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Incredibles Sequel, maybe, someday

edit David Janes 2007-06-25 12:42 UTC 2 comments

SCI FI Wire reports:

Brad Bird, who wrote and directed the Oscar-winning animated film The Incredibles, told SCI FI Wire that he still is working out a story good enough to justify a sequel. "I have to come up with a story that is as good as or better than the original," Bird said in an interview on June 22 while promoting his next Pixar movie, Ratatouille. "If I could come up with something like a Toy Story 2 with the same characters from Incredibles, then I would do it in a second." Bird has been developing a new storyline for the superhero family introduced in 2004's The Incredibles. "I have ideas," he said. "I have a few bits and pieces, but I don't have it all together."

Brief notes on _Sixteen Candles_

edit David Janes 2007-05-03 00:24 UTC add comment

Brief notes on Sixteen Candles:

  • the movie is much more on sweet and a lot less on story than I remember
  • funny that I remember Long Duk Dong so well, considering how inessential he is to the movie
  • Molly Ringwald really didn't act that well; very self-consious
  • considering the period, the music is totally forgetable
  • cultural changes in the last 23 years are amazing (no wonder social engineers feel empowered!):
    • it looks like Mike is setting up Farmer Ted to date-rape his girlfriend
    • the family smoking at the breakfast table!
    • no one puts on seat belts
    • wood paneling on cars
  • on the other hand, Ringwald says "aces" which is still pretty cool
  • funny that the male lead really didn't make much of a career of it
  • the technology is funny:
    • floppy disks are expensive (this day will come again, from rarity)
    • the camera is a Polaroid instant
    • the car phone is huge and clunky (and a sign of wealth)
  • the DVD forces you to watch ads, with no option of fast forwarding or going to menu or skipping. It's unbelievable how I see red when this happens.

This week's movies

edit David Janes 2007-04-30 13:16 UTC add comment

Here's what I have queued up for watching this week:

  • 1941 -- Spielberg's first major flop; I remember liking it way back when so we'll see how it stands up
  • On the Waterfront -- I'm investing the rumor that Brando was thin once
  • Ocean's 11 -- the original; I recently watched Ocean's 11 & 12, the remakes
  • Miss Congeniality 2: Armed and Fabulous. I figure if I'm renting a stack of movies I might as well get one I can watch with the wife
  • Sixteen Candles -- just because we were talking about it the other day

Brief notes on _The Lost Boys_

edit David Janes 2007-04-29 22:03 UTC add comment

I just finished watching 80's vampire movie, The Lost Boys. A few notes:

  • it's much shorter than I remember -- only about 1 hour 30.
  • it's much shallower than I remember, I think it's the cool title song that made me think more of it. Listening to the commentary, the shallowness is somewhat deliberate -- it's supposed to be a teen movie, remade from an original script for a kid's movie
  • the movie looks great, very modern in technique but the clothes and music is totally -- epitomely, if that's word -- the 80's. The commentary said that Corey Feldman's clothes was supposed to be "mall fashion-victim", but that provides no excuses for the head vampire Edward Hermann who looks like he wanted to be on a Duran Duran album cover.
  • first movie with The Two Cories
  • Keifer Sutherland looks great; they say he has the least words of any of the major stars in the movie, but every word counts
  • I have to say that Buffy the Vampire Slayer has totally set my expectations for vampire movies -- "hey, they're not following the rules". For example, inviting a vampire into your hour renders you powerless; but they don't need an invitation.

_Meatballs_

edit David Janes 2007-04-29 21:53 UTC add comment

Classic camp movie Meatballs is being re-released on June 5 on DVD. I wonder if they dug up Chris Makepeace somewhere for the commentary?

