Wednesday, January 26, 2011

BMC MOVIE OF THE WEEK: SURF NAZIS MUST DIE

Surf Nazis Must Die
  • Surf Nazis Must Die
  • Barry Brenner,
  • Gail Neely,
  • Michael Sonya

An earthquake leaves the California coastline in ruins and reduces the beaches to a state of chaos. A group of Neo-Nazis led by Adolf (Brenner), the self-proclaimed "Führer of the new beach," take advantage of the resulting chaos by fighting off several rival surfer gangs to seize control of the beaches. Meanwhile, an African American oil well worker named Leroy (Harden) is killed by the Nazis while jogging on the beach. Leroy's mother "Mama" Washington (Neely), devastated by the loss of her son, vows revenge. After arming herself with a handgun and grenades, she breaks out of her retirement home and sets out to exact bloody vengeance on the Surf Nazis. – Wikipedia

34% liked it

R, 1 hr. 23 min.

Director: Peter George

January 23, 2011: Third Sunday in Ordinary Time (Year A)

There’s basically two kinds of movies you get from Troma. There’s the ones they make themselves that are chock full of unappealing nudity (yes, such a thing exists), cartoonish violence & gore, and more detailed depictions of gross bodily functions than you probably ever wanted to see (or hear) in your lifetime. And then there’s the other kind, the independently made oddities which Troma occasionally picks up and distributes. Mercifully, for my tastes anyway, Surf Nazis Must Die is one of the latter.

Which isn’t to say it’s a good movie. It’s so poorly paced, oddly edited, and awfully acted that it couldn’t be considered a good movie even if it were the only movie ever made and there was nothing else to compare it to. But at least it’s not vomitus. And, believe it or not, if you catch Surf Nazis Must Die in just the right mood, it’s got a couple of things that make it kind of interesting and (almost) enjoyable to watch. For one thing, there’s the throbbing electronic score by Jon McCallum (who, in a telltale sign of just how low budget this movie is, also did the special effects makeup) which manages to create a singular cohesive atmosphere for the film (which is good, because the script sure doesn’t). So if you’re a fan of all those old John Carpenter inspired synthesizer soundtracks, then this one isn’t to be missed. (Of course, if you don’t care for the bloop-bloop bleep-bleep school of scoring, this one will surely make you jam pencils into your ears.)

And then there’s the strange comic book universe the movie creates for itself, sort of like the one you find in Walter Hill’s The Warriors, although admittedly not depicted quite as successfully. As in The Warriors, the back alleys of Surf Nazis Must Die are populated not with Bloods, Crips, Latin Kings or other such real world gangs, but rather with outlandish bands of costumed cretins. There’s The Pipeliners, The all-Japanese Samurai Surfers, and the fashionably attired Designer Waves. And, of course, there’s the Surf Nazis themselves, all adorned with face paint and swastikas and driving around in their shark mouthed van. It’s funny goofy and all the better because the cast plays it dead serious.

Also like in The Warriors, the catalyst for everything that happens in Surf Nazis Must Die is the attempt by one guy to unite the various factions into one undefeatable army. And just like in The Warriors, there’s simply too much distrust and egoism and personal agendas spread amongst the individual gangs for the plan to ever reach fruition. Which works out well for everyone in post-big one California because, after all, who wants to be ruled over by guys with names like Adolph, Mengele, Brutus, Hook, and Smeg? But such internal bickering can be disastrous for groups where unity is considered a fundamental requirement, like say the Body of Christ which is the Church. That’s why Paul scolds the Corinthians in this week’s second reading. “For it has been reported to me about you…” he writes, “that there are rivalries among you. I mean that each of you is saying, “I belong to Paul,” or “I belong to Apollos,” or “I belong to Cephas,” or “I belong to Christ.” Is Christ divided?”

During a 2009 address for the feast of Sts. Peter and Paul, Pope Benedict XVI explained that the “greatest danger” to the Church is not external persecution, but the “negative attitudes” of the world that can pollute and “infect the Christian community” from within.” Among the specific dangers he pointed out were selfishness, vanity, pride, and love of money, all things which can lead to disharmony. That’s why the Catechism warns us, “Christ always gives his Church the gift of unity, but the Church must always pray and work to maintain, reinforce, and perfect the unity that Christ wills for her.” We must always be vigilant about our own hang-ups when we assemble, lest we go the way of the Surf Nazis.

Not literally, of course, as in the Church being taken down by a plus sized African American grandma armed with more firepower than Rambo, but you know what I mean.

