Year: 2006 (Page 25 of 228)

Jericho, Episode 8: “Hi, my name is Eric…and I’m a dumbass.”

Was it just me, or did the shots of Jake and Eric in the car during that opening scene look like something out of an Ed Wood flick? Not once was it ever even remotely convincing that they were really on the open road in a car. I believed it about as much as I believed Eric when he said he’d be ready to use his gun when the time came. Something I found funny, though, was that after I complained about how I didn’t buy into the chemistry between Skeet Ulrich and Kenneth Mitchell last week, they actually came off really good this episode. Maybe it’s only when they’re trying to act sentimental that I don’t buy it. Whatever the case, their sequences in Rogue River while searching for medicine to save their father’s life are unquestionably the best of the bunch this week. Of course, part of that was less to do with them than with the action scenes in the hospital, but even so.

That having been said, however, I also really enjoyed the further painting of Gray Anderson of the town’s resident asshole, thanks to his grilling of the Hawkins household. Gray kept going farther and farther over the top with his requests of Robert and his family, and you wanted to see just how much they were going to put up with it. In the case of Robert’s teenage daughter, it seemed as though it wasn’t very long at all; I admit to having been somewhat surprised that it was an intentional performance on her part. It was also nice to see Gray put in his place. That’s what you get, you son of a bitch!

In fact, the only scenes that didn’t really do anything for me were the scenes with Heather and Emily, with their attempts to make ice. The only thing I found interesting from a character development standpoint was the one bit with Heather coming within an inch of a freak-out when she couldn’t seem to make the ice; actress Sprague Grayden played the scene as if Heather felt like she was letting down this family who had taken her in, and although it could’ve gone over the top, I felt her performance worked well.

So, at the end of the episode, we still don’t know for sure that the meds worked on Mayor Green…although the preview for next week proceeded to answer the question for us (gee, thanks, CBS!)…but we do know that, in the future, Eric shouldn’t take off his fucking jacket!!!

Good lord. What an idiot.

Overlooked middle Baldwin acts out

Daniel Baldwin, younger brother of “30 Rock” star Alec and elder brother of Billy and Stephen, has been arrested on suspicion of stealing a car, according to the Associated Press:

Baldwin was stopped Wednesday by officers in Santa Monica who saw him in a white GMC Yukon reported stolen in neighboring Orange County, authorities said.

The actor was taken to jail and booked for investigation of grand theft auto. Bail was set at $20,000.

“The car belongs to an acquaintance of Mr. Baldwin, but he had no permission to take it,” said Jim Amormino, a spokesman for the Orange County sheriff’s department.

The big question is, did Daniel steal the car because he just really needed a lift and none of his siblings were available to act as chauffeur…or had he planned to sell the SUV for drug money? Besides which, what happened to his own car? Surely he does have one, yes?

And when is this poor, damaged middle child going to realize that he’s good enough, he’s smart enough, and doggone it, people like him…except when he’s stealing cars and doing drugs?

“Lift up your eyes and look north”

I don’t really know if there’s some hidden meaning behind the abovementioned phrase that was sketched into Eko’s prayer stick, but by the look in Locke’s eyes, it seems that he’s found some kind of significance in it. Whatever the case, Mr. Eko is now dead. Let’s move on, shall we?

This week’s flashback was dedicated to Kate, which wasn’t a very big surprise seeing as how the show begins its three-month hiatus following this week’s episode. It seems that Jack isn’t the only survivor with some marital skeletons in his closet. Kate, too, was once married, oddly enough to a Miami cop named Kevin (Nathan Fillion). Unfortunately, she hasn’t exactly been honest with the guy from the start (he thinks her name is Monica), and though Kate really does love him (she even begs the FBI agent over the phone to stop chasing her so she can start a new life), she still decides to leave the poor guy. That is, of course, after informing him of her fugitive status and then drugging him. Um, okay.

Back on the island, Kate is asked to persuade Jack to operate on Ben. If she can convince him to perform surgery, Sawyer won’t be killed. Pretty simple, no? Jack, however, doesn’t buy her modest plea, and doesn’t agree to do the surgery until he’s given Ben’s word that he’ll have a ticket off the island once the operation is complete. What I’d like to know is if Ben means the island as a whole, or just the smaller one that everyone seems to believe they’re now on? Sawyer believes he’s on a different island, enough so that he’s told Kate of their situation.

So, are they really on another island, or has Sawyer truly been conned into believing so? I know this bleeds a lot into our discussion a few weeks back, but I’m still not completely sold on whether or not Ben was telling the truth. Whatever the case, Sawyer and Kate are going to have a hell of a time escaping, no matter what kind of leverage Jack has earned with his kidney-slicing diversion. There’s no way the Others are gonna let them get away that easy, and it’ll be interesting to see if they can pull it off.

“Mumble mumble mumble . . . more cowbell, Sharon!”

Christopher Walken will soon be eating bats, snorting fire ants, and dropping acid in a theater near you. According to ABC News, Walken has signed on for a cameo role as Ozzy Osbourne in the upcoming Motley Crue biopic “The Dirt,” based on the 2001 book by the same name:

“The Dirt: Confessions of the World’s Most Notorious Rock Band” set new limits in tell-all confessionals. The 448-page tome catalogues the drug and alcohol abuse, nasty infighting, and sex parties of Neil and band mates Tommy Lee, Mick Mars and Nikki Sixx.

The film, announced in April, is now in preproduction and is expected to be released in 2008 by Paramount and MTV. It’s been billed as a true-life version of “This Is Spinal Tap.”

If that’s the case, we’re particularly looking forward to the scene in which Vince Neil and his bandmates (each of whom will be played by unknowns) prance around their eighteen-inch model of Stonehenge onstage…assuming, of course, that they succeed in actually finding the stage in the first place.

[Thanks to Defamer for the link]

Heath prepares to get jokey with it

In a brief interview with Newsarama.com, Heath Ledger speaks of his upcoming role in the next “Batman” flick as the Joker. Turns out he’s not really in the know on the “Batman” mythos, and he’s thinking that might work to his advantage. “I never despised (comics),” he explains, “but I was never one to read them. I never sought out the films, but I would sit down and enjoy them. So because of that, I really feel that I’m not carrying much pressure.” He has, however, been handed a copy of “The Killing Joke,” which is – even for non-comic fans – one of the single best Batman stories ever.

Here’s hoping he takes a cue from the Joker’s portrayal in that story…and not from Jack Nicholson’s over-the-top take in Tim Burton’s “Batman.”

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