Year: 2006 (Page 170 of 228)

Next season’s “SNL” cast changes: Oh yes, there will be blood

Don’t look now, but “Saturday Night Live” is getting funny again. Thanks to a massive infusion of good young talent, featuring Bill Hader, Andy Samberg, Kristin Wiig and Jason Sudeikis, “SNL” is better than it’s been in years, due in large part to the now-famous Digital Shorts “Lazy Sunday” and “A Day in the Life of Natalie Portman.” The kids are the stars…

…and you better believe that the repertory players know it. Screen time for nearly all of the veterans has dropped to the point where many of them are making their first appearance in the “five to one-er” (the last skit of the night). I smell blood in the water, and expect there to be a massive overhauling of the cast in the offseason. But don’t take my word for it: Lorne Michaels has already said as much as early as December. I’d link to the article, but it’s the New York Times, and you have to pay per piece online. Fuck that.

And so, I decided to go through the cast of repertory players (there is no doubt in our minds that all featured players will be repertory players next season) and predict which ones will be back for another year.

Fred Armisen: Stays. Fred isn’t the funniest guy on the staff – if anything, he is the king of uncomfortable humor, like his Indian standup comedian and those Goddamned Nuni skits – but he’s game for anything (three words: Camilla Parker Bowles) and does enough writing to keep himself involved each week. Loved his George Carlin impression during the Sean Penn Celebrity Roast, though. And the Prince Show. Always love the Prince Show. Pity Prince was too cool for school to appear on it when he was the musical guest.

Rachel Dratch: Gone. This is a bittersweet prediction, as I saw Rachel numerous times when she was a member of Second City, and she was always a ton of fun to watch. But her funniest skit was Sully & Denise, starring former cast member Jimmy Fallon. Everything else they’ve given her – Debbie Downer, Abe Sheinwald, Sheldon – should never have become recurring skits. And don’t even get me started on that deformed baby thing. She’s become the butt of every joke, and she deserves better than that. Expect her to walk.

Tina Fey: Gone. This one hurts the most. She is the best “Weekend Update” anchor in the show’s history, and as head writer has come up with some of “SNL’s” best work of the last nine years. But she just had a baby, and is starting her own show (currently dubbed “Untitled Tina Fey Project”), along with writing another movie (“Curly Oxide and Vic Thrill”). That’s an awful lot on one plate, which means something has to give. Sadly, we think it’s “SNL.” Man, I hope I’m wrong about this one.

Will Forte: Stays. Every show needs a straight man, and for “SNL” that man is Will. Plus, that Zell Miller impression is to die for. Think that vein in his forehead will ever pop?

Darrell Hammond: Stays. The ability to do impressions of every news personality is a huge plus (though I miss the Hardball skits), not to mention Trump, Cheney, and…Don Knotts? Wow, was that awesome, even if he didn’t look a thing like him. The new kids’ talents as master impressionists – Hader and Wiig are possibly the best impressionists the show has ever seen – is going to feed right into Hammond’s wheelhouse. He’s not going anywhere.

Seth Meyers: Stays. The biggest stone cold lead pipe lock of them all. He takes over as head writer when Tina Fey leaves, which means we should prepare for lots and lots of Appalachian Emergency Room and Needlers skits. Luckily for me, I think those skits are hilarious.

Finesse Mitchell: Gone. Where’s a brother gonna get some screen time? Finesse has been getting shafted left and right lately, and unlike Tracey Morgan, he doesn’t have the arsenal of recurring skits (Brian Fellows, Astronaut Jones) to guarantee him some face time. If I were him, watching all these punk-ass kids taking all of the scenes, I’d start working on a new standup routine and hit the road, jack.

Chris Parnell: Stays. He and Andy Samberg are clearly brothers from another mother, and their love of rap satire will carry both of them for years to come. A straight man in the Will Forte mold, but also willing to let it all hang out (Tyler in the Appalachian Emergency Room skits, Merv the Perv), Parnell may not be a marquee name, but his influence is undeniable.

