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Box Office Prediction: Dr. Seuss Messages Won’t Keep ‘The Lorax’ From #1

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Moviegoers will see it with a group. Movigoers will see it while they eat popcorn. Moviesgoers will see it with their 3-D glasses. Moviegoers will see it while they sit on their theater seats. What did you think I was gonna say? However people see it, there are sure to be millions of eyes on the latest Dr. Seuss adaptation, The Lorax, this weekend. Enough, in fact, that it’s all but guaranteed the #1 spot on the chart. Unless there’s some Danny DeVito backlash that we’re not privy to, it seems a foregone conclusion. Sure, there’s an R-rated, high school, found footage comedy hitting theaters, as well, so the little tree hugger won’t be making all the scratch, but a majority of it?

Yes. The weekend box office is upon us, and one of these movies is bound to be a hit. If you don’t like what we’re saying, you can go right ahead and email us about it. Hey, that one actually rhymed!

The Breakdown:

Dr. Seuss’ The Lorax

  • Dr. Seuss is always a tasty subject when it comes to box office gold, and The Lorax won’t disappoint. 2000′s How the Grinch Stole Christmas debuted with $55m, The Cat in the Hat opened with $38.2m in 2003, and Horton Hears a Who! launched in 2008 with $45m.
  • All three of those films had A-list, comedy stars behind them. Even with Horton Hears a Who! being animated and Jim Carrey and Steve Carrell only providing voices, their names were still on the posters. The Lorax has Ed Helms, Zac Efron, and the aforementioned DeVito. Helms has some clout with The Hangover films and DeVito is more popular now than he was 10 years ago with “It’s Always Sunny.” Still, none of these are considered A-list.
  • Universal really doesn’t care about their star power. No actors’ names are on the poster. Instead, their selling the film on its bright orange, mustached, titular character. And he’s so damned cute. Especially the mustache.
  • It’s a computer animated comedy for kids. What more needs to be discussed?
  • The March opening will dampen the weekend take a bit. Not a lot, though. PIXAR has the Summer on lock-down, and DreamWorks is moving in, but March seems to be firm planting ground for the smaller, animated companies to rake in some serious cash. It’s the month where Rango debuted with $38m last year, How to Train Your Dragon opened with $43.7m in 2010, and Monsters Vs. Aliens opened with $59.3m in 2009. The Lorax won’t have that type of impact. It’ll be more on the Rango/Horton Hears a Who! side, high $30m range to low $40m range. Let’s just say it won’t be the last Dr. Seuss adaptation we ever see.
Weekend projection: $41m (#1 on the chart)

Project X

  • Project X is aiming at a number of different sub-genres. It’s R-rated. It’s a high school comedy. It’s even found footage, which is the biggest factor here. Found footage films that get a wide release tend to open rather well. The only exception is Apollo 18, which debuted last September to $8.7m. Quarantine opened to $14.4m in 2008, but, beyond that, it’s all $20m or higher.
  • Outside of The Virginity Hit – $301,885 opening in 2010, but it only opened on 700 screens – the found footage sub-genre hasn’t branched to include comedies yet. It’s a risky move, which is why Warner Brothers hasn’t spent a ton of money promoting the film.
  • It can’t fall back on star power, either. The biggest star here is a kid who had a 10-episode run on “Curb Your Enthusiasm”, not exactly someone to pull in $20m extra at the box office. There’s a reason it’s being sold primarily as “from producer Todd Phillips, the director of The Hangover“.
  • It’s being sold primarily as “from producer Todd Phillips, the director of The Hangover“. Those two words, “The” and “Hangover“, is where Project X will be making most of its money. It’ll do fine just being an R-rated comedy for high schoolers, but making that connection to a blockbuster hit is what will drive Project X not only into double digits but somewhere in the high teens. The Todd Phillips-produced School For Scoundrels debuted with $17.8m, and that was before The Hangover was even in existence.
Weekend projection: $18.8m (#2 on the chart)

The Artist

  • It’s not a new movie, but it is a newly crowned Best Picture winner at the Oscars. The Artist will reap the benefits of that win at the box office this weekend. Best Picture winners have a tendency of increasing their weekend takes the weekend after the big win, especially if they’re nowhere near a DVD/Blu-Ray release. Slumdog Millionaire‘s weekend box office rose 43.4% the weekend after it won. No Country For Old Men increased its box office by 71.1% when it won in 2008.
  • It doesn’t hurt that The Weinstein Company is expanding The Artist‘s theater count by nearly 800 screens. All of this won’t be enough to get The Artist near the top of the chart, but it’ll definitely be enough to make it rank.
Weekend projection: $5.2m (#8 on the chart)

The Chart:

  1. Dr. Seuss’ The Lorax – $41m NEW
  2. Project X – $18.8m NEW
  3. Act of Valor – $11.1m (-54.5%)
  4. Journey 2: The Mysterious Island – $7.7m (-41.6%)
  5. Tyler Perry’s Good Deeds – $6.2m (-59.8%)
  6. Safe House – $5.6m (-48.5%)
  7. The Vow – $5.4m (-45%)
  8. The Artist – $5.2m EXPANDING TO 1756 SCREENS
  9. Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance – $4.3m (-51.3%)
  10. This Means War – $4.3m (-47.7%)

The Analysis:

It won’t even be a competition. These computer animated features are roping families into theaters left and right, and it’s not looking like it’ll be stopping any time soon. The Lorax, like all the major Dr. Seuss adaptations in the last 12 years, will slice through every other movie out there. It’ll do so lovingly, with a nice, pro-Earth message, and some adorable, rhyming dialogue, but, by God, it’ll be the victor once Sunday comes.

The $109.6m weekend The Lorax will be leading here is about average for this time of year. The first weekend in March has had its leaps as with last year when Rango debuted or 2010 when Alice in Wonderland opened with $116.1m. That was just Alice in Wonderland, not the entire top 10. You have to consider that something of an anomaly, though. Those $100+m opening films play Hell with statistics. Regardless, the weekend as a whole is still in that middle-of-the-road ground before the Summer season kicks off. With John Carter hitting next weekend, it could be sooner than many think.

We’ll be back early next week to go over the weekend numbers.

Click here for more of The Reject Report


The 10 Must-See Movies of March 2012

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Last month we got a really fun and nicely old-fashioned horror movie, a found footage superhero movie becoming a surprise hit, a terrific hitman/horror/love story, and a B-movie featuring Denzel Washington kicking ass. It was better than an average February. As expected like every year, we’re dealing with a packed March. There are two possible franchise starters and one of the funniest comedies we’ve seen in quite sometime, so we’ve got a pleasant month ahead of us.

Honorable Mentions: Friends with Kids (a fine dramedy) and The Deep Blue Sea (a semi-festival favorite), and Silent House (another film with Elizabeth Olsen being terrorized? I’m in.)

Check out the ten must-see movies of March below.

John Carter

Opens March 9th.

When it comes to John Carter, far too much attention has been payed  to discussing the possibility of a “box-office disaster!” Why aren’t more people talking about how we’re getting treated to another Andrew Stanton picture? After revisiting WALL-E the other day, I’m convinced the man doesn’t have a bad filmmaking bone in his body. Having seen John Carter I can firmly say most of his strengths shown in WALL-E and Finding Nemo are present. This blockbuster may not feature the heart of those films, but Stanton’s sense of fun and eye for scale are more than present in this solid hero’s journey.

21 Jump Street

Opens March 16th.

I can’t say too much about 21 Jump Street, but I will say this is the funniest comedy in recent memory. It’s about as perfect as a comedy can be. If you’re a fan of Chris Miller and Phil Lord‘s equally satisfying Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs, you’re going to adore this smart, original, and fast comedy.

Casa de mi Padre 

Opens March 16th.

Like Mirror Mirror, this one could go either way. Will Ferrell speaking Spanish is a funny idea, but that’s only an idea. The trailers rely on that “Ferrell speaking Spanish!” joke, but will there be an actual story to back it up? Possibly. Director Matt Piedmont and writer Andrew Steele wrote on SNL during one of its brighter times, so it’s not difficult to build a sense of confidence that Casa de mi Padre will play as more than a one-joke film.

Detachment

Opens March 16th and now on VOD.

I cannot wait to see director Tony Kaye‘s Detachment. We all know Kaye, the man who had his feature film debut, American History X, taken away from him and edited into a modern classic. Kaye’s been working since then, but this is his return to narrative features. Even critics who don’t fully embrace his Adrien Brody-starring film seem to respect Kaye’s intentions. Those who love Detachment declare it an ambitious piece of art. Whether you come to love it or hate it, Detachment should make for a unique experience.

Jeff, Who Lives at Home

Opens March 16th.

