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Boss Zoo

by King Sheep on July 8, 2011 at 1:59 pm
Posted In: Blog, humor, movie reviews, updates

Depending on your generational lingo, you either understood the title as a gnarly beast-o-rama to the max or a preserve for viewing different types of business managers.  If you favor the former, check your swatch and make sure it’s not set for 1985.  For the latter, join me in imagining the various exhibits of this mildlife park, such as the director’s domain, middle manager menagerie, temp turf, and the habitat for Horrible Bosses (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic).“The three principal actors click. The looseness of the structure actually proves a benefit, allowing Bateman, Sudeikis and Day, all trained on television comedy, to bounce off each other, talk over each other and apparently pull lines out of the air. “The Globe and Mail (Toronto) Liam Lacey

Why do creative people only pull lines out of thin air rather than the other elements?  My rickety question could have just as easily been pulled from fragile fire, wispy water, or emaciated earth.

“The laughs are proportionate to the stakes, which are middle-of-the-road.“ Boxoffice Magazine Sara Maria Vizcarrondo

Being in the road might be the least dangerous part

“Here’s a hit-and-miss farce that leaves you wishing it was funnier than it is. Why? Because it wussies out on a sharp premise.“ Rolling Stone Peter Travers

Even if the movie is a wuss, do we really need to resort to name-calling?

“Slow-witted, clumsy and almost pathologically reliant on crude name-calling for laughs – Horrible Bosses represents the lowest end of the comedy spectrum.” Miami Herald Connie Ogle

Total douche comment.

“With stellar comic timing from the entire ensemble and a dark streak of edgy humor with just enough wit to make it not seem cruel, this is one of the straight-up funniest movies of the year.” Brian Tallerico The Deadbolt

Mark Twain wrote “Of all the animals, man is the only one that is cruel. He is the only one that inflicts pain for the pleasure of doing it.”  Oddly enough, man and animal share the same cause in the story of a love-sick animal-talking Zookeeper (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic).

“A children’s comedy about talking animals that feels as if it were written by children or, perhaps, by talking animals.” Joe Neumaier New York Daily News

Whenever someone talks about 1000 monkeys typing at 1000 typewriters, we never hear the part about the one who got a Hollywood agent for his autobiographical screenplay.

“Offensive to women, men, children, parents, WASPs, Asians, African-Americans, animals and zookeepers … a movie with no conceivable audience.” Steven D. Greydanus Decent Films Guide

At last, a film for aliens looking for an excuse to invade our planet!

“Lock the cage and throw away the key. ‘Babe’ this is NOT.” Pete Hammond Boxoffice Magazine

But Babe was never in a cage.  Does this mean we should or shouldn’t make Babe into bacon?

The process looks so simple, it makes you wonder why he wanted to permanently write it down

“Look, a great movie this is not. A pleasant summer entertainment it is.” Roger Ebert Chicago Sun-Times

Would be pleased with phrasing Yoda would.

“It’s all mildly deplorable and instantly forgettable. Kevin James remains a potentially appealing movie star – if only he didn’t have to be in Kevin James movies. “ Time Richard Corliss

King Sheep doesn't know how to follow the advice: be yourself, so long as you’re not you

└ Tags: Horrible Bosses, review roundup, Zookeeper
1 Comment

Dark Moon Crowned “Larry”

by King Sheep on June 30, 2011 at 11:12 am
Posted In: Blog, humor, movie reviews, updates

When and if moons begin to crave individualism, not all of them are going to want names based on Greek and Roman mythology.  There will be a few that desire scientific accuracy (hello PSR B1257+12 B), others will sell their naming rights to corporate sponsors (greetings iMoon), and some will opt for pedestrian options such as Bob, Mike, or Larry Crowne (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic).

“It’s got Tom Hanks, it’s got Julia Roberts, and … well, that’s pretty much it.” Thomas Leupp Hollywood.com

So if you’ve seen the poster, you’ve seen the movie?  If that logic holds up, the plot involves a horrible motorcycle accident captured in freeze frame – one tragically happy second before impact.

“This is a film that can only be watched in utter misery. See it, and share in cinema’s degradation.” Antonia Quirke Financial Times

Any miserable critics want to respond?

“The humanist opposite to Hollywood’s self-congratulatory snark.” Armond White New York Press

The opposite of self-congratulation

“It’s the recognizable geniality in Larry Crowne that both carries the film and which makes it deeply frustrating.” Francesca Steele Sky Movies

Damn those irritatingly likeable people!  Their predictable happiness reminds others that it’s missing in their lives.

