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…)
Though it’s sometimes been derided by comedy purists who claim it’s a corpse-heavy lowbrow sketch show, but I’ll openly declare those unfortunate souls snobbish fools, because The Carol Burnett Show is one of the best comedy sketch shows ever to hit the small screen. It may not have been as intellectually clever as Monty Python, but the writing was sharp, the comedy was funny, and the performers – Burnett, Harvey Korman, Tim Conway, Vicki Lawrence, & Lyle Waggoner – were a dream ensemble. Most of all, though, you got the sense that the main cast, and all of the guest stars who would pop up over the years, were genuinely enjoying the experience of performing this comedy together for the audience there in the studio and at home. And the only way to experience it is via the long overdue 22-disc box set The Carol Burnett Show: The Ultimate Collection (Time Life, Not Rated, DVD-$199.95 SRP), featuring 50 uncut episodes, episodes of the The Garry Moore Show (including Carol’s TV debut), rare comedy sketches, interviews (from the cast as well as guests & fans like Betty White, Carl Reiner, Bernadette Peters, and Amy Poehler), and 13 featurettes looking at specific sketches and more. Honestly, this is a set you should give your eye teeth for, but seeing as how you can buy it instead, do that.
First it was Star Wars, and we were all delighted. Then came Harry Potter and Indiana Jones, and we were all ecstatic. And Batman and Superman? Giddy. But I never anticipated that one day the fine folks at LEGO would give us brick versions of the Lord of the Rings films. I doubt Tolkien ever envisioned it, either, but here we are, with playsets aplenty featuring everyone’s favorite Fellowship. Right off the bat we’ve got some major highlights – Gandalf Arrives ($12.99), Attack On Weathertop ($59.99), The Mines Of Moria ($79.99), The Battle Of Helm’s Deep ($129.99) against the Uruk-hai Army ($29.99), and Shelob Attacks ($19.99). Can a LEGO Balrog be far behind? If it is, you can be sure Thinkgeek will stock it.
Tick another one of the list of classic Disney films that haven’t made it to high definition, as the Mouse House polishes up the glass slipper and drops Cinderella (Walt Disney, Rated G, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP) in their patented never looked or sounded better fashion. In addition to a brand new Tangled short, most of the bonus features from the previous DVD Platinum Edition carry over, including an alternate opening sequence, featurettes, and more.
Tim Burton’s Dark Shadows (Warner Bros., Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$35.99 SRP) would be a really wonderful movie if it knew what movie it wanted to be. Is it a comedy? Is it a farce? Is it a gothic horror? Soap opera? It’s all over the place, and it suffers, sadly, as much of Burton’s work has ever since Big Fish – his last truly wonderful film. Is it a nice looking film? Sure. Is there some fun to be had? Yes. But it could have been so much more if it had just hewn closer to adapting and streamlining the gothic soap opera of the original show. Bonus materials include featurettes and deleted scenes.
If there’s anyone that could hold the title of 5th Beatle, it would be the man who gets his own remarkable documentary in Produced By George Martin (Eagle Vision, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$19.98 SRP). From producing the Goons in the 50’s to The Beatles in the 60’s to founding the legendary Air Studios, his story is a corker. The disc features an additional 52 minutes of interviews.
And speaking of Beatles-related documentaries, the great thing about the documentary Beatles Stories (Julukesy Films, Not Rated, DVD-$19.95 SRP) is that it captures how fandom is universal, as it features loads of interviews with celebrities who have had encounters with the Fab Four – with everyone from Brian Wilson to Henry Winkler providing their anecdotes.
I’m a sucker for the band Queen and its dynamic frontman Freddie Mercury, and Rhys Thomas has produced a pair of brilliant docs that should be on your viewing list – Queen: Days Of Our Lives (Eagle Vision, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$19.98 SRP) and the Freddie-specific Freddie Mercury: The Great Pretender (Eagle Vision, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$19.98 SRP). Both are absolutely brilliant. Loving, unflinchingly honest, celebratory portraits.
Of all the Tim Burton/Johnny Depp teamings – and there have been some stinkers – my favorite by a mile, Ed Wood (Touchstone, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$20.00 SRP), finally makes its debut in high definition. In addition to a lovely transfer, we also get a carry over of all the bonus materials from the last DVD special edition, including an audio commentary, featurettes, deleted scenes, and a music video.
Disney has kept the new-to-hi-def catalogue floodgates open, dropping another clutch of titles that have been on the desired list… And some that I’m sure have fans. Definitely sure. So what titles are we talking about? How about the still-unsettling comedy-horror Arachnophobia (Hollywood Pictures, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$20.00 SRP), Dennis Quaid & Sharon stone in the thriller Cold Creek Manor (Touchstone, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$20.00 SRP), the psychotically naughty nanny classic The Hand That Rocks The Cradle (Hollywood Pictures, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$20.00 SRP), the still-disappointing-but-now-trumped Sylvester Stallone Judge Dredd (Hollywood Pictures, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$20.00 SRP), and the family witch-flick Hocus Pocus (Walt Disney, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$26.50 SRP), starring Bette Midler, Sarah Jessica Parker, and Kathy Najimy. Arachnophobia sports a pair of featurettes and the Venezuela sequence. and Cold Creek has an audio commentary, featurettes, an alternate ending, and deleted scenes.
Although already released on Blu-Ray, the new 25th anniversary edition of The Princess Bride (MGM, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$19.99 SRP) does add in a brand new 2-part retrospective documentary featuring the entire cast reminiscing on the film, in addition to the previously released audio commentaries and featurettes. Worth getting? Sure.
Go inside HBO’s hit adaptation of George RR Martin’s epic Game Of Thrones with the lushly illustrated and info-packed Inside HBO’s Game Of Thrones (Chronicle Books, $40.00 SRP), which will take you to Westeros and beyond, explaining how all of the players fit together into the larger story and how the show was produced.
Stephen Fry is brilliant as the titular country solicitor Peter Kingdom in Kingdom (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$34.98 SRP), who travels the Norfolk countryside solving cases all while contemplating the mysterious disappearance of his brother. Just check it out. The DVD also includes a bonus behind-the-scenes documentary.
Fans were left high and dry when only the first two seasons were released, but now you can get all 3 seasons of the beautifully odd Sarah Silverman Program ( Shout Factory, Not Rated, DVD-$49.97 SRP), which is packed full of commentaries, featurettes, music, and more. See? Sometimes dreams do come true.
It’s not the best of the Stephen King adaptations, but there’s still enough creepy quality to be had in Pet Sematary (Paramount, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$22.98 SRP), with the highlight being Fred Gwynne’s Jud Crandall. And now it’s made the transition to high definition with an audio commentary and a trio of featurettes.
Yes, it’s been 7 seasons, but we’re still no closer to finding out How I Met Your Mother (Fox, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP). And yeah, it’s getting a bit frustrating. You can keep your relationship hoo-ha, your ducky ties, and your umbrellas – just finally, finally let me know the answer to the gimmick. Then I’ll keep watching I Met Your Mother. Bonus materials include audio commentaries, featurettes, deleted scenes, and a gag reel.
If you want to risk potential cute-blindness, take your chances and partake of the first season of New Girl (Fox, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP), starring devastatingly cute Zooey Deschanel as a girl on the rebound who moves in with a trio of bachelors. Cute comedy ensues! Bonus materials include audio commentaries, featurettes, deleted/extended scenes, and a gag reel.
It’s always nice to come across a documentary that illuminates a little slice of history that is both crucial and largely overlooked, and such is the case with Whittle: The Jet Pioneer (Shelter Island, Not Rated, DVD-$24.98 SRP), the story of Sir Frank Whittle’s invention of the jet engine during World War II.
Honestly, you don’t know what you’re missing until you see a very fine martial arts film like Flying Swords Of Dragon Gate (Vivendi, Rated R, 3D Blu-Ray-$29.93 SRP) in glorious 3D right in your very own home theater, and this Jet Li actioner has enough of a story to make the whole package enjoyable. Bonus materials include featurettes and interviews.
This week’s theatrical score pick brings Music From The Batman Trilogy (Silva Screen Records, $17.42 SRP), which finds the London Music Works performing selections from across the trio of Christopher Nolan’s Bat-films, originally composed by Hans Zimmer & James Newton Howard.
Still as delightfully deadpan as ever, Demetri Martin returns with his second standup special Demetri Martin: Standup Comedian (Comedy Central, Not Rated, DVD-$14.95 SRP), which is more of the same, but new. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, an audio commentary on the audio commentary, rejected concepts, joke variations, and The List.
After suffering many years in the crappy public domain release wilderness, you can now get a spiffy, official 2-volume set collection the entirety of Bonanza: Season 4 (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$58.98 $RP), featuring all 34 episodes of Cartwright clannery. The sets also contain audio commentaries, original Chevy commercials, bumpers, and more.
If you’re new to the whole sex thing or just could use a few pointers, you might want to pick up a pair of 5-disc collections dedicated to just that – The Lover’s Guide: The Original Collection & The Lover’s Guide: The Essential Collection (True Mind, Not Rated, DVD-$49.98 SRP each). Focusing on everything from positions and orgasms to sex plan and masturbation, the whole lot can be found in these somewhat dated, but still practical guides.
We’re yet another step closer to completing the seemingly-infinite run of Roy Clarke’s Last Of The Summer Wine (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$34.98 SRP) with the release of the 1993 Vintage (season). The 2-disc set contains all 9 episodes, plus the 1993 special.
Hard to believe we’re already up to the fourth season of the new 90210 (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$45.98 SRP), which finds everyone moving on from high school and right into a whole new set of catty dramas. Bet you didn’t expect that. Bonus materials include commentaries, deleted scenes, featurettes, a music video, and a gag reel.
While I do love the MEGO-style figures that they’ve been doing up to this point, I admit I had been secretly holding out hope that Biff Bang Pow would be able to make classic 3 3/4′ figures from the Venture Bros. license. And guess what? THEY HAVE! First out of the gate is the big man himself, Brock Samson (Biff Bang Pow, $9.99). The articulation is old-school Star Wars limited, but the sculpt is great, and it exists. My only real complaint is I wish the pain job was a little cleaner, which is hopefully something that can be addressed going forward. You also might want to snap up the Comic-Con Exclusive Brock ($14.99) while you can, as it features Samson in his blood-splattered white shirt. I can’t wait to see the rest of the cast.
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…
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 Spin Master Toys, we’re giving away a whole slew of TRON LEGACY Action Figures & Vehicles – Everything from 3 3/4 and deluxe figures to light cycles and more.
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…)
After teasing fans with a best-of collection a few years back, the complete, digitally remastered first season of Sgt. Bilko (aka The Phil Silvers Show) (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP) is now available – and if you’ve never seen the show and consider yourself a fan of comedy, you must rectify the oversight immediately. Not only is the writing sterling, but Phil Silvers is a brilliant comic performer, elevating the material and making his role as a con-happy army sergeant iconic. The 5-disc set contains all 34 episodes, plus audio commentaries, the original network opening, original cast commercials, the lost audition show, and Phil Silver’s guest-starring episode of The Lucy Show.
I love bubbles. My nephews love bubbles. Who doesn’t love bubbles? Well, perhaps people who hate Lawrence Welk. Still – most people love bubbles. How about really big bubbles? Surely big bubbles equal big fun. And it’s true – big bubbles equal big fun. How can you make big bubbles easily? Why, with The Big Bubble Thing ($11.99), with which you can make ginormous bubbles up to 50-feet long.
If you’ve yet to see the brilliant Stephen Fry’s equally brilliant journey across the United States in the 6-part documentary Stephen Fry In America (BFS, Not Rated, DVD-$29.98 SRP), please rectify that grievous oversight at your earliest available moment. Accompany Fry as he visits all 50 states, encountering stereotypes and people, places & events that undermine established stereotypes. A Blu-Ray edition ($39.99 SRP) is also available (and looks pretty darn good).
I never thought that I’d eventually get to watch a high definition version of GI JOE: The Movie (Shout Factory, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$26.97 SRP), restored to its intended theatrical ratio. Yes, remember that it was supposed to be a theatrical feature, but when the big screen outing of Transformers tanked, GI JOE: The Movie was consigned to a direct-to-video release. Granted, the print still looks like a TV cartoon from the 80’s, but it is cleaner than it’s ever been, and the sound has been cleaned up significantly. Bonus materials include an audio commentary and those good ol’ PSAs we know and love so much. Also, for fans, the bonus standard DVD includes contains the flick in full frame, as we all remember it.
Leave it to Warner Bros. to take an incredible legacy and talent base for their animated DC properties and continue to spin out neither here nor there direct-to-DVD features that recast already brilliant actors for the sake of gimmicky stunt casting. So it goes with Batman: Under The Red Hood (Warner Bros., Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$29.99 SRP), which finds yet another voice for Batman & The Joker, leaving behind the iconic Kevin Conroy & Mark Hamill, in a blah story about the Gotham arrival of a vigilante with no ethics, Red Hood. Bonus materials include featurettes, a quartet of Batman: The Animated Series episodes presented by Bruce Timm, and a Jonah Hex animated short.
