here to not talk to you about the history of Dollhouse or its second season pickup. I’m here to talk about the forthcoming release of Dollhouse season 1 on DVD and Blu-Ray on July 27th.

    Dollhouse Blu-Ray
    Dollhouse Blu-Ray

    I’m not usually the guy that tells you to go out and buy a TV show on DVD mostly due to the fact that what you get more often than not isn’t anything greater than what you saw for free on television. With this DVD/Blu-Ray release, however, there is a different story.

    There are two extras on this DVD/Blu-Ray that make the purchase a must have for any fan of the show. The first is the un-aired original pilot of the show. This pilot was shot and then shelved/used for parts in the assembly of a new pilot and subsequent episodes. After seeing the entire series I think seeing this pilot was interesting in seeing the vision that was originally intended for (and eventually moved back to) for the show. It’s also interesting to see the bits and pieces from this pilot that were used in the actual series. I also highly recommend it because as a fan of the Whedon clan I found that this pilot was far superior to the aired pilot.

    The second reason I highly recommend this purchase if for another un-aired 13th episode of the show, Epitaph One. Ever since Felicia Day (@feliciaday on Twitter) announced that her episode wouldn’t air on TV (at the time setting off fear that this was a sign that the eventual renewal wasn’t coming) I have been obsessed with seeing this episode. Over the days after the tweet we learned that this episode was actually made specifically for overseas distribution AND the home video release. We were treated to cryptic messages from those involved like when Joss Whedon who said, “It’s one of the best episodes we’ve ever made.” The fans were wanting and waiting.

    Now, on the eve of the episode Epitaph One being shown at the San Diego Comic-Con I am happy to say that I have seen the episode… and it is better than I’d even imagined.

    Epitaph One was a story by Joss Whedon and a teleplay written by Jed Whedon and Maurissa Tancharoen. The episode, set well after the events of the first season, is a stand alone episode that provides us some flashbacks of the original cast and introduces us to six new characters (in the case of most, only briefly in true Whedon fashion). In a phone interview I recently had with Jed Whedon he confirmed that this episode was a story that was set in a way that the if show wasn’t picked up for renewal it would serve as a nice book-end to the series. It does this wonderfully in that we are shown the big picture while still having plenty of questions to have answered and none of our future seasons spoiled. We learn some information about what happened to our regular cast of players while being handed an interesting and frightening original story to follow. In some ways the story has almost Stephen King and George A. Romero inspirations to it and it presents to us a twist that could only come from the mind of someone named (or married to a) Whedon.

    One of the interesting things about Dollhouse is the moral gray area that the show tap-dances within. Is what any of these people doing really right or wrong? If you watch Epitaph One one of those questions is heavily answered, and the answer weighs on one of the regular cast members so bad that the result is a complete mental breakdown. The performance of this character is a complete 180 turn from anything we’ve seen from them before and the pain that was conveyed in this scene reached out to me.

    Another stand out in this episode is the use of Zack Ward who most of you will remember as Scut Fergus in the holiday classic A Christmas Story. His character is hard, he is tough, and he is played to perfection. One of the things I walked away from most in seeing Epitaph One is wanting to see this story play out just so I can see more of him.

    I hate to say that Epitaph One is by far my favorite episode of the season, especially since it is a completely unique story that in no way is a reflection of the rest of the season, but it really is. I would love to see Dollhouse last for quite a few seasons to come and have each season end with the annual continuation of this stand alone story.

    So there you have it folks. Whether you buy it or rent it I highly recommend you take in the first season home video release of Dollhouse and especially sit down and enjoy Epitaph One.

    Will Wilkins is only available in this limited edition set.I’d also encourage you to listen to the Jed Whedon interview for even more interesting tidbits.

  • Contest Round-Up: 2009-07-22

    contestheader.jpg

    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 Adult Swim, we’re giving away three (3) copies of ROBOT CHICKEN: STAR WARS EPISODE II on DVD.

