Monthly Archives: July 2009

Interlude – Remember 1999?

Steve: Dude.

Joe: Dude?

Steve: Before we continue this conversation, here’s a pop quiz for you.

Steve: 8MM
American Beauty
Analyze This
Any Given Sunday
Being John Malkovich
The Blair Witch Project
Bringing Out The Dead
Dogma
Election
Eyes Wide Shut
Fight Club
Galaxy Quest
Girl, Interrupted
Go!
The Green Mile
The Hurricane
The Insider
The Iron Giant
Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels
Magnolia
Man on the Moon
The Matrix
Mystery Men
Office Space
Payback
Run Lola Run
The Sixth Sense
Sleepy Hollow
South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut
The Straight Story
Sweet and Lowdown
The Talented Mr. Ripley
Three Kings
Toy Story 2
What two things do all those movies have in common?

Joe: All made in the 1990′s?

Steve: Close.
All released in 1999

Joe: Wow, really?

Steve: And all great.
Yeah.
See, this is why I’ve been saying for years that we may never see another movie year like 1999 in our lifetime.

Joe: I don’t think I’d put “The Hurricane” in the great category, but I’m with you.

Steve: I think 2008 may have matched it now, though.
There were some other movies in 1999 that I’m told were great but I didn’t actually see.
Like Cider House Rules.

Joe: I just remember Cider House Rules being evil because it was an abortion clinic, but I’m not even sure if that’s true. It was during my reactionary Christian years.

Steve: I just remember thinking it looked boring as hell.
It came out the same weekend as The Green Mile.

Joe: Ah.
Green Mile is way underrated.

Steve: Absolutely.
It’s like Shawshank 2: This Time With Magic.

Joe: Ha.
Dude, Stephen King, what the hell?

Steve: I know. He’s got all these great stories under his belt but all anyone knows him for is shitty horror novels that he cranks out in his sleep.
I’m gonna run down 2008 now. See how it matches up.

Joe: k
You’ve got Dark Knight in there.

Steve: I just got a complete list of the internet. I’m gonna just delete the lame ones.
Did you like Cloverfield?

Joe: Didn’t see it.
New York has been like MIA for me with movies.
It’s just not a movie town.

Steve: Well I thought it sucked ass but I’ll leave it on because a lot of people liked it.

A few minutes later…

Steve: Okay, not looking so good for 2008 after all.

Joe: I didn’t think so, but 1999 was very good.

Steve: Well, there were a lot of great movies in 2008.
But not nearly as many as 1999
The Bank Job
Bolt
The Chronicles of Narnia: Prince Caspian
Cloverfield (according to some)
The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
The Dark Knight
Death Race
The Forbidden Kingdom
Frost/Nixon (didn’t see it, would probably hate it, but everyone else liked it)
Gran Torino
Hancock (stretching)
Hellboy 2: The Golden Army
The Incredible Hulk
Iron Man
Justice League – The New Frontier
Kung Fu Panda
Mongol
Rambo
Run, Fat Boy, Run
Seven Pounds
Slumdog Millionaire
Transporter 3
Tropic Thunder
WALL-E
The Wrestler
That’s 25 in 2008 versus 34 from 1999.
And some of the 25 are only cool to me because of my Jason Statham addiction.

Joe: Yes.
I was about to say.
And, I liked Hancock, but great is a little bit of a stretch.

Steve: I know.
That too.
I was really fighting for 2008 here.
But it still had more great movies than any other year since 1999

Joe: And was Justice League a feature?

Steve: It was direct to DVD, but it deserved a theater release.
But you know.
Hulk, Dark Knight, and Iron Man by themselves make 2008 the greatest movie year we’ve seen in a while.
Not to mention Gran Torino, Kung Fu Panda and Slumdog.
All movies that should be on anyone’s list.

Joe: Dude, Gran Torino makes me scared of Clint Eastwood.
He’s a great film maker and a wonderful story teller.
And he could kill a guy just by blowing his nose.

Steve: I know!
That dude’s going to be in a hospital bed when he’s 102, unable to blink under his own power, and I’ll still be scared to death of him.

