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Angry Driver Passes Hall Shelter

by King Sheep on February 24, 2011 at 9:29 pm
Posted In: Blog, humor, movie reviews, updates

This is the last weekend to check out Oscar nominations before some become Oscar winners.  In response, your new releases have fled to the other end of the quality spectrum.  We have a forgettable thriller starring an Oscar-nominated actress, a filmmaking duo’s mid-life crisis played out on screen, and the Nicolas Cage hair personality test.  If you’re desperate for movies and willing to venture into the cold, be safe and don’t Drive Angry (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic).

“Not every movie needs to be a thought-provoking work of art…” Ben Rawson-Jones Digital Spy

Thank you for clarifying that it’s not a work of art.  What is it a work of?

“The juicy, toxic and unhealthy cinema equivalent of the biggest, tastiest and least nutritional burger you’ve ever wolfed down in a moment of heedless gluttony.“ Catherine Bray Film4

Put another way: It’s a metaphorical burger with enough yummy toxicity to make your metaphorical heart explode.  But it also sounds like the best case scenario is enjoying the movie, but hating yourself afterward.

“They say what you see in Nicolas Cage’s hair is a reflection of your own soul. To me, it looks a bit like a giant, microwaved wombat slipping off the top of St Paul’s Cathedral.” Robbie Collin News of the World

Wombat wigs aside, which Nicolas Cage hairdo best reflects your soul?

“With his recent glut of increasingly low-rent cinematic forays…combined with the blatantly obvious fact that he’s only making them to stave off bankruptcy, Nicolas Cage may have subjected himself to a whole new subgenre of filmmaking – Cagesploitation.” Shaun Munro Obsessed With Film

Looking at the list of previous Nick Cage movies, we know the man likes to work.  Besides, self exploitation is the highest form of exploitation.  Unless you’re unsuccessfully exploiting yourself, you might as well call it personal achievement.

“A shambling, ponderous mess that aims to be a trashy cult classic and merely ends up in the trash — Fichtner aside.” Chris Hewitt (UK) Empire Magazine

Everyone sucks but Fichtner.  You may not recognize his name, but you’ve seen him in plenty of movies.  If ridiculous 3D action and actors wearing wombat wigs isn’t appealing, Fichtner could be your only cinematic Shelter (Rotten Tomatoes).

“Julianne Moore’s latest is about a man with multiple-personality disorder. Ironic, since the film also doesn’t know what it is. A horror hodge-podge touching on reincarnation, loss of faith, witchcraft and demonic possession, this is like a Sunday evening stew of leftovers.” David Edwards Mirror UK

Horror hodge-podge leftovers range in quality from hearty comfort food to a boiling mess that makes starvation look appetizing. Can we simplify the ingredients?

“As far as its own multiple personalities go, Shelter gives you your pick of exhausting, grim and absurd.” Tim Robey Daily Telegraph

I chose absurd

“To be fair, not only is Shelter the maddest film you’ll see this year, it’s also made with great skill, visual flair, pace and style, and even if it does occasionally tip over into silliness it will keep you hooked, gripped and not a little scared.” Mike Martin Moviemuser

It looks like a thriller, sounds like a thriller, but provides no thrills.

“Begins as a psychological thriller, transforms into a supernatural bonce-scratcher and finally descends into an almighty mess.” Rosie Fletcher SFX Magazine

Would it have been better to be an almighty mess the whole time?

“Not unwatchable but not particularly good either.” Matthew Turner ViewLondon

That statement sums up the last 2 months of Hollywood movies.  In these dark times, delinquent students who would normally cut class to go see movies now prefer to wander their schools with or without a Hall Pass (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic).

“The Farrelly brothers continue to strain desperately for their gross-out glory days with Hall Pass, their latest “comedy” — and, yes, that word is in quotes for a reason.” Christy Lemire Associated Press

Is it because you didn’t “like” it or did you worry that sarcasm wouldn’t “translate” without explanation?

“Hall Pass, a light comedy of horny marital woe from directors Peter and Bobby Farrelly, makes a novel statement about the sex wars: It says that they’re essentially over. And that the guys – in case there was any lingering suspense about it – have lost.” Owen Gleiberman Entertainment Weekly

TO: Men
SUBJECT: Are we going to spend the future moaning about it or is there going to be a rematch?

“If you go in with low expectations, you can’t help but be pleasantly surprised. The value of its huge laughs shouldn’t be underestimated.” Marshall Fine Hollywood & Fine

This would count as success if his lowest expectation was punching himself

“What once came naturally now seems like trying too hard, as the Farrellys face their own mid-life crisis.” Nick Pinkerton Village Voice

If the Farrelly’s humor had always been aimed at disenfranchised middle-aged males instead of young adults, we might have ended up with Bald and Balder or There’s Something About Hemorrhoids.

