Monday, December 31, 2012

the top 53 movies of 2012!



Alrighty then. Let's get this over with!

A couple of notes about this list. It includes all the movies I saw in theaters in 2012. It also includes all non-2012 movies I saw in the theater. That means there's some spillover from 2011 (The Muppets, The Artist) and some old movies that were either re-released or one-time engagements (Raiders of the Lost Ark, The Royal Tennenbaums, etc). This skews the whole "movies of 2012" thing, so I hope you'll understand. Some of the ones I've mentioned aren't even movies, but Fathom Events of RiffTrax and British plays and stuff like that. Weird stuff like that didn't make my top ten so I can still have a top ten list of unadulterated 2012 movies.

Also, there were a few movies that came out in 2012 that I saw at home on DVD or streaming (Tim and Eric's Billion Dollar Movie, Beyond the Black Rainbow, etc.)

In short, there are lots of movies included. When I went over them yesterday I was amazed at how many I actually really liked. Either I'm getting better at knowing what will be good for me before I see it or I'm getting more open-minded to a lot of crap. Seriously, the top 50 (of 53 movies) were actually pretty enjoyable.

Talk to me a year from now, though. Every time I do this, I seriously regret several slots. That's part of the fun, I suppose. Obviously I didn't see every movie in the theaters, so stuff like Zero Dark Thirty, The Master and Beasts of the Southern Wild will have to make next year's list, even though they should be mentioned on the 2012. I do what I can.

Here we go.

53. John Dies at the End
This one may not be worth mentioning. It was just a silly sci-fi monster movie that played as a Sundance midnight movie. I'll just tell you right now there's a lot of crazy monster stuff that's supposed to be funny, but just gets really boring and tedious. Also, John doesn't actually die at the end. Spoiler, but whatever.

52. Taken 2
Sorta like Taken, but with all the fun and fire removed. It did have its moments, like when Qui-Gon Jinn found where he was by having Shannon from Lost just start hucking grenades all over Istanbul.

51. Savages
Very silly drug movie from Oliver Stone. The ending was cheap in a laughable way. People love Taylor Kitsch, but I haven't seen Friday Night Lights yet, so maybe it's my fault. Blake Lively seems like a corpse to me though.

50: The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey
I've been getting a kick out of making fun of this movie for the past few weeks, but now I feel sort of bad about it. It wasn't too bad and I'm amazed that I liked 49 movies more (that's a compliment to other movies and not a slam on The Hobbit). However, there were problems. Yes, it's 1/3 of a fairly short book and it definitely feels that way. The gang doesn't even leave Bilbo's house until like 40 minutes in.  From then on it feels like 1/3 of Fellowship played in slow motion. There is a very action-packed sequence involving goblins toward the end, that seems very Rube Goldberg-ish. I can see how that might be exciting for people, but it got pretty old for me pretty quick. There was no sense of danger in the slightest. Sort of like a Bugs Bunny cartoon.

49. End of Watch
Lots of folks really liked this one for its realism. I totally commend it for that. BUT, it also seemed like it was a movie nearly composed entirely of deleted scenes. Donnie Darko and that Pena guy were phenomenal together though.

48. Tim and Eric's Billion Dollar Movie
Would not advise anybody to see this movie. If you do though, make sure it's past midnight and the gigglefits have started to come on.

47. Beyond the Black Rainbow
This one's hilarious too, in a freaky serious earnest way. Weird. Weird. Weird. Weird. Weird. Weird. It's like being back in the 80s and catching something weird on Showtime at 2 a.m. and missing the first  half so you know even less of what's going on and while you're watching it realizing that you're just DREAMING you're watching it.

46. The Expendables 2
Better than the first. Violenter than expected. So that was nice.

45. The Amazing Spider-Man
I liked this one more than the previous trilogy (thanks mostly to Emma Stone's sexy wool socks), but I don't think I ranked the other ones so low. Ultimately, though, this one won't be remembered as well, and deservedly so. If they're gonna reboot so early, it would have been nice if they diverged much further from the previous incarnation.

44. Ted
Most of my love for this movie is because Ted makes the absolutely true claim that the 1980 film version of Flash Gordon is the best film ever made. Very true. Galactically. Also, Mark Wahlberg is phenomenal  in comedic roles. We need to tell him this more often.

43. This is 40
I think I like Apatow-directed movies more than any of my friends, even though they are too long. I dunno, though. Who says a comedy has to be short? If it's funny and consistent, why wouldn't we want more of it. The straight Apatow written and directed movies are a very different bit of humor. Less punch lines and more generally humorous conversations. It's something he does best. Of course this one may be his worst, but alas. It's still great to have it every few years. Btw, if you don't want to watch the movie, make sure you watch the end credits. Melissa McCarthy goes nuts and it's hilarious.

42. Jack Reacher
Saw this with my stepdad, which was fun because he was in the military and he's read all the Jack Reacher books. He told me the MPs in his unit really sucked at marksmanship. So that was fun. The movie was alright too. I don't think there was a scene with Tom Cruise running, which was weird. I did like Cruise in this though. Yeah, he's supposed to be a big guy, but I have no allegiance to the books anyway, and my stepdad liked it, so there. Rosamund Pike sounds weird with an American accent. I think the accent lowered her voice an octave. Also, there's one outfit she wears that makes her boobs pretty phenomenal.

