Archive for the ‘Greg Reifsteck column’ Category

Comic-Con Day Three Ground Report

Exhibit Hall is a microcosm of fandom and fun

By Greg Reifsteck

 Exclusive EOTM Comic-Con Coverage at twitter  @moviemaniaceotm & Facebook.com/ EOTMMovieManiac

(c) Greg Reifsteck

Today’s entry comes from the trenches.  Not the press trenches I have been in the last three days, insulated in press conferences from the rest of the convention.  Today I made a concerted effort to see the Exhibit Hall and only cover one press conference: The Marvel Panel with the cast of Iron Man 3. Watch for that coverage as it happens.

(c) 2012 Greg Reifsteck

As I said on last night’s E Buzz! Show with Carla B. everyone’s Comic-Con journey is different.  I really enjoyed walking around the crowd in the Hall with everyone dressed up and enjoying the spirit of the Con. I am including some pictures of my favorites.

I ran into Breckin Meyer from the USA show buying t-shirts with his girlfriend. Sean Astin signing autographs at a random exhibitor’s booth.

Tons of wonderful creative comic book artists, writers and illustrators were showing off their wares, and doing portfolio reviews to the bright-eyed future generation of the comic book artist’s world.

I was wowed by the booths put up by the major studios and their dog and pony shows and big star autograph lines stretching the length of the hall. RazorGator - Get TicketsThis place is an epicenter of comics, TV, movies and pop culture that grows and evolves and mutates.

(c) 2012 Greg Reifsteck

It was a great breath of fresh air.  Not that I am not excited to meet celebrities and record their thoughts to report to you, my Movie Maniac fans.  It was just good to be a civilian again.  The geek in me was doing the jig in side.  Enjoy these photos and let your own freak flag fly as you enjoy them.

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San Diego Comic-Con: Downey, Jr. takes playing Iron Man as ‘serious as Shakespeare’

By Greg Reifsteck

 Exclusive EOTM Comic-Con Coverage at twitter  @moviemaniaceotm & Facebook.com/ EOTMMovieManiac

A brotherhood of creative riches is sure to make Iron Man 3 a success

(c) 2102 Greg Reifsteck

Before heading out to the hell of Hall H and the general public the stars Iron Man 3 did a press junket for the press conference.

Stars Robert Downey, Jr. and Don Cheadle were joined by Marvel’s Production President Kevin Feige and the film’s director Shane Black.  Black was brought in after Jon Favreau directed the first two films of the Iron Man franchise, and Feige was quick to point out that Marvel Studios is so in tune that they could probably plug any director into their system and make a great super hero movie.

Notorious screenwriter Black (who penned Lethal Weapon and The Last Boy Scout in the last few decades) agreed with this philosophy, since his directorial debut was the indie Kiss, Kiss, Bang, Bang, which starred Downey, Jr.  Iron Man three is his first step up to big budget land and Marvel’s infrastructure made it a less daunting task.

“What surprised me frankly was how much generous help there was to me, that made it as easy as it could be.  [Producer] Favreau was available to give me all kinds of tips and advice..he gave me that transitional feel that I needed. And Marvel as such an effective special effects machine that they could walk me through this process and hold my hand, and pretty much ensure that I was free to concentrate on story and character.”

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“There is an idea for being big, but there is also an idea of upping the intensity that The Avengers managed to capture.” Shane continued when asked how this will compare to the phenomenon of the $600 million blockbuster. “That lightning in a bottle feel of really stuffing so much into a limited space.  We’re trying to get as much into this as we can. We’re going to get a ton of thrills into a short space.”

The kinship between Downey, Jr. and Black also forged a trust on set that is sure to add to the enjoyment of the film.

Kiss, Kiss, Bang, Bang was one of my favorite experiences,” said Downey about his previous critically-acclaimed collaboration with Black. The script was practically perfect, but we improvised anyway.” To which Black quickly quipped, “You improvised anyway.”

“This time around…we all made enough mistakes together that we are all really seasoned at this point. The main this is that Shane is a storyteller. The kind of emotional depth that happens without taking itself too seriously is kind of what Jon has already set up,” Downey, Jr. continued about the creative camaraderie on the set. “There were times when Favreau, and I, and Don would be calling Shane when we had a big scene the next day. He actually asked that his payment once was that we pick him up a piece of salmon and some fresh blueberries.  So he became known as Code Word: Blueberries.  And he’s working for about the same fee now.”

Cheadle weighed in how his character Lt. Col. James ‘Rhodey’ Rhodes’s onscreen teamwork with Tony Stark will also be more prominent in Iron Man 3.

“I do suit up,” admitted Cheadle. “There are some different iterations that War Machine goes through in this movie.  I don’t want to give too much away.  It’s fun to see those things sort of morph and shift.”

Finally Downey, Jr. asked the press throng, “When does the kid in the Sharpie goatee get to ask a question?” The young journalist didn’t disappoint when he asked Downey the touching question of how he felt about playing a hero.

The classy Downey, Jr. responded, “Well I think I speak for any of us that get to live in this world…I take it as seriously as Shakespeare.”

 

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Disney flaunts its Great and Powerful lineup at Comic-Con

The Lone Ranger, Oz, Frankenweenie impress the press

By Greg Reifsteck

Live 2012 San Diego Comic-Con coverage at twitter  @moviemaniaceotm & Facebook.com/ EOTMMovieManiac

(c) 2012 Greg Reifsteck

Disney pulled out all of the stops at Comic-Con this year.  After putting out the lack-luster bomb John Carter from Mars last year, they finally had a line up to truly be proud of this year.  As the saying goes, if you’ve got it flaunt it.

(c) 2012 Greg Reifsteck

The public were treated to some footage of The Lone Ranger with Johnny Depp and Armen Hammer.  The footage was impressive and really shows that Gore Verbinski is spending every penny off the over-budgeted $250 million western gamble.

 

Speaking of enormous budgets, fans were also treated to the teaser trailer of Sam Raimi’s Oz: The Great and Powerful. Here is a link to the trailer they showed: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yyywumlnhdw

Soon after, I, your wild Movie Maniac high-tailed it over to an exclusive press conference not open to the public.  I will have audio from that conference on tonight’s E Buzz! Show with Carla B. at 7 p.m. PST.

Click here to stream live –

Also in attendance was Tim Burton plugging his black & white stop motion animation extravaganza.  I will have audio of Burton as well on tonight’s show.

(c) 2012 Greg Reifsteck

For a tease, here are some highlight quotes from that press conference from Raimi as well as some images from the lovely cast:

Sam Raimi: You’re right. It’s absolutely different than anything that I’ve ever done before. I had never made a family picture. I guess you call the Spider-Mans family pictures, but basically those are action love stories. And this was just a completely different, otherworldly experience for me. I never tried it before and I didn’t know if I could do it. But I so loved the screenplay, I was so moved by so many different points. I really enjoyed the goal of telling an uplifting story. And what’s uplifting about it, is that the character learns to be a better person.

How much has James Franco changed as an actor since you first worked with him?

Sam Raimi: For me, James was much less collaborative when I first started working with him [on Spider-Man]. He was a real serious actor. I think he still had his James Dean hat on. He was doing it his way. So I worked with him with certain limitations because we couldn’t communicate as deeply as we eventually did on this picture. And I don’t know if that’s just a result of James’ growth as an individual or whether a director just has a much deeper relationship with their leading man or leading ladies than they do with the best friend character that he played. But now that James is a filmmaker, he understands all the things that go into a shot.

Will there be any flying monkeys in this movie? If so, will they get a backstory?

Sam Raimi: In the teaser they showed today, the Wicked Witch has an army of flying baboons. And we saw a glimpse of them today. It’s the first animation that’s completed on it. There’s also a flying monkey story, different than the baboons. A nice flying monke,y so don’t worry.

Who is Bruce Campbell playing in this movie? And will the great Ted Raimi be appearing as well?

Sam Raimi: Yes, my younger brother Ted plays a tiny part, otherwise my mother would have my head. And Bruce Campbell, unfortunately is in the movie. He plays a bit part, because he was busy working. I think he was shooting his TV show, so he took a day off and came down and just did a tiny little, few-line role for us. But it’s a tiny little cameo. It’s really funny to watch in the picture. He did a great job.

 

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Dark Twilight Panel and Red Carpet bring reboot news and jeers

By Greg Reifsteck

Live 2012 San Diego Comic-Con coverage at twitter  @moviemaniaceotm & Facebook.com/ EOTMMovieManiac

The Twilight: Breaking Dawn 2 panel took the 2012 San Diego Comic-Con by storm Thursday morning 28 cast members strong.

