Author: David Medsker (Page 41 of 65)

In: The Prince Show. Out: Lazy Sunday, Part Deux

Back in April, while in the throes of a mad TV crush on Kristen Wiig, I started to wonder what cuts Lorne Scissorhands would be making to the cast of “Saturday Night Live” in the offseason. Here were my picks for the soon-to-be-departed:

Rachel Dratch
Tina Fey
Finesse Mitchell
Maya Rudolph
Horatio Sanz

And here’s who Lorne axed, through the simple omission of their names in a press release:

Rachel Dratch
Tina Fey
Finesse Mitchell
Chris Parnell
Horatio Sanz

Four out of five ain’t bad, if you’re playing baseball. Personally, I’m surprised by the departure of Parnell. I thought that he and Andy Samberg would be making beautiful “Red Vines + Mr. Pibb = crazy delicious” music together for years to come. On the plus side, that kills the Merv the Perv skit once and for all, so there’s that.

On another note, they announced the host and musical guest for the season premiere. The band is the Killers, and that makes sense since they have a new record out October 3. And for the host…?

Dane Cook.

I don’t know about you all, but I remember the last time he hosted “SNL,” and it sucked out loud. His new movie, “Employee of the Month” (which comes out three days after the Killers’ new album) looks even worse. This is looking like an ominous season premiere, especially with the Dane Cook backlash at fever pitch. Time to bring out that $5,000 check and get the Beatles back together again, Lorne.

Box Office Roundup: Are you ready for some, um, more football?

Based on Sunday’s estimates, courtesy of boxofficemojo.com:

1) Gridiron Gang: $15million (first week)
Creepy. Two weeks ago, the #1 movie was football flick “Invincible,” which made $15.2 million. Maybe we’re all stuck in the Matrix after all, and this is one of those déjà vu moments.
2) The Black Dahlia: $10.4 million (first week)
Days from now, the agents for Aaron Eckhart, Josh Hartnett and Scarlett Johannson will be found brutally murdered, without the pleasure of doing a stag film before their untimely deaths.
3) Everyone’s Hero: $6.2 million (first week)
We love baseball, but putting this out now makes as much sense as putting a basketball movie out in September.
4) The Last Kiss: $4.7 million (first)
Upon hearing the disappointing performance of Zach Braff’s latest movie, Eli Cash did a happy dance… in front of his 92” HDTV.
5) The Covenant: $4.7 ($15.7 million, second week)
Go rent “The Witches of Eastwick” instead. You’ll thank us later.

The only good things that ever came out of the high school experience

EW Popwatch has assembled their list of the 50 best high school movies of all time, and they pretty much nailed it. Everybody from James Dean to the Ramones is here, with slashers and wizards mixed in as well. I am especially pleased to see that “Brick” (currently sitting at #1 on my Movies of 2006) placed as high as it did, and Buffybot will be pleased to see “Can’t Buy Me Love” earned a spot as well. No one, however, will be able to successfully convince me that “Sixteen Candles” deserved to be ranked 49th overall. Wrongheaded revisionist history, that’s all it is.

One movie that didn’t make the cut that I always had a soft spot for: The Last American Virgin.

LAV

A classic? Hardly. But one of the few at the time that dared to take a more dramatic approach to the teenage experience. I crushed on Diane Franklin big time, even more so when she was in…

Holy shit. “Better Off Dead” didn’t make the cut, either. Are you kidding me? Forget everything I said. This list sucks. What say you, Tracy?

Tracy Flick
“You know what they say about the early bird, Mr. M.”

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