41. Moonrise Kingdom
Not a super fan of Wes Anderson. I appreciated tons of the visuals and quirk here (enough to like it more than Jack Reacher!), but I can't find the heart in his films. It's almost as if the pod people in Invasion of the Body Snatchers made a movie.

40. Oscar Nominated Animated Shorts
Hoo boy. I saw these like a year ago. They seemed to be okay. They were nominated for Oscars, after all.

39. Haywire
I may have ranked this one so well because I'm disappointed in hearing so many people say that Gina Corano didn't act well in it (apparently she's some kind of MMA fighter or something). Maybe it's the feminist in me, but she acts better than Seagal and Van Damme and nobody seemed to blame them for anything. Also Fassbender's in this one. And the Carano-Fassbender fight was pretty cool.

38. Hit and Run
Flaws aplenty. Despite that I'd like to be friends with Kristen Bell and Dax Shepherd. They sort of seem like groovy folks.

37. RiffTrax Live -- Manos: The Hands of Fate
Worst movie of all time? I don't think so! 37th best theater experience of 2012! The RiffTrax guys always give me incredible stomach exercise.

36. Raiders of the Lost Ark (in IMAX)
The perfectest movie ever. Of course, in IMAX, the perfectest movie reveals what few flaws it has quite strikingly. Still, they just don't make 'em like they used to.

35. Star Trek: The Next Generation ("Q Who?" and "The Measure of a Man")
They had this special theater event where they showed two Next Gen eps. "Q Who?" is probably more exciting than any of the actual TNG movies. "The Measure of a Man" was quite good, especially with additional scenes not shown on TV that really filled out some of the philosophical aura of the episode.

34. 48-hour Movie Competition: Event B
I'm partially including this because I was actually in it. You wanna do something fun? Watch "Back" with the YouTube-generated captions on. Hilarious! I promise.

33. The Hunger Games
Pretty good, but I had some serious camera-work issues. They were forced into shaky-cam to get the PG-13 rating, which many people praised as a non-explicit loophole. Personally, I feel it would have suited the story and setting far more if instead of shaking away from the violence, they instead cut away to the television audience reaction, from stimulated to horrified).

32. ParaNorman
My biggest praise of this movie is that it really respects the kids in its audience. Yes, kids can handle a movie with obvious horror elements. Casting McLovin as a bully was actually a pretty good choice too.

31. 21 Jump Street
Sorta funny, but I think it really works because Channing Tatum and Jonah Hill really did seem like buds.

30. The Muppets (2011)
Last year's movie. Pretty good!

29. Premium Rush
This one played out like a low-budget 80s action film, right down to the "fight the man" coming together of the good bicyclist and evil bicyclist. Michael Shannon as the quintessential 80s bad guy is really the icing on this cake.

28. To Rome with Love
I always give props to Woody Allen. No matter what. This one is no exception, even if it is a bit unusual. It's an ensemble piece with several storylines, but some of the storylines seem to take place in a day and some over the course of several months. Maybe this was on purpose to achieve a sort of dreamy fantastic quality. Underneath all the exuberance, though -- sadness.

27. Goon
I'm not sure if this movie ever played in theaters. It is on Netflix, though, and I'd recommend checking it out. Hockey movie that deals with the guy on the team specifically in charge of putting the other guys out of commission. Our hero is quite good at throwing punches, but is also a sweetheart of a nice guy. Alison Pill is here and she's just as fun as in Scott Pilgrim (and waaaaaaaay funner than she is on The Newsroom).

26. The Queen of Versailles
This documentary deals with the "time share king" and his vapid family building the nations largest single-family dwelling place and losing it all during the housing crisis. The movie is remarkably restrained by not shelling out a series of cheap shots at an easy target. Still, my favorite moment is when the mom rents a car for the first time and asks the Enterprise guy "the name of her driver."

25. Silver Linings Playbook
I'm sensing a recurring theme here. This is an adequate story that involves people with with grief-induced mental illness, but the reason the movie works is from the dynamic of Bradley Cooper and Jennifer Lawrence (who is far more fun as a disgruntled nymphomaniac widow than a post-apocalyptic teen archer).

24. Wanderlust
Jennifer Aniston hasn't been this funny since Friends and Paul Rudd is someone I constantly want to spend time with. I have a new soft spot for David Wain movies in much the same way I have for Woody Allen movies. I love this movie, but if you haven't seen a David Wain flick, please check out Role Models.

23. Seven Psychopaths
This is a good one, but I don't really know what to write about it. I may have to think for another year about it. It addresses violence as an issue in a very funny... and violent way. I haven't decided if I appreciate that method or not. Still, you can't go wrong with heavy doses of Sam Rockwell and Christopher Walken (who are extraordinary on bad days (and are beyond that here)). There's a line in the movie that's not answered: "What are Americans known for?" I think (especially considering recent events) the answer the movie gives is violence. Then again, maybe the movie isn't as deep as I think I'm supposed to take it.

