Movies


July 11, 2006: 7:18 pm: beezerBeezer, Movies

Along Came Polly (2004)

Ben Stiller, Jennifer Anniston

Ben Stiller has a long history of making crappy movies (see: Zoolander and Duplex), so really I should have not been the least bit surprised that this movie sucked. It wasn’t even remotely funny.

Actually, I shouldn’t say that. There were some funny parts. Like Alec Baldwin in the bathroom. Or any scene with Phillip Seymour Hoffman. But those scenes were carried more by the other actors than by anything Stiller does. And throw in the amazingly bland acting of Jennifer Anniston (who plays the same character in everything she does) and it makes a movie that will have you snoring faster than any product my by the good people at Nyquil.

Since the movie was so spectacularly boring, my mind tended to wander and I had some random thoughts. So I’ll post them rather than rant on about how awful this movie was.

  • Debra Messing is a horrible actress and is wildly unattractive. How the hell does she continue to get acting jobs??

  • Topless beaches are cool. Hank Azaria’s bare ass is not.

  • Everyone needs a friend like Phillip Seymour Hoffman. The scene in the elevator and at the party is awesome. And I need to find a way to work the word shart into everyday conversations.

  • I don’t buy Stiller and Anniston as a couple. What is Hollywood’s deal with plain or even ugly looking dudes hooking up with insanely hot chicks?? I’m not saying it doesn’t happen, but in some movies, it’ just not believable.

  • Dating rule #628: Never drop a deuce at the girls house on the first date.

  • Jennifer Anniston in red hot pants = FREAKING AWESOME! (And note to self: take salsa lessons with Anniston)

If this movie had more Hoffman and more Baldwin, it might have been a worthwhile flick. Other than that, don’t waste your time.

July 9, 2006: 7:35 pm: beezerBeezer, Movies

Catch Me If You Can (2002)

Leonardo DiCaprio, Tom Hanks, Christopher Walken

Movies based on real events usually make good movies because they are typically more believable. Like Goodfellas. Sure it was well made, but the fact that it was based on events that actually happened made it so much better, because you didn’t have to invoke your “Suspension of disbelief” reflex. And that’s the category that this movie fell into. It’s a decent movie that is made even better by the fact that it actually happened.

It was a much better movie that I thought it would be. I liked both Hanks and DiCaprio, but both needed to work on their accents (especially Hanks…where the hell was he supposed to be from??). I found it interesting that the way DiCaprio’s character watched TV shows to determine how to act in each profession he was faking. Maybe I should start taking notes when I watch CSI, in case I decide that I want to become a fake crime scene investigator. I did find it a bit hard to believe that DiCaprio is supposed to be 16 years old.

It was a bit interesting to see how the FBI treated DiCaprio. Every time they were going into a hotel room or home to arrest him, they came out with their guns drawn. Why is that?? It’s not like he was a murderer or something like that. Do you really need your guns drawn when apprehending a teenaged kid who forged a few checks?? And the fact that the FBI had such a hard time catching a teenager who was using TV programs to scam people doesn’t really paint a good picture for the government. (Especially since they lose him on a plane WHILE IT’S IN FLIGHT.)

There were a few things that I didn’t understand. Maybe some of my readers can answer some of these questions for me. Like:

What the hell was up with Jennifer Gardner’s character?? Was she supposed to be a hooker or just trying to get some money out of DiCaprio?? I thought he said that she was on the cover of some modeling magazine. Do all models become hookers if they don’t make it in the modeling world?? I just don’t get her character.

What was with the label peeling?? Was there some deeper purpose or meaning to that quirk of his that I missed??

Why was he put in maximum security prison in solitary confinement?? Again, he’s a 17 year-old check forger. Does he really need to be punished that way??

Can someone please explain the “two mice in a bucket of cream” story to me?? What the hell is that about??

When were airline pilots treated like rock stars?? I have never had the urge to get an autograph from a pilot.

Even with the few questions I had and the few minor problems with the movie (No way DiCaprio passes as 16 and the horrible accents), this was a pretty good movie made even better by the fact that it really happened.

July 7, 2006: 8:30 pm: beezerMovies, The Grand Vizier

Today’s installment comes from a friend of mine. We’ll call him The Grand Vizier. And really, anyone who goes by The Grand Vizier deserves a post. A bit longer that what I normally post, but a good read. Enjoy!

Independence Day (1996)

Will Smith, Jeff Goldblum, Bill Pullman

Let me just say that for anyone who cheered or said, “That was AWESOME!” when we were leaving the theatre should be submitted to electro-shock therapy (you know who you are). There are two good things in this movie. One is sci-fi heroine Mary McDonnell. The other is the special effects. After that, positive words cannot be used to describe this movie.