Greatest movies of the 00′s, Part 1

Joe: Okay, we need to have an epic conversation over gtalk.

Steve: Ok

Joe: We can’t do it right now, will have to wait until we have time because it’s epic.
Topic: Best movie from 01.01.00 until 12.31.09.
Considering I can’t foresee anything amazing coming out in the next six months I feel safe having a conversation about the last 9.5 years.

Steve: I think this needs to be a multi-part conversation.
Which we can start today and continue until the end of the year.

Joe: Sounds good, but I think you can see we need time carved out for this.

Steve: Yeah.
I gotta do shit right now anyway.

24 hours later…

Steve: The first ten years of the 2000s will be gone soon.

Joe: That’s true. And there have been quite a few movies over the last 110+ months.

Steve: I think to start with…
Lord of the Rings.
I’m not even sure I could imagine what popular culture would look like today if those movies hadn’t been the greatest movies ever.

Joe: Very true, but I think they should be treated as one film because they are one story.

Steve: Perhaps. They were shot all at the same time and they were based on books that were originally intended to be published as one.
But I still say they’re different movies.
And if forced to choose a best one, I’d say Return of the King.

Joe: Agreed.
But, before we get too much into specifics of movies, we should pick either categories or criteria.

Steve: Okay, as long as we agree up front that Return of the King is unquestionably the greatest movie of the past ten years.
Overall.

Joe: You can’t compare Lord of the Rings to Little Miss Sunshine.
I don’t think we can have that discussion just yet.

Steve: Yes you can.
You can compare how much they affected you and how much they affected the world.

Joe: Okay, I refuse and I argue that Speed Racer, a fucking piece of shit film I didn’t even see is the best movie ever, fuck you Steve.

Steve: Wow.
You’re trying to make an argument of it here.

Joe: Okay, I’m calm now.

Steve: Alright, we both know we’re going to end up back at LotR, but let’s start throwing out some great movie titles.

Joe: Anyway, I think we should go top 5, then top in each genre, then best film ever of 2000 – 2009 which will most likely be Return of the King.

Steve: Okay.
Agreed.

Joe: Gladiator

Steve: Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon. Pan’s Labyrinth. Shrek. Munich. Cinderella Man. O Brother Where Art Thou. Pirates of the Cariibbean. Memento. Spider-Man 2. The Passion of the Christ. The Royal Tenenbaums. Iron Man. Batman Begins.

Joe: Hey.

Steve: The Dark Knight

Joe: Slow down.
Okay, here’s the thing, I think if a film has a terrible sequel, it should diminish it some.
For example, Pirates of the Caribbean was good, and number 2 was good, but number three was a turd sandwich.

Steve: Hmm… Maybe.

Joe: It really only applies to Pirates.

Steve: Though I’m pretty comfortable igoring 2 and 3
You can’t have 2 without 3, but 1 works as a standalone.
And it was darn good.

Joe: Well, then we have to discuss story. For example, Matrix 2 and 3 were so bad that Matrix 1 almost sucks by proxy (although that wasn’t a 2000′s film).

Steve: Right, but again. You can ignore the sequels.

Joe: I agree with you, but if we’re talking total package, bad sequels should at least be weighted by like 5%.

Steve: Those two trilogies follow the same pattern.

Joe: No, because Pirates 2 was decent.
Pirates 3 made out with Sierra Mist.

Steve: Right, but stay with me here. One great movie that you can watch by itself.
Followed by a sequel that you couldn’t.
And finished off with a second sequel that was the crappiest thing ever dreamt of by man.
If you wanted to argue that Pirates 3 diminished Pirates 2, I’d have to agree.
Since Pirates 2 had no ending.
But I’m not sure I’m ready to say it diminished Pirates 1.

Joe: …Well, it’s not a huge point, but Dark Knight makes Batman Begins better by association, and the LOTR films are great as stand alones or together.
However, in the extreme case, all three shitty new Star Wars films damage the original 3 by proxy.
In a really serious way, a way that hurts everyone between the ages of 25 and dead

Steve: Yeah, I guess there is some spillover there.