The one thing I can say about the otherwise flat, lifeless, and sadly boring remake of Clash Of The Titans (Warner Bros., Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$35.99 SRP) is that, stripped of its horrid 3-D conversion for home viewing, it’s a least a brighter affair. Bonus materials include an alternate ending and a featurette on Sam Worthington.
Long available in the complete series set, high definition enthusiasts can now pick up the penultimate 3rd season of Battlestar Galactica (Universal, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$88.98 SRP). The 5-disc set contains audio commentaries, video blogs, deleted scenes, featurettes, and webisodes.
As Stallone’s big action flick The Expendables is right around the corner, it’s no surprise that there’d be a tie-in release of Rambo: The Complete Collector’s Set (Lionsgate, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$54.99 SRP), which contains all 4 Rambo films in high definition (though the most recent, Rambo, is just Disc 1 of the original 2-disc set). Bonus materials are the same as the last special edition.
I suppose it must be a sign of soft sales at retail that the 3rd season of The New Adventures of Old Christine (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$24.95) has been demoted to Warners On-Demand service. But I suppose fans should just be happy they can get the 10 episodes that comprise this season anywhere.
Just in time for the healthcare debate but ignored in theaters, Repo Men (Universal, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$39.98 SRP) stars Jude Law and Forest Whitaker as Remy & Jake, a pair of near future repossession men who reclaim organ transplants when their recipients fail to make their payments. But after Remy gets a new heart after an on-the-job accident and falls behind in his own payments, Jake comes after him. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, deleted scenes, fake ads, and a visual effects featurette.
Largely depressing but endlessly fascinating, Life After People: The Complete Season 2 (History Channel, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$39.95 SRP) presents another 10 episodes packed with post-apocalyptic degeneration. Like I said – irresistibly depressing.
After 7 seasons and years of releases, the DVD journey of Sabrina The Teenage Witch (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP) comes to an end with the final season. The 3-disc set contains all 21 episodes, plus the TV movie Sabrina Goes To Rome.
Besides barreling through introducing him to a load of classic films, I’ve been looking for activities that my 6-year-old nephew will enjoy while the summer heat gets a bit too hot to make outside activities viable. And what I’ve found is that the movie-watching activity can be combined with major construction projects. Those major construction projects, you won’t be terribly surprised to find out, are LEGO-based.
This is the largest LEGO project we’ve tackled, coming in at 1,170 pieces… A good deal of them very, very tiny. Once the box was opened and the bags set out, the enormity of the task was a bit daunting.
Of course, I spent far too much time wondering why Grand Chancellor Palpatine looked so much like Christopher Walken.
And finally – after three whole movies – we came to the end, and my nephew was eager to explore all of the nooks and crannies, including Palpatine’s office (with a small box holding Death Star plans hidden away in the bow).
Next week, we’ll be tackling another project, but for now, here’s a look the finished Attack Cruiser…
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…
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…)
Picking up where Douglas Adams and zoologist Mark Carwardine left off 20 years prior, Stephen Fry steps in for his good friend as he and Carwardine revisit species on the verge of extinction in Last Chance To See (BFS, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$39.98 SRP), 6 brilliant hours of exploration, education, conservation, and entertainment.
Everyone needs a good spork – and to have it be heat-resistant and made of a touch polycarbonate material? Well, that’s just icing on the sporky cake. In other words, pick up a 4-pack of Light My Fire Sporks ($7.99). You never know when it’ll come in handy.
Sparkling fresh and looking better than ever, Ray Harryhausen’s stop-motion masterpiece Jason And The Argonauts (Sony, Rated G, Blu-Ray-$24.95 SRP) hits high-definition with a clutch of fanboy bonus features, including two new audio commentaries (one with Harryhausen fan Peter Jackson), interviews, featurettes, and storyboards.
If your only exposure to Life On Mars (Acorn, Not Rated, DVD-$79.99 SRP) is the awkward US version, please put that out of your mind and dive into the complete set 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 8-disc set contains all 16 episodes, plus audio commentaries, a behind-the-scenes documentary, featurettes, and an outtake reel.
At least Grover is present to balance out the furry red monstrosity in Sesame Street: Preschool Is Cool! ABCs With Elmo (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$14.98 SRP), in which the loveable blue monster plays the alphabet teaching professor to Elmo’s eager student.
Just as Matt Smith’s first year as the Doctor comes to a close, a quartet of classic Doctor Who adventures hit DVD for the first time. From the William Hartnell years, we get The Space Museum/The Chase (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$49.98 SRP), the Jon Pertwee years brings The Time Monster (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$24.98 SRP), and from the Tom Baker years we get both The Horns Of Nimon & Underworld (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-$24.98 SRP each). All four are packed to the gills with the usual complement of bonus features, including commentaries, interviews, featurettes, and more.
We still haven’t seen them in their Mystery Science Theater iteration, but you can watch the original Gamera vs. Barugon (Shout Factory, Not Rated, DVD-$19.93 SRP) in restored form – which, really, is the only way to watch a giant turtle movie. Bonus materials include an audio commentary and galleries.
In A Single Man (Sony, Rated R, DVD-$27.96 SRP), Colin Firth more than earns his Oscar nomination as a college professor left cold after the death of his longterm partner in 1962 LA, as he struggles to find a reason to live again. Bonus materials include an audio commentary and a making-of featurette.
After a long, long spell, Shout Factory has rescued another show that only got its first season released by Universal, delivering to fans Dragnet 1968: Season 2 (Shout Factory, Not Rated, DVD-$44.99 SRP). The 6-disc set contains all 28 episodes, the original 1966 pilot movie, a vintage trailer, and a featurette on Jack Webb.
It’s been a long, long road to get here, but with the release of ER: The Complete Thirteenth Season (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$49.98 SRP), we’re down to the last 3 seasons to hit DVD. This season is notable for the departure of Dr. Weaver and the arrival of Dr. Gates. Bonus materials include unaired scenes and outtakes.
The Warner Archive continues to release TV shows on demand that would otherwise have too-limited an appeal to merit a wide release, this time making available the complete first season of the Dylan McDermott-starring cop drama Dark Blue (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$24.95). The 4-disc set contains all 10 episodes.
It feels like just yesterday that the last volume came out, but here we are with the 3rd volume of Squidbillies (Adult Swim, Not Rated, DVD-$19.98 SRP) with another 10 episodes, featurettes, bumps, art, music, and the 2009 DragonCon panel.
It’s nice that, after years of being neglected, Dave Stevens’ Rocketeer is enjoying a resurgence and being appreciated not only in its original comic book form, but also the in the form of the underrated big screen adaptation. Sideshow has done their part by producing a stunning – and fun – Rocketeer Premium Format Figure ($339.99). With an art deco base and standing 18″ tall, it’s pretty darn nifty – right down to the wad of bubble gum plugging the hole in the jet pack. The Sideshow exclusive edition also features a swappable Cliff Secord head.
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…
That he was born is just one of the many undeniable facts about the life of the late Douglas Adams – author, humorist, raconteur, speaker, and thinker (although it should be noted that, on at least one parallel Earth, Mr. Adams was born a spring-toed lemur with a predilection for grassy fields and the works of Byron – a poetic lemur whose work was not terribly springy).
Another fact which comes to mind is that, of the 7 novels he wrote in his all-too-brief lifetime, by far the most popular is The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy and its four sequels – which make for a fine trilogy if you’re somewhat numerically impaired. Please don’t take this as a slight against Adams’s other novels, featuring detective Dirk Gently (Dirk Gently’s Holistic Detective Agency and its sequel, The Long Dark Tea-Time of the Soul), as they are both fine pieces of writing, and should also be read. Your reading list should also include the spoof dictionaries he co-wrote with John Lloyd (The Meaning of Liff & The Deeper Meaning of Liff), as well as his book on endangered species, Last Chance to See (with Mark Carwardine).
Sadly, Douglas Adams passed away on May, 11 2001 in California, where he had spent decades trying to get Hollywood to comprehend (and realize) a big screen version of Hitchhiker’s. Thankfully, he left behind a legacy in print that will not soon be forgotten, as well as a few deadlines that are still pending.
On the eve of the release of the big screen version (Iteration? Interpretation? Desecration? You judge…), I asked a few of Douglas’s friends, colleagues, associates, and vague acquaintances (for the sake of balance, naturally) to provide an anecdote they feel best described the Douglas they knew.
As a poet once said, “My enemy is hopelessness, my ally honest doubt. The Answer is a Question that I never will find out…”
In all fairness, another poet once said, “Don’t you know how sweet and wonderful life could be?… So let’s get it on…”
TERRY JONES (author, director, Python)
I was lucky enough to buy two tickets for the first ever screening of Abel Gance’s Napoleon in Kevin Brownlow’s restored version. I don’t know why I bought the tickets, because I’d never heard of either the film nor Abel Gance, however the idea of a five hour silent film with a final sequence that prefigured Cinerama with three screens interlocking sounded pretty intriguing.
However, when the day of the screening came (a Sunday), I had a hangover and so did my wife. She decided she didn’t feel up to sitting in the cinema watching a silent movie from 10.00am until 5.00pm. So I rang Michael Palin. He said he had a hangover and didn’t fancy the idea of sitting in the cinema watching a silent movie from 10.00am until 5.00pm. So I rang up Douglas. He said he had a hangover and didn’t fancy the idea of sitting in the cinema watching a silent movie from 10.00am until 5.00pm.
So I gave up, and decided that since I’d bought the tickets, hungover or not, I’d have to go on my own.
Just as I was leaving the house, however, the phone rang. It was Douglas. He said he’d been thinking about it, and the idea of sitting in the cinema watching a silent movie from 10.00am to 5.00pm sounded so dreadful that he just had to do it to see if it was as dreadful as it seemed.
So that’s what happened. Douglas and I met up, thinking we’d give the middle of the film a miss, but instead finding ourselves riveted and at each interval impatient to get back into the film. It was, in short, one of the cinematic events of my life.
But for me the interesting thing was Douglas’s fearless curiosity. He came precisely because it sounded like such a bad idea! That really was Douglas.
JOHN LLOYD (producer, writer, co-author of The Meaning of Liff)
The Hitchhiker movie was almost 23 years in turnaround.
I spent September of 1982 with Douglas (and his then girlfriend, Jane) in Donna Summer’s beach-house in Malibu.
We were supposed to be writing a book called The Meaning of Liff, but Douglas spent much of the time in meetings with movie people, trying to find someone he could get on with.
One day he returned from one of these encounters distracted and bewildered. He had just met a grotesque caricature of the archetypal Hollywood producer – a squat, toad-like man with an enormous cigar.
This creature, so Douglas reported, had the following proposal:
“So Doug,’ he growled, ‘We’re gonna eat a little lunch, maybe take a few moments to go over the idea and the money – and then we’re gonna talk about what kinda animal ya like to sleep with…”
SUSAN SHERIDAN (actress, “Trillian” in the Hitchhiker’s radio series)
I certainly admired Douglas, for his dedication to his causes, and his “‘off the wall” sense of humour.
“Goodbye and thanks for all the fish” was a stock phrase in our house for years!
But the concept that we are in or among not just one but many dimensions is just the most wonderful thought – and who knows, it might be true.
I suspect D thought so…
…and ruled by white mice… how brilliant is that?
And of course, memories of him rushing the scripts in at the last minute…no wonder we didn’t understand it half the time!
I envy the film cast having scripts in advance!
NEIL INNES (singer/songwriter, Rutle, one of the many legitimate claimants to the title “7th Python”)
Douglas Adams and I share the distinction of being the only two people – other than the team themselves – ever to have put pen to paper with Monty Python. It was while I was writing with Graham Chapman that I first met him… he would regularly join us for “lunch” – very lively and jolly occasions, often the highlight of the day.
Somehow or other the idea was spawned that Douglas and I should write a musical together, and a couple of years later, no sense in rushing these things, he drove up to Suffolk for the weekend. The family and I had only just moved to the country and we literally lived up a riverbed that was also a road – most of the time. It was wild and the kids adored it.
Douglas arrived with his guitar and fashionable London shoes in a style aptly named “slip-on”. Wide-eyed, he got out of the car and began to enthuse about Nature and Being. As I escorted him across the lawn, the only way to the house at that time, his feet suddenly slid from under him and he did the best impression of an Oliver Hardy fall I have ever seen!
A big man in so many ways, I shall never forget the sight of Douglas lying flat on his back, precious guitar held safely aloft, still extolling the beauty of the English countryside.
GRAHAM CHAPMAN (writer, author, ex-Python)
(Mr. Chapman could not be reached in time for deadline)
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NEIL GAIMAN (author)
I was working on Don’t Panic! and that day I was at Douglas’s brand new Islington house going through dusty filing cabinets, pulling out early drafts of the TV series scripts and notes and old fan mail and such.
