by Orson Welch October 18, 2004 Good morrow, gentlefolk. I have just returned from my bi-monthly excursion to the Clatterton, New Jersey Renaissance Festival and I mourn the loss of medieval times. Even more so, I curse the inventions of televisions and motion pictures. What better time to review the upcoming DVD releases.
In Theaters Van Helsing Hugh Jackman is Jack Shit in this re-telling… re-telling? Not quite. In this completely farcical defecation of the original Bram Stoker character who hunted Dracula. Only if Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn formed a boy band could Hollywood more ruthlessly violate a literary classic. The special effects are amazing, and by special effects, I mean the genius editing done by the marketing department that fooled countless individuals into seeing it at the theater. No doubt the DVD will sell well, too. Possibly the greatest injustice we'll suffer this year. Garfield: The Movie Remember the 1980s classic cartoon strip "Garfield," about the wisecracking lazy cat who loved lasagna and hated Mondays? No? That's precisely why the demonic forces of Tinsel Town have seen fit to smite us with a live-action version of this forgotten Rubik's Cube of a character. In this, Garfield learns that jealousy can lead him to misjudging a new friend, and we learn that animals should be harmed in films. Dawn of the Dead This complete rip-off of the 1985 George Romero zombie sequel is actually the most original thing coming out this week. Not a compliment. The make-up effects and casting is much improved from the original. In fact, let's just say that everything is much improved from the original. Still not a compliment. Not a shred of unique thought slips into this movie, it's locked up tight. You have to respect the serious devotion to unoriginality exhibited by the director, whatever he was, as the original modern parable of the living dead walking a shopping mall is not lost on today's audience. Today's audience, of course, also living dead. How clever that an audience can watch a thinly-veiled metaphor insult the bejesus out of them and they still possess enough capability for cognitive dissonance to deny they're the very ones being mocked. But not you, of course, dear reader. I must go, before the smirk on my face begins to slip. By the way, if anyone knows how long a full roast duck or turkey leg will maintain in a modern refrigerator, please let me know. It's a long way until next month's RenFest. Quote of the Day“What a waste it is to lose one's mind. Or not to have a mind is being very wasteful. How true that is. Jesus, I'm wasted.”-Dan Quayle Fortune 500 CookieDon't stop thinking about tomorrow—we hear if you're late to your own castration they charge double. Anyone can be a hero to a small child, just buy a monster truck and never take your sunglasses off. Try eating more greens: we find it hilarious and it pisses off those asshole golfers. This week's lucky medical procedures not covered by Medicaid: assectomy, therapeutic genital massage, gene therapy for "itchy taint," installation of a second "failsafe" spare heart—baboon or otherwise, and goat removal.Try again later. Top KFC Image-Makeover Slogans
October 4, 2004 Buenos Nachos, Americanos, it's time for another weekly injection of the Entertainment Police serum. Hope you've all been good boys and girls out there in boy and girl-land, I don't really have the technology to follow up on that in order to deny... (10/4/04) September 20, 2004 Do they even release movies to the theaters anymore? Each week it becomes more difficult to find a DVD release to review that wasn't a movie released years ago. And of those, it's even harder to find one that wasn't re-released on DVD with removed... (9/20/04) September 6, 2004 Booya, America. I'm not sure what that means, but it seemed appropriate. Whatever sentiment that expressed, you can file it in triplicate because Roland McShyster's in a good mood today. Good? Nay, agreeable! I've seen the proverbial bluebird of... (9/6/04) |