Mar 22 2010

The Twisted Mind of Jon Arbuckle

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If you’re like me (and I know I am) you’re a fan of Garfield Minus Garfield, the web comic that removes the titular cat from his comic strip, leaving only a sad, addled, mentally unstable Jon Arbuckle behind.  It completely changed the way I look at the comic, and it even won the approval of Jim Davis who eventually agreed to a book compilation.

Anyway, some enterprising soul gave the terrible movie the same treatment.  Breckin Meyer’s peppy spirit results in a Jon Arbuckle who is more creepily deluded than clinically depressed, but the end result is roughly the same.


Mar 17 2010

Critical End! (The Podcast) #47: The styles you need and the brands you crave

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If it looks good on a messenger bag, Tim Burton will adapt it. REVIEWED: Alice in Wonderland (2010). PLUS: Journeys Shoes? Still exists.

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Mar 11 2010

Boring!

Much like Tim Burton making Alice in Wonderland, the thought of Ridley Scott making Robin Hood bores the hell out of me.  And to top it all off, casting Russell Crowe (remember him?) as the title character pretty much guarantees that you’ll fall asleep during the first reel.  In fact, this may be the first trailer that I’ve watched for an unreleased film and thought, “Haven’t I seen this movie already?”

Check it out for yourself and feel free to start placing bets on how many Oscars it will win in our comment section.


Mar 3 2010

Tim Burton Now Apparently Taking Requests

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abraham-lincoln-vampire-hunterIs it just me or is Tim Burton on total autopilot these days? I don’t want to say “parody of himself” just yet, but his most recent films are Alice in Wonderland, Sweeney Todd, and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.  Those are just three existing stories about which somebody said “Wouldn’t it be cool if this was kind of screwed up and goth?”  Of course there’s also The Corpse Bride, which is just a version of A Nightmare Before Christmas that Burton actually bothered to direct.

Following his theme of just doing whatever my 14-year-old self would have begged him to do, he’s now on board to direct an adaptation of Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter, which is one of them historical monster mashups done by the Pride and Prejudice and Zombies fella.  I guess that’ll be good?  Maybe?  I’m a big fan of a lot of Burton’s work, but this is such obvious material for him that I feel like I don’t even need to see it.  I wouldn’t mind seeing something from Burton that I’d never seen before, more in the vein of Big Fish than just another skewed-view re-imagining.

Well at least he’s not doing something silly like  a feature length version of Frankenweenie.


Feb 8 2010

Moviegoers Tire of Insipid Alien Romance, Return to Insipid Human Romance

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Well folks, Avatar’s two-month long reign of terror at the top of the box office has come to a close.  As you may recall, Logan and I weren’t big fans of the film, so we’ve both been waiting for the arrival of the movie that would knock it down a peg.  I’m proud to announce that that movie is Dear John, and when I say proud, I mean deeply, deeply ashamed.

I haven’t seen Dear John, and because I never will, I read the plot synopsis.  After all, I had to know what manner of movie could dethrone the king.  If you’re planning on seeing it, but are waiting to catch Avatar one more time for comparison’s sake, be advised that SPOILERS follow.

Okay.  So apparently Channing Tatum, a soldier, and Amanda Seyfried, a girl, meet and fall in love.  Channing confides that his dad’s been distant ever since his mother left.  Naturally, this causes Amanda to suggest that, hey, maybe he’s autistic.  This pisses Channing off, so he goes back to war, but the two develop a deep emotional bond through letter-writing because if there’s one person who you always bond with, it’s the chick you hooked up with one summer that told you she thought your dad was autistic right after meeting him.

They’re in so much love it’s not even funny.  So naturally, Channing continually re-enlists in the army to make sure he’ll never have to come home and reveal to Amanda that he was actually born a woman.  Just kidding!  That would be interesting.  Eventually, Amanda realizes that there are other men in the world, some of whom she’s met upwards of three times.  Thus, she pens the titular Dear John letter. Channing assumes that Amanda’s going to marry her snooty rich friend from earlier in the film.  This sends him into a patriotic super-rage, causing him to take a dangerous mission where he gets shot, but not fatally, leading me to believe that this was a failed attempt to have something actually happen in this movie.

Upon returning home, he discovers that Amanda has in fact married her NON-rich friend with the autistic child, which, since his child is autistic, makes everything heartwarming and all right.  Channing says goodbye to his dying father, who manages to suddenly become important, then he sells his father’s coin collection to pay for an operation for Amanda’s husband, who, by the way, is totally dying.  Be warned!  A long distance relationship with Channing Tatum is so brutally unfulfilling, that it will drive you into the arms of your dying, non-rich platonic friend.  I repeat:  Three months of emotionally torturous hospital visits capped with a funeral is preferable to one letter from Channing Tatum.

So what I’m saying is this makes perfect sense.  The only movie that could have toppled Avatar was one that actually outmatched its meandering, maudlin, plotless mediocrity in every way.  Way to go Dear John!  I look forward to the remake next year.  And every year after that.  And all years previous as well.


Feb 3 2010

Critical End! (The Podcast) #42: Dear Grodd

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GIVE ME BACK MY SON!/DAUGHTER!/WIFE!  REVIEWED: Edge of Darkness.  PLUS: A quick tour through Mel Gibson’s filmography.