As usual, I agree with the site’s eccentric genius Kate Erbland that the Duplass brothers knocked it out of the park when it comes to Jeff, Who Lives at Home. As she put it, only “audiences who hate joy and whimsy will be straight-up displeased,” and that’s half true. Like the Duplass brothers previous films, they’re not afraid to have their characters act flawed, and when the moment calls for it, be straight up assholes or just act plain odd. They capture real and honest relationships and feelings, and that shows through best in Ed Helms and Jason Segel‘s lovely performances.

4:44 The Last Day on Earth 

Opens March 23rd.

Abel Ferrara + Willem Dafoe + apocalypse = should be interesting?

The Hunger Games

Opens March 23rd.

While everyone is sadly predicting the doom of John Carter, I believe The Hunger Games has a far better chance of failing to meet expectations, quality and box-office-wise. The trailers make this adaptation come off surprisingly small in scale and bland, but it does come from Gary Ross, the director behind the wonderfully sentimental Pleasantville and Seabiscuit. He knows drama, so the odds of him finding dramatic stakes in a story featuring kids having to kill each other is a good possibility. Yes, they’re iffy trailers, but Ross isn’t an iffy director. Hit or miss, it’ll be interesting to see if The Hunger Games lives up to all the “fan” hype.

The Raid: Redemption 

Opens March 23rd.

Many have already declared The Raid: Redemption as an action masterpiece, and that praise sums the film up nicely. It’s quick, brutal, funny, extreme, creative, and plain ‘ol awesome. This is a teenage boy’s fantasy idea of an action movie. There’s no bloat or lame girlfriend subplot; it’s 90 minutes of pure action heaven.

Goon

Opens March 30th.

Goon is a big leap ahead of Michael Dowse‘s Take Me Home Tonight. While that felt like a derivative coming of age story we’ve already seen, Goon manages to surpass its fellow genre entries. Despite not ever passing itself off as a satire, the Evan Goldberg and Jay Barauchel scripted comedy spins enough tropes to have a fresh vibe. There is no big championship game, but rather a bloody fight, a satisfying battle between Sean William Scott and Liev Schreiber, both doing very good work here. And, to much surprise, the film’s got a big heart.

Mirror Mirror

Opens March 30th.

The first trailer for Tarsem‘s kiddy family film was bad, inexcusably so. Even when I saw the trailer play for an audience full of children, they all seemed depressed and left in confusion by the end, which has been the general online consensus as well. However, a Tarsem film is still a Tarsem film. The visionary’s first big studio gig, Immortals, wasn’t the average sword and sandals movie. Mirror, Mirror, hopefully, will prove that ghastly trailer wrong. If the film does reflect its trailer, then this will go down as the must see disaster of the year.

Time to Put On the Foil: 9 Tough Guys Who Make Hockey Movies Fun For The Whole Family

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Hockey Tough Guys

Since the days of yore, or at the very least, my childhood, the sport of hockey has made my blood pump faster through my veins. Born across a lake from Canada into a family with a few notable hockey lovers, I couldn’t help but become enamored with the game of sticks, ice and grit. There’s nothing like a good old fashioned hockey game. Old time hockey, as someone once called it. And in every great hockey movie, like every great hockey game, you need a few things. You need a hero, you need a sage coach with relentless demand for perfection and you need some supporting players. The funny guy, the smart guy and the eccentric goalie. But chief among these sidekicks of stick is the enforcer — the toughest motherf**ker of the group. Whether he’s challenging the hero or watching his back, the enforcer, the thug, the goon is the guy who makes it all so much fun. Because everyone loves a good fight.

Inspired by a recent viewing of the awesome Sean William Scott led hockey tale Goon, about a bouncer who finds a true calling on the ice, in the line of knuckle-fire that permeates the world of minor league hockey, I would like to proudly present a list of cinema’s great on-ice tough guys. None of these man are the center of their particular stories. None of them get the girl. But they’ve all got the guts and the grit that it takes to challenge the hero, so that he can go off and get the girl while they lie toothless upon the cold, hard reality of the fact that they’re nothing but a bunch of thugs. And we owe them all the love in our hearts.

9. Racki, Youngblood (George Finn)

Hockey Tough Guys: Racki

Sure, this 1986 classic starring the baby-faced pair of Patrick Swayze and Rob Lowe was about being a boy playing a man’s game, only to find the man deep inside and emerge victorious in hockey and love. But none of that would have meant anything if not for the momentary screen presence of George Finn as Racki, the bearded, hard-nosed adversary who wouldn’t let Rob Lowe, the “pretty boy,” get off easy. On the frozen surface of hockey’s battleground, men are mad with fists. And strange, completely unrealistic hockey stick slap fights.

8. Adam ‘Tree’ Lane, Mystery Alaska (Kevin Durand)

Hockey Tough Guys: Adam "Tree" Lane

“I’m about to be on the cover of Sport Illustrated. That photographer said I have one of those expressive faces. A face that tells a story.” Damnit all, I love this movie. Even a trumped up performance from Mike Myers can’t bring down one of the most underrated sports films of all-time. And even though this one’s got a grizzled Russell Crowe, a grizzled Burt Reynolds and all the ridiculous fan-fare of the New York Rangers coming to play a group of local homeboys from the Great White North, it’s a young Kevin Durand who steals the show as a 9-foot tall tough guy with a softness inside him that will melt your heart. Which in turn will keep you warm, because it’s really damn cold in Alaska.

7. Rob McClanahan, Miracle (Nathan West)

Hockey Tough Guys: Rob McClanahan

Being based on a real person is what makes Nathan West’s delivery of that cocky guy from Minnesota all the more impressive. He was never your typical enforcer, but Mac got the job done when it came time to become the glue that would help propel the 1980 U.S. Men’s Hockey team to toppling communism’s red barricade and creating the greatest moment in sports history. Yes, the greatest moment in sports history. I said it. It’s true.

6. Ogie Oglethorpe, Slap Shot (Ned Dowd)

Hockey Movie Tough Guys: Ogie Ogilthorpe

Somewhere toward the end of Slap Shot, just before it gets really ridiculous, the man who has loomed over the entire movie steps out on to the ice. Touted all along as the most vicious son-of-a-bitch 21-year old to ever lace up his skates, Ogie Ogilthorpe does not disappoint. Through all “the litigation, the notoriety, his subsequent deportation to Canada and that country’s refusal to accept him,” Ogie makes it to the final showdown with Reggie Dunlap (Paul Newman) and the Chiefs. And oh, what a brilliant moment he creates. Though his place on this list is solidified by the lore of Ogie. The build-up to his appearance is perhaps the most intimidating one afro’d man can be, and he never lets us down.

5. Fulton Reed, The Mighty Ducks (Elden Ryan Ratliff)

Hockey Tough Guys: Fulton Reed

Fulton Reed may be the warmest and fluffiest of all the men on this list. But give the guy a break. By my count — which is being completely fabricated for the purposes of the second part of this sentence — he was about 13 years old in the world of The Mighty Ducks. And even though he was pubescent at best, Fulton was a wrecker. Early on he was the kid with the 100-mile per hour slapshot. In later films, he’d join Aaron Lohr (as Dean Portman) to form the “Bash Brothers,” wreaking havoc upon the youth of the world as Julie “The Cat” Gaffney made the big save. Sure, Joshua Jackson got to be the heart and soul, but Fulton was the man among boys.

4. Ross “The Boss” Rhea, Goon (Liev Schrieber)

Hockey Tough Guys: Ross "The Boss" Rhae

“Know this shit hard. If ever there comes a time when it gets down to the marrow and it’s down to you and me. Kid, I will lay you the fuck out.” In Goon, the film that inspired this very list, Sean William Scott delivers an intensely nuanced performance as Doug, a tough guy coming into his own and learning where he fits in the world of hockey. But in order to become the Goon, Doug must go through the immovable object known as Ross “The Boss” Rhea, the toughest man on two skates. He’s got a classic hockey mullet, a major handlebar mustache and attitude to fill hundreds of arenas at once. All complete with the unflinching charisma that only a seasoned actor having a blast with a character can. Liev Schrieber is that man. This is that movie.

3-1. The Hanson Brothers, Slap Shot (Jeff Carlson, Steve Carlson, and Dave Hanson)

Hockey Tough Guys: The Hanson Brothers

There is not enough room on this list for the wonderfully brutal world of the brothers Hanson. There is no such list without those boys and their toy cars. For the most part, they are bigger than average children with silly glasses. But when it comes time to put on the foil and go into the game, they know how to put on a rough-and-tumble show, eh? All of these men on this list have come since, and despite their best efforts — both in the realm of toughness and style — none of them have been able to come close to the pure joy of watching three grown men with taped up spectacles skate in unison toward an unfortunate victim. Who own da Chiefs? Who cares, as long as they keep those Hanson boys on the ice.