Monday, January 24, 2011

INTERMISSION

Sorry, I had to take a few days off from blogging to knock out some work so I could slip away and celebrate my wife’s birthday AND head to downtown Atlanta to go for a walk with a few thousand of my new closest pals. Now the Atlanta March For Life draws nowhere near the crowd of places like DC or San Francisco, but there was still an eerie kind of power to be found in thousands of people silently walking through the concrete canyons of the city, the only sounds being the occasional siren, a few helicopter flyovers, and the stray Hail Mary.

Of course, being who I am, on the way down to the march I couldn’t help but call to mind the most recent image of Atlanta which has been on everyone’s mind… that of hordes of zombies shambling through the various Peachtree Streets on AMC’s The Walking Dead.

The knee jerk reaction (especially if one only has the discernment skills of something like, say, an unfunny HBO talk show host) would probably be to compare the marchers to the zombies. But in this instance, the zombies in the above photo are more readily identifiable with a society hell bent on devouring itself. They are a tidal wave of mock-life mindlessly spreading a culture of death. On the other hand, Officer Rick up there, that’s us, trying to survive and protect human life where we find it.

Only, unlike in most zombie stories, there’s more than just a rag tag band of survivors involved in the struggle. At least it sure seemed that way from my viewpoint last Friday afternoon…

2011-01-21 13.21.36

One day, in a more appropriate venue than a silly blog devoted to discussing crappy movies, I’ll have to tell everyone my personal involvement with abortion and why walking in that throng was the very, very least thing I could do. But for now, I’ll just let the Catechism have it's say. “Human life must be respected and protected absolutely from the moment of conception. From the first moment of his existence, a human being must be recognized as having the rights of a person - among which is the inviolable right of every innocent being to life.”

Please take a moment today to pray for our brothers and sisters marching around the country, and for those women (and men) who out of fear and desperation are considering the wrong choice, and especially for those unborn who deserve a chance at the life we ourselves so often take for granted.

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And then come back later when things aren’t so serious, cause I’ve still got more crappy movies to discuss than I know what to do with.

Sunday, January 16, 2011

CUTAWAYS–ROLLER BLADE

If you made the rounds on the Catholic blogosphere last week, no doubt you ran across this ad for the Sisters of St. Benedict out of Indiana.

Now, obviously, the Church doesn’t micromanage every religious order’s membership drive, nor should it, but the Catechism does have a few things to say regarding nuns and sisters in general.

“Religious life derives from the mystery of the Church. It is a gift she has received from her Lord, a gift she offers as a stable way of life to the faithful called by God to profess the counsels. Thus, the Church can both show forth Christ and acknowledge herself to be the Savior's bride.” Admittedly, I know next to nothing about The Sisters of St. Benedict in Indiana, so if their website claims they are a monastic community whose members “are teachers, social workers, parish ministers, counselors, nurses, youth ministers, chaplains, librarians, and more (there's even a firefighter among us!),” then I’ll take their word for it. Those activities definitely offer the opportunity to show Christ in the world.

“Religious life in its various forms is called to signify the very charity of God in the language of our time.” Okay, so slacklining is relatively new, but is it really the language of our time? Maybe not, but at least it’s not pagan in origin (I don’t think I’ve ever heard of any Druidic slackliners), so it’s basically harmless. Let’s be charitable and give it a pass. Besides, for all we know, potential sisters worldwide are clamoring for more slacklining.

“All religious, whether exempt or not, take their place among the collaborators of the diocesan bishop in his pastoral duty.” Um, well, okay, we may finally have a problem here. While I didn’t read every page on the community’s website, I read a lot of it, and only once did I run across the word Catholic. And that’s in reference to the original settlement of Ferdinand, Indiana, not the monastery or the religious order itself. You would at least expect to find the word Catholic on their “guiding principles” page, but it’s not there either. With that being the case, you can probably guess how many times the words bishop, pope, or anything else related to Church authority appears, can’t you?

So, alas, I’m a bit torn. Due to having known a couple of hard working non-habited sisters, I’m always a little reluctant to jump to judgment when something silly like this ad appears. But the lack of Catholic identification on this particular group’s website is troubling. With no profession of their commitment to the teachings of the Church, what’s to prevent them from slowly drifting further and further away from the original intentions of religious orders? Oh sure, they’re just into harmless slacklining today, but what about tomorrow…

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

SHORT FEATURE: THE MUPPETS – HOLD TIGHT, HOLD TIGHT (WANT SOME SEAFOOD)

Our sharksploitation festival continues here at the B-Movie Catechism with this little ditty from one of my favorite Muppets of all time, Rowlf The Dog. You know, you really have to hand it to the Muppets. I mean, who else could take what was a fairly vulgar boogie woogie song back in its day and turn it into a comedy sketch fit for kids of all ages? And do it without changing any of the words?