    In conjunction with Thinkgeek.com, we’re giving away a SUN JAR and a MOON JAR.

    In conjunction with Fox Home Video, we’re giving away three (3) copies of DOLLHOUSE: SEASON 1 on DVD.

    In conjunction with BBC Home Video, we’re giving away three (3) copies of DOCTOR WHO: PLANET OF THE DEAD on DVD.

    In conjunction with BBC Home Video, we’re giving away three (3) copies of TORCHWOOD: CHILDREN OF EARTH on DVD.

    In conjunction with BBC Home Video, we’re giving away three (3) copies of TORCHWOOD: SEASON 2 on Blu-Ray.

    In conjunction with Shout! Factory, we’re giving away five (5) copies of THE MIDDLEMAN on DVD.

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

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

    In conjunction with Walt Disney Home Video, we’re giving away two (2) copies of THE TIGGER MOVIE on DVD.

    In conjunction with Miramax Home Video, we’re giving away a copy of SLING BLADE on Blu-Ray.

    In conjunction with Touchstone Home Video, we’re giving away a copy of THE WATERBOY on Blu-Ray.

  • Win DOLLHOUSE: SEASON 1 on DVD!

    contestheader.jpg

    In conjunction with Fox Home Video, we’re giving away three (3) copies of DOLLHOUSE: SEASON 1 on DVD.

    Contest ends at 11:59pm EST on Wednesday, August 12th.

    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 August, 12th.

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

  • Weekend Shopping Guide 6/05/09: You Can See My Back In That Shot

    weekendshopping.png

    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 Quick Stop Weekend Shopping Guide – your spotlight on the things you didn’t even know you wanted…

    (Please support Quick Stop by using the links below to make any impulse purchases – it helps to keep us going…)

    When I was a young college freshman near the end of my first (and only) disastrous year at NYU, I was able to arrange for a press ticket to a taping of The Dana Carvey Show (Shout! Factory, Not Rated, DVD-$24.99 SRP). And then they say me up front. Way up front. In fact, you can see me during Carvey’s monologue in the 7th episode, which was also the last aired. You’ll find that episode, plus an unaired 8th, in the long-awaited DVD release. The show was hit and miss, but it had an almost literal ton of up-and-coming talent, including Stephen Colbert, Steve Carrell, Robert Smigel, Louis CK, Charlie Kaufman, and Dino Stamatopoulos. The set also contains an interview with Carvey & Smigel, plus deleted scenes.

    thinkgeek-01.jpg

    For years and years and years, ever since I first saw one when I was a kid, I’ve wanted a book that opens up to reveal a cut-out hole. You know what I mean? The kind you could hide things in. Like a jewel. Or booze. Well, Thinkgeek now gives you that Book Vault ($34.99). You absolutely, positively know that you want one. How can you not? It’s a friggin’ book vault!

    thinkgeek-02.jpg

    Another Pixar film in theaters means another eye-candy filled “Art Of” book, which is exactly what you get with The Art Of Up (Chronicle Books, $40.00 SRP). As usual, the hardcover tome is packed to the rafters with production artwork, designs, interviews, and more.

    blankguide.gif

    Forged in the fire of the Writers Strike of 2008, released on the internet to rabid fan acclaim, and long available on that selfsame net, everyday people can now get a copy of Joss Whedon’s online musical, Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog (New Video, Not Rated, DVD-$14.99 SRP) wherever they’d like. Bonus features include a musical studio commentary, a standard commentary, making-of featurettes, and Evil League Of Evil application videos.

    blankguide.gif

    Much of the comedy in Eddie Murphy’s game-changing stand-up concert Delirious (Entertainment Studios, Not Rated, DVD-$29.97 SRP) has not aged well, and some of it is just uncomfortable. Still, if you can get past those bumps in the road, there’s still a fair amount to laugh at. The 2-disc 25th anniversary edition contains additional footage, a making-of featurette, and an interview with Murphy.

