Friday, June 26, 2009

BucketCast: Episode 20 (Video Edition)

In a special video edition of the BucketCast, Michael and I tackle the local midnight show of Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen. Remember to watch in HD. Otherwise, sit back and enjoy! Please send your comments in to webmaster@bucketreviews.com or Twitter handle "bucketreviews", especially on whether or not we should do another videocast. And please rate us 5-stars on YouTube!

Part One


Part Two

Sunday, June 21, 2009

2009 Los Angeles Film Festival: Day One

If you read my coverage of last year’s Los Angeles Film Festival, you’ll remember that I was not exactly thrilled by the movies I saw. That’s not to say that good movies didn’t play—it was where I discovered both Man on Wire and Boy A, two of my favorite films of the whole year, and there were loads of terrific choices I didn’t catch until later—but rather that I had bad luck with my selections. Going into this year’s chapter of the festival, I was optimistic, set on avoiding the same fate. After Day One, it was clear I needed to rethink my strategy because I was already batting 0-for-3.

Adhen is beautifully shot and tackles a potent, topical issue, but it’s a frustratingly incomplete movie. The setting is a rundown palette factory in France, where working-class immigrant Algerians are exploited by their boss, Mao (Rabah Ameur-Zaïmeche, the co-writer/director). Mao gets away with paying his predominantly Muslim crew bottom-of-the-barrel wages by erecting a mosque in their favor, using the power of religion to ensure they don’t question him. He appoints the Imam (Larbi Zekkour) himself, using the man to convert the staff so his leverage will further. But there’s an uprising in store, as two factory mechanics (Salim Ameur- Zaïmeche and Abel Jafri) rally behind new Muslim Titi (Christian Milia-Darmezin) in questioning Mao’s religiosity and lack of care for the employees.

The film’s quasi-documentary, fly-on-the-wall style is both a blessing and a curse. On one hand, it allows Adhen to stand out as another enlightening piece of realism in a growing body of cinematic representations of Muslim immigrants in France. The film feels completely authentic, and those adventurous American audiences willing to watch it will no doubt learn quite a bit (I did). Then again, this is potentially dangerous if Adhen is not an accurate blanket representation of working-class Algerians in France, which is very possible. It is a rather political film, and I’m sure the opposing side has something to say about it. But that’s not the big problem with the way the message is conveyed. Instead, it’s that factory life is painfully dull and, no matter how realistically depicted, it wears on the viewer. Yes, this sense of wear is part of the point of Adhen, but I’m unwilling to accept the notion that a film can be effective solely by capturing boredom. The subject matter may seem similar to Laurent Cantet’s exceptional The Class on paper, but I assure you, the comparisons end there. There are certainly isolated moments of engagement in the picture—a shocking scene in which Titi circumcises himself to become a “real Muslim,” a beautiful sequence set on a river, et cetera—but on the whole it's too tedious for its own good.

Nonetheless, there’s no denying that Adhen boasts its share of accomplishments. Cinematographer Irina Lubtchansky works with the confinements of the factory, tightly photographing through each orifice between stacks of red palettes, and captures the toils of working-class life. It’s true that the images in Adhen often seem too perfect for the gritty material, but without them, the movie wouldn’t be near as distinct or reflective of the social paralysis of its characters. Also strong are the performances, which are all too easily taken for granted because they appropriately lack any grand-standing and keep things authentic. It’s a shame that the partially-successful picture may have been doomed to failure from its inception in that making a fully engrossing movie on daily-life in a supremely laborious, dull setting is a paradox. In order to really work, Adhen would have had to transform into something else entirely. The film may have many rewarding elements, but most audiences are likely to be snoozing before they recognize them. 2-1/2 Buckets out of 4.

As most festival-goers filed into the Mann Festival theater for Davis Guggenheim’s documentary on the electric guitar starring Jack White, Jimmy Paige, and The Edge—It Might Get Loud—I decided to counterprogram with one of LAFF’s “Guilty Pleasures” selections, Weather Girl. Unfortunately, standing five feet from supporting actress Kaitlin Olson on the red carpet was more exciting for this “It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia” fan than anything in the movie itself. After a small theatrical release, Weather Girl will premiere on the Lifetime Channel in October and, boy, will it be right at home there.

My crappy, covert camera-phone capture of Sweet Dee in the flesh, greeting reporters on the red carpet.