(c) 2012 Getty Images

There was a cloud of sadness over the crowd, after the death of a Twilight fan Gisela Gagliardi on Tuesday that was hit by a car, crossing the street against the light, while waiting in line for the panel since Sunday. Many members wore black ribbons in her honor to the panel.  But after that the focus of the crowd in Hall H changed to the final film of the Twilight saga.

(c) 2012 Getty Images

Kristen Stewart, Robert Pattinson and Taylor Lautner, as well as Mackenzie Foy, Elizabeth Reaser, Peter Facinelli, Kellan Lutz, Ashley Greene, Nikki Reed and Jackson Rathbone all were in attendance.

The 22-year-old actress Stewart first hit the red carpet in a BCBG skirt and Fluxus t-shirt, and was joined on the red carpet by her co-star and real life boyfriend Robert Pattison.

When asked by MTV journalist Josh Horowitz about the rumored reboot, co-star Jackson Rathbone joked that it would be called “The Amazing Twilight,” a reference to the Amazing Spider-Man film that arrived in theaters just five years after the last movie. Continued Rathbone, “Andrew Garfield is going to play all the roles. I can’t wait to see what he does with Bella.”

Co-star Ashley Greene told MTV she was hoping to have more time to bask in the glow of the franchise, a reference to the benefits of being known for the billion-dollar series of films.

Even star Pattinson reportedly made light of the possible reboot.

“I pity the person who would take over my part,” said Pattison at the press conference before the panel. “I would make a campaign against them!”

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The Movie Maniac San Diego Comic-Con Preview – DAY THREE

The Hobbit, Iron Man 3 and Tarantino!

By Greg Reifsteck

Follow on Twitter @moviemaniaceotm & Facebook.com/ EOTMMovieManiac

Your legs are gimpy from partying, standing in lines or walking the length of the Exhibit Hall. Or, your ass is asleep from sitting in panels all day.  Either way, you have lived on snack bar food, shared a room with three other people and have not gotten much sleep. You have also suffered the back and forth on the never-on-time Con shuttles.

Day Three – you have made it!  And your reward?  The full damned cast of The Hobbit!  That’s what.  Oh, and other things major things are happening, too.

(c) 2012 Warner Bros

Being the Movie Maniac, I will be bringing you up-to-the-minute online updates of the cinematic action going on at the Con on the EOTM Blog.

I will be giving a live Comic-Con update on Carla B’s E Buzz! Show on Friday night at 7 p.m.  Please tune in for all of the action.

I will also be doing a round-up, including interviews from the convention on my new internet radio show Greg Reifsteck Movie Maniac debuting Sunday July 22, 5 p.m. PST on EOTM Radio.

Click here to stream live and set a reminder.

Here is part two of a preview of what I feel will be the movie highlights of the Con.

DAY THREE – Saturday, July 13

The second day of the Con really fits its lucky number date. Ringworms get to hang out amongst the super hero diehards and the Tarantino snobs.  Yes, another melting pot of marvelous fandom.

11:30 a.m. – Django: Unchained Panel- Hall H

Tarantino’s ode to spaghetti westerns comes to the Con.  The remake/homage to 1966’s Django features Jamie Foxx, Leonardo DiCaprio and Christopher Waltz.  Who will show up from the cast is anyone’s guess.  Just get your damned cameras ready.

(c) 2012 The Weinstein Co.

 

12:45 p.m. – End of Watch and Silent Hill: Revelations 3D Panel – Hall H

Open Road films will have Jake Gyllenhaal and Michael Pena on hand for their film about two young officers are marked for death after confiscating a small cache of money and firearms from the members of a notorious cartel.  They will also bring out the stars of the latest chapter in the popular horror series.

 

2:30 p.m.  – Warner Bros. Panel – Hall H

Yes most of the major cast should be in attendance from The Hobbit, Ringers Director Peter Jackson, Martin Freeman and even Ian McKellen in a very rare Con appearance should be there.  We also get Guillermo Del Toro, who almost directed The Hobbit, presenting his giant creatures and robots movie Pacific Rim, with Charlie Hunnam, Rinko Kikuchi and Ron Perlman. We also just might get to meet the new Man of Steel.

6 p.m. – Marvel Iron Man 3 Panel- Hall H

With Shane Black taking over the helm of this super hero series’ third installment, we hope for more dark humor out of Tony Stark and less CGI mayhem.  Robert Downey, Jr. and some other surprise cast members will be around to please the crowd.  Don’t leave early.

 

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The Movie Maniac San Diego Comic-Con Preview – DAY TWO

Browncoats, bad-ass women, and sci-fi spectacle

By Greg Reifsteck

Follow on Twitter @moviemaniaceotm & Facebook.com/ EOTMMovieManiac

After you shaken off the hangover of Day One of Comic-Con, and that Fan Mate has already run off with a different Wonder Woman or Doctor Who Cosplayer, Day Two will be a maze of mayhem and fandom.   Again there will be the craziness of Hall H, but there are still other fringe panels to enjoy.

Being the Movie Maniac, I will be bringing you up-to-the-minute online updates of the cinematic action going on at the Con on the EOTM Blog.

(c) 2012 Universal Pictures

I will be giving a live Comic-Con update on Carla B’s E Buzz! Show on Friday night at 7 p.m.  Please tune in for all of the action.

I will also be doing a round-up, including interviews from the convention on my new internet radio show Greg Reifsteck Movie Maniac debuting Sunday July 22, 5 p.m. PST on EOTM Radio

Click here to stream live and set a reminder.

Here is part two of a preview of what I feel will be the movie highlights of the Con.

DAY TWO – Friday, July 12

The second day of the Con really has something for everybody, with the sci-fi and animation genres dominating the programming.  The Browncoats will celebrate a milestone in a reasonably sized ballroom, while the fan boys will be drooling all over themselves with the endless parade of hotties in Hall H.

11:45 a.m. – ParaNorman Panel- Hall H

Focus Features will be bringing out Kodi Smit-McPhee, Anna Kendrick, Christopher Mintz-Plasse, Travis Knight, Chris Butler, and Sam Fell from their latest horror-based animated feature.

12:30 p.m. – Firefly 20th Anniversary Panel – Ballroom 20

The Browncoats will be rejoicing that they do not have to get caught up in the Hall H line with their smaller but mightier celebration of their beloved series. Nathan Fillian, Alec Baldwin, Gina Torres, Summer Glau and of course Joss Whedon join others from the cast.

2:15 p.m.  – Tron: Uprising Panel – Room 6A

Everyone knows the revival of Tron with last year’s Disney feature Tron: Legacy left a lot to be desired. But those, like me, that appreciated the spirit of the effort are drooling over this animated series being featured on Disney’s XD Channel. Bruce Boxleitner, who has played Tron in both of its versions lends his voice once again, and will be in attendance with newcomers to the grid Elijah Wood,  Emmanuelle Chriqui and Tricia Helfer.

3:00 p.m.  Adult Swim: Robot Chicken Panel- Indigo Ballroom, Hilton San Diego Bayfront

You cannot call yourself a true Movie maniac without being a can of film parodies, especially ones done in stop-motion animation. And no one does them better than actor Seth Green and his producing partner Matthew Senreich. Both will be in attendance along with Breckin Meyer and other voice actors and writers that make this so-wrong-its-right send up of the movies a joy to watch with every episode.

4:05 p.m. Resident Evil: Retribution Panel- Hall H.

The zombie movie series that will not die, and that keeps writer/director Paul W.S. Anderson in a paycheck, brings out his easy-on-the-eyes wife and star of the series Milla Jovovich, along with Michelle Rodriguez, Oded Fehr and others to talk about their latest adventures with the undead.

4:35 p.m – Total Recall, Elysium and Looper Panel– Hall H

This Sony panel will not disappoint sci-fi geeks as the studio brings out directed by Len Wiseman, who will join stars Colin Farrell, Kate Beckinsale, Jessica Biel, and Bryan Cranston  from its Total Recall remake. They also have writer/director Rian Johnson will join stars Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Emily Blunt from their time travel flick Looper.  And lastly the very secretive film Elysium, the latest from by District 9’s director Neill Blomkamp. Be a part of the first audience anywhere to get a first look at his new movie, and its stars Matt Damon and Jodie Foster.

(c) 2012 Sony Pictures

 

7 p.m. – Blade Runner 30th Anniversary Panel- Room 6BCF

With Ridley Scott finally getting around to doing a sequel to his prized and underappreciated masterpiece, join Blade Runner expert Paul M. Sammon as he interviews numerous cast and crewmembers, including art director David Snyder and The Final Cut producer Charles de Lauzirika. Rumored are very special surprise guests.

