Author: Jason Thompson (Page 67 of 67)

Halloween III

So I rented “Halloween III: Season of the Witch” from Netflix because I read a lot of stuff about it, since it’s the only one to not feature Michael Myers, etc. because the original idea for the series was to only have him in the first two and then the rest of them be independently different. Well, that didn’t happen and we know the rest. Anyway, it’s a pretty cheeseball flick with this evil dude putting weird-ass transmitters in kids’ Halloween masks that react to a special commercial shown on TV with embedded junk in the transmission to make the masks…well…I’m not quite sure what they do really. They kind of bubble up and then the kid collapses and bugs and snakes crawl out of the remains. What the hell? How does that make any sense at all? I get the suspension of belief with horror flicks, but what kind of acid was John Carpenter and his co-writers on when they came up with that idea? I expected the kid’s head to explode or something, but not have reptiles and insects come forth!

The only other interesting and wacky thing about the movie is that it features a death by a nose break. Awesome! That’s gotta be a once in a blue moon idea as well. Say what you want about the genre, but the ’70s and ’80s were at least rife with horror movies that varied a lot in scope, versus the kinds of things we’re used to these days. Even if most of ’em did suck back then, at least they had a campy feel to them that you could laugh at and scratch your head to wondering where the re-writers were.

Baaaaad TV

There’s plenty of bad TV out there, but I’ve recently come to the conclusion that The Hallmark Channel is equally as bad as The Lifetime Network due to its mind-numbing quality of content. Seriously, if I wanted to watch “M*A*S*H*” that much, I’d buy some DVDs. Ditto “Little House,” ditto whatever the hell bad old western shows they have on there. I keep waiting for Wilfred Brimley to be their official spokesperson.

On the other hand, Spike isn’t any better, but then what version of it ever was? “Max X” has gotta be one of the dumbest “real video” shows ever created, and if this is the kind of thing a real guy wants to watch, then put me down for being a pussy. The ’80s are over and “Miami Vice” is never worth revisiting, even if Frank Zappa did appear on it. I miss the old days of TV with the water-cooled Zenith that got at best 13 channels when cable first came around, and that goofy local channel that did nothing but show a black and white camera shot panning back and forth across a wall full of clocks, barometers, and thermometers. Now that’s nostalgia, kids.

TV Series I Wanna See On DVD

I think it’s quite possible that the greatest thing to come out of the whole DVD revolution is the re-release of the fondly-remembered TV series. When VHS was king, you’d often only get select episodes from a series, or else the whole series would be released, and if the show ran a long time, you found your shelves littered with a ton of boxes. Anyway, a number of my old faves have been reissued so far (“The Greatest American Hero,” “The Muppet Show,” “Starsky And Hutch,” “SCTV,” etc.), but there are still some that need to be puked up again for further enjoyment. Here’s a quick list of those shows that I want to see again in glorious remastering and 5.1 sound.

“Riptide” – By God, I used to watch this show every week. It came on right after “The A-Team” and was the better of the two shows, in my opinion. Joe Penny, Thom Bray, and Perry King solved mysteries while flying around in that pink helicopter called The Screamin’ Mimi with the big face painted on the front. Bray’s character, Murray often intoned his favorite adjective, “boss” (as in “That’s so boss!”), and he had that goofy robot companion, the Roboz. Totally boss, indeed!

“Exit 57” – Before there was “Strangers With Candy” there was “Exit 57.” It starred Stephen Colbert, Amy Sedaris, Jodi Lennon, Mitch Rouse, and Paul Dinello. Sketch comedy at its non sequitur best. Rouse played a redneck asshole to a T, while one of Dinello’s best characters was a freak who would get beat up and yell “Teach me who the stain is!” Sedaris played a whole host of wacked-out oddballs, while Lennon got to freak out as well. And then there was Colbert who did that thing that is truly Colbert. You know, he was Colbert! Sure, a lot of these folks came back for “Strangers With Candy,” which is a great show in itself, but I never got to see all the “Exit 57” episodes, and the ones I do have are on a crappy old VHS tape. Get with it, already!

“Max Headroom” – One of sci-fi’s best shows in the ’80s. It came after Max debuted on Cinemax or whatever the hell it was with his oddball talk show. This show was much better, and Matt Frewer was groovy as Max and as the TV news reporter who was always out to uncover the truth in post-modern where ever the hell they were. Plus it had Amanda Pays. Damn, whatever happened to her?! Frewer later “came back” on the crappy sitcom “Doctor, Doctor” and last I saw him was in the terrific remake of “Dawn of the Dead.”

“The Electric Company.” Oh hell yeah. Back in the ’70s, you couldn’t get any groovier with learning than with this show. It came on as part of the super triumvirate that included “Sesame Street” and “Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood.” It was rerun on the Noggin network not too long ago, but then pulled to make way for more “Degrassi.” Yawn. This is undoubtedly the best thing Bill Cosby ever created, and there’s a ton of memories I have associated with it. Spider-Man was on there, sure, but then there was Morgan Freeman as Easy Reader and Rita Moreno as the psycho film director, Skip Hinnant as Fargo North, Decoder, Gene Wilder doing the voice of “Letterman,” and so much more (not to mention the groovy silhouettes with the the first and second syllables of a word flying out of their mouths). In reality “The Electric Company” will probably never get released on any format, but it deserves to be more than just a memory of us who lived with it originally.