I’ll leave the real reasons I hate this movie until the end of this review… let’s just go over the movie first, shall we?

We open with shots of the moon – the US flag and Armstrong’s footprints. Then, there’s a rumbling and the footprints fade. Now, what is transmitting the waves of disturbance? Really, space is a vacuum… there’s no way to translate that motion down to the surface of the moon.

Meanwhile, back on earth, SETI researchers, who like to play golf instead of look for extra-terrestrial life, are listening to REM’s “End of the World as we Know It.” Also, SETI scientists (they sleep in bunk beds) can tell if a signal is extra-terrestrial or not over the telephone. I’m not saying that it’s impossible, I’m just saying that I confuse one of my closest friends, her sister, and their mother when speaking to them over the phone, and I’m a classically trained musician (no viola jokes, peanut gallery!).

Some political/military scenes later, we find out that President Whitmore is not so much a politician-president as just a “Regular Joe”-president, kind of like Jimmy Carter. However, Jimmy Carter was very smart, whereas I have my doubts about the character played by Bill Pullman. I can believe Carter was brilliant and a nice guy. I can’t believe that of Pullman or Whitmore. I do believe his advisors would go with their first instinct, though… yes, that’s right: blow it out of the sky.

Jeff Goldblum is here, playing the same lightly stuttering character he excels at playing; this time a sciency-type geek named David Levinson. He’s a super-environmentalist this time, and rides his bike in his office. I wish I could ride my bike in my office. Nice Fruitopia product placement, too.

Next we meet the racially-mixed family living in a Winnebago, children of a drunken Quaid of some kind. This character is HIGHLY believable, though. I feel any Quaid is simply perfect in these alcoholic typecast roles.

Now that we’ve been introduced to most of the characters, the little spaceships that are larger than most US cities (including suburbs) detach from the big spaceship and start their nice special effects of clouds coming into the atmosphere.

“It’s broken into over a dozen smaller pieces, smaller than the whole, sir.” Well, thank God the laws of physics haven’t totally broken down yet.

But just wait.

Somehow Levinson figures out, in a matter of minutes, that there’s a signal that’s reducing every time it repeats. How he knows that a repetitive signal from a spacecraft is counting down and will be gone in seven hours is beyond me. But it’s awfully convenient, isn’t it?

The ships arrive, everyone stares, and then people wait. But Levinson KNOWS that the signal has to do with something, and almost immediately begins his hero role. He instinctively knows that it must be some attack. And he knows that the rest of the world has overlooked this signal. Sorry… he postulates that the rest of the world has overlooked this signal, because people at NASA, friends with the SETI people, were playing shuffleboard when the aliens showed up. Trillions of dollars worth of equipment on the ground and in space, and Levinson says they haven’t looked for it.

Now we move to Los Angeles.

Somehow Capt Hiller’s (played by Will Smith) household, or rather, the household of his whore, is the only one to remain oblivious to the menace. For something to disrupt the surface of the moon in a vacuum, they have blissfully slept through the loud booms that a large hot craft would make upon entering the atmosphere over LA. Also – and this is REALLY irritating – they don’t see it when it’s RIGHT IN FRONT OF THEIR FACES until the script tells them to. Staring straight ahead, Hiller sees it and stares, after missing it while walking out to pick up the paper. The whore comes running up from behind to offer him some coffee and doesn’t see the GIGANTIC spaceship until she realizes Hiller is unresponsive. No joke, she doesn’t see the leviathan even though her exit from her house up to Hiller and beyond to the spacecraft is one straight line.

Mary McDonnell, the First Lady, bless her, has to tell the president to “stick to the truth, that’s what you’re good at” while she’s on the phone with him. So he is Jimmy Carter, just not smart. It’s Bill Pullman, don’t argue with the truth.

So Levinson and his dad make it to DC in record time (remarkable considering all Levinson does is tell his father how slow he’s driving), where Levinson proceeds to call his former wife, the president’s press secretary. He just triangulates her location in the White House with stuff he happened to bring along for the road trip.

Anyway, he’s the only one that’s found out what’s going on, and he’s going to tell the president. Very convenient that the former MIT student who’s nerdy and unsure of himself got married to, then divorced, a beautiful Washington insider… I hope this is how it works out should aliens ever really attack. You know, provided NASA didn’t notice the aliens beforehand while they scan the skies with the network of satellites they have.

When there’s 28 minutes left, everyone decides to flee from the White House. It’s taken 19 of those minutes to get to the helicopter, which means they have to get to Air Force One (which must be at Reagan National as opposed to an actual Air Force base) and take off in 9 minutes. While it’s a very short flight, I’m not sure 9 minutes is enough time.