“Bobby and Peter Farrelly have brought water to the arid desert currently calling itself American film comedy. It’s a drink spiked with enough crudeness to cause a nasty bout of dysentery.” Wesley Morris Boston Globe

King Sheep doubts there are pleasant bouts of dysentery.

└ Tags: Drive Angry, Hall Pass, movie posters, review roundup, Shelter
6 Comments

Momma’s Street Number Unknowingly Vanishes

by King Sheep on February 18, 2011 at 11:26 am
Posted In: Blog, humor, movie reviews

While disappearing neighborhood identification is unsettling, it’s not as serious as the late winter movie dry spell.  Sadly, the drought continues this week and its end remains Unknown (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic).



“Implausible, over-the-top, ridiculous and for the most part, fun is a much better description for this “smart suspense” flick.” JimmyO iamROGUE

The tone, logic, and use of ‘orphan quotes’ makes that review the cinematic equivalent of “she’s got a great personality.”
Q: Is it good?
A: Well, it’s fun.

“Unknown is finely tuned pulp filmmaking, a dumb movie with a smart veneer, which is nothing to sneeze at.” St. Petersburg Times Steve Persall

Q: Is it smart?
A:Well, it’s fun.

“That’s eventually what Unknown is – violent, impersonal and comforting.” Movieline Elvis Mitchell

Another unknown: What if violent maniacs give the best hugs?


“I saw “Unknown” with an entourage whose average age was about 70. They loved it, although one of them kept calling it “The Bond Ultimatum.” Which sounds about right.” Wesley Morris Boston Globe

The Bond Ultimatum: Starring Bourne, James Bourne.

“John Wayne wore cowboy drag, Mel Gibson’s mullet was his tip-off, but the most recognizable action hero signature these days is Liam Neeson’s nose.” Steve Persall vSt. Petersburg Times

Despite calling out John Wayne’s masculinity, associating mullets with psychos, and praising Neeson’s nose, the next inductee into this dubious hall of acclaim should look at his fellow action icons and say to himself “I Am Number Four (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic).”

“What we have here is a witless attempt to merge the “Twilight” formula with the Michael Bay formula.” Roger Ebert Chicago Sun-Times

How witless was the attempt?  Did they end up with vampires versus robots or Twiformers: Revenge Of The Emo?

“Like its chaste, chemistry-free central couple, Number Four is all buildup and no release.” Josh Bell Las Vegas Weekly

While the comment works as a metaphor for unsatisfied desires, why not commit to the alliteration and call the couple’s chronic chastity a case of canceled coitus?

“A flashy, lunkheaded sci-fi extravaganza sure to appeal to teenagers who like their interplanetary warfare bloodless, their high-school soaps squeaky-clean and their numbers countable on one hand.” Variety Justin Chang

What about those of us who are comfortable counting on two hands (and, if necessary, feet)?

“Is I Am Number Four going to revolutionize Young Adult fantasy filmmaking? Let’s not FOURce the issue.” Jordan Hoffman UGO

Let’s hope that was the worst of the wordplay.  If not, FOURgetaboutit.

“”I Am Number Four” has more than a whiff of number two about it…” Michael Phillips Chicago Tribune

And if you catch a whiff of poo-smell, pray it disappears like a Vanishing on 7th Street (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic).



“Wonderfully shot in deep, bleak shadows, set to an aggressively moody musical score, and quick enough to get through the apocalypse in less than 90 minutes.” Scott Weinberg FEARnet

Hop in the express line for the apocalypse – Fifteen sins or less.

“The movie begins to feel like a grad-school thesis masquerading as entertainment. So what’s the metaphor? It’s way too vague to tell.” Joshua Rothkopf Time Out New York

The film’s metaphor is as vague as a bad metaphor.

“Anderson has made a zombie movie without the zombies.” Entertainment Weekly Owen Gleiberman

Our final film is a comedy without laughs: Big Mommas: Like Father, Like Son (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic).

“Among this film’s many misdemeanours is pinching the plot of Some Like It Hot.” Peter Bradshaw Guardian [UK]

The movie about cross-dressing crime stoppers is committing crimes of its own?

“Whoever demanded a third instalment of Lawrence’s mirthless mash-up of weak gags and cross-dressing horrors should be imprisoned and forced to watch it on repeat until they repent. Avoid.” Anna Smith Empire Magazine

A film that commits crimes becomes its own punishment.  That zen notion is likely to be more interesting than the movie.