Heck, even the mighty Martin Luther (oh so infallible authority that he was) had to make up new lyrics when he utilized a few ‘de-rhythmed’ secular folk songs as the basis for some of his hymns. These days, we call the process of what Luther (and hordes of others from the middle ages on) did a contrafactum which, according to the Free Dictionary, was “a vocal composition in which the original words have been replaced by new ones, either secular words substituted for sacred, or vice versa. In the 16th century the Reformation was responsible for several changes of this kind, especially from Latin to vernacular words in the conversion of plainsong melodies to hymn-tunes.” And though the term contrafactum isn’t usually applied to more modern works, the technique has continued to be used. And why not, “why should the devil have all the best tunes?” At least that’s what William Booth, founder of the Salvation Army, asked when he was chided for replacing the words of popular songs with Christian lyrics in order to appeal to the street people he ministered to. Now I’m not sure if Catholic artist Nick Alexander shares Mr. Booth’s philosophy, but he sure doesn’t mind playing around with constructing contrafacta, especially when it involves that rapidly approaching time of year when we all must consider eating some seafood…

Contrafacta and sharksploitation, two great things that never go out of style.

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

BMC MOVIE OF THE WEEK: BATTLE BEYOND THE STARS

Battle Beyond the Stars
  • Battle Beyond the Stars
  • Richard Thomas in Battle Beyond the Stars
Produced by Roger Corman and scripted by John Sayles, Battle Beyond the Stars is a cheerfully blatant imitation of The Seven Samurai (or at least the American remake The Magnificent Seven). A peace loving planet is attacked by malevolent aliens. The powers-that-be hire a group of mercenaries, headed by George Peppard, to protect the planet from harm. Peppard's contingent includes squeaky-clean Richard Thomas Jr. and statuesque Sybil Danning. John Saxon goes through his usual paces as the villain, while the supporting players include such dependables as Sam Jaffe, Jeff Corey, and, from Magnificent Seven itself, Robert Vaughn. Keep an eye out for Julia Duffy as "Mol". A deft blend of standard sci-fi action and knowing "inside" humor, Battle Beyond the Stars was one of Corman's biggest hits of the 1980s - not to mention an endless supply of stock footage for future New World Productions. – All-Movie Guide
45% liked it

PG, 1 hr. 45 min.

Director: Jimmy T. Murakami

January 9, 2011: The Feast of the Baptism of the Lord (Year A)

As noted above, 45% of Flixter users liked this movie. The other 55%, while entitled to their opinion… are quite obviously insane. Battle Beyond The Stars is Roger Corman at his (mostly) non-sleazy best, a near perfect realization of his tried and true technique of gathering together recognizable faces like Richard Thomas, Robert Vaughn, George Peppard, and (Oh Yeah!) John Saxon, and pairing them with some soon to be recognizable names behind the camera such as a then unknown composer named James Horner and a still wet behind the ears visual effects effects designer by the name of James Cameron.

Which is actually kind of funny because, for my sensibilities at least, this measly $2,000,000 dollar effort is a lot more enjoyable than the $237,000,000 production Horner and  Cameron last worked on together. Oh sure, Avatar might win in the effects department (kind of), but it pales in comparison to Battle Beyond The Stars when it comes to characters. For me, Cameron’s generic space Indians just can’t compete with the rag tag band of memorable mercenaries the hopelessly wimpy Shad assembles to protect his planet in Corman’s movie. There’s the cosmic trucker Space Cowboy with his ever present harmonica and trusty booze dispensing utility belt. There’s the pre-Borg group consciousness Nestor who sends five of his hive minded clones to join the battle just for the experience. There’s Gelt, the galaxy’s most wanted assassin, whose only fee is a bed he can sleep in without having to leave one eye open. There’s the overly enthusiastic chain mail bikini clad Valkyrie warrior Saint-Exmin. There’s the righteous revenge seeking man-lizard Cayman of the Lambda Zone and his crew of heat speaking midgets, The Kelvin. Heck, even Shad’s spaceship Nel has a more memorable personality (not to mention a more memorable anatomy) than anyone in Avatar.