The first lady boards her own helicopter to leave, while the stripper and her son are sitting in traffic in a tunnel in LA.

On board Air Force One and the alien death rays start firing. However, there’s still time to fire everything up and get off the ground. Naturally, they just barely make it – though actual flames around the tin can full of jet fuel fail to make it explode. Lucky.

The stripper and her son, dodging the rest of LA in the tunnel as the death ray fires, are the only ones to see a maintenance closet and dive in. The dog makes it just in time, and the exploding gaseous plasma fails to fill up the space of the closet. They didn’t even close the door! Yet, the fur covered dog and the human counterparts are unscathed.

Overnight, the multi-ethnic family sees everyone in the US that owns an RV has shown up in their desert.

The President states himself that he was once a fighter pilot (it was mentioned earlier when we first met him in the White House). This will be very convenient later, and this divergence in character (let alone from logic) is really where this president veers away from the honest Jimmy model. He was a fighter pilot. AND I consider him to be one of the worst movie presidents, and certainly one of the worst movie fathers, of all time. I’m sure it’s just the writing, but Pullman’s acting is pretty terrible.

A squadron, featuring Hiller, heads up in their jets to launch missiles at the spaceship over LA. The missiles fail to penetrate the shields – the impacts cause the shield to glow green. At this point, Hiller says, “They must have some kind of protective shield.” Well, that, or it’s the Care Bear Stare gone horribly wrong.

Hiller is a star pilot (Smith’s the star, so it figures) and is arrogant even while retreating. Two little spaceships follow Hiller and Harry Connick, Jr (btw, Harry, braces buddy. You make enough money to get your teeth fixed) as they take off and are immediately over the desert. It’s mid-day there, though, and was early morning for the attack, so maybe I’m wrong and they managed to elude the spaceships for at least an hour. But I think more, as Hiller seems to be flying through the Grand Canyon at supersonic speeds. He ejects as he runs out of fuel (of course) and the pursuing spacecraft crashes. After landing, he walks right up to the crashed space ship and, being an arrogant ass, opens the cockpit and punches out the alien that is presumably wearing a spacesuit of some kind.

Let’s pause for a moment and think about the previous couple of scenes. Hiller, in his jet aircraft, is able to fly at near supersonic speeds long enough to get from LA to the Grand Canyon, avoiding death at every opportunity at the hands (well, lasers) of the alien pursuing him. He then continues to fly that fast, while diving into the Canyon itself. As his jet fuel is depleting rapidly, he flies directly at a wall, ejecting at the last possible moment. I’m assuming he’s still traveling at a Mach number, and somehow isn’t injured or killed with this little maneuver. The alien spacecraft, which has been following close enough to avoid all the same obstacles, doesn’t apparently see the wall and pulls up too late?

Okay, let’s say the alien’s attention was elsewhere, and it does crash into the edge of the canyon wall before tumbling a bit and coming to a halt. Why didn’t the shield protect it from that impact? There was no green glow and that spaceship was a mangled heap.

Anyway, at that point, provided Hiller survived/wasn’t even injured, he then WALKS RIGHT UP to the alien craft. He finds the door handle (well, he does… I don’t know how) and opens the cockpit to find the alien. With one punch to the face, he manages to knock out the creature that is inside a spacesuit of some kind. No offense, I’m sure Hiller is a strong guy, but come on. He then drags the alien off in his parachute.

Back in LA, the stripper finds a fire truck that a) didn’t explode (well, it is a diesel, which is much safer than petrol) and b) has the keys and cranks right up. With some other survivors she starts driving through the bleak wasteland of LA – the aliens didn’t do much to Los Angeles, did they? The ship that covered the city seems to be gone, but a downed helicopter is on their drive out of the city. Oh look, it’s the First Lady.

Back on Air Force One, Levinson’s dad and ex-wife are having a heart-to-heart while the military men are trying to talk the president into using nuclear weapons. Levinson tries to be reasonable while being his environmental self, people shout, and Levinson’s dad tells everyone off and brings up Area 51 and Roswell, NM. The president had no idea, but it turns out it’s all true and they decide to fly there.

This movie sure jumps around a lot. It’s designed for people with so-called ADD. We’re now back in the desert near the Grand Canyon that’s also near a big salt flat, where Hiller meets the caravan of RVs featuring the ethnic family. See how they tie everything together, rather conveniently?

Brent Spiner of Star Trek fame is present in an irritating crazy scientist role at Area 51. He has long hair and really hams it up. At least he seems to realize this isn’t a serious movie, and just rides it for fun. The president clearly doesn’t like scientists, but even this one is a little wacko, even for a movie scientist. They look at some remains of aliens and the president seems to be the big know-it-all by calling them organic. Good job, W… by which I mean President Whitmore, of course.