For those curious parties who also like hockey movies and tough guy stories, Goon is currently available on-demand. It hits theaters March 30. Whether you catch it in your home or in theaters, it’s more than worth watching. Check out the trailer below.

The Alamo Drafthouse is Bringing Back the Summer of 1982, And It’s Going To Be Epic!

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Alamo Drafthouse Summer of 1982

Blade Runner. Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan. The Road Warrior. The list of incredible films released during the summer of 1982 goes on and on. From E.T. to Tron, it could very well be the greatest summer of movies in the history of nerds, geeks, lovers of cinema and eaters of popcorn. It was one of those summers that defined the term “Summer Movie.” The only sad thing about it is that 1982 came before many of us were born. An entire generation of movie geeks who grew up with these movies, but never quite got to experience them all together as they did in that one magical summer.

The Alamo Drafthouse is looking to change that. To celebrate the 30th anniversary of the “greatest summer of movies ever,” our friends at the Alamo have designed a screening series unlike any other. Mirroring the release schedule — to the best of their ability — of the Summer of 1982, the Drafthouse will present 1982′s best blockbusters in 35mm, with plenty of Mondo posters, special guests and a few other surprises that — and I say this with only limited knowledge beyond what we’re telling you here — will absolutely blow your minds. They’ve asked a special group of websites — Film School Rejects included — to co-host each screening. We drew The Road Warrior. It’s basically the greatest thing to happen to us since, well, we first saw The Road Warrior. So if you’re in the area of an Alamo Drafthouse, we’ve got the ultimate plan for your Summer 2012. It’s the Summer of 1982. 

The full line-up can be found at Drafthouse.com/1982. The series poster, full press release and a trailer can be found below. Please clean up, should you fail to control your bodily functions while perusing the schedule. It’s been happening and it’s starting to smell around here.

Alamo Drafthouse Summer of 1982

Austin, TX— Friday, March 2, 2012— Alamo Drafthouse is recreating the “Summer of 1982” to celebrate the 30th anniversary of the greatest summer of movies… ever!  From May through July, the theater will replicate 1982’s earth-shaking release schedule, screening eight of the biggest genre classics on the same weekends they were released exactly 30 years ago.  These gargantuas include Conan the Barbarian, The Road Warrior, Rocky III, Poltergeist, Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan, E.T., The Thing and Tron, all presented in 35mm.

As you can see, the “Summer of 1982” was an unprecedented super-tornado of Hollywood magic, mixing high adventure with interstellar impossibilities and unthinkable horrors. A generation of imaginations were set aflame, and there has never been another stretch of cinematic dynamite to match it. These movies endured beyond their opening weekend and decades later the releases throughout the “Summer of 1982” are forever tattooed on the hearts of movie fans across the globe.

Alamo Drafthouse is excited to partner with eight film sites on “Summer of 1982”, working collaboratively to honor this very special (and relentlessly fun) chapter in movie history.  The editors and writers of these sites all cite this summer as being formative to their movie geekdom.  Ain’t It Cool News, Badass Digest, Collider, Film School Rejects, First Showing, Hit Fix, Movies & Slashfilm will each co-host their own “Summer of 1982” movie.

The programmers are currently scheming additional ways to turn back the clock to 1982 at the Alamo, including lining up all of the 35mm trailers that originally played with each film on their opening weekend!  There will be fun ballyhoo, special guests and stunning new Mondo posters for select films.

Alamo Drafhouse will celebrate the “Summer of 1982” in all markets across Texas and Winchester, VA.  The following schedule is set at the Alamo Drafthouse Ritz in Austin.  Stay tuned for news from other Alamo theaters on their schedule.

May 11 – CONAN THE BARBARIAN
May 18 – THE ROAD WARRIOR
May 25 – ROCKY III
June 1 – POLTERGEIST
June 3 – STAR TREK II: THE WRATH OF KHAN
June 8 – E.T.
June 22 – THE THING
TBA – BLADE RUNNER*
July 6 – TRON

*Note, the Alamo programming team is working hard to schedule the sci-fi opus BLADE RUNNER.  Watch for updates via @drafthouse and Facebook.com/AlamoDrafthouse.

Watch the Summer of 1982 trailer below:

Movies to See Before the World Ends: Quest For Fire

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The Mayans, the wise race of ancients who created hot cocoa, set December 21st, 2012 as the end date of their Calendar, which the intelligent and logical amongst us know signifies the day the world will end, presumably at 12:21:12am, Mountain Time. From now until zero date, we will explore the 50 films you need to watch before the entire world perishes. We don’t have much time, so be content, be prepared, be entertained.

The Film: Quest For Fire (1981)

The Plot: 80,000 years ago in the time of the neanderthal one of the most precious commodities was fire. It served to cook food, keep warm, and ownership of fire by a tribe of human ancestors was a sign of power – because at that time it was not understood as to how it could be manufactured. When one such tribe gets brutally attacked by another group they lose their flame in the aftermath. Three of the group’s males (Nicholas Kadi, Everett McGill, and Ron Perlman in his first film role) break from the tribe and trek the land in search of another flame, and on their journey encounter groups of similar beings; some of which are as brutal as the creatures that attacked them earlier, and others more ‘strange’ to their current level of understanding.

The Review: Quest For Fire one could consider to be the first of a trilogy of adventure pictures from Jean Jacques Annaud whose primary protagonists are animals; real animals, of the non-speaking non-animated variety. This picture in contrast to The Bear and Two Brothers though is a reversal of complication of physical performance in that it required the believable dumbing-down of human actors to tell a story as if they were animals and the results are both compelling and, oddly, insightful.

Much of this is probably testament to the source novel the picture was adapted from, but there is certainly something to be said about bringing a story to life and making it easy to follow where the communication level between the subjects is minimal. The characters make noises and gestures, but as a viewer it’s difficult to know whether the characters themselves even understand each other some of the time. It’s a strange concept to see that the tribesman are capable of devising schemes of attacking and hunting by the use of deception and decoys, yet trivial responses such as laughter and humor are foreign.

However, the fascinating element to Quest For Fire, outside of the actors giving believably ape-like performances and articulating nothing, is how the filmmaker is able to make correlative commentary on modern society and modern man through a picture that relies solely on the physicality of its actors to play beings that are 80,000 years our intellectual inferiors. It’s a very “the more things change the more they stay the same” perception of evolution. We’ve certainly learned a lot, but in terms of what it is that we value, why we value it and how we treat other members of our species that get in our way of attaining it we can simply realize more by seeing that we really haven’t learned anything. Depending on a viewers personal outlook the film can simply be a story of our capabilities and how we can learn to better ourselves by exposure and venturing into untraveled territory; but it can also be metaphorically representative of how knowledge in the hands of an immoral being can, and usually does, have destructive consequences depending on what you think happens to the tribe after the credits role. The answer to that can be found on any of your favorite news programs.

But why spend 100 minutes watching this film when you only have 423,357 minutes left alive?

Depending on your belief system it’s always good to know where you’re headed by understanding where we came from. Whether you believe in the theory of evolution or not the fact is creatures akin to us did exist and whether you find them to be of our own ancestry or not is irrelevant. The fact is we are not as dissimilar from the ape species as one might think when you consider our animalistic tendencies on possession and gender superiority; and when knowledge is lost we have to start over and chances are when we do that we won’t know much more than that we need to put something in our mouths in order to stay alive. We certainly won’t know how to make fire, let alone how to cook something on it, unless you watch Quest For Fire. Watch, learn, and survive and maybe 80,000 years afterward we will still be attempting overcome the same root behavioral problems. But, we’ll have fire.

Come on Baby, Light my Fire and Read Apocalypse Soon Titles By It

Review: ‘Dr. Seuss’ The Lorax’ Speaks For the Trees – When He’s Not Shilling Mazdas

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Everyone involved in Dr. Seuss’ The Lorax, from co-directors Chris Renaud and Kyle Balda to the Universal Pictures marketing division, has been faced with a tricky balancing act. On one hand, there’s the need to remain true to the spirit of Seuss’ anti-consumerist work, his most earnestly activist effort. On the other, there’s the requisite allegiance to 3D animated family movie standards and the obligatory corporate tie-ins that come with promoting such an effort. If you’ve been paying attention, you’ve seen Seuss’ mystical mustachioed creation across the advertisement spectrum lately, in everything from IHOP ads to printer spots and Mazda car commercials. Sure, Universal has made a point of pursuing advertising partners with “green” tie-ins/messages, or so they claim, but the Lorax’s ubiquitous commercial presence leaves the sort of rotten taste that only comes with the betrayal of a sacrosanct legacy.

