Scott Pilgrim vs. The World

Scott Pilgrim vs. The World

Posted on November 2, 2010 at 10:00 am

Director Edgar Wright’s latest movie is based on the popular series of graphic novels about Scott Pilgrim, an often-clueless, out of work musician who falls for a girl named Ramona and has to fight her seven evil exes in a mode that is half superhero, half computer game. In other words, it’s a Comic-Con Quadrella.

Those who were born before 1980, don’t recognize gamer terms, and are easily confused by a cuddle puddle of comics, Bollywood, indie music, and the omni-connectedness of the 2010’s, will either find this an imaginative anthropological journey or an unintelligibly precious mish-mash of smug self-awareness. Those who are in the right age group will either find it uniquely speaking to their own sense of alienation mixed with a boundary-less
hive-mind ultimate oversharing — or an unintelligibly precious mish-mash of smug self-awareness.

I thought it was cute and funny and surprisingly sweet. Director Edgar Wright (“Shawn of the Dead” and “Hot Fuzz”) tells the story with great energy and imagination, incorporating an pan-media range of story-telling techniques. When Scott has a realization, Wright has a quick cut to a parking meter with a needle that swings from the red “no clue” to the green “gets it.” Another character’s feelings are expressed when the pink, fluffy word L-O-V-E wafts in Scott’s direction.

Scott Pilgrim (Michael Cera, of course) is a nice if somewhat clueless guy whose cluelessness is tolerated and sometimes enabled by his roommate Wallace (Kieran Culkin, employing a terrific, seen-it-all-and-finds-it-amusing deadpan), his fellow band mates (Sex Bob Omb, and his high school girlfriend Knives (Ellen Wong). Yes, her name is Knives and she is his high school girlfriend not because he met her in high school but because she is in high school. What do they do together? “She tells me about how yearbook club went and once we almost held hands on the bus.”

And then Scott sees Ramona (Mary Elizabeth Winstead) and in a time-honored tradition that goes back even before Hot Pockets and Nintendo, love will make him braver, stronger, and able to consider the feelings of others for pretty much the first time in his slackery life.

But first he has to fight her seven evil ex-boyfriends, I mean exes. Each one is a physical manifestation of anyone’s insecurities in a new relationship. Will he be strong and brave enough for her? Pure enough? Successful enough? What have they got that he hasn’t got? On the way to understanding, I felt big, pink, fluffy L-O-V-E wafting from me toward the screen.

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Action/Adventure Based on a book Comic book/Comic Strip/Graphic Novel Date movie Fantasy Musical Romance

Interactive Trailer for ‘Scott Pilgrim vs. The World’

Posted on August 8, 2010 at 8:00 am

This trailer for the “epic of epic epicness” is interactive — you can click on the screen to get points and find out facts about the movie, for example, how they got that amazing shot where Michael Cera throws an Amazon package over his shoulder and it hits the wastebasket. Thanks to Keith Demko of Reel Fanatic for this!

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Trailers, Previews, and Clips
Comic-Con!

Comic-Con!