The RV convoy shows up at the base… why? They just do. It’s convenient like that. And what’s better is they let them onto the base. All of them… not just Hiller and the alien, but the entire damn convoy are allowed onto the base.

The stripper and her refugees get to Hiller’s original base, which is, of course, wiped out. The First Lady is being nursed by the stripper and during a little heart-to-heart the FL asks what the stripper does. She replies she’s “a dancer.” Now, I can forgive a lot, but there’s no way that the First Lady – any first lady – is going to say “the ballet” in response to that. They’re just not. They most likely wouldn’t say anything at all, and be polite. The writers for this scene were just plain stupid… fortunately, Mary almost pulls it off.

Back at the base, Brent and Co. are taking the alien out of its suit, and it emits a high frequency noise that drives Brent, and no one else, crazy. It goes on a quick killing spree as the president and his crew show up to see what’s going on. Things aren’t looking so good as a dead or nearly dead Brent is thrown up to the window with tentacles around his neck. Then, stupidly, the president decides to talk to the creature, asking if “there can be a peace between us.” A bit late for that, Mr. President, but good try. Telepathically, the alien then attacks the president (and NO ONE ELSE), while also revealing the entire plan. “They’re like locusts,” only with spaceships and the associated technology. The president then orders the use of nuclear weapons.

Upstairs, Levinson and the press secretary are talking. They’re sort of mending things, but not really. We need some more sexual tension. And outside, Hiller decides to just take a helicopter and go try to find his stripper girlfriend.

Why is it that we need to deliver our nuclear weapons via an airplane? Were our VAST supplies of ICBMs unavailable that day? Last count, even dismantling them under START-II, the US alone possesses several thousand. Naturally, the attack doesn’t work, and everybody’s pissy about it.

Shortly after takeoff, Hiller gets to his old base and finds the stripper and her group, and takes them back to the base. When the president goes down to see his dying wife, the doctor says that she’s bleeding internally… the pres interrupts, “Wait, what are you saying?” Uh, he just said it. She’s bleeding internally.

There actually are a few touching moments here, mainly due to the little girl. Other than that, these scenes will just serve to reinforce that Pres Whitmore is a bad father (as we’ll soon see).

A drunk – no, now he’s sober – Levinson comes up with a plan after a pep talk from daddy. He realizes what the rest of them don’t know… you know, the best and the brightest are once again outdone by the random guy from NYC. I’m not saying people in NYC are stupid, mind you. Many of them are quite smart. They meet on Wednesdays at a little out-of-the-way place no one has heard of and plot their escape.

Anyway, Levinson (can he really be sober that fast?) realizes the crap on board the tiny ship the US has had for the past fifty years works, so the shields must work, too. So all they have to do is create a computer virus and upload it onto the spaceship. However, they have to load it onto the main computer in the main ship that’s still out in space. They’ll just climb aboard the little runt ship and take off for the big one, easy-peasy. Oh, and Hiller is qualified to fly it after having been chased by one, one time, and crashing his own plane during that chase. Ladies and gentlemen, our heroes.

And now, the British in the Iraqi desert are getting a Morse Code signal from the US. And the response? “About bloody time” that the US came up with a plan. Come on – no one believes that even the British (our most favourite allies) are going to be waiting around for us to come up with a plan. Honestly. If anything, they’re waiting around for the Israelis to come up with a plan, because they know how not to botch up a massive military operation.

The Air Force officers go outside to recruit more pilots – from the RV people. Quaid is now part of that group, and still drunk. But he volunteers AND they accept him without question. And he’s able to fly the new plane even though he’s not flown anything but cropdusters since Vietnam. And even better? Everyone giggles when he says he was kidnapped by aliens, as though he’s a lunatic. Um, they blew up most of your cities, maybe it’s plausible. Stop chuckling! I hate inconsistencies in movies.

So everyone is all excited about their plans and what they’re going to do. The stripper and Hiller get married, Levinson and the press sec get back together, the virus is all ready to go, and people are going to their planes to go up and fight.

And then Pres Whitmore gives a REALLY LAME SPEECH, somewhat aping a Dylan Thomas poem and being a general putz. Then he gets ready to get on his own plane, abandoning his posts as president AND father. He has a daughter whose mother has just died, and he thinks it’s okay to get into a plane and take off. BAD father. Bad. I don’t care how badly you need pilots, this is just a terrible plot development. PS, there are still LOTS of people on the base, probably qualified to fly or could do a decent job compared to Drunky McShitfaced (Quaid), and they stay on the ground so the President (!) can abandon his post (he is supposed to coordinate everything, after all, for the entire nation) and abandon his daughter.

