DVD REVIEW: HUDSON HAWK – SPECIAL EDITION

BUY IT AT AMAZON: CLICK HERE!
STUDIO: Sony
MSRP: $19.94
RATED: R
RUNNING TIME: 100 minutes
SPECIAL FEATURES:
• Director’s commentary by Michael Lehmann
• “The Story of Hudson Hawk” featurette with Bruce Willis
• “My Journey to Minerva” featurette with Sandra Bernhard
• Hudson Hawk trivia track
• Deleted scenes

The Pitch

“Hi, can I speak to Mr. Silver? Hey Joel, it’s Bruce. Remember how you cast me in Die Hard and made me a huge movie star? Well I want to give you something to show you my appreciation. It’s a screenplay called Hudson Hawk, and it’s a sure-fire hit! No no, you can thank me later.”

The Humans

Bruce Willis, Danny Aiello, Andie MacDowell, James Coburn, Sandra Bernhard, David Caruso, and… you guessed it: Frank Stallone

The Nutshell

Master thief Hudson Hawk (Willis) has just been released from a ten-year prison sentence when he and his partner Eddie (Aiello) become wrapped up in a plot to steal three priceless Da Vinci artifacts. Also after the artifacts: A team of CIA operatives named after candy bars (led by James Coburn, with David Caruso as “Kit Kat”); the Mario Brothers crime family (yes, the Mario Brothers), a sadistic and wealthy industrialist husband-and-wife team (and their dog); a knife-wielding British butler with a penchant for bad puns, and a beautiful nun charged with protecting Da Vinci’s secrets. Got all that?


“Wow Bruce, this sunglasses shtick is genius! Do you mind if I use it? For the rest of my career?”

 The Lowdown

You’ve got to hand it to Bruce Willis… he might be a lot of things, but pretentious isn’t one of them. After Die Hard catapulted him from television star to box office behemoth almost overnight, he took advantage of his newfound clout to produce a pet project he’d been working on for over a decade. What was this dream project? Some hard-hitting drama that would tackle serious social and political issues? An adaptation of Willis’s favorite piece of literature, perhaps? No, the film was Hudson Hawk, Bruce Willis’s cinematic ode to Pisans, pratfalls, and porkpie hats. It seems that making Hudson Hawk was a lifelong ambition for Willis: the story goes that years earlier, when Bruce was a struggling actor in New York, he would answer his home phone “Hudson Hawk Productions!”  It says a lot about Willis that, of all things, this was the movie he’d been waiting his entire professional life to make. More power to ya, Bruno.

Willis plays our title character, a master thief who would happily go straight if only his services weren’t in such high demand. After he and his partner Eddie steal a priceless Da Vinci sculpture, they learn that it contains one-third of a mysterious, ancient key. Turns out, this key is the final component of a machine built by Leonardo da Vinci that can transform ordinary lead into solid gold. Soon Eddie and Hawk are off on an adventure too silly to be exciting and too ponderous to be funny; a smug, overly self-aware caper flick full of one-liners so leaden I half-expected to see someone throw the script itself into Da Vinci’s machine. There’s no doubt about it: Hudson Hawk is a bad movie.

 
Ask your doctor if Botox is right for you.

And yet, despite all its flaws – the nonsensical plot, the ham-fisted performances, the desperate, flailing attempts at snappy banter – the movie just tries so damn hard to please that ultimately I can’t help but root for the poor thing. Like the fat kid in the triathlon, you know he won’t succeed but that only makes you pull for the little bastard even more. And like that fat kid, it’s a film that simply isn’t equipped to achieve the goal it sets out to accomplish. It’s precisely this quality that I find so endearing about Hudson Hawk: its gleeful, almost Pollyannaish journey headlong into futility. It’s a movie that simply cannot work under any circumstances, thoroughly lost in a sea of ill-conceived ideas and dead-weight comedy, yet the movie always presses onward valiantly.

Take, for example, the scene where Hawk and Eddie synchronize a museum robbery not with stopwatches but with a song, performing a two-man musical number in the middle of a heist. It’s such a bizarre concept that I, for one, can’t imagine a scenario where this scene plays. A wiser director would’ve scrapped the idea in pre-production, knowing full well that it would never work. But Hudson Hawk is a film that truly believes it can pull off the preposterous, and although the scene predictably falls flat on its face, you have to admire the effort. There’s something so optimistic about a film that willingly attempts the unachievable. After all, watching a movie try and fail is much more interesting than watching a movie not try at all.