Fortunately, the film itself fares better. It’s a pleasant, minor-key affair that gives appropriate attention and weight to the important environmentalist message. The picture asks that its young viewers sit up and take notice of the world around them; it demands that they put down the video games, learn to care about nature and seek to preserve it.

The urgency behind that theme drives the story, set in the world of Thneed-Ville, a labyrinthine maximalist town birthed by consumerism and defined by commercialism. There are no real parks or trees here; only turf and blow-up facsimiles. Fresh air is bottled and sold by the villainous O’Hare (Rob Riggle), who keeps the Thneed-Ville residents shuttered away from the outside world. Yet precocious 12-year-old Ted (Zac Efron) escapes from the plastic prison, driven by his girl crush Audrey’s (Taylor Swift) desire to be given a genuine, living tree. Making his way through the desolate, apocalyptic landscape outside Thneed-Ville, Ted finds the Once-ler (Ed Helms), an old man who tells him the story of the Lorax (Danny DeVito), protector of the forest, and the ways unchecked greed led to the tragic destruction of the trees.

The Lorax runs into some of the same problems that have hampered past feature-length Seuss adaptations (The Cat in the Hat, Horton Hears a Who etc.). Chief among them: the fact that building a feature-length narrative out of these short stories requires a lot of padding. The extra storytelling almost always distracts from the distinct ethereal beauty at the core of Seuss’ books. The solution here is to turn The Lorax into a musical, but the musical numbers are superfluous distractions.

The movie’s at its best when it reconstructs Seuss’ inspired, colorful surrealist style. The picture offers such a loving, moving reproduction of the doctor’s warm images that you almost wish the filmmakers had forgotten about the plot. The visual contrast between the cold, ruined present-day world and the happier time of the trees, populated by the Lorax and his friendly animal friends drives home the message more effectively than anything. You feel the poignant sense of loss that sets in as the Lorax and the animals form a long, sad procession away from their ravaged former home. And that’s what sticks.

The Upside: Dr. Seuss would likely be proud of the movie, which stays true to his environmentalist message, placing it front and center.

The Downside: This doesn’t need to be a musical, and the bastardization of the character in the movie’s marketing has left a very bad taste.

On the Side: Mazdas? Seriously?

Grade: B

Kevin Carr’s Weekly Report Card: March 2, 2012

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Kevin Carr's Weekly Report Card

This week, Fat Guy Kevin Carr grabs his camcorder and tries to find the biggest all-night party in Pasadena, filled with slutty, dancing high school girls who looks amazingly like they’re in their early twenties. Of course, he never finds that because this sort of 15-year-old wet dream fantasy doesn’t exist. So he sets his sights on finding something far more realistic than any of the events that take place in Project X: the short, hairy peanut with a mustache and Danny DeVito’s voice known as The Lorax.

Want to hear what Kevin has to say on the Fat Guys at the Movies podcast? Click here to listen as Kevin is joined by Nick Herum from MoviesHateYouToo.com to talk about the movies that end with X.

THE LORAX
Studio: Universal Pictures

Rated: PG for brief mild language

Starring: Danny DeVito, Zac Efron, Ed Helms, Taylor Swift and Rob Riggle

Directed by: Chris Renaud and Kyle Balda

What it’s about: Based on Dr. Seuss’ 1971 book of the same name, The Lorax tells the story of a boy in a overly plasticized world who discovers a decimated forest beyond the outskirts of town. There, he learns from the mysterious Once-ler of how this was once a lush forest of Truffula trees. However, when the Once-ler starts to cut them down to manufacture a miracle product, a mysterious forest creature known as the Lorax appears and tries to stop it from happening.

What makes the grade: It’s hard to believe that this is only the fourth Dr. Seuss book to be adapted into a feature-length film. And after two ugly misfires (with How the Grinch Stole Christmas and The Cat in the Hat), the medium of computer generated animation (which gave us the charming and loveable Horton Hears a Who) appeared to be the best place to do this sort of thing.

Like Horton Hears a Who, The Lorax looks beautiful. The impossible physics and design of Dr. Seuss shines in this film. The 3D, while not completely necessary, looks slick and makes the anchor action scenes even cooler to watch. Plus, the movie has a brisk running time that moves along at a good pace.

Is there a pushy environmental message? Well, there’s a message that does get pushy at times, but that message was there when the book was written in the 70s. To leave that message out at this point would be intellectually dishonest and offensive to the memory of Dr. Seuss. So check your politics at the door in this one. Conservative or liberal, I think we can agree that there’s nothing wrong with telling kids not to harvest a resource into oblivion.

What fails: Even though this is a cute movie and the second best feature-length Dr. Seuss adaptation made (out of four, mind you), it’s got some tough story issues. The original book The Lorax is really just a short picture book that takes about ten minutes to read. However, to reach feature-length, a lot had to be added to the script to pad out the picture.

This is nothing new when it comes to adapting picture books. The Polar Express is mostly padding that doesn’t impact the actual story. Both How the Grinch Stole Christmas and The Cat in the Hat pad themselves so much it pretty much ruins the original spirit of the books. The padding that takes place in The Lorax, which includes everything that happens in town as well as various musical numbers that are more out of place than Tex Richman’s rap in The Muppets, doesn’t destroy the film but ultimately amounts to little more than fluff.

Who is gonna like this movie: Kids, families and fans of Dr. Seuss.

Grade: B

PROJECT X
Studio: Warner Bros.

Rated: R for crude and sexual content throughout, nudity, drugs, drinking, pervasive language, reckless behavior and mayhem – all involving teens

Starring: Jonathan Daniel Brown, Miles Teller, Alexis Knapp, Thomas Mann and Martin Klebba

Directed by: Nima Nourizadeh

What it’s about: A completely unrealistic beer commercial disguised as a found footage house party in Pasadena gets out of hand.

What makes the grade: Boobs.

What fails: You know those raunchy teen sex comedies like American Pie where the characters show up to a party and later continue to the rest of the movie? Well, Project X is sort of like that, only without the rest of the movie thrown in. The story is solely about the party, how epic it is and how it’s going to make the kids throwing it the coolest kids in school.

The problem is that without the rest of the film (i.e., plot, characters, dramatic arcs or human decency), we’re left with an insipid, mean-spirited 90 minutes of decadence that has no redeeming or entertainment value at all.

The characters are all awful people, not the least of which is the racist and homophobic friend who escalates the party out of control. He’s painted as the wing-man to his “boyeee!” whose birthday the party is celebrating. The kids in this film are the embodiment of the over- privileged, entitled assholes who have had everything (except coolness, manners and a sense of morality) handed to them by their parents.

The found footage style is supposed to make it seem like a real high school party… only bigger. Sadly, this film reeks of douchebag teenage boy fantasy as much as Twilight reeks of sullen teenage girl emotional fantasy.

Even the party itself, as it gets out of hand, is a mockery of anything realistic. It’s flooded with twentysomething hotties playing “average” high school students. Kids are taking enough drugs to put a rhinoceros in a coma and everyone refuses to leave even when the cops show up. (Hint… when the cops showed up at the parties I went to in high school, the kids scattered like cockroaches when you turned on the lights.)

But the worst part of Project X is the complete and utter disregard for anything remotely resembling right and wrong. I suppose a lot of it is meant to play for laughs, but it ends up looking like a recruitment video for sociopaths who think home invasion, physical assault and even a drunken plan for attempted murder just might be okay if you want to give the finger to society.

Finally, the movie attempts to shoehorn in a John Hughes-style romance between the dorky kid and his unbelievably gorgeous best friend since childhood. Again, this is meant to ground the film, but speaking as someone who grew up with John Hughes movies, I imagine he’d weep at the thought of this emotionally and morally vacant film fills the niche he left behind.

Who is gonna like this movie: Teenagers and douchey suburban “ballers” in their early twenties who think their “epic” and “sick” birthday party was as cool as this movie’s.

Grade: F

Scarlett Johansson to Turn Heads as Janet Leigh in ‘Alfred Hitchcock and the Making of Psycho’

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Since we first heard about director Sacha Gervasi’s (Anvil!: The Story of Anvil) upcoming look at the life and work of legendary filmmaker Alfred Hitchcock, quite a bit of important casting has seemingly gone down. Variety reports that not only are age-old rumblings of Anthony Hopkins being attached to play the title character still holding up, but also that Helen Mirren has signed on to play Hitchcock’s wife, Alma. That’s a lot of pedigree for one movie to have, both in cast and subject matter, but the news doesn’t stop there.

