Senin, 16 November 2015

Decades in the making, this 2005 example of egregiously bad filmmaking is sure to become an instant cult classic.

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Among the opening credits for Dangerous Men is this one: "Created and written by John S. Rad." It's an appropriate description for this instant cult classic from 2005 that has been delivered as a gift to fans of egregiously bad movies by the enterprising folks at Drafthouse Films. If there was ever a reason to bring back Mystery Science Theater 3000, it's this.

The backstory is fascinating. The film, which was two decades in the making, was directed, scripted, produced and edited by one John S. Rad, who also contributed the production design and musical score. He was actually Jahangir Salehi Yeganehrad, an Iranian architect and filmmaker who emigrated to the United States in 1979, fleeing his country's political turmoil.

He began shooting his American opus sometime during the 1980s, working on it for the next twenty years or so as time and money allowed. It eventually received a theatrical release in 2005, supposedly earning $70 during its weeklong run at a Los Angeles theater. Rad died at the age of 70 two years later.
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And now the film is back in all its awful glory that would make Ed Wood green with envy. The story begins with loving, newly engaged couple Mina (Melody Wiggins) and Dan (Kelay Miller) enjoying a blissful stroll on the beach when they're attacked by a pair of thuggish bikers. During the ensuing melee, Dan and one of the bikers are killed, with the surviving assailant standing over Dan's body and yelling at him, "You son of a bitch, you're lucky you're dead!"

Rather than expressing outrage, Mina immediately comes on to the biker and offers to go with him to a hotel. There she strips naked and instructs him to rub her knees and lick her belly button. But it's all a ruse, as she has a knife wedged between her butt cheeks with which she stabs him to death. She then goes on a murderous rampage targeting the male sexual predators who apparently make up the vast majority of the

L.A. population.

The first time she hitchhikes, she's picked up by a seemingly mild-mannered, middle-aged man who immediately transforms into a would-be rapist.

"Why should I pass up this opportunity?" he asks himself. "She's god's gift to a henpecked husband!"
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After she turns the tables on him and leaves him naked in the desert, he hops around like a demented Woody Woodpecker for what seems like forever while loudly berating his penis.

The plot then segues to Dan's brother David (Michael Gradilone), a detective who begins investigating his sibling's murder even though, as his irritated chief keeps reminding him, he's supposed to be on vacation. His sleuthing leads him to a drug-dealing, bleached-blond villain with the moniker "Black Pepper" (Bryan Jenkins).

In his handling his multiple assignments Rad shows no discernible talent for any of them. The pacing is bizarre (at one point there's a long belly dancing interlude, for no apparent reason); the dialogue is laughably atrocious; the production values are non-existent; the acting is embarrassing; the fight scenes are ineptly staged, with loud sound effects failing to compensate for the fact that no blows are landed; and the synthesizer-heavy musical score sounds left over from a '70s porn film.

Instant fodder for drinking games, Dangerous Men is a grand testament to its filmmaker's undeniable passion, tenacity and complete lack of talent.

Production: Simma Sims Productions
Cast: Melody Wiggins, Michael Gradilone, Kelay Miller, Bryan Jenkins
Director-screenwriter-producer-production designer-editor-composer: John S. Rad
Director of photography: Peter Palian
Not rated, 80 min.

Jumat, 02 Oktober 2015

The Last Witch Hunter

 
The modern world holds many secrets, but the most astounding secret of all is that witches still live amongst us; vicious supernatural creatures intent on unleashing the Black Death upon the world. Armies of witch hunters battled the unnatural enemy across the globe for centuries, including KAULDER, a valiant warrior who managed to slay the all-powerful QUEEN WITCH, decimating her followers in the process. In the moments right before her death, the QUEEN curses KAULDER with her own immortality, forever separating him from his beloved wife and daughter in the afterlife. Today KAULDER is the only one of his kind remaining, and has spent centuries hunting down rogue witches, all the while yearning for his long-lost loved ones. However, unbeknownst to KAULDER, the QUEEN WITCH is resurrected and seeks revenge on her killer causing an epic battle that will determine the survival of the human race.

Astronaut's Major Complaint About Space Movies: They Should Be Wearing Diapers

Lawyers are bound to quibble with the details of courtroom scenes. Same goes for teachers watching films set in the classroom. And it even extends to astronauts viewing movies that simulate space.
While Neil deGrasse Tyson has taken apart the science of movies like Gravity and Interstellar, NASA astronaut Tracy Caldwell Dyson has a much simpler bone to pick with Hollywood’s version of space travel.

Senin, 28 September 2015

Elizabeth Banks on 'Pitch Perfect 3' and Why Women Can Totally Direct Dinosaurs




Elizabeth Banks is still reeling from the wild success of Pitch Perfect 2, her first major studio directorial effort in which she also stars as Gail, the over-sharing a capella commentator with big hair. “It’s really surreal,” she told Yahoo Movies during a recent phone interview.

The musically inclined comedy sequel, whose ensemble includes Anna Kendrick, Rebel Wilson, Brittany Snow, and Hailee Steinfeld, scored a huge $70 million opening, unexpectedly surpassing its weekend rival Mad Max: Fury Road. To date, Pitch Perfect 2 has made nearly $300 million worldwide, roughly 10 times its $29 million production budget.

The film should also be a boon to Banks’s directorial aspirations, as she hit it big with audiences her first time out.When it came to that astonishing debut, though, Banks revealed to Yahoo it coincided with a difficult time in her life. “It was a weekend with big ups and downs for me,” she said. “I suffered a personal loss the same weekend that the movie opened. I was really just a mess of emotions for about 10 days after the film opened.”

Now that time has passed, she admitted, “I still don’t know that I processed it. It was the experience of making the movie and life goes on. Even though I know that it has had an impact for me in the world I’m still, like, getting up and making my kids’ lunch every morning

John Wayne Taught Michael Caine How to Avoid Fan Pee, and 5 Other Things We Learned



Michael Caine in New York on Sunday (Photo: Matthew Arnold)
At 82 years old, Michael Caine is the keeper of some of Hollywood’s best stories from decades past. The Dark Knight star has had a long, fruitful career since getting his big break playing an inveterate ladies’ man in the 1966 comedy Alfie. Caine regaled a New York City audience with a treasure trove of stories on Sunday during a talk hosted by The New York Times and BAFTA. Here are the six best:

Documentary Star Lizzie Velásquez Talks About Fighting Back – and Hugging Her Cyber Bullies

Lizzie Velásquez was 17 when someone uploaded a video of her to YouTube without her knowledge. When the Austin native — who suffers from a rare congenital disease — discovered the clip, she also read the thousands of hateful comments below it calling her “THE WORLD’S UGLIEST WOMAN.” 

 Today, she describes the experience as someone “putting their fist through the computer screen and physically punching me over and over and over.” She was devastated. But she fought back with candor, fearlessness, and a microphone. (Watch our new interview with her above.)