 
I’ve heard of explosive diarrhea, but this is ridiculous.

That’s not to imply that I enjoyed Hudson Hawk on an ironic level; laughing at this movie would seem far too cruel. On the other hand, it’s equally impossible to enjoy on its own terms. Yet there’s still a part of me that enjoys Hudson Hawk. Why? Is it pity? Honestly, I think I just like the idea that this movie exists. I like the idea that this sort of batshit-crazy flick can get made in Hollywood. Hell, they’re still getting made: Southland Tales, for example. Love ‘em or hate ‘em, I’m glad I live in a world where insane, nonsensical vanity projects can be forced through the Hollywood system without anyone stopping long enough to point out that they make no fucking sense whatsoever. If ever there was proof that the auteur theory is true, for better and for worse, this is it.

If it seems like I’m contorting myself into knots to give Hudson Hawk a positive review, you can consider me guilty as charged. I know that Hudson Hawk sucks. This fact is indisputable. Yet somehow I like the movie anyway. I’ve tried my best to explain my reasons, if only for my own edification. But the truth of the matter is, even I’m baffled by my own fondness for Hudson Hawk. The movie is the very definition of a guilty pleasure, fascinating to watch in the same way that the ramblings of a schizophrenic are fascinating: None of it makes sense, but you know that it makes sense to him. The fun comes from trying to rearrange those incoherent fragments into something vaguely resembling the original intent of its creator. Maybe it’s unfair to compare the creative output of Bruce Willis to the delirious ravings of a madman, but if the porkpie fits…

 
Armed goon or no armed goon, one cannot resist the come-hither gaze of Frank Stallone.

The Package

If you love indignation and defensiveness in your bonus materials, then Hudson Hawk is the DVD for you!

First off is the director’s commentary by Michael Lehmann, who spends the entire track making excuses for the film, along with its poor performance at the box office and its unanimously negative critical reception. Apparently it was the audience’s expectations that torpedoed Hudson Hawk at the box office, not the quality of the film. They were expecting another Die Hard, and instead they got this. If only the audience would expect the movie to be awful like they’re supposed to, then they wouldn’t be so disappointed all the time…

There are two short featurettes about the making of Hudson Hawk: the first is a sit-down with Bruce Willis and executive producer Robert Kraft, Bruce’s old friend from his early days. The piece has almost nothing to do with the movie at all – the two of them sit around a piano and sing, reminisce about old times, and occasionally mention something about the movie before going back to reminiscing. The two of them look so reluctant to talk about the movie, you almost feel like they insisted that a piano be in the room during the interview so they’d have something to distract them. The second featurette is a bizarre interview/performance by Sandra Bernhard about her experience playing the billionaire villainess Minerva that’s mostly a self-promotional monologue that has very little to do with anything, let alone the film.

Finally there’s the Hudson Hawk trivia track, which serves up useless pieces of information that can all be found with a simple Google search. Did you know that Danny Aiello’s first acting role was in Bang the Drum Slowly? Well now you know, thanks to the Hudson Hawk trivia track! Thank God it exists to tell you these things.


“Stop the movie, I wanna get off!”

 5.8 out of 10






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JULES DASSIN STEALS AWAY AT 96

The great American director Jules Dassin has succumbed to a surfeit of life at the age of ninety-six, barely one week after the passing of his Night and the City lead, Richard Widmark, and some fourteen years after losing the love of his life, Melina Mercouri.  The shameless deification of Ms. Mercouri (in Never on Sunday) earned Dassin his first and only Academy Award nomination for Best Director (and made him an art house favorite amongst those who really didn’t like art house movies), but it is the tough, unsentimental, London-bound collaboration with Mr. Widmark to which we look when we wish to recall Dassin’s bruising noir realism.  The brilliance of 1950’s Night and the City was presaged over a three-year span via Brute Force, The Naked City and Thieves’ Highway (which features one of Lee J. Cobb’s most memorable screen performances), but Dassin had to travel abroad to realize it, as he was soon to be blacklisted for his brief dalliance with the Communist Party; in fact, Dassin’s position was so tenuous that 20th Century Fox mogul Darryl F. Zanuck urged the filmmaker to shoot the most expensive sequences first, which would essentially push the studio all-in on finishing the picture. This situation clearly wore on Dassin: whereas his previous films evinced a profound disappointment in humanity, the HUAC tussle brought out an active loathing.  Indeed, Night and the City may be the most pessimistic movie ever financed by a major studio (prior to 1967). 