    blankguide.gif

    It’s pure popcorn, but I think Air Force One (Sony, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$28.95 SRP) is the last great Harrison Ford movie. From that point forward, a once winning movie star couldn’t pick a solid project to save his life, steadily devolving into a caricature of himself. Ignore all those future failures and instead relive this last great one in full high definition, which ports over the audio commentary from the standard DVD release.

    blankguide.gif

    Another great flick making its transition to high definition is the Civil War epic Glory (Sony, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$28.95 SRP), which benefits from the audio/visual upgrade. It was a fine film to begin with, but the battle scenes have certainly been plussed. Bonus features carried over from the standard edition include an audio commentary, deleted scenes, and featurettes, with the addition of a Blu-Ray exclusive virtual Civil War battlefield map.

    blankguide.gif

    I must admit, Revolutionary Road (Paramount, Rated R, DVD-$29.99 SRP) is a good film, but a very difficult one to make it through… Perhaps because the young 50’s couple we’re following (a reunited Leonardo DiCaprio & Kate Winslet) are coming apart at the suburban seams. Bonus features include an audio commentary, deleted scenes, and a pair of featurettes. A Blu-Ray edition ($39.99 SRP) is also available, with identical features.

    blankguide.gif

    June has become decidedly jazzy with a trio of deluxe Legacy Edition catalogue releases from Sony Music. First up is a 3-disc edition of Dave Brubeck’s Time Out (Sony Legacy, $24.98 SRP), containing the original album, se second disc with 3 years worth of live performances, and a DVD with performance footage, and interview with Brubeck, and a photo gallery. Next up is Charles Mingus’s Mingus Ah Um (Sony Legacy, $24.98 SRP), with 2-discs containing the original album, alternate takes, and bonus tracks. Finally, it’s Miles Davis’s Sketches Of Spain (Sony Legacy, $24.98 SRP), with the album, alternate takes, and bonus tracks. Sweet, daddy. Sweet.

    blankguide.gif

    Paramount isn’t the only one unleashing a tidal wave of Blu-Ray catalogue titles, as Universal dips into their extensive roster for a batch of their own, many of them must haves. So what does the batch consist of? Field Of Dreams, Fletch, Inside Man, Spy Game, Children Of Men, Seabiscuit, Bruce Almighty, and Cinderella Man (Universal, Rated PG/PG-13/R, Blu-Ray-$29.98 SRP each). Bonus features are identical to the standard editions, so the A/V upgrade is the big bonus here.

    blankguide.gif

    I still can’t fathom what people saw in the three flicks currently comprising the X-Men Trilogy (Fox, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$79.98 SRP). They’re poorly written, badly acted, and in no way capture the source material. But people still saw them. In droves. And must have enjoyed them. No accounting for taste. For those that dug them, the trio – X-Men, X-Men 2, & X-Men: The Last Stand – are now available in a 9-disc Blu-Ray box set, porting over all of the bonus materials available in the standard editions.

    blankguide.gif

    Sergio Leone’s The Good The Bad And The Ugly (MGM/UA, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$29.99 SRP) made an icon out of Clint Eastwood, and it gets a spiffy high definition treatment that translates all the grit quite nicely. The bonus features are a direct port of the excellent special edition DVD from a few years back, including audio commentary, featurettes, deleted scenes, and the theatrical trailer.

    blankguide.gif

    Over 20 years after its single season run, The Jetsons returned to television with brand new episodes, the first 21 of which are being released as The Jetsons: Season 2 Volume 1 (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$34.98 SRP). The 2-disc set also contains a featurette looking at the evolution of the series.

    blankguide.gif

    The BBC’s nature documentarians can always be counted on to deliver stunning visuals, and that’s certainly the case with Nature’s Most Amazing Events (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$29.98 SRP), which is 2-discs packed with exactly what it says on the tin. A Blu-Ray edition ($34.98 SRP) is also available, which cranks everything up with even more impressive high definition.