22. Lincoln
Should have been called The 13th Amendment. Daniel Day-Lewis is amazing, but the most interesting thing about the movie is how much of a large ensemble it is. Check the IMDb page. Everyone's in this freaking movie and some of the best parts are on the floor of congress, where Lincoln wasn't.

21. Room 237
This one may be hard to explain. It's not a documentary about the movie The Shining, but a documentary about the crazy people who have all sorts of conspiracy theories regarding The Shining. Such theories include the idea that Stanley Kubrick made The Shining in order to reveal that he took part in faking the Apollo 11 moon landing. Like in The Queen of Versailles, this one doesn't take cheap shots at anyone. It can't really because it's gotta be the most cheaply made documentary ever. It's just audio laid over footage from Kubrick films (which I believe is one reason this one is so difficult to see -- because the rights to the movies weren't given). Despite the cheapness, the film comes across not as an indictment of overanalysis, but the joy of it.

20. Safety Not Guaranteed
Yeah, I'm a sucker for time-travel movies, but this isn't a time travel movie so much as it is a quaint story of people letting their guards down long enough to care about each other. Aubrey Plaza's kind of annoying, but Duplass is always great (and pretty different here). My highlight character is a supporting role from Nick from New Girl.

19. Sleepwalk with Me
I've been really into Mike Birbiglia's stand-up lately. The guy really excels at the story-driven stuff, so the fact that this is his first directorial feature, and it's quite good, is no surprise. His stand-up relating to the events of this movie are far funnier, but the movie has a lot of heart and real emotion that's respectable and touching.

18. Friends with Kids
It's a pretty laugh out loud comedy, but it's worth noting that, like Sleepwalk with Me, there's some real emotion and connection with these characters. It doesn't hurt that there's Bridesmaids reunion of Jon Hamm, Kristen Wiig, Chris O'Dowd and Maya Rudolph.

17. Your Sister's Sister
Made by the same team that made Humpday (which I sort of hated), this one was actually pretty good. It involves a trapped love triangle (one of which is the delectable Emily Blunt) that runs through the wringer of loss, guilt and family. It's also refreshingly full of ad-libbed dialog. I admit, if every movie was ad-libbed rather than polished, it would get annoying fast. Fortunately we get just enough of it every year with flicks like this.

16. Shut Up and Play the Hits
Another documentary. This is about the final concert of LCD Soundsystem. I'm not really a fan, but the concert footage was exemplary and created a party of the senses. The concert footage is intercut with interview footage between the mastermind of LCD Soundsystem, James Murphy, and the most diabolical interviewer ever (and my personal hero), Chuck Klosterman.

15. The Avengers
Do I need to tell you about this movie? I'm sure you saw it. Everybody did. I will say, it was the action that was weak though. The real fun is the interaction between our heroes, who were all heroes in vividly different ways.

14. The Dark Knight Rises
I could talk about the flaws of this film all day (and I have). The fact is though, talking about the flaws of a Christopher Nolan movie is a lot like talking about the lack of a sliding van door on a Porsche. His films tend to be so high above the norm that ripping it apart is just a way to pass the time between saying "Wow, that was incredible." Great movie, but still probably the least great of Nolan's Batman films.

13. The Artist (2011)
Let's get it out of the way. This film is overrated. I don't say that as a knock on the movie. I say it so that when you finally see it, you know that it might not necessarily be the best film of 2011 (it won Best Picture), but it does deserve an immense amount of credit and deserves to be wholly enjoyed. That Bejo chick is an absolute delight and both leads find true charm within the constraints of a long-lost film type. Yes, the silent film treatment is a gimmick. But it lands and succeeds fully within that gimmick.

12. The Royal Tennenbaums
This old movie played at the Tower for a one-time event. I said I didn't appreciate Wes Anderson, but I really love this one. It came out like ten years ago, so don't take my word for it.

11. Frankenstein
This is actually a broadcast of a recent British play version of Frankenstein directed by Danny Boyle and starring Benedict Cumberbatch as Dr. Frankenstein and Jonny Lee Miller as the monster (coincidentally both actors are separately playing Sherlock Holmes on British and American television). It is kind of weird to watch the taping of a play in a movie theater, but this sucker was dark and twisted enough to keep me caring throughout. Lots of critiques on humanity. If we do create a new form of life, it may be far more enlightened than us by default.

10. The Perks of Being a Wallflower
I read the book this was based on, but didn't remember most of the details, so I was sorta re-living it again for the first time. Everyone was very real. So real, in fact, that I actually missed the 90s for a couple of hours. It was great. Wish I had more to say.

9. Skyfall
Somehow this James Bond movie re-wrote everything about how to make a James Bond film and also went back to Bond basics at the same time. It's just great to have the guy back. There's a reason he's lasted this long. There's also a reason why the 007 film was successful this year, but the Bourne film wasn't. Bourne was a great adrenalizer, but Bond is simply eternal. We may get a little tired of him now and then, but like his women, we'll always come crawling back.