Apparently the sweetest role in the pic is that of Janet Leigh, Hitchcock’s Psycho leading lady. Inside sources are saying that this is the sort of role that’s going to be grubbing for awards attention, like Michelle Williams’ turn as Marilyn Monroe did last year, and whoever lands it is bound to see their career get an uptick. So who’s getting the chance to play such a choice part? An actress who already has little trouble getting attention on her own, Scarlett Johansson.

Say what you will about the legendary status’ of Alfred Hitchcock, Anthony Hopkins, and Helen Mirren, but there’s a whole youth demographic that their names aren’t going to bring in, and a behind the scenes look at shooting a shower scene with Johansson just might. Factor in that Johansson is a promising actress who hasn’t gotten much dramatic material to sink her teeth into recently, and this casting could become a win-win for everybody.

This is a project that’s been gestating for a while, but that now seems to be full steam ahead toward production. So who wants to take bets in how long it will be before the studio changes Alfred Hitchcock and the Making of Psycho to a punchier title? Maybe something with a colon. Colons are in these days.


In Regards To Your Movie, ‘Project X’

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To Misters Matt Drake and Michael Bacall,

I attended a screening of Project X this past week, a film for whose script you two are inescapably responsible, and wanted to congratulate you on crafting one of the single most vile, reprehensible, and culturally detrimental films in recent memory. And I’ve seen Good Burger, twice. Every critic worth his salt, or even his Splenda, knows that when you write a negative review, even one for a movie as heinous as your recent blight on multiplexes around the country, vitriol must be confined to the events unfolding on the screen. In other words, it’s been well-established that personal attacks against a filmmaker are the antithesis of proper criticism. Therefore, despite the fact that, given the events on the screen, your tenuous grasp on propriety and overall morality is reminiscent of that dastardly Manson family, I shall nevertheless do my very best to restrain myself and tear down your festering dung heap of a film based on its own absent virtues.

Let’s first make sure I understand the plot of this film correctly so that there will be no illusions of, or ass-covering maneuvering citing, my misconception of context. You have a film about a high school student celebrating his seventeenth birthday, a child described by his own parents as “sweet,” but also “a loser.” Bravo by the way for painstakingly scripting this paradigm of acceptable parenting techniques. Honestly, I kept waiting for junior’s father to show up at his high school and pants him in front of all the cool kids. So Lanky McLoserface, now destined to be the author of several articulate letterbombs, has but one wish for his birthday: to spend time with his two best friends, one of whom happens to also be a complete degenerate who wants to make a name for himself, and his friends purportedly, by throwing the biggest, most out-of-control party imaginable. Despite all the resistance of the “protagonist,” Captain Pint-Sized Miscreant manages to scrape together an orgy of booze, drugs, sexual inhibition, property damage, physical assault and apocalyptic destruction. This party is ultimately broken up not by parents returning home or by any sudden spark of conscience, but by police in full riot gear and the reduction of a peaceful suburb to a scorched war zone; essentially we are watching a block party in the Gaza Strip. Then, of the vile beginners of this fray, two actually walk away scot-free while the third receives a verbal reprimand wrapped in a repentantly ham-fisted veil of begrudging respect from his father. Again, stellar parenting, Danny Thomas.

Oh, and how can I forget to mention that Project X is a found footage movie? That’s your entire hook! It’s what allowed you to forgo the usual, troublesome process of crafting a story and instead concoct an obnoxious game of one-upmanship with your own trite concept. I can see you two now, sitting in your mom’s basement, or someone’s mom’s basement, amidst a rising tide of rolling papers and discarded McRib cartons. You remember you have a film script due in the morning so you haphazardly engage in a game of hypothetical ping-pong, lobbing back and forth;  “this crazy thing happens, and then this crazier thing happens, then ANOTHER crazy thing happens!” Repeat ad nauseam, credits. I theorize that this explains the total (lack of) genius in your enigmatic (thoughtless) title. I would imagine the original, lengthier name of the film during production was something like, Project X: Real Title To Be Added After The Jersey Shore Marathon and Hot Pocket Eating Contest. Shooting it as a found footage film also afforded you the opportunity to feature staggering cinematography the likes of which have not been seen since…the last time we visited YouTube. We all know that found footage is as much a gimmick anymore as 3D and the films that stand apart, those within the genre that are the exception as opposed to the rule, are those that find ways to creatively incorporate the cinema verité concept so that it no longer seems cheap. Don’t misunderstand me, I’m not saying that the found footage angle in your film is cheap, because cheap denotes even the slightest perceivable value whatsoever.

What makes your film so unconscionable, what makes watching A Serbian Film with my grandmother a more attractive proposition, is its total lack of a soul. You create a world in which popularity is not just a currency, but instead something more akin to the last remaining resource in a post-apocalyptic world. A world in which the ends of achieving elevated social status justify the means of destroying lives and engaging in criminal behavior that would shock serial killers and political despots alike. You also fetishize teenage tits and ass, not in a playful, coming-of-age way but in an underground porn site, gonna-need-a-shower-immediately sort of way that should by all accounts land you on a sex offender watch list. True, your actors are all assuredly over the age of eighteen as to avoid your actual incarceration, we all know how inconvenient it would be to have to go door-to-door letting everyone in the neighborhood know when your next film is playing.  But they are presented as high school students of indeterminate age, especially given that your lead character just turned seventeen. The movie devolves at points into the most repugnant Girls Gone Wild video ever filmed, and even Joe Francis will tell you that’s saying something. You also propose a world in which teenagers are so drug-frenzied that they will dive on a cache of free ecstasy tablets like five-year-olds upon the innards of a freshly burst piñata.

Mind you, all of this, and I mean all of this, could be forgiven if you at all adequately portrayed the negative consequences of this depravity. Granted we do learn, via a complete afterthought of a title card, that the birthday boy was brought up on some charges, but we never see it. Instead our last glimpses of him are his receiving a hero’s reception at his school the Monday after the party and getting back the girl on whom he cheated within hours of their first hook-up. Forgive me if I don’t find this to be a sufficient deterrent for others thinking of following in his footsteps. Not satisfied simply being flippant toward righting the moral compass, the title cards then emphatically state that the far more culpable little douchebag beats all charges against him thanks to his slick lawyer. So if you’re rich, you can get away with anything and that is something to be commended. Oh, and Obligatory Douchebag C has all the charges dropped because his parents lie about him being a “special needs” student so his sentence is reduced to merely riding the short bus to school for the rest of the year. The offensiveness of your film has so many facets that you’ve actually created the Rubik’s Cube of poor taste.

The one character in the entire film that exhibits any semblance of decency is the harried neighbor across the street. First of all, let’s forgo the absurd supposition that only one person in this entire besieged neighborhood would have a problem with the earsplitting roar of this hedonistic bash. Obviously in a movie like this, the guy who wants to break up the party is the hated villain. So how does this villain surreptitiously try and pull the plug on the festivities? He goes to their front door and politely asks that they shut it down so that his baby can sleep. What an asshole! I mean, whoever heard of a “baby?” Obviously, this loathsome breed of civility is worthy of a righteous tasing, right? The neighbor, being thusly tased, then lashes out at the punk seeking to electrocute him for making a reasonable request, at which point your script successful transforms the last upstanding person on the block into a violent, abusive monster. The two kids who repeatedly assault this man are not punished in the slightest.

Herein lies the main difference between Project X and something like Human Centipede. At least Human Centipede has the courtesy to exist in a world that is 100% theatrical and completely divorced from the real world. It presents evil deeds as they should be presented, as evil deeds. Dr. Heiter isn’t sewing people together mouth-to-anus in an effort to gain popularity, as surefire a recipe for Facebook friends as that may seem, and at no point does the film present his actions as anything to be revered and/or emulated. Not only that, and SPOILER ALERT to those who haven’t seen Human Centipede, but at least its sadistic, atrocious antagonist gets his fatal comeuppance. As extremely upsetting as this film is, this key difference means that I would rather watch The Human Centipede II backwards, which is somehow more disgusting, than watch Project X again. There will be those who defend your film in this regard by claiming it to be a work of fantasy and therefore playfully innocent in its depiction of events not meant to be taken seriously. Funny thing is, you made the choice to write this as a found footage movie, a gimmick whose sole design is to shatter the fourth wall and facilitate a more realistic experience for the audience. The film is also book-ended with title cards espousing that what we are seeing is a true story. I’m sorry, but you simply cannot have your filth-frosted cake and eat it too.