The title newscaster is Sylvia (Tricia O’Kelly). In the opening sequence of the film, she has an on-air eruption, deciding she’ll call out quintessentially moronic anchors Dale (Mark Harmon) and Sherry (Olson) on numerous character flaws on the air. Most notably, Dale weaseled his way into a sex-based relationship with Sylvia, only to leave her for his bumbling idiot of a co-host. While the scene leaves Sylvia without a job and all over the Internet in embarrassing form, things slowly but surely turn around for our heroine, as they always do in this type of movie. Circumstance forces her to move in with her brother, Walt (Ryan Devlin), who allows his web-designer friend and Sylvia’s soon-to-be love-interest Byron (Patrick J. Adams) over to use the Internet while his is down. On the emotional rebound, Sylvia once again faces a tough decision when she’s inevitably offered her job back at the station to improve sweeps ratings.

While Weather Girl is never a painful sit, it never fully realizes itself as a romance, a comedy, or a combination of the two. This problem stems from the way Sylvia is written. In the opening sequence, she is established as a caricature rather than a character, grand-standing in climactic fashion as if only to make the audience hoot and holler at the drama. While very glib, this technique would be OK if writer/director Blayne Weaver’s only goal was to make the viewer laugh at Sylvia the entire time. But instead he targets a more sympathetic portrayal—especially as the movie goes on—and his expectation that we simultaneously treat her as an over-written ploy for laughs and a real human proves impossible. Needless to say, Sylvia’s ensuing lack of authentic emotion means her romance with Byron comes off as artificial, not sweet or compelling. Actress O’Kelly is a champ throughout and tackles the role as best she can, but her attempts are futile within the confines of Weaver’s script.

Yes, there are select enjoyable moments in Weather Girl, most of which involve actors Harmon and Olson hamming it up for the camera as all-too-realistic news anchors. But given Will Ferrell and Adam McKay’s legendary Anchorman already stands as the definitive broadcasting comedy, this disjointed melodrama’s attempts to engage the audience in that way seem unnecessary. If you’re bored one day and find Weather Girl on Lifetime when channel-surfing, it’s an acceptable time-killer, but there isn’t any other reason to see it. 2 Buckets out of 4; screens again on Weds, Jun 24 at 9:30 p.m. at the Landmark.

Then again, Weather Girl has nothing on Matthew Bissonnette’s Passenger Side when it comes to empty caricatures. The film stars Adam Scott (Knocked Up, Step Brothers) and Joel Bissonnette as brothers Michael and Tobey, who are not so much people as they are mouthpieces for dialogue. The only background the viewer gets is that it’s Michael’s birthday, and he has canceled the plans he had with his girlfriend so he can drive recovering drug-addict Tobey around L.A. on mysterious “errands” all day. And drive they do, from Echo Park to Glendale to Joshua Tree to the Valley to Long Beach and back. They seem to sit in a lot of traffic, but nonetheless cover at least 350 miles in about 12 hours. I didn’t know that was possible in this town, especially when one is forced to take a detour to rush a kid with two severed fingers to a hospital and to sit down for a long lunch with a lonely old lady.

Had the conversation or the main performances been particularly deep or authentic, then Passenger Side could have been an interesting and/or emotional experience. But they’re not. That’s not to say that there’s anything inherently wrong with the two elements, other than perhaps their overextended desire to conform to the indie standard for "quirkiness." They’re simply unremarkable and therefore don’t contribute much to an already unremarkable movie. For instance, when we find out what Tobey is actually looking for on this long (albeit circular) journey, the revelation could have led to some quietly poignant scenes between the brothers but instead the ensuing material is just flat. At times, it seems as though leads Scott and Bissonnette completely misread the script, crafting restrained portrayals under the assumption there was something underneath that wasn’t actually present.

The one regard in which the movie really works is as a love letter to Greater Los Angeles. Joining the recent Drag Me to Hell as a cinematic representation of a gentrified Echo Park in the first scenes, the film expands in geography as it moves and does so beautifully. Director Bissonnette doesn’t show L.A. in an unrealistically picturesque way, as the movies often do, but rather with the sort of jaded discovery that makes the places in the city what they are. Aiding this style is D.P. Jonathon Cliff’s humid, distinct way of shooting each location. In fact, I dare say that a momentarily-featured, blank doughnut shop exterior has more personality than either Michael or Tobey. The journey in Passenger Side is indeed far more interesting than the men taking it, and that’s reason enough why the movie doesn’t succeed. 2 Buckets out of 4; screens again on Thurs, Jun 25 at 4:30 p.m. at the Landmark.