8. Indie Game: The Movie
Alright last documentary. It's about independent video game makers, but the profession isn't at all what's important here. It's an exhaustive record of the blood, tears and most of all emotional stability of people who put everything they have into succeeding at just one thing. Heartbreaking. Inspirational.

7. The Raid
I saw this at Sundance (before they changed the title to Colon Redemption). Not much to say about this one except it kinda rocks. Non-stop Indonesian martial arts. My second favorite moment: when the tiny psycho guy laid down his weapon in front of the cop so they could duke it out like men. My favorite moment: when the tiny psycho guy laid down his weapon in front of the two brothers so the three of them could duke it out like men.

6. Django Unchained
A slight disappointment, but by Tarantino standards that'll still get you in the top ten pretty easy. Cristoph Waltz and Samuel Jackson were very amazing. They delved quite deep into their characters. Surprisingly I was quite fond of Leonardo DiCaprio and he usually bugs me. Come for the scenery, stay for the final hour of incredible blood spatter.

5. Prometheus
If I believed in guilty pleasures, this might be the one for the year. The characters make decisions that make absolutely no sense. I'm still waiting for a very needed online course that goes over the life cycle of the Alien aliens. However, I was pretty riveted during this thing. Even though the characters made Cabin in the Woods-ish decisions (more on that later), I was all in. Funny how in other movies I'd be annoyed at such things, but in others I forgive. I love forgiving so many elements of Prometheus. It does bring horror on two levels. The obvious level -- these things are trying to kill us, as well as the big picture level -- our creator just might exist -- and he/she/it/they doesn't/don't love us all that much.

4. Looper
I'm a sucker for time travel. Looper is especially hilarious though. Not only is it a time travel movie, but it states very early on, "this is about time travel, BUT ALSO, a bunch of people have telekinesis FOR NO REASON, and the plot of the movie depends on it. As for the time travel, it reinvents the rules and focuses on the paradox of two of the same self within the same present. It's the perfect setting for plotting a course that sets young idealism at odds with hindsight wisdom (both through the eyes of a pretty amoral criminal). Rian Johnson for the win. His flicks are always interesting.

3. Argo
Not only does the movie take place in the 70s, it sort of looks like it may have been made in the 70s -- and I don't mean a lame movie from that time either. Argo is relentless in using oldschool Hollywood techniques to make me sweat despite how seemingly formulaic it is. Very fitting that Hollywood itself kind of plays a character in the story.

2. Les Misérables
I've been waiting for this movie for 25 years. When I finally saw it... I was super worried during the first hour. There was A LOT of missed opportunity here. They could have illustrated the music literally (especially during "I Dreamed a Dream") rather than focusing on the close-ups (which turned out rather distracting than intimate). BUT, by the end, I was completely in. I'm in love with Eponine (who was brilliant and heartbreaking) and I want to fight at the barricade no matter the lost cause (thanks to a surprisingly strong Enjolras who is never a super powerful singer when I've seen the play in the past -- and in the movie is possibly the thawed out cryogenic remains of Tom Bailey from Thompson Twins). That last shot got me, man. I'm weeping now.

1. The Cabin in the Woods
Very rarely do I see a movie in the middle of the year and say to myself as I'm watching it, "Well, that's my favorite movie this year." It was pretty easy with The Cabin in the Woods. It's almost unfortunate that The Avengers did well. If I were Joss Whedon, I'd actually be a little miffed that his superior work was so overshadowed. If you watch scary movies, it helps. But Cabin isn't especially scary. It does provide an amazing analogy for why we as a movie-going people continually demand all the things we endlessly complain about. Also, the movie kicks ass.

Questions, disagreements and comments are welcome.

Monday, December 24, 2012

airing of grievances 2012

It's Festivus today. The list of grievances is small this year, but that doesn't mean you haven't disappointed me.

Blinking yellow arrows --
Have you seen these? Now instead of having just a green light, some intersections have a blinking yellow arrow to signify that you can turn left, but still yield to oncoming traffic. Yeah, so it's exactly the same as a green light. The only difference is you may glance up, see that you have a yellow arrow (which normally means "Hurry! You have one second left of a free left turn!"), hit the gas suddenly, and then get hit by an oncoming semi. Seriously. Call your councilman. These are deadly. They must be stopped.

Cutting down something incredibly popular --
Not a fan of Bieber or Twilight. But such things are a part of popular culture and if I bring them up as a part of a natural conversation, I really don't need you telling me how horrible and stupid such things are for the next half hour. I've been subject to that half hour far too many times. It's one I don't need over and over again. It's one nobody needs.

Pandora --
I love the internet music system Pandora and I listen to it every single workday. Pandora is especially proud of their algorithm to piece together all my stations and play things from a combination of everything I listen to. Pandora, don't be proud of this. All it means is it takes all my extremes out of the equation and pumps an overarching selection of safe blandness into my ears. A combination of Oingo Boingo, Erasure, Abba, Rolling Stones and Pink Floyd means I only hear Blondie over and over and over. Get over it Pandora. Loosen your stupid algorithm.