I know Battle Beyond The Stars sounds cartoonish, and to tell the truth, it is. But thanks to the solid performances it’s also true that you get attached to the characters, and feel for them when they start to die. Heck, If I had a booze dispensing utility belt, I’d lift a glass to them all right now. I suppose all that bible reading has just left me with a soft spot for unlikely heroes. You know, like in this week’s reading from the Book of Isaiah which is the first in a series of  four poems known as the Servant Songs. These verses announce the coming of a messiah who will bring deliverance for God's suffering people, but not necessarily the one they might expect.

As Peter M. J. Stravinskas  explains in his book The Catholic Church and the Bible, “Throughout much of Israel’s history, it seems that the Messiah was seen as a king or political figure. Even the famous oracles in Isaiah had their original setting in the imminent expectation of a king… As it became increasingly obvious that the kings were not living up to their vocation, many in Israel began to turn to others for a Messiah, such as the one we find described in the “Servant Songs” of Isaiah 42 and 49-53. This servant would suffer and, through his sufferings, justify many. He would bear the guilt of the people.” Doesn’t really sound like the warrior-king one would expect to save a nation, does it?

But, as in everything else, the unexpected servant king revealed by those songs acts as our example today. With our individual quirks and flaws, we may not be what the world expects to save it, but we’re what it’s got anyway. As the Catechism points out, “lay Christians are entrusted by God with the apostolate by virtue of their Baptism and Confirmation, they have the right and duty, individually or grouped in associations, to work so that the divine message of salvation may be known and accepted by all men throughout the earth.” Nowhere in there does it say only the cool or important Christians, but all of us, however unlikely a choice as we might think ourselves to be.

Now if only we could figure out a way to get the job to include one of them there booze dispensing utility belts…

Sunday, January 09, 2011

THE B-LIST: I LOVE TO SEE YOU SMILE

Having chosen Jaws – The Sharksploitation Edit for my next mega-review, it dawned on me that one or two of you might not know exactly what sharksploitation is. Well, that’s easily remedied. You see, after Jaws made its big splash (bwah ha ha… ha… ha… heh… sorry, I won’t do that again) in 1975, movie makers the world over did what they do best… they saw a chance to make a fast buck. Immediately, from all corners of the earth, Jaws rip offs began to inundate  the big screen. But let’s face it, not everybody who steps behind the camera is a Spielberg. So instead of offering up iconic imagery or characters you could care about, the rip offs simply ramped up the exploitative elements by increasing the amount of bloody shark attacks, decreasing the amount of clothing worn by the actors, and throwing in arbitrary subplots requiring lots of guns and explosives. You know, the “fun” stuff. But rather than just having sharksploitation explained to you, why not sample the following trailers and actually get a feel for it all.

1. GREAT WHITE – THE LAST SHARK (1981)

Except for a surprising lack of nudity (I mean, we’re talking about a movie from Italy after all), this film pretty much epitomizes sharksploitation. There are multiple exploding sharks, untold numbers of severed limbs, and enough property damage to give insurers cardiac arrest for years to come (And yet, like Jaws itself, this was rated PG when I was a kid). Other than that, Great White so blatantly rips off Jaws (Vic Morrow plays a weird amalgam of Quint & Hooper, plus there’s a conflicted mayor) and Jaws 2 (the teenage surf sailing rally and the helicopter attack) that Universal sued to have it removed from theaters. Personally, I think they were just embarrassed that Jaws 3-D and Jaws The Revenge were in the pipeline and even this piece of schlock was better than them.

2. MAKO: THE JAWS OF DEATH (1978)

Director William Grefe is notorious for his celluloid atrocities, so it’s no shock to find his name on this turkey. This movie turns the tables and makes the sharks the innocent victims, at least until a telepathic animal rights activist shows up and commands the put upon fishies to kill, kill, KILLLL!

3. DEVIL FISH aka MONSTER SHARK (1984)

You MSTies out there are already familiar with this bit of cinematic water torture. For those of you who are not, Devil Fish is basically Sharktopus without the cool name. Or, for that matter, any of the other handful of things that made Sharktopus watchable. Trust me, folks, there’s a reason Lamberto Bava directed this under a pseudonym.

4. THE SHARK HUNTER (1979)

And finally we have this. Now I must warn all you ladies out there, if you are the least bit fertile, don’t watch this trailer. The shark hunter is the kind of guy who is so manly, so full of machismo, so bursting with testosterone, that when he spots a shark while parasailing, he actually drops from the sky onto the back of the beast in order to do battle. I’m explaining this beforehand because I don’t want any of my female readers to view this trailer and accidentally find themselves impregnated by exposure to the shark hunter’s overwhelming virility.

