Archive for June, 2007

TV Review: The Closer – “Homewrecker”

Tuesday, June 19th, 2007

Tonight’s episode, “Homewrecker”, starts out much differently than most of the other of episodes of The Closer. Normally an episode begins with the murder, or with Brenda struggling with some personal aspect of life in Los Angeles or sorting out her relationship with her boyfriend, FBI Special Agent Fritz Howard. Instead, this episode opened up with choppy video interviews involving different interviews the detectives of the Priority Homicide Division. You can tell is a handheld camcorder. As it turns out, the murder scene is being filmed by forensics people for presentation in the upcoming court case, once Brenda and her team of highly trained investigators figure out whodunit.

The beginning plays a little off and not as personal as many episodes do, but it quickly regains that feeling. The story was intriguing, and the mystery seemed like it was over almost as soon as it got started. Which would’ve been a disappointment. But I can always count on the writers to throw in a lot of twists when it comes to Brenda finding out who the murderer actually is.

A mother, a father, and a twelve year old daughter lie murdered in their home. Even as the PHD team is processing the scene and gathering information, a cell phone rings in the attic. When they break into the attic they find the couple’s seventeen year old son strung out on drugs. He claims to have been in the house when his parents and sister were killed — but he didn’t hear anything. It takes Brenda just seconds to totally rip his story to shreds. Then the truth begins to emerge — a very tangled and twisted truth that took me in a direction that I found surprising.

Watching Brenda work is magic as always. She puts together the incongruencies about the case and figures out her trap to bring the murderer to justice and get the confession she needs to close the case.

In the meantime, financial cutbacks at the LAPD have forced the department to release new financial guidelines. According to these guidelines, one member of every team- including Brenda’s PHD team — is going to have to be transferred to a different department or take early retirement. Detective Lieutenant Provenza’s neck is on the chopping block.

The add further stress to her life, which all the viewers of the show have come to love, Fritz — Brenda’s live-in FBI special agent boyfriend — is putting pressure on her to go house-hunting. If she protests and says she doesn’t have time, especially with the triple homicide she’s currently working. But longtime fans of the show know that Brenda hates any kind of change.

I have to admit, the show does play into a lot of fantasy element, but I love it. Case in point, Brenda moved the body at one of the crime scenes. No way, no how would a seasoned investigator do something like that. It corrupts the evidence and interrupts chain of custody. Another point is when Brenda confronts the murderer and ends at dumping the victims’ clothing on the table between them to raise the emotional stakes. That would not be done either. Again, of the chain of custody would be interrupted as well as the evidence being subject to getting tossed out and of the courtroom and the case.

All and all, though, the episode was everything I’ve come to expect the show. The laughs were there, the compassion was there, and — most of all — Brenda’s neurosis and personal problems marked everything she did.

I hope you DVRed this one because it was a classic episode of the series. Also, I hope you recorded the earlier broadcast. The second broadcast of the evening was not aired commercial-free. The season is just beginning! Will Brenda and Fritz find a house? Stay tuned.

Mel Odom is the author of over 100 novels. Winner of the American Library Association’s Alex Award for 2002 and runner-up for the Christy in 2005, he’s written in several genres, including tie-in novels for Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Angel, Without A Trace, and novelizations of Blade, XXX, and Tomb Raider. Thankfully, he’s learned to use his ADHD for good instead of evil.

Apple IIe animation from 1985 (with commentary)

Tuesday, June 19th, 2007

Apple IIe animation from 1985 (with commentary)

It’s Time To Vote!

Tuesday, June 19th, 2007

princecharming.jpg

And the finalists are here!

We asked and you have spoken.

What shall we name Brittany Murphy and her shady new husband Simon Monjack????

Here are your best suggestions:

– Loopy and Kooky

– Shitney & Jackoff

– Murphy’s Lawbreaker

– Cracker Jack

– Kook and Crook

– Rob N’ Chick

– Shady and the Tramp

– Quack & Jack

– Slut & Gut

– 2 Ugly People

– Con Airhead

– Queef ‘n’ Beef

– Gramps ‘n’ Tramps

– Britt ‘N’ Broke

Which nickname do you like the best????

CLICK HERE to vote!!!

Devoid of Yesterday: Things Fall Apart

Tuesday, June 19th, 2007

If you haven’t yet seen it, check out Devoid of Yesterday’s Things Fall Apart. It’s just the first film in a new collaboration by Rob Chiu / The Ronin, Chris Hewitt / Dstrukt, and Ben Lukas Boysen / HECQ that promises to create a series of original, non-commercial work. The evocative and dark short film premiered a few weeks ago at the ICA in London and came together in only three weeks. It’ll be interesting to see what else comes out of this collaboration and where they take this story next … Stay tuned.