Douglas himself was off doing the sort of things that Douglas did, like contemplating writing something for the Comic Relief Live programme booklet, and then having lugubriously contemplated, taking a bath. There was a sudden scurrying and commotion as a Douglasy sort of noise came from upstairs, followed by the arrival downstairs of Douglas’s stepmother. “He says there aren’t any towels in the bathroom and he’s in the bath. Where are the towels?” she asked, and Douglas’s assistant went off with her to locate the linen closet and find Douglas a towel.
I thought, of course. You have to be the kind of person who doesn’t know where his towel is to notice that the people who do are the truly cool people. And I was glad Douglas didn’t. And I went back to the filing cabinets.
DAVID LEARNER (actor, stage and TV “Marvin, the Paranoid Android”)
Warm from the day. The sun exploded into the china clay pits in Carclaze. Twenty-five years on and they’re so close to the Eden project. The Douglas project? Jim Francis was propping up a model of the “Heart of Gold” on stones. Special effects? Yes, given the budget. None of your movie money here.
Way way back up the hill stood Simon (Jones), sweltering in his dressing gown. Mark (Wing-Davey), complaining for the thousandth time about the other. David (Dixon), the best dressed of all of us: Ford always had it easy. Sandra (Dickinson), actually Sandra wasn’t wearing an awful lot, sleek and cat-like in red. Me, bringing up the rear, in the suit. The suit and I had no relationship whatever. Previously Jim and Perry had taken the usual forty minutes to screw me into the thing, leaving just the top of my head sucking in the Carclaze air. Now it was on. Bad mood? I should say so.
Down there, Douglas and Alan. Mike with a megaphone. “Roll!”
We ambled down the track. Breakfast was a long time away. I was getting hungry. “Cut! That’s a wrap.”
Simon said, “Bollocks. I still had my sunglasses on. Do you think anyone noticed?” It was very Arthur Dent.
Douglas’s choice at last of where we were eating. Actually, he always chose what we ate. The Mevagissey fish restaurant was fantastic. His choices were blindingly accurate. Usually. “It’s called …..”
I daren’t say what it was called. It’s probably still going. “It’s forty miles away!” I said.
It mattered not a jot. We piled into the motors, headed out across the moor. Everyone trying to keep up with the Porsche and failing admirably. The sun had slid down the sky. Even Marvin would have sighed at its beauty.
What was wrong with the meal? Don’t know. The place had a superb reputation, the service was excellent; it just didn’t … gel. We were expecting to give it ten out of ten; heck it was expensive.
In a sweeping gesture, Douglas paid for everyone. That was his way.
CLIFF PINNOCK (assistant floor manager, Hitchhiker’s TV series)
Towards the end of filming the TV version of the Guide, my wife and I adopted a homeless dog from the RSPCA.
He was thought to be an Irish Wolfhound crossed with a German Shepherd. He was gigantic, hairy and bore his oversized face and nose regally. They said he was about three years old.
He was an amazing dog; faithful, adventurous and completely fearless. He was able to escape from anywhere with amazing ingenuity and could be completely distracted whilst planning his next escapade.
He would disappear completely and we would search the streets and lanes for hours growing frantic with worry, sure that some terrible fate had befallen him. Then he would shoulder through the door, often followed by some amazing new friend who he had discovered on his travels.
Somehow we all laughed with him and not at him, because he allowed us to see the humour from his point of view, rather than clowning.
He was run over outside our house by an articulated lorry and died much too young.
We had named him Douglas and the parallels, for me, are inescapable….
MARK CARWARDINE (Zoologist, Conservationist, Environmentalist, co-author Last Chance to See)
Both Douglas and I have very low boredom thresholds. We spent an inordinate amount of time talking about everything under the sun. Funnily enough, Douglas didn’t read much while we were travelling. I don’t think he could concentrate on something so different and far-removed from the situation in hand. But the first thing he did on getting back to civilization was to buy books and ready solidly for hours.
When we got back to Sydney after our visit to Komodo, he went to his hotel room and disappeared for an hour – shaving, showering etc. – and then went off to find a bookshop. He bought at least 20 books on an incredible variety of subjects and then went back to bed for three solid days and nights to read the whole lot in one sitting.
His other great thing on returning to civilization was the phone – he made loads of phone calls.
The thing about Douglas was that he thoroughly enjoyed roughing it and life in the wilds for a week or so, but then he pined for the comforts of civilization. Completely understandable, of course.
STEPHEN FRY (author, actor, director, bon vivant)
Douglas and I, as the first two owners of Apple Macs in Europe, played for years (before the internet would have made it easier) like kids with train sets, swapping software and routines and programmes. No colour, no hard disks for some years: but damn it was fun.
Downstairs lurked Sue Freestone, DNA’s publisher, wishing that I would go away so that Douglas would get on with his latest novel. As a way of getting rid of me she offered me an advance for a book of my own.
So I went off and wrote one.
When I came back Douglas was no further forward with his. As is well known, he HATED writing.
He was a huge man: when he was in a house it rattled and you always knew he was there. He did the same to the earth. It doesn’t rattle any more now that he’s gone.
MICHAEL NESMITH (singer/songwriter, producer, author, entrepreneur)
Douglas Adams could see connections between things, people, and ideas that ordinary people either never saw, or finally saw long after Douglas had seen it. It was a singular talent, intuitive to Douglas, and developed to a unique and extraordinary extent. As a result Douglas had many friends who never would have met each other were it not for him. Douglas himself was the hub. His ability to discern these unseen connections made him a friend to a remarkably broad array of very different people.
When I was a teenager I saw a cartoon by Paul Crum of two hippos in a remote jungle stream with just their nose above water. They were talking, and one was saying to the other “I keep thinking it’s Tuesday”.
The cartoon impressed me deeply. I thought the cartoon amazingly funny. It captured something special.
I listened in astonishment one afternoon as Douglas told a group of reporters of having seen that same cartoon when he was a teenager, and how much it had meant to him. Douglas and I had never mentioned it to each other before that moment, although we had been friends for ten years.
It didn’t surprise Douglas. For him it was the final appearing of something he had intuitively known since we first met. Fortunately for me Douglas offered his friendship based on that hunch, and I will always treasure it.
MARK WHEATON (screenwriter)
When I met Douglas Adams – for the briefest of moments – I was a broke grad student at Indiana University who had most of his books memorized but only an aged, dog-earned Long Dark Tea-Time of the Soul amongst my possessions. I’d seen a small poster advertising a lecture being given by Adams at IU and went – book in hand hoping for an autograph – expecting a throng.
The lecture wasn’t exactly a sell-out, but for those of us who showed up, it was a truly great night. Adams came down off his podium when he noted the attendance, invited everyone to move up close, and started off by saying he would have to amend his typical Q&A as he always answered the question, “Where
do you get your ideas?” with: “A small mail-order company in Indiana.”
Though the lecture was mostly about the environment – somewhat in conjunction with the book Last Chance to See – Adams talked about the nature of humor, recalling a story about driving in the American Southwest and passing a sign reading: “Strong Winds May Exist.” He extrapolated on this for awhile, making eloquent use of his trademark humor, but then told us a story that, he explained, would have a funny set-up, but a horrifically disappointing ending. I won’t recall it anywhere near as well as Adams did, but it went something like this.
Adams was driving around London and ended up talking to a police officer/bobby – the kind that wore the large, pointy helmet. Anyway, he went off in his car, only to find himself soon chased by the police, people in the neighborhood, little kids, buses – you name it – everyone pursuing him. That’s when he realized that the bobby’s hat – the theft of which was an arrestable offense – was on top of his car.
So, he stopped and gave the helmet back.
He told the story brilliantly and everybody got a laugh. At the end of the evening, Adams signed autographs and chatted with fans. I got up to him and talked to him about radio-theater, something we agreed was a great way for a young writer to cut their teeth. He was curious about where they practiced it in America and we got on the topic of Austin, Texas – a place Adams thought was pretty nifty. And that was it. When I found out he had passed away, it was the first time the death of an author really made me feel truly regretful of what writing may have yet been still to come.
KEN BUSSANMAS (writer)
I distinctly remember the first time I “met” Douglas Adams – I was 13 years old and had decided that I was going to write for Doctor Who. After several phone calls (a story unto themselves that will be recounted elsewhere), I was put through to the Doctor Who production office and turned over to its new Script Editor, one Douglas Adams.
Either I was far better at disguising my age over the phone than I believed possible or Douglas was so intrigued that an American would show any interest in writing for Doctor Who at the time to give it a second thought. Whatever reason he had for not hanging up the phone the instant I came on the line, it began a series of phone calls wherein we discussed pretty much anything that came to mind and very rarely the task at hand, which was writing stories for Doctor Who.
At the time, the US market was considerably behind the BBC and the series hadn’t yet taken off in America the way it would a few short years later. My first request was to ask Douglas for a copy of the Writer’s Guide for the series, the story bible that writers use as a framework for submissions.
There was a long pause.
“We haven’t got one”, he finally replied.
“That’s okay,” I said, “just get me the one for last season and I’ll go off of that one until the one for this season is ready.”
Yet another long pause and a deep breath followed.
“It’s not that we haven’t written one for this series, Ken,” he started off, almost sheepishly. “We’ve never had one. I’m really sorry about that and I know you must think we’re very unprofessional for that but I can try to work you up something to use.”
I couldn’t believe it – I had one of the people responsible for producing a series I was practically begging to write for apologize to me for not having a writer’s guide! I think he mistook my stunned silence as some kind of indictment of Doctor Who, the BBC and himself as a person. “I’ll make sure you’ve got something to work with by the end of the week,” he told me and he was good to his word. A remarkable accomplishment considering how legendary his inability to meet a deadline became in the years that followed.
The “writer’s guide” that appeared in my mailbox nearly two weeks later was three typewritten pages, each weighed down by at least a few ounces of Liquid Paper. Douglas, it seemed, would “edit on the fly” and the extra postage reflected the extra weight. It was hilarious, reflecting the personality of the man I’d been speaking with on the phone and almost completely useless for its intended purpose as it gave no directions whatsoever on characters or settings. Still, Douglas Adams had a great influence on my life and my career simply for being who he was and being gracious enough to give someone he didn’t know a chance.
KEVIN JON DAVIES (Hitchhiker’s TV series animator, documentary maker, and concept artist of The Illustrated Hitchhiker’s)
During one studio session for the 1981 BBCTV series of The Hitchhiker’s Guide I sat with Douglas for a while behind the director, Alan J.W. Bell, up in the control gallery. Alan was speaking to his Floor Manager via the talk-back system as they diplomatically wrestled with an awkward actor who was holding up the proceedings. This guest star (who’d better remain nameless) had, frankly, been having trouble remembering his lines since the rehearsal period and his latest excuse was to blame his uncomfortable seating arrangements. Douglas fumed as his precious script was mangled yet again.
“Why doesn’t he just prop himself up a bit?” I murmured.
“Why doesn’t he just f*** off!” barked Douglas, loudly. The comment shot straight down the director’s microphone and out to every pair of headphones on the studio floor. I later learned that even those without headphones could hear the remark.
“Who said that?” demanded the rather compromised F.M., “Was it Kevin?”
(I don’t think he liked me…!)
Alan glanced round at Douglas and replied ruefully, “No, I’m afraid that was our writer…!” Douglas just grinned, unashamedly.
In January 1984 I attended a glittering ceremony where Douglas was to collect his first Golden Pan Award as the youngest author under 30 (apart from poor little Anne Frank) to sell a million copies in the Pan Paperback edition alone. His publisher, making the presentation, spoke at length about Douglas’s famous inability to meet deadlines. They used to wonder whether, come each delivery date, Douglas was actually at home finishing the latest novel or out somewhere wrapping another Porche around a lamppost (the fate which befell his first – within a fortnight). To rapturous applause, Douglas accepted his prize statuette and turned to the audience; “I’ve known about this evening’s presentation for sometime,” he grinned, “And I’m pleased to say my acceptance speech is very nearly ready!”
M.J. SIMPSON (writer, author of Hitchhiker: A Biography of Douglas Adams)
I didn’t know Douglas Adams socially; I just met him professionally a few times. But when I did meet him I found him to be enthusiastic, amiable and polite. I think he was slightly bemused by being a ‘celebrity’. He used to worry that it wasn’t normal for writers to be recognizable, but at the same time he was a frustrated performer who loved giving readings and interviews. I always summed it up as: he didn’t really like ‘fans’ but he was always happy to talk with ‘a fan’.
I wrote a huge article about the history of Hitchhiker’s Guide in SFX magazine for the series’ 20th anniversary in 1998. The movie deal had just been announced and Douglas very kindly wrote a few paragraphs about it for the feature. No agents involved, no hassle, no fee – he was that approachable, although I’m sure he wrote the stuff for me in order to avoid having to write something else for someone else. Nevertheless, I take pride in being almost the only person on Earth to have commissioned some writing from Douglas Adams and received it before my deadline.