I am not a prude. I know that will be the linchpin defense behind which your few defenders will rally, but it is categorically untrue. I am no stranger to drink and debauchery and, upon request, can produce several lack-of-character references. But I tend to draw the line at putting my boozing cohorts at risk of incarceration or serious bodily harm for my own selfish gains, so therein lies the chief departure between myself and the “characters” in your film. Oh, and nice try with your fabricated line of dialogue in which the best friend tells the birthday boy that he did all of this for him despite our not seeing a single event up to that point to corroborate this statement. That can go back on the shelf, writers two, because nobody is buying it…and please don’t set the store on fire on your way out. Thank you, the management. I also enjoy The Hangover, a film directed by your producer Todd Phillips. So how could I hate your film and like The Hangover? They’re both about lascivious nights of drinking, right? Two reasons: The Hangover is a movie about four adults, and the fact that it’s called The Hangover is a direct acknowledgment of the cost of id-unleashing decadence. The majority of the damn film takes place IN the consequences.

I will concede that it’s not the responsibility of cinema to regulate and police morality, but that pendulum swings both ways. Otherwise it wouldn’t be a pendulum, it would be a rod. You, as filmmakers, are not expected to tie up every ethical loose end and preach to the audience on how they should live their lives. However, when you put forth the idea that contemptible conduct devoid of any regard for right and wrong yields nothing but rewards with few to no consequences, you are officially encouraging that conduct. If you present all of the fleeting social benefits of this kind of reckless abandonment of morals without addressing the intrinsic setbacks, you are de facto advocating it. There are no two ways about it. Project X, with its found footage approach and wanton depravity, plays like a detailed blueprint and pulpit for sociopathology.

And spare me your facile, completely erroneous argument about how your film is aimed at audiences younger than myself and that I don’t like it simply because I’m a curmudgeonly killjoy. I’m not a curmudgeon, even though I do currently sound like I’m waving my keyboard cane around my head and shouting, “get off my lawn, internet”  I’m 27 years old and haven’t spent a single day in any of those years as an adult. Also, Project X is rated R, so the only people to whom you could possibly claim this movie is catering, in an effort to sidestep my criticism, are those who are not allowed to see it. You’ve made a film you’ve deemed too raunchy for children to see, without parental accompaniment, and yet you have ostensibly children performing all of the myriad acts of degeneracy that earned you that rating. Even if you want to subscribe to the idea that this film accurately exposes what actually happens at teen parties anymore, absurdly painting Project X as a hard-hitting social commentary, by championing the merits of this behavior, you are perpetuating the problem as opposed to simply drawing attention to it. You’re like the liquor store clerk who never checks I.D. and then tries to claim society is to blame for the underage drinking problem. Also you give the kids crystal meth and handguns.

I fear for society if this is what we’ve come to regard as an acceptable form of entertainment. This is a celebration of the very worst of humanity no matter at what age. Of course, that’s also what I said about Slappy and the Stinkers, but I really mean it this time. Your film is not just playing to the lowest common denominator, it’s playing to the lowest forms of life on the planet. With all its selfish, consequence-free vice, Project X is also a stomach-turning snapshot of all the reasons why so much of the world hates America. I legitimately pray that the Taliban never sees your movie.

If nothing else, Michael Bacall, you’ve given us insurmountable evidence that Edgar Wright did most of the work on the Scott Pilgrim vs. The World screenplay. But you know what, I am willing to give you guys this small benefit of the doubt. Perhaps your producer slipped some r0hypnol into your unassuming goblet of Four Loko, and Project X was merely the film you wrote while tripping all of the balls. I hope when you wake up, you read this response and that, in some small measure, I can contribute to your own hangover.

Sincerely,

Brian Salisbury

‘The Human Centipede III (Final Sequence)’ to Bring Back Both Baddies

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Human Centipede 2

You probably won’t find too many people willing to argue that the first two Human Centipede movies are any good. The first one felt like an idea that could have made for a chilling short stretched for time, and the second ramped up the gore factor to keep from being so boring, but still didn’t tell any sort of worthwhile story. And yet, despite their obvious badness, everyone still watched them, and everyone talked about them afterward. When a project like this is so clearly desperate for attention it seems that it’s pretty hard to not take a peek for yourself and see what all the noise is about, and consequently there’s still enough gas in the Human Centipede tank for the planned trilogy to be completed. The Human Centipede III (Final Sequence) is set to begin filming this May and June in the southern United States.

There is some good news about the continuation of this series, however. Despite the myriad flaws of the first two films, it would be hard to argue that they weren’t horror movies with effectively creepy villains. Dieter Laser’s manic, gleeful Dr. Heiter from the first film and Laurence R. Harvey’s slow and slovenly Martin from the second were both skin-crawling, creepifying bad guys; and each in their own unique way. So the news from Entertainment Weekly that both actors will be returning in Final Sequence for featured roles is kind of a breath of fresh air in a days long trip through the sewer.

Most likely Final Sequence will follow in the footsteps of its predecessors by being a movie more concerned with shock tactics and stomach-turning gore than storytelling, tension building, or character developing (and its promised tagline of being “100% politically incorrect” points to the fact that it will likely get even more extreme in those regards), but at least we know that it will include some fun performances from a couple of crazy character actors. That should add some substance to the water cooler talk the day after this one comes out. You know, once we’re done discussing all the new ways the victims were made to eat poop.

Review: ‘Project X’ Is A Long, Boring Beer Commercial

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A character in Project X touts the onscreen house party as the most epic one of all time. There’s no doubting that. Filmmaker Nima Nourizadeh and screenwriters Michael Bacall and Matt Drake have conceived the most monumental scenes of suburban destruction that you’ll see outside of a Michael Bay film. The debauchery in this Todd Phillips-produced project, which was kept weirdly secretive under production and cast with mostly unknowns, reaches staggering heights. So in that sense the movie, shot as a faux-documentary, achieves what appears to be its only goal.

That doesn’t mean it’s any good, though. In fact, Project X is terrible, a laugh-free experience about repulsive morons who behave moronically and are pretty much rewarded for it. It’s Superbad without the heart, or the quality acting, a mean-spirited affair in every sense. Sure, it’s sort of fun to see just how outrageous things get when outcast high school buddies Thomas (Thomas Mann), Costa (Oliver Cooper), and JB (Jonathan Daniel Brown) plan an enormous party at Thomas’s house so they can get laid. But after awhile, a film has to offer more than sheer uninhibited spectacle. With its endless montages of hot girls making out and gyrating, ala a risqué beer commercial, the movie offers a warped and exceptionally tedious depiction of a high school party, one clearly conceived by men who have never actually attended one.

A successful black comedy needs a structure, flawed characters, a ribald spirit, and a plot that raises the stakes by propelling the protagonists through an array of humorous troubles. Bad Santa had what it took. So did Phillips’ The Hangover. Project X flops, principally because its characters basically have a great time partying. There’s no real danger, or regret, just bacchanal.

Superbad used the same deep-rooted teenage horniness that drives Project X to send its characters on a journey full of troubles, in which they fought, clawed and struggled to get the female attention they desired. Their thought process — “get girls drunk and they’ll definitely sleep with us” — was flawed and misogynistic, of course, but you understood where it came from and enjoyed watching the struggle. In Project X, the characters get what they want so easily that they come across as lecherous, contemptible creeps.

It’s hard to fathom why anyone would waste their time watching a movie about other people partying, particularly when the spectacle of the party is the sole focus of the production, not the characters experiencing it or the lessons learned from it. The Bay comparison is apt — if the Transformers helmer made a picture about a high school party, it’d probably look a lot like this. At the same time, it’s even harder to comprehend why the movies’ male filmmakers thought they’d get away with a movie that, with one slight exception, presents women as a faceless sexed-up horde, there for the taking by nerdy, far less attractive teens. Come on guys — it’s 2012.

The Upside: The party achieves some impressively destructive heights. Crazy stuff definitely happens.

The Downside: No real story or structure, despicable characters, sexism, laugh-free, etc. etc.

On the Side: To be fair, in the interest of full disclosure, I did laugh once…at an out-of-left field gag involving a dog and a bunch of balloons.

‘Hunger Games’ Clip Reveals Katniss’ Talents – And Some Surprising Faithfulness

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The Hunger Games

The cinematic adaptation of Suzanne CollinsThe Hunger Games series has a number of obstacles, including: making child-on-child murder fit into a PG-13 film, pleasing fans with casting decisions, not looking silly, appealing to fans, appealing to non-fans, not getting lumped in with The Twilight Saga just because the film includes a love triangle, giving Lenny Kravitz something to do, hiring someone to etch out Wes Bentley’s facial hair, and making back enough bank to not only make the film a “success” but to also provide some financial padding for sequels.

And then there’s the Katniss Everdeen problem. Jennifer Lawrence‘s character is the center of the story, the leading lady, a rebel and a firebrand – and she’s also kind of an inscrutable jerk sometimes. But fans who have read Collins’ books love Katniss, even if they had to grow into that love – moviegoers who don’t know her from Bella Swan don’t have that luxury. So what to do? Well, make a new trailer that shows Katniss’ softer side.