Amazingly, Dassin got most of the bile out of his system with that one film; his next work, the masterful Rififi, is positively buoyant in comparison (even though it ends… eh, I’ll not spoil it for those who’ve yet to experience its glories).  Of Rififi, Francois Truffaut raved, “Out of the worst crime novels I
have ever read, Jules Dassin has made the best crime film I have ever
seen.”
It’s hard enough to argue with an authority like that, even
harder when you behold Dassin’s meticulously crafted centerpiece: a
twenty-eight-minute heist sequence that unfolds in almost total silence.  That one scene basically spawned the modern heist film (see Roger Donaldson’s The Bank Job for the latest iteration); fifty-three years later, it’s yet to be surpassed.

If you’re suddenly inspired to catch up on Dassin’s filmography, make sure you get everything from Brute Force to Rififi out of the way before you go sampling his later frivolities (the best of which is easily Topkapi); I’m afraid that one viewing of Phaedra could put you off the Dassin’s cinema for good.  Whatever.  You can’t fault a man for being in love, especially when he left behind so much else to cherish. 






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THE SPECIAL EDITION – 03.31.08

It’s a pretty slow week for DVD releases, with only one top-of-the-line release hitting shelves.

Sweeney Todd – The Demon Barber of Fleet Street
d. Tim Burton
c. Johnny Depp, Helena Bonham Carter, Alan Rickman

  • Single-Disc Edition
  • Featurette: Burton + Depp + Carter = Todd – A behind-the-scenes looks at the collaboration of Tim Burton with Johnny Depp and Helena Bonham Carter featuring exclusive footage from rehearsals, recording sessions and more.
  • Two-Disc Special Edition
  • Featurette: Burton + Depp + Carter = Todd – A behind-the-scenes looks at the collaboration of Tim Burton with Johnny Depp and Helena Bonham Carter featuring exclusive footage from rehearsals, recording sessions and more.
  • Sweeney Todd is Alive: The Real History of the Demon Barber
  • Musical Mayhem: Sondheim’s Sweeney Todd
  • Sweeney’s London
  • The Making of Sweeney Todd The Demon Barber of Fleet Street
  • Grand Guignol: A Theatrical Tradition
  • Designs for a Demon Barber
  • A Bloody Business
  • The Razor’s Refrain
  • Sweeney Todd Press Conference, November 2007
  • Moviefone Unscripted with Tim Burton and Johnny Depp
  • Theatrical Trailer
  • Photo Gallery

Who else but Tim Burton could convince a studio to finally make the theatrical version of the Broadway musical adaptation of the British play based on the mid 19th century legend of a murderous barber who slices the throats of clients and then passes them on to his partner in crime to bake into meat pies. This ain’t your daddy’s musical. In a year with fluffy sing-song films such as Enchanted we get a musical about a serial killer with the songs warbled by one Johnny Depp, who continued in his quest to never look remotely human (of course that changes in this year’s Public Enemies, where he looks – dare I say – normal?). The American version apparently contained an edited ending that differs from the International version, and cuts out a lot of the splattering of blood and destruction to achieve an R-rating. I have not seen any news of which version will be on the DVD, only assuming it will be the U.S. version that remains since nothing is being said of an Unrated version. There is a single disc and a double disc edition, but there will not be a High Def edition yet, as it was one of the scheduled HD-DVD discs that were cancelled when the format was shit canned.

