Year: 2006 (Page 35 of 228)

Rikki, please lose that number

First they skewered Owen Wilson in an open letter to his brother, Luke. Now the guys from Steely Dan (Donald Fagen and Walter Becker) have set their sights on Wes Anderson, writer/director of “Rushmore,” “The Royal Tenenbaums” and “The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou.” Apparently, Steely Dan is a big fan of Anderson’s first film, “Bottle Rocket,” but they feel that his subsequent films have been progressively worse.

These follow-ups have all concerned themselves with the theme we like to call “the enervated family of origin”©, from which springs diverse subplots also largely concerned with the failure to fulfill early promise. Again, each film increasingly relies on eccentric visual detail, period wardrobe, idiosyncratic and overwrought set design, and music supervision that leans heavily on somewhat obscure 60’s “British Invasion” tracks a-jangle with twelve-string guitars, harpsichords and mandolins. The company of players, while excellent, retains pretty much the same tone and function from film to film. Indeed, you must be aware that your career as an auteur is mirrored in the lives of your beloved characters as they struggle in vain to duplicate early glories.

Steely Dan goes on to outline two strategies to “help” Anderson get back on track, providing lyrics to two separate songs that they’ve written for his next project. But before they agree to work with Anderson, there are a few conditions…

Same thing for the mandolins and the twelve-string stuff and the harpsichord, they’re out. You yourself may be partial to those particular instruments. We’re not. Remember, we saw “Tom Jones” in its original theatrical release when we were still in high school, we had to listen to “Walk Away Renee” all through college and we fucking opened for Roger McGuinn in the seventies, so all that “jingle-jangle morning” shit is no big thrill for us, OK?

I find these letters fascinating, not so much for their flowery words or content, but for the simple fact that these guys from Steely Dan actually think that anyone gives a fuck what they think about a movie.

The only explanation I can come up with is that somewhere in this universe, there is a tear in the space/time continuum, which leads to a parallel universe where the guys in Steely Dan are highly respected film critics. And somehow these letters got through…damn wi-fi.

Idol face…or O-face?

I can’t believe it actually took five seasons of “American Idol” for someone to come up with this.

I’d never realized until now how close the ecstasy of singing was to the ecstasy of…something else. Constantine in particular would appear to have a lucrative second career on his hands if this whole music thing doesn’t work out…and I’m still not entirely convinced that Nikki McKibbin hasn’t contributed to both art forms.

Enjoy.

DVD shuffle: 10/24/06

New on DVD this week:

1) Slither – BUY: Go buy this movie. Don’t ask why, just do it. Okay, you want a reason? Here’s two: It’s one of the best darn movies of the year, and Nathan Fillion is one of the most underrated talents in Hollywood.

2) Monster House – BUY: Parents beware: This is some scary shit. On a good note, however, it’s probably the best adult-themed animated flick of the year.

3) Nacho Libre – RENT: It’s no “Napoleon Dynamite,” but fans of Jack Black will probably still enjoy this PG wrestling romp.

Also out on DVD this week are re-releases of “Reservoir Dogs” and “Saw II,” as well as new TV sets for “Batman Beyond,” “Justice League Unlimited,” and “The OC”.

“The Birds”: Now with 200% more explosions!

In yet another sign of the coming apocalypse, Cinematical has announced that Michael Bay intends to remake Alfred Hitchcock’s classic, “The Birds.”

Naomi Watts is rumored to be under consideration for the role originated by Tippi Hedren, and while Watts is more than capable of handling the job, we still can’t help wondering two things:

1. Which executive producer is going to tackle Bay’s inevitable question about “How do we get all these damn birds out of the movie?” and

2. What convoluted plot device (not to mention prickly negotiations with the ASPCA) will Bay employ in order to arrive at the film’s inevitable climactic moment involving thousands of birds falling from the sky while simultaneously exploding into glorious, blazing, feathered fireballs?

We’ve seen Hitchcock, Mr. Bay…and you, sir, are no Hitchcock.

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