Brief notes on _The Godfather: Part III_

edit David Janes 2007-04-26 09:31 UTC add comment

Here are a few thoughts on The Godfather: Part III:

  • I had never seen this movie and quite enjoyed it (despites to follow). Given its place in pop culture, I was expecting Jar Jar Binks meets Cadyshack II
  • The despites:
    • Sophia Coppola can't act. Too bad.
    • George Lucas makes exactly the same mistake as Coppola in Star Wars I-III: they confuse the MacGuffin with the story
    • The Andy Garcia (Sonny Corleone's illegitimate son) plotline is poorly integrated, to say the least. At the beginning of the movie he doesn't even rate an invitation to big event; at the end he's the Godfather despite the fact he really doesn't really accomplish much
    • Tom Hagen is missed.
  • What's the point of the Godfather trilogy: is it just that Michael has to pay for his character flaws of being disproportionate and losing sight that it's supposed to be for the family, not for honor? That Michael's sins put him outside of forgiveness? Just asking...

Despite the critical tone above, if you haven't seen it, take the time.

Monty Python vs. Dark Vader

edit David Janes 2007-04-23 21:33 UTC add comment  ·

Is it that they have too much time on my hands, or that I do?

George Lucas does LotR

edit David Janes 2007-04-23 20:37 UTC add comment  ·

Having recently watched Star Wars III, including the incredibly boring special features about how they did everything (green screen + cash + Australians), this video "interviewing" George Lucas and pals about how they would do Lord of the Rings is priceless:

Interestingly enough, the most interesting part ... hell, maybe the only interesting part ... of Star Wars I-III, the fight on the volcano planet, had a lot of consulting with Steven Speilberg.

Brief comments on the Godfather I & II

edit David Janes 2007-04-21 19:02 UTC add comment  ·

I'm just watching The Godfather right now; I watched The Godfather: Part II last week and I had a few thoughts I wished to record:

  • Marlon Brando is amazing (and I'm only 15 minutes in); I'm really going to have to make an effort to watch some of his early material to see what that's all about -- my memories are mainly of the corpulent joke Brando, but there's a lot more going on there
  • Robert De Niro is amazing too; I'm glad I watch these movies in the reverse order. He did a fantastic job of capturing Brando's character. Sadly, another actor who has lapsed into parody
  • My wife Joanne's Italian and it's funny to note that they had a "fixer" character too in their life. When they moved to Canada, only one lady could speak English and she took charge of all things dealing with "the English". As necessary, she would be the mother, the sister, or whatever was needed for the circumstance (such as going to the doctor). [I'll update this with her name when Joanne gets home]
  • Everything you know about Italians from the top-tier mob movies is true, except for the mob part. Really (or at least they're not admitting to the mob part, though I do step lightly). The first time I saw The Sopranos, it was "hey look, they have our bedspread ... and our bedroom ... and our kitchen cupboards..."
  • (update) the soundtrack is totally over the top. Is this a time-ism thing, or did it suck also when the movie came out? Rick McGinnis would know...

IJIV: Grumpy Old Men

edit David Janes 2007-02-11 20:10 UTC add comment

Canoe sez:

Variety.com reports that Harrison Ford will reprise his role as Dr. Jones after a nearly 20-year hiatus. At the moment, plot details are more heavily guarded than the Ark of the Covenant.

I'm wondering if that guy ever saw Temple of Doom.

50 most significant SF books

edit David Janes 2006-12-09 22:30 UTC 5 comments

Tenser has a list of the 50 most significant SF books, with comments. My notes:

  • No "A Fire Upon the Deep"? This is the book that made deep-space SF readable again.
  • "Nine Princes in Amber" is missed, though "Lord of Light" is an inspired choice and is highly rcommended.
  • "To Your Scattered Bodies Go" is an excellent choice for the list; I like the immediate set of sequels. I'll have to dig these books out of storage
  • "Sword of Shanara"? WTF? Was this list edited by retarded munchkins?
  • I like "Ringworld", though Known Space is more important as a collection than as any one individual book.

There's lots of stuff I read years ago and I'll have to dig out and read again; I may pick up a few more of these just to check it out, though I find a lot of pre-70's SF kind of tedious.

The Cowardly Way

edit David Janes 2006-11-23 11:15 UTC add comment  ·  ·

VDH:

The Cowardly Way

This Michael Richards mea culpa about his racist outburst against hecklers is pathetic—mentioning Katrina and war as he tossed out banalities about the nation’s “hate” and “rage.” The outburst and the apparent apology are right up there with the Judith Regan creepy confessional about her grotesque O.J. non-book event.