I think it is interesting, and a little sad, that Douglas’s name has been so low-key among all the publicity and hype for this movie. The trailers just said “From the celebrated best-selling novel” – but omitted to mention who wrote it. On the other hand, it may be best for Douglas Adams’s reputation that he isn’t linked too closely with the film. Despite what many people are saying, he didn’t write it. He wrote a screenplay which Disney rejected, then he died, and then another writer came in and wrote a new screenplay incorporating material from Douglas’s version. WGA rules mean that both writers are credited, though they never met.
A much better tribute to Douglas is the new, final radio series based on the fourth and fifth Hitchhiker books. The reason those books don’t work very well is because they were rushed so there is almost no editing. Douglas needed a good editor or producer to make his work really shine and what Dirk Maggs has done with these final eight scripts is extraordinary and exactly what an editor would have done with the books had there been time.
DIRK MAGGS (Adapter/Director, The Hitchhiker’s Guide To The Galaxy Quandary & Quintessential Phases)
In the early 1990s I was, like Douglas Adams and Geoffrey Perkins before me, a Producer in BBC Radio Light Entertainment. As well as comedy programmes our output included ‘Light Drama’, and whilst making action serials featuring the DC Comics characters Superman and Batman I was able to develop a radio production style which layered lots of sound effects and music onto a tightly written, cinematic script. It was, and is, an incredibly labour intensive way to work, and at times I still wonder what rod I made for my own back. But these early efforts had caught Douglas’s attention, and he was in talks with the BBC about further radio series of Hitchhiker’s. One spring morning in 1993 he called my boss Jonathan James Moore and asked if I would be interested in taking on the job of producing them. I was floored. Apart from marriage and children, nothing before or since has so wonderfully and unexpectedly trumped my expectations of life.
That proposed first series ground to a halt due to script problems and contractual difficulties. Then talks I had with Douglas and Robbie Stamp in 1997 to restart the process through their Digital Village company were scuppered by the long-awaited Movie Deal coming through. When we last met, in Broadcasting House Reception in 2000, we were still making hopeful noises about finishing the saga on radio. And then, overwhelming any such petty concerns, Douglas died. Against all odds it was a chance meeting at his Memorial Service which revived the idea, and this time it actually happened.
I did not know Douglas as a friend, but on the occasions we met I liked him enormously, whether he was enthused, taciturn, distracted or utterly pissed off. I can only thank him for having faith in me, and recall a moment when perhaps I helped maintain his faith in himself. After the Tertiary Phase collapsed in 1993 I was ‘poached’ to produce Ned Sherrin’s Radio 4 chat show Loose Ends. Mostly Harmless had just been published in paperback and I invited Douglas in as a guest, as well as Sir Ranulph Fiennes, who had just manhauled a sled across Antarctica, losing useful items like fingers and toes to frostbite. As the great explorer told an epic tale of suffering and endurance, Douglas’s face fell.
Afterwards, in the pub, I asked if something had upset him.
“Oh, not really,” said Douglas. “It’s just that talking about being locked in a hotel room to write an overdue novel seems pretty tame stuff compared to trekking across a thousand miles of icy crevasses.”
“Well you need to put things in perspective,” I replied. “First of all, your struggle was on a more human scale, and the result is a unique achievement no-one can match. Secondly, just before we went on air, Ran Fiennes got lost in the basement of Broadcasting House looking for the toilet.”
Douglas smiled and picked up his glass. “That makes me feel much better.”
I want to thank everyone who shared their thoughts and anecdotes about Douglas, especially those who set aside crippling deadlines of their own to make sure this piece had their input. Of course, I could have gone through with my original plan – in honor of Douglas – and run this piece four months late…
Welcome to our weekly round-up of featured giveaways here at FRED. 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 Warner Bros. Home Video, we’re giving away six (6) copies of WHERE THE WILD THINGS ARE on both Blu-Ray & DVD.
In conjunction with Fox Home Video, we’re giving away three (3) copies of COLD SOULS on DVD.
In conjunction with Shout Factory Home Video, we’re giving away five (5) copies of ELVIS on DVD.
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 have nothing against the Coen Brothers’ remake, but it doesn’t hold a candle to the original Ealing version of The Ladykillers (Lionsgate, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP), which has arrived in high-definition in a deluxe special edition featuring an introduction from Terry Gilliam. Not only that, its also go an audio commentary, featurettes, interviews, and the theatrical trailer. If you haven’t seen this film – See it.
Do you have a bunch of old albums lying around that no one’s bothered to release either on CD or digitally? I do. A ton of ’em. I’ve tried different digitizing solutions, but all have been rather awkward or delivered poor sound quality. With the Briefcase USB Turntable ($69.99), I think I’ve finally found a solution that sounds good, has a dead simple interface, and – seeing as how it’s all in a nifty briefcase – is portable. Add to that the brilliance of built-in speakers, and you’ve got a one-stop solution. Ain’t clever technology grand?
There are some films that I can watch again and again – not by choice, but if I stumble upon them, I’m instantly drawn back in. Goodfellas (Warner Bros., Rated R, Blu-Ray-$34.99 SRP) is a film like that. Now, it’s made its way to high definition, in a 2-disc edition that carries over the bonus features from the standard special edition – a pair of audio commentaries, a trio of featurettes, and storyboard-to-scenes comparisons. The second disc is the feature-length documentary Public Enemies: The Golden Age Of The Gangster Film.
It’s been attempted before, but it’s taken Black Dynamite (Sony, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$34.95 SRP) to finally nail a truly funny satire of the blaxsploitation flicks that dominated 70’s cinema. The script is sharp, and Michael Jai White is pitch perfect as the titular former CIA agent out to avenge his brother’s death. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, featurettes, and deleted/alternate scenes.
Also arriving in high-def is Akira Kurosawa’s take on King Lear, Ran (Lionsgate, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$39.99 SRP). Besides a spiffy respiration, the disc also includes an interview with a Japanese Art-Of-War expert, and a trio of documentaries.
I do believe the packaging for the second half of the second season of Cannon (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$36.98 SRP) is making a weight joke about star William Conrad when it says “LA’s biggest crime fighter returns!” Yeah, I think they are. Either way, the 3-disc set contains 12 episodes, plus the episodic promos.
Stephen Fry returns in the 3rd and final series of Kingdom (BFS, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP) as the titular solicitor who finds himself representing the eccentric folk in the small English town of Market Shipborough. It’s a fun, funny series that reminds me of the US’s Boston Legal.
Exploring exactly how Adolf Hitler was able to survive over 40 assassination attempts, Hitler’s Bodyguard (Acorn, Not Rated, DVD-$79.99 SRP) pieces together a portrait of the elite staff who swore oats of allegiance to the Fuhrer himself. The 3-disc set collects all 13 episodes of this fascinating series that weaves interviews, documents, recreations, and virtual tours of his various homes, bunkers, and strongholds.
What’s the sign of a good documentary? It’s one that makes you interested in a subject you never fathomed that you would ever find interesting. Chris Rock accomplishes this feat with Good Hair (Lionsgate, Rated PG-13, DVD-$27.98 SRP), which looks at the way hairstyles impact multiple facets of the black community. Give it a spin and you’ll dig it, too. Bonus materials include an audio commentary and the theatrical trailer.
The final Bourne film arrives in high-definition as the latest of Universal’s new line of flipper single-disc Blu-Ray/DVD combos. I loathe flipper discs with a passion, so even though I understand the cost-cutting thought behind it, I can’t get behind the concept. Looking at the Blu-Ray side, The Bourne Ultimatum (Universal, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$29.98 SRP) features a load of featurettes, an audio commentary, and deleted scenes. Great flick, shame it’s a flipper.
Over here! The big wheel keeps on turning out more direct-to-video Scooby-Doo movies, the latest of which is Scooby-Doo!: Abracadabra-Doo (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$19.98 SRP), which finds the Mystery Inc. crew trying to unravel the sinister forces at work inside a school for magicians. As for bonus materials, there’s a featurette on how to make your very own scary puppet.
Abby Cadabby and Elmo travel down the rabbit hole in the newest Sesame Street release, Abby In Wonderland (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$14.93 SRP). Is it worth it just to see Grover as the Mad Hatter? Sure. The release also contains a bonus CD of 5 classic Sesame Street tunes.
As some series wrap their release on DVD, there are still plenty of others waiting in the wings, which is why we’ve got the complete first season of Barnaby Jones (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP), starring Buddy Ebsen as the titular PI forced out of retirement to solve the murder of his son. The 4-disc set contains all 13 episodes, plus the episodic promos for each.
I didn’t think I would, but I actually found the female-centric comedy Women In Trouble (Screen Media, Rated R, DVD-$24.98 SRP) to be quite a fun little flick. In fact, it’s what The Women should have been – an all-star cast backed by a strong script. This one centers around a group of LA women who collide on one unique day. Bonus features include deleted scenes and trailers. A Blu-Ray edition ($29.98 SRP) is also available, with identical bonus materials.
With a cast that includes Gary Coleman, Ron Jeremy, Jason Mewes, and Scottie Pippen, it’s not without a small amount of embarrassment that one watches the sensationally titled documentary Midgets vs Mascots (First Look Studios, Not Rated, DVD-$19.98 SRP). I mean, you’re either gonna watch it or you’re not. Bonus materials include featurettes and deleted scenes.
I’m sure you’ll agree that Raiders Of The Lost Ark is loaded with iconic props (although I’d consider Indy’s hat to be costuming and his whip to be a weapon). Of those iconic props, there’s one that remains attached to one of the most dynamic, tension-filled opening sequences in cinema history – the golden Fertility Idol ($169.99). Sideshow has created a chrome-plated, expertly recreated piece complemented by a polystone base evocative of the pedestal from the film. It’s a fantastic piece, a conversation starter, and irresistible to evil French archeologists. The piece is limited to 1500, so get yours now.
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…
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…)
I’ve banged on about it for years, and I’ll continue to bang on about the absolute greatness of the British comedy panel show QI, which makes the discovery of interesting knowledge a hilarious affair. A few years back, they brought the immense database of general ignorance (little factoids the disprove much of what be believe to be true) to books, a pair of which have gotten a release in paperback – The revised & expanded Noticeably Stouter Book of General Ignorance (Faber & Faber, £7.99) and The QI Pocket Book Of Animals (Faber & Faber, £7.99). Also available is the audiobook edition of the original book, The Sound Of General Ignorance (Faber & Faber, £16.98). Get them all. Get them now.
There’s plenty of high-end goodies to be had over at Thinkgeek, but some of the best stuff id the reasonably-priced, highly-practical items. For example, I give you the Speaker/Headset Switching Hub ($6.99), which allows you to easily switch between your external PC speakers, your microphone, and your headphones – you know, for when you’ve got to take that Skype call on the fly and want to eliminate all of the fumbling around.
The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles – as created by Kevin Eastman & Peter Laird – are celebrating their 25th anniversary. Yes – you heard me right. And to celebrate, all four feature films have been pulled together on high definition into the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: 25th Anniversary Collector’s Edition (New Line, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$84.99 SRP). The set contains all 4 flicks – Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: The Secret Of The Ooze, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles III: Turtles In Time, and the CG TMNT – plus a beanie, character cars, a comic, and a sketch.
Hot on the heels of Role Models (which I enjoyed), Paul Rudd returns with I Love You, Man (Paramount, Rated R, DVD-$29.99 SRP), another winning tale of arrested development and male bonding, as he plays a man who, as his wedding approaches, seeks to find a guy friend to be his best man. Who does he ultimately try for? Jason Segal. Bonus features include an audio commentary, deleted/extended scenes, featurettes, and a gag reel. A Blu-Ray edition ($39.99 SRP) is also available, with identical bonus features.
I’m a sucker for a 50’s monster flick, and it’s nice when a modern filmmaker tries to recreate that era – which is exactly what Alien Trespass (Image, Rated PG, DVD-$27.98 SRP) is. Eric McCormack stars as an astronomer possessed by an alien out to save our planet from a rogue alien on a rampage. Bonus features include featurettes, interviews, and trailers. A Blu-Ray edition ($35.98 SRP) is also available.
Right from the start, I was impressed with both the concept and visuals of Life After People (History Channel, Not Rated, Blu-Ray – $29.95 SRP) – which explores what would happen to the planet if man suddenly disappeared – but it’s even more fun to watch it in full high definition. Bonus features are limited to additional scenes.
Get over the idea that Zac Efron eventually grew up to be Matthew Perry, and 17 Again (Warner Bros., Rated PG-13, DVD-$28.98 SRP) is a nice little modern spin on Peggy Sue Got Married, which finds thirtysomething Mike O’Donnell (Perry), fresh from a divorce and with a life on the skids, gets presented with an opportunity to be the Mike he was at 17 (Efron), but with the rest of the world remaining in the present – which means he can now be a classmate to his own teenage kids. It’s a fun flick, with particular kudos to Thomas Lennon as Mike’s best friend. Sadly, no bonus features. A Blu-Ray edition ($35.99 SRP) is also available, which actually does have bonus features – a pair of featurettes and a trivia track.