Unfortunately, Day Two of LAFF didn’t prove much better than the first, but I’ll provide more on that later. Now, I must scurry off to Westwood for the pair of Day Three viewings on my slate.

Saturday, June 20, 2009

BucketCast: Episode 19

Today's BucketCast is little more than a recitation of Friday's box office figures, as predicted by Leonard Klady at Movie City News, and Exhibitor Relations' weekend projections, but it's my hope that you'd rather listen to my soft, sultry voice than read them off a chart yourself.

Why so bland? Well, I'm up here doing lots of LA Film Festival stuff and don't have the time to do a substantive if you want me to crank out some festival coverage too.

So take this as an opportunity to catch up on older BucketCasts if you haven't already. I highly recommend yesterday's episode with Reid on potential summer breakthroughs and Episode 8, in which Michael and I talked David Carradine movies.

S&R.

Friday, June 19, 2009

BucketCast: Episode 18

That's right: as the picture on the left featuring Subby artisan Dustin would indicate, today's podcast is brought to you from Subman with go-to Friday guy Reid Ackerman.

It was pre-recorded, for all of you are questioning how I magically am in both L.A. and San Diego at the moment.

During the episode, Reid and I talk openers Year One and The Proposal, plus potential summer movie breakthroughs.

S&R. Now. I command thee.

BucketCast: Episode 17

Now the BucketCast is completely up to speed, and rest assured: it'll stay that way for the foreseeable future. I already have tomorrow's (err... today's, by 20 minutes) episode all cut and ready to post. That is, once you're done listening to these two.

On this bare-bones Thursday edition of the BucketCast, I provide my usual weekly box-office opener predictions. They are for Year One, The Proposal, and Whatever Works. On Saturday moring, we'll all know whether I was crazy, prophetic, or somewhere in between.

S&R. You know you want to.

BucketCast: Episode 16

Putting an end to the momentary BucketCast backlog that resulted from my travels 100 miles north for the L.A. Film Festival, here's Wednesdays episode, which Michael and I recorded from a movie theater parking lot. (You gotta love the portability of podcasting!)

My pick for the week is Friday the 13th (1980) and his is Ghost Busters, making for an all-around '80s cheese sesh. Enjoy the commentary and banter, and remember to listen to the end to hear us tease the films we'll be covering next week.

Instead of doing the whole "Subscribe & Rate on iTunes" line, from now on I'll simply type "S&R" at the end of these BucketCast announcements.

S&R, baby. S&R.

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

BucketCast: Episode 15

Hey, what do you know? I'm only 30 minutes late in posting this BucketCast -- the best I've done in three days! Things are looking up here for my punctuality's sake.

Is it really DVD Talk Tuesday again? (Well, technically it's early Wednesday morning right now, but let's not let technicalities get in the way of the pure, unadulterated joy of that proclamation.)

On today's show, I provide reviews of the three new releases: Tyler Perry's Madea Goes to Jail, Friday the 13th, and Morning Light. Also in store for 'ya is my usual DVD pick of the week and what I'll be renting.

As always, I beg you to listen, subscribe, and rate. There will be a pretty... interesting... incentive to do so announced on Friday's show.

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

BucketCast: Episode 14

I'm a bit late again in posting Monday's BucketCast, but cut me some slack -- I'm still trying to get the hang of podcasting nearly every day. And better late than never, right?

On this edition of Random Monday, I do quick audio reviews of a few movies out there that I didn't get to in print -- Dance Flick, My Life in Ruins, Angels & Demons, Imagine That, Land of the Lost, and Night at the Museum 2: Battle of the Smithsonian.

These are similar to what I'll be doing in the "YouTube Reviews" I announce at the beginning of the show. Those will begin running in around two weeks from now.

Sunday, June 14, 2009

Sunday BucketCast Announcement

After nearly two weeks worth of BucketCasts, I have made a decision regarding the daily format: there will be no Sunday shows.

Recording, editing, and publishing seven days a week was already starting to get tiresome, so I've decided I need a day-a-week break.

Sunday came as the natural choice for that break. Not only was I dreading the prospect of left-wing listeners becoming alienated by the proposed regular political episode of the show, I also found that such an episode would require a lot of prep-time to be good. And I just don't have 4-5 hours to put these things together.

Not to mention: Internet traffic really lulls on Sundays, meaning not many would hear the show. Movie news also slows, meaning a simple change in topic would likely prove futile.

So, with that said, the BucketCast will now broadcast six days a week. It's still an ambitious schedule, but one I will mostly hold to. I say mostly because I'm still unsure of whether I'll be able to do episodes when I'm at film festivals, like the one coming up this week.