“So nice and upbeat and eager to please that other movies might beat it up on the playground.” Josh Bell Las Vegas Weekly

Maybe Larry can recruit giant robots to help repel bullies.  The idea must have some merit since there are three movies about Shia LaBeouf’s entourage of biped alien escorts.  The first Transformers (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic) hit the sweet spot between blockbuster and nostalgic product placement, but Transformers Revenge Of The Fallen (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic) crashed like a segue on autopilot and started the odd trend of putting “of the” in the title, as evidenced by Transformers: Dark Of The Moon (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic).

“The best 3D movie of all time –short as that timespan may be, it’s quite something.” Joseph Proimakis Movies for the Masses

Until we get 4D technology, kids still can’t play with the toys on screen.

“You can’t say enough bad things about this theme-park ride trying desperately to pass itself off as a genuine dramatic feature film.” Dennis Schwartz Ozus’ World Movie Reviews

Challenge accepted!

“I would say that this movie objectifies women, except for the obviously deep respect and affection it shows for objects.” Rob Thomas Capital Times (Madison, WI)

Objectified woman, female object, or all of the above?

“A self-important, 153-minute-long spectacle with no feeling, no meaning and a wonky sense of geography.” Duane Dudek Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

It’s not enough to destroy the world in the film; Michael Bay has to do it twice by teaching impressionable children bad geography.

“Watching Transformers: Dark of the Moon makes you die a little inside. Is this the future of movies? God help us! Michael Bay, you’ve done it again.” Peter Travers Rolling Stone

Michael Bay is trying to kill people with his movies?  Conclusion: He is a Decepticon.

“The result is still like being urinated upon, but at least this time Michael Bay was considerate enough not to ingest asparagus first.” Garth Franklin Dark Horizons

King Sheep fears another sequel involving Defecaticons

└ Tags: Larry Crowne, review roundup, Transformers Dark of the Moon
1 Comment

Super Penguin Teaches Green Car

by King Sheep on June 24, 2011 at 11:26 am
Posted In: Blog, humor, movie reviews, updates

Teaching cars shouldn’t be possible (even if they are environmentally conscious), but if anyone could, why not a super penguin?  After two weeks on the road, I’m likely to believe that anything is possible.  All living things benefit from education, why not Cars 2 (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic)?


“It’s sweet-spirited, visually delightful (if aurally cacophonous), and it will make for a pleasant enough family afternoon at the movies. But we’ve come to expect so much more than mere pleasantness from Pixar that Cars 2 feels almost like a betrayal.” Slate Dana Stevens

For the past few summers, the primary criticism of other animated films has been “They’re good, but they’re not Pixar-good.”  Now, if Pixar-good is just normal good, the comparison rings as hollow as truck drivers arguing over Chevy and Ford.

“But if it’s going to be diet Pixar, at least it’s action-packed diet Pixar — with overwhelming, detail-choked production design that occasionally had my jaw lowering like a forklift.” Joe Williams St. Louis Post-Dispatch

More jaw-dropping forklift action

“The rare sequel that improves on its predecessor, this lightning-paced caper-comedy shifts the franchise into high gear with international intrigue, spy-movie spoofery and more automotive puns than you can shake a stickshift at.” Justin Chang Variety

Rather than constructing my own motor metaphors, I’ll let the haters do it for me.

“With “Cars 2,” Pixar goes somewhere new: the ditch.” Colin Covert Minneapolis Star Tribune

“Pixar had never produced a clunker, but with “Cars 2,” the animation studio has not only stalled, it’s gone into reverse.” Portland Oregonian M. E. Russell

“Pixar runs out of gas. Into a brick wall.” Matt Pais RedEye

Made for families who like a little Disney in their Pixar, other audiences may experience a charming car crash. Normally, you would blame the driver, but since the cars drove themselves into a ditch, it wouldn’t matter if they’d had a Bad Teacher (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic).

“An amusing but wholly forgettable assemblage of scenes, some very funny, others thankfully brief, that you should absolutely catch bits of when it is on cable.” Jordan Hoffman UGO

You are encouraged to watch just the good parts of this movie six months from now when it’s on TV.  Thank you for the nigh-impossible homework assignment.