Alvin and the Chipmunks
d. Tim Hill
c. Jason Lee, Alvin, Simon and Theodore

  • Single-Disc and Blu-ray Editions
  • Chip-Chip-Hooray! Chipmunk History
  • Hitting the Harmony featurettes.
  • Two-Disc Special Edition
    Digital Copy download feature – allows viewers to quickly and easily download a digital version of the film to a Mac or Windows-based PC computer and then transfer to select portable video devices including an iPod and/or iPhone
  • Behind the Nuts Munkumentary featurette
  • Chip-Chip-Hooray! Chipmunk History featurette
  • Hitting the Harmony featurette
  • “Witch Doctor” Music Video
  • Two exclusive iTunes music downloads – “Get Munk’d (DeeTown Remix)” and “Get You Goin’ (DeeTown Funk Remix)”
  • Inside Look at Horton Hears a Who

Hmm. I don’t know how popular this DVD will be around these parts, but I know I will be picking it up for two reasons. The first is the fact that my wife still giggles like a little kid whenever she hears the Chipmunks talk and sing. Hell, I have to buy the Best Buy version so she can get the plush toys. But the second reason has to do with me. When I was a kid, I loved the Chipmunks. I still have the Chipmunk Rock and Chipmunk Christmas vinyl albums from when I was a kid. Hell, I could still sing along with Momma’s Don’t Let You Babies Grow Up to be Chipmunk Cowboys. We bought the Chipmunk Christmas DVD last year and I still enjoyed it, so whatever. Second, I love me some Jason Lee. The former skater, turned Kevin Smith superstar, turned white trash Earl is still high on my list whenever he appears in a movie. So, that’s about it. There are three editions, a single and double disc as well as a Blu-ray edition. The single disc is one of those shitty flip discs with the widescreen on one side and the full screen on the other. The Blu-ray edition only includes what is on the single disc, ignoring the double-disc special features. Nuts to that.

Unbreakable [Blu-ray]
d. M. Night Syamalan
c. Bruce Willis, Samuel Jakcson

Lots of people hate them some M. Night lately. After breaking out with the very solid The Sixth Sense, he followed up with the polarizing Unbreakable. The film, which plays as a super hero origin story might be his best film to date. I am sure lots of you will say that ain’t hard to do, but Signs was pretty popular when it came out and it wasn’t until he turned people off with The Village that people backlashed against his prior output. Fuck that. Unbreakable has been accused of being a super hero movie with no action, and therefore a failure. I think that would make the people who say that look boring and a little retarded. At its center is a story of two men, one almost super human and the other fragile and weak. The story is about the development of these men and studies the differences between the two as it relates to their place in the world. It is a really solid little film and deserves none of the backlash that Night’s other flicks have gotten. I have the great Vista Series edition, so I’ll probably skip this, but if you have completely made the switch to High Def or don’t own this one yet, I say give it a shot.

Also Available in Blu-ray
   

Fear House
d. Michael R. Morris
c. Kiersten Hall, Matthew Montgomery, Monique La Barr

For this week’s edition of “Let’s see if we can find a midnight movie to watch,” I look at Fear House. The plot is as follows (from Amazon): “Relatives and colleagues of reclusive writer Samantha Ballard track her to an isolated house in the California desert where they discover a traumatized Samantha. She greets them with the grim announcement that they will die if they attempt to leave the house. After Samantha’s ex-husband and his girlfriend suffer horrible deaths while trying to escape, the others realize that she was serious.” Ok, with that out of the way, the cast is a mishmash of DTV actors such as Kiersten Hall (from the AWFUL Dorm of the Dead), Matthew Montgomery (Long Term Relationship) and Monique Le Barr (666: The Beast). It’s directed by Michael R. Morris, who served as a Production Assistant on Children of the Corn III (his job description might have been to protect director James D.R. Hickox from actual Stephen King fans who were attempting a ritual sacrifice of their own to stop the bleeding of that “franchise.”) Any good word? Not really. It apparently has really bad dialogue and the story is kind of ridiculous, but it’s got gore, so I won’t recommend it, but if you like to watch bad horror movies you might want to give it a look. Or you could watch . . .

Eye of the Beast
d. Gary Yates
c. James Van Der Beek

This one has an automatic advantage over Fear House because there is an actual famous actor in it. Dawson himself, James Van Der Beek stars in this movie that clearly stars a sea creature that rips a man in half! Unfortunatly it is a TV Movie, so how graphic can it really be? It is also directed by the man who led Gary Busey into battle with a killer tiger in Maneater, so there’s that. The plot goes like this: “After several locals disappear off the coast on Fells Island, a small fishing community in the North Atlantic, terrified survivors claim the existence of a Giant Squid. A group of courageous seafarers venture into the dangerous waters themselves to kill the creature before it makes a feast of the entire island.” Reviews claim it is better than most giant squid movies, but once again, is one of those bad horror movies for a late night with the guys. Or you could try . . .

