Rifftrax Takes on Sharknado — One Week Only

Posted on February 18, 2015 at 10:08 am

sharknadoIt’s a perfect combination. Rifftrax, the funniest movie commentary creators of all time, have brought their genius to “Sharknado.” And it is online for just a week. The stars of Mystery Science Theater 3000 give us their thoughts on the social media phenomenon “Sharknado” in “Sharknado: RiffTrax Live.” Join Mike Nelson, Kevin Murphy and Bill Corbett live and onstage at the historic State Theater in Minneapolis as they provide their hilarious commentary to The Asylum’s original shark-filled worldwide sensation in front of a nationwide audience. RiffTrax Live offers non-stop laughs and also includes a live riff of the classic short – “A Case of Spring Fever.”

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Internet, Gaming, Podcasts, and Apps

Two New Books About LOVING Movies

Posted on February 18, 2015 at 8:00 am

Actor/comedian Patton Oswalt (“Ratatouille”) has written a memoir about immersing himself in old movies.  Silver Screen Fiend: Learning About Life from an Addiction to Film is not just about the hundreds of movies he watched; it is about how he used what he saw as a kind of therapeutic education in life.  Oswalt describes this period of his life as a four-year compulsion.  At first, it helps him hide from some of the issues in his life, but then it helps him to understand and confront them.

Over at Last Seat on the Right, my friend Michał Oleszczyk reviews a compilation of answers to the question “What do you love about movies?” The book is What I Love About Movies: An Illustrated Compendium, with answers from egendary directors such as Francis Ford Coppola, the Coen brothers, Wes Anderson, Steven Soderbergh, Pedro Almodovar, Darren Aronofsky, Quentin Tarantino, and Spike Jonze, and A-list acting icons such as Ryan Gosling, Michael Fassbender, Kristen Stewart, Jake Gyllenhaal, and Tom Hardy, all collected over the years by film review and commentary magazine Little White Lies, as they conducted interviews. Oleszczyk writes:

The book’s opening response comes from Francis Ford Coppola, and it is appropriately grand: the maker of Apocalypse Now (1979) states simply that “the human race was waiting for cinema” (p. 21). Darren Aronofsky concurs, pointing to the close-up as “an overlooked great invention of the 20th century” (p. 161), while Viggo Mortensen lives up to his taciturn, if potent, screen persona by offering the single briefest response in the volume: “The places you will go” (p. 101). There’s no denying that there is no great revelation awaiting in the wings of the 50 answers we get (rather predictably, the word “transported” gets the biggest mileage), but it is the very difficulty with defining the central passion of their lives that is most telling in those filmmakers’ responses. Accompanied by lucid, often brilliant reading of their works by the “LWL” writers (the four-member team also incuses Adam Woodward and Sophie Monks Kaufman), the responses enter into exciting friction with the critical writing – as well as with the artwork, which is never less than lively (it is “LWL” tradition that every piece is credited both to the person responsible for the “words” and the one providing the “pictures”).

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Books Film History

Meryl Streep as The Worst Singer Ever and Why We Love Awful Failures

Posted on February 17, 2015 at 3:57 pm

Why is complete artistic failure so fascinating? I’m a huge fan of Epic Fail: Bad Art, Viral Fame, and the History of the Worst Thing Ever by Mark O’Connell, who pays tribute to the “sort of accidental surrealism” of bad art from people who have no idea how bad it is. He describes a mental condition called the Dunning-Kruger effect. “Not only do they reach erroneous conclusions and make unfortunate choices but their incompetence robs them of the inability to realize it.” The people with the lowest competence were also the most likely to overestimate their ability, especially in areas like humor, logic, and grammar. It is kind of the opposite of the Imposter Syndrome, sort of being your own courtier in the story of the Emperor’s New Clothes.

One legendary example of this syndrome was a wealthy woman named Florence Jenkins, who wanted very badly to be a great opera singer but who had a dreadful, off-key voice. Her still-popular recordings include The Glory (????) of the Human Voice. Meryl Streep will be playing Ms. Jenkins in an upcoming film, with Hugh Grant co-starring. Can’t wait to see it. In the meantime, here is the original.

And a reminder of what it is supposed to sound like.

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Actors In Production

The History of The Odd Couple

Posted on February 17, 2015 at 8:00 am

“The Odd Couple” is coming back to television, starring “Friends'” Matthew Perry as the slob and writer/actor Thomas Lennon as the neatnik. The long-running television series starred Tony Randall and Jack Klugman. There have also been versions with a black odd couple, a female odd couple, and even an animated cat and dog odd couple.

But before that, it was a Broadway play and then a movie starring Walter Matthau and Jack Lemmon. And before that, it was kind of a true story.

Neil Simon, the most successful comic playwright of the last half-century, wrote the play based on his brother, comedy writer Danny Simon, who moved in with a friend following his divorce. It may also have been inspired in part by Mel Brooks (who was a writer with both Simon brothers on Sid Caesar’s “Show of Shows”). He also briefly lived with a friend following a divorce. Danny also inspired characters in his brother’s other plays, including “Plaza Suite,” “Laughter on the 23rd Floor,” and “Brighton Beach Memoirs.”

Matthau and Lemmon are ideal as Oscar and Felix, and the movie is well worth putting in your Netflix queue.

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Film History For Your Netflix Queue
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