“A raunchy comedy that’s funnier to think about than to watch.” Philadelphia Inquirer Steven Rea

It’s oddly fitting for a teacher-comedy to leave you with food for thought.  Does the movie get extra credit if I laugh after it’s over?

“Viewers sick of being force-fed inspirational lessons who are looking to mentally flip the bird at authority, this will hit the spot.” Luke Y. Thompson E! Online

Perhaps more respect for authority is needed

“Diaz’s Bad Teacher might not give an F, but just about scrapes a B- herself.” Sophie Ivan Film4

Better than earning a D for diploma.

“Most of the cast doesn’t know what to do with their shallow characterizations and lackluster dialogue. The best lines were harvested for the trailer – so if you’ve seen that, you’ve seen it all.” San Francisco Chronicle Amy Biancolli

As long as we’re harvesting film, let’s dig into some old footage made on Super 8 (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic).

“A popcorn blockbuster made with craft, care, enthusiasm, genuine affection for its characters and respect for its audience. It’s entirely derivative, yet in this season of sequels and remakes and snark, it feels not just fresh but refreshing.” John Beifuss Commercial Appeal (Memphis, TN)

Audiences can decide for themselves if something is derivative or homage.

“J.J.’s Close Encounter with E.T., Gremlins, Jaws and Jurassic Goonies!” Kam Williams TheLoop21.com

Homageddon!

“This sci-fi thriller has an engrossing plot and a strong cast of fully drawn characters. There’s even a sweet youthful love story. In other words, it’s a summer blockbuster firing on all cylinders.” Claudia Puig USA Today

How many cylinders will Transformers 3 fire on next week?

“Super 8 is a thoroughly entertaining popcorn flick, but one does get the sense of Abrams sweating up a storm in an effort to produce the sort of guileless matinee magic that Spielberg conveyed effortlessly.” Matt Brunson Creative Loafing

There is no such thing as effortless success, only masters who make the difficult seem simple.

“Remember the good old days? This is the movie you went to see on a Saturday afternoon in the good old days.” Tom Long Detroit News

But if you’re young, you’re living your good old days.

“Abrams fashions Super 8 in such a calculating manner, with every element weighed both for maximum nostalgia value and ironic hipster cred, that it has an artificial feel to it. It’s like a birthday cake made of spun glass.” Peter Howell Toronto Star

A glass birthday cake can only be appreciated if it has a light inside.  Might I recommend a Green Lantern (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic)?

“Hal claims that a Lantern’s only enemy is fear itself. The thought of a sequel to this shamelessly soulless Hollywood product scares me plenty.” Rolling Stone Peter Travers

The yellow fear of making a bad sequel will never defeat potential mountains of green cash.

“Even by the standards of the current run of mediocre comic-book movies, this one stands out for its egregious shoddiness.” Dana Stevens Slate

I don’t think I’ve ever heard of a movie being egregiously shoddy.  Perhaps the sentiment was expressed as grievously gaudy, preposterously pretentious, or scandalously scruffy.

“As a disjointed rumble in the cosmos, it’s both too much and too little, and too dorky looking. In this case, Green means stop.” Tom Long Detroit News

Every other color means "use best judgment"

“DC has to step up its game. Christopher Nolan’s Bat-films aside, Marvel is kicking their ass all over the place.” Pete Vonder Haar Houston Press

The battle between publishers is filled with parallels: the rich morally-dubious industrialist superhero (Marvel – Iron Man, DC – Batman) or the proud and sexy long-haired god (Marvel – Thor, DC – Wonder Woman).  For my movie dollar, Marvel always has the advantage because it takes place in the real world (Chicago and New York vs. Gotham and Metropolis).

“Ryan Reynolds is a fearless fighter pilot famous for wielding his stick in many a starlet’s cockpit.” Mark Ramsey MovieJuice!

Great, Earth’s intergalactic cop is a sexual harassment case waiting to happen.

Hal Jordan parallels Starfox: Marvel's cocksure galactic gigolo

“One of the goofier, less pretentious and more agreeably kid-friendly superhero action movies of the current trend.” John Beifuss Commercial Appeal (Memphis, TN)

And if you’re looking for goofy and agreeably kid-friendly entertainment, you can find it with Mr. Popper’s Penguins (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic).

“’Mr. Popper’s Penguins’ is Hollywood formula, but it’s well poured and goes down easy.” Teddy Durgin Screen It!

That sounds like the formula toddlers eat.

