Dec 31, 2007

The Replacements: Best Sports Movie to Date

In the midst of bowl season, and with college basketball hitting full stride, I am reminded of all the great sports movies that have inspired us and taken us back to our old glory days. I ran cross country, and sucked at it, so I can't really relate to the likes of Raging Bull or Hoosiers or Rudy, but I am inspired nevertheless. I grew up on Rocky, The Sandlot and Little Giants. The Mighty Ducks trilogy intranced me to buy roller blades and hockey gear so that I could put puck-shaped dents in my garage door. "It's Knuckle Puck time!" Emelio Estevez at his finest!

But there is one sports epic that truly emulates heroec athleticism, one film that brings big heart and big names to the screen. Yes, I'm talking about The Replacement. In a nutshell, a bunch of second rate ex-football players get to play professionally because the actual pros went on strike, based on the very really tragedy that famous athletes do not make any money. One might argue its place among other flicks of its genre, but answer me this: Why else would they show it twice a day for a week on daytime TBS?

Gene Hackman must've thought "Hoosiers was a flop and a joke. I need to play a coach in a movie that has some impact on the sports world". Well coach, you succeeded.

Keanu Reeves leads his team to victory with a strong arm and even stronger acting. Playing a has-been college quarterback known for choking under pressure, Reeves (a.k.a. Falco - awesome name for a QB) is given a second chance to play. What really amazes me is how at no point during the film do you see him fall victim to helmet-hair.

To round out the start-studded cast, you have that one fat black guy from that one movie, and that other fat black guy who's been in a couple movies, and of course that one black guy. And Orlando Jones.

The story, combined with great regular cuts to the cheerleaders makes this a movie milestone to remember. The director was even able to shove more overplayed classic rocks songs into the movie than a Waffle House Jukebox. Rocky helped bring down the Berlin Wall. Blue Chips showed the sad-but-true dark side of college basketball. The Replacements showed us that if there was ever an NFL players strike, the league would reach out to convicts, sumo wrestlers and retards (Reeves) to maintain the greatness of pro football. God Bless America.

Happy New Years everyone! If you need something to do while recovering from your hangover tomorrow, rent The Replacements, Juwanna Man and Eddie for your sports movie fix.

Dec 25, 2007

Sex, Drugs, and Machine-Gun Kidnappings: A Review of Alpha Dog



Christmas Eve is a special day of the year, a day for warm apple cider, family, and shagging your high school ex while home from school. But I fucking hate apple cider, only care for my family in an abstract way, and do not have a high school ex. Consequently, I spent the day drinking protein supplements and watching Alpha Dog, a film that—in keeping with my wishes—totally wrecked the Christmas ambience my kin so wished to maintain.

In the main, Alpha Dog consists of just three or four types of people: wiggers (this is where Justin Timberlake excels), gangsters, and hot sluts. When the gangsters are not kidnapping innocent teenage boys and thrusting them into situations shimmering with sexual possibility (more on this later), they are smoking weed, drinking, or trying to off someone. To offset the patent lack of realism that characterizes some of the scenes, the characters who witness the hostage (played by Anton Yelchin) with his captors are numbered as witnesses with on-screen text—Witnesses #x, #x+1, #x=2—to remind you that, yes, this really did happen. But once the number of witnesses exceed twenty or so, the repeated on-screen labels become annoying, and the viewer begins to wish that the director had achieved realism in better ways.

This leads me to the sex scene in the pool, the part of the movie that strained not only the bounds of my belief but also the crotch seams of my underwear. We find Zack Mazursky, the hostage, being taken to a pool by Julie (played by Amanda Seyfried from Mean Girls), the girl who has wanted Zack's nuts since she found out that he is a hostage (she thinks "That's hot."). Her slutty sidekick joins them for some skinny dipping and a tantalizing game of Marco Polo. Before long, Zack is sandwiched between them and the scene fades to black.

This is perhaps my biggest complaint. There is no need for modesty or propriety in a movie that, overall, contains enough unnecessary filth (a guy shitting on a living room floor, for instance) to make a full-blown sex-scene a mere accessory. I would have liked to see Zack engage in some Wesley-Pipes style fucking. Such a scene would have fit well with everything else in the film, and it would have been most entertaining.