Pandora --
Also, sometimes Pandora plays too many of my favorite songs in a row. Eventually I get sick of hearing good music. Now I just hate music period. I hate hating music.

iTunes --
Yesterday I had a nervous breakdown trying to upload something from iTunes to my iPod. I'm an Apple man until the day I die, but iTunes is taunting me lately.

Take out --
I order a lot of take out. I get the impression that they want me to tip me. They put the check in a little leather case with a pen and everything so I can write the tip in. Then they look away slightly as if they're giving me my privacy to give them money for handing me a plastic bag where they forgot to put utensils in. I'm generous, but I'm not tipping for take out. That's crazy, right? And if I did tip, I'd request it just go right to the cooks. I don't consider myself served unless someone at least pours me a water.

Christmas songs --
I haven't heard "Christmas Wrapping" by the Waitresses yet this year. Pathetic. What's up with that? Get on it stations!

KOSY --
Speaking of, this isn't a grievance, but it must win the award for Grinchiest move of the year. KOSY 106.5 suddenly changed formats to a rock station 4 DAYS BEFORE CHRISTMAS. Douche move, radio. They were still playing Christmas music. Sure we have a lot of Christmas music on other stations, but douche move, right? I mean. It's the weekend before Christmas. In a more broad sense though, what about Showtunes Saturday? I will miss that, even though she kept playing the same showtunes over and over again, which is a grievance in itself. I will listen to the new rock station. Rock will never die. Zeppelin rules!

Outdoor malls --
Why do all new malls exist outside instead of inside? It's a conspiracy to colden us up and get us to buy more clothes. Give us a roof! Central heating!

I have lots more grievances, but they're all in my subconscious and Festivus is over. Stupid subconscious.

Thursday, December 20, 2012

it's been fun. oh my.

The apocalypse will be here in 54 minutes. Just wanna really quickly say that I'm sorry. I've tried hard to be good and nice. If I haven't been the goodest and nicest to you, it's not what I meant. Thanks. Love ya world!

Thursday, November 01, 2012

halloween sounds 2012

Meant to post this earlier of course. This year's Halloween CD was finished just a couple of days ago. The songs are mixed sprinkled with lines from the various scary movies Insidious, Waxwork, The Gate, Tales of Terror and An American Werewolf in London.

Here's the playlist:

1. "Kiss Kiss Kill Kill" by Horror Pops
2. "Party Til You Puke" by Andrew W.K.
3. "Devil In My Car" by The B-52s
4. "In the Night" by The Pet Shop Boys
5. "Haunted" by Taylor Swift
6. "Gravy (With Some Cyanide)" by John Zacherle
7. "Wolves and Warewolves" by The Pack A.D.
8. "Baby Dracula" by Scarling
9. "Bodysnatchers" by Radiohead
10. "Dull Life" by Yeah Yeah Yeahs
11. "Sneakyville" by Secession
12. "Ghost Town" by The Specials
13. "Electric Funeral" by Black Sabbath
14. "6 Underground" by Sneaker Pimps
15. "Dead Melodies" by Beck
16. "Devil's Song" by Big Pig
17. "Paul Newman vs. the Demons" by The Avett Brothers
18. "Anything Can Happen on Halloween" by Tim Curry

As always, let me know and I'll burn a copy for you. Yes, Halloween is over,  but there's always The Day of the Dead.

Monday, July 30, 2012

48 hour film project 2012

Alright, so I'm finally posting our movie from this year's 48 hour film project.

We kept it in the can for a while because we wanted to make a few more minor corrections, but most of the glaring flaws are still in it which is one of the fun things about doing the 48 hour thing (when I say "fun" I guess I really mean suicidally aggravating).

Anyway, here's the deal. We drew the genre "drama" and had 48 hours from that point to make a movie. At the time of the drawing we were also given specific elements we needed to use. Our required prop was a watch. Our required character name was Al Crofton and that character needed to be related to someone famous. Our required line was "I meant to tell you a few days ago."

I pitched a sort of time travel concept to the rest of the team. It was an idea regarding time travel I had sorta had for several years. Since it's such a science fiction idea (which is another genre we could have drawn), it took a little bit of convincing. Also of note, the plot is strikingly similar to John Maxim and Cameron Daley's 48 hour film from like three years ago (which a bunch of us actually helped out a little on). For that reason, we threw in the "paradox" line.

Anyway, here's the video below. You will notice aspect ratio issues, weird sound, camera bumps and terrible acting by yours truly (but not the other players). You'll also really notice a weird color shift that makes Chad look like he's a chameleon struggling to ward off a predator (or sort of like Predator struggling with his invisibility device).


 I'm wondering if anyone else has the same curiosity and fear of time travel that I have.