From the raw gyrations that greeted viewers watching his 1956 debut, Elvis: The Ed Sullivan Show – The Classic Performances (Image, Not Rated, DVD-$14.98 SRP) collects 15 of Presley’s Sullivan Show appearances on one disc. Bonus materials include interviews, promos, and rare home movies.
Through a production quirk, the episodes featured in Super Friends: The Lost Episodes (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$26.98 SRP) went unseen for over a decade. Now, these 24 episodes are collected onto DVD for your perusal. You know you want to see more Wonder Twins power activation. And Gleek.
While it doesn’t fully illuminate the poor decision-making skills that went into making such a horrid adaptation, G.I. JOE: The Rise Of Cobra Mission Dossier (Titan Books, $14.95 SRP) does at least touch on some of the blinkered behind-the-scenes thinking that delivered such a stillborn exercise. Oh, and there are plenty of photos, too.
Score aficionados should be on the lookout for Ben Foster’s soundtrack to Torchwood: Children Of Earth (Silva Screen Records, $16.98 SRP) and the City Of Prague Philharmonic Orchestra’s compilation of The Music Of Star Trek (Silva Screen Records, $16.98 SRP), which runs the gamut from the 60’s to the present.
The wife of a good friend of mine is a big fan of the porcine children’s book star Olivia (Nickelodeon, Not Rated, DVD-$16.99 SRP), whose animated adventures get their first DVD release with a disc containing a quartet of episodes plus a photo gallery.
Lionsgate has opened up the floodgates and released a trio of catalogue titles in high definition – one of which is a certified guilty… well, I hesitate to say “pleasure”. That one is Renny Harlin’s awkward pirate epic Cutthroat Island (Lionsgate, Rated PG-13, Blu-Ray-$19.99 SRP), which contains an audio commentary from Harlin and an archival featurette. The other two flicks are Johnny Depp in Roman Polanski’s The Ninth Gate and Jean Claude Van Damme’s Replicant (Lionsgate, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$19.99 SRP each).
There used to be a show named Project Runway (Genius, Not Rated, DVD-$27.95 SRP), that suddenly disappeared amid behind-the-scenes disputes. It’s coming back on a different network, and that most recent, long ago season – the 5th – is now on DVD. The 4-disc set features extended episodes and a featurette.
I’ve heard that there are people who watch the updated version of the high school tribulations of those wacky West Beverly students on 90210 (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$49.99 SRP). I am not one of them. I have no reason to be one of them. If you are one of them, you’ll probably want to pick up the complete first season, featuring all 23 episodes plus commentaries and a clutch of featurettes.
Over the past few years, Sideshow has been consistently releasing top-notch 12″ Star Wars figures – so good that they’ve virtually erased the painful memories of Hasbro’s off-model monstrosities of the past. If you think I speak in hyperbole, gawp in delight at the newly released 12″ Darth Vader ($124.99), presented as he appeared in the original film. Towering over other 12″-scale figures, Vader is spot-on – from his helmet sculpt down to the costume and materials used to pull it all off. And you certainly can’t pick up a Vader without also picking up a 12″ Stormtrooper ($89.99). Just take a look at the pics below and tell me you don’t want these gracing your shelf…
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…
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…)
The books are classics of English humor, and the television adaptations starring Stephen Fry & Hugh Laurie serve the material exceptionally well, as you can discover in P.G. Wodehouse’s Jeeves & Wooster: The Complete Collection (A&E, Not Rated, DVD-$59.95 SRP), which contains all four seasons.
When I’m out running errands, I never seem to have a pen with me when I need it most. You know, like when you want to write something down, or make a deposit, or defend yourself against a mountain lion. Well, the Inka Pen Travel Pen ($14.99) is perfect, because not only does it store itself at half size and come on a keychain, but it also features a PDA stylus to boot. Perfect.
Director Mamoru Oshii (Ghost In The Shell returns with a beautiful feature about a group of eternally young fighter pilots engaging in incredible dogfights against an implacable enemy, and the one pilot that wants to discover his missing past. Sky Crawlers (Sony, Rated PG-13, DVD-$27.96 SRP) features both the English and original Japanese versions of the film, plus a pair of featurettes. A Blu-Ray edition ($34.95 SRP) is also available, with identical bonus features.
I’ve praised the fine folks at Twomorrows Publishing many, many times in the past, and that praise it deserved. In fact, I’m going to do so again, by recommending the latest volume in their magnificent Modern Masters artist spotlight series, which has just featured Kyle Baker (Twomorrows, $14.95). Equal parts in-depth interview and sketchbook, it’s a must-have.
As if murderers weren’t enough of a pain, Deputy Chief Brenda Johnson (Kyra Sedgwick) now has a snooping reporter to make things awkward in the complete fourth season of The Closer (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP). The 4-disc box set contains all 15 episodes, plus unaired scenes, featurettes, and a gag reel.
A long time coming, Harlan Ellison: Dreams With Sharp Teeth (Docurama, Not Rated, DVD-$26.95 SRP) is an unblinking, affectionate, warts-and-all portrait of a writer whose creativity is matched only by his curmudgeonly, combative nature. Read the man’s work and then pick this up for a look at the man behind it. The DVD features additional readings, a featurette from the film’s premiere, and pizza with Harlan and Neil Gaiman.
While all of the attention went to the flashier Matrix, I always enjoyed the quieter, more cerebral sci-fi of producer Roland Emmerich’s The Thirteenth Floor (Sony, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$28.95 SRP), which is now making its debut in high definition. It’s part virtual reality, part noir, part detective whodunit, and more. If you’ve never given it a spin, try it out. The disc features an audio commentary and a music video.
All these years later, there’s something comically over-the-top about Falling Down (Warner Bros., Rated R, DVD-$19.98 SRP), which starred Michael Douglas as a laid off defense worker whose had enough and is not willing to take it anymore. Controversial at the time, it’s more a caricature now. The new special edition adds a commentary track with Douglas and director Joel Schumacher, an interview with Douglas, and the theatrical trailer. A Blu-Ray edition ($34.99 SRP) is also available, with identical bonus features.
Kids today have no idea what seemingly-endless cartoon fun Saturday mornings used to be before the rise of cable and home video. For just a taste of what it was like, Warners has put together both Saturday Morning Cartoons: 1960s Volume 1 & Saturday Morning Cartoons: 1970s Volume 1 (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$26.98 SRP each), 2-disc set featuring over 5 hours of Hanna-Barbera and Warners cartoons that evoke memories of that bygone era. The sets also contain documentaries on Quick Draw McGraw, The Herculoids, Frankenstein, Jr., Charlie Chan, and The Funky Phantom.
The Beeb has brought together a quintet of their recent Dickens adaptations into the Charles Dickens Masterworks Collection (BBC, Not Rated , DVD-$119.98 SRP). The set collects the previously released discs of Oliver Twist, The Old Curiosity Shop, Bleak House, Little Dorrit, and Great Expectations, with the exact same bonus features as those original versions.
However, the Beeb hasn’t brought out any of their classic comedy in high definition yet, but we are getting a pair of their recent prestige productions on Blu-Ray. The first is their multi-art adaptation of Charles Dickens’ Bleak House (BBC, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$49.99 SRP), starring Gillian Anderson and containing bonus commentaries, interviews, and a photo gallery. Also available is Cranford (BBC, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$39.98 SRP), their adaptation of the works of Elizabeth Gaskell. The sole bonus feature is a making-of featurette.
I’m not entirely a fan of the split-season approach to releasing classic DVD series, but if it’s the only economically viable way to get them out, I guess we’ll all just have to be patient. The latest installments are Gunsmoke: The Third Season Volume 2 (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$36.98 SRP) and The Mod Squad: Season 2 Volume 2 (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$36.98 SRP).
Get a complete, compelling look at the prehistory of Planet Earth through the arrival of mankind with the History Channel’s Prehistoric Collection (History Channel, Not Rated, DVD-$59.95 SRP), which collects four previous documentaries in one set – Jurassic Fight Club, Prehistoric Megastorms, Journey To 10,000 BC, and Clash Of The Cavemen. Bonus materials include additional footage and the Mega Disasters episode “Asteroid Apocalypse”.
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…
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…)
There are many catalogue titles whose arrival in high definition have been long awaited, and near the tippy top of the nerd list (I count myself amongst you, my brothers and sisters) is the Star Trek feature films. The arrival of JJ Abrams’s big screen revamp means that we get the 6 films comprising the original cast’s own cinematic adventures, all contained in the Star Trek: Original Motion Picture Collection (Paramount, Rated PG, Blu-Ray-$139.99 SRP). All 6 films are in their original theatrical cuts (meaning no Motion Picture director’s cut, or extended cuts of II & VI). You do get most of the special features contained in the 2-disc special editions from a few years back, plus new audio commentaries and featurettes. The biggest bonus, though, is an exclusive 7th disc – a 70-minute conversation between William Shatner, Leonard Nimoy, Patrick Stewart, Jonathan Frakes, and host Whoopi Goldberg titled “Star Trek: The Captain’s Summit”.
This past winter, things got a bit dry in the ol’ air I was a’ breathin’. Not wanting to cart out the massive room humidifier I had occasionally used in years past, I instead suffered through the dryness. If only I knew then about the Personal Humidifier ($59.99), I would have been far happier. As you can see in the picture, it’s a small, portable humidifier that gets its water source from your average bottled water bottle. It also runs pretty darn quietly, has low energy usage, and is something you could easily throw into your luggage and take on a trip.
Even though the new Star Trek film effectively eliminates all of these stories from continuity (big nerd boo!), the eight episodes – 4 on each – contained on the single disc Best Of Star Trek: The Original Series and Best Of Star Trek: The Next Generation (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$14.98 SRP each) really are the cream of the crop. The TOS set features “The City On The Edge Of Forever”, “The Trouble With Tribbles”, “Balance Of Terror”, and “Amok Time”. The TNG set features “The Best Of Both Worlds” Part I & II, “Yesterday’s Enterprise”, and “The Measure Of A Man”.
Some see it as the film the broke the back of the Star Trek franchise, poking fun at some of the barnacles that had long ago become franchise cliches. Nonsense. I see Galaxy Quest (Dreamworks, Rated PG, DVD-$14.98 SRP) as a wonderful, post-modern celebration of the classic Star Trek series, from its sci-fi tech to its message, and the writing and actors that brought it all to life. Galaxy Quest has just gotten a newly remastered special edition, with a clutch of new featurettes and deleted scenes, in addition to the materials from the original release.
For some inexplicable reason, North America’s first DVD introduction to the wonderful Kingdom (BFS, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP) – starring Stephen Fry as a small town lawyer – is starting with the release of the show’s second series. Why? I have no idea. Pick this up, but here’s hoping they hurry up and release the first series.
Penn & Teller are back on the case, exposing bullshit for what it is in the complete sixth season of the appropriately titled Penn & Teller: Bullshit (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$29.98 SRP). Their targets this time include NASA, porn, new age medicine, dolphins, sleep, green products, sensitivity training, child safety, nostalgia, and world peace. Yes… They call bullshit on world peace. I love these guys.
Remind yourself of Tom Hanks’s mulleted-glory in full high definition via the new extended cut of The Da Vinci Code (Sony, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$38.96 SRP). Not only does the 2-disc set contain the enbiggened cut, but is also contains a 5-minute preview of the sequel Angels & Demons, an audio commentary, and a whopping 17 behind-the-scenes featurettes.
Launched as an online extension of his low-cost animation empire, Seth MacFarlane’s Cavalcade of Cartoon Comedy (Fox, Not Rated, DVD-$22.97 SRP) comes to DVD in a collection of all of the shorts released so far. Bonus features include a red carpet featurette and galleries. A Blu-Ray edition ($24.99 SRP) is also available, with identical bonus features.
Liam Neeson plays a father (and ex-CIA agent) who’s hot on the trail of his kidnapped daughter in the surprisingly engaging thriller Taken (Fox, Rated PG-13, DVD-$34.98 SRP), as the seemingly quiet man calls upon his CIA training to try and piece the puzzle of her whereabouts together. Bonus features include audio commentaries, behind-the-scenes featurettes, and side-by-side scene comparisons A Blu-Ray edition ($39.99 SRP) is also available, with identical bonus materials.
It’s no great flick, but there was a certain B-movie horror punch to The Grudge (Sony, Rated R, Blu-Ray-$28.95 SRP) that only the Japanese can deliver with enough psychological hoo-ha to make it all seem classy, and now you can see it all in high definition (with identical bonus features to the standard release). This is happening because the far lesser new installment, Grudge 3 (Sony, Rated R, DVD-$24.96 SRP) is making its own DVD debut, with deleted scenes and a pair of featurettes.