Posted on July 23, 2010 at 12:03 am

IMG_9884.jpgMy visit to Comic-Con 2010 began with a press conference for one of the most celebrated and anticipated films previewing here, the long-awaited sequel to the pioneering 1982 Disney film, about people getting sucked into computers, “Tron.” Steven Lisberger, who wrote and directed the original, told us that the first film was about what they anticipated computers could bring about; this one recognizes that audiences are only too aware of how pervasive computers have become in our lives. Stars Jeff Bridges and Bruce Boxleitner were there to compare the experience of acting in the first to the new one. The suits in this one are high-tech, molded around each actor’s body, threaded with fiber optics that light up (and create a buzz that drove the audio technicians crazy). After actor Michael Sheen (“Underworld,” “New Moon,” “Frost/Nixon”) described the way that even the actors would be so amazed by the glowing light from the suits they would forget to start acting, Boxleitner pointed out that in the original film, their wardrobe was “spandex and magic marker.” Jeff Bridges had something to add: “And dance belts!”
IMG_9886.JPGThen I met with Robert Popper and Peter Serafinowicz, creators and stars of the cult comedy hit British television series, Look Around You, shown on The Cartoon Network’s “Adult Swim” and out on DVD for the first time this week. “Our show is such a weird, weird show,” Serafinowicz said happily. “It’s creepy and bleak and not much happens and it is very slow.” “It’s super-surreal,” agreed Popper. Inspired by the over-serious and under-engrossing science films they saw in school when they were kids, Popper and Serafinowicz created hilariously demented parodies, with white-coated scientists explaining how ants build igloos, for example. Their affection for Monty Python and “Police Squad” is evident in the free-form looniness of the shows. And the DVD release has extra commentaries from some of the show’s biggest fans, including Michael Cera and Jonah Hill.
Later, I attended a panel discussion on “The Expendables,” written and directed by Sylvester Stallone and featuring just about every action star he could find. He appeared, along with co-stars Dolph Lundgren, Ultimate Fighting Champion Randy Couture, WWE’s Steve Austin, and former football player Terry Crews — plus a surprise appearance from Bruce Willis, who is in one scene in the film along with Arnold Schwarzenegger.
They talked about filming in Brazil, where they were allowed to use more explosives than permitted in the US, and about getting banged up in the stunts and fight scenes. Stallone, whose neck was broken by Austin in filming, said he did not mind getting hurt making films. “I didn’t get hurt in ‘Rhinestone’ or ‘Stop or My Mom Will Shoot,” and those did not turn out well.”
Couture told us that his biggest challenge was the very first scene filmed, a monologue he worked hard to memorize and to develop his acting skills. And then, when he arrived on the set, Stallone had rewritten it and given him a different monologue instead. Lundgren said what was hardest for him was the scene where he had to tell a joke. Stallone made him do it over and over — and then used the first take. Crews and Austin told the crowd about some explosives that went off faster and closer than they expected. “There’s no such thing as movie fire,” Crews told us. It was real and it was dangerous. The clips they showed were every bit as exciting (and gory) as anticipated.
But perhaps no film is as Comic-Con-friendly as next month’s “Scott Pilgrim vs. The World,” described on the poster as “an epic of epic epicness,” and based on the popular series of graphic novels. Director Edgar Wright brought a dozen of his stars including Brandon Routh, Alison Pill, Mary Elizabeth Winstead, and Michael Cera, who wore, throughout the entire presentation, a Captain America costume. It had nothing to do with the movie, but it was fun to see. The crowd went wild over introductory clips to show us all of the characters and nearly levitated out of their seats when Wright told us that he was going to show the entire film. I was not one of the lucky ones selected to be walked over to the theater with Wright, but can’t wait to see the movie.
IMG_9954.JPGI have also enjoyed my visits to the Exhibition Hall, filled with every possible kind of display for every possible kind of product relating to what the Comic-Con folks call “the popular arts,” including games, collectibles, books, movies, television shows, DVDs, original art, t-shirts, and, yes, comics, plus people to help you store, organize, and insure your collection. I had a nice talk with Dino Andrade, a voice-over actor (“Pop” in the Rice Krispies commercials, the Scarecrow in “Arkham Asylum”) who founded an online dating service for Comic-Con types called Soul Geek. It is a tribute to his late wife,
Mary Kay Bergman, who provided all of the female voices for “South Park” until she died in 1999 at age 38. He spoke to me very movingly about what they had shared and his hope of creating a place where other geeks, freaks, and fanboys and girls could find each other.
I also saw the first episode of “Nikita,” a new television series based on “La Femme Nikita” and the American remake, “Point of No Return,” about a woman assassin trained by a CIA-type organization who escapes. It stars the sensationally gorgeous and brilliantly talented Maggie Q. And I got a kick out of a new line of Hallmark greeting cards with themes from “Star Wars,” “Star Trek,” and “Twilight.” And the costumes, better than ever.
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