The Return of Swamp Thing
d. Jim Wynorski
c. Heather Locklear, Dick Durock

In 1982, Wes Craven adapted the popular comic book character The Swamp Thing into a fairly entertaining movie with Dick Durock as the Swamp Thing battling the evil Dr. Arcane (Louis Jourdan) while trying to reconnect with his girlfriend (Adrienne Barbeau). Seven years later, Jim Wynorski (who gained some popularity with his Bare Wench Project franchise) directed the sequel. Durock and Jourdan took time out of their busy schedules to return (Durock was in Octopussy during those seven years while Durock returned to stunt work). Barbeau would not return however, being replaced by the future Mrs. Richie Sambora, Heather Locklear. This was, of course, following her tremendous success as Officer Stacy Sheridon on T.J. Hooker and during her starring role as Sammy Jo Dean Carrington on Dynasty. Just proves that banging the guitarist of Bon Jovi and drummer of Motley Crue before eventually loving Chachi could make you a bigger persona than Melrose Place and Spin City combined.

TELEVISION on DVD

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Law and Order: Special Victims Unit – The Sixth Year
Martin – The Complete Fourth Season
Father Knows Best: Season One
That ’70s Show – Season 8
Doctor Who – The Time Warrior (Episode 70)
Doctor Who – Timelash (Episode 142)
Becker – The First Season

The Tomorrow Show With Tom Snyder
John from Cincinnati – The Complete First Season
New Street Law – The Complete Second Season
Gene Simmons Family Jewels: The Best of Seasons 1 and 2

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The Osmonds Live in Las Vegas 50th Anniversary 2 DVD Collector’s Edition
The Bette Davis Collection, Vol. 3 (The Old Maid / All This, And Heaven Too / The Great Lie / In This Our Life / Watch on the Rhine / Deception)
The Cutting Edge – Chasing the Dream

Terry Jones: Medieval Lives
The Curse of King Tut’s Tomb: The Complete Miniseries
10.5 Apocalypse: The Complete Miniseries
Harold and Kumar Go to White Castle (Extreme Unrated Edition)
Ring of Honor: Bloodstained Honor

Ring of Honor: Stars of Honor
What Love Is

The Cook
Country Matters

Kaos
The Chipmunk Adventure
Alvin & The Chipmunks Go To The Movies – Funny We Shrunk The Adults

The Island on Bird Street
Christie’s Revenge
Believe In Me (Director’s Edition)
Mayhem Motel

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ERIC STOLTZ GETS MILK

Gus Van Sant’s Milk, about the life and murder of Harvey Milk, is one of my more anticipated upcoming films. The casting so far has been amazing: Sean Penn as Milk, Emile Hirsch, James Franco, Josh Brolin and Diego Luna co-starring. Now an extra on the San Francisco set of the film drops us a line to tell us about another actor who will be appearing in what sounds like a smaller role:

Tom Ammiano in MILK is being played by Eric Stoltz. That’s not out
yet, I
don’t think.


He shot his scenes here in SF, with Sean Penn, in the final
week of

the shoot.

Ammiano, of course, was a long supporter of Harvey
– and himself

was gay (and worked as a school teacher).

This hasn’t
been reported yet, I don’t believe.


I believe his scenes take place a few
years after Milk’s death in

the movie.

Thanks.

‘W’

IMDB lists Ammiano playing himself in the movie, but I wonder if he’s going to play himself in some kind of bookend thing. Maybe ‘W’ is confused about where Stoltz plays Ammiano; it would make sense for him to play Ammiano as a younger man, when he was San Francisco’s first openly gay school teacher, while the real Ammiano could be playing himself in an epilogue.






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INDY SWINGS INTO YOUR TV

I knew it was bound to happen sooner or later, but I guess I assumed we would have a couple more weeks before the Indy IV television-marketing blitz began to fire up its engine.

As it so often happens, my assumption was wrong, and a new TV spot hit the Web this weekend.  This means that for the next two months the Paramount marketing machine is going to beat us over the head with/shove down our throats/ anally rape us with slightly different spots playing during every commercial break for everything we watch.