Remember all those TV shows you bought on DVD? Well, you might as well get used to re-buying them all on Blu-Ray, particularly when shows like CSI get a high definition season 1 release (Paramount, Not Rated, Blu-Ray-$89.99 SRP) presented in 16×9 for the first time, plus a director’s cut of the pilot and all of the featurettes, promos, deleted scenes, and outtakes found on the original release. That’s right – start saving pennies.
I suppose somewhere, in some universe, someone was hoping for a direct-to-video sequel to Donnie Darko focusing on the now grown-up sister of Donnie and her own encounters with time-hopping bunnies and bizarreness. Well, that person will be happy to hear about the existence of S. Darko (Fox, Not Rated, DVD-$22.98 SRP), which does exactly that. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, deleted scenes, and a pair of featurettes, A Blu-Ray edition ($29.99 SRP) is also available, with identical features.
The House of Mouse continues its Walt Disney Animation Collection of classic short films with the release of a new trio of discs featuring The Wind In The Willows, The Tortoise And The Hare, and The Reluctant Dragon (Walt Disney, Not Rated, DVD-$19.99 SRP each). Each disc also contains of clutch of additional shorts mostly themed to the title short.
Kicking back with more comforting junk food comedy in the form of the complete fifth season of Two And A Half Men (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$44.98 SRP) is always an option. The 4-disc set contains all 19 episodes, plus the episode of CSI written by the Two And A Half writing staff, a featurette about the crossover, a look at the show’s 100th episode, and a spotlight on the rotating end title cards.
The latest Marvel premium format figure from the fine folks at Sideshow Collectibles is none other than that prince of the deep, the sovereign ruler of Atlantis, Prince Namor, The Sub-Mariner ($244.99). Namor stands 18″ high, and the Sideshow exclusive edition (limited to only 350 pieces) comes with a replaceable hand wielding the incredible trident you see pictured below.
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…
We’re giving away, in conjunction with HarperCollins UK and West Park Pictures, five (5) sets featuring both the companion book and DVD of the documentary STEPHEN FRY IN AMERICA.
Please note that the DVD set is Region 2/PAL, and requires either a Region 2 or a Region free DVD player.
Contest ends at 11:59pm EST on Monday, December 22nd.
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 Monday, December 22nd.
The winner must allow 4-6 weeks after notification of win to receive the product.
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…
Getting a long-overdue top-to-bottom overhaul of it sound and picture, The Nightmare Before Christmas (Walt Disney, Rated PG, DVD-$32.99 SRP) has been re-released as a revamped 2-disc special edition, replete with a brand new commentary (with Tim Burton, Henry Selick, and Danny Elfman), a making-of documentary, deleted scenes, a storyboard-to-film comparison, the Frankenweenie and Vincent shorts, Burton’s original poem with Christopher Lee narration, trailers, and more. Not only is the regular edition available, but there’s also a gorgeous Blu-Ray version ($39.99 SRP) and a deluxe edition housed in a bust of Jack Skellington ($179.99 SRP), which also features his Santy hat and beard for easy holiday decorating.
With the third Three Stooges Collection (Sony, Not Rated, DVD-$24.96 SRP), we move into the beginning of the war years. Before even Chaplin, the Stooges were the first to tackle and lampoon Hitler and the Nazis onscreen in the short You Nazty Spy!, which leads off this 2-disc collection of 23 shorts spanning the years 1940-1942. Bring on volume 4!
It’s been almost a decade since Randy Newman put out a new album of original tunes – not since Bad Love for the doomed Dreamworks Records, in fact – and it was with some trepidation that I spun up Harps And Angels (Nonesuch, $18.98 SRP). You see, I’m a big Newman fan – from the days of his eponymous debut right up to his ill-fated Faust – and I worried about how badly I’d take it if his new batch of songs didn’t live up to his past. Well, I needn’t have worried, because this a great clutch of tracks, with his signature melodies and arrangements and his unique songwriting perspective intact. Go listen.
Three years in and Everybody Hates Chris (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP) has managed the rare feat of still being a quality, funny show. Unlike Malcolm In The Middle, which squandered its brilliant start by becoming a cartoon, Chris is still grounded in the reality it set up right from the beginning. The 4-disc set features all 22 episodes, plus audio commentaries, webisodes, interviews, featurettes, deleted scenes, a gag reel, and more.
Very rarely does a film manage to capture the of-times bizarre flights of fantasy that envelop the average childhood, so when a flick does manage to capture lightning in a bottle, it’s worth noting. Such is the case with Son Of Rambow (Paramount, Rated PG-13, DVD-$19.99), which finds a young boy discovering common ground with a bully by taking a video camera and a worn copy of Rambo: First Blood, and making a little cinematic magic of their own. To say anymore would ruin the fun, but suffice to say – see it. Bonus features include an audio commentary, the short film that inspired the movie, a making-of, and more. This title is currently a Best Buy exclusive.
Seven years after it came out with an underground, viral splash, Brotherhood Of The Wolf (Universal, Not Rated, DVD-$19.98 SRP) gets a new director’s cut and a 2-disc special edition, featuring a making-of documentary, deleted scenes, featurettes, storyboards, and more.
If you were in any sort of doubt that we were, in fact, in a presidential election year here in the US, let the immense American Experience: The Presidents Collection (PBS, Not Rated, DVD-$129.98 SRP) remind you. The 10-disc set features profiles on Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson, FDR, Harry Truman, The Kennedys, LBJ, Richard Nixon, Jimmy Carter, Ronald Reagan, and George HW Bush.
For all of the brilliance of Heroes‘ first season, its second season (Universal, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP) fell into that awful, stereotypical sophomore season confusion that has derailed many a promising series before it. In fact, the best thing that happened to the season was probably the writer’s strike, which truncated the wrongheaded direction and allowed a rethink breather. We can only hope season 3 is a course correction. The 4-disc second season set features all 11 episodes, plus audio commentaries, an alternate ending and behind-the-scenes look at the episode “Generations”, featurettes, interviews, and a sneak peek at season 3.
By now, you pretty much now to expect quite a nice dramatic ride from Detective Vic Mackey, and the 6th season of The Shield (Sony, Not Rated, DVD-$59.95 SRP) doesn’t disappoint., as Internal Affairs is breathing down his neck and forced retirement is looming. The 4-disc set features all 10 episodes, plus audio commentaries, featurettes, and deleted scenes.
Mark Harmon and his team of crackerjack Naval Investigators are up against murderers, kidnappers, spies, terrorists, and tigers (maybe not tigers) in the 5th season of NCIS (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$59.98 SRP). The 5-disc set features all 18 episodes, plus audio commentaries, featurettes, and more.
See, I thought the arrival of Pixar’s John Lasseter and Ed Catmull at the head of Disney animation was going to put a stop to the roll-out of mediocre direct-to-video sequels. I guess there’s no stopping the Disney marketing machine, because here we are with The Little Mermaid: Ariel’s Beginning (Walt Disney, Rated G, DVD-$29.99 SRP), a prequel to the 1989 classic. Bonus features include deleted scenes, a behind-the-scenes featurette, and more.
Hunker down this weekend with the complete first seasons of a pair of new History Channel shows – UFO Hunters and Battle 360 (History Channel, Not Rated, DVD-$39.95 SRP each). The 4-disc set UFO Hunters features all 13 of the investigative (if misguided) episodes plus additional scenes, while the 4-disc Battle 360 sports all 10 episodes chronicling and recreating the USS Enterprise’s dramatic WWII battles, in addition to a clutch of bonus scenes.
The second volume of The Untouchables‘ second season (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP) finds Elliot Ness and his G-Men shifting their focus away from alcohol and onto narcotics, and also expanding further afield than just the mean streets of Chicago. The 4-disc set contains 16-episodes.
Even though it’s more hit than miss, there’s a certain joy in discovering that there was once a sketch show that starred Stephen Fry, Hugh Laurie, Emma Thompson, Ben Elton, and Robbie Coltrane. That series – Alfresco (Acorn, Not Rated, DVD-$39.99 SRP) – is now available in its entirety on DVD, and is worth checking out for the talent alone.
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…
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…
As a fan of Mystery Science Theater 3000 from “back in the day”, for years I’d hoped for the return to performing of MST creator Joel Hodgson and writer/performer Trace Beaulieu (Dr. Forrester & Crow T. Robot). Even though we’ll probably never see MST return for various intractable reasons, both Joel and Trace returned – along with fellow alums Frank Conniff, Mary Jo Pehl, and Josh Weinstein – to form Cinematic Titanic. For all intents and purposes, it’s pretty much MST – only all 5 members are silhouetted onscreen at the same time, stationed on a tiered series of platforms on either side of the screen and commenting on the flick. Their first flick was the delightfully awful The Oozing Skull($14.99), but they’ve just released their second flick – Doomsday Machine ($14.99). You can pick up both discs – and all forthcoming titles – via www.cinematictitanic.com. The magic is back, my friends. Snap it up, post haste.
William Conrad – now THERE was an outsize TV star that filled the screen in ways today’s stars only wish they could. And I don’t mean that in just the obvious reference to Conrad’s fabled girth – no, he was an old school TV actor who commanded your attention, much like William Shatner still does on Boston Legal. If you don’t believe me, check out the first volumes from the respective first seasons of both Cannon (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$36.98 SRP) and Jake And The Fatman (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$ SRP). Cannon features 11 episodes of Conrad as LA PI Frank Cannon, while Jake And The Fatman sports 11 episodes of Conrad as one half of the titular team of LA District Attorney J.L. McCabe (Conrad) and his on-tap PI Jake Styles (Joe Penny). Both sets feature the original episode promos, but nothing more. Where’s the tribute featurettes?
As anyone who’s seen Wall-E knows, sitting in front of a computer all day (working, in my case) doesn’t exactly lend itself to muscle toning (or avoiding the dread carpal tunnel nightmare). Maybe that’s why everyone who sends their days bathed in the LCD glow should pick up a Powerball ($59.99). This remarkable little exercise ball – which contains a gyroscope at its core – is such an amazing piece of kit. It derives its amazing kinetic energy – up to 15,000 rpm – just from manual manipulation. Get one of these.
Ah, Peep Show. If you’re a fan of The Office – or just offbeat British comedy in general (you know, the smart people) – you’ll probably dig Peep Show (BBC, Not Rated, DVD-£44.99 SRP). Gosh, how do I describe such a unique premise… In the show, you see the lives of roommates Jeremy & Mark through their eyes – and inner monologues. Jeremy is a wannabe pop star, Mark is an obsessive loser, and their thoughts and actions are truly hilarious. Think of it as a small-screen take on Being John Malkovich, without all the arty pretension. The 5-disc Region 2 set features all 5 current seasons, with bonus features including audio commentaries, featurettes, bonus scenes, and more. Check it out. Now. NOW!
If you’ve ever had the desire to live a Wodehousian existence and be as coddled and pampered as Bertie Wooster – or you just feel like being awakened in the morning by the mellifluous tones of Stephen Fry – then you’ll want to make sure to get your own Voco Alarm Clock (£39.95 each), which features 150 different wake up messages recorded by Mr. Fry in his finest Jeevesian delivery. The clock is available in both a “Good Morning, Sir” and “Good Morning, Madam” version, and is an incredibly fantastic idea for an alarm clock.
Anticipation of The Dark Knight is building to a fever pitch, so it makes sense that Warners would quickly shuffle out a Batman Begins: Limited Edition Giftset (Warner Bros., Rated PG-13, DVD-$39.92 SRP) to exploit the mood. In a nutshell, in addition to the previously available 2-disc special edition of the film, the set contains a 128mb flash drive with Dark Knight images, a 2/12 minute sneak peek at Dark Knight, and a collection of postcards.
And speaking of the Caped Crusader, I can see what they were going for with Batman: Gotham Knight (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$29.98 SRP). Essentially, it was the Batman equivalent of the animated explorations done for The Animatrix, employing non-traditional artist’s takes on the Caped Crusader. Unfortunately, much like the Matrix vehicle, we get an uneven affair of fascinating interludes and forgettable ones. Still, it’s worth a spin, and the 2-disc set contains audio commentary, a documentary on Batman creator Bob Kane, a featurette, and 4 bonus episodes of Batman: The Animated Series. Will they bring that back already?
Did you know that there was a new Mummy movie coming out? No? Well, even I barely knew there was a new Mummy movie coming out. In order to mark the occasion, Universal has cooked up a batch of new special editions related to the franchise, starting out with 2-disc special editions of both The Mummy and The Mummy Returns (Universal, Rated PG-13, DVD-$19.98 SRP each), both containing a clutch of newly-produced featurettes. Also in the dock is a new 2-disc edition of the original Mummy (Universal, Not Rated, DVD-$26.98 SRP), starring the great Boris Karloff. The new Mummy film features Jet Li, so why don’t we throw in a new special edition of Fearless (Universal, Rated PG-13, DVD-$19.98 SRP) featuring 3 versions of the film, as well? And even though nobody asked for it, even director Stephen Sommers’s massive disappointment Van Helsing (Universal, Rated PG-13, DVD-$19.98 SRP) gets a collector’s edition of its own.