If you find Christmas as boring as I found Christmas Eve, and you have access to On Demand premium channels, I recommend blowing off the holiday vibe and watching Alpha Dog. Unless, of course, you have a high school ex.

Dec 19, 2007

The Dark Side of the Deep South: Review of Searching for the Wrong-Eyed Jesus

As someone who has just recovered from his first taste of (toxic) Appalachian moonshine, I feel that I am well qualified to post a review that I've been meaning to write for some time: my thoughts on Searching for the Wrong-Eyed Jesus, a BBC sponsored documentary on the Deep South. The documentary originated when some wealthy Brit received a copy of Jim White's debut album Wrong-Eyed Jesus (The Mysterious Tale of How I Shouted). Impressed with its distinctive sound, he set out to find the origin of music like this. His donations to that end spawned the documentary. Jim White himself leads the camera crew through the backwater regions of Florida, the ghostly hills of Virigina, and plenty of places in between, all the while participating in his own spiritual sojourn. The result is more than enough to make the average Connecticut Yank shit in his L.L. Bean britches.

There are basically two types of scenes in Searching for the Wrong-Eyed Jesus: the frightening and the merely unsettling. Examples of the first sort include a woman (whose mouth seems to be rotting by the second) discuss her cancer and son's death during a respite from her job at a Jesus-freak roadside restaurant, a Pentecostal scene in which everyone is either crying or babbling in their own tongue, and a Confederate-flag wearing biker who decides, during the interview, to put a few holes in a nearby stop sign with his 1911 pistol. Falling in the latter category, we have Jim's visit to a honky-tonk (apparently in LA), in which some drunken white trash discuss the delicate relationship between sin and salvation, and the local floozy grinds against any rube who is willing to take hell in exchange for a dry hump.

This leads to perhaps my biggest criticism of the film. While the intent of the documentary is to find the origin of music like Jim White's, it quickly becomes a documentary about the Deep South in general, and therefore it shoulders the burden of providing a representative view of the South as a whole and not just its lower class. While viewing the film, I was inclined to ask: Where are the Atlanta suburbs? Where is the Southern genteel? And where the fuck are cultural icons like Charleston and New Orleans?

A related gripe is that some of the scenes (in addition to which locations are visited) are excessively contrived. At one point, Jim White seems to doctor his automobile on some country road, and while he is at work, a random old man walks up and begins to tell stories about his youth. But a little research shows that the man is not random at all, but is rather the famous Southern author Harry Crews, and the seeming happenstance of their meeting on a road turns out to be planned. Scenes like these make the viewer question the all-important authenticity of the film.

In any case, the documentary is worth a watch. While those not from the South will get the most from it, even Southerners by birth like myself can learn a few things. And we need not wear diapers while viewing.

Dec 17, 2007

Rambo 4 Title Contest


Sylvester Stallone, while playing Bridge in his Beverly Hills retirement village, recently thought to himself, "I really f'd up the Rocky series with 'Rocky 5' and 'Rocky Balboa'. I really do have talent...somewhere. If only there was a way I could redeem myself and show everyone that I'm not really an over-the-hill, roid-pumping botox bitch. I know! I'll make another Rambo! Nurse, where are my Depends? I am heading to the studio!"

Yes, Grandpa Sly is at it again. He is creating another unneccessary end to a film series that has been stretched tighter than the skin on his cheeks (which now can be found on his forehead). Sure to be the most violent Rambo yet, the preview starts a preemptive body count to the tune of, what else, but "Let the Bodies Hit the Floor". Sigh, Sly.

To help the Italian Stallion out a little bit, I thought we could have a contest to come up with the best alternate title to the movie. Kyurious Hype and I have been working for the past half hour to come up with a few, such as:

Rambo IV: Killin' before I Die

Rambo IV: Assisted Living, Assisted Dying

Rambo IV: Thats not a roman numeral 4, he's seroiusly on an IV

John Rambo: Badass with Botox

We need your help, America! (And yes, Canada, you can play along too.) Give us some other alternative names for this turd-flick. Slyvester needs our help, first witht the movie title, and then probably helping him off the toilet. Get to it!