“By happy coincidence, their names – Bitey, Loudy, Stinky, Lovey and Nimrod – pretty much double as a plot summary.” The Globe and Mail (Toronto) Rick Groen

If names = quality, perhaps the penguins belong to Mr. Pooper.

“During the movie’s awww-inducing conclusion, those of you who are allergic to cuteness – or to Jim Carrey – might want to look away.” Washington Post Michael O’Sullivan

If your eyes are itching, you might have a cuteness allergy

“A bland family film where your struggle with consciousness will be the most exciting thing happening in the theater.” Mathew DeKinder St. Louis Post-Dispatch

King Sheep wonders if he wins or loses by staying awake

└ Tags: Bad Teacher, Cars 2, Green Lanter, movie reviews, Mr. Popper's Penguins, review roundup, Super 8
1 Comment

Preview Pontification

by Major Sheep on June 14, 2011 at 9:44 am
Posted In: Blog

Trailers.  Teasers.  Previews.

I was going to say “These are just a few of the names…” but really it’s all the names I can think of, and maybe all the names there are for the subject of this ramble: movie previews.

To some people, they are the annoying 10-15 minutes that they have to endure before they can watch the movie for which they handed over 10 good American dollars.  Or they’re the first couple of chapters on the DVD that must be skipped before you can see the main menu.  For those folks, previews are probably nothing more than a big green blanket with a bold letter printed on it.

Side note: if anyone needs a birthday idea for me, a fleece blanket emblazoned with the MPAA green screen would be awesome.  Preferrably with an R rating (Language, Sexual Material, and Crude Humor).

To me, and a few other select people in my circle of friends, movie trailers are their own appreciable art form.  They are two-minute films that are often better than the movies they advertise.  Yet while they may build hype prior to their movie’s release date, their posthumous success is forever linked to that of the film.  If a movie sucked, no one remembers the trailer.

I won’t include TV spots into my endeavor of trailer appreciation.  While I’d like to say it’s for artistic reasoning, it’s actually something more petty than that.  In 1999, The Matrix had been in theaters about two weeks when Warner Brothers released a TV spot that showed the end of the movie with Neo stopping bullets.  I’d already seen the movie a couple times at this point, but they basically revealed the ending of the movie on broadcast TV.  I just felt it was poor taste, and 15-second trailers have left a wrinkle at the base of my neck ever since.

Yes, they can be traitors as well as champions; prophets and charlatans both.  But I would like to submit an idea to you, the reader: can, for the sake of artistic appreciation, a trailer be judged on its own merits alone?

I spend a good bit of time on places like comingsoon.net and movie-list.com where I basically make sure no trailer is released without my knowledge.  These sites do a great job of catching just about everything that’s released for the public, and my favorite feature is seeing the difference between consecutive trailers for the same movie.  For example:


Back in March, a trailer was released for a movie called Larry Crowne, starring Julia Roberts and Tom Hanks.  It looks like it’s the kind of rom-com that will appeal to our hearts and our frustration with the economy.  Wow.  When I write it like that, it doesn’t sound like a winning combination at all, but the preview will smooth all that out.  It’s quirky, it’s funny, but it leaves you with a ton of set-up and no hint as to the meat of the story.  All lettuce.

If I can keep the trailer-to-hamburger comparison afloat, it had the mustard, veggies, and a good bit of cheese.  Now, as I said earlier, I don’t need my trailer to be all meat.  In fact, the thinner the patty, the better.  However, this preview had not even the lingering scent of bacon.  A selection of scenes to introduce the story arc, then a collection of soundbites to make sure it’s officially classified as a romantic-comedy starring two of the most well-loved actors in modern cinema.

Last Monday, a second trailer was released, and here’s why I love it:  it’s almost identical to the first one, but it’s got meat.  It starts off the same way, but shows a little more breadth in the set-up.  It also features lingering looks, a hint of tension between the two love birds, and things that show me the story is going to be more than just two people.

So, trailer #1: 2/3 of a burger; trailer #2: 3/4 of a burger.

I didn’t want to give it a full burger because I’m still working out what that means.  No sense in going all out on the first run, eh?

That’s all for this time.  Tune in this Friday when I cover for King Sheep who is still on the road to his new home in Michigan.