 

 

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Movie Maniac Review: Stoned ‘Savages’ never gets as primal as it needs to be

The once masterful director needs to sober up and make movies with bite again.

By Greg Reifsteck

Follow on Twitter @moviemaniaceotm & Facebook.com/ EOTMMovieManiac

Drugs have fueled the creativity of many good artists. The list goes all the way back to Edgar Allan Poe and the wicked tales he came up with strung out on opium. Unfortunately that mind alteration can sometimes make good ideas ruminate a bit too long. The result can be a muddled mess of half ideas.

Such is director Oliver Stone’s latest sociology lesson Savages. He tries to study the collision of our peaceful and our primal self. What makes us cross over to our bad side? What takes us away from our content state and drives us to a fight or flight situation?  His hypothesis seems to be we all have someone so precious that we will cross that line for, and when that person is taken from us we will fight tooth and nail and become a savage to get them back.

(c) 2012 Universal Pictures

He sets up a story in which a hippy chick narrator named O or Ophelia (Blake Lively), acts as the Zen glue that holds the lives of two primo Kush entrepreneurs in the balance.  Chon (Taylor Kitsch mumbling his way through another role), is a jar-headed Iraq veteran, and Ben (Aaron Johnson), is a Buddhist spouting brilliant botanist. Both guys obsess over her and love her, as well as each other.  Of course the world of Stone is way too evil to keep their blissful equilibrium safe for very long, even when they seems insulated in sleepy Social of Laguna Beach.

Stone hasn’t met a natural high he didn’t like.  He has made no bones about it, and is quite public about it.  According to Jane Hamsher’s book Killer Instinct Stone came up with much of his wild imagery for his notoriously amped-up Bonnie and Clyde Natural Born Killers while in a peyote- induced haze.

This is why when I saw the high-octane trailers for Savages, I expected Stone’s adrenaline junky side. Instead when his mind unleashes a Mexican drug cartel led by the ice queen Elena (Salma Hayek) and her menacing minion Lado (Benicio Del Toro) on this flawed love-triangle of “heroes,” I hoped would get to see some real bite.

Elena has Lado kidnap O from the lovers, so she can force them to join her drug empire. She is very naïve and from her privileged upbringing doesn’t have much worldly experience beyond the mall. Soon she is in a remote location, sleeping on a dirty bed in a cage, being drugged in and out of conscience by Lado, who is surely doing unspeakable things to her, which are only revealed in the closing moments of the film.

Why don’t we see any of this true evil horror earlier? Unfortunately, Stone has his characters babbling, philosophizing and endlessly facing off, instead of really going to battle.  It’s like the most boring of UFC fights, when neither opponent will commit and they just keep circling and kicking each other in the shins.

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Stone masterfully and successfully studied a similar chess game of good vs. evil in the piece of pulp U-Turn (1997).  In that escapist film we saw some good old backwoods sex and carnage between a drifter trying to take a wife away from her older controlling husband.   But, in Savages we just get glimpses of some torture, with Stone seeming to be afraid to really pull the trigger. An alleged snitch in the cartel is set on fire at a distance for his wrong doing, and the camera is at a distance and is shot all muddled just when we are going to truly see something intense.

The vibe I kept getting was similar to the one I feel while I am watching the Stone-penned Scarface when it plays on regular television. I am not a sadist, but if I have been sold that a film is going to go to a certain place, I am hoping it will get what I expect.

Best Deals on DVDs and Video Games on the web at IAlso, Stone keeps finding redeeming qualities to all of his evildoers.  Maybe he is trying to say there is a silver lining to everyone, no matter how damaged we are? Elena has a daughter she never sees because she is ashamed of her mother’s career choice in crime.  So, when O demands to stop being mistreated by Lado, Elena takes her into her mansion and makes her a surrogate daughter.

All of this is truly a shame since the acting is top notch all around (well except for the unwatchable Kitsch).  We even have John Travolta thrown in for comedy relief as a bumbling DEA agent trying to play both sides. They all seem more than willing to go that extra mile, especially Tel Toro whose scenes will make you pray that you never get an unexpected visit from gardeners at your house.

Nothing good lasts forever is the message I got from Savages. Not just from the plot, but from the style of Stones directing. This is the man behind Platoon and Wall Street for goodness sakes.  This man used to have the balls to give us a Sgt. Elias or a Gordon Gekko.  Soon he gave us unwatchable Alexander the Great biopics and watered down treatises on the downside of pro football.  A story called Savages needed more suspense, more twists, and more old-school Stone before he got too stoned to tell a coherent story.

Stone has broken the cardinal rule of Tony Montana, the greatest characters he ever written.  He has gotten high on his own supply.  The film world is no longer his.  He needs to sober up go back to the basics.  He needs to go back to being a savage himself.

 

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The Movie Maniac San Diego Comic-Con Preview – DAY ONE

Stay connected to EOTM! Online & EOTM Radio for live coverage of San Diego Comic-Con 2012.

By Greg Reifsteck – Follow on Twitter @moviemaniaceotm & Facebook @Movie Maniac

The Good, the Bad-Ass and the Undead.

Going to San Diego Comic-Con used to be a different experience.  It wasn’t about getting a big bag of swag and lining up at 4 a.m. to see some big name celebrities in Hall H. It used to be a social experience to meet up with the same comic book fans year after year back, and be with like-minded people.

(c) 2012 Lionsgate Films

Now with the overcrowding of 120,000 comic book, movie and TV buffs squeezing into the exhibit halls and corridors of the San Diego convention center, and all of the movie and TV studios plugging their latest projects, Comic-Con has become a sociological experiment unlike any other.

Being the Movie Maniac, I will be bringing you up-to-the-minute online updates of the cinematic action going on at the Con on the EOTM Blog.

I will also be doing a round-up, including interviews from the convention on my new internet radio show Greg Reifsteck Movie Maniac debuting Sunday July 22, 5 p.m. PST on EOTM Radio.

Click here to be redirected to Greg Reifsteck Movie Maniac

Here is part one of a preview of what I feel will be the movie highlights of the Con.

DAY ONE -Thursday, July 12

The first day of the Con looks to be a marathon that won’t let up.  Twihards will collide with Disney freaks and muscle head fans, all parking themselves in Hall H.

11:45 a.m. – Stan Lee’s World of Heroes Panel- Room 6BCF

What a fitting way to start the Con, by bowing down to one of the masters. Stan the Man will be joined by Luke Skywalker himself Mark Hamill and hottie Adrienne Curry to discuss his latest online venture.

12:45 p.m. – Twilight: Breaking Dawn Part 2 – Hall H

Twihards will be camped out in the fitting darkness of the early morning to get into this one.  Kristen Stewart, Robert Pattinson and the rest of the blood suckers from the film series finale will be in attendance.

(c) 2012 Summit Entertainment

2:05 p.m.  - Walt Disney Studios Panel- Hall H

It’s a heavy hitter panel with the Mouse House trotting out the two mega directors that will revive the studio after last year’s John Carter from Mars debacle: Tim Burton’s Frankenweenie, Sam Raimi’s Oz: The Great and Powerful.  Also being featured will be the animated ode to 8-bit video games Wreck It Ralph, that my sore thumbs are going A,B,A,B, left, right, start over in excitement . Stars John C. Reilly and Sarah Silverman will be in attendance.

3:00 p.m. 1982- Greatest Geek Year Ever Panel – Room 5AB

If you cannot get into the Hall from Hell, this lively retro panel will be a highlight for anyone from the MTV generation.

The editors of Geek Magazine along with a panel of other writers will discuss the year that gave us Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan, Blade Runner, E.T., Tron, Poltergeist, Conan: The Barbarian, The Road Warrior, The Thing, Liquid Sky, The Sword and the Sorcerer, Diner and 48 Hours.

3:00 p.m.  Hotel Transylvania Panel- Indigo Ballroom, Hilton San Diego Bayfront

More alternative programming if you cannot get into the Disney panel. A must-check-out for horror and animation fans, this hilarious-looking film will be presented by its director Genndy Tartakovsky.

4:45 p.m. Expendables 2 Panel- Hall H.

All of the big guys are back in Lionsgate’s sequel to the Sylvester Stallone-directed mega action star mash up. Van Damme, Schwarzenegger, Lundgren, Randy Couture and Terry Crews all will be there in their HGH inflated glory.