Dec 10, 2007

Javier Bardem = Long Lost Murderous Beatle

So I finally found out why there’s no country for old men. Javier Bardem will MURDER you before you reach the ripe old age of 30. Basically he will murder you. That’s the gist of the Coen Brother’s new deathtacular western-noir No Country For Old Men. Long gone are the sardonic f-bomb cratered tirades of the dude, or the mustachioed purrings of our favorite Pater Familias, and even the neurotic mumblings of Barton Fink. No, this new country—bereft of old men—is simply comprised of three things: Murder, sweating and running away from being murdered, and the ramblings of a tired Golden Retriever marauding as Tommy Lee Jones. And Murder.

As much as I enjoyed the cat and mouse game between Josh Brolin and Javier Bardem (which is less cat and mouse more armored War Bear and monkey [no I won’t stop bashing the Golden Compass])… I was upset, confused and beffudencholy at the seemingly elitist and confounding ending of the film. No, no… I’m sorry ending is a harsh word. Let’s say the way the film just stopped. No closure, no explanation, no reason, just shit happened and then it stopped happening because the screen went black and the credits rolled.

Now I could’ve missed something. Maybe the projectionist switched up a reel and there was something that happened after the credits. But he didn’t, it didn’t and it was a letdown.

For the last 8 minutes of the film watching Tommy Lee Jones (or TLJ as his BFF’s call him), talk about not one but TWO dreams he had, I couldn’t help but hear the Coen Brothers laughing giddily like Knox Harrington, the video artist. They did however find a way to give Milton from Office Space his stapler--and by stapler I mean silenced shotgun and by give I mean shoot in the neck.


Now to a completely different tangent: I love Lindy West. She writes for The Stranger out in Seattle and she’s hilarious when she writes about movies. But after discovering her new-found love of Cheesecake Bites at Arby’s I’m now… perplexed, forlorn and moved to start taking up money for her inevitable double bypass. Basically eating fried Cheesecake is about as healthy as rolling in a pit of bears (armored war ones) covered in honey and meat tenderizer after eating poison and swallowing a jar of bees. Plus I hear they’re about as addictive as fried cocaine. Maybe I’ll pick up a half dozen tonight…


PS: Javier Bardem’s thinking of murder right now.



Nov 27, 2007

Michael Bay loves Trannies


So I was on a long plane ride and finally got around to seeing the latest advertisement for America—I mean, Michael Bay flick, Transformers. It was everything I expected it to be.

-A high school romance inconceivably woven into a plot that encompasses the possible destruction of the world.
-A competent American Military defeating a nigh invincible intergalactic threat on behalf of the world.
-Computer enhanced EVERYTHING, creating lightening quick “action” only to be appreciated when you try to re-watch the film frame by frame.
-Giant Robots.
-And of course, that inevitable “No matter what happens, I just want you to know blah blah blah” moment.

Ahhh. An instant classic. It truly had me from the opening line—uttered so butterly by Optimus Prime—I knew exactly where it was going and exactly how it would end. “In the beginning there was…the cube. We know not where it came from…blah blah blah blu bling bling blah.”

You know… the cube. The Cube!? Of course… Thaaaat cube. I used to make chicken soup with that cube, but then it left this planet to start life in other galaxies and later returned as the ultimate plot device.

Hi, I’m writing a movie, this is what’s going to happen. I’m going to start off with something you’ve never heard of, and I’m going to introduce it right off the bat and slap you in the face with it so you know what it is. Then I’m going to drag you through an egregiously long and illogical plot* and then I’m going to say… hey. Remember that thing I showed you at the beginning? Well, we’re just going to use that to end the movie and basically nothing else you just watched really mattered.

But at the same time… it was so damn entertaining…

I felt like I had just sold my soul to the devil. The whole time I thought to myself… just sleep and this plane ride will go faster, when in actuality I found myself routing for Shia TheBeef and his intrepid band of loveable robots. Son of a bitch!