Joe: So, it’s not as bad with Pirates, but I still think it hurts just a bit.
Anyway.

Steve: Okay, maybe.

Joe: Little Miss Sunshine.
Is there a total list we can look at?

Steve: http://digitaldreamdoor.nutsie.com/pages/movie-pages/movie_00s.html
Here’s a partial.

Joe: Holy crap, Old Boy is on the list here.
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa

Steve: Yeah, I know.
So is Episode III
Not the most intelligent list ever.
But helpful to look at.
Hotel Rwanda.
Which I still haven’t seen.

Joe: You know what sneaks on the list?
Oceans 11.

Steve: Yup
Sin City.
Juno.

Joe: Yeah, Juno.
Okay, are you ready for number 1 and number 2 which need to fight it out.

Steve: Ok.

Joe: Return of the King vs. Dark Knight.
Really, those are my top two.
With Gladiator close behind.

Steve: Return of the King easy.

Joe: Mmmmm don’t know.

Steve: Dark Knight is definitely up there, but it doesn’t even begin to approach the epic scale of Return of the King.
And no way does Gladiator rank higher than Passion of the Christ.

Joe: I disagree.
Passion is hard to judge because we’re both Christians, although maybe that counts.

Steve: You’ve always had a disproportionate love of Gladiator.

Joe: Because it’s amazing.

Steve: Dude, you never want to watch any movie that’s not Gladiator.

Joe: Not true.

Steve: It was a great movie, but it’s not on par with these others that we’re talking about.

Joe: I didn’t suggest it was on par with Dark Knight or LotR.

Steve: It just doesn’t touch as many emotional beats as LotR or Passion.
I don’t think Passion is hard to judge.
It made over $600 million in the theater.
That’s not what happens to “Christian” movies.

Joe: I agree, but this wasn’t just a Christian movie, and besides, Da Vinci Code made 600 million, so that just means people are dumb.
Anyway. Okay, my top for now seem to be (in no order yet): Gladiator, LotR.
Passion.
Dark Knight.
Juno has amazing rewatchability.

Steve: Alright, I’ll duplicate that and throw in Fellowship.
I’ll not put Two Towers in the top few.
But the other two for sure.

Joe: Well, I’m just counting LotR as a whole, but we’re in agreement.

Steve: Donnie Darko?

Joe: mmmm.
It was good, but nothing epic about it.
Really good, but not quite there.

Steve: Okay, I just thought of something that made me want to declare a new rule.
Before it comes up.
Rule is: We will not treat animation as a “genre.”
Animation is a medium, not a genre.

Joe: I think I’d agree with that.
Oh, I know it’s not the best, but Anchorman.
Isn’t that in the 2000′s?

Steve: Yeah, that’ll definitely be in the top five comedies.
You know what else we haven’t mentioned?
X-Men 2.

Joe: Oh yeah.

Steve: Before Dark Knight came out, I still had my money on X-Men 2 to be the greatest superhero movie of all time.

Joe: Best non-Batman super hero movie.
Right.

Steve: Hellboy.
Casino Royale.
28 Days Later.

Joe: No Casino Royale.
Fighting that one.

Steve: Actually, everything by Danny Boyle.
How can you fight Casino Royale?

Joe: I watched 30 minutes and couldn’t keep going.

Steve: It’s the best Bond film since Connery.
Are you sure you’re not talking about Quantum of Solace?
That one was lame.

Joe: Well, A. not a Bond fan and B. Didn’t like it.
Nope, talking about Casino Royale.

Steve: Well fuck you.
It’s on the list.

Joe: Nope, it’s off, fuck you harder.
Hey, is there a copy of Kill Bill as one big film?

Steve: Double fuck with a cattle prod.
It’s on.

Joe: It’s off, you get fucked by Mt. St. Helens’ dick.

Steve: Ow.

Joe: Kill Bill, one film?

Steve: Kill Bill isn’t on the list no matter how you edit it.

Joe: I agree, just wondering.

Steve: Yeah, I don’t know.
Was it ever one film?
I thought the whole thing was an experiment in spreading a three act structure over two films.