Hiller and Levinson get in the spaceship that the US has had for fifty years and get ready to go up into space and load the virus into the mother ship. They’re having fun apparently, despite the fact that they’re mission is to save the planet. They have a nuclear weapon on board to take out the mother ship once they load the virus disabling the shields…

Once on board, they start loading the virus after four seconds of “negotiating with host.” And the computer, on the vessel created by aliens capable of interstellar travel, just accepts the virus and it’s done. Simple as that. Imagine if these aliens showed up today with an unsecured wireless network? They’d be doomed, and probably due to some VP of some company who still can’t figure out his Blackberry.

Back in the atmosphere the President, LEADING the attack in his plane, shoots a couple of missiles, the second one hitting its mark. But his daughter is safe with the stripper and her son, in case you were wondering about her welfare. Someone has to worry about her welfare, right?

Everyone’s out of missiles except for Quaid, of course. Presumably he’s not too drunk at this point – let’s hope not, anyway, since he does have MISSILES and is in control of a USAF jet. He really is terrible, overacting all the way. Anyone out there a pilot? Can you tell me if you make all these insipid comments when you’re flying in combat? And if you do, can you please stop, for the Love of God? In my head, pilots are highly trained professionals, not comic relief.

Quaid becomes lucent and there’s a brief touching moment when his missile won’t fly off the plane and into the target (also, why did the President fire from such a bad angle so as to miss? IITS, I guess) and he tells the controllers on the ground to tell his children that he loves them very much (which was why he was such a good father, based on how the children react to his presence in general. Although, he is all they’ve got, I guess). The eldest son, in the control room, doesn’t seem terribly broken up (at all) about the fact that his dad’s on a suicide mission. Quaid takes out the ship’s main weapon as it starts to fire by flying INTO the beam. One quick question: why didn’t this destroy him like it did with cities and towns over which these ships flew before? He flies RIGHT INTO IT. The ship blows up and starts to crash to earth.

Meanwhile, up on the main spaceship, Hiller and Levinson decide to light up their cigars and set off their nuke with them still aboard, since they’re trapped in the docking bay. However, it fires into the control room holding their ship in place, and they’re free to go. And suddenly, Goldblum is not David Levinson, but Dr Ian Malcolm from Jurassic Park telling Hiller that he “must go faster.” Ugh.

Now, without shields, and presumably no power supply in about two seconds, they head back down to the planet’s surface. The shockwave alone should have destroyed them (no shields) before they reached the atmosphere, but should it not, the atmosphere’s friction certainly would have gotten them. But do they die? No, because it’s in the script (and they’re our heroes).

For being such a scientist geek, Levinson sure has a swagger. Hiller and Levinson embrace their wives, greet the president, and everything is back to normal. Aside from lots of clean-up, that is.

“Happy Fourth of July, daddy,” the president’s daughter says. Ugh.

Now, aside from just being poorly written, what really gets me is the fact that they ignored EVERYTHING their science advisor said during production. Physics haven’t totally broken down throughout the movie, but there is NO AIR IN SPACE and therefore a passing ship is NOT going to disturb the footprints on the moon.

Furthermore, the “welcome wagon” uses lights and looks like Close Encounters, only pathetically. I think if a fly or ladybug flew in front of my face with a bunch of lights, I would swat it down, and if it died, too bad. Furthermore, I hope that it’s last words as I raise my hand (or open the weapons bay doors like in the movie) are not “this may be some sort of response.” Famous last words these are not.

Another thing that really bothers me is that the aliens know exactly where to go. I understand that our major population centers are obvious targets, but how, on earth, do the aliens know where to go after that. How did they know to go to NORAD (Colorado Springs is NOT a major population center)? How did they know where to go in the middle of the damn desert to attempt to destroy what was left of the US Armed Forces.

Now, Macs are wonderful. And they do automatically communicate with everything they come into contact with, more or less. However, not even a Mac is going to be able to communicate with the alien computer. Maybe by luck they also use a binary system of 1s and 0s, but most likely, it’s a lot different. And part of writing a virus is understanding the code you’re attacking. I just don’t believe it. Not one bit.

Also, is there a beacon or signal on the little spaceship? Did the aliens not think “hey, this is M1327BFH (or whatever)… didn’t that disappear awhile back? What’s it doing here?”

Lame dialog is another reason I dislike this movie. Aping a Dylan Thomas poem, stating something living is organic, or questioning what the doctor is saying, or assuming someone is a ballerina, or saying, “Hello boys, I’m baaaaaaaaack” as you fly INTO the main beam of the death ray… it’s all just too much. Beyond that we’re stuck with quotes from other movies that were all better. Quaid saying that he “picked a helluva day to quit drinking” isn’t funny. It was in Airplane. Here, it’s just plain dumb.