But keep tuning in and keep subscribing and rating on iTunes. This is a very small cut-back. Your listenership is appreciated indeed.

Saturday, June 13, 2009

BucketCast: Episode 13

On today's BucketCast, I discuss the Friday box office numbers.
The Hangover and Up claimed the #1 and 2 spots, with openers The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3 and Imagine That coming in at #3 and #6, respectively.
I also talk box on limited openers Moon, Food Inc., Tetro, Street Dreams, and Call of the Wild 3D.
So what are you waiting for? Listen and then be so scintillated you're compelled to subscribe and rate on iTunes (if you haven't already)!

Friday, June 12, 2009

BucketCast: Episode 12

Here to tell you to listen to this Friday Subman edition of the BucketCast is a 14-year-old Reid Ackerman, stoned off of Disneyland cotton-candy on our 8th Grade graduation trip.

But a lot of things have changed since then -- not only Reid's ability to pose for pictures, but also his movie tastes.

Without regulars Ryan Gray or Blaine Nelson, Reid and I discuss the new movies this weekend, Imagine That and The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3, and a slew of movie news.

We also tease a special Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen feature coming on the BucketCast. It's bound to be as epic as Bay's film, so make sure you listen for that.

And, as always, I'm begging you to subscribe to the BucketCast on iTunes and to rate it 5-stars.

BucketCast: Episode 11

I apologize it's about 15 hours late--how off my game have I been over these past two days?--but here's the Thursday Box Office Predictions edition of the BucketCast.

I talk about the likely weekend takes for The Taking of Pelham 1 2 3 and Imagine That, which are unlikely to dwarf last weekend's top two, The Hangover and up.

This delayed episode will not preclude the normal Friday Bucketcast from Subman, which will be posted by 9 p.m. tonight.

As always, please Subscribe to the BucketCast on iTunes and rate it 5-stars.

Thursday, June 11, 2009

BucketCast: Episode 10

Sorry it's about 90 minutes late, but here's today's (well... yesterday's) edition of the BucketCast.

It's Retrospectives Wednesday again, where once-a-week co-host Michael Lester and I look back at movies of the past.

This week, the chosen ones are 1962's The Longest Day, in celebration of the 65th anniversary of D-Day, and 1974's The Taking of Pelham One Two Three, which has of course been remade by Tony Scott with Denzel Washington and John Travolta for Friday release.

C'mon, you know you want to listen. Yes, you do...

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

BucketCast: Episode 9

It's DVD Talk Tuesday on Bucketcast Episode 9.

I cover all the big releases this week: Crossing Over, The International, Nobel Son, Fired Up!, and Gran Torino. Can you guess which one I liked the most? Yeah, thought so.

I also provide my standard "Pick of the Week" and offer up what I'll be renting this weekend.

This episode runs pretty short (9 minutes, 31 seconds), but I'm playing with the lengths to see how they play. Remember to send you're opinions on this or any other matter concerning the BucketCast in to webmaster@bucketreviews.com or Twitter-handle "bucketreviews".

Once again, thanks for listening and I hope you'll tell a friend!

Monday, June 8, 2009

BucketCast: Episode 8


On today's BucketCast, Michael "Retrospectives" Lester and I discuss the movies of David Carradine (1936-2009).

We focus on Boxcar Bertha and Death Race 2000, both made at the beginning of Carradine's long and (mostly) successful film career. His characters in these films are two of his most iconic.

There's also some talk of Kill Bill and "Kung Fu", as I promised when teasing the show.

Hope you enjoy this special episode, and we love your questions and comments. Send them to webmaster@bucketreviews.com or message the Twitter handle "bucketreviews". One note: do not e-mail us because Michael accidentally said "Roger Shaw" rather than "Robert Shaw" -- he was still marinating on our discussion of Roger Corman and the correction is duly noted.

And, if you haven't already, please subscribe to the BucketCast on iTunes. And rate it 5-stars. I'm sure Carradine would have wanted you to. Oh, yes, I went there.

Sunday, June 7, 2009

BucketCast: Episode 7

We're a week of BucketCasts in and the fun has barely started.

In an effort to not alienate liberal listeners and to ensure I don't make a fool of myself by not preparing thoroughly enough, I've postponed Politics Sunday until next week.

Because Michael and I will be doing a special retrospective tomorrow (on David Carradine movies), I decided to move up the "Anything Goes"-Monday topic to Sunday for this one time.

During the course of this BucketCast, I discuss the movies I'm most awaiting in 2009. Let's hope they live up to their promise.