Let me get his Seinfeldian logic: a hip, sort of leftist cynic unloads on some impolite blacks in his audience with language right out of the Ku Klux Klan lexicon, and then tries to weasel out of it by suggesting some rage unleashed by things like the Katrina diaster? Apparently he thinks that hip nihilists like himself can’t be redneck racists. And if they slip up and show that they are, then it’s only because they suffer from a temporary sort of Bush-derangement syndrome brought on by the general “rage” unleashed in the country.

We need a new word in the vocabulary for this increasingly common syndrome where a liberal spouts far right nonsense that no conservative would utter and then blames his outburst apparently on the conservative climate. We all thought that the apology would be the alcohol or abused childhood common refuge, so surely “rage” is something new. Do we all suffer from it, or just Richards that evening?

And what is this new throat-clearing about the “war made me do it” (e.g. Richards’ reference to the “rage” between “this country and another nation”)? Even Mel Gibson sought cover in that idea of global conflict when his anti-Semitic rage boiled over in his cups (“The Jews are responsible for all the wars in the world.”). Apparently he thought the Iraqi and Lebanon fighting was both “the world” and were caused by the “Jews.”

Rick McGinnis reviews "An Inconvenient Truth"

edit David Janes 2006-11-21 18:07 UTC add comment  ·  ·

He gives it 2 1/5 stars and according to Kathy, "the hate mail is already flowing in". Didn't Rick get the memo that speaking our betters speaking truth to power is a lecture, not a dialog: no talking back!

The film is basically a filmed version of a lecture Gore claims he claims he’s given over a thousand times since 1989. Near the end of the film, after dire warnings about our addiction to oil and the disastrous effect that we’re having on the environment, he lists all the places where he’s given the lecture; even if you didn’t count his stint as Bill Clinton’s number two, it’s an impressive record of jet fuel and gasoline consumption.

No doubt many viewers might have an occasion to wince about their own energy consumption habits, but they needn’t fear; just as Gore’s personal hydrocarbon tally gets a pass, his film will let you imagine that you can become part of the solution to the global warming crisis by making only the most reasonable sort of sacrifices, while offloading the greater burden onto governments and corporations.

It would require much more space than a movie review to consider Gore’s science. He claims a universal consensus of scientists on manmade climate change that doesn’t exist, and relies on questionable anecdotes to illustrate its effects, such as the one about polar bears drowning as they lose their ice floe habitats – and illustrates it with a cloying cartoon. The lynchpin of his lecture is a graph that shows the earth’s temperature rising exponentially with the levels of greenhouse gases; even if this now-famous graphic weren’t in dispute, he neglects to mention that levels of atmospheric hydrogen have tended to echo temperature, not the other way around.

Fight brewing over Galactica "Webisodes"

edit David Janes 2006-10-20 20:44 UTC add comment  ·

The Sci Fi Network, NBC and Ron Moore are battling over royalities for the Battlestar Galactica "webisodes". Read all about it here.

Note: BSG has nothing to do with it really; this is a proxy fight for how creatives will be compensated in a post-TV world.

Ten Years of South Park

edit David Janes 2006-10-04 21:46 UTC add comment  ·

Cathy Seipp of National Review Online writes about the start of the tenth season of South Park:

[H]ow conservative, really, are the guys behind South Park?   

“I hate conservatives, but I really f***ing hate liberals,” said co-creator Matt Stone, in an oft-repeated quote from when Stone and partner Trey Parker accepted a  People for the American Way award in 2001. But if the creative team’s spitballs are lobbed mostly at people like Rob Reiner and Sean Penn et al, that’s mostly because the liberal elites are the ones mostly in charge.

“Hollywood views regular people as children, and they think they’re the smart ones who need to tell the idiots out there how to be... South Park was based on our hatred and loathing for Hollywood,” Parker and Stone told Hollywood, Interrupted authors Andrew Breitbart and Mark Ebner.

“We still believe that all people are born bad and made good by society,” Parker told Time this spring. “Actually, I think that’s where we’re conservative,” added Stone.