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Archive for June, 2007
Tuesday, June 12th, 2007
Written by El Articulo Definido
In 1989 The Simpsons aired their Christmas special, and for many, this was something totally new, a depiction of a dysfunctional nuclear family that seemed more familiar to many families than what was depicted on typical sitcoms. In the beginning that show had dysfunction, but its popularity was largely due to its heart.
However, when that show was aired, not once do I remember it being compared to, what seems to me, its obvious predecessor, Wait Till Your Father Gets Home. With Season One released as a Hanna-Barbera Classic Collection by Time Warner last week, it has become apparent to me what an overlooked treasure this show is.
Wait Till Your Father Gets Home was originally aired in 1972 and features the voice of Tom Bosley as Harry Boyle, an understanding father trying to understand a vastly changing world. His neighbor is conservative, way to the right, terrified of the communist threat to America, and thus runs a crack outfit of pseudo militants, The Vigilantes, bent on bringing justice and safety to their quiet neighborhood. And so, The Vigilantes stand as a great example of just one extreme.
His children, however, go to the opposite extreme. The two oldest children, Alice and Chet, serve to show the bleeding-heart liberalism that was prevalent in the 1970s. Just one example, is in an early episode in which the family suspects Harry of cheating with his secretary. They don’t believe him when he denies it, yet they try to understand why he would cheat, rather than chastise him for doing so. Of course, not once do they consider that he didn’t. In response Harry utters, “I get treated better around here when they think I’ve done wrong.” The largest, most prevalent theme when dealing with the kids is that Chet, at 22, refuses to get a job.
Is it a case of history repeating itself, as more and more kids are frightened of entering the workplace after college? Of course, it doesn’t help that there are few jobs waiting for them.
The youngest son, Jamie, who is voiced throughout the season by both Willie Ames and Jackie Earl Haley, seems to be a prototype for Family Ties’ Alex P. Keaton, and sign of what is to come in the ’80s. The young, entrepreneurial Jamie is constantly trying to sell whatever services he has for a little extra change, and even tries to barter up the value of a lost tooth, asking why the Tooth Fairy doesn’t account for inflation.
In the middle of all, is Mom. She is a mom of the past, dependent on house and husband, but is ruler of the roost at home. However, she is always supportive of both the kids and Harry. She is the sole voice of reason, even when no one is listening.
Overall, it is a very unique family dynamic that encapsulates the feelings of change spreading through the mass consciousness at the time. Alongside of all of this social commentary is an animation style that fits the show so well. It is very pared down, putting less emphasis on backgrounds, and more emphasis on characters, and with this minimalist approach the viewer is left with a less-is-more feeling.
In the end, the best way to describe it is as Family Guy living next door to American Dad with the heart, emotions, truth, and honesty of the first few seasons of The Simpsons. For those who remember this show, it is worth the purchase as a reminder of the past, and a reminder of the present as it holds up remarkably better than many sitcoms of the ’70s. That, in my mind is due to the themes taking precedence over the visual commitment of painting the ’70s. It’s just a family, dealing with the issues of their, and our, times.
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.


Posted in Celebrity Gossip, Movie Reviews, Video | No Comments »
Tuesday, June 12th, 2007
Dave Corkery
When Steven Soderbergh announced that he was making a second sequel to Ocean’s 11, film-fans everywhere gave each other confused looks. Why was this great director further burying himself under the dirt of sequel-crud? Wasn’t one unnecessary, superflop sequel enough for the superstar cast and director? But no, they just couldn’t get enough of each other and now here we are with Ocean’s 13. But luckily for them, it’s a return to form for Steve and the crew.
Posted in CinemATTIC, Reviews | No Comments »
Tuesday, June 12th, 2007
Filed under: Horror, Thrillers, Lionsgate Films, Celebrities and Controversy, Fandom, Movie Marketing, Interviews 
Earlier this afternoon I had a chance to speak with Courtney Solomon from After Dark Films. A filmmaker himself (he directed An American Haunting and the 2000 flick Dungeons & Dragons), Courtney is now a partner over at After Dark Films. A company that has a multi-picture deal with Lionsgate; these are the same folks who were also responsible for marketing the upcoming horror flick Captivity. And we all know what happened there. Back in March, a bunch of controversial billboards for Captivity began popping up all over New York and Los Angeles; billboards, mind you, that were not approved by the MPAA. Hence, the MPAA suspended the film's ratings process and slapped After Dark Films with an unprecedented sanction, forcing the company to clear all venues and locations of its ad buys with the MPAA.
Since then, the film's release date has been pushed back twice (it's now set to be released on July 13), and folks like Eli Roth have called them out basically saying that After Dark Films helped ruin the ratings process for other films, like Hostel: Part II, that were trying to go through the process at the exact same time. Following my interview with Roth (in which the director had some pretty harsh things to say about both Captivity and After Dark), I caught up with Solomon who wanted to set the record straight.
Cinematical: Let me read what Eli Roth said to me regarding Captivity and its controversial ad campaign: "Well ... I mean, everyone hates those guys. And word of mouth is that Captivity sucked. Why would I be jealous of that; I don't give a sh*t. I was pissed actually, because it makes it very difficult for the rest of us. They did not go before the MPAA with those posters. It really puts everyone on edge when that happens. And suddenly, who's the next one up? Oh, thanks, it's me. I'm not doing this for attention, I'm doing this to make good movies. And that decapitated head poster was a European poster; that was in 80% of the countries in Europe. It was not a poster that was intended for American audiences." What's your response to that?
Courtney Solomon: First of all, I've heard this over and over again -- [Eli] has spent most of his publicity tour talking about the Captivity posters and dissing us. I was listening to K-Rock one day, and he spent twenty minutes on there just going on about me -- and I've never even met Eli. As far as what he's saying, there are a couple of things that are completely inaccurate. First of all, nobody has seen Captivity because we re-did a third of the movie and we're just finishing it now. We actually just finished the mix on it two days ago. So he hears word around town that the movie is sh*t, but how can he say that when no one has even seen the movie? We just spent a lot of money and a lot of time to make the movie better, because we cared that the movie was good. In fact, it's got a lot more substance than his movie does -- that's number one. That's just a blatant, stupid, wrong statement. That's someone just spouting out from the mouth without even thinking about what they're saying. Continue reading Interview: After Dark Films' Courtney Solomon Talks to Cinematical About 'Captivity' Controversy and Eli Roth's Big ... Mouth Permalink | Email this | Comments
Posted in Celebrity Gossip, cinematical, Movie News | No Comments »
Tuesday, June 12th, 2007