So what are you waiting for? Start listening!

(And subscribe and rate on iTunes and all that fun stuff.)

Saturday, June 6, 2009

BucketCast: Episode 6

On today's BucketCast, I discuss the Friday box-office numbers and their future implications.

Boy, did that Hangover movie open big... and I had a lot to say about it.

So what are you waiting for? Download the episode now or, if you haven't already, subscribe to the BucketCast on iTunes so my voice will automatically find its way onto your computer each and every day of the week.

Friday, June 5, 2009

BucketCast: Episode 5

Oh, yes, it's another BucketCast for ya.

Today, I speak with soon-to-be Friday regulars Reid Ackerman and Ryan Gray from local sandwich joint Subman. If you remember their posts on Bucket Reviews from years ago, then you've been following the site for waaaay too long.

Topics range from this week's openers to the future of Digital 3-D to the month's release calendar.

As a side-note: the audio quality blows, mainly because I had to hold the microphone and the input-level on my laptop was turned up way too high. We'll fix this next week. My deepest apologies.

If you have any suggestions for the BucketCast, please contact me at webmaster@bucketreviews.com. Also, once again, I ask that you please subscribe to the BucketCast on iTunes and rate it 5-stars while you're there.

Thursday, June 4, 2009

BucketCast: Episode 4

New reviews are coming over at the main site tonight, but for now you have the latest BucketCast.

On today's episode, I discuss the box-office prospects for this weekend's openers: Land of the Lost, My Life in Ruins, The Hangover, and Away We Go.

Tomorrow, the BucketCast will offer a look at what mainstream audiences think of these, as I'll broadcast from local sandwich-joint Subman.

Remember: it will really help if you Subscribe to the BucketCast on iTunes and rate it 5-stars while you're at it.

Thanks!

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

BucketCast: Episode 3

I may not be producing the desired amount of reviews these days, but I'm certainly cranking out the daily BucketCast at the rate I promised. It's a demanding task, but nonetheless a rewarding one. Please send your feedback to me at webmaster@bucketreviews.com if you haven't already.

Episode 3 of the BucketCast is the first-ever with a co-host. That's Michael Lester you're hearing, and he will be joining me every Wednesday for weekly retrospectives.

In this episode, we talk William Friedkin's To Live and Die in L.A. (1985), which was supposed to be released on Blu-Ray this week but wasn't, and Ridley Scott's Alien (1979), which just celebrated its 30th Anniversary.

Also: I drop a news bombshell about the speculated Alien Quadrilogy Blu-Ray set.

Because Michael decided to destroy the suspense, he announced that next week's picks will be 1974's The Taking of Pelham One Two Three and 1962's The Longest Day. Stay tuned for those.

If you enjoy the Podcast, please Subscribe to it on iTunes and rate us 5-stars! That will really help.

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

BucketCast: Episode 2

Yep, it's that time of night again -- the second episode of BucketCast is now posted.

In this installment of "DVD Talk Tuesday", I cover the latest releases in the format: He's Just Not that Into You, Revolutionary Road, and Defiance. I also offer my weekly DVD pick--Nothing but the Truth--and discuss the movie I'll be renting for the weekend (tune in for that).

While I still have a lot to learn about Podcasting, I hope you'll tune in because I think this 20-minute segment is at least moderately interesting.

And, remember, on tomorrow's show, Michael "Dawn of the Dead Retrospective" Lester makes his return to Bucket Reviews after a five-year layover in Siberia! We'll talk old movies, namely Alien (1979) and To Live and Die in L.A. (1985). Stay tuned for that.

And please be sure to subscribe to "BucketCast" on iTunes and rate it 5-stars. Because you know it deserves that rating so it can keep (or start?) thriving.

BucketCast: Episode 1

OK, I'll admit it -- I've been slacking on writing my Up and Drag Me to Hell reviews. (Let's just pretend that the "review a day" promise was supposed to start next week, all right?)

But I've got something better. Here's a link to the first episode of the daily BucketCast.

In the short opening, I introduce the daily features and talk about Conan O'Brien's (perhaps not so coincidental) debut on "The Tonight Show". Nonetheless, despite NBC's totally copycat programming-choice, I'm certain BucketCast will be the more popular topic at tomorrow's watercooler.

Don't let the link stop you from subscribing to the Podcast on iTunes, though. And, please, if you like it, give us a 5-star review -- that's what will improve its ranking and therefore expand the reach of Bucket Reviews.

Hope you enjoy!