5:00 p.m – The Most Dangerous Women at Comic-Con Panel – Room 7AB

It’s tough to be a woman in the testosterone-fueled action film industry.  Here will be some good estrogen-driven counter programming to the dudes in the Big Hall. Katrina Hill (GeekNation, MTV Geek) has assembled a team of women dangerous in their own right: Leah Cevoli (Robot Chicken), Holly Conrad (Comic-Con Episode IV: A Fan’s Hope), Adrianne Curry (Stan Lee’s World of Heroes), Clare Kramer (Buffy the Vampire Slayer), Patricia Tallman (Night of the Living Dead) and many others with moderator Bonnie Burton.

8:30 p.m. – Comicon: Episode IV : A Fan’s Hope Screening and Panel- Ballroom 20

Documentarian Morgan Spurlock will put a capper on the day with his take on the Comic-Con phenomenon.

Petco Park Insanity

This year the Con has gotten so ginormous, it has spilled over into Petco Park next door.  From 6 to 9 p.m. on Thursday and in the daytime on Friday and Saturday, there will be the unbelievable Walking Dead Escape fan experience www.thewalkingdeadescape.com where you can hunt the undead or be a hunted zombie in a wicked looking 35 to 55 minute maze that overtakes parts of three levels of the baseball park. Price levels vary for the type of treachery you want to take in.

At night the first ever Dawn of the Con will take place at the park for Con badge holders only from 5:30 to 11 p.m…  Rob Zombie will be the master of ceremonies, presenting a concert of remixes of his classic songs. There will also be exclusive giveaways every hour, as well as a photo op experience with Zombie’s Dragula car.

 

 

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The Movie Maniac Review: The Amazing Spider-Man is cover band of the franchise

By Greg Reifsteck

Twitter: @MovieManiacEOTMFacebook.com/eotmmoviemaniac

Dramatic director Webb cannot build suspense with the same old action hits

Every time I saw the trailer for the Marvel Studios reboot of The Amazing Spider-Man, I wondered: Why? Do we really need to go back to the beginning of this story we have seen time and time again.  Is Marvel really greedy enough to try and sell us the same car with just a new glossy paint job and tinted windows?

(c) 2012 Marvel Studios

Slapping the word “Amazing” on what was a pretty promising franchise is as bad as putting “New and Improved” on a box of detergent, or Taco Bell wrapping a taco in a Doritos shell.  But, after the studio forced the imaginative Sam Raimi into directing the lackluster Spider-Man 3, I guess they were just desperate enough to shove more of the same product down the moviegoers throats.

Enter Marc Webb, who directed one of my favorite movies of 2009, 500 Days of Summer, a sweet, quirky dramedy that was not only colorful cinematically.  It also proved this young filmmaker was able to develop rich and vibrant characters and mine their everyday emotions into a realistic story of infatuation and eventual heartbreak.

So I guess Marvel thought, hey, our last dramatic director pretending to be an action director experiment didn’t go quite horrible enough (Ang Lee directing 2003’s cerebral snoozefest  Hulk), let’s try it again with Webb and our Spidey franchise.

The Amazing Spider-Man is not a bad movie; it just feels like I am watching a concert of the new Journey.  Yes that Filipino dude sure sounds like Steve Perry. Hell yes I am going to pump my fist when I hear Wheel in the Sky, but in my heart I know that it isn’t Steve freaking Perry.

Webb throws The Social Network’s Andrew Garfield into the Peter Parker role for this version, with a shiny-looking unitard and some even slicker spider web shooting technology to boot. He puts the socially awkward character in high school and gives him the love interest of science major Gwen Stacy (played by one of my movie girlfriends, Emma Stone).

We go through the origin story motions, this time Peter’s father is experimenting on fusing animal and human DNA in an attempt to heal people, and give them better adaptability.  One day while playing hide and seek with a young Peter, Mr. Parker’s study is broken into.  Soon Peter’s father is dropping him off at Uncle Ben (Martin Sheen) and Aunt May’s (Sally Field) for good.   Nothing creates a super hero more than parental abandonment.

One day the basement floods and Peter finds some of his father’s old research, a mysterious equation, and a picture of Dr. Curt Connors (Rhys Ifans). Soon Peter is sneaking into an internship program at Oscorp, his father’s old company, and befriending Dr. Connors.  Of course, Peter gives his father’s equation to the doctor, to help him regenerate his missing arm.  But soon, like all science experiments in comic book movies, it goes awry, with Connors turning into a giant lizard and terrorizing the city.

Here is where Webb gets it right.  He knows characters, and the innocent love story between Peter and Gwen is the amazing part of this movie. He knows that silence speaks volumes, and the scene where they finally have their meet-cute Webb uses it very well.  They awkwardly stare and try to form words but cannot because they are both nervous. It’s really cute stuff.  Stone is a vision as always, with her quivering lip and tell-tale eyes.

Then the action cranks up after Uncle Ben is shot and Parker goes on a vigilante spree.  Those scenes are quite fun as well.  Even though Spidey soaring through the air over the city looks clunky compared to the Oscar-winning visual effects work Star War’s vet John Dykstra did for Raimi’s first two Spider-Man films.

Garfield really goes for it in the acting department and I actually liked him more than Tobey Maguire  Yes, he overdoes it in some scenes, but he really masters the spirit of the role.  Maguire always seemed too silent and brooding to me.  Garfield really goes balls-out with the emotion of the role.

The third act of the film is where things get moving too fast and the paint starts to chip off of this old jalopy of a comic book franchise.  We really get to see the surface paint and primer of lazy writing.  The Lizard is a horrible villain and adds no excitement with its fake CGI destruction.  The scenes in which he fights Spider-Man are very by-the-numbers and will have your mind wandering.  Nothing really dazzles in any of the effects scenes down the stretch, including a ridiculous and pointless King Kong-esque sequence involving a weak Spider-Man using cranes to make it to the top of Oscorp to save the city from the ugly fake-looking Lizard.

There is even an allegedly suspenseful bridge sequence in which Spider-Man attempts to save people from their Lizardly doom that falls flat on its face with the same-old, same-old.  Raimi showed wicked imagination in all of his Spider-Man films; even the last one that the studio got a hold of a ruined the third act.  Hey, what a coincidence.  Maybe Marvel needs to take an Artist’s Way course in how to keep people compelled until the final scene.

Webb doesn’t seem fully to blame for the flameout down the stretch.  He simply isn’t an action director.  He is a good storyteller and is magnificent with actors.  The scenes between Garfield and Stone are simple and poetic.  The interaction of Peter Parker and his Aunt and  Uncle are understated and honest.  His casting choices are spot on. But when it comes to making movie magic in the action sequences he just doesn’t have the chops. The result leaves a lot to be desired.

Marvel Studios needs to stop being a Jay Leno and let the Spider-Man franchise go.  Stop pulling the same old car out of the garage and try to make it flashy by parading it around countless times. They smartly did their Avengers assimilation earlier this year with breathtaking results.  They put some their prized characters in the hands of Joss Whedon, a man that was born with a comic book in his hand and the right mind to pull off action sequences that tell a story. The result was a $600 million dollar payday.  If that is the formula for success, Marvel, then I say stick with the veteran directors and simply introduce us to some new exciting characters from your arsenal.  Last I heard you have quite a few to choose from.

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Ted – Movie Review

By Greg Reifsteck

McFarlane’s crude Ted analyzes the man-child with hilarious results 

I have only seen one full episode of Family Guy.  I was forced by a friend of a girlfriend to sit through it. She wanted us to watch the boxed set of the DVDs on holiday break and was preaching the Seth McFarlane gospel I had heard time and time again; Stewie this and Peter Griffin that.  I seriously bailed after one episode.

Photo credit (c) 2012 Universal Pictures

See, I’m a curmudgeon when it comes to TV shows.  Very rarely can I be converted to a show if I haven’t had enough interest to catch it from the first episode.  I missed out on a lot of trendy shows because of this mental flaw.  The Sopranos, Friends, Seinfeld; go ahead and poke sticks at me.  Yes, three of the most popular TV shows in the last two decades I could have given a rat’s ass about because I didn’t want to jump in after episode one.

I remember watching the episode and liking the humor, but I thought it was a lot of softballs.  It didn’t have the heart of The Simpsons.  The characters were the typical dysfunctional family, but what they said wasn’t as clever as their Fox Animation neighbors.  I dismissed it as being crude for crude’s sake and too obvious with its pop culture geek references.  I felt it was even pandering to geeks in a way.  I know I am not alone in this opinion; there are a lot of Family Guy haters out there.

So it was with much trepidation that I saw Ted, director and Family Guy creator Seth McFarlane’s debut foray into live action. The ads are what made me see it.  Something told me this was my kind of movie.  The whole innocent looking teddy bear gone wrong thing just appealed to my 15 year-old sense of humor. I also know I am not alone in this, hello Hangover movies!