    blankguide.gif

    I can’t see William Conrad in the episodes features in Cannon: Season 2 Volume 1 (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$36.98 SRP) without thinking of all of the voice work he did on the Jay Ward cartoons of the 60’s, particularly Fractured Fairy Tales. The 3-disc set contains the first 12 episodes of season 2, plus episodic promos.

    blankguide.gif

    The movie’s a dud, but it’s still fun to flip through both Terminator Salvation: The Official Companion (Titan Books, $29.95 SRP) and its companion The Art Of Terminator Salvation (Titan Books, $35.00 SRP). Both are packed with plenty of photos, art, and info. Shame the movie couldn’t have been… you know… good.

    blankguide.gif

    Though often a director, I always get a kick out of Kenneth Branagh, the actor, who is in fine form in the UK series Wallander (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$34.98 SRP), in which he stars as the titular Swedish detective. The 2-disc set features a trio of episodes, plus featurettes and a Branagh interview.

    blankguide.gif

    Surprisingly, Fargo (MGM/UA, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$29.99 SRP) is still, I believe, the most successful, accessible Coen Brothers film. It’s not my personal favorite (hello, Hudsucker Proxy), but it is a quirky delight. And guess what? Now it’s available in high def, with an audio commentary, a featurette, and a trivia track.

    blankguide.gif

    The folks at Sesame certainly are pushing Abby Cadabra, aren’t they? The latest team up with their little red cash cow is Elmo And Abby’s Birthday Fun! (Genius, Not Rated, DVD-$14.93 SRP), where the duo travel to Fairy Tale Land to celebrate Little Red Riding Hood’s birthday.

    blankguide.gif

    Nancy Botwin moves her mini pot empire south of the border in the fourth season of Weeds (Lionsgate, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP), and the trip to Mexico doesn’t exactly make things easier – or safer. The 3-disc set features all 13 episodes, plus commentaries, featurettes, and a gag reel.

    blankguide.gif

    It’s not my cup of tea, but Army Wives (ABC Studios, Not Rated, DVD-$45.99 SRP) seems to have gotten traction with audiences in its second season, which arrives on a 5-disc set with featurettes, deleted scenes, and bloopers.

    blankguide.gif

    Daniel Craig, Liev Schreiber, and Jamie Bell star as a trio of simple farmhand brothers who goes up against the Nazis in Defiance (Paramount, Rated R, DVD-$29.99 SRP), a flick that was largely overlooked at the box office but makes for quite a good at-home watch. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, a quartet of featurettes, and more. A Blu-Ray edition ($39.99 SRP) is also available, with identical bonus features.

    blankguide.gif

    In Direct Contact (First Look Studios, Rated R, DVD-$28.98 SRP), Dolph Lundgren stars as an ex US Special Forces soldier whose imprisonment in Russia is lifted if he agrees to undertake a daring rescue – only to find out it was all a ruse, and means he’s now a pursued man. A Blu-Ray edition ($29.98 SRP) is also available.

    blankguide.gif

    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

    ##

  • Contest Round-Up: 2009-05-27

    contestheader.jpg

    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 New Video, we’re giving away five (5) copies of DOCTOR HORRIBLE’S SING-ALONG BLOG on DVD.

    In conjunction with Warner Bros. Home Video, we’re giving away four (4) copies of THE JETSONS: SEASON 2 VOLUME 1 on DVD.

    In conjunction with Titan Books, we’re giving away four (4) copies of TERMINATOR: SALVATION – THE OFFICIAL MOVIE COMPANION.