Amy Poehler: Stays. An even bigger lock than Seth Meyers. She’s the only female cast member to get as much or more time than Kristen Wiig, and they will need her to usher in the new era of Weekend Update once Tina Fey leaves. Oh, and she’s also the funniest woman on the cast, though Wiig is giving her a run for her money.

Maya Rudolph: Gone. I love Maya, but she’s done. She, like Tina Fey, just had a baby, and isn’t getting into nearly enough skits to justify working the crazy hours that go into putting an “SNL” show together. She was in, what, one skit in the Matt Dillon episode? Why even bring her back from maternity leave? Of course, losing her means losing the Prince Show, and that is unfortunate. On the plus side, it means that we never had to see that annoying-as-fuck Nuni skit with Fred Armisen. Are you getting the impression that I don’t like the Nuni skit?

Horatio Sanz: Gone. Simply put, he hasn’t been the same since Jimmy Fallon left. He provided invaluable support to every Sully & Denise skit, not to mention his bits in Jarred’s Room as Gobi and those Hussein/Bin Laden skits that degenerated into uncontrollable fits of laughter, something that would have been frowned upon by the “SNL” founding fathers. He was a sport for filling in for Tina Fey on Weekend Update when she was on maternity leave, but all of his partners in crime are gone, and he seems to be adrift these days. The biggest fear in this prediction being true: there will be a “Boat Trip 2.” But we kid; not even Sanz would sign on for that movie.

Kenan Thompson: Stays: He has ten times the versatility of Finesse Mitchell, and his Deep House Dish skits are money (yes, Rachel Dratch is his co-host, but all he does is humiliate her, which is pretty much what everyone does to Dratch these days. She can be replaced, no harm done). And even if he didn’t have those, there is his spot-on impression of Bill Cosby. Besides, how do you get rid of the co-star of what will surely be the most successful cult movie of all time, “Snakes on a Plane“?

One last thought: I find it curious that the page that contained links to all of the cast biographies featured a picture of Will Ferrell and Cheri Oteri. What a slap in the face of the current cast. Shame on you, Lorne.

Drop everything and watch this

Whatever you are doing right now, it can’t possibly be as important as your need to view what is undoubtedly the finest half-hour television series starring Owen Wilson as a talking motorcycle ever made: “Heat Vision and Jack,” a Fox pilot from 1999 that never made it to air.

Heat Vision Poster

Oh, and as if the talking-motorcycle angle weren’t enough to recommend it, the series was directed and executive produced by Ben Stiller, features a theme song by Tom Jones (covering Yaz, no less), and stars Jack Black as an astronaut whose close encounter with the sun caused his brain to expand like cookie dough, making him the world’s smartest man (but only when the sun is up, in sort of a reverse-vampire twist).

Still not convinced? Okay, how about this: the episode also features the late Vincent Schiavelli as an alien life form with hilariously low-tech glowing eyes, stars Ron Silver as a cold-blooded-killer version of himself, and even manages to sneak in a blink-and-you’ll-miss-it visual reference to Superman II.

YouTube will undoubtedly be barraged with cease-and-desist orders from Fox momentarily, even though Fox couldn’t be bothered to broadcast the pilot episode even one time on its own airwaves…so watch it now, while you still can.

Admit it: You really don’t have anything better to do for the next twenty-two minutes, so just give in to temptation. You’ll be glad you did.

DVD shuffle: 03/28/06

Out on DVD this week:

1) King Kong – BUY: An average DVD for an average film. Don’t get me wrong. I liked Peter Jackson’s epic just as much as everyone else, but by the end of the film, it just doesn’t stick with you the same way the “LOTR” trilogy did.

2) Memoirs of a Geisha – RENT: A great film that didn’t get the recognition it deserved. With that being said, however, I’m not exactly sure anyone needs to see it more than once.

3) Stay – PASS: This movie makes absolutely no sense. Renting it would make even less.

4) Get Rich or Die Tryin’ – PASS: Is 50 Cent the next Daniel Day Lewis? Hardly. So why is Jim Sherridan wasting his time with this no-talent hack? You got me. But please, don’t encourage this kind of behavior and stay away.

Also out this week is the sci-fi disaster “A Sound of Thunder,” season five of “Six Feet Under” and the “Planet of the Apes” Ultimate DVD Collection.