Ted is one of the funniest movies I have seen in a long time.  It has turned me into a McFarlane convert, and I will probably go back and give Family Guy, American Dad and The Cleveland Show a chance.  I think it was the fact that it has human beings doing McFarlane’s dirty work.

The plot is very simplistic.  The year is 1985. An introverted Boston boy named John Bennett gets a gift of a big cute stuffed bear one Christmas. He names it Teddy and wishes it was real so he would at least have one friend in the world.  Voila, a Christmas miracle! The next morning he wakes up to his bear alive and talking and scaring the crap out of his parents.

Ted the bear becomes a media sensation, and ends up on Johnny Carson and the front of tons of magazines.  But of course, fame is fleeting and as the decades pass Ted is soon being being busted for trying to smuggle in mushrooms at the airport, and is relegated to smoking bongs on the couch of his grown up roommate John’s apartment.

Speaking of smoking, John has managed to get a sizzling hot girlfriend Lori (Mila Kunis) that met him during a nightclub dancing accident. This is when the signature McFarlane retro pop culture references really kick in to high gear. John’s romanticized recollection of the fated night is a reference to the disco dancing scene from the 1980 Zucker Brothers comedy Airplane! I don’t’ know why but finally the whole McFarlane came clear to me.

With this being real characters and not overblown animated personas, the references are a bit more grounded.  Much like Airplane! sent up the airplane disaster movies of its time, I realized Ted was sending up the sappy coming of age films of our time.  These references were being used to give us a really good sense of how the mind of a guy that won’t grow up really thinks.  I should know I am one myself in many ways. My brain takes many flights of fancy into the movie world of my past to escape the manly responsibilities of my present.

John worships the 1980 film Flash Gordon, and loves the fact that it shows a football player could be called on to save the universe. It secretly helps him believe he can do anything and keeps his dreamer spirit alive. I have worshipped the 1984 film The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai: Across the 8th Dimension for the same reason. It has a pre-Robocop Peter Weller playing a rock star, neurosurgeon, adventurer that saves the earth from aliens.

This is also when the movie really picks up steam for Ted the bear. He is given a lot more free reign than Stewie, the baby who acts as the crazy comic relief from Family Guy.  This film is R rated plus, and pulls no punches in its raunchiness.  The bear turns out to be the roommate/best buddy from hell all guys have had at one time or another in their lives. Ted is the type of irresponsible man-child I dealt with personally, that wants to get to a concert parking lot at 8 a.m. just so they can get a good spot to drink all day. Soon the bear (voiced by McFarlane) is having over prostitutes resulting in the grossest game of truth or dare ever.

Of course Lori gets sick and tired of all of John’s immaturity and wants to settle down. She gives John an ultimatum to ask Ted to leave or she will.  The rest of the film works out this conflict to some pretty wild and crazy results.  It is not a reinventing of the wheel by any means, but any movie that ends up working in a cameo for Sam J. Jones (who played Flash Gordon on the 80’s film) is going to get a high voltage recommendation from this Movie Maniac.

So, please, if you haven’t drunk the McFarlane Kool-aid, give Ted a try.  I wouldn’t say I am a disciple of all of his work yet, but I am a convert to his live action work so far. His heart is in the right place, and he turns what could have been a one-note movie into something with some psychological depth.  Hey, I know it’s not hard to analyze the 2012 model of man child, but Ted makes it quite hilarious session.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


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Movie Maniac Review: ‘People Like Us’

By Greg Reifsteck

Twitter: @MovieManiacEOTM     facebook.com/eotmmoviemaniac

People Like Us is the heart and soul date movie of the Summer

Every summer people are looking for popcorn fare to escape their hectic lives.  I enjoy a good mindless action film as well, but for every super hero slugfest or cranked up action thriller I need a think piece as a palette cleanser.  I crave for a film that stretches my mind as well as satisfying my eyeballs.

This year’s surprise is People Like Us. It is one of those rare gems that studios for financial reasons shy away from making.  They would rather spend $150 million on special effects to make Megatron crap a CGI lightning bolt to make $300 million, instead of spending $20 million to possibly tell us a compelling or inspiring story.

People Like Us reminded me of last year’s hidden and underappreciated surprises Crazy Stupid Love and We Bought a Zoo in the way it also showed humanity for all of its brightness as well as its blemishes.  It is about real people dealing with real life problems, and taking them on with dignity and respect.  The characters in People Like Us don’t talk down to each other or at each other, as they do in many formulaic Hollywood dramas.  They aren’t preachy either.  They just have normal conversations that are food for thought.

Inspired by true events of its director Alex Kurtzman, the film stars Chris Pine as Sam, a twenty-something, slickster scam artist.  Sam’s latest “deal” collapses on the day he also learns that his father has passed away.   Sam lives a jet set lifestyle, and wants to run away from the reality of the situation.  But, he is called home against his wishes by his estranged mother Lillian (Michelle Pfeiffer).  We get a taste that his father lived the same wild lifestyle Sam has fallen into.  Fueled by drugs and alcohol, he was an old school music industry A & R guy that lived the Laurel Canyon life to its Wonderland fullest.

His father’s attorney Ike (Philip Baker Hall) meets with Sam to get the estate in order, and gives him a small bag of money. But the loot is not for him. The bag also contains a note saying he must deliver the money to a mystery address. Sam soon uncovers a startling secret that turns his entire world upside down: he has a 30-year-old sister Frankie whom he never knew about (Elizabeth Banks). As their relationship develops and deepens, Sam is forced to slow down and look life straight on instead of just the corner of his eye.  He also has a misunderstood nephew Josh (Michael Hall D’Addario) that does some early-teen acting out by placing a homemade bomb in his school pool.

This film is obviously a labor of love to first-time director (but veteran writer) Kurtzman, and thank goodness Spielberg saw the potential in the story to let him make it over at DreamWorks.  The budget of the whole film probably cost the same as 15 minutes of one of the Kurtzman usual special effects fests. It was brave of him to try and tread in unfamiliar waters, and he should be commended for succeeding with a movie that tugs at the heart and soul.

Pine shows real chops in drama, and should continue down that path.  We knew he had it in him playing a young James T. Kirk in the Kurtzman-penned Star Trek reboot.  He gives his character real depth and makes us believe in both sides of Sam; the one that can’t stop lying to sell anything to anyone and the one that realizes the truth will set him free.

I must digress, I have what I call my movie girlfriends; actresses I know I don’t have a chance with in reality, but will watch them in any film they star in because I have massive crushes on them.  Sandra Bullock is my ultimate movie girlfriend, such brains, beauty and balls.  I even suffered through Premonition and Miss Congeniality 2 to watch her at work for goodness sake. Emma Stone is another one thanks to Zombieland, Easy A and Crazy Stupid Love. You get the picture.

So my latest cinematic babe that can hold her own is Elizabeth Banks, who plays Frankie in People Like Us.  She first caught my eye as a football wife in Invincible, but really got me going in Zach and Miri Make a Porno. She gives it her all as Frankie in People Like Us.  She makes Frankie many dimensions of emotion, and a very old soul.  The chemistry between Pine and her is charming and palpable.

The other huge discovery in this film is D’Addario.  He has the same look in his eye Patrick Fugit had an impressionable young rock journalist in Cameron Crowe’s Almost Famous. He spews his little philosophies on life with venom, but you know deep down inside he is going to be a heartbreaker.  D’Addario gives his character an innocence that you know won’t last very long once he puts all of the pieces together.  And you root for that day to come along with him, because in his small acting nuances D’Addario gives him potential.

Please give this film a chance this weekend if you are not in for the rude and crude Ted or the Chippendale’s kitsch of Magic Mike. If you want to impress your first date, or are trying to resuscitate a relationship, take them to see this movie. If the tenderheartedness of People Like Us doesn’t get things swooning then nothing will.

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‘Brave’ Review – Movie Maniac

By Greg Reifsteck

Twitter:    @MovieManiacEOTM   Facebook.com/eotmmoviemaniac

Pixar isn’t Brave enough to get past a two-dimensional story with their ode to Scotland

Credit: Disney/Pixar

The first time I went to the Highland games just outside of San Diego, I remember getting wrapped up in the spirit of the event.  The marching of the clans, all donning their different shades of plaid and kilts that made you hope the men weren’t following tradition too strictly. There were the competitions of strength and skill usually involving hurtling a large telephone pole looking “cable,” or something else quite heavy for an unbelievable distance. Then of course was the general rough and tumble attitude of the event, complete with endless beer guzzling and song.