“The movie is at least 20 minutes too long. Actually, it’s 107 minutes too long.” Roz Laws Birmingham Post

King Sheep suspects the trailer is too long

└ Tags: Big Mommas House, I Am Number Four, movie posters, review roundup, Unknown, Vanishing on 7th Street
2 Comments

Rapid Eagle Goes With Cedar Gnome

by King Sheep on February 11, 2011 at 12:26 pm
Posted In: Blog, humor, movie reviews

Valentine’s Day looms, not much else to say, so Just Go With It (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic).

“It’s abundantly clear that Sandler is caught in his own memory gap. As he wrestles with an uncomfortable middle age, he’s either forgotten or ceased to care about how to make people laugh.” Peter Howell Toronto Star

If he’s not a comedian anymore, does he become an actor by default?

“I inflicted this movie on myself and now someone’s got to pay.” Andrew O’Hehir Salon.com

It doesn’t count as taking a bullet for the team, if you felt like jumping in front of a gun.

“The positives have an edge over the negatives, but it probably doesn’t matter either way. It is an Adam Sandler movie. It is a romantic comedy opening Valentine’s Day weekend. It is going to be huge.” Pam Grady Boxoffice Magazine

Voodoo dolls would be huge if they made people feel better

“You may root for Sandler and Aniston to just ‘go with it’, but only so you can be done with it” Stella Papamichael Digital Spy

If it’s a hit, “Just Be Done With It” could be the name of the inferior sequel.  Then again, it sounds more like the end of a trilogy.  The sequel, could be “Keep With It” or “Still Milking It.”

“The people in this movie are dumber than a box of Tinkertoys.” Roger Ebert Chicago Sun-Times

The star-crossed protagonists of our next film really are as smart as a box of Tinkertoys: Gnomeo and Juliet (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic).

“What a dud of a story! You know what it needs to dress it up? Garden gnomes.” Movieline Stephanie Zacharek

If this starts a trend, please consider: The Knick Knack Merchant of Venice, The Taming Of the Yard Flamingo, and Much Ado About Lawn Ornaments.

“Totally crackers but it gets powered by pure invention and eccentricity alone.” Empire David Hughes

A purely eccentric invention

“Gnomeo & Juliet is Romeo & Juliet…but with gnomes? That’s TERRIBLE. It’s like doing Moth-ello, a kids’ film about a Moorish general who hatches from a cocoon, flies towards lightbulbs and eats jerseys.” Robbie Collin News of the World

As long as we’re tossing out alternates, how about Otter-thello or Duckbeth?  I would pay to see King Deer: three does clash over their father’s kingdom, but the story ends tragically in roadkill.

“The movie’s overall lack of imagination is the real tragedy.” Time Out New York Nick Schager

If people laugh at the tragic failure, does that make it a comedy?

“If it’s not an unerringly faithful adaptation of Shakespeare’s play, it still manages enough wit and charm to come off.” Orlando Sentinel Roger Moore

Is it better to come off like a cheap set of lingerie or take off like The Eagle (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic)?

“The Eagle is full of action and fleet of foot-it’s a movie of smoky, lowering battlefields and trippy, space-bending flashbacks, pausing only for admiring location shots of Scotland’s wild, craggy vistas.” Village Voice J. Hoberman

That review was full of bombastic declarative expositions and trippy syntax-bending clauses.

“[I]f it looks like a loving ode to fascism sounds like a loving ode to fascism then, well, there’s really only one conclusion to draw.” Mark Dujsik Mark Reviews Movies

If it walks like a duck and talks like a duck, it might be a duck-billed platypus.

“It’s a Channing Tatum movie. Asking for anything more than gruff posturing is like asking Sylvester Stallone to pull a Brando.”Alexis Loinaz Chicago Tribune

Oh internet, how I love that you have a response to every comment: Stallone as Brando

“‘The Eagle’s’ sweeping score and grand cinematography are reminders of that old saying: When in ancient Rome, do as Ridley Scott does.” Graham Killeen Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

And if you want to embrace mid-western values, do like they do in Cedar Rapids (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic).

“Though not as uproarious as “The 40-Year-Old Virgin,” director Miguel Arteta’s consistently entertaining white-collar laffer could do for Helms what that film did for Steve Carell.”  Variety Peter Debruge

But Ed Helms is already on the Office.

“It helps that Reilly is the opposite of a slob-comic. With his hangdog melancholy, he makes even the nonstop cunnilingus allusions poignant-the product of emotional longing.” New York Magazine David Edelstein

The Oscars should recognize an actor who can make raunchy humor seem poignant


“This crude aping of every hack from Judd Apatow to the Farrelly brothers represents the worst of what is happening in film today…” Rex Reed New York Observer

Who are these crude apes who are tormenting Hollywood?

“The jokes sing as well as zing.” Manohla Dargis New York Times

I doubt anyone would sing a zing for this thing: After Ming’s fling with King Cling, something stings.  his ‘string that swings’ lies in a schwing sling.

