Tag: pat morita

  • Weekend Shopping Guide 5/14/10: Adam and Joe Know

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    The weekend’s here. You’ve just been paid, and it’s burning a hole in your pocket. What’s a pop culture geek to do? In hopes of steering you in the right direction to blow some of that hard-earned cash, it’s time for the FRED Weekend Shopping Guide – your spotlight on the things you didn’t even know you wanted…

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

    I came rather late to the Adam & Joe appreciation party, but now that I’m here, I’d like to recommend you all pick up a copy of The Adam And Joe DVD (Channel 4, Not Rated, Region 2, DVD-£16.99 SRP), which gives a wonderful overview of all 4 series of low-budget comedy. There’s also a figurative ton of bonus materials. Just get this disc already.

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    If you caught any of the Red Nose Net charity marathon a few weeks back, you might recall that we used the USB Webcam Rocket Launcher ($49.99) quite a bit. Yes, it’s a USB rocket launcher that also has a webcam built in, giving you the launcher’s eye view of your target on your computer screen. How cool is that?

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    Long held up by music licensing issues, MTV’s Daria (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$72.99 SRP) has finally made it to DVD, and it’s a mixed bag. Gone is 99% of the original music cues, but at least the series is finally ownable (at least on an official basis). Diehards may be upset by the absent music, but they may rebound when they see the bonus materials, including the pilot, interviews, Daria Day intros, an animatic, and more.

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    Penn & Teller return to the 7th season of Bullshit (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$29.98 SRP) with a clutch of new topics, including stress, lawns, video games, lie detectors, the apocalypse, astrology, organic food, taxes, and even orgasms. There’s nudity in that one. Really.

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    As the remake makes its way to a theater near you, can relive your 80s love of Mr. Miyagi in full high-def via the collector’s edition boxset of The Karate Kid I & II (Fox, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$39.95 SRP). While both films contain retrospective featurettes and a pop-up multimedia trivia track, the first film also includes an audio commentary.

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    If you didn’t have the cash to buy the big ol’ Mel Brooks Blu-Ray set that came out last year and want to pick-and-choose a few of his later flicks in high-def, you can now snag History Of The World: Part 1, High Anxiety, & Robin Hood: Men In Tights (Fox, Rated R/PG/PG-13, Blu-Ray-$24.99 SRP each). Bonus features include retrospective featurettes, isolated score tracks, and more.

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    The third season of Thirtysomething (Shout Factory, Not Rated, DVD-$59.97 SRP) was probably its strongest, as the characters and storylines had fully gelled, and the audience was fully primed for its zeitgeisty take on making an adult life at the dawn of the 90’s. The 6-disc set contains all 24 episodes, plus commentaries and an introduction.

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    It’s not Mr. Wizard or Bill Nye, but Smithsonian Network’s SciQ (Infinity, Not Rated, DVD-$29.98 SRP) is still a fun little science series for kids, which you can now experience in its entirety via this 4-disc box set.

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    For anyone who was a fan of the BBC miniseries Edge Of Darkness and was hoping that one day a louder, shallower, star-driven movie would one day be made of that excellent thriller, than the new Edge Of Darkness (Warner bros., Rated R, DVD-$35.99 SRP), starring Mel Gibson as a Boston cop caught up in a conspiracy that involves the death of his daughter, than this is for you. Bonus materials include featurettes and alternate/additional scenes.

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    If you want some good old-fashioned swashbuckling action, Columbia has opened the vaults and found a quartet of little-seen Robin Hood flicks that are worth a spin – The Bandit Of Sherwood Forest, Sword Of Sherwood Forest, Prince Of Thieves, & Rogues Of Sherwood Forest (Sony, Not Rated, DVD-$14.94 SRP each). Of particular note is Hammer Pictures’ take on the legend, Sword Of Sherwood Forest, which finds the great Peter Cushing in the role of the Sheriff of Nottingham.

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    Charlie Brooker had it pegged when he presented Deadliest Warrior (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$26.98 SRP) as a ludicrous, testosterone-filled fightfest that tries (and fails) to disguise itself by presenting “scientific” and historical information about various warriors, who they then pit against each other. If you’ve ever wanted to know who would win in a dramatic reenactment of an imaginary battle between a ninja and a Spartan, this is the show for you. The 3-disc set contains all 9 episodes, plus roundtables, post-fight analyses, and a season one wrap-up.

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    Yes, I’m getting a bit tired of all of the vampire films and TV shows, but at least Daybreakers (Lionsgate, Rated R, DVD-$29.95 SRP) does give a bit of a spin to things, as humankind has been transformed into vampires by a virus and actual humans for feeding are almost nonexistent, and the race is on to find a blood substitute. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, a featurette, and the theatrical trailer.

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    With grim determination and a hound dog expression in tow, the greatest defense attorney of them all returns in Perry Mason: Season 5 Volume 1 (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$49.99 SRP), which contains the first 15 episodes of the 5th season.

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    The 5th season of The Fresh Prince Of Bel-Air (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$29.98 SRP) finds everyone from Will to Carlton finding love, as the show begins to wind down towards its 6th and final season. This 3-disc set contains all 25 episodes.

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    So there you have it… my humble suggestions for what to watch, listen to, play with, or waste money on this coming weekend. See ya next week…

    -Ken Plume

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  • Opinion In A Haystack: Buck Shots

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    A recurring series of columns celebrating forgotten, underappreciated, or down right hilarious moments of interest from a confusing variety of films.