DVD Review: The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh – The Friendship Edition

Tuesday, June 19th, 2007

I have fond memories of watching classic Winnie the Pooh cartoons as a child but even fonder ones of my parents reading me A.A. Milne’s classic tale of a boy and his stuffed bear. To this day I have a copy of the Complete Tales and Poems of Winnie the Pooh on my shelf. Winnie the Pooh, Piglet, Rabbit, Owl, Tigger, Kanga, Roo, and Christopher Robin are all unforgettable characters that many children grow up loving. I know that I am one of many.

In 1961 Walt Disney obtained rights to the British bedtime classics and he predicted that Pooh Bear and his friends would be huge. The Many Adventures of Winnie the Pooh brings together three of Disney’s classic shorts, Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree (1966), Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day (1968), and Winnie the Pooh and Tigger Too! (1974). All three were combined in 1977. These short cartoons are what propelled Winnie the Pooh out of the pages of a book and into the hearts of America.

In Winnie the Pooh and the Honey Tree, Pooh muddles his way through the acquiring of honey from a bee hive high up in a tree. He rolls in black mud and floats into the sky with the help of a balloon in what has to be an instantly recognizable image; Pooh hanging by a blue balloon as he sings about wonderful honey. I have not watched Pooh in years but I was instantly transported to the moment I first watched him when I was little and I enjoyed it just as much even though I am a little older.

Winnie the Pooh and the Blustery Day won an Academy Award in 1968 for best cartoon short. Walt Disney never got the chance to see Pooh become a household name; he died in December of 1966 before the short was finished. But Pooh and the Blustery Day is one of the most well known of the shorts.

Then we have Winnie the Pooh and Tigger Too! "The most wonderful thing about Tiggers is I’m the only one!" Even now I’m singing that song and making the growling noises in my head. I love Paul Winchell as Tigger, his voice is the perfect fit. While some voice actors might come close, for me there is only one Tigger. In the short Tigger’s bouncing is addressed as Rabbit gets fed up with being knocked down constantly. But soon the friends of 100 Acre Wood realize that Tigger is not Tigger unless he is bouncing.

The Friendship Edition also has some great special features. For the kid in us all, or for that matter your own kids, there is sing-a-long with Tigger, "100 Acre Wood" game, and a bonus short "A Day for Eeyore" (1983). For the adult, well, there is "The Story Behind the Masterpiece" featurette that includes interviews with Paul Winchell, (voice of Tigger) and Jon Walmsley (voice of Christopher Robin), as well as some of the animators.

Isn’t this the way childhood should be? Fun, light-hearted, and while life is not perfect, you have your friends there to help you solve the problems. A childhood would not be complete without this experience and as an adult you will enjoy reliving your own childhood.

Mrs. McNeill works for a non-profit agency where she is thankful for any internet time she can squeeze into her day. In her free time she reads one of the thousands of books she has stacked in her tiny apartment. Her husband is sure the books are a fire hazard and threatens daily to call the fire department.

1408 – Trailer 1r

Tuesday, June 19th, 2007
  1408 - Trailer 1r
The only demons in room 1408 are those within you. Renowned horror novelist Mike Enslin (Cusack) only believes what he can see with his own two eyes. After a string of bestsellers discrediting paranormal events in the most infamous haunted houses and graveyards around the world, he scoffs at the concept of an afterlife. Enslin’s phantom-free run of long and lonely nights is about to change forever when he checks into suite 1408 of the notorious Dolphin Hotel for his latest project, “Ten Nights in Haunted Hotel Rooms.” Defying the warnings of the hotel manager (Jackson), the author is the first person in years to stay in the reputedly haunted room. Another bestseller may be imminent, but like all Stephen King heroes, Enslin must go from skeptic to true believer - and ultimately survive the night.
Directed by: Mikael Hafstrom
Starring: John Cusack, Samuel L. Jackson, Mary McCormack, Tony Shalhoub

Transformers – Trailer 4

Tuesday, June 19th, 2007
  Transformers - Trailer 4
On July 4, our world will become the final battleground in a war fought by aliens. Though most will try to destroy us, some will try to protect us. “Transformers” is the action movie event of 2007.
Directed by: Michael Bay
Starring: Shia LaBeouf, Josh Duhamel, Tyrese, Megan Fox, Rachael Taylor

Movie Review: Gypsy Caravan

Monday, June 18th, 2007

Written by Caballero Oscuro

Gypsies. Just the mention of the word conjures images of mystery and danger, but how much do you really know about them? Sure, most people immediately picture a nomadic, hobbled old woman wearing a head scarf and one large hoop earring who might glance at you with a piercing evil eye as she tries to steal your money or your baby. However, as Johnny Depp points out in this film during a brief interview, "what you've believed about these people has been a lie your entire life." The truth about gypsies is far less threatening, and as it turns out, quite enlightening.

As conveyed in this riveting new documentary from filmmaker Jasmine Dellal, gypsies are more correctly identified as the Romani people, an ethnic group scattered across the globe. They are not wandering nomads, but instead have forged vibrant communities in their respective lands. They mostly share a common language and traditions, but have also integrated into their home countries to the point where there is not much that ties them together. This is evident in the range of music styles chosen for inclusion on last year’s six-week concert tour across North America that serves as the basis for this film.