Well, that should be more than enough to give you an idea of what sharksploitation is all about. Now some of these flicks are good fun and some of them are truly painful viewing experiences, but in the end, none of them are Jaws. Basically , Great White I’ll watch every couple of years for a lark, Spielberg’s movie I’ll watch every time it comes on. As odd as it might be to hear the author of a blog devoted to cinematic cesspools say so, but you just can’t replace substance with a lot of sound and fury. Well, you can, but not if you expect to give the people in the seats anything meaningful. And that goes for churchgoers as well as moviegoers. Don’t believe me, just watch this…

Okay, so that was obviously a bit of self deprecating parody by some of our protestant brethren, but there’s still a grain of truth in it. In a 2005 article in Bloomsberg Businessweek, William C. Symonds noted the rise of the protestant megachurches. “Evangelicalism's theological flexibility gives it the freedom to adapt to contemporary culture. With no overarching authority like the Vatican, leaders don't need to wrestle with a bureaucratic hierarchy that dictates acceptable behavior… Many evangelicals say they're just trying to satisfy demands not met by traditional churches. Craig Groeschel, who launched Life Church in Edmond, Okla., in 1996, started out doing market research with non-churchgoers in the area -- and got an earful. "They said churches were full of hypocrites and were boring," he recalls. So he designed Life Church to counter those preconceptions, with lively, multimedia-filled services in a setting that's something between a rock concert and a coffee shop… Bill Hybel's consumer-driven approach is evident at Willow Creek, where he shunned stained glass, Bibles, or even a cross for the 7,200-seat, $72 million sanctuary he recently built. The reason? Market research suggested that such traditional symbols would scare away non-churchgoers… So adept at the sell are some evangelicals that it can be difficult to distinguish between their religious aims and the secular style they mimic.”

Which is the problem. In his recent book, "The Courage to Be Protestant," David Wells suggests that "The born-again, marketing church has calculated that unless it makes deep, serious cultural adaptations, it will go out of business, especially with the younger generations. What it has not considered carefully enough is that it may well be putting itself out of business with God… And the further irony is that the younger generations who are less impressed by whiz-bang technology, who often see through what is slick and glitzy, and who have been on the receiving end of enough marketing to nauseate them, are as likely to walk away from these oh-so-relevant churches as to walk into them."

In essence, many (though not all) of the modern megachurches are following in the footsteps of the sharksploitation movies noted above. They’ve cranked up the razzle dazzle, but often at the expense of anything lasting. And that’s just one more reason the mass must never be fundamentally changed from what it is and always has been. As the Catechism explains, “As early as the second century we have the witness of St. Justin Martyr for the basic lines of the order of the Eucharistic celebration. They have stayed the same until our own day for all the great liturgical families… The liturgy of the Eucharist unfolds according to a fundamental structure which has been preserved throughout the centuries down to our own day. It displays two great parts that form a fundamental unity: the gathering, the liturgy of the Word, with  readings, homily and general intercessions; - the liturgy of the Eucharist, with the presentation of the bread and wine, the consecratory thanksgiving, and communion. The liturgy of the Word and liturgy of the Eucharist together form "one single act of worship." It’s been that way for almost 2000 years. It ain’t broke, don’t try to fix it.

The mass; it may not have as many exploding sharks as your local megachurch, but years from now, you’ll still want to be coming back to it.

Friday, January 07, 2011

COMING ATTRACTIONS: JAWS - THE SHARKSPLOITATION EDIT

jaws_sharksploitation

For our next mega-review (which, unlike the last one, will definitely appear in less than eight months) we’ll be watching something a little bit different, Jaws – The Sharksploitation Edit. Unfortunately, as this is a FanEdit, there is no trailer, just the nifty homemade cover art above. Don’t know what a fanedit is? Not to worry, all will be explained. And if you really need some trailers, just stay tuned for the next post.

Thursday, January 06, 2011

NOW SHOWING AT A BLOG NEAR YOU

now_showing

Well, Epiphany is here and the holiday season is officially over now, so it’s time to clear out those visions of sugar plums and get caught up on some blog reading. I’m way behind, so let’s get going and see what’s been on everyone’s minds out there.

ZOMBIES for one thing! On his blog, Cahiers Péguy contemplates the shambling undead and wonders why they should interest us as Catholic Christians? Matt Swaim, over at The Integrated Catholic Life, already has his answer. “The undead should intrigue us, not because we want to emulate them, but because we want to eliminate them.”