“Automan.” No, I jest. Although it’ll probably get full DVD treatment before anything else in my list. Who wants to see any show with Dest Arnaz Jr. in a starring role?

Munson’s Top 5 Worst Movies Ever

If you’re not a pal o’ mine over at MySpace, then you didn’t see this little piece I originally posted over there. Anyway, this seems like the more fitting joint to lay it down, so I give to you, dear readers, my very own top five list of my least favorite movies of all time. Feel free to disagree, though I can’t see why you’d want to. (Note: I’ve changed my original 5th place flick.)

5. “Eraserhead”. I used to think David Lynch was super-cool back in my high school days (i.e., 14+ years ago). I enjoyed “Blue Velvet” and even “Twin Peaks: Fire Walk With Me”, and a couple others. But not even in my biggest fanboy days did I ever enjoy “Eraserhead”. It’s one of those cult movies that doesn’t deserve its cult. Actually, I can’t even stand Lynch anymore, save for the original “Twin Peaks” TV series. When you’re in high school, weird for weird’s sake is pretty cool at times, but once you get older and grumpier, you get tired of watching abstract wanking. “Lost Highway” was a wretched piece of poo, and “Mulholland Drive” wasn’t far behind. Let’s face it: there have been much better and weirder flicks in either commercial or indie styles to have come along and completely blown Lynch out of his own water, so I just say, “Please, Dave, no more nuttiness. Do a romantic comedy with Fran Drescher.”

4. “The Majestic”. In which Jim Carrey punishes us all for liking his funny movies by agreeing to star in a completely life-draining piece of sap. Why is that comedic actors always go through a “I’m a serious actor!” phase? I’ll give props to Jimbo for his work in “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind”, but he almost lost me completely after this disaster. It was even sadder to see his character in “Bruce Almighty” unironically bitch about wanting to be taken seriously. That’s the kind of second-grade pandering that people should just immediately throw popcorn and flat soda at. Dammit, I still think the second “Ace Ventura” movie is funny, as well as “The Cable Guy”. There’s no excuse for “The Majestic”, though, just like there’s no excuse for Adam Sandler to still be making movies after his first two.

3. “The Blair Witch Project”. The biggest ripoff of all time if you went into this thinking it was real. I hadn’t, having read an article about it a month before its premiere in Rolling Stone. What sounded really interesting on paper turned out to be one of the dullest, uninspired pieces of celluloid that for some reason still gets praised for its originality and “scares.” Whatever. There aren’t any scares, period. The folks who say it’s what you can’t see that’s scary are just pussies when it comes to gore and traditional scary flicks. Dammit, “Seven” was a scary movie, and that was a crime thriller, for God’s sake! So don’t gimme any reasons why this was scary. Especially when the dialogue is nothing but a bunch of “fuck you”s strung together, as well as people bitching about maps, cigarettes, and most importantly, getting that equipment back to the school! I’m just glad these heather, Josh, and Mike all got killed in the end. I was glad they wouldn’t be wasting my time anymore with their hysterics. The audience I was in laughed during the movie and booed the screen when it was all over, and rightfully so. As for the sequel, I actually preferred it. Evryone else hated it, natch, because it was just a regular ol’ horror flick. But I’ll take boobies and blood any day over dough faced Heather and hippie Josh. Word is Sanchez and Myrick are working up the Bore Witch prequel (they had nothing to do with “Book of Shadows”). Too late, guys. Everyone’s moved on.

2. “The Ghosts of Edendale”. I’ll bet you haven’t even ever heard of this disaster. Lucky you if you haven’t. This is Stefan Avalos’ followup to his successful, funny, and downright creepy “The Last Broadcast”, which came out before “The Blair Witch Project” and saw many of its core elements “borrowed” for the latter. Avalos likes to work within the digital genre of filmmaking, which basically means he spends a lot of his own dough making flicks on his desktop computer. This worked magnificently for “The Last Broadcast”‘s documentary-type feel, but for “The Ghosts of Edendale”, it just makes it feel like a porn flick. There’s even a semi sex scene here that’s well worth passing over. The dialogue is crap, the acting and actors are completely wooden, and the “effects” are hilariously bad. Think of it as the visual equivalent of an old Casio keyboard. Somehow, Warner Brothers decided to distribute this movie on DVD. Trust me, you won’t even make it past 30 minutes of this snorefest. The funniest thing on the DVD is Avalos’ commentary, in which he pats himself on the back for staring a scene with a shot of the back of main community center actor Stephen Wastell. Ooh yeah, Stefan, that is amazing indeed. Zzzzz.

1. “Last Days”. The fine folks at Bullz-Eye itself gave this a really bad review, so I just had to see for myself. I would have given this crapper no stars had I reviewed it. Gus Van Sant takes us on a mind numbing voyage with “Blake,” the Bizarro World version of Kurt Cobain, since he couldn’t secure the rights to Cobain’s own story. But you’ll see Blake walk around stones on smack, mumbling while other characters flit around doing nothing. Van Sant tortures us not only with this but also with long drawn out scenes that go nowhere. Case in point, when Blake first cranks up his guitar and lays down a multi-tracked tune on his own. It must go on for five minutes, all the while the camera slowly pulls back farther and farther from Blake’s house. Ugh. I never again want to hear how The Beatles’ “Magical Mystery Tour” is boring and how nothing happens in it. At least you had The Beatles goofing off in that. This has literally nothing, and why anyone associated with it wanted to be associated with it is beyond me. Poor Asia Argento.

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