 Wanna hear something that probably only I think is funny? There used to be a show on TNT called Monstervision. It wasn't so much a show as it was a couple of horror or sci-fi movies with a host by the name of Joe Bob Briggs who commented on the action at the commercial breaks. He once reported on one movie that the writer said "his original version was much darker" Joe Bob quipped that you never hear a writer or director say that their original version was "much lighter." When I outlined the idea for "Back," there wasn't really a huge conflict between the friends. They knew what they were doing was serious, but they were both on board with it and joking to the end. I also envisioned a few humorous elements regarding nudity because, like in the Terminator movies, time travel necessitated going back in the nude. Ultimately, the rest of the team convinced me that we needed to emphasize more drama so we really staked up the tension between Chad's character and mine. Also, everyone didn't really want to bother with the nude scene even though I was totally all for it.

Thursday, July 12, 2012

14th of july is still a go!

Quick blog reminder for you that the 14th of July is still happening. I tried to stop it. I was going to retire it. Fortunately and unfortunately, the 14th is sentient and it's still happening.

Not aware of the details? Here: http://www.facebook.com/events/203660313093839/

It's on a Saturday this year so that means it's more of a day thing rather than an evening thing. That's good. Now the slip 'n slide won't be nearly as chilly as usual.

This year we're adding the prestigious Miss Spirit of the 14th of July. Will you win it? The qualifications are vague and honestly unwritten at the moment, but likely  the key qualification will simply be wrestling the sash away from me.

There will certainly be lime-tinged deep fried things. There will be lactose consumption. There will be some form of nog.

Mostly, of course, there will be lounging and talking. Oh, and I'll throw some cheap vinyl on a cheap player.

Anyway, the point is, please come along. Get wet, drink milk, listen to samba. It will be a good excuse to see you again. You know who you are.

Thursday, May 31, 2012

Here's hoping some of  you are still subscribed by Google Reader to this blog.

How have you been? I really miss you. You may feign modesty and deny it, but you know I do. I totally do.

I could really use your help. My friends and I are ensconced in the 48 Hour Film Project and since we won't be assigned our film until the 48 hours start, we don't have time to prepare in advance. That means the costumes and sets and props and stuff will need to be obtained spur of the moment. This could get expensive.

Cutting right to it, we've started a Kickstarter campaign for the shoot's cash supply. If you didn't bother to read anything to this point, this 30-second video sort of explains everything.



Notice you're not just giving money away. If you give five bucks, you will officially become a producer on the film and your name will appear in the credits. Not a bad gig. Seriously.

Any amount will be very very appreciated, but keep in mind there are other rewards at the $20.00 and $30.00 mark.

It should now be Friday morning. You're at work, taking it slightly easy checkin' out people's blogs. Maybe you even got paid today. Please don't cure cancer today. Be a part of something funner than cancer.

Go here! http://kck.st/KhWVDm

And one more thing... if we don't reach our modest Kickstarter goal, we don't get ANYTHING. We're 25% of the way there and the campaign ends Wednesday. Jump in now!

Thursday, May 03, 2012

the avengers will suck

I know I never write anymore.

But I have to say this and I think you know why.

The Avengers movie will suck.

SOMEBODY has to say it. We can't go to this movie with nothing but good omens. The only place to go would be down.

There are only a few hours left until we all see it, so let's do a little brainstorming shall we?

1. We can't accept another Hulk into our lives. Bill Bixby, Lou Ferrigno, Eric Bana, Edward Norton, Mark Ruffalo. Hulks are like drummers for Spinal Tap. We stopped taking them seriously after the third one. Of course the other side of the coin is that it makes no difference who plays Hulk since it's really the one character made cartoon by necessity. Allow me to rant against CG: [same old complaint since 1998 -- CG characters don't have life or weight]. Anyway, summation: too many living actors and too much lifeless technology.

2. No Vision and the Scarlet Witch*. Maybe it's just me, but I've always felt that the literal marriage between technology and the occult is the most beautiful kind of romance on Earth. You took that from me Whedon!

3. Redundancies. The Hulk's power is that he's super strong. Captain America's power is that he's super strong (and can jump fences (and can hide behind shields)). Thor's power is that he has a hammer that makes him super strong.

4. Loki. Apparently they decided on the boringest, wettest villain of all the pre-Avenger movies to be the feature in the big one.

5. No time for love. Sure, there will be lots of action and butt-kicking and explosions, but with six main characters (and only the least-important one female), we're not gonna get any semblance of a well-formed romantic sub-plot that my boyfriends and I love to see in movies like this.

6. Helicopter Thor. They may have Thor swing his hammer around like a helicopter again and that looks stupid.

7. Hulk-a-go-crazy. It's gonna be awesome to see Hulk go nuts on the bad guys, but I have a feeling that the random rage that powers him will be conveniently controlled in the team setting without an adequate explanation. I've never understood how someone like Hulk could consciously be on a team. Maybe that's me. You got a lotta 'splainin to do Whedon! BUT DON'T DO SO MUCH 'SPLAININ THAT IT CUTS INTO THE BUTT-KICKING AND/OR LOVE!

8. Cobie Smulders. Apparently she's in it. How can we enjoy The Avengers without thinking about how awesome and hilarious the first three seasons of How I Met Your Mother were?

9. Popular kids. When you read all those Marvel comic books in the past, didn't you think that The Avengers were actually the sort of pretty-boy rich team? They didn't have the edge of The X-Men. They're just a little too polished and noble. Don't you want to tear that down a little? I'm not crazy. I just don't like things to be too good. Super good people make me uncomfortable. That's not weird.