Speaking of getting rid of evil, EXORCISMS also seem to be a bit of a hot topic lately. You’ve probably already heard by now that the Vatican and The Discovery Channel are producing a new series, The Exorcist Files, which will recreate stories of real-life hauntings and demonic possession. Hopefully, the show will be respectful, but considering the potential exploitative nature of the subject matter, we’re going to be a bit reserved in our optimism until more details emerge. Now obviously, we’re not against a little exploitation, at least not when it comes to fictional movies. And neither is Enbrethiliel over at Shredded Cheddar. She indulged in a viewing of Night Of The Demons 2 and managed to have her interest piqued by the displays of various forms of religious clothing and a conspicuous photo of Pope Paul VI. Still, Eli Roth, director of Hostel and producer of The Last Exorcism, isn’t quite sure what to make of the resurgence of the devil as an antagonist in films. In a recent interview with the Den of Geek, he notes, “You can see that the Vatican did open an exorcism academy. They are training new exorcists and that either means that the devil's on the rise, or fake exorcisms are on the rise…” Still he’s not hedging his bets, as the new release of The Last Exorcism contains a prayer of protection against dark forces on it, just in case.

But we Christians already know that prayers and stuff can come in pretty handy don’t we, even in FANTASY WORLDS. “Readers are going to find a lot of adventures where the heroes are overcoming some terrific odds with the help of their faith.” says Karina Fabian, editor of the short story anthology Infinite Space, Infinite God II, in an interview with the Sci-Fi Catholic. “We really didn't have a theme per se” she explains, “we just wanted exciting, fun-to-read stories that put Catholic characters and situations in science fiction settings.” Sounds like a book worth checking out. And if you’re still in the mood for some Catholic-tinged fantasy after you’ve read all those stories, then The Curt Jester recommends revisiting the old R.A. Salvatore D&D novels featuring everyone’s favorite dark elf Drizzt Do’Urden. “While the author probably did not intend to write a character with so many Catholic sensibilities and moral sense, nevertheless he did so…” relates Jeff. One person I’m sure who would agree with the Curt Jester’s take is J. B. Toner from Korrectiv who, after some contemplation, has decided that life itself is an RPG.

Yes, the line between fantasy and reality can be a thin one. For example, in an article for the National Catholic Register, Matthew Archbold notices striking similarities between being a parent and being a character from a monster movie. But it’s okay if life imitates art sometimes, especially if, as Joshua Mercer at CatholicVote points out, it’s imitating the new V series in which we finally, FINALLY, get to see a catholic priest portrayed on television as a hero. Of course, there are other times, as Belinda’s Brain (and I’m assuming the rest of Belinda as well) informs us, where some movies such as Clint Eastwood’s latest flick Here After, in which “as usual the Christians  were  depicted as idiots”, are better left onscreen. Oh well, you can’t win them all. I suppose it’s been a long time since “the Church Saved the Movies.”

You know, that’s a lot of reading. So if you get thirsty while sifting through all that data, feel free to stop by Catholic Drinkie where Sarah has assembled an assortment of Halloween themed mostly adult beverages. I’m sure you’ll find something to your taste. I couldn’t help but notice, however, that one thing was missing from her cocktail collection. ZOMBIES!

Of course, given the effects of drinking those things, maybe it’s for the best they didn’t make the cut.

BMC MOVIE OF THE WEEK: BLOODY NEW YEAR

Bloody New Year (Horror Hotel) (Time Warp Terror)
    Despite the misleading American release title -- giving the impression of another holiday-themed slasher flick -- this British production (aka Timewarp Terror) is set in midsummer and employs a wacky but interesting supernatural theme. The story serves up the usual batch of teenage morons and bimbos as horror-fodder, stranding the group in a haunted hotel which, years ago, was the site of a massacre so horrific that the entire locale has been trapped in a deadly time warp. The resident ghosts torment their new guests with a variety of silly special effects -- including a possessed vacuum cleaner, an inter-dimensional mirror, and a lethal movie screen -- and turn them into murderous ghouls who then pursue the still-warm survivors. Directed by Norman J. Warren (the sceptered Isle's answer to Fred Olen Ray), this film is derivative of Sam Raimi's The Evil Dead and Lucio Fulci's The Beyond, minus those films' extreme approach to horror. – All-Movie Guide
    20% liked it

    R, 1 hr. 30 min.