“Ping-pongs between empathetic chuckles at Helms’s charming social awkwardness and putting him through a raunchfest ringer.” David Fear Time Out New York

If alliteration annoys, King Sheep apologizes

3 Comments

Intermission…

by Major Sheep on February 8, 2011 at 11:19 pm
Posted In: Blog

My greatest heart-, stomach-, and brain-felt apologies, but there will be no new Coming Distractions today.

The reason for this is multi-folded, but stems around another project Pat and I are doing.  Yes, this here comic strip you’ve come to know and love isn’t the only thing we’re good for.  In fact, would you be surprised to know that IT is the actual side project?  Well, maybe you’ve been able to guess that from its sometimes-irregular updates.  However, I bet you’re still surprised.

So here’s the deal: I’ve got a deadline to finish our project and it is coming up quickly which means I have to divert all fire power to the forward batteries so that nothing gets through.  This means there won’t be any comic updates for the rest of this month.  I know!  Sadness!  But dry your tears, earnest fan-folk, for your days and weeks won’t be completely lonely.

I’ll post some things on the blog here to make up for the lack of comics.  Plus, just think that the fewer comics I’m posting, the more I’m doing real work that earns me money that will one day allow me to do the comic more.  It’s cyclical.  Like a wheel.

So, here’s a little teaser.

Later, tater.

Comments Off on Intermission…

The Other Roommate’s Sanctum

by King Sheep on February 4, 2011 at 8:31 pm
Posted In: Blog, humor, movie reviews, updates

Yet again, Hollywood’s releases are in fierce competition with the weather over which is the most cold and dreary.  In this tug-o-chore, the only real losers are audiences with high standards.  However, if all you need for entertainment are flickering images and a tub of popped corn, go ahead and treat your local multiplex as your personal Sanctum (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic).


“Suffocating, nerve-fraying and deeply uncomfortable to watch. Just not in the ways intended.” Robbie Collin News of the World

The intention was to portray suffocating in a good way?

“At times Sanctum is surprisingly ambitious and refreshingly smart and despite all its flaws, an entertaining yarn.” Jarrod Walker FILMINK (Australia)

More entertaining yarn

“This is a movie that features not one, but two graphic mercy killings. Forget “127 Hours”: Sanctum makes sawing off your own arm look like a minor penalty for the crime of spelunking while clueless.” Washington Post Mark Jenkins

Beware similar Darwin award activities such as drunk street luge, mountain climbing on roller skates, and whitewater kayaking in a cardboard boat.

“The key to enjoying Sanctum is to look, not listen.” Variety Justin Chang

Just follow this one-step guide to audience happiness

“A documentary on the formation of stalagmites would have been more compelling.” USA Today Claudia Puig

Did you know touching a stalagmite will leave oil and dirt behind that changes the mineral’s surface and color?  If you asked the rock’s preference, it would want a clean, hands-off person to be The Roommate (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic).

“What’s most memorable about this plodding thriller are the copious amounts of foundation and lip gloss.” Boxoffice Magazine John P. McCarthy

Usually memorable make-up only occurs in horror movies.  Is the lip gloss scary?

“You want it to be satisfyingly stupid, and it is. A sense of humor about garbage like this goes a long way.” Matt Pais Metromix.com

I hope someone's laughing at this garbage

“A dull, unpleasant thriller with no pulse, no thrills, and no soul. Staring into an empty movie theater with a black screen would be more appealing.” Scott Weinberg FEARnet

Would the theater charge for that?

“I can sum it up like this: no boobs, no blood, no point. Walk away from this one please!” Beth Accomando KPBS.org

The one word that keeps being used to describe this movie is “no.”  Rather than focus on the roommate, they should have made the story about The Other Woman (Rotten Tomatoes – Metacritic).


“Lest my own reaction be misconstrued, let me explain that I didn’t like a single one of these insufferable narcissists, the kid included.”  Wall Street Journal Joe Morgenstern

Maybe Joe is the one who threw the kid in the trash.

“The Other Woman isn’t a perfect film, but it makes better use of her (Portman) talents than her other current movie, ‘No Strings Attached.’” New York Post Lou Lumenick

This film completes a trifecta of current Portman possibilities.  There’s scary Natalie in Black Swan, sexy Natalie in No Strings Attached, and now: pouty Portman.

“The Other Woman firmly plants its feet and slaps you across the face until it wrests that precious, precious salt water from your eyes.” Ethan Alter NYC Film Critic

A glimpse into a reality where tears are more precious than oil

“In spite of its air of seriousness and sophistication, The Other Woman feels oddly shapeless and pokey.” The New York Times A.O. Scott

King Sheep hopes the pokey isn’t hokey.

└ Tags: funny pics, movie posters, Sanctum, The Other Woman, The Roommate
3 Comments
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