Finally, the President, Thomas Whitmore… he’s an absolutely terrible character. He’s president, but is apparently honest (right) and forthright. He appears to be an absolute moron (which I can believe), and is a terrible father. Honestly, who in the hell is going to a) be president and think they’re more valuable in the air than on the ground effectively leading the nation and b) leave their child, whose mother has just died, to try to be a hero?

And finally, the fact that people call this movie “ID4.” What were the other ID movies? The movie is called Independence Day, NOT Independence Day 4: The Return of the Jefferson. Calling it ID4 is just insipid. Yes, I get that the Fourth of July is Independence Day for the US, but don’t call the movie ID4, for the Love of God!

I can see why people do like this movie, don’t get me wrong. Lots of explosions, great special effects… but beyond that it’s not very well written and the acting is pretty poor.


A feature I really like of Andrew Borntreger’s Badmovies.org (www.badmovies.org — please check it out, it’s awesome):

Things I learned:

Infrared is, in fact, red.

Interestingly, “Soviet Central News” is still on five years after the Soviet Union collapsed. And they broadcast in English.

AWAC airplane radios can communicate directly to regular phones.

The President makes the call for using the Emergency Broadcast System.

Modern office buildings have bomb shelters.

Aliens instinctively will know to go to NORAD and how to get there.

People in LA don’t care about anything less than a 4.0 earthquake.

Aliens will target the White House, not the Capitol or Washington Monument, despite the greater prominence of both of those buildings in the DC skyline.

Traffic in NYC moves fast enough for multi-car pile-ups.

Chess references are very dramatic.

During panic no one pays any attention to traffic lights or one-way traffic signs.

Exotic dancers (who work during the day) own nice houses up on top of hills outside of LA.

Top stories on local desert news include interviews about a public drunkard.

Harry Connick, Jr., is one of the best actors in the movie. Yep, it’s true.

Promises between strippers mean nothing.

The President’s press secretary has a publicly-listed phone.

Closets in a concrete tunnel blocked by a steel door is sufficient protection from an alien death ray, even when said door is not closed.

No one has to wear seat belts on Air Force One.

Air Force bases welcome RVs.

Air Force bases are only in deserts.

When you’re a pilot, you can fly anything: planes, helicopters, alien spacecraft. Simple as that.

A scientist can sober up instantly.

Alien computers are susceptible to viruses created on a laptop.

July 5, 2006: 9:00 pm: beezerBeezer, Movies

Ray (2004)

Jamie Foxx, Kerry Washington, Regina King, Clifton Powell

I remember meeting Ray Charles once. I was working in Roswell, GA, at a festival put on by the city that coincided with the Olympics in 1996. I was basically working for a Coors distributor selling beer during the festival. Great job for a kid fresh out of high school. They held concerts each evening of the festival and I happened to be working the bar by the stage the night that Ray Charles played. I was able to slip back stage as he was finishing his set and talk to him for a minute. He was a little short with me but over all not a bad guy. So that’s how I always picture Ray. As a sweet old man who happened to be a bit grumpy when I met him.

Then I watched this movie.

Image destroyed.

Turns out, Ray was a heroine addict who slept with everything that moved while he was touring (even while he was married to a lady who bore his children). He even had a kid out of wedlock and was pretty much a jack-ass to most everyone.

Overall, it was a good movie, but completely screwed up my image of Ray Charles. But it was interesting to see how his life progressed and how he was eventually able to turn things around and completely change his life. And Jamie Foxx did an amazing job. It’s been cool to watch him transform from crazy comedian on In Living Color to Oscar winner in Ray. Totally deserved his Oscar.

Here are a few other random thoughts I had during the movie.

Ray was lucky to be blind at times. Like when he was in Seattle. He was lucky that he couldn’t see how ugly the bar owner that he was sleeping with was.

I found it funny that Mary Ann Fisher was jealous of Ray spending time with another woman. When she was spending time with Ray while he was married to another woman. This again proves that women are crazy.

What was with the random scene with a bunch of white kids dancing on the beach to Ray’s music?? I just don’t get the point of the scene.

I was also glad to see that some stars from the 80’s (Booger from Revenge of the Nerds – played Ahmet Ertegun; Willow Ufgood from the movie Willow – played Oberon) didn’t end up as crack heads or criminals.

July 4, 2006: 10:10 am: beezerBeezer, Movies

50 First Dates (2004)

Adam Sandler, Drew Barrymore

Ok. So this movie was basically a crappy, humorless, rip-off version of Memento. Aren’t Adam Sandler movies supposed to be funny?? It wasn’t even remotely entertaining.