  • Weekend Shopping Guide 12/12/08: Popeye Hears A Who

    weekendshopping.png

    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 Quick Stop Weekend Shopping Guide – your spotlight on the things you didn’t even know you wanted…

    Over the past few years, beginning with their landmark Complete Peanuts, Fantagraphics has set the standard for how collections of classic comic strips should be done. In addition to Peanuts and Dennis The Menace, they’ve been giving the A-level treatment to E.C. Segar’s sailor man supreme, Popeye. The third collection of Segar’s Thimble Theater has just hit – Popeye Volume 3: “Let’s You And Him Fight!” (Fantagraphics, $29.99 SRP). Pick it up, and join me in counting the days until we finally the start of their Complete Pogo.

    blankguide.gif

    After the pain of the live action Grinch and Cat In The Hat, it’s with so, so much delight that the CG Horton Hears A Who! (Fox, Rated G, DVD-$34.98 SRP) manages to capture the visual feast of Dr. Seuss and the wonderful charm of the story itself, while still bringing modern audience to the table. It’s funny what happens when filmmakers understand why a story has had enduring appeal, and decide to trust in it. Bonus features include an audio commentary, deleted footage, copious behind-the-scenes featurettes, screen tests, and an all-new Ice Age short. A Blu-Ray edition is also available ($39.99 SRP) with the same bonus features, as well as the Blu-Ray exclusive ability to watch the film with a Who.

    blankguide.gif

    What kind of world do we live in when the new installment in the Mummy franchise is a better flick that the new Indiana Jones. It’s sad, but true that The Mummy: Tomb Of The Dragon Emperor (Universal, Rated PG-13, DVD-$29.99 SRP) is fun and thrilling without being idiotic or just plain embarrassing – unlike the recent outing of that guy with the Fedora – as the O’Connell family journey to China to face the rejuvenated dragon emperor (Jet Li) who decides to enslave the world after a 2,000-year-old curse is broken. The 2-disc special edition features an audio commentary, deleted/extended scenes, making-of featurettes, and more.

    blankguide.gif

    Like an ersatz Brady Bunch, two forty-something layabouts are forced to live together after their parents get married, leading to the kind of immature territorial tit-for-tats one would expect from ten-year-old Step Brothers (Sony, Not Rated, DVD-$34.95 SRP). However, when their bickering tears the marriage apart, they join forces to bring to try and bring their parents back together. As Brannan and Dale, Will Ferrell and John C. Reilly manage to pull of what could have been easily dismissable broadly comic roles by bringing a welcome component of actual emotion. The 2-disc set features an unrated cut of the film, plus an audio commentary, line-o-rama, deleted scenes, job interviews, therapy sessions, featurettes, a gag reel and more.

    blankguide.gif

    After watching the disappointing first theatrical adaptation from The Chronicles of Narnia, The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe, I wasn’t exactly eager for Prince Caspian (Walt Disney, Rated PG, DVD-$39.99 SRP). Yes, the canvas is much larger and the action is much bigger, but it still suffers from the ho-hum malaise that crippled the first film. The 3-disc set features an audio commentary, deleted scenes, featurettes, bloopers, and more. A 3-disc Blu-Ray edition ($40.99 SRP) adds an exclusive Circle Vision Interactive look behind-the-scenes of the castle raid.

    blankguide.gif

    It may be singing its swan song this year, but go back to the good ol’ days of Law & Order: The Sixth Year (Universal, Not Rated, DVD-$59.98 SRP) – and boy, is it good to see Jerry Orbach again. This is the season that added Benjamin Bratt as Detective Rey Curtis, and featured the crossover with Homicide: Life On The Street. Thankfully, the sole bonus feature of the 5-disc set is that episode of Homicide.

    blankguide.gif

    Many saw the fourth season of Lost (ABC Studios, Not Rated, DVD-$59.99 SRP) as a return to form after the narrative freefall of the 3rd season. Personally, the show lost me years ago, but at least this was an embarrassment. Bonus features include numerous behind-the-scenes featurettes, a live performance of the score, audio commentaries, deleted scenes, bloopers, and more. This is also the first season to get a Blu-Ray edition ($96.99 SRP), which contains all of the standard edition bonus materials, plus more cuts from the live symphonic performance, a more in-depth version of the standard edition’s “Definitive Flash-Forwards”, and a SeasonPlay feature.