And release a new clip that show what an absolute badass Katniss is – both with her bow and arrow and her total disregard for authority.

Now that? That’s a hell of a clip. Not only do we see Katniss breaking out her number one skill, kickass archery, we see it done in a way that also shows that she doesn’t give a holy heck what the Capitol expects of her. Would you be so cool if you were about to fight a bunch of other kids to the death in a giant, televised event? Probably not.

Even better? This clip illustrates perhaps the most faithful scene adaptation of the book so far. Fans of the series have found plenty to nitpick with the marketing we’ve seen till now – even that new trailer with Katniss and her younger sister Prim has some serious deviations from its source material (hint: it involves that Mockingjay pin), but this scene looks to be lensed exactly as it appears in the book. Do all adaptations need to stick to their original material? No, but it’s nice to see at least some of The Hunger Games will have scenes meant to especially appeal to fans, and this clip can appeal to everyone.

The Hunger Games opens on March 23. [via Badass Digest]

Movie News After Dark: Barnabas Collins, Project X, The Avengers, Goon and Behind The Raid: Redemption

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Barnabas Collins by Tim Burton

What is Movie News After Dark? It’s a nightly collection of movie news, stories, articles, happenings and thingamajigs that is not interested in your excuses, just your unwavering loyalty.

We begin tonight with a new look at Johnny Depp as Barnabas Collins in Dark Shadows, courtesy of Hollywood Elsewhere’s ability to scan a page of the upcoming issue of Vanity Fair. It’s quite retro, somewhat chic, a lot emo and… oh, those bangs. Depp truly does have a bit of a Nosferatu thing going on, which is refreshing. At least he doesn’t sparkle.

Special Urgent News Bulletin

You can now follow Movie News After Dark on Pinterest, a place where our FSR scavengers will pin awesome movie-related things to a board in the cloud. It’s very New Age, we assure you. Just click the button below.

Movieline has collected the 9 most scathing critical responses to Project X. Neither of our writers who addressed the film, Robert Levin or the impressively angry Brian Salisbury were featured. That said, they did provide some zingers that were right up there with the best of them.

It is true that Sam Neill’s random roles are better than most people’s not-so-random roles.

Congrats to Eric D. Snider and Jeff Bayer, who celebrated the 100th episode of Movie B.S. with Bayer and Snider this week by reviewing The Lorax and whoring themselves out for some donations so that they can take on Cannes. It’s a worthwhile cause.

In the surprise move of the spring, Film Crit Hulk will take on SXSW in a panel called Arts Criticism 140 Characters At A Time. I wonder who he really is… I wonder if he speaks in all caps… All of these questions, ANSWERED!

Over at the HowAboutWe dating blog, The Date Report, our Cole Abaius guests in with The Bittersweet Rise and Fall of the Romantic Comedy, answering a soon to be major question: “Will people 50 years from now swoon over the idea of living life like a Katherine Heigl movie?”

Set your phasers to silence! Japanese researchers have built a speech-jamming gun that is designed to confuse the brain and stop you from talking mid-sentence. Oh, the terrible wonderful things this could do for many of my personal relationships and family outings.

Not long ago, minimalist movie posters became sort of a big deal on the internet. It’s a meme that works, because it allows artists to be expressive about their favorite cinematic events without having to express much. As a person who is trying to embrace minimalism, I’m not all that against it. Which is why I dig some of the work that Pascal Richon has done with his One Object Movie Minimalism project. You’ll see what that means below:

Jurassic Park Minimal

According to statistics, the latest trailer for The Avengers broke the iTunes download record with 13.7 million views. At least 130 of those were me rewatching the Hulk’s big catch near the end. It’s the stuff that fanboy dreams are made out of, folks.

It’s hard not to love Peter Hall’s Tales from the Elliptical series of articles over at Horror’s Not Dead. It’s a series of articles that promotes both good genre watching habits and good physical health habits. The damn thing might as well come with a side salad. Or something more sinister, considering the latest entry: Running Through the First Four Seasons of Tales from the Crypt.

The Drive soundtrack will be released on vinyl. I’ll buy that. Because I’m a hipster. And because I’m not sure if you guys noticed, but that soundtrack is incredible. (Note: I’m not actually a hipster. I’m so over hipsterism.)

“It almost feels incorrect to even describe what they do as “humor,” really. It’s more about taking the skeleton of comedy and using it against itself. In the world of Tim and Eric, comedy exists just so they can kill it. This ends up being labeled as comedy even though it’s purposely designed for you not to laugh. It’s laughing at you.” From a brilliant piece by Will Leitch at Gawker called The Oppressively Nihilistic Anti-Comedy Of Tim and Eric, Who Think You’re Stupid For Laughing. It basically says everything I feel about Tim and Eric, but better than I would have said it.

For years, I’ve thought of freelance journo Jordan Hoffman as a good guy. He’s a mensch, what can I say? But now, having read his recent article Goon - impressions of a hockey movie masterpiece, I’m convinced that he’s one of the greats. I loved that movie, I love this article, I love Jordan Hoffman. There, I said it.

President Obama has confirmed what the rest of us knew all along, that Omar is the best character on The Wire. Omar comin’, yo.

Sweet mother of Gryffindor. Warner Bros. has announced that they will be selling a 31-disc Harry Potter Wizards Collection, complete with… well… 31-discs of Harry Potter related content. Take that, Lord of the Rings box set #27.

Shortlist presents a reasonably long list exploring When Movie Titles Change. Did you guys see Harold and Kumar Get the Munchies? How about The Mighty Ducks Are the Champions?

We close tonight with a five-minute long featurette that takes you behind the scenes of The Raid: Redemption. It gets into some of the nitty gritty of how director Gareth Evans really amped up the action for his action thriller. It’s fascinating, wonderful and violent, just as (I’m told) the movie is.

Click Here to Continue Reading Movie News After Dark…

Giveaway: See an Advanced Screening of ‘Salmon Fishing in the Yemen’ On Us

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Do you live in Boston, Chicago, Los Angeles, New York, Philadelphia or San Francisco? If not, do you mind driving to them for a Lasse Hallström movie? If so, pack up some beef jerky, energy drinks and the What’s Eating Gilbert Grape? soundtrack because you’re in for the wildest road trip of your life.

And when you get to one of those cities, we’ll get you into a free advanced screening of Salmon Fishing in the Yemen – Hallström’s new flick starring Ewan MacGregor and Emily Blunt which tells the story of a fishing expert charged with bringing the sport of fly fishing to the desert by a Sheik.

What do you have to do? Email me with a subject heading “I Want to Go Salmon Fishing” and give me your name and the city you’ll be in on Tuesday (3/6) or Thursday (3/8) in or around the evening time. First come, first served.

Plus, you can bring a +1. A spouse, a girlfriend or boyfriend, a family member, maybe a stranger you meet on the subway and fall deeply in love with because of us and this movie? Or, if you’re planning on attending the San Francisco screening, maybe a giant naked woman who just stomped on your car. That’s up to you! By that, we mean we’re not liable for any damage done to your car when the giant naked woman is overwhelmed with emotion by the movie.

 

Joel Kinnaman Confirmed for ‘Robocop’; Will Now Be Brutally Murdered

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Joel Kimmaman

They TOLDJA us! After several days of rumors swirling around that actor Joel Kinnaman was close to signing a deal to become the new Robocop in Brazilian director José Padilha’s reboot of the franchise, Deadline Windsor has now confirmed that the deal is done. This means it should only be a matter of time before he goes in to be fitted for his metallic visor and hidden leg gun.

For those not yet in the know, Padilha is a director known best for his Elite Squad movies, which were action packed looks at Brazilian street crime, as well as the corruption that runs rampant in their politics and police forces. They’re a little heavy handed where the politics are concerned, but that generally gets made up for by how brutal and fun their action sequences are, and it’s probably safe to expect that this new take on Detroit’s number one cop will be in the same vein. He’ll be directing from a script co-written by Gran Torino scribe Nick Schenk and newcomer Joshua Zetumer, so there’s some more indication that this new Robocop will probably be the sort of movie that gives you some socio-political commentary alongside it’s bloodletting.

Kinnaman is a young actor who was born in Sweden, and who seems to just be emerging onto the Hollywood scene. His name and face started to get recognized after he landed a role on the AMC series The Killing, and recently he’s parlayed that success into a couple smaller roles in mainstream films like The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo and Safe House. If Robocop hits like a movie with both name recognition and an unstoppable robotic cop should, then this could be the project that really breaks him as an actor.

And Robocop, well hell, you know who he is.