And I feel confident saying that the walrus in the movie that does silly little tricks is a better actor than Drew, Adam, and Rob Schneider.

There were a few funny moments in the movie. First, when the little kid says “nipples”. There’s just something inherently funny about a little kid saying the word nipples. The second instance was when Drew loves the smell of Adam’s hands because they smell like fish. This was funny mainly because Drew is freaky enough in real life to ACTUALLY enjoy the smell of fish on someone’s hand. (Although, she is not nearly as weird as French-kissed-my-brother Angelina Jolie).

And the final funny moment came when Drew beats the crap out of Rob Schneider with a baseball bat. This was something that needed to be done for real after Schneider made Deuce Bigelow: European Gigolo. Is it wrong that I found the beating of another human being funny??

Finally, I don’t understand this trend with movie stars these days. They play Oscar worthy (and in some cases, Oscar winning) roles in critically acclaimed or blockbuster movies and then follow it up with sub-par crap. Like Sean Astin in this movie. This was the first movie he made following the hugely successful Lord of the Rings trilogy. Another example would be Russell Crowe following up his Oscar winning performance in A Beautiful Mind with Master and Commander. I just don’t understand this trend. Are they intentionally trying to sabotage their careers?? I don’t get it.

June 30, 2006: 11:48 pm: beezerBeezer, Movies

Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl (2003)

Johnny Depp, Orlando Bloom, Keira Knightley

My initial thought about this movie was “First they turn video games into movies and now they turn Disneyland rides into movies??” I must admit that I didn’t have very high hopes for this one. In fact, I didn’t even see it when it came out in the theaters. Just something about a ride turned into a movie that I couldn’t get into.

However, I was pleasantly surprised. It turned out to be pretty good. I even like how they mixed in little subtleties from the ride (like the dog in the prison that won’t move). It had a good blend of comedy and action. And Johnny Depp was the absolute perfect choice for the role of Jack Sparrow. I can’t imagine too many more actors being able to replace him and do as good a job.

Just as I was getting into the movie, the disc freezes. So I rewind a bit, thinking that maybe it was a one time glitch.

Nope. Freezes again.

So now I’m pissed. Because the disc froze right at a tense, climactic-type moment. Netflix screwed me out of a decent movie experience.

After I was finally able to get it working again (a lot of playing around with FF and REW), it moved along pretty well for about 20 minutes. And then it froze again.

So my POTC experience was diminished a bit due to the fact that Netflix sent me a crappy disc. (I will say that it wasn’t near as bad as when I rented The Exorcist from Blockbuster and it skipped an froze at the end of the movie, when the priest is finally drawing the demon out of Linda Blair)

The rest of the movie was pretty good, but I wasn’t really into it since I was pissed at Netflix. I did manage to notice, however, that Orlando Bloom was able to save the girl by the end of the movie.

And dress like a Three Musketeer.

What was that about??

June 28, 2006: 8:48 pm: beezerBeezer, Movies

The Island (2005)

Ewan McGregor, Scarlett Johansson

“I want to know answers and I wish there was more.”

This quote from the movie sums it all up. I had loads of questions for the movie and got zero answers. And I wish there were more to it. So let’s get to my questions that need answers.

If men aren’t allowed in the women’s dorms, then how does Lincoln know EXACTLY where Jordan’s room is?? As he’s running through the dorm, women are gasping as if men aren’t allowed in that area, so it’s startling to see one there. Yet Lincoln is able to go DIRECTLY to Jordan’s room.

If you don’t want people to escape from where ever you are keeping them, why don’t you make air shafts that are impossible for humans to fit into?? This is not a problem isolated to The Island. This happens a LOT in movies. When building your inescapable fortress, make sure a grown man or woman can’t fit into the air shafts. That will cut off at least one escape route.

Does Jordan clearly understand the concept of stealth?? I’m guessing not, since as they were trying to sneak out of the facility, she was SCREMING at Lincoln. “STOP!” “RUN!” “LINCOLN!” They didn’t need all the fancy technology to locate Jordan and Lincoln during their escape. Just listen for Jordan’s stealth like screams.

Is it possible to make the Chevy SSR look any worse?? Actually, this one was answered in the movie. Yes. It is possible.

Why is Amtrak still around in the future?? No one rides it now. Are we all of a sudden all going to start riding Amtrak in the future?? And where are they getting the money to convert all their regular trains into hover trains??

Speaking of which, why does everything hover?? Who decided that in the future everything will hover??

When did Jim “The Anvil” Neidhart start acting?? If you’ve seen the movie and watched the WWF in the 80’s then you know exactly who I’m talking about.

