Monday, March 19, 2007

Sunday, March 11, 2007

Trent Reznor

"I went into [the new album] with a sense of not giving a fuck. Not worried about singles, radio play, melody, 'correct' song structure, record labels, marketability, critics, kissing ass, my own fans' expectations, chart positions, being fashionable, etc. In other words, probably every single thing a band like, say, Fall Out Boy worries about." -- In the new Rolling Stone.

Monday, March 05, 2007

Film Geek...

I have been meaning to write bite-sized reviews for each of these films I've watched recently, but, they're backing up, so here goes:

"Hollywoodland" is everything it's cracked up to be including the Oscar worthy supporting performance from Ben Affleck. What I could have done without (like a lot of critics) actually is the fictitious "private eye" story. George Reeves is plenty interesting enough to warrant an entire film.

I was far, far less impressed by "Amores Perros" which played like a half-baked Tarantino ripoff to me, or worse, a half-baked ripoff of a Guy Ritchie movie. Snore.

You know what was UNDER-rated? "Find Me Guilty". Don't let Vin Diesel scare you! This true-life tale about a mobster who defended himself at his RICO hearing is dazzling, funny and very engaging. Not to mention it's directed by the legendary Sidney Lumet.

"Capote" ain't all it's cracked up to be but it's worth watching for Philip Seymour Hoffman's award-gobbling performance. I just didn't think it delved deeply enough into the story he was covering, or for that matter, Capote's own story.

William H. Macy (and Alec Baldwin) is great in "The Cooler," a deftly-crafted Vegas yarn about a guy whose luck is so bad he's used to "cool" down gamblers on winning streaks with his very presence. When he falls in love, his luck turns... It's great.

"The Constant Gardner" is an English-language movie but the British accents are so thick we had to turn on the sub-titles.

"A History of Violence" is one of the greatest graphic-novel adpatations put to film. SEE IT NOW.

I liked "The Illusionist" well enough (mainly for it's great actors) but it really only got me jazzed to see Christopher Nolan's similarly themed movie starring Hugh Jackman and Christian Bale, which I still need to do.

I had never seen "The Bourne Supremacy" until recently and let me tell you it's every bit as good as the original, maybe better.

Mike Judge's followup to "Office Space," "Idiocracy", was worth the wait. It's truly too bad he got screwed by the studio system yet again.

And finally, make sure you check out "Superman II: The Richard Donner Cut," because you haven't truly seen this comic-book classic unless you've gotten the full story about all of the craziness involved with how it was made. Warner Bros. should be given a gigantic fanboy pat on the back for this recent contribution to the history of filmmaking.

On the TV front:

How have I missed "Battlestar Galactica" for so long? It's been called "the best show on television" and watching the mini-series certainly delivered on that claim for me. "Curb Your Enthusiasm and "Extras" have been rocking me lately and delving into something this serious (yes, you read that right, it's deadly series) was a blast. The stakes are high, the metaphors are thick, and the sci-fi action is FUN.

"Prison Break" seems to be losing steam as it trucks through it's second season. I was all for seeing them out of prison and on the run, that's not what's bothering me; it's the one-note performances from Wentworth Miller and the rest of the gang (save for the guy who plays T-Bag) that are grating. You sort of don't notice it so much earlier in the show... But man, are they flat. I haven't given up on "Prison Break" yet, but...

"The Office" on the other hand? It only gets better. I mean episodes directed by Joss Whedon and JJ Abrams? Crazy.

And a show that's gone the complete opposite direction of "Prison Break": "30 Rock". It sucked. Now, it rules.

The new album from The Hidden Hand? It's good.

Playlist:
Zao, "Where Blood & Fire Bring Rest"
Zao, "All Else Failed" (Redux)
Zao, "Liberate te ex Inferis"

Jay Bakker's Revolution


I devoured Jay Bakker's "Son of a Preacher Man: My Search for Grace in the Shadows" from cover to cover a couple of weeks ago, inspired in part by the Sundance Channel's excellent 6 episode first season of the reality series "One Punk Under God." The son of Jim and Tammy Bakker, Jay's life has been full of tragedy, triumph and most of all, grace. I'd write a more in-depth review if I had a bit more time, but, the strongest thing I'd like to get across about the Jay's journey (as depicted in his book and on television) is that you don't have to agree with everything, or even anything, Revolution Church does to get something out of it. For my part, I can't think of another reality series that has brought tears to my eyes -- and more than once, at that! And not to mention, Jay and Marc at Revolution are fans of Demon Hunter. That's excellent.

Buffy is Back


The Buffyverse telemovies that were talked about following the cancellation of "Angel" are not happening. Whedon (who was recently dumped from Warner's "Wonder Woman" movie) has said recently that it's because the network thought they'd be able to get the gang back together on the cheap. Somehow they haven't heard about "American Pie," "The Grudge" or TV's "Bones," I guess? Regardless... "Buffy" Season 8 is on! On the page! Dark Horse is letting Whedon publish a comic book version. And we know he's got the chops, after all, he wrote some funny books for Marvel a while back including "X-Men." (I haven't read his "X-Men," but I know he put Wolvie back in the blue-and-gold, and there's no way that's a bad thing). My buddy at Dark Horse sent me the first two issues. I can't wait to crack them open!

Vegan Power