    blankguide.gif

    I know there are some diehards out there, but I never enjoyed Joss Whedon’s ill-fated (and short-lived) TV space opera Firefly. It attempted to present an anachronistic future that relied heavily on the often awkward imitations of the camera techniques of the old spaghetti westerns, with characters that were difficult to like and a mission that was nebulous at best. Sadly, the show was neither fish nor fowl, and suffered from the creative burnout that eventually led the final season of Buffy to a disappointing end. Still, I know there are fans out there, and you’ll be happy with the entire 14 episode run, uncut and presented in anamorphic widescreen, is now available on Blu-Ray with the 3-disc Firefly: The Complete Series (Fox, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$89.96 SRP) set. There’s commentary on select episodes (“Serenity,” “The Train Job,” “Shindig,” “Out of Gas,” “War Stories,” “The Message,” and “Objects in Space”), 3 behind-the-scenes featurettes, 4 deleted scenes, a gag reel, audition tapes, and even Joss singing the show’s theme song, as well as a brand new cast roundtable discussion.

    blankguide.gif

    Sgt. Carter’s frustration with a certain Marine comes to an end with the release of the fifth and final season of Gomer Pyle, USMC (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP). The 4-disc box set features all 30 unedited episodes, but my desire for a Jim Nabors commentary has been completely disregarded. Shazam, indeed!

    blankguide.gif

    It’s largely a mindless actioner adapted from a videogame, but there’s a shameless exuberance to Wanted (Universal, Rated R, DVD-$34.98 SRP), starring James McAvoy as a workaday schlub who finds out from Angelina Jolie that he comes from a long line of assassins belonging to the mysterious Fraternity, and he must avenge the death of his father. But hey, there’s lots of fighting, and Morgan Freeman. Th 2-disc set features an extended scene, behind-the-scenes featurettes, and more.

    blankguide.gif

    Brenda is long gone and Val is firmly entrenched in the 6th season of Beverly Hills 90210 (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$59.98 SRP), as Kelly descends into the rabbit hole of drugs, Dylan proposes marriage, and there’s even a porno! Oh, the humanity! The 7-disc set features all 31 sudsy episodes.

    blankguide.gif

    It’s a button pusher, but watching Home Alone (Fox, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$34.98 SRP) during the holiday season is still one of those annual traditions that I adhere to – only this year I got to watch it in high definition. The bonus features of the new Blu-Ray edition are the same as the recent standard special edition, with an audio commentary, behind-the-scenes featurettes, deleted scenes/alternate takes, a blooper reel, and more.

    blankguide.gif

    The fourth season of Happy Days (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$40.99 SRP) exists in those still happy days prior to the show being taken over by Joanie and Chachi, as the stories still revolved around Fonzie schooling the awkward trio of Richie, Potsie, and Ralph. This season, though, is the one that found Al Delvechhio taking over as the new owner of Arnold’s. Whydya leave us, Pat Morita? The 3-disc set features all 23 episodes, plus the 3rd Anniversary Show.

    blankguide.gif

    I’m not entirely sure who was clamoring for a new X-Files film outside of the die-hards and creator Chris Carter. It’s a shame that The X-Files: I Want To Believe (Fox, Not Rated, DVD-$34.98 SRP) still doesn’t deliver what the first mythology-heavy film didn’t – a nice, old school, standalone X-Files yarn full of creeps, gallows humor, characters, and atmosphere. Not even Billy Connolly can raise the bar on this flat production. Shame. The 2-disc special edition features both the theatrical and an extended cut of the film, an audio commentary, behind-the-scenes featurettes, a making-of documentary, deleted scenes, a gag reel, and more. The Blu-Ray edition ($39.99 SRP) also sports a picture-in-picture video commentary.