The moral of this story—really—is that giant robots are seductively sweet. Even if they’re unfathomably complicated and over-animated. Now… to wait 15 years until Michael Bay releases his master epic, Power Rangers…

*"So if the robots are after us, we should lead them into LA where they can do more damage!” – soldier “Good idea!” –Secretary of State Jon Voigt

Nov 13, 2007

Service, with a folding chair to the face

I don't know if any of you have considered joining the marines, but If you haven't, you will after seeing THE MARINE produced by the WWE (World Wrestling E...nterpr...ise? Damn you World Wildlife Federation!). That's right, the WWE is now churning out films and if it's even possible to concieve, they're even more smacktacular than the XFL. In this tale that teaches us marines can throw people through glass storefronts even on the homefront, WWE wrestler John Cena, with arms the size of a bloated goat carcus, plays John Triton, ex-marine turned rent-a-cop after being honorably discharged for disobeying a direct order despite the fact that he saved the lives of 5 marine's who were being beheaded at an "Al-Qaeda outpost/barracks" in Iraq. (bwaaaa?)

"How do we get around 'em, John?" "We don't. We go through 'em" (fires shotgun slash grenade launcher into the camera).

He kills sooo many terrorists though! How can they discharge him on a technicality? Just, Marine Core. Harsh, but Just. That's how I like my America. So, not knowing what to do next, he returns home to his ridiculously attractive wife, in his oddly beautiful home and bangs her (no, not in the head with a folding chair.) I thought this movie was already perfect so far but then they blew my expectations away with an Oscar-worthy performance from former T2 T1000 (liquid-terminator) Robert Patrick as a sociopathic jewel thief. I didn't watch the entire film, but I got all I needed to know online. If you go on IMDB, you'll notice that the Plot Keywords are: Explosion/Marine/Chase/Kidnapping/Alligator.

OfCreams out. Hoo Rah.

Nov 8, 2007

The ADD Libs

Hey guys,
Just thought this might be something this crowd would enjoy.

(Laughs Evilly)

Oct 30, 2007

Indy 4: The Quest for One Free Beer

Last weekend, I was relaxing with a cold beer in hand debating the most important questions of modern American cinema with my long time friend Joe Bauer*; which Die Hard movie most beautifully captured the idea of the "unstrung hero", how James Cameron made much more of a statement in Total Recall then he did in Titanic, how Spaceballs is best watched on VHS, etc.



Our discussion led us down a very dark path with the very mention of the upcoming Indiana Jones installment. This little gem hits theatres in 2008 with a vengeance, much like Die Hard: With a Vengeance, only more subtle. My friend Joe and I both await the 4th chapter with eager anticipation, much like anticipation one experiences after a long car trip with lots of Kool-Aid and no bathroom breaks. As our movie-loving bladders fill to capacity and nearly rupture, there are still so many questions left unanswered. Very little info has been released about the film. Even the IMDB entry is skin and bones. What little info we can find is hardly credible so I suppose only time will tell.



Joe and I found ourselves heated and nearly wresting on the floor over one key element: Shia Labeouf. We know he is in the film and will play a pivotal role, but answer me this, bloggers: Will he play the son of Henry Indiana Jones, Jr.? I tend to think no, however my much hairier companion seems to think it is the only possibility. And in situations like these, what do two stubborn males with no money and no creativity do? We bet a beer on it.



Help me, minions of the motion picture. Perhaps those of you out there who actually paid $160 for a real brown Stetson or those who have dressed up like Indy for every Halloween since the age of 9 can put my mind at ease on this topic. I wish to drink my free beer not just for me, but for you, all of you. Hugs and Kisses.



*Joe Bauer is in no way related to Jack Bauer.

Oct 11, 2007

Glad I don't live there...oh wait...

These things have been on TV where I live lately... Before reading your post get caught up on this demeaning, ignorant, and confounding ad campaign to come live in Louisville, Ky...