The Gypsy Caravan 2006 tour united five gypsy bands from four countries, and the film follows the tour on the road as well as on location in their homelands. Their musical styles incorporate diverse but related elements like flamenco and brass band, folk music from India, and violin music from Romania. As one performer notes in the film, two of the only things the Roma have in common are their language and their heart, or passion, about their music. The film expertly captures this passion live on stage, but also shows glimpses of their daily lives on tour and back home. While the music might not be everyone’s cup of tea, the film shines by examining the Roma passion and sense of community in spite of their different countries of origin.

As we get to know the performers, we see glimpses of their homes and families in Spain, Macedonia, Romania, and India. These interludes between performances give the film its weight, as we learn to accept and care about these people rather than just enjoy their musical compositions. From the old man who worries about the future of his family when he’s no longer around to support them through his performances, to the “Queen of Gypsies” who describes her life experiences raising 47 adopted children, we see how fascinating their backstories are while concurrently enjoying their vibrant music.

Gypsy Caravan
is now playing in New York and opens in Los Angeles on June 29. For additional information, please visit the website.

This writer is a member of The Masked Movie Snobs, a collective that fights a never-ending battle against bad entertainment. El Bicho is an active contributing editor for BC Magazine.

DVD Review: American Pastime

Monday, June 18th, 2007

Written by Fantasma el Rey

American Pastime is set during World War II and is the story of a Japanese-American family’s relocation to an internment camp. Revolving around baseball, jazz, and family, it is a good-hearted movie that tells a wonderful tale but at times takes the all-too-beaten path in doing so. It's an enjoyable film and in some respects one could call some of the themes timeless.

Spanning the years 1941 to 1946 we see how the Namuro family copes with life in Camp Topaz, Utah. Attempting to make the place more than merely livable, they begin to fix the camp by giving it a feel of home. Youngest son Lyle (Aaron Yoo) loves jazz and baseball and aided by the latter was to be the first Namuro to attend college. Then along came Pearl Harbor, bringing Lyle’s dreams to an abrupt end. Lyle grows to hate baseball, rejecting his father’s offer to play on a camp team. Instead Lyle starts a swingin’ jazz band and, to help ease his misery, sells booze and gambles.

He also takes an interest in Katie (Sarah Drew), the daughter of the camp’s military supervisor (Gary Cole). This of course causes greater tension in the nearby town of Abraham. Lyle finds himself at odds with his father and now with Katie’s pop as well. As if that weren’t enough, rebellious Lyle and his respectful, older brother Lane begin to feud over right and wrong. To ease the tension between town folk and “prisoners,” a climactic baseball game is arranged that pits the local pro team, including Katie’s father, a former Yankees prospect, against Camp Topaz’s best. Of course, Lyle makes a return to the diamond in this ultimate showdown.

The Romeo and Juliet love story and the effect it has on the two different families is a story we’ve seen before as are the clashes that go on within the two lovers’ families. The squabbling brothers and the squabbling father and son, while the understanding mother tries to hold it together and play peacemaker, are very familiar plotlines as well. Not surprisingly, the game’s final outcome is decided between Lyle and Katie’s father. We’ve seen these formulas enough and I would rather watch a documentary on baseball and the internment camps, although I can see how it must be told this way in order to reach a wider audience, which allows for some fine performances from Aaron Yoo, Sarah Drew, and Gary Cole.

To his credit director Desmond Nakano does well in mixing actual vintage footage throughout the film. I do admire the fact that he also includes a scene where camp dissidents try to rally other internees to ask questions, like why other Americans weren’t put into camps. The Germans and Italians were also enemies of The U.S. Were they not interned because they were harder to spot, making them less of a target for violence? If that’s the case, then I guess it was for their own protection that the Japanese were locked away and forced on their “trail of tears.”

Overall, American Pastime has accomplished its goal in telling a story about a little known facet of our history and how baseball, that all-American game, played its part by presenting the story in an entertaining way everyone can relate to. When I’m in the mood or if it’s on television I will probably watch again, which is the mark of a good movie.

This writer is a member of The Masked Movie Snobs, a collective that fights a never-ending battle against bad entertainment. El Bicho is an active contributing editor for BC Magazine.

2007 Promax/BDA Title Sequence

Monday, June 18th, 2007

Rezn8’s open to the 2007 BDA is beautiful and well rendered while maintaining a very brooding (almost tribal) nature. This is the result of a very powerful audio choice and the pacing to go with it.

bda1.jpg

Its interesting that both this year’s BDA and Boardsmag Awards have such a similar concept behind their branding and title sequences. They both involve collaged-out bean stalks extending upward which culminate in the development of the logo. While the concept is similar, the design and execution are entirely unique.