    blankguide.gif

    Oh, and X-Files fans will probably also want to pick up a copy of X-Files: Fight The Future in high definition (Fox, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$34.98 SRP) at the same time. Bonus features are nearly identical to the recent standard special edition, including an extended cut, audio commentaries, featurettes, and the Blu-Ray exclusive picture-in-picture video commentary.

    blankguide.gif

    Wrap up the second season of The Streets Of San Francisco by picking up Volume 2 (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP), featuring 12 episodes packed with Karl Malden’s nose (and some young guy named Michael Douglas).

    blankguide.gif

    The pop songs are lamentable, but John Powell’s wonderful score is more than enough reason to pick up the soundtrack to Disney’s new in-house, non-Pixar CG film Bolt (Walt Disney Records, $18.98 SRP). It’s got humor, it’s got drama, and it’s got some nice moments of bombast – just like the film.

    blankguide.gif

    Like some kind of weird time travel experiment, you can watch two different ages of William Conrad in the second volumes of both Cannon and Jake and The Fatman‘s first seasons (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$37.99 SRP each). The 4-disc Cannon set features 13 episodes plus episode promos, while the 3-disc Fatman set features 11 episodes and episode promos. And both feature William Conrad. ‘Nuff said.

    blankguide.gif

    I’m almost happy that Louis C.K.’s HBO comedy Lucky Louie got cancelled, if only because he’s since rededicated himself to his caustically brilliant stand-up. He’s in fine form on his new album, Chewed Up (Image, $13.98 SRP). Give it a spin.

    blankguide.gif

    The 5th season of Hawaii Five-O (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$49.99 SRP) sometimes feels like an episode of The Love Boat, considering how many guest stars there are running around the islands of the 50th state. See how many you can count in the 6-disc set, featuring all 24 episodes full of kidnapping, blackmailing, con men, and killers… And surf. Lots and lots of surf.

    blankguide.gif

    If you’re looking for some last minute gifts for the comic fan in your life (or, you know, just yourself), an easy recommendation is the fine books put out by those preeminent comics fans/scholars at Twomorrows. First up is the latest volume in their artist profile series, Modern Marvels: Mike Ploog (Twomorrows, $14.95) As always, it’s got an in-depth interview as well as loads and loads of rare artwork. The other is the latest in their series examining the complete history of various characters and comics, The Hawkman Companion (Twomorrows, $24.95 SRP). Could you guess that this one focuses on Hawkman?

    blankguide.gif

    Fast-forward Mad Men ahead a decade and move it out of the office and into the suburbs, and you’d probably get Swingtown (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$40.99 SRP), a look at a trio of couples who share more than a fence line in the Chicago suburbs of 1976. The 4-disc set features all 13 first season episodes, audio commentaries, a pair of featurettes, deleted scenes, and a gag reel.

    blankguide.gif

    The lion of the law returns in the 2nd volume of the third season (whew!) of Perry Mason (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$49.99 SRP). Come for Raymond Burr – stay for those always wonderful courtroom confessions. The 4-disc set features the 14 remaining season three episodes.

    blankguide.gif

    James Arness is back in the saddle as Marshal Matt Dillon in Gunsmoke: The Third Season – Volume 1 (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$37.99 SRP) – although I find myself watching it almost as much just for Dennis weaver as Chester B. Goode. The 3-disc set features the first 19 episodes of the third season, plus the original sponsor spots.

    blankguide.gif

    Ride ’em in, count ’em out – it’s Rawhide: The Third Season Volume 2 (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$40.99 SRP), and boy do I think this is a clever opening line. Okay, maybe not – but you can still get all 15 episodes starring Clint Eastwood as Rowdy Yates.

    blankguide.gif

    Reformed juvies Pete, Julie, and Linc are back on the undercover beat in The Mod Squad: Season Two Volume 1 (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP). The “issues” handled in the episodes come off as a bit heavy-handed by today’s standards, but that’s half the fun of watching them now. The 4-disc set features the first 13 episodes of season 2.

    blankguide.gif

    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

    ##