10. If there are vampires in this movie, they probably inexplicably know kung-fu. Remember on Buffy when she'd fight vampires with martial arts? Sure it makes sense that Buffy knows martial arts, but why would the vampires? When you die, do you learn martial arts in the blink of an eye? It doesn't make sense. Anyway, Joss Whedon made Buffy the Vampire Slayer as well as the upcoming Avengers.

I know many of you know someone who saw an advance screening and that person has said it's the best movie ever made. Please know that everyone who went to an advance screening was BOUGHT. How can Paramount afford to pay off every single person who saw an advance screening? Because they're making an investment in HYPE. They need to maintain the hype machine on the movie through the weekend so that the buzz carries the picture to a $500 million weekend gross.

Don't trust advance screeners!

I'll see you at 12:15 on row F!

*In case you're wondering (and I KNOW you haven't read down this far), Vision is a hyper-advanced robot who was once with the Avengers. Another Avenger, the Scarlet Witch is the daughter of Magneto (from the X-Men franchise) and has the ability to change probability. They actually in sort of an unholy alliance (yet romantic!) way fell in love and got married.

Tuesday, February 14, 2012

v.d. '12

"To sleep, perchance to Dream" -- Shakespeare.

"To Feel Perchance to Love" -- the title of some dude's online Sherlock Holmes fan fiction.

"To dream of love, perchance to consume the greatest sweetness in the highest quantity (but then throw up later)" -- Madsen.

I grew up in hearing the British New Romantic pop music movement in the background constantly. Ideally, love is as sparkly as synth. Learned that from the 80s.

Unfortunately, I went through puberty in the 90s. Maybe that's the reason I always associate love with pain. Why did we have so much pain and cynicism in the 90s? The cold war was over. The arms race was abating and we were an unrivaled superpower. 9/11 and the time of terror was another world away.

Maybe we had too much love. That would start any grunge movement.

To lovers past, present and future: the hurt's been fun.

Monday, January 30, 2012

jon's 2012 big announcement

It's my living wish that you watch this video. I'm starting it here and moving it to all other media later today.

Wednesday, January 18, 2012

why not come sundancing it's only natural

Please note that I'm hitting up the Sundance Film Festival this year. I have Friday, January 20 off of work, so I'm going to try to make a day of it. If I can, I'm going to try to get into the following films:

9:00 am: The Queen of Versailles (documentary about rich people from the housing boom stuck with an unfinished palace)

11:15 am: The Raid (sounds like the Indonesian martial arts version of Die Hard)

3:00 pm: Indie Game (documentary on independent video game creators)

6:30 pm: Celeste and Jesse Forever (Andy Samberg and Rashida Jones get divorced)

9:45 pm: Red Lights (It's by the guy who made Buried and it's got Cillian Murphy and Elizabeth Olsen)

11:45 pm: Tim and Eric's Billion Dollar Movie (sounds weird and funny)

If anyone would like to go to these or any other movies on Friday, please let me know. I'm going to try to wake up early and go to the box office to grab what tickets are available. I probably won't be able to get all of my choices, but I'll prioritize. Please let me know. It'll be fun.

Friday, January 13, 2012

2011 a quarter of a picture at a time

Much of my record keeping this last year has been in Twitter entries. I'm reproducing the most life-changing Tweets here as my final (extremely accurate) summation of 2011. I guess I talk about movies a lot huh?

21 January:
About to watch Bellflower -- the riskiest sounding film today (future tweet: Bellflower is the dumbest movie I've ever seen).

1 February
Made it through Winter's Bone! Fascinating science fiction. Takes place on a planet called "Ozarks."

2 February
Aaaaand just finished The Kids Are All Right. Huh. Lesbianism is far boringer than I have been led to believe.

6 February
I'm totally loving being in the middle of this righteous five-day weekend! Well, except that I have to work for two of the five days.

10 February
This just in! Jerry Sloan to become the new president of Egypt!

16 February
Really? Watson didn't pick Skynet as its charity?

27 February
Babies aren't made through sexual intercourse. Made up 8000 years ago cuz propagating human race seemed like a good excuse to fool around.

27 February
Man, Billy Crystal's gone downhill since Miracle Max.

1 March
Never been drunk, but whenever I eat Carolina BBQ chips I wake up with a massive hangover.

6 March
You know how people say "everything happens for a reason?" The Adjustment Bureau teaches the horror of that statement.

8 March
Think I'm giving up R movies for Lent, which might be rough because I only have 129 PG movies in my instant queue and 152 in my DVD queue.

9 March
Other things I'm considering Lenting: red meat, washing hands after using the toilet, words with the letter K, hookers.

22 March
So Mickey Rourke is gonna play Gadhafi in the movie, right? RIGHT?!

23 March
Big announcement! The limitations of twitter don't do it justice. Please check my blog:

3 April
Whoops! Left the car windows down during the blizzard! Ha ha! That is so me (I hate everything and everyone)!

7 April
Got Thursday off. The Pringles and clam dip coma begins... NOW!

17 April
Watching a recorded Kimmel show from earlier. Seriously, there were THIRTY-SIX commercials between Tom Arnold and .