The flamboyant C3PO and R2D2 both appear in this '80s anti-smoking PSA. Runtime: 36 sec
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Tuesday, June 12th, 2007

Kelly Clarkson tries to charm a cobra on a Danish talkshow. Runtime: 30 sec
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Tuesday, June 12th, 2007
One of the few motion graphics companies that have come up with a style so potent that they’ve been able to carry it across the majority of their projects is Zeitguised.

Their work often involves twisted structures frenetically morphing into one another that they refer to as “high gloss artschool 3D punk blends”. They’ve been off the radar for some time now, but its obvious that they’ve been continuing to push their technique further and further. Their newest music video “Junior Boys In the Morning” (both a departure and a progression from their previous work) is the present state of the evolution of this style.
Posted in Filmmaking | No Comments »
Tuesday, June 12th, 2007

Mr. T saves the I.T. world from corporate zombies, a cold-hearted consultant, and dumb disk arrays! Runtime: 3 min 23 sec
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Tuesday, June 12th, 2007

The great Senegalese filmmaker -- the first and most important cinematic voice to emerge from post-Colonial Africa -- is dead at the age of 84. A.O. Scott's Times obit ran yesterday, as did the A.P. obituary, and Scott's further appreciation is in today's Times. Wesley's overview of Sembene's career will be in tomorrow's Globe (I'll retrolink when it goes up). Here's a good webpage for beginners, and there's always Wikipedia.

Sembene started making movies later than other post-WWII giants like Truffaut, Fellini, Kurosawa, but you could argue that he's more important than all of them put together, because there simply wasn't an African cinema before him. With 1966's "Black Girl" and especially 1968's "Mandabi" ("The Money Order"), he applied a social realist narrative style to narrative concerns directly impacting Senegalese and African audiences: racism, post-colonial corruption, women's rights, the search for a cultural identity untainted by Western values.
Which makes his movies sound like medicine, when they're anything but. Rather, they're alive and bursting with characters, some humorous, some tragic, all striving to be heard. Sembene's last film, "Moolaade," is about women in a rural village who resist the tradition of female circumcision, but a wiser, more joyous, yet more unsettling depiction of the push and pull of human life you will not find.
Not many of Sembene's films made it to American theaters, and they're hard to find on video (the riotous 1975 bourgeoise satire "Xala" is available, as are "Mandabi" and "Black Girl" -- all highly recommended. "Moolaade" has been on DVD but is currently unavailable; look for used copies). For that reason, he's not as well known as he should be in the West. That didn't seem to bother the filmmaker, whose use of local dialects and oral tradition was meant to reach as many of his countrymen and fellow Africans as possible. "Africa is my 'audience,'" he once said, "while the West and the 'rest' are only targeted as 'markets'.
So he didn't need us. But we need his movies.
Posted in Movie News | No Comments »
Tuesday, June 12th, 2007
When you were directing The Nines, did you find that you wanted to change some of the action and dialogue because it didn’t come across in production the way you thought it would when you wrote it. And, if you changed things, was it because you were maybe hypercritical of your own work and saw problems where nobody else would or did you consider making changes just because you could (being the writer and everything)?
– Dennis Feeney
The action changed somewhat, based on the geography at hand. For instance, there’s a scene in Part Three where a family is coming back to a parked car. As scripted, there was a certain sequence for who would be where for what line of dialogue, but once you have real actors, real dolly movements and real reflections to contend with, that all changes. And that’s after storyboarding, during which some of those things were already decided.
In terms of dialogue, I didn’t find myself changing that many lines. We’d had the luxury of some rehearsal, so if there was a line that an actor really had a difficult time landing, I could change that ahead of time.
Once we started production, I really saw myself as a the director, not the writer. If something wasn’t working, my instinct was to look at changes in the performances or the camera movement rather than the words. Indeed, the few times I did go back in to writer-mode was when I saw unanticipated opportunities. During a confrontation between Hope Davis and Melissa McCarthy, I added this line…
- SARAH
- He’s an actor. If no one’s watching him, he doesn’t really exist.
…which ends up being fairly important to the scene (and, ultimately, the movie). Yet I added it at six in the morning on the day of shooting, based largely on something I overheard the actors talking about between takes. That kind of serendipity is what made my dual roles rewarding.
Posted in Screenwriting, Words on the page | No Comments »
Tuesday, June 12th, 2007
XYZ and Bitstate (both on The Ebeling Group’s roster) have created two more spots for the Havaiana’s campaign. (We posted the Three Legged Legs addition a while back).

Watch XYZ’s spot | Watch Bitstate’s spot
All the spots in the campaign use electric, candy-coated palettes to paint dreamlike worlds that we tour from a foot’s point of view. It’s a fun concept, albeit a little constraining at times. I think it works, though, especially with the sudden jumps to live action (a.k.a. “reality”) at the end of each spot.
Posted in Filmmaking | No Comments »
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