“24,” Hour 15: Do the hustle

Here is where “24” has improved upon the mistakes it made in seasons past. This is clearly a bridge episode, one where Homeland Security slowly digs its claws into CTU while Jack gets thisclose to getting the Warlock. Of course, in the process of saving the world, Jack had to blow some shit up. The episode ended with Jack and the Warlock getting stuck in a police car at a gas facility that Jack had just rigged to explode. They tried to make it look like we don’t know if they survived, but please, do you really kill the show’s star and villain with ten episodes to go? Yeah, I didn’t think so, either.

First thing’s first: the interrogation of Audrey. Now, “Entertainment Weekly” has already exposed the fact that Kim Raver, the actress who plays Audrey Raines, just signed up for another drama, which means that Audrey’s all but a goner…but not this week, even though it certainly looked like Jack was going to torture her worse than he did Robocop. And here is where Homeland Security’s plot comes into play. It’s chilling to think about, that one branch of government would basically lay siege upon another. And yet, that’s exactly what this episode was all about. Let me explain.

Exhibit A: The People vs. Chloe O’Brien. Chloe finally gets some IT help in the name of a girl named Shari, who looks a lot like the Sandra Bullock girl that for all intents and purposes cost Edgar his life. Shari is almost instantly smothered by Homeland chicken-hawk Miles, and when Shari does something that Miles disapproves of, Chloe covers for her, since Shari had told her earlier that Miles had made unwanted advances towards her on a previous assignment (the record of which is conveniently sealed), and Miles is clearly out for revenge. Chloe, very much the Humphrey Bogart “I don’t stick my neck out for nobody” type, made a fatal mistake here, since Shari was never assaulted by Miles. Stick with me on this.

Exhibit B: The People vs. Bill Buchanan. Bill, obviously, didn’t like the way that Homeland Security BSD (read “Liars’ Poker” if you don’t know what that stands for) Karen Hayes was pushing CTU around, and he did everything he could to vouch for the integrity of his people, including suspected baddie Audrey Raines. Hayes was not at all pleased by the angle that CTU took towards nullifying an agreement that Jack had made with the Femme Fatale information broker so that they could interrogate her in order to learn more info…or so it seemed. In truth, they freaking loved what CTU was doing, but kept their mouths shut for the time being. Meanwhile, Shari conveniently informed both Bill and Chloe about the whole PSI/VX gas thing, and when Buchanan patted Shari on the back for a job well done, Shari said, “Did you see the way he touched me like that? That wasn’t right.” Chloe, like the rest of us, looked at Shari like she was nuts.

But Shari’s not nuts: she’s just playing her role in a spectacular hustle, orchestrated by Homeland Security to rid CTU of its most faithful, and therefore troublesome, employees. There was never any case of sexual harassment between Shari and Miles; they were good cop and bad cop, playing Chloe and Buchanan against each other unwittingly. Now, they have Chloe down for allowing her underlings to act outside of protocol, and they have Buchanan down for making “unwanted sexual advances” towards a subordinate. As a bonus, they have Bauer for taking out the security guard assigned to protect our femme fatale information broker, not to mention Hayes’ “assertion” that Bauer didn’t interrogate Audrey to the fullest extent in order to get the information they were looking for, despite the fact that Audrey never possessed that information in the first place. Homeland will then take the information that those three did extract, claim it as their own, and run CTU out of town on a rail.

And we haven’t even gotten to the scenes for next week. It looks as though one of our conspiracy theorists – forgive me if I don’t credit you by name, I don’t keep a spreadsheet of everyone’s theories – was dead on about the First Lady’s assistant Evelyn. She is seen admitting that she has information about the day’s events. The big question is: why did she keep it to herself? Did she think she’d wind up dead like President Palmer, or wind up “dead” like Walt Cummings? When I say “dead,” I am not implying that Walt isn’t dead. He’s certainly dead, but I wouldn’t bet the farm that he killed himself. That is probably why Evelyn, wisely, kept mum. She didn’t know whom she could trust. That White House, it appears, is crawling with chickens and hawks. Good thing this never happens in real life or anything, because that would be downright scary.

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