Watch 10-Minutes of ‘John Carter’ and Decide For Yourself If It’s Worth Seeing

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Many things have been said about Disney’s John Carter. From bloggers who say it’s “full of action” to a marketing department at a major studio that’s having trouble explaining what, exactly, the hell John Carter is to the general public. Nerds know. Fans of Edgar Rice Burroughs’ century-old story Princess of Mars know. Those of us who have seen it know that there’s plenty within it to love. So what else can be done to give you a reason to see it when it hits theaters this Friday, March 9? How about a 10-minute clip featuring the back story of our title character (played by Taylor Kitsch), an appearance by Bryan Cranston and almost some ‘of Mars’ kind of action. It’s not the high-flying, impressively scaled scenes from the movie, but this 10-minute clip should give you a good idea of what’s going on. If you’re still needing more, well, we’ve got more coming.

John Carter hits theaters on March 9, 2012.

Idris Elba, Taraji P. Henson To Deliver Thrills in ‘No Good Deed’

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According to The Hollywood Reporter, Idris Elba and Taraji P. Henson have both signed to star in No Good Deed – with a script from Aimee Lagos (who wrote and directed the incredibly strong 96 Minutes). It’s a cool project with a high concept kidnapping plot where a former District Attorney invites a stranger having car trouble into her home. There’s your good deed right there. No doubt it won’t go unpunished.

The best part of the news is that Elba’s Luther director Sam Miller will be making this his return to directing after a decade away from the feature film camera. His attempts of the late 90s were, not great, but his television work has been both extensive and impressive. Hopefully this will be a solid partnership and a great film – which is aiming for a Spring start.

It’s a safe bet that Henson will star as the former DA, but it’s unclear whether Elba will be the stranded man or another main character. But really, does it matter? It’s Idris Elba. No matter where they stick him here, he’ll crush the role. And by “they,” I mean “he,” because he’ll be Executive Producing as well.

Post-Tsunami Japan Will Tell Its Own Stories With ‘Japan In a Day’

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Fuji TV, Ridley and Tony Scott are asking that the people of Japan pick up a camera on March 11th to tell their own stories for a massive documentary project being called Japan in a Day. The project will join the growing number of crowd-sourced docs like Life in a Day (which was also produced by Ridley Scott) and the burgeoning world of Post-Tsunami filmmaking (which is in part getting started by Sion Sono).

The goal, as with other films like it, is to get a ground-level viewpoint of the everyday in Japan to show the beauty of banality. Videos will be featured on their official Youtube page, and their team will assemble clips into a feature length film for a Fall release in Japan to be followed by an international release sometime later.

And what about the people who can’t afford cameras? That’s right – rumors that all Japanese people have bionic, recording eyeballs are false – which is why Scott and Fuji are donating 200 cameras to areas hit hardest by the tsunami so that they can share their stories as well. The production has a trailer/call for films that celebrates the exciting world of walking, waiting, looking around, and otherwise going about your day. Check it out for yourself, and see those all-too-familiar things become poetry:

Would you go see it?

Short Film Of The Day: ‘Cut Off’ is Noir in a Bathrobe

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Why Watch? Smartly shot with an engaging lead this short film from Takashi Doscher brings a story literally to life. In it, an author consumed by writing his next novel ignores the real world at his own peril, and when his work bleeds into reality, he’ll have to deal with some severe consequences.

It flashes with a noir sensibility and style but manages a lot of humor without crossing the line into parody. With subtle nods and a nice mirroring technique, it’s clever work that’s got a great eye for location, art direction, and camera work.

What will it cost? Only 7 minutes.

Skip Work. You’ve Got Time For More Short Films.

When Does an Adaptation Stop Being an Adaptation?

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Boiling PointAMC’s The Walking Dead and I have a strange relationship in that I watch it but don’t particularly care for it. I can’t really tell you why I tune in every week, but it has something to do with my great love for the comic books and a desire to see horror on television, mostly regardless of quality.

The books by Robert Kirkman have always had a bit of melodrama about them, but the show has often taken that to obvious, soap opera levels. “The Walking Dead” comics feature a great cast of characters with complex motivations and relationships. Many of those characters made it to the television show – well, at least characters with the same names made it in.

Things have changed so drastically from comic to screen that one has to ask – when does an adaptation stop being an adaptation?

Media changes forms. Movies that get turned into books undergo some changes. Books and written media that go to the big screen can undergo rather dramatic changes. Sometimes, this is for practical purposes, sometimes it’s for creative reasons. Jurassic Park is a successful example of both. The source material had some densely scientific moments, stuff that could never really be translated to film. That’s the nature of books – you can do whatever the hell you want. It’s words. The story was also creatively changed – different characters had different fates (in many ways the book is superior there) and the ending is entirely different.

But Jurassic Park worked as a movie. As an adaptation. I’m a fan of both the book and the movie. If you take a look at a movie like The Running Man, it’s loosely adapted from a story by Stephen King. If you were a big fan of King’s story, you might be disappointed in the movie, but it took the central theme and a several supporting ideas from the book and made a movie out of it. Acceptable, I suppose.

With The Walking Dead I am always easily upset because the source material is so good. You could take a Watchmen approach to this and basically just use the comics as your storyboards and shoot it as is. That’s how engaging the comic books are.

The real powerful moments in the comic books come from the characters, many of whom are drastically different on screen. Shane has a much different arc in the books, one that’s very good, but left out of the television show. But one of the biggest changes on a character level involved Dale and Andrea. In the comics, Andrea is only 26 years old, while in the show she is 36. Ten years is a lot, especially with all the goings on in the comics that never made it into the show. The relationship dynamic between these two is so very, very different on the page than it is on the screen.

Another example is Jim, a minor character in both the comics and the show, who had his bit changed. In the comic, his death is actually a sweet and somber moment; in the show, it’s just another cog in the machine.

Does The Walking Dead still count as an adaptation of the comics? Major deaths are changed, character relationships are changed, and things just happen differently. Has it changed too much?  For legal purposes you might have to pay for the rights to the show, but if you’re going to go so far away from what the comics were, why not just go further and call it The Zombie Chronicles or something and avoid not only the costs of acquiring the rights,but also the disappointment of ardent comic fans?

For me personally, the changes are pretty huge. It’s almost at the level of paying millions of dollars to the rights of the Battleship board game and then making it about aliens. Why not call the movie Alien Engagements or The Navy vs the Invasion or literally any title other than Battleship? Adaptations come with expectations. Sometimes, you meet those expectations and make a faithful adaptation. Sometimes, you have no intent of ever doing so. Anyone who thinks the Navy versus Aliens has anything to do with the Battleship board game is a moron.

Take a look at I Am Legend (if you can do it without throwing up). If you’ve read the source material, either in written form or comic form, you won’t find much of anything familiar in the Will Smith movie. Why pay the money to change it? Why read something and exclaim “WOW, this is fucking fantastic. It’s so good I want to make it into a movie. It’s so exciting to me that I can’t wait to change it until it becomes unrecognizable.”

Sounds dumb, right?

Look, some material is kind of shitty to begin with. Making a proper adaptation of it sometimes doesn’t make sense. You’re just trying to capitalize on a name, rather than on a good product and that’s where you’re making your first mistake. No one thought a Super Mario Bros movie was a good idea and what came out of it is something so awful it’s become required watching.

It’s baffling why a movie company would pay so much money for a little name recognition, especially when they’re going to change it to the point that the fans they’re attracting will be turned off.

Jurassic Park worked. The changes made from book to screen in Jaws were for the better – though it probably helped to have author Peter Benchley on board. The ending in the novel form of Fight Club is a bit different, but the movie works. These make sense. You get the title recognition from best sellers, attract fans, and new people get on board.

Then there are the ones that don’t make much sense. The Running Man. Super Mario Bros. The Walking Dead? What’s the point of licensing the title? People who are unfamiliar with the books don’t care that it’s an adaptation. The people who are familiar get upset at the changes. It seems like a lose-lose scenario.

It’s worth noting that I liked the last few episodes of The Walking Dead. It’s finally moving and doing some good stuff, but I don’t really see it as a good adaptation of the source material. Characters have changed too much, the group dynamic is too far off. It doesn’t make for a good adaptation, even if you think it makes for good television.

When it comes to adaptations, I’m easily pushed to my boiling point. I don’t watch adaptations to see what’s going to be different, I go to see a new artistic take on something I enjoy. I can read a book and love it and then read a comic adaptation of it. I don’t need it, or want it, to change. I just want to see it in a new form. I’ll then go see the movie too. I’ll look at art. Posters. Paintings. Whatever. I don’t want to change it, I want to enjoy it again. Sometimes, Hollywood producers just don’t get that.

Click Here for The Officially Licensed Graphic Novel Version of Boiling Point

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