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Jan 20 2010

Critical End! (The Podcast) #41: Snorkel it Off

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Vampires: Grim and gritty supernatural killers or creepy angsty stalkers?  To make the call, we pit the Spierig Brothers’ latest against a movie we never thought we’d see.  As Bela Lugosi put it, “I have never met a vampire personally, but I don’t know what might happen tomorrow.”  REVIEWED: Daybreakers, *cough*Twilight*cough*

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Jan 18 2010

What to Expect When You’re Out of Crap to Remake

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Alternately known as "What to Suppose When You're Presupposing" or "Placenta: A Love Story."

Good news!  There’s going to be a movie version of popular (?) pregnancy guide What to Expect When You’re Expecting.  And it’s a romantic comedy about parenthood!

After the stirring social commentary that was He’s Just Not That Into You, Logan and I suspected that we had a new trend on our hands.  Well, this confirms it:  We’re officially on to self-help books.  Not since the board game adaptation trend, or even the amusement park ride adaptation trend, has a more exciting movie-from-not-a-movie trend crossed our desks.

Never one to lag behind the times, I threw the idea into the Critical End! Trend-O-Tronic Pitch Machine (TM) and it predicted what we have to look forward to between now and 2012 when John Cusack kills us all:

Rich Dad Poor Dad
Two single dads, hard working blue-collar contractor Danny Miles (John Travolta) and pampered blue-blooded aristocrat Trevor Pennybottom (Colin Firth) magically switch bodies thanks to a Wiccan ritual gone wrong.  Can they each raise the other’s daughter while learning a little about themselves in the process?

Awaken the Giant Within
A young boy (Chandler Canterbury) is devastated by his parents impending divorce, so he retreats to a fantasy world (crafted by director Guillermo del Toro) where he is a man-eating giant.  Aziz Ansari plays the dual roles of the kindly fisherman that befriends the boy and the voice of the giant’s comical fruit-fly companion.

Self Matters
Dr. Phillip Self (Jason Alexander) is a forensic scientist on the trail of the Paper Crane Killer.  But the real casualty may be his long-neglected marriage.  Bebe Neuwirth costars.

Yoga and the Wisdom of Menopause
Will be exactly like the book except the full title will be Tyler Perry’s Yoga and the Wisdom of Menopause.

Anyway, if you’re one of the 14 million people who have already read What to Expect When You’re Expecting, please don’t ruin the ending for your friends.  (SPOILER: A baby.)

[I Watch Stuff]


Dec 30 2009

A friendly reminder

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Catching up on 2009 movies for our big year end wrap-up, I finally saw G.I. Joe.  During my viewing, Dennis Quaid gave me a message that he wanted me to pass along to you.  He says to…

“DEPLOY THE SHARKS!”

Just so you know.


Dec 30 2009

Critical End! (The Podcast) #39: Houndz

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Is Robert Downey Jr. hording all of this money in a basement somewhere, fully aware that his star could fall again at any moment?  Or is he like “What the hell, I can always make a sequel to Mr. Willowby’s Christmas Tree!”   REVIEWED: Sherlock Holmes.  PLUS: More musings on the trials of theater-going, including the secret world of the Kiosk Gnome.

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Dec 24 2009

Critical End! (The Podcast) #37: Moving in with Chad

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So…what if he’d kissed a regular frog?  REVIEWED: The Princess and the Frog.  PLUS: A bunch of Christmas Retro Picks including Jack Frost (not the Michael Keaton one) and a whole messa Muppets.

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Dec 16 2009

Bale gets his due on Empire’s 20th birthday

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"That's 'Bone'."

For Empire Magazine’s 20th birthday issue, they got a bunch of stars to pose for fancy glamor shots that evoke their most famous films.

Our ol’ pal Christian Bale got to participate and I was thrilled to see that he wasn’t wearing a Hugo Boss batsuit, but instead holding an axe and contemplating a table full of business cards.  Nicely done, Empire.  But for your 50th birthday: Newsies Reunion!


Nov 27 2009

Critical End! (The Podcast) #34: Prime Directive

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Button, button, who’s got the MURDER!  REVIEWED: The Box.  RETRO PICK: Button, Button.  PLUS: Logan faces some touch choices of his own when Ryan presents him with his own series of moral-decision boxes.

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Nov 16 2009

Critical End! (The Podcast) #33: Team Jake v. Team Tobey

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This audio recording is being beamed directly into your brain with Jedi mind tricks.  REVIEWED: The Men Who Stare at Goats.  PLUS: Trailer talk, featuring Brothers.

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Nov 5 2009

R.I.P. Funny Owen Wilson

Oh, funny Owen Wilson, how I will miss you.  There was a time when you were co-writing critically acclaimed films like Bottle Rocket and Rushmore, then making me laugh while you kicked some ass in films like Shanghi Noon.  Now look at you: Voicing a CGI Marmaduke in the upcoming comic strip adaptation.  Sigh.  Maybe you’ve been spending too much time swimming nude with your buddy Woody Harrelson…or maybe it’s all of the pot.  Hmmm.  The pot would at least explain why you’ve had the same haircut since 1997.  Oh well.  Perhaps the death of your comedic talent is for the best.  It was either this or another Meet the Parents film, right?  Wait…you’re doing one of those as well?  Double sigh.

I leave you with what I SWEAR is today’s (November 5, 2009) Marmaduke comic.  I can only hope that the movie might feature slightly more timely comedy.

marmaduke

[via CHUD]