Joe: Well, the original concept (the “original concept created for marketing purposes”) was that it was one film and needed to be cut up into two for length.

Steve: An experiment that might have worked if the movies had been good.

Joe: Anyway.
You may not like this one but…
The Prestige.
Really good film.

Steve: Yeah, that movie was good.
Definitely worth paying to see.
But I don’t think it’ll make the tops of our lists.

Joe: mmmm…Guess not, but it’s really good and I could watch it over and over.

Steve: The Incredibles.
Finding Nemo.

Joe: I’ll say yes on both of those.
Okay, I’m way behind on work. Let’s postpone until a later date. I think the next conversation we come up with a top 20.

Steve: Okay, agreed.

Dammit, Sierra Mist!! Bring back Earl!

Steve: When you move back we should have a work party.
I can use a laptop when I need to.
Or you can come over here.
We can throw Cheetos at each other while we press buttons that arrange electrons in a way that someone will pay us for.

Joe: Yes!!!!!!!!

Steve: My mountains of soda are dwindling.
I’m down to just Sierra Mist and Mountain Dew now.

Joe: Make them fight it out.
My money’s on Mountain Dew, although Sierra Mist is probably sneaky.

Steve: Soon it will be just Sierra Mist.

Joe: I hear Sierra Mist went on a sex tour of Asia.

Steve: I have the Moutain Dew bottle sitting next to me.

Joe: I hear Sierra Mist hates African-Americans so much he donates money to the KKK.

Steve: That bastard.
I swear, I hate Sierra Mist

Joe: Sierra Mist has unprotected sex with strangers in men’s bathrooms and then goes home to his wife.

Steve: Sierra Mist is responsible for colon cancer.

Joe: I hear Sierra Mist picks up hitchhikers and forces them to undress while he sings “Nobody Does it Better” by Carly Simon.

Steve: Sierra Mist once tied up Al Gore and beat him with a snow shoe until he admitted that global warming was a myth.

Joe: I hear Sierra Mist directed Van Helsing

Steve: Sierra Mist wrote Pirates of the Carribean 3.

Joe: I hear Sierra Mist makes anonymous donations to the Green Party.

Steve: Sierra Mist is holding back RC Cola by making shady deals with the soda conglomerate.

Joe: I hear Sierra Mist puts razor blades in Halloween candy. He also pees on the razor blades.
Also, the candy is made of pee.

Steve: Sierra Mist went back in time to warn Hitler about the suitcase bomb.

Joe: Sierra Mist voted for Ralph Nader in the past four presidential elections.

Steve: Sierra Mist taught Uwe Bol everything he knows.

Joe: Sierra Mist sells rotten milk at convenience stores.

Steve: Sierra Mist is the real-life inspiration for Cobra Commander.

Joe: Sierra Mist invented black jelly beans.

Steve: Sierra Mist convinced NBC to cancel My Name is Earl.

Joe: Okay, why haven’t we had a “My Name is Earl got cancelled and America is stupid” conversation?

Steve: America isn’t stupid.
Just NBC.
If America had had any indication that Earl was on the block, they would have raised hell.
The problem was it was canceled without warning.
In the middle of a two-part episode.

Joe:Yeah, it’s ridiciulous.
I hate that it was cancelled.

Steve: Yeah it ‘s definitely the kind of thing only Sierra Mist would do.

Joe: What on earth will replace it? Every show they tried as the fourth show with The Office, 30 Rock and My Name Is Earl sucked crab dick.

Steve: I no longer care.
I don’t watch The Office or 30 Rock and as the creator of Earl pointed out, it’s not really that upsetting to be kicked off a sinking ship.
NBC’s going down and I don’t give a rip.

Joe: I watch The Office and 30 Rock and I tried to watch the horror that were the other pilots, but it seriously wounded me.
Screw NBC.

Steve: Yeah.
NBC hasn’t produced ten consecutive minutes of watchable Saturday Night Live material in almost fifteen years.
They deserve to die.
They have the most popular sketch comedy show in history and they can’t make it good.

Joe: Which is amazing considering there are countless people dying to get into that show.

Steve: Yeah, well it’s still a good way to get a movie role.
At least once.