There isn’t a whole lot of new stuff in here, but there is new stuff, which is why it’s newsworthy. I don’t have anything else to say.

Here it is in HD, and those without awesome computers can check out this smaller version.






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X-FILES 2 TEASER ONE-SHEET STUFFED WITH SPOILERS

I realize that a version of this poster leaked last week, but this final, hi-res copy is just different enough to merit its posting.  As you can see, it’s the most revelatory piece of advertising, official or unofficial*, that Carter & Co. have released to date!  Scroll down if you dare!

*Remember those werewolf pictures?  I’m hearing that was a complete put-on.






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MOS DEF INVENTS ROCK N' ROLL

Cadillac Records, the movie about Leonard Chess and his Chess Records, continues to add cool people to the cast, which already includes Jeffrey Wright as Muddy Waters and Adrien Brody as Chess. The latest addition is Mos Def, who will be playing Chuck Berry – the guy who essentially invented rock ‘n roll*.

I keep waiting for Mos to have that break out role, the one that really validates all the love I have for him; he’s had plenty of roles that did that for me personally (his Ford Prefect, for example), but I don’t think he’s yet had one that does that for the general populace.

Also joining the cast is Gabrielle Union, who will be playing Muddy Waters’ girlfriend. I’m pretty psyched for this movie, and hoping to see some good images soon.

*Or who stole it from Marty McFly. It’s up to you, I guess.






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JOE DANTE'S INFERNO TAKES LOS ANGELES

The New Beverly in Los Angeles has brought us film festivals programmed by Quentin Tarantino, Edgar Wright and Eli Roth. Now they’re playing host to one of the great filmmakers of the last thirty years, Joe Dante, and his festival – called Dante’s Inferno – promises heaps of rare and obscure gems for the true fans in the Los Angeles area (or the really hardcore who fly in!). The festival runs from April 9 to April 22nd, and includes one mystery movie and one cinema experience you are unlikely to ever have in your life again. Here’s what Joe has to say about the films he’s programmed:

“April 9 + 10 MONDO CANE and ZULU

It’s hard to imagine today
the impact this tawdry but fascinating Italian “shockumentary” had on
the world in 1962, when the bizarre customs of people in other lands
seemed both exotic and horrifying to Western eyes. Its smash success
spawned a whole genre of mostly phony Mondo movies, each outdoing the
other for pure sleaze, which lasted into the 80s and paved the way for
something much more upsetting: Reality TV.


ZULU is simply one
of the great historical epics ever–100 stuff-upper-lip British
soldiers battle 4000 Zulu warriors in a beautifully staged reenactment
of the 1879 Battle of Roarke’s Drift. John Barry should have won (but
didn’t) an Oscar for his brilliant score. The cast, led by producer
Stanley Baker, is terrific, but the great Nigel Green steals the show
as the consummate side-whiskered, mustached Victorian Sergeant-Major.
With Jack Hawkins, James Booth, Patrick Magee and a very young Michael
Caine, whose work here got him THE IPCRESS FILE.


April 11 + 12 HOLLYWOOD BOULEVARD and TRUCK TURNER

We
called it “Day For Nothing” when we made it (shot in ten days around
footage from 12 other movies on a bet with Roger Corman). One of the
last of New World Pictures’ popular “three girl” drive-in movies where
pretty girls doff their duds and chase around non-permitted LA
locations. The late great Candice Rialson plays a version of herself as
a naive Indiana girl trying to make it in scuzzy 70s Hollywood. Pulled
from 42nd Street after two days, it seems to have survived as a cult
movie. It’s certainly an accurate record of what it was like to make a
New World Picture. Producer Jon Davison, co-director Allan Arkush and
stars Mary Woronov and Dick Miller are scheduled to appear.


TRUCK
TURNER, which came out late in the blaxploitation game, got lost in the
Hollywood shuffle but it’s as dazzling a piece of action filmmaking as
the 70s had to offer. Isaac Hayes is a bounty hunter on the trail of a
big-time pimp whose vengeful, bitch-slapping squeeze is played by Star
Trek’s Nichelle Nichols! Along for the violent ride are Yaphet Kotto,
Alan Weeks, Scatman Crothers, Sam Laws and Dick Miller. One of the
overlooked gems of the decade from director Jonathan Kaplan (HEART LIKE
A WHEEL), who will introduce the film.