For your viewing pleasure might I suggest... Ohio, Dallas and LA. They seem to insinuate that
1) People from Ohio want to come to Louisville to meet women with tattoos on their ass (Might as well be a bulls eye)
2) Louisvillians who want to move to LA will make their parents cry.... WHAT!?
3) Black, gay men in Dallas who like tofu will be accepted in Louisville... Hmm... Its still in the south last time I checked, this might be a hard sell...

I didn't see how I could let this aggression stand, man. I fired back:

Dear Anonymous PR guy at Share Louisville,

I have to say, I'm a born and raised
Louisvillian, and these commercials are embarrassing.

A young man from Ohio wants a girl with a tattoo on her butt?
A girl moving to LA isn't going to be recognized for her intellect, but her bra size?
A man in Atlanta is dying because there aren't any hospitals there, and too much traffic?
A man in Dallas wants to be able to shout "I eat TOFU" from the steps of the
JUSTICE BUILDING!? What!?

Honestly I think we can sell ourselves a lot better by playing up our strengths rather than the weaknesses of other cities. And by strengths I mean actual STRENGTHS and not advertise
that we have cheap tattooed girls here who also happen to be appreciated for
their intellect (which, by the way... is a lie).

YES there are
great jobs here
YES there are fun things to do
YES the city could use an
influx of smart, creative, young people.

But seriously, a bunch of
slo-mo, sob-story, obnoxious, and down right embarrassing commercials will not
get the job done. I know they say any PR is good PR, but... Hey, when
you make us look like idiots, we're the ones who have to live with
it.

Yours Truly,
Not-so anonymous guy, who happens to
be young, smart, creative, has a great job, loves Louisville, tattoo-free,
appreciated for his intellect, has access to hospitals, but sits in traffic in
the morning, hates tofu, and secretly wants to move to LA.

Waa waa wee wah! What the hell are these people thinking!? Who thought this was a good idea? There's been a lot of arguments that these run in the same vein as John Stewart or the next to godly Stephen Colbert... I have to say... I don't get that comparison at all. Let's look at what's supposed to be funny in these ads and see if it makes any sort of important or original commentary... The Ohio ad seems to make fun of Louisville more than small towns, and every single ad seems to forget the fact that people are usually extremely proud of where they come from. Ancestarally or otherwise. So when you completely trash where they come from... you look desperate to get anyone to come to your city. This ad is exemplary of what people inside the box seem to think belongs on the outside. Its not clever, its not funny, and I still fail to see the point. Whatever, this ain't a single's town anyhow... time to blow this popsicle stand.

Oct 3, 2007

Welcome, Suckers.

And so it was…

Hey, Director! is thus born by a small group of recent college grads, divided by geography, but united by their collective love of trashing and reveling in terrible movies. Our Ethos: To tear down those poorly conceived pieces of trash that fall conspicuously like turds in the sewer of pop culture (oh, and defend the ones we like).

This is how you know YOU will enjoy this blog…

YOU were the one who predicted Samuel L. was 30 seconds from being jawed by a Gumby-looking CGI shark while standing next to the unexplained “pool” in that illogical, banana-ram-bonanza known as Deep Blue Sea.

YOU mailed Joel Schumacher anthrax after he utilized an iMovie trick by just reversing footage in Batman and Robin to make it look like Robin was drowning…(it was really just swallowing Chris O’Donnell AND Alicia Silverstone’s career).

It was YOU who brazenly placed Uwe Boll's carcass-storm of a film, House of the Dead in your queue on Netflix, immediately regretting it after realizing A) you were watching a film based off a video game that people play in theater arcades while waiting to go see a REAL movie and 2) all of the zombies in the flick were gifted with conveniently placed springboards…even in a topless teen ridden forest…

And YOU breathed a sigh of relief when Guillermo del Toro unleashed Pan’s Labyrinth , because all of its critical acclaim somehow legitimized your secret, tongue-in-cheek attraction to Hellboy and its chatty, Russian half-zombie (“If I had leg’s I’d kick your ass”).

So as founder and contributor to this beautiful new blog, I’d like to say, as humbly and quietly as possible (because who’s reading this? honestly)—LET’S MAKE THIS SHIT EPIC!! I believe our next step will be to add Carmina Burana blaring on our home page….