In their attempt to please every culture on the face of the Earth (they already took on France in Ratatouille and will be doing a Latin tinged Day of the Dead film in the next few years) , Pixar / Disney’s latest princess feature Brave, attempts to immerse us into the Scottish spirit.  They also were going to very Brave and have their first female animation director at the helm of one of their films, Brenda Chapman (who was at the reigns of rival studio DreamWorks’ so-so The Prince of Egypt). Well she was fired in October of last year, replaced by Mark Andrews that co-directed Pixar’s short One Man Band.

Who knows if it was the creative shake-up, or the push to make things more commercially viable, but result is Brave is not up the usual depth and snuff Pixar has offered in some of its emotionally richer fare like Up, Wall-E and the Toy Story trilogy.

The film cranks up the energy and the Highlands wildness rather quickly in the first half hour.  We are thrust into the lush green landscapes and the boisterous people of Scotland.  We are introduced to Merida, who is a young red-haired lass that has a love of archery and believes in magic.  When she wanders off to retrieve an arrow from the forest, she encounters a series of sprites that she realizes will determine her fate.  She also comes across a huge bear that terrorizes her family, and solidifies the fate of her father as the Bear King.

But ginger-haired Merida’s fate isn’t brought into question until she reaches her teens, and the day she is to be presented to the local clans to determine who will win her hand in marriage. When the clans show up we really get the sense that Pixar is only keen on immersing us in the stereotypes of the Scottish culture.  Rabble-rousing and fighting are apparently all Scottish males like to do, because we get scene after extended scene of it as comic relief from the serious story of Merida trying to find her fate.

We also get her three baby triplet brothers, whose mischief is played to its heights.  If it weren’t for some of their little plots of whimsy, this film would truly drag in parts.

But it is the mother daughter story that is supposed to melt our heart, and it tries really, really hard to. Merida decides to buck tradition, and as princess declares an archery competition to see who will win her hand in marriage.  Of course, she is the best archer in the land and after she splits the bulls eye-hitting arrow of the winner, she insults all of the clans and creates a huge rift with her mother.

After a huge argument, involving the symbolic tearing of a family heirloom, we are then back out to the forest where she encounters a hag witch plucked straight out of a Miyazaki movie. Merida obtains a spell that will change the fate of rift with her mother, which I will not expose the result of since it is the only original thing about this movie making it worth watching.   The witch is a nice homage, but it exposes Brave for what it truly is, a mash-up of too many things we have seen before.

Sure the animation is smooth and incredible. As usual we feel like we have been transported to a far away land we will never get to see in our lifetime.  That is one tradition of Disney in which Pixar never disappoints. One particular scene at some waterfalls will truly take your breath away.

But it’s the mother-daughter rift plotline makes all of the lush animation simply window dressing. We have seen it in every single princess movie, so I hoped Pixar would break that Disney tradition and take it to the next level like they do with everything else. However, my hopes for a reinvention by the usually inventive minds of Pixar are for naught.  I don’t need to spoil anything else in the film because halfway through it your mind will begin to wander like mine did. You will have the end of the film already predicted as well.

Brave is not a bad movie.  But it is just not A grade, this is a solid B. And if Pixar is going to keep the fate of its box office grosses above the competition from DreamWorks, Sony and its sister company Disney Animation Studios (whose last princess effort Tangled  was a reinvention of the genre I enjoyed much for than this) they are going to have to elevate themselves.

 

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Feeling Horny? Jolie looks magnificent in this First Look at Maleficent

By Greg Reifsteck

 facebook.com/eotmmoviemaniac twitter: @MovieManiacEOTM

Photo Credit: Disney

Fairy tale movies have been hot at the box office lately, and no film has bigger anticipation behind it than Disney’s Maleficent, starring the owner of everyone’s favorite Oscar red carpet legs Angelina Jolie, as Disney’s most popular and beloved villain from the 1959 classic Sleeping Beauty.

Disney leaked this image just this morning!  The film began production on June 13. It is scheduled for a March 14, 2014 release.

This live-action film is the untold story that reveals the events that hardened her heart and drove her to curse the baby Aurora.

I think the casting is brilliant.  Look at those devilish eyes!  The opening weekend of the film is sure to be enormous. And it is good to see the sexier have of Bradgelina is finally starring in something legit (unlike her slumming in the guilty pleasure Salt or the phoned-in excuse for a vacation The Tourist)

Maleficent co-stars are Sharlto Copley (District 9), Elle Fanning (Super 8), Sam Riley (On the Road), Imelda Staunton (Vera Drake), Miranda Richardson (The Hours), Juno Temple (Atonement) and Lesley Manville (Secrets & Lies).

The creative pedigree behind this film is promising as well.  Two-time Oscar®-winning production designer Robert Stromberg (Avatar, Alice in Wonderland), in his directorial debut, and produced by Joe Roth, Maleficent is written by Linda Woolverton (The Lion King, Beauty and the Beast) and executive produced by Angelina Jolie, Don Hahn, Matt Smith and Palak Patel.

Add to the mix two-time Oscar®-nominated costume designer Anna B. Sheppard (Schindler’s List, The Pianist) and seven-time Academy Award-winning makeup artist Rick Baker (Planet of the Apes, Men in Black) and you have a recipe for success.

 

 

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Review: ‘Rock of Ages’ cannot capture the rage of the stage

By: Greg Reifsteck – Follow on Twitter @moviemaniaceotm & Facebook @eotmmoviemaniac

 Rock of Ages cannot capture the rage of the stage, but Cruise and the music save it.

When I was I teenager growing up on the north side of Chicago, I used to stand in the middle of my bedroom, with my huge headphones on and air guitar along with my first piece of vinyl Foreigner 4. I pretended I was a Rock God. You bet my too portly for spandex ass did! I would picture myself onstage next to Lou Gramm just jamming out and shouting Urgent! Urgent! Emergency!

Photo credit: (c) 2012 Warner Bros.


Midwestern teens like me were the poster children for being dreamers in the Midwest. Frustrated creative types like me wished we were on the road, living the lyrics of the songs like Living on a Prayer and Don’t Stop Believin’ after our long shift of asking people if they would like fries with their McDLTs.

I first saw the stage version of the musical Rock of Ages at the Pantages in Hollywood two summers ago.  Sure the plot was simplistic enough. Sexy and sultry Sherrie gets off the Greyhound from Tulsa, to find fame and fortune while walking the hopeless streets of Hollywood.
A seemingly kind streetwalker snatched her bag and a young Sunset Strip bar back Drew (then played by Constantine Margolis) came to her rescue. The second he took the stage with aspirations of becoming a rock star, that’s when my FM antennas went up. I was jettisoned back to my bedroom all over again, and got goose bumps remembering my own journey of dreams I made from Chicago to Hollyweird 12 years ago.

The musical had a live rock band onstage that gave it a very in your face feel. So I was very skeptical when the inevitable movie version was announced. I heard director Adam Shankman was doing this screen redux as well, and I had enjoyed his take on John Water’s Hairspray a few years back.  But I was afraid the live concert feel would be lost on screen.

Shankman’s penchant for stunt casting didn’t help. I never liked seeing John Travolta in a fat suit in Hairspray; it always urked me. For Rock of Ages, I wasn’t buying that pretty boy Tom Cruise could pull off the pivotal role of Stacee Jaxx, the pock-marked, burnt out metal head that was too lost to find himself.

Well, it turns out Shankman has done a serviceable, but homogenized job with his screen version of Rock, The grittiness and profanity of the R rated stage version has been toned down drastically for PG 13 consumption. The raw dark sides of all of the characters have been given a sheen, so they never seem as if they are in peril. The cinematic versions of the characters are a bit too Shankman pretty.

Knockout Julianne Hough plays the screen version of Sherrie. Sure she can sure belt a tune but she barely looks like she has ever gotten a pimple, let alone could handle her rough and tumble job at the aptly titled Bourbon Room.  And Diego Boneta as her onscreen love interest Drew is such a lanky pretty boy that it seems like a beer keg would crush him if he tried to lift it.  The stage actors all had a snarl and bite that truly made you feel for them when they were rescued by the love only power ballad’s could express. They weren’t the chiseled specimens Shankman has envisioned.

Also gone are the scary undertones of the plot. The promiscuous sex and bacchanal excess is gone. The stage musical was a smashed Jack Daniels bottle tribute to the Sunset Strip. Whereas Shankman’s is more like the wine cooler Sherrie is drinking as she picnics with Drew, waiting to be wooed.