April 13, 14, 15 THE SADIST and CONFESSIONS OF AN OPIUM EATER

Fairway-International
was a tiny company specializing in grade-C drive-in movies like WILD
GUITAR and EEGAH! But from such unlikely soil springs a chilling
surprise! James Landis’ intense 1963 drive-in classic is based on the
same true crime story as BADLANDS– the serial killing exploits of
Charles Starkweather and his underage girlfriend. Brutally unfolding in
Real Time over 94 taut minutes, mad killer Arch Hall Jr. terrorizes our
small cast in a junkyard — maybe the best-photographed junkyard ever,
courtesy of the great Vilmos Zsigmond, who will appear in person on the
15th.


CONFESSIONS OF AN OPIUM EATER is the greatest work of
exploitation king Albert Zugsmith (SEX KITTENS GO TO COLLEGE)–a
triumphantly surreal parade of seemingly inexplicable images starring a
deliriously miscast Vincent Price as an aphorism-spouting soldier of
fortune trying to get the lowdown on a girls-for-sale ring in turn of
the century Chinatown. Price, who has probably consumed more drugs
onscreen than anyone except Bela Lugosi, goes on a trip in this one
that you won’t soon forget. With Philip Ahn, Richard Loo, Lisa Lu and
every Asian actor in town. As you might imagine, they don’t make ’em
like this anymore.


April 16 + 17 THE SECRET INVASION and TOMB OF LIGEIA

This
scenic WWII epic, shot in Yugoslavia in 1964, is one of Roger Corman’s
least-seen yet most accomplished films, with essentially the same plot
as THE DIRTY DOZEN — which wasn’t made until three years later!
Stewart Granger, Mickey Rooney, Edd Byrnes, Henry Silva and Raf Vallone
are felons recruited for a mission to rescue an Italian general from
behind enemy lines. Roger used this story idea in his first movie, FIVE
GUNS WEST. I haven’t seen this since it came out!


TOMB OF
LIGEIA was the last of Corman’s popular series of Edgar Allan Poe
adaptations, but unlike the others it has many beautiful English
countryside exteriors and mostly departs from the stylized stage-bound
unreality of its forebears. Robert Towne (CHINATOWN) wrote the script
in a more romantic vein, thinking Richard Chamberlain would play the
lead–but AIP intervened and sure enough, Vincent Price took over.


April 18 + 19 WRONG IS RIGHT and Mystery Movie

When
Richard Brooks’ star-studded adaptation of Charles McCarry’s spy novel
The Better Angels came out in 1982 it was roundly dismissed as a
confused jumble. From the hindsight of 2008, it looks like the
STRANGELOVE of its era. So many aspects of this film have come true,
it’s up there with NETWORK as a predictor of the future, our sorry
present. Sean Connery stars as a globe-trotting tv reporter who’s
tracking a terrorist dealing nuclear weapons in the mideast. Along the
way we meet a President who goes to war to boost his ratings, a
(Condi-like) Vice President, CIA and FBI figures who are so broadly
caricatured they seemed divorced from reality in 1982– but who closely
resemble figures we now see on the news every day! Suffice it to say
the climax involves the World Trade Center. One of the all-star
ensemble will join us–John Saxon!


Plus another movie in the same vein TBA with guest

April 20 + 21 BLOOD ON SATAN’S CLAW and HORROR EXPRESS

Piers
Haggard’s atmospheric and beautifully photographed (Dick Bush) entry in
the burn-the-witches genre benefits from a prolonged sense of dread,
literate dialog and an unusually convincing period flavor — sort of a
Masterpiece Theater horror film. When hairy patches of “satan’s skin”
start cropping up on the bodies of nubile 17th century teenagers, local
judge Patrick Wymark intervenes, starting with voluptuous teen
temptress Linda Hayden. Less well known than the same studio’s earlier
WITCHFINDER GENERAL, but equally effective, with more emphasis on the
supernatural. Great score by Marc Wilkinson.


I love train
movies. HORROR EXPRESS was made because the producers had access to the
train models from NICHOLAS AND ALEXANDRA. One of my very favorite
vehicles (get it?) for Christopher Lee and Peter Cushing, this
Spanish-made extravaganza (also known as Panic on the Trans-Siberian
Express) has it all — good characters, lots of wry humor, a mad monk,
a mysterious countess, a prehistoric fossilized monster alien, eyeballs
in a jar, Telly Savalas as a bellicose Cossack (it’s 1906) and a
surprisingly complex science fiction plot. And I left out the zombies!
Seriously, this one of my top favorites of all time.