Joe: How can you have so little writing and acting talent when anyone from anywhere who has ever made someone laugh would do it in a heartbeat?

Steve: Maybe that’s the problem.
They’re taking anyone from anywhere.

Joe: Yeah, it’s just sad.

Steve: Oh well.

Joe: Sierra Mist ruined Saturday Night Live.

Steve: Sure did, Joe.
It sure did.

RC Cola and Ron Perlman

hellboyRC
Joe: How was the billion dollar bbq?

Steve: I had 51 guests.

Joe: Wow.
That’s a lot.

Steve: Dude I have so many sodas.
And so much beer.
This was a weird year for leftovers.
I made less food and had more people than last year.
So the leftover food is almost gone already.
But the drinks could fill an Olypmic-sized swimming pool.

Joe: Nice.
Anything good?

Steve: Cherry 7-Up.
Pepsi.
Some douchebag brought like four 2-liters of Diet Coke.
I’ll probably give most of that away.
Some Mug Root Beer.
A completely unopened 12-pack of Sierra Mist.
And a mostly full 12-pack of Mountain Dew.
And lots of Miller.

Joe: Sierra Mist is like American Pie movies. Who the hell keeps asking for it?
…Oh, teenagers. They’re stupid.

Steve: Exactly.
It’s like all the useless parts of Sprite and all the worst parts of Mountain Dew had a retarded baby.
Oh here’s a bunch of Tropicana Fruit Punch.

Joe: If I were 7-Up, I’d be so pissed. Sierra Mist pretends 7-Up doesn’t even exist, but why do we need more than 7-Up in the first place?

Steve: And a bottle of Red Horse Malt Liquor.

Joe: Awesome!!!!!!!!!
If I even smelled that I’d throw up.

Steve: The other day there were some pretty fancy beers with unpronounceable names but Sarah and our current houseguest drank them.
While I shook my head and muttered about the evils of alcohol.

Joe: Who is your current house guest?

Steve: Some guy you don’t know.
Needed a place to stay temporarily.

Joe: Potsi from Happy Days?

Steve: Yup.
The good thing is, if you tell him to sit on it, he does.
You know what’s really underrated?
RC Cola.

Joe: Oh yeah.
It’s a great soda.

Steve: I’m basically a Dr. Pepper man myself, but if it was between RC, Coke and Pepsi, I’d usually reach for the RC first.

Joe: Oh yeah, RC’s sorta like Ron Perlman. You’re never quite sure why things didn’t work out, and then you’re like “Oh, Ron Perlman’s a 7 foot tall beastman who showers in vodka and feeds his baby shrimp scampi.”

Steve: Absolutely.
And then his most prominent role in decades is one where nobody can see what he actually looks like.

Joe: Yeah, poor guy. He was Beast from Beauty and the Beast, Hellboy, and like four other roles where he was covered in makeup.
I have no idea if he’ll ever get recognized by anyone other than sci-fi fans.

Steve: It’s what he’s good at.
You know what else he’s doing a lot of these days?
Video game voices.
It’s like he’s committed himself to taking roles that can make him the maximum amount of money while allowing him to retain the maximum amount of anonimity.

Joe: Not a bad idea.
Hey, you know what movie Ron Perlman’s in?

Steve: What?

Joe: Any film where the story begins with “A crack commando squad is sent in to fight a psychotic band of…”

Steve: haha

Joe: Wait, they released this?
http://boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=mutantchronicles.htm
I know it’s horrible, but I wanted to see it.

Steve: Direct to DVD I think.
Hit up a Blockbuster.
They don’t carry good movies anymore, but they should have this one.
Along with 800 copies of anything starring a Wayans.
Or Tyler Perry.

Joe: Oh, just saw Babylon AD. I finished the first 100 minutes and I’m waiting for the movie to begin.
You know, the part of the movie with the story and character development and what the fuck a hot Russian cyborg?

Steve: All I remember is Vin Diesel shooting everything the fuck up.
And then the movie mooned me instead of ending or having a third act.

Joe: Yeah.
I got lost in there.
Ok, headed to lunch.

Steve: Later.