17 April
Sorry, but I have to say it again. One TV show. 36 advertisements right in a row. I still have it recorded. Come over and watch. Fascinating

20 April
I'm working on my fore-handed insults. Example: "Your ignorance barely disguises how much prettier you are than me."

23 April
Wow. Nothing says pathetic and out of shape more than a softball victory through forfeit and then actually being sore from it the next day.

24 April
2011 has been my very favorite Easter. In fact I'm gonna call it "Eastest."

1 May
I need to reiterate. ALL the Fast and the Furious movies suck (except the first one, the third one, the fourth one and the fifth one).

6 May
That scene where Thor walks into the room without his shirt on will prevent all girls from wanting to score with me this year.

6 May
I mean that had to be CGI right? Related: I'm now a little gayer.

6 May
Flippin. They should have called it: "Thor: God of Thunder from Down Under."

7 May
It was mildly warm today. Big welcome to the first swass of the season! Let's enjoy it until October!

27 May
The Hangover Part II was pretty much like any other Netflix streaming horror movie of the week, but my theater had a laugh track.

4 June
Hottest babes in First Class in order: that Kravitz chick, January Jones, Michael Fassbender.

7 June
Our city garbage can emanates rank odor. I want to throw it away, but the city never takes it when I set it by the curb.

14 June
Last night I wrote 12 pages in my journal! Angst-ridden junior high moping is back bitches!

21 June
I look better than I feel. And I feel badass.

22 June
How was your Solstice? I celebrated by totally beating a girl at tennis.

22 June
Just had an awesome, refreshing sneeze. It's the best thing that's happened to me today and, I guess, all summer.

28 June
I'm feeling fat today. I really mean that. I'm literally feeling myself up right now.

28 June
Okay, I just saw how gross that last one looks. Sorry. I'm just saying my hand got stuck in one of my ab chins. That's it.

28 June
It's just that I'm in a quiet room right now and when I move slightly I can actually hear sections of my body sloshing around.

1 July
Sometimes I'm proud of just how gassy I can be.

4 July
Ugh. I've got the biggest Romulan ale hangover right now (Earthicans might call it a Mountain Dew Voltage hangover).

6 July
Why do I always feel so damn unsexy on Wednesdays? Is it because new comic books come out on Wednesdays?

8 July
So, checking this out and I guess the biggest difference between Google+ and Facebook is that chicks aren't allowed on Google+.

11 July
New discovery! Dipping Tim's salt and vinegar chips in Cafe Rio dressing! Amazing! Other news: I've just gone blind.

14 July
My iPad just told me it's too hot and needs to go inside. I guess I'm ready for children now.

21 July
Heading to midnight show of Captain America in a couple of hours. Will also be ironically wearing my Nazi uniform.

8 August
Finally have the six-pack I've always wanted! I just have to bend my stomach so I have six ab-flab chins!

10 August
This tweet is a cry for help. I've been extremely depressed lately and also one of my arms is caught in a bear trap.

17 August
Soooo hungry! But I have to save my money to purchase a unicycle tomorrow.

26 August
Village Inn has this thing where you pick four breakfast items for seven bucks. Thanks vi! You prevented my suicide today!

26 August
Also, Village Inn changed its name to vi. Do you pronounce that "vih" or "six"?

8 October
Is it just me or does Febreze just "moisten" the odor?

21 October
Off blondes again. Adding them to the list (which includes brunettes, redheads and "other").

22 October
I know I've said this before, but shouldn't "School's Out" by Alice Cooper be the absolute LAST song played at a college football game?

1 November
Cold now, so I purchased a vintage green army style jacket. Walked past a mirror and discovered to my horror that I've become Taxi Driver.

1 November
Just re-entered the 21st century as a woman by watching the first episode of Gilmore Girls.

6 November
I'm wearing my sexy favorite jeans right now. I feel like Robert Plant. I've never felt more masculine (or feminine).

18 November
Watching Burn Notice for the first time. Unique. I'd call its genre something like "noir jour."

18 November
The subtle humor of my last tweet depends on your knowledge of Burn Notice, international film history and the French language.

20 November
People who know me know my biggest fear is flash mobs. Now there's a Fox TV show devoted to the subject. The universe is conspiring...

5 December
I just experienced the first-time wonder of my inner 13-year-old girl. I was shaking a sealed container and my boobs started bouncing.

6 December
Am watching Gilmore Girls. DAMMIT!!! Why did I just announce that to the world... again?!

24 December
Watched the new Dragon Tattoo flick. Totally lost from the very start. NO ONE in the whole film explained why everyone was speaking English.

26 December
Finally saw the new "colorized" version of Footloose (by that I mean it's shot for shot same as original, but they added some black actors).

29 December
Will 2011 just END already?!?!

31 December
Reflections from this last year: disappointment, loneliness. Things to look forward to next year: disappointment, loneliness, apocalypse.