In the legend that is the emerging grunge scene in the early-90’s, you may not know the name of a band called The Gits. The reason for that omission is the brutal tale of the rape and murder of the band’s lead singer and emotional core, Mia Zapata, after the group returned from a successful European tour. Over a decade later, new evidence would reopen the case, leading to the arrest of a suspect and a tale captured in the documentary The Gits (Liberation Entertainment, Not Rated, DVD-$19.99 SRP). Bonus features include an audio commentary, deleted scenes, trailers, and a featurette on the non-profit organization that was formed in the aftermath of the tragedy.
Eager to make sure that their second theatrical outing isn’t met by the same slack-jawed confusion of their inaugural go, the folks behind the X-Files (Chris Carter and Frank Spotnitz) have selected 8 essential episodes in the 2-disc X-Files: Revelations (Fox, Not Rated, DVD-$22.97 SRP). The set also features episode introductions, a WonderCon panel, and the theatrical trailer for the upcoming flick.
Another in the long line of Iraq war related films that failed to perform at the box office, Stop-Loss (Paramount, Rated R, DVD-$34.99 SRP) is, at the very least, worth a second chance on DVD, as it’s actually a decently crafted portrait of what today’s generation of military men are facing as their home lives crumble in the face of open-ended overseas commitments. Bonus features include an audio commentary, deleted scenes, and a pair of behind-the-scenes featurettes.
Ignoring the double negative, Jimmy had it right when he said they don’t dance like Carmen no more – and you can see for yourself with The Carmen Miranda Collection (Fox, Not Rated, DVD-$49.98 SRP). The set feature a quintet of remastered catalogue titles starring the lady with the fruit hat – The Gang’s All Here, Something For The Boys, If I’m Lucky, Greenwich Village, and Doll Face. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, featurettes, deleted scenes, galleries, and more.
If you want to feel the colossal loss of Joe Strummer all over again, by all means check out Julien Temple’s magnificent documentary The Future Is Unwritten (Sony Legacy, Not Rated, DVD-$19.98 SRP), providing an affectionate but unvarnished portrait of the Clash frontman. Bonus materials include an audio commentary, 100 minutes of exclusive interview footage, and the theatrical trailer.
Despite all of those peanuts, it’s nuts to Jericho (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$39.99 SRP) as its hard won second season of post-apocalyptic politics proves to be its last. The 2-disc set features all 7 episodes, plus deleted scenes, audio commentaries, featurettes, and the unaired alternate ending that was filmed in case the show got a third season pick-up. Which it didn’t. So here it is.
Where are you going to take the relationship between Jeannie and her “master”, Tony, in the fifth and final season of I Dream Of Jeannie (Sony, Not Rated, DVD-$39.95 SRP)? To the altar, of course! That’s right – they walk down the aisle, and are thrown into a guest-star studded series of magical escapades. The 4-disc set features all 26 episodes, but not a single audio commentary from Larry Hagman.
Six seasons in, Monk (Universal, Not Rated, DVD-$59.98 SRP) just keeps obsessively compulsively plugging along, an amiable little character treat. The 4-disc box set features all 16 episodes, plus audio commentaries.
Even with the arrival of Amanda Tapping’s Colonel Samantha Carter, Stargate: Atlantis (MGM, Not Rated, DVD-$49.98 SRP), I still can’t get behind the spin-off series of the almost always enjoyable Stargate SG-1. Either way, the 5-disc set features all 20 episodes, plus audio commentaries, featurettes, deleted scenes, galleries, and bloopers.
A pair of DC animated series come to an end with the release of their respective fifth seasons – The Batman and Teen Titans (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$19.98 SRP each). Both sets feature 13 episodes across 2 discs, plus behind-the-scenes featurettes.
Mix The Fast and The Furious with Miami Vice, and you pretty much get the short-lived Fastlane (Warner Bros., Not Rated, DVD-$59.98 SRP), co-created by fauxteur McG. The 6-disc complete series et features all 22 episodes, plus an extended scene from the pilot, behind-the-scenes featurettes, and outtakes & and bloopers.
I admit – by the team Sabrina The Teenage Witch reached its fourth season (Paramount, Not Rated, DVD-$39.98 SRP), I really didn’t care. Sure, I watched the first season, but that was because it featured Paul Feig, had Frank Conniff as a writer, and had practical magic effects by Joel Hodgson. By season 4, all we had was Nick Bakay’s sarcastic feline, Salem. The 4-disc set features all 22 episodes, but zero bonus materials.
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…
Some people hang the holly, others decorate the tree, and a few even terrorize the neighborhood with off-key caroling.
Not us.
Here at Quick Stop Entertainment, we’re celebrating the holiday season by giving a little something back to you, our readers (you know who you are).
Every weekday leading up to the holiday break, we’ve got uber-exclusive gifts provided by a whole range of artists, actors, comedians, and studios. One a day, straight from them to you (and you can check out last year’s fun here).
Ain’t that cool?
Today, not only do we have an extra special holiday sampler of the brilliantly funny UK quiz show QI, but we also chat with host Stephen Fry.
If you’ve never heard of the UK quiz program QI, you’re missing out on one of the funniest “educational” shows ever devised (the devisee being creator/producer John Lloyd, formerly of Blackadder, Not The Nine O’Clock News, and Spitting Image). The key to QI (which stands for “Quite Interesting”) is the central tenet of its philosophy – it’s not always being correct that counts, but interesting (and funny). The interesting nature of a given piece of information spurs conversation and debate, eventually leading round to the learning said informational nugget. Did you know that the Earth has more than one moon, for example? Or that otters kill crocodiles? Hosted by Stephen Fry, it features a rotating panel of four comedians (one of which is mainstay Alan Davies) – and it’s one of the most hilarious shows I’ve ever seen… Honestly, you’ll laugh as much as you learn. Be sure to visit QI on the web at www.QI.com.
Far from being a stuffy intellectual, a loathsome toff, or a smug git, Stephen Fry has managed to walk the fine line of being not only a wonderfully intelligent man who unashamedly exhibits said intelligence, but also a very funny performer and an all-around humble and likeable guy.
From out of the fertile ground of the Cambridge Footlights – alongside fellow ‘lighters Hugh Laurie, Tony Slattery, and Emma Thompson – Fry soon planted himself in the burgeoning comedy scene of the 1980’s alongside comedy partner Laurie, a teaming known by the rather straightforward sobriquet “Fry & Laurie”. By the end of the 1980’s, with Fry & Laurie fast becoming beloved members of the funny firmament, Stephen branched out into playwriting before moving into screenwriting, directing, acting, hosting, just plain bookwriting… Really, there’s not much he hasn’t done.
Since 2003 – and over the course of 5 series and counting – he’s served as host/schoolmaster of the panel show QI.
In the not-to-distant past, I had a chance to chat with Stephen about QI – and as a holiday treat, we finally present that interview to you, the merry masses…
KP: So, I suppose we should start at the beginning – how did QI enter the picture?
FRY: Well, through John (Lloyd). Through his remarkable persuasive powers. I’ve known him for years and years. Really, he was a great hero. When I was at university – he had been, like me, at Cambridge in the Footlights club, which is a famous club at Cambridge. It produces comedians, and has done so for over 100 years. John Cleese and Peter Cook and Ali G – and myself, Emma Thompson, and Hugh Laurie were all in the same year at Cambridge, and we were all in the Footlights as well. And as I say, it’s that sort of Python tradition. And John Lloyd had been in about five years before me. Same time as Douglas Adams who wrote The Hitchhiker’s Guide. They were very good friends. John had become well known to those of us aspiring toward the comedic world because of a TV series called Not The Nine O’Clock News, that he produced. When we left university, I sort of got to know him a bit.
KP: There’s somewhat of a history with Footlights of the alumni sort of lifting up and providing opportunities for those that come afterward, isn’t there?
FRY: Yes indeed. It causes extreme annoyance to those who were not at Cambridge. It’s often regarded as a kind of closed shop, a kind of Mafia, but it’s really just because we’re all very insecure and like working with people we know and trust, I suppose. But he did this series Not, as I say, and then Blackadder started and he asked me to be in the second series, where I played a character called Melchett, and then in the third series in one episode, and then did all the fourth series, as well. We just became friends, really. We’d go on skiing holidays together and that sort of thing. And then a few years ago he started to talk about this idea he had about this whole quite interesting thing, and at first I just thought, “Well, that sounds interesting. It’s a bit sort of Ripley’s Believe It or Not.” But knowing his track record as the best comedy producer of his generation, I kind of thought he must have some television ideas – because for him it’s a whole empire. It’s not just television – it’s books, it’s probably films, and god knows what else.
KP: I think it’s an action figure at this point…
FRY: Yeah. (laughing) So, he took me to lunch in a very fine restaurant of my choosing, and…
KP: So, you know how to play the game as well…
FRY: Oh, absolutely, absolutely. And he asked if I would be in it. Either as a regular guest or as the host, and I said I’d rather be a regular guest than a host – not really knowing much about hosting and whether it was the kind of thing I wanted to do. And we did a pilot for the BBC, and he said, “Well look, for the pilot, can you be the host? Because we just can’t think of anyone else who could do it.”
KP: So he’s actually quite sly about the way he set this up…
FRY: Absolutely, yeah, indeed. So I did it for the pilot, and then it just seemed natural… everyone seemed to like it and said, “Well look, you must do the series. It goes through June.” So I said, “Well, okay then.” And I did it through the series. And, actually, I quite enjoy doing them, being the sort of beaming host of or, indeed, the vicious host, depending on how you look at it.
KP: Obviously, for years you’ve done panel shows. How would you describe the difference, from your perspective, to now be in the presenter’s seat?
FRY: Well, on the one hand there’s less onus on you to come up with witty remarks. On the other hand, there’s a strange onus on you to keep order. It’s bizarrely like being a schoolteacher, which I was very briefly before going to university. In what we call your gap year – which is the year between school and university where people like to go off usually and do the Inca trail in Peru or lounge around on Leonardo DiCaprio style beaches in Southeast Asia – but I instead taught at a prep school in England. And it’s like that. It’s like having a class of unruly people, and I feel it’s my duty to drag them back to the subject. But, on the other hand, of course, let them be amusing as well. So it’s a peculiar feeling. But it’s fun, and actually that sort of personality distinction between myself and Alan in particular is part of the fun of it, really, is that I treat him like a naughty puppy or a bad school boy.
KP: Who knew you would develop into an amazing comedy duo?
FRY: Yes, it does seem like that. It’s great fun. We record… I don’t know how long we record. John probably knows. It’s only about an hour, from which they have to get a half an hour, of course. And because we do 12 in one series – which is a lot for an English series, although it’s nothing for an American series – it gets into a nice rhythm.
KP: Did you know right off the bat that there was a rapport between you and Alan?
FRY: No, no, not at all. I’ve known him – met him at industry parties, award ceremonies and things – and he seemed a very nice chap and I liked him, but no, it just did seem to work. Of course, you know he plays a lot dumber than he really is, and I play a lot smarter than I really am! (laughing)
KP: With the benefit of the prompter, I’m sure.
FRY: Yes, absolutely. I’ve got all the answers, but usually, obviously, the point is not to… if everyone just knew the answer it would be a very dull game. The idea is to vamp and busk and generally, as it were, scatting on the subject. And the great thing is that now it’s well established, people who’ve not done it before will have seen it on television and be less scared of it. Because when it started, when we had a newcomer they were very nervous that they wouldn’t know enough, or that they had to be funny. I think what makes it fun for everyone to be on… well, there are a number of things. One is that it doesn’t address any of the boring issues that other television addresses, i.e. the celebrity culture and pop culture and contemporary politics and so on. It is genuinely… you have weird conversations about strange insects or about the nature of the universe or a chicken that lived five years without its head.
KP: Very much about the tangent…
FRY: Exactly, exactly. And that’s a relief, though. And people don’t have this enormous feeling that they have to come up with smart one-liners all the time. That it’s wonderful when people are funny, but it’s also wonderful if they genuinely know something interesting. You know, and sometimes the audience enjoys that more than anything else. Some odd fact may remind them of another odd fact, because everybody does know odd things. But off the top of their head they won’t know them. You need to be reminded. It’s like priming a pump.
KP: Alan mentioned that Hugh (Laurie) was quite nervous about doing the show…
FRY: Oh yes, indeed he was, yeah. He’s always nervous, Hugh, mind you.
KP: From what Alan related, he had a performance anxiety that he wouldn’t be able to keep up with you…
FRY: (Laughing) That’s nonsense! A, he can keep up with me, plus – I mean, he’s so brilliant, Hugh. And also, of course, he has so much charm that he’s always absolutely brilliant anyway.