What’s worse than 1 sub-par performance by Ewan McGregor?? Two sub-par performances by Ewan McGregor.

Did they mean to make Ewan McGregor’s human counter part (Tom Lincoln) look like one of The Proclaimers?? I was waiting for him to ask if his insurance policy had walked 500 miles.

Lastly, why was this movie over 2 hours long?? I’m pretty sure they could have fit in all the necessary plot points in an hour and a half. And it might have been a better movie for it.

June 27, 2006: 5:46 pm: beezerBeezer, Movies

Master and Commander: Far Side of the World (2003)

Russell Crowe, Paul Bettany

If you wanted to read a book, would you pick it up and start reading in the middle?? No. That’s what Master and Commander feels like. We pick up the story in time to see this battle between 2 ships. No build up to the fight. No character development. We know we are supposed to care about Russell Crowe because he is the star of the movie and you don’t typically kill the star in the first 10 minutes. I was a good 48 minutes into the movie before I finally asked my wife “What the hell is going on??” And she didn’t have a good answer.

In addition to having zero character development, you can only understand about every 3rd word uttered by the actors. That made for an enjoyable evening of the “What did he say?” game at the Beezer home.

And is it just me or does Russell Crowe seem to play the same character in every movie he’s in?? Don’t get me wrong, he’s not as bad as George Clooney or Katie Holmes, but it seems like you can lift his character out of this movie and drop it into any of his other movies and it’d be hard to tell a difference.

Despite not knowing what was going on, or why I should care about the people that were dying, the part of the movie that drove me absolutely crazy was the guy who had part of his brain scooped out with a spoon. He was making more coherent sentences than the rest of the cast. How is this possible?? He had the procedure done on the deck of a boat while at sea, with the most rudimentary of tools (a SPOON), and yet is able to function as normal. Does this not bother anyone else?? What kind of healing powers does this man posses?? Were all doctors this good in the 1700’s?? Did his HMO cover the procedure??

I think one sentence from my wife sums up this movie perfectly:

“I may die of boredom at any moment.”

June 26, 2006: 8:51 pm: beezerBeezer, Movies

Super Troopers (2001)

Erik Stolhanske, Jay Chandrasekhar, Steve Lemme, Kevin Heffernan, Paul Soter

This movie was terrible for two reasons:

1) This is one of those movies that you have to watch with that buddy of yours who makes any movie (no matter how boring it is) funny as hell. We all have this buddy. We don’t know why movies are funnier with them than without. But I didn’t watch this movie with the Dubber, so it was not near as funny as it could have been.

2) Ever since this movie came out, I’ve had people tell me how funny it was. But for whatever reason, I never got around to watching it. So when I finally got around to it (5 years after its release), my friends had hyped it up so much that there was no way it would ever be able to live up to that hype.

In retrospect, I would have rather stabbed myself in the eyes with a red hot spork than watch this movie.

June 21, 2006: 10:39 pm: beezerBeezer, Movies

Flightplan (2005)

Jodie Foster, Peter Sarsgaard

I’m not sure who to feel more sorry for in this move: Jodie Foster, who can’t figure out what was painfully obvious to me within 20 minutes (the identity and plan of the bad guy) or her daughter, who is routinely ignored by Jodie. Seriously, are there any parents out there who would allow their child to stray away from them in an obviously crowded airport in a foreign country?? Probably.

If you were on crack and were meeting your dealer for your next score.

As if that wasn’t enough to have child services knocking on her door, she put her daughter in a row by herself to sleep, while she blacks out in the next row. Isn’t this what actual crack addicts do?? Pass out after a night partying only to awaken and find that their kids are missing. Did I miss the part of the movie that explained Jodie’s smack addiction??

I’d also like to point out a few things to those that have never flown internationally:

1) There is no way someone in coach is boarding before fist class. Coach passengers are treated as second class citizens on international flights. Plus, they want you to board after first class so that you can walk through first class and see them sipping champagne, eating steak, getting massages and being given briefcases of money from the flight attendants. Makes you feel real good about the 9 hour flight sitting between the crying baby and the fat, sweaty guy whose routine breathing sounds like a 20 year old lawnmower on its last legs.

2) The seats on a real international flight are not near as big as those depicted in the film. In a real coach seat, parts of Fatty McSweatsalot would ooze over into your seat throughout the duration of the flight. They make coach seats for 10 year old girls with eating disorders and dwarves, not for regular sized humans.

3) Every international flight I have ever been on has been jammed packed. Don’t count on there being 15 empty rows in the back of the plane for you to stretch out on and use to come down off your crack high. If there are, expect the flight attendants to defend those rows more fiercely than the Vietcong.

Movies that can be figured out in less than 20 minutes suck. So this one sucked.

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