Comments Off on Preview Pontification

Beginning Submarine Class

by King Sheep on June 3, 2011 at 5:29 pm
Posted In: Blog, humor, movie reviews

You have your choice of three good movies this weekend, though you probably haven’t heard of two of them.  That being said, I must announce there won’t be a roundup for the next two weeks due to my cross country move with all my worldly possessions.  With all my junk, I may have to consider other options if the truck is too small, like a freight train, mercenary aircraft, or a commercially-available Submarine (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic).

“Succeeds by perfectly recapturing the way teenagers behave, the forced pretense of their actions, their deadly seriousness in dramatizing what amounts to minor emotional damage.” Jesse Cataldo Slant Magazine

Luckily, teenagers have plenty of time left to experience major emotional damage.

“…plays an awful lot like “Rushmore” with a dash of “son of Rambow” thrown in…Newcomer Craig Roberts appears to have modeled his performance on “Harold and Maude’s” deer-in-the-headlights Harold.” Laura Clifford Reeling Reviews

The review skews negative despite the comparison to highly-esteemed coming-of-age classics.  This may be an unintended consequence of not being able to reference movies no one remembers.  For example, the film sounds like a hybrid of Gentlemen Broncos and Catfish in Black Bean Sauce, but that could just be me.

“Submarine may not be epic cinema, but in a modest way, it’s close to perfection.” Time Out New York Sam Adams

Modest perfection = humble awesomeness

“Submarine is the film Youth In Revolt should have been, an achingly sad yet ribald account of a hyper-verbal oddball’s ascent/descent into manhood.” Nathan Rabin AV Club

My point about popular examples is suddenly moot if you haven’t seen Youth In Revolt.  Oh well, as with many unpaid bloggers, I can still be amused by my failures like most Beginners (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic).

“Beginners is all about beginnings that begin with endings – the point, Mills seems to be saying, is that sometimes you need to say good-bye to make room for hello.” Movieline Stephanie Zacharek

Helpful advice from the ‘Less Is More’ school of thought.

“McGregor goes bone-deep in a performance of shining subtlety. And a never-better Plummer is simply stupendous, refusing any call to sentiment as he shows us Hal’s resonant lunge at life. Mills works the same way. Beginners is one from the bruised heart.” Rolling Stone Peter Travers

Attention teenagers: this is a preview of major emotional damage

“A sad, sweet, funny and ultimately unforgettable love story about a man and a woman and a father and son, and also ranks among the most affectionate and sensitive portraits of homosexuality ever crafted by a straight person.” Salon.com Andrew O’Hehir

I can’t tell if that’s a dubious or legitimate compliment.  Perhaps it teeters between being a claim-to-fame and shame.

“So Beginners might sound insufferable, but it isn’t – or at least not completely. Mills’s second feature (after Thumbsucker) has way too many quirks for its own good, although it also flaunts a rare freedom to jump back and forth in time.” Village Voice Rob Nelson

Wait, now time travel is involved?  The characters are beginning to sound like the mutant-students of X-Men: First Class (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic).

“This prequel draws new energy from supersmart casting, plus the shrewd notion of setting the beginnings of the X-Men saga in the early 1960s.” Wall Street Journal Joe Morgenstern

Supersmart casting and energy manipulation imply the film itself has superpowers.  I hope this self-aware movie believes that with great power comes a responsibility to provide great entertainment.

“A fourth movie that feels like a first.” Jim Slotek Jam! Movies

Considering the previous prequel (Wolverine), it appears Hollywood has learned another lesson from modern comic books; when you can’t go forward, just keep starting over with a new issue #1.

“Erik/Magneto, as played by Michael Fassbender, is, well, magnetic.” Peter Rainer Christian Science Monitor

Calling Magneto magnetic is redundantly redundant

“I know there’s no mention of mutants in the Wikipedia entry of the Cuban Missile Crisis, but after watching this movie, you could almost believe there should be.” Kevin Carr 7M Pictures

Rewriting history would be another nifty superhero power, but the character would need a paradoxical origin story.

“The finest comic-book flick since 2008’s The Dark Knight.” Lisa Kennedy Denver Post

Bold claim; perhaps optimism is her mutant superpower.  What say the Brotherhood of Unimpressed Critics?

“It’s a strangely talky motion picture that tries to advance several philosophical themes; these would have been more interesting if we weren’t already aware of how they will play out in the “future” X-Men trilogy.” James Berardinelli ReelViews

King Sheep expects a bright future to play out in Michigan

└ Tags: Beginners, review roundup, submarine, X-Men First Class
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