KP: I think, now – by law – he belongs to us in America now.
FRY: Yeah, he certainly does, doesn’t he? Yeah. I’ve only seen four episodes, I think, but he’s terrific. Really wonderful.
KP: I’m surprised they haven’t scheduled your stunt casting as the hospital administrator, or something…
FRY: Well, funnily enough, when I talked to him he said, “You’ve got to come and do an episode.” I said, “I’d like to be the visiting doctor from London who’s even nastier than you are. Who makes you look like a pussycat.”
KP: I can’t even imagine that… unless you went around performing unnecessary amputations or something, I can’t imagine a more unpleasant sort than what they’ve made his character out to be. But in a loveable way.
FRY: Yeah, exactly. Exactly.
KP: When you look at something like that, as far as a career trajectory, did you ever have a plan for where your career would go, or where you thought it would go?
FRY: Never. I’ve never had a career plan or trajectory in my life. I rather enjoy the fact that I have no idea what’s going to happen next in the world, and everything’s a constant surprise. I’ve never planned more than a few months ahead. I just do or don’t do things according to mood, really. I sometimes think, “Well, if I concentrated on one thing, if I decided to be just a writer, or decided to be just a comedian, or just an actor,” I might have had more conspicuous kind of success, but I don’t regard success as meaning anything… Happiness is the only success I’m interested in, really. Rather than the kind of reputation type of success. And QI‘s just something that is fun, and it’s nice… it gives pleasure to people in a very particular sort of way. I like the fact that taxi drivers talk about it. And they say, “Oh, I thought it was going to be too poncy for me…” This very English word – too kind of “artsy-fartsy”, as you would say, I think. But they enjoy it. Because, as I say, everyone does know things that they don’t know they know, and it’s a good program, and so it gets a huge mailbag, of course, because people would say, “Oh, this reminds me of something I was told…” And, of course, people love telling me that I’m wrong.
KP: Yeah, including Alan.
FRY: Indeed, absolutely! Absolutely.
KP: He mentioned that you were generally uncomfortable with the Boxing Day episode at the end of Series 2, with the tables being turned and you being placed in the hot seat under his questioning…
FRY: Well, I just thought it was a bit… well, not exactly self-indulgent, but I was just worried that it was a bit… yeah, I mean, it looks as if we were too pleased with ourselves in a strange sort of way, as if we were making an assumption in taking for granted that people would so buy into our characters that they would be amused by something that might amuse us. So it was probably oversensitivity on my part.
KP: See, Alan’s take on it was you just desperately didn’t like being put in that position.
FRY: (laughing) Maybe that’s true! Maybe that’s probably the horrible truth of it, is that I don’t like not being boss.
KP: And the problem that Alan had was that you happened to get the first couple of responses correct…
FRY: Yes, quite. He wanted to humiliate me! (laughing) The tradition in grand English country houses is that the Duke and Duchess serve the staff, the servants, their Christmas lunch. That’s a very English tradition, that. So it’s that sort of equivalent. I become the school boy for one episode.
KP: Does it feel different to you? For years you’ve done panel shows, but being the host, was it a completely different feeling to then be put on the panel?
FRY: Yes it was, actually. I mean, very strange, because you suddenly feel a whole different part of your comic mind is being asked questions, as it were, that you know you have to come at from a different place. Because you think, “Well now, do I interrupt here? Am I silent? If I’m silent too much people think I’m sulking. If I talk too much, they think I’m trying to take over everything.” So a rather bad bout of self-consciousness comes over one. (laughing)
KP: Do you find that you became slightly more frustrated with the panelists at times during the first series? I remember in particular the “how many moons” episode…
FRY: Oh, (laughing) absolutely! Yes, I see it as partly in a comic sense, but also partly in a quite serious sense to be my function, is to stop this kind of anti-science nonsense that is so prevalent amongst some, and try and sort of bang the drum for rational thought. Which is a bit like Hugh in House, actually. Try and be rational and basically push the palm of your hand hard into the face of those who doubt the value of logical thought.
KP: I think, to some extent, Rich Hall saw a bit of an opening and a way to needle you on that.
FRY: He did indeed. He’s brilliant at that. He’s an extraordinary figure, Rich, isn’t he? I mean, talk about dry. I don’t know anybody who’s dryer than Rich Hall.
KP: Someone I’m glad who has found a life outside of the US.
FRY: Yes, absolutely. Is he well known in America? I’ve never been quite sure.
KP: Well, I remember watching Rich on Not Necessarily the News in the 80s. Which is where he really made his mark. And then, much like the US does with other things, we kind of cast him off unceremoniously.
FRY: Right. And he has his Otis Crenshaw character as well, doesn’t he?
KP: Yes.
FRY: Have you seen that? Yeah, he’s kind of a trailer park character…
KP: I’m quite glad that he has an aftermarket in the UK, and you respect him as much as we foolishly did not.
FRY: Indeed.
KP: We tend to be quite disposable, and you guys actually tend to respect intelligence and talent.
FRY: Oh indeed. Yeah, we do.
KP: Which I’m sure you’ll see, because at some point we’ll even be foolish enough stop liking Hugh, as well.
FRY: Oh ho ho, please. He’s so sweet.
KP: It wouldn’t be my choice.
FRY: No, I hope not. Well he’s got to do another 22 in a few months, so he’s going to be there for a long time.
KP: Can you envision a season lasting that long?
FRY: No. And they work so hard on it. I’m doing this movie at the moment here in Berlin. It’s a studio picture. It’s Warner Brothers and it’s got a big budget and everything. So everything’s nice and slow. Here I am in my dressing room chatting to you. I get a nice Mercedes driving me in every morning and get nicely looked after and my own personal assistant who cleans my ashtray and brings me coffee whenever I want it and books me theater tickets if I’ve got a free evening and so on. Hugh, who is the star – and I’m only just a supporting actor – Hugh, who is the star of his own TV series, he has to drive into work, which all people do in TV. He shares a two-way trailer. I mean, he has his own section of it. And he gets almost no time in his dressing room in his trailer because people between shots are running, the whole crew is running around to do the reverse shot and they’re running to do the next shot. And they’re firing people who are a bit slow because they have so much to do. Eight, nine, ten pages a day. You know, we’re doing half a page today, and this is quite a lot of special… not special effects, but stunt work in the one I’m doing today. But give me films any day. They’re so much more relaxing! (laughing)
KP: Plus he gets to juggle the American accent…
FRY: Yes, which he does a very good job with – at least to my ears he does, and I think to a lot of Americans he really does do a good job.
KP: I think it’s always a nicely disconcerting moment when interviewers actually hear his natural accent in interviews…
FRY: Yes, indeed.
KP: As someone who’s observing it and has occasionally dipped his toe into it, do you see a reticence for the US audience to accept British actors on their own terms?
FRY: I think the fact that Hugh was probably best known to American audiences for Stuart Little, in which he also played an American, has made it quite easier for him, because I think with the exception of the Masteripece Theater-type audience who would have seen him as Bertie Wooster in Jeeves & Wooster, most of them will say, “Oh, that’s the guy who was with Geena Davis in Stuart Little,” and they’ll feel quite sort of… maybe feel he almost is American or, if he is English, then he probably grew up in America. Whereas if it was an obvious English actor like Hugh Grant doing it, I think they would find it rather hard to accept. It’s a tricky one. We love… we don’t mind Renee Zellweger doing an English woman, or Gwyneth Paltrow…
KP: But you did mind Dick Van Dyke.
FRY: That was terrible, because it was just so… Just so bad. An unspeakably bad accent. I mean, he can’t have had a dialogue coach. It was just shocking.
KP: (laughing) But he tried…
FRY: He tried, bless him… yeah, and, you know, he certainly was a good hoofer and he could move around and so on and, you know, I’m a big fan of his and all the rest of it, but dear me. (doing bad accent) “‘Ello Mary Poppins!”
KP: Well, that shows you the full range of what we have to offer.
FRY: (laughing) Yeah. But, you know, don’t… I sometimes get quite cross with Americans for selling themselves short. You’re the country that gives us The Simpsons and West Wing and things like that. There’s some really intelligent writing and performing and brilliant TV going on as well as the dregs. There’s some fantastically smart people working in television. Aaron Sorkin and people like that, David Kelly, and many of the others are really – they’re just incredible, what they put together under the pressure they do. Even things like CSI are so much better than they need to be, if you know what I mean. Obviously, after that fourth and fifth series, they tend to get more sentimental and formulaic and so on, but they’re very well constructed and very impressive pieces of craftsmanship. And at their best, like West Wing and The Simpsons, quite brilliantly written.
KP: Another thing I regret, and QI is an antidote to that, is that we tend to be so intensely disposable because of the glut of information that we have delivered to us…
FRY: Yeah.
KP: Just a all of this mass media coming at us.
FRY: Yeah.
KP: Whereas, especially with performers – and QI being an example of that – there really is an appreciation for solid, intelligent performers in the UK that I just don’t think we have over here.
FRY: Yes, absolutely. That is an advantage we have, no question. Yeah. It would be interesting to see what would happen if the Americans took the format, to see what you would do with it. Whether it would become more a series of one liners, whether there would be script editors. We don’t have that. I get the questions and that’s all I do, and I just say “Hi” and ask them. And the contestants… “Contestant” is not the word… The performers come along and respond to them. Some of them would like to know roughly what subject might come up beforehand, but nobody writes gags for them. Nobody tells them what to say. That’s the fun of it. I think the audiences know that somehow. They know whether something is prepared or not. And I’d be interested to see if American performers would allow that.
KP: It seems – particularly your role within it – a very British thing compared to the US, since we really don’t have the same kind of headmaster-type role in our upbringing.
FRY: No. You have issues with authority.
KP: As you’ve seen with Rich.
FRY: (laughing) Right! Exactly! (laughing)
KP: Can you imagine hosting an American version of the show?
FRY: It would be interesting. I would be treated, probably, like King George the Third, as someone who had to be… you know, have my tea poured over the side of the ship! (laughing) (doing American accent) “We fought a goddamn war to get rid of your kind!”
KP: Yes… The final segment every week would be them switching places with you.
FRY: Yeah, I mean, look at Anne Robinson on The Weakest Link. I mean, it lasted about a series or two, didn’t it, before people got fed up with this bitch from England…
KP: I think it was just the intensity with which it was sold.
FRY: Yeah, I think it was overdone, wasn’t it? It was ridiculously overdone.
KP: To the point where, I think at one point they were airing it three or four times a week.
FRY: Oh, dear god.
KP: Eventually we had The Weakest Link: County Commissioners special.
FRY: (laughing) Yeah, enough already!
KP: You can only have so many variations of a game show.
FRY: Yeah, quite.
KP: But there’s also just the concept of the entertainer-based panel show, which really doesn’t exist here in the US. Bill Maher tried to do it with Politically Incorrect, but we really don’t have… I mean, in the UK there is that deep history of the panel show and game shows.
FRY: Yes, there is. That’s right, absolutely. Lots and lots and lots. And I don’t know what it is. I don’t understand what psychological national characteristic is called in that gives it this kind of obsession, or at least history of it. Who knows what it says about you?
KP: You’re someone who’s endlessly interested in being on these shows… What is the appeal, to you, of the panel show?
FRY: Well, the fact that it’s simple and easy. I turn a lot more down than I do, but I do the odd episode of Have I Got News For You, which is a topical one, and I’ve done it about four times and it’s been going for 12 years. I’ve done a few others. And I love doing them on radio. They are enormously enjoyable.
KP: Like Just A Minute…
FRY:Just A Minute, exactly, and I’m Sorry I Haven’t A Clue, which is a wonderfully silly one but very enjoyable. But yeah, I mean, it’s a pleasant way to spend an afternoon in a studio with… you know, (laughing) I don’t know what the answer is, I suppose. It used to be, before television took over the world, that’s how British people would disport themselves after dinner. They would play games. What’s called house party games. Games like Just A Minute all come from that. They were “parlor games” is the phrase, isn’t it? And a lot of the best games on television come from parlor games like that. There’s that play by Noel Coward, Hay Fever, which has got that classic scene in the middle where they all play this game called in the manner of the word where someone goes out of the room and everyone in the room has to think of an adverb – like “slyly”, or “astonishedly”, or whatever it might be. And then the person comes in and they ask questions, and they all have to reply in the manner of that word. And then he has to guess what the word is. And there’s this fantastic scene of violence and emotional sort of thunderstorm in Hay Fever because one of them feels humiliated because he doesn’t know the word “archly” or something, and they get in this terrible fight about it.
KP: So this is what a repressed populace plays during a blackout…
FRY: It would seem exactly that – rather than actually just getting straight down to it, as I’m sure you Americans would.
KP: As opposed to expressing emotions through parlor games…
FRY: Yeah, (laughing) that seems to be it.
Check out the rest of this year’s “Holiday Havoc”HERE