April 22 THE MOVIE ORGY

This
the first, one nite only public showing in many years of my first
project. In 1968 when “camp” was king, Jon Davison and I put together a
counterculture compendium of 16mm bits and pieces (tv show openings,
commercials, parts of features, old serials etc.), physically spliced
them in ironic juxtapositions and ran the result at the Philadelphia
College of Art interspersed with parts of a Bela Lugosi serial. The
reaction was phenomenal. This led to The Movie Orgy, a 7-hour marathon
of old movie clips and stuff with a crowd-pleasing anti-war,
anti-military, anti-establishment slant that played the Fillmore East
and on college campuses all over the country for years — always the
one print. We called it a 2001-splice odyssey. We kept adding and
subtracting material over time so this, alas, is not the original
version– it’s the later cutdown, running a mere 4 hours and 19
minutes! But it’s still a pop time capsule that will bring many a
nostalgic chuckle from baby boomers and dazed expressions of WTF?! from
anyone else.”

For more info, visit the New Beverly website right here.






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KI KI KI, MA MA MA. KI KI KI, MEARS MEARS MEARS

I have Peter M. Bracke’s Crystal Lake Memories book as my current bathroom reading; it’s a fascinating and pretty honest look at the making of the Friday the 13th films. I just finished reading the section on The Final Chapter and there’s a story about the stuntman who played Jason in that film, Ted White, demanding that his name be taken off the credits. He apparently thought it was a statement about how unhappy he was with the film, but as the producers say, the only person who cares about Ted White’s credit in that movie is Ted White.

So yeah, who cares who’s playing Jason. Still, it’s neat to see the guy who is going to be the next iteration of the most enduring slasher of them all, and this time the guy is Derek Mears, a ginormous actor and stuntman who is apparently also a big horror geek. Nice casting!

I’m actually sort of stoked about the new Friday the 13th. It’s undeniable that I love this series, but I also understand it – these films are, in the end, cynical exploitationers that exist only to have cool kills. The movies were never a labor of love, as right from the beginning Sean Cunningham was just desperate to get a movie made and had a great idea for a title but nothing else, so he put an ad in Variety with that title, hoping to get bites from financers and did he ever. Plus, this series has been hopelessly destroyed by its own endlessly bizarre continuity, so the idea of not quite rebooting or remaking any of the films but rather setting it in the golden era of F13 – sometime around parts 3 and 4, where Jason has the hockey mask but is not yet a zombie* – appeals to me.

*And yes, I know that there is zero room between 3 and 4 for this, but whatevs.






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STEVE MARTIN & DIANE KEATON PISS ON YOUR GOODWILL

A telling ‘graph from Variety’s story on the purported “family comedy”, One Big Happy:

“[Diane] Keaton was last seen in the comedies Mama’s Boy and Mad Money. [Steve] Martin next stars in Pink Panther 2.”

Whisper words of wisdom, let it be.

What’s sad is that “a comic pitch” from the creators of Party of Five, Chris Keyser and Amy Lippman, is actually a major step up from the uninspired rubbish Martin and Keaton have been persistently wallowing in over the last decade.  I understand cashing in a little, but when an otherwise brilliant career devolves into an uninterrupted string of paycheck gigs… it’s sad.  And while Keyser and Lippman aren’t awful writers in the least (says the guy who watched Party of Five for most of its run), their creative ceiling would be something like The Family Stone (if they’re playing way over their heads: Parenthood). 

The apparently gangbusters premise of One Big Happy is, according to Variety, “being kept under wraps”.  All we know is that it entails “a couple and a family reconnecting amid various obstacles”, which makes it sound like On Golden Pond meets Scavenger Hunt.  The sad thing is, I’d pay to see that.  More than once if they successfully finagle a Richard Benjamin cameo. 

Paramount paid somewhere in the high six-figure range for One Big Happy, but it’s not clear yet who’ll direct (Keyser is prepping his own feature, so maybe Lippman?).  John Goldwyn and Lorne Michaels are set to produce. 






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