    Director: Norman J. Warren

    January 2, 2011: Solemnity of the Epiphany of the Lord (Year A)

    A few decades ago, Italian horror directors like Argento and Fulci were playing loosely with a formalist derivation of Andre Bizan’s concept of a “total cinema”. The idea was to create in the viewer a subjective experience of reality through a barrage of visuals and sound. Intelligible plots were often an afterthought in these movies, but that only contributed to the intentional disorientation of the audience’s senses. The resulting films such as Suspiria and The Beyond are now considered classics of the horror genre, and as long as you don’t require coherent stories, watching them can be the closest thing you’ll get to feeling like you’re in a waking nightmare. With Bloody New Year, Director Norman J. Warren appeared to be going for some kind of jolly old English take on this technique. Unfortunately, about all he got right was the incoherence. Rather than being total cinema, Bloody New Year is just a total mess.

    Still, there’s plenty of cheesy fun to be had in Bloody New Year if you’re in the right frame of mind. People get attacked by table cloths, fishing nets, and random blasts of snow. People get menaced on a Tilt-A-Whirl by weird carnies who look like the old doo wop group Sha Na Na. People avoid attacks from ghostly ping pong balls by riding a billiard table. People get laughed at by shrubberies. It’s all entertaining rubbish up until the moment they try to explain it.

    You see, In Bloody New Year, with little to no foreshadowing, the movie just up and tells you that all the craziness might be due to an experimental plane crashing on New Years Eve in 1959, an event which somehow trapped an entire island in a time loop. Why said time loop also created killer stair rails, touchy feely elevators, and frosting faced zombies is beyond my, or the movie’s, ability to explain. All the sudden revelation really does is cause more confusion. In the aforementioned Italian films, however, even though the plot (and common sense) were often given little attention, the movies at least dropped hints here and there to let you piece things together. It might take a few weeks, but eventually you’d have that “A-ha” moment where you finally figured things out.

    Our life as Christians often work this way as well. As this week’s readings in which the Old Testament passages prefigure the New Testament ones make it clear, although epiphanies may be sudden, our minds have usually been made ready for them beforehand. Even the Church’s calendar recognizes this. We’ve got Advent (preparation) followed by Christmas (revelation) followed by Epiphany (understanding). As Pope Benedict noted in a 2007 homily, even the Magi didn’t really have their epiphany overnight. “What convinced the Magi that the Child was "the King of the Jews" and the King of the peoples?” asked the Pope. “There is no doubt that they were persuaded by the sign of the star that they had seen "in its rising" and which had come to rest precisely over the place where the Child was found (cf. Mt 2:9). But even the star would not have sufficed had the Magi not been people inwardly open to the truth.” In short, they had been preparing themselves all along so they would recognize the sign when it came. And we must do the same. God’s answers may come to us in sudden blinding flashes at times, but we have to keep our hearts and mind prepared to recognize those moments when they come. Otherwise, much like Bloody New Year, we may miss the point altogether.

    Wednesday, January 05, 2011

    THINGS TO COME: SUING THE DEVIL

    Okay, I’ve been known to give Christian movies a bit of a hard time on this blog because, well… a lot of them aren’t really very good are they? But Suing The Devil, currently scheduled for a March 11th release, has Malcom McDowell chewing the scenery as Old Scratch himself, and I’m always willing to give the benefit of the doubt to the guy who starred in Clockwork Orange and Time After Time.

    Of course, McDowell also starred in Tank Girl and (sweet Mary, Mother of God pray for us) Star Trek: Generations, so he’s certainly not infallible. Plus, judging by the trailer, there are a lot of people in the film who… aren’t Malcom McDowell. So, yeah, the trailer leaves me a bit torn. Still, I’m pretty sure I’m going to watch this one.

    Plus, it’s interesting to note that Suing The Devil is coming out on the heels of Anthony Hopkins’ exorcist in training movie The Rite, as well as last year’s Devil and The Last Exorcism. It would seem that, despite the best efforts of the evangelistic atheists last year (the billboards were pretty lame, guys), the movie going public is more interested than ever in seeing Satan depicted as a reality. And that’s fine with me, because as the Catechism notes, when we pray “deliver us from evil” every week at mass, that “evil is not an abstraction, but refers to a person, Satan, the Evil One, the angel who opposes God.” So, yes, keep’em coming and I’ll keep watching them. I mean, there’s no way any of them could be worse than Star Trek: Generations, right?

    RIGHT?