    The definition of the “Money Shot” according to Wikipedia is a provocative, sensational, or memorable sequence in a film, on which the film’s commercial performance is perceived to depend. You are probably familiar with it yourself, most notably for its pornographic definition. I will not be focusing exactly on “Money Shots,” because the moments that will be provided are, more often then not, extremely cheap and unintentionally gut busting. Since my focus here will be on a low-budget oeuvre, I have decided to call them “Buck Shots” instead. These are moments on which a film’s cheese-factor is based, often underlining the tone of the entire production and providing the viewer with the opposite effect intended.

    My personnal path crossed with the existence of most of these wonderfully derelict moments because I managed a “mom and pop” video store for the better part of half a decade and “clerked” there as well. It was the glorius type of video outlet which had 25 years worth of VHS rentals accumulated within its long and many isles”¦plus the biggest porn room in town!

    My co-workers, my friends, and I were often obsessed with cheesey cinema, especially the culture of completely forgotten 80’s sci-fi, action, and horror titles released during VHS-mania. There were literally thousands of films that even cinephiles like us had never heard of, with the longest, cliché’ taglines ever concieved stamped right on the cover. We would each often indulge in the cornecopia of forgotten shlock, and play the most reprehensible, hilarious, or disgusting moments during our shifts. However, due to the fact that 90% of these films were downright unwatchable, we would usually only share the “Buck Shots” and never the film, sparing everyone else from the painful, elongated running times. Hence I wish to do that same for you.

    This entry into Buck Shots: ASIAN COPS AND HEAD/AUTOMOTIVE TRAUMA

    Collision Course (1989) ““ PAT MORITA’S JUMP KICK

    Tag Lines:

    • “The only thing stopping these two cops from solving the crime of the century… is each other.”
    • “Not So Much A Lethal Weapon, More Of A Liability!”
    • “With two cops like this someone’s going to die laughing!”

    The first and only thing I would ever say to Jay Leno upon meeting him is “I loved you in Collision Course!” Not sure if that will anger or annoy him, but I’m betting on the former. Directed by Lewis Teague, also the director of the “blah” Romancing the Stone sequel Jewel of the Nile, this much forgotten piece of late 80’s comedy action is not completely worthless. The cast includes the two notable leads, Chris Sarandon (of Fright Night and Princess Bride fame) and the creepy Tom Noonan (Monster Squad, Robocop 2, Last Action Hero, Manhunter.) And no, this has nothing to do with the Crocodile Hunter.

    I am probably alone, but I would easily prefer watching this Asian Guy/American Guy buddy movie over any of the Rush Hours or Shanghai Noons“¦in fact this film did the Asian-American Buddy drinking scene before and better then Shanghai Noon. I have actually sat through this film more then once since obtaining a VHS copy off eBay circa 1996 and can honestly say that few film moments have struck me as hard or as funny then the one below. Like most of the clips I will post here, describing this one with mere words is only doing you, and it, a disservice”¦enjoy:

    Low Blow (1986) ““ LEO FONG SLOWLY ATTACKS A CAR FILLED WITH BAD GUYS

    Taglines:

    • “The deadliest weapon is still your fist.”
    • “When the odds are against you…hit hard, hit first, and hit with a low blow.”

    In Low Blow we have the famous 70’s and 80’s martial arts actor Leo Fong playing detective Joe Wong, whose character is on a mission to save a kidnapped girl from a religious cult. It also has Tae-Bo legend Billy Blanks in it as well, and don’t worry I plan to cover some of his “amazing” movies eventually, as I own several (yes, Billy Blanks has movies.) A warning should be given that if your interest is at all peaked from these clips, please note that if you look up Low Blow on Google you will get more then your fair share of gay porn results, I found this out the hard way. Now I don’t exactly know who that guy with the abnormally large fist on the box cover is, but I’m guessing it’s just a random graphic, since it’s not Detective Wong or the evil cult leader.

    This clip needs to be described, only because in text form it almost sounds more ridiculous then the real thing. If you want to watch it fresh, skip this and go to the video below. In this two minute snippet we see Detective Wong chase three “bad guys” to their getaway car. Watch as he runs up to the vehicle, lifts the hood without a single problem, pulls out an apparently crucial part of the engine, flaunts and wiggles it to the bad guys inside the car, whilst they writhe and scream like babies. He then proceeds, WITH A SMILE, to take a plank of wood and joyfully smash in all the windows and dent the body. Meanwhile the evil dudes inside the car scream and moan as if being attacked, while fully NOT taking the several and very lengthy chances to EXIT THE OPPOSITE SIDE OF THE CAR. Leo Fong then runs AWAY from the car, puts on safety goggles and picks up the conveniently placed round saw and begins to slowly cut off the roof. When finished, he simply lifts the roof off the car and LETS THE BAD GUYS RUN AWAY!!! All of this is of course taking place while a loop of 80’s synth-music repeats constantly (as it does through the rest of the movie.) It’s pure genius on so many levels. If you doubt for one second that what I just described is 100% true”¦just watch:

    Low Blow (1986) ““ THE FACE CAKE!

    This clip takes place a tad later in the film, I believe as Detective Wong infiltrates the cult fortress (or the cult’s suburban house.) Wong slowly walks down a corridor (OF EVIL!) and is attacked by a henchman, one that was apparently involved in the elaborate and sluggish car attack earlier as he states “Got you now Chinaman! I think you owe me a car!” Now, the unnecessary racial slur aside, what I’ve always wondered was, was this henchman in the car or did he just own it and get really pissed when he found out what happened?

    Because all we are dealing with here is master shots and poorly lit shots, it is hard to make out who exactly this henchman is. Leo Fong flips him on his back and then, well, he kills him by smashing his skull in”¦yet in the universe of Low Blow all henchmen’s biological material is made of birthday cake. They don’t allude to it much in the narrative, but it obviously true. See:

    Ok, that is all for this first entry of BUCK SHOTS”¦I have a whole gaggle of clips that will keep coming your way. Thanks for reading!