Author: David Medsker (Page 48 of 65)

Snakes on a U2 parody

First, he made a hilarious “audition reel” for “Snakes on a Plane,” where he did impressions of Christopher Walken, Jack Nicholson, Robert De Niro and Joe Pesci. Now the heretofore unknown DCLugi has taken the U2 song “Sometimes You Can’t Make It on Your Own” and, well, made it better, by appropriating it to fit “SoaP” and its star, Samuel L. Jackson. Funny, funny stuff.

We were also pleased as punch to learn that Sam was snapped at the MTV Movie Awards wearing a version of the same “SoaP” shirt owned by myself and Tyler Durden. His, of course, is black, and has ‘M.F.’ in between ‘a’ and ‘plane.’

Snakes on a T-shirt

Box Office Roundup: They don’t write ‘em like that anymore…and there’s a reason for it

Based on Sunday’s estimates:

1) The Break-Up: $38 million (first week)
Hooray for Jennifer Aniston, she has a hit movie on her hands. Now she and Paul Walker have something in common: they can claim to be a box office draw, despite the fact that they had virtually nothing to do with their movie’s performance. Somewhere, in hell, a devil just got his wings. We hope you’re happy, Vince Vaughn.
2) X-Men: The Last Stand: $34.3 million ($175.6 million, second week)
They lost two-thirds of their audience from last week, most of which, we’re guessing, was only there for the “Snakes on a Plane” teaser, anyway. After all, that massive first weekend gross couldn’t have been because of Brett Ratner’s deft ability of sending cars hurtling into the air while Pyro sets them ablaze, over and over again, could it? Didn’t think so.
3) Over the Hedge: $20.6 million ($112.3 million, third week)
Forget arcane clues, secret societies, and the deliberate subordination of Jesus the Human. The public has spoken, and they like the cookie.
4) The Da Vinci Code: $19.3 million ($172.6 million, third week)
Don’t cry for Ron and Tom, Argentina. This movie’s still made a sick amount of money, and greenlit the prequel, “Angels and Demons,” which Akiva Goldsman will surely dumb down just as much as he did Dan Brown’s (already emotionally flat) “Da Vinci” novel. We can hardly wait. And by that, we mean that we can wait. Forever, if need be.
5) Mission: Impossible III: $4.6 million ($122.6 million, fifth week)
This placing, a good $15 million behind the next movie, brings to mind Bill Hicks’ joke about Iraq having the world’s third largest army, and his comeback: “Yeah, but after the two biggest armies, there’s a preeeeeeeety big fucking drop-off.”

Shameless cross-promotion: ESDMusic Album Cover Quiz #2

Not sure if many of you fine, fine readers are aware of this, but we have a sister blog that’s dedicated to the world of music, called Eat Sleep Drink Music (esdmusic.com). We’re launching this new game, see, where we blot out the name of an artist and the album title, and see if you can figure out what it is. Here are a few covers from this week’s installment.

Think you can get the rest? Then click here, and tell your friends. Good luck.

Box Office Roundup: Moviegoers embrace their inner homo mutant

Based on Sunday’s estimates:

1) X-Men: The Last Stand: $120 million (first week)
In four short days, the third “X-Men” movie has already made more money than the third “Mission: Impossible” movie. Have fun spinning that nugget, Paramount.
2) The Da Vinci Code: $43 million ($145.4 million, second week)
Only three or four more weeks until we never have to write or think about this movie again.
3) Over the Hedge: $35.3 million ($84.3 million, second week)
“Da Vinci” fell off 44% this week. “Hedge” fell off 8%. Word of mouth: it’s the new/old way to market movies.
4) Mission: Impossible III: $8.5 million ($115.8 million, fourth week)
Should there be a fourth installment, Tom Cruise has commissioned a script about a “mutant” spy with a terrible, terrible secret. Some have called it the part Cruise was born to play.
5) Poseidon: $7 million ($46.6 million, third week)
At last, we are no longer bound to come up with another “RV” joke, which would have made us even with the number of jokes contained in the movie itself.

24, Hours 23 & 24: Dammit, dammit, dammit!

They never stick the landing.

Oh, sure, they come up with some great last minute hook to lure you in to next season – killing Teri Bauer, poisoning David Palmer, faking Jack’s death – but the events leading up to that moment leave little to the imagination. Of course Jack’s going to stop the virus from spreading (though chopping off Chase’s arm was pretty cool). Of course CTU is going to stop the missile headed for L.A. And, this year, of course Jack is going to find a way to bug President I.M. Weasel and get that confession.

And yet, while it was imperative that Logan be taken down, I can’t help but think that they ignored nearly every other detail in the last two hours in the process. How did no one else from Logan’s security detail find Old Yeller and the First Lady of Crazy? Were we really supposed to believe Robocop wouldn’t have been able to tell that the pistol Jack gave him was empty? Heck, they taught us that in “In the Line of Fire” 13 years ago. Lastly, can you really break someone’s neck with your calves? Holy Xenia Onatopp.

The best line in the show came from a guest star who damn well better be a regular next year, Chloe’s ex-husband Morris. Chloe taps him to do some hi-tech gadgetry for Jack, and Chloe, in her typical personality disorder-driven style, says, “Can you do this without talking?” “I could do that, but it would be a terrible waste of my charm,” he counters. Oh, man, are they going to be fun to watch next year.

And speaking of next year: I am dying to know how the Chinese were able to abduct Jack right out from under the noses of government forces and have him on a Chinese tanker, seemingly miles offshore, in a matter of 10 minutes. Unless they moved like Hammy the squirrel at the end of “Over the Hedge,” that’s just not physically possible. Also, will the Overseers be returning? If not, they were an incredible waste of time. But most importantly, we never found out who it was that leaked Jack’s status and fingered the people responsible for it. Who knows, maybe that was the Overseers’ work, and maybe they were the ones that tipped off the Chinese on Bauer’s whereabouts. They damn well better be, since they dangled that ‘who sold us out’ subplot in front of us for half the day, and then swept it under the rug when it was no longer necessary. But I still want to know the answer to the question, dammit! (Take a drink)

I’d still like to see one of these seasons end with the bad guy winning. Maybe Logan has Big Dick Heller implicated for everything while Martha suffers an “accident” on her way to the funny farm. That would be a lot more interesting than an angry Russian President, discarded, followed by an angry English spy, discarded, then the former President’s brother, discarded. Worst of all was Kim Bauer, needlessly brought in, and just as quickly, discarded. I’m sure it’s incredibly difficult to graph these story lines out, and for the most part, they do an incredible job. But they have to start spending more time on resolving these temporary plot threads, rather than leaving them dangling like that. One of these days, the whole thing will just fall apart.

I’m sure I am forgetting something else. But after watching this and the series finale of “Alias” back to back, I’m all spyed out. Plus, I’ll have my hands full tonight trying to keep Buffybot from drowning those kittens during the “American Idol” finale. See you in January.

« Older posts Newer posts »

© 2026 Premium Hollywood

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