    Sunday, January 02, 2011

    TALES FROM THE CRYPT: DEMON KNIGHT

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    (This is a long, long overdue requested review. It was promised well over half a year ago, but after I lost the almost finished piece in a hard drive crash, I couldn’t seem to find the time to retype it right away. After that, honestly, I kind of forgot about it until the holidaysw. I’d say better late than never, but, you know… considering the stuff we review around here, there’s always the chance never just might be better.)

    THE TAGLINE

    “Ready for your deadtime story?”

    THE PLOT

    When two mysterious strangers arrive at Miss Irene’s boarding house one dark and stormy night, the residents at first believe Brayker to to be the insane one. But after the man known as The Collector punches his fist through the seemingly empty head of the local sheriff, the small group realizes that perhaps he just might be the crazier of the two. After being forced outside, The Collector calls forth an  army of demons to lay siege to the building, but Brayker manages to seal all of the entrances with blood poured from a strange artifact he identifies as one of the seven keys of hell. Barred from entering the building physically, The Collector begins to tempt the occupants with visions of their darkest desires, eventually winning over some of the weaker folks with his false promises. After one of the misguided dolts erases the blood barrier and allows The Collector and his demons entry, the body count quickly escalates as The Collector attempts to acquire Brayker’s key. Mortally wounded in the ensuing chaos, Brayker passes both the key and his mantle of guardianship to Miss Irene’s niece Jeryline. Unfortunately, not only does the key appear to be empty of the demon-killing blood, but The Collector takes a sudden liking to the girl and attempts to dazzle her with dance. Will Jeryline be able to resist The Collector’s tantalizing tango and escape, or will Satan finally acquire the key and unleash eternal darkness upon the world?

    THE POINT

    Like it or not, there are two ways you have to judge a film like Tales From The Crypt: Demon Knight. The first is obvious; you have to answer the question, “Is it a good movie?” Which around these parts is usually immediately followed by the question, “Well, compared to what?” Which matters because, you know, Demon Knight came out the same year as Braveheart. And Demon Knight ain’t no Braveheart. But compared to other dreck (Showgirls also came out in 1995 you know.), Demon Knight is actually a lot better than you might expect.

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    Okay, maybe not a lot, but it does have some things going for it. Director Ernest R. Dickerson learned his craft as Spike Lee’s cinematographer, so the movie has a slickness many of its similar budgeted contemporaries do not. The cast is made up of a to-die-for who’s who of dependable names such as Jada Pinkett (not quite) Smith, Thomas Haden (it should have been just me in Spiderman 3) Church, CCH  (make a joke about me and I’ll tear your heart out) Pounder, and the inevitable Dick Miller. And the two leads are excellent. William Sadler, never afraid of slumming it, lends the whole exercise an air of gravitas it probably doesn’t deserve as the dead serious Brayker. And Billy Zane, who we all know has phoned it in way way too many times for movies that show up at 2:00 am on Cinemax, really gives it his all here. Coming across as a sort of better looking Beetlejuice, Zane’s obviously having so much fun as the maniacal Collector that his enthusiasm quickly rubs off on the audience. 

    So, yeah, when compared to your typical B-movie, Demon Knight is pretty good. But, as noted earlier, there’s another way you have to judge this film, and that’s by asking, “Is it a good Tales From The Crypt movie?” You see, there’s a lot more to to the title than just a name, there’s a legacy involved. Tales From The Crypt has its origins with M.C. Gaines, the man who way back in 1933 got the idea to collect together Sunday color comic strips and sell them in a magazine format. Basically, he created the comic book (which pretty much earns him a spot in heaven as far as this one time lonely geek child is concerned). After co-publishing titles with National Comics (the home of Superman and Batman) for a few years, Gaines founded his own venture, Educational Comics, which found success with titles like Picture Stories From The Bible. Yes, boys and girls, there actually was a time when one of the better selling comics on the market featured fairly bland adaptations of Holy Scripture.

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    Unfortunately, post-WWII comic readers had apparently grown tired of clergy approved reading material, so by the time Max died (Saving the life of a child! If inventing the comic book didn’t get him into the pearly gates, that sure as heck had to.), his company was in danger of going under. To save the company, Max’s son Will began experimenting with genres ranging from romance to westerns, but nothing seemed to be working. And then, noticing that one or two of his competitors were having success with new books featuring horror themed material, Will got the bright idea to turn some of the best talent in the industry loose on some decidedly non-clergy approved stories. And so, in October of 1950, under the less institutional sounding banner of Entertaining Comics, or EC for short, the first issue of Tales From The Crypt hit newsstands. To say the comic was a hit is something of an understatement. For the brief five years the U. S. Senate allowed the magazine