Get Led Zeppelin T-Shirts & Merch from Rock.comThank goodness Shankman doesn’t tease when it comes to directing production numbers.  The Strip’s sepia tones have been pumped up to Technicolor. He captures the vast scale of the stage in abundance. All of your favorite songs from the hair metal days by Poison, Foreigner, Journey and others are blasted full throttle.  Hot male and female bodies fly around the screen with cleverly choreographed slick gusto.  Actors that would seem like unlikely singers: Alec Baldwin and Russell Brand as the Bourbon Room’s owner and sidekick, Malin Ackerman as a spitfire Rolling Stone writer, Catherine Zeta Jones as a bitch on wheels politico trying to clean up the sin of the Strip, all give flawless performances.

Then there’s Tom Cruise.  Yes, I hate to say it but he truly steals the show and Shankman’s stunt casting pays off in spades.  His real life over the top persona fits right in with the scotch-fueled fallen rock god attitude of Stacee Jaxx. He goes right along with the lampoon of Axl Rose, embracing the ridiculousness of the excesses: the alleged Satan worship, the debauchery, the monkey named Hey Man. He is the real heart and soul of the film, making us actually hope he will be rescued from his den of inequity.

Rock of Ages is a crowd pleaser that is for sure.  But part of me really wished Shankman would have kept the blemishes and tattoos of the stage version.  Sure I sang along to all of the songs all the way up to Guns and Roses’ Paradise City over the closing credits. But I was only feeling nostalgia after the screen version; whereas I wasn’t feeling the personal connection I felt when I left the stage version.

I wanted to put the headphones on again and remember being a Juke Box Hero.  Instead I only felt like I was watching a poseur cover band.

 

 

 


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LA Kings win the Stanley Cup

Published by EOTM News Editor on June 12th, 2012 - in Breaking News, Greg Reifsteck column, Sports, Sports News

By: Greg Reifsteck – Follow on Twitter @moviemaniaceotm & Facebook @eotmmoviemaniac

Lord Stanley finally comes to L.A.  The Kings and their classy fans finally get their first Cup in franchise history.

Los Angeles Kings center Anze Kopitar hoists the Stanley Cup after the Kings beat the New Jersey Devils 6-1 during Game 6 of the NHL hockey Stanley Cup finals in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)

There were no bar stools left at Leo’s All Star in La Cresenta at 5 p.m. PST, so I just stood.  Kings jerseys of multiple generations were all I could see.  There were the new slick ones with a big crown on the front of them, and some went all the way back to the old school grey Wayne Gretsky-style.

Forty-five years.  That is how old the Los Angeles Kings hockey franchise is. That is only four more years than I have been alive.  That is how long it took for them to finally have the glory of hoisting Lord Stanley’s Cup over their heads.  But I am getting ahead of myself.

The people in this bar weren’t hungry for food.  They wanted a goddamned win.  They had been teased by two misfires by their frustrating Kings, one here in L.A. and one on the road.  They also had sat through a few early series overtime cliffhangers.

The Kings had walked backwards into the playoffs. They were the eight seed.  No other eight-seeded team had ever gone the distance in NHL history.

So while many of the games during this 3-2 series against the New Jersey Devils had been slow starts for The Kings, they rewarded their fans last night and came out firing in the game that finally gave them their fourth and deciding victory.

Los Angeles Kings 2012 NHL Western Conference Champs

In the first period, Devil Steve Bernier boarded King Rob Scuderi hard enough to have him on all fours with blood pouring out of his mouth.  That game-changing five-minute major penalty opened the door for four minutes of payback fury, resulting in a three-goal onslaught.

First was captain Dustin Brown, then Jeff Carter finally Trevor Lewis; three unforgettable goals leaving New Jersey in a hole they were never going to dig themselves out of.  The Staples Center erupted in chants of “We Want the Cup” after each goal, and Leo’s followed suit. High fives flew and beers got chugged. No nail-biting overtime this game.  The barrage had a finality to it that had the hundreds of So-Cal bars rocking off their rafters for the next two periods.

Shop 2012 Stanley Cup NJ Devils & LA King Finals gear at Fanatics!

Sure the Kings scored a few more goals; Carter scored his second of the game 90 seconds into an ill-tempered second period. Sure two more came in the third period from Lewis and Matt Greene, one of them into an empty net.  Sure rookie Adam Henrique scored the only goal for the Devils, which had won the last two games in the finals after falling behind 3-0 in the best-of-seven series.

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But to be quite honest, the shots that were handed out after those first three Kings goals in the first period had left the rest of the game a blissful blur one that lasted until the final 2 minutes of the game.  That is when the reality set in.

I had been standing next to a lifetime Kings fan that had held his cool up the entire game.  He was a rowdy screaming hulk of a man.  But now the realization of a Cup victory had finally hit him. Suddenly he fell to one knee, scaring the crap out of his fellow revelers and myself.

He put his head in his hands and started to cry, a cry he had held back his entire life.  His buddies started to rub his back.  There was no laughing at him or jeering. It was understood what he was going through.

I had the same emotions overcome me when my beloved Chicago White Sox finally won a World Series in 2005. My friends wondered why I fell to my knees and let out a yell and cried after the final out of the victory. I had waited for decades as well, and when reality finally set in I had flashbacks to all of the great and no-so-great games I had watched.  This dude was going through the same thing and had taken the same journey. It was awesome to see how the power of sports fandom can overtake and affect someone.

The final seconds ticked off of the clock and for the last 30 we counted them down.  More shots were poured; hugs and high fives were made, as we waited for the ceremony.

A full size replica of the cup had already made the rounds of the bar, being kissed and hoisted by many in attendance.  But the real cup wasn’t coming out yet. First Jonathan Quick, who made 17 saves in another stellar postseason performance, threw off his gloves and was awarded the Conn Smythe Trophy as the most valuable player in the 2012 playoffs.

Finally the real Cup revealed itself, as each King was able to savor the glorious coda to a topsy-turvy season.

“This is something everyone’s dreamed of for their whole lives and this city’ dreamed of for 45 years,” said Brown. “I can’t really explain it. We had an opportunity to do something special on home ice and we did, and we’re champions.”

“It’s just everything you pretty much dream and dreams just came true,” said Kings sniper Anze Kopitar. “To do it in front of the home crowd, to have my family here, my girlfriend … to do it in front of them and share it with them is unbelievable.”

At the beginning of the third period the LAPD was put on tactical alert.  The Los Angeles Lakers victories had usually always ended in a good old fashioned riot and some looting.  However, the Kings fans showed Los Angeles can have some class.  Most people headed to bars and just kept the party going.  No one was out on the streets overturning cars, setting anything on fire or making mayhem. No embarrassing reports on the national nightly news.

In the only reported incident of significance in the hours after the game, a small group of fans on the south end of downtown threw bottles and tried to rock a city bus, and police fired less-than-lethal rounds to make the group disperse, said LAPD spokeswoman Wendy Reyes. No one was injured.  Only six arrests were made, those being drunken fans fighting amongst themselves.

I made my stops at my neighborhood bars without incident.  In fact, most of the bars were empty, since people had headed home because it was a Monday and there was work tomorrow.

But for the Kings, who can now truly call themselves Stanley Cup Champions, the work is over. All they need to do is sit back and enjoy the victory along with their cool-as-ice fans.

 


 

 

 

 

 

 


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Chest Bursting for Thought! Scott gives us something to think and squirm about with his Alien Prequel

By: Greg Reifsteck — follow on  facebook.com/eotmmoviemaniac @MovieManiacEOTM and twitter

In space….no one can hear you give yourself an Alien abortion.  That should be the marketing tagline for Ridley Scott’s Prometheus, playing off of the tagline for Alien, of which this film is a definitive prequel.

Photo credit: 20th Century Fox Film Corp

Everyone remembers seeing Alien for the first time. I was 1979 and I was 9. I saw it second on a double feature with the cheesy action bomb Megaforce; and after watching a young Barry Bostwick fight off a band of evil mercenaries on a flying motorcycle while wearing a much-too-tight jumpsuit; I was ready for something serious…and scary.

But at that impressionable age I wasn’t prepared for the sublime intensity of Alien.  Sure it starts off slow with its smooth production design by Moebius.  We are introduced to a rag-tag crew of the Nostromo, trying to find what might be at the source of a derelict spacecraft’s homing beacon.

Of course, just when we think the then-untested commercial director Scott has slipped us a mickey and makes us feel all safe, he literally punches us in the chest. He wakes us up screaming with a chest-bursting H.R. Giger-designed beast terrifying enough to that spawn three sequels and two mash ups (none of which Scott participated in).

Fast forward 32 years later, and Scott finally gets his shot at expanding the story the late Dan O’Bannon and his writing partner Ronald Shushett created.  Of course, Scott is an aged man that has gotten a lot headier, and begins Prometheus as a possible Tree of Life for sci-fi fans.

In a very 2001: A Space Odyssey-esque prologue, we are shown a lot of majestic scenery on a planet we are not sure is Earth. Suddenly a pale humanoid being disrobes on a cliff, drinking a dark potion of sorts.  After ingesting it we realize it is bringing decay to his organs.  He vomits profusely and soon falls into the rapids below.  We see his DNA break down into small organisms.  Is this the death or the birth of humankind on another planet? Does this symbolize what will happen to us eventually with the humans on our planet?

Jump cut to 2093 where Elizabeth Shaw (Noomi Rapace), a woman who wears a cross on her chest, is on an archaeological dig with her boyfriend, Charlie Holloway (Logan Marshall-Green) a man of science and Darwinism. They find yet another cave painting with beings looking to the sky at a configuration of round objects.  They are soon on a trillion-dollar mission to find those similar shapes in the sky, aboard the high-tech spacecraft Prometheus.

This is where Scott begins to build the similarities to the original Alien.  Sure they are on a mission in anticipation of finding beings that they hope are there instead of being in fear of what they hope isn’t. But, that is where he lulls us into a sense of safety again.  We are off to find the creators of mankind.  How deadly can they be if they created sentient beings like us, right?

We are introduced to the Prometheus crew, a carbon copy of Norstromo’s similar rag tag group of folks under the thumb of the Weyland Corporation that funded this discovery mission.  They each have their own quirky qualities and agendas for comic relief; but, there is really no time to get to know them because Alien film buffs know they eventually will be chum.

The icy figurehead Meredith Vickers (Charlize Theron) rules the ship, and lets everyone know it with her do-it-or-else stare and quarters that include a grand piano and vodka bar.  She is not there for science.  She is there along with her conniving android “brother” David (Michael Fassbender) to help their dying zillionaire father Peter (Guy Pearce in heavy makeup) meet his possible maker.  After all if you had that much money, power and ego, why wouldn’t you want to meet the only person more powerful than yourself- “God?”

They land on the distant planet after two years of hyper sleep, to find straight lines.  “Human’s don’t make straight lines” they infer, and are soon in a large cavernous temple on the planet’s surface.  Scott and his production team’s eye for technology and production design is once again cutting edge and flawless.

My hate of 3D was again lifted for one more film made by a director masterful enough to integrate it into their design, rather than detract from it. The only other positive experiences were James Cameron’s sensual immersion Avatar and Martin Scorsese’s playful nostalgia Hugo.

The space suits, land rovers and especially the Prometheus ship are sleek and colorful.  They are a wonderfully stark difference from the dingy dark Alien lair.  We are the good guys after all right?

What our heroic couple finds in the temple is astounding.  A large stone head, a large spacecraft and of course a bunch of dead humanoid beings that have our same DNA.  However, we also find what caused their undoing.  A black substance that soon spawns some very horrific and ghastly fates for our crew, as they, of course, drop one by one.

Yes, SPOILER ALERT, blatant visual parallels are made to the Alien film. And we get to see their birth of the beast that haunted our nightmares

Let me just say that the invention of a machine in which you can give yourself surgery is genius.  Watching said surgery (in this case a Caesarian abortion) had me squirming in my seat, thankful that in the present we have specialist for that sort of work.

The performances by everyone are pitch-perfect.  Fassbender of course steals the show, playing David with the right innocence early on, that when we do see his true colors we wince on cue.  Every actor has made a name for himself playing the androids in the franchise: Ian Holm did it in Alien, Lance Henriksen in the souped-up Aliens, and so on.

The only problem comes with the lack of romantic chemistry between our leads. But, we still care for them and their fate and when the carnage begins we wish them both the best.  Rapace’s Shaw is not the new Ripley.  Sure, she stares evil in the face and can run like a maniac with a stomach of surgical staples, but she doesn’t have the snarl and bite that Sigourney Weaver’s character had.

Do we find out makers in Prometheus?  Many stuffy critics have said the end of this film leaves a lot to be desired.  I thought it was perfect.  Scott pulls a brilliant bait and switch, making a grand statement about how too much human curiosity can bite a civilization in the ass. Faith and mystery can be our greatest gift.

As we are reminded when the cold android David is sabotaging the discovery for the blind selfish agenda of his corporate creator Weyland; humans have a soul.  His actions are driven by intelligence and a thirst for knowledge, but there is no desire to drive it in a humanistic and passionate direction.

Prometheus is at its core a horror movie.  One of the staples of the horror genre is that the characters are always expecting to find something miraculous.  With Prometheus, the cynical and British Scott’s vague conclusion to the hypothesis of the meaning of human life is that if you look too hard you will probably end up disappointed.

 

 

 

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SNOW WHITE AND THE HUNTSMAN: A Pretty Damned Boring Fantasy Film

By Greg Reifsteck   @MovieManiacEOTM   facebook.com/MovieManiac

As I walked out of the advance screening of Snow White and the Huntsman, I got nostalgic.  Being a child of the MTV generation, I had a déjà vu moment of leaving the theater after 1985’s Legend, directed by Ridley Scott. Yes, the Ridley Scott that is about to bring the science fiction fan in me to orgasm with the Alien prequel Prometheus when it’s released in a little more than a week.

Credit: Disney

Legend starred Tom Cruise fresh off of being in Ridley’s brother Scott’s blockbuster Top Gun. It was a fantasy yarn in which a man was supposed to stop the Lord of Darkness (Tim Curry) from bringing perpetual  night to the Earth.  The previews had lots of heroic derring-do, and the costumes and special effects looked flawless.  Every time I saw the trailer I thought, “This is the guy who directed Alien and Blade Runner.  There is no way this will be bad.”

The film was a box office bust, and I was very disappointed in the film, because the it was all scenery and not real cohesive plot.  And when there was a plot it dragged.  It was a lesson in the fact that if you do not have a script, all of the window dressing in the world cannot save your film.

Fast forward back to Snow White, that attempts to put a twist on the classic fairy tale by turning the princess into a tragic warrior.  Ravenna (played by Charlize Theron in stone-cold mode) imprisons young Snow White after seducing and killing her father.  Fast forward to teenaged Snow (played by Kristin Stewart in stone-cold mode, you get the idea) who escapes from her cell when Ravenna’s albino-looking brother Finn (Sam Spruell in a damned ugly white wig to boot) tries to seduce her.  This evil family just can’t keep their hands off of anyone.

Soon Ravenna looks into her cool-ass melting mirror, and is told by the spectre that comes out of it, that she is not the fairest of them all.  When she finds out Snow White is, she sends the monosyballic Huntsman (Thor’s beefy Chris Hemsworth) off to kill her, by acknowledging her as only an escaped prisoner.  Of course, Huntsman cannot kill her because he eventually finds out her  true identity and her innocence. The Huntsman instead decides to train her to be a warrior in order to destroy Ravenna and rid the kingdom of the darkness she had brought to it.

Unless you are completely brain dead, I think you can figure out act three.

Newbie director Rupert Sanders has some really beautiful people to use, and never quite knows how to get any of them out of three-expression mode.  Theron, Hemsworth and Stewart are truly dialing it in.  All of them have their serious, fight mode and concerned (aka I look like I just smelled a fart) looks down pat.  But no attempt is made to give any of these characters depth.  They are merely pawns to walk through the chessboard of a script.

The three screenwriters, including The Alamo director John Lee Hancock, make the film a continuous chase.  Snow White and the Huntsman come across an all-woman community in the Dark Forest. We get some chit chat of them oohing and ahhing at Snow.  Suddenly the bad guys led by creepy brother Finn show up slinging arrows, and we have an incoherent battle sequence that they barely escape.

Our heroes come across a colorful land of animals and lame looking sprites.  They just begin to pet them and the arrows come again.  We yawn through another horribly-edited, dark and messy action sequence, with no rhythm or soul.  Lots of shaky camera work attempting to show emotion.

Mutli-Academy Award winning costumer Colleen Atwood gives it her all.  She will be up for an Oscar again with the all-around stunning outfits.  But it is all for naught since they have more character than any of the characters in the film.

The climax is formulaic, and an attempted love triangle between Snow White, the Huntsman and a young childhood crush named William is never resolved.  It is all truly a mess.  Much like Legend was two generations ago, and much like many fantasy films Hollywood makes, and will continue to make.  As long as the studios keep setting up the deal: the stars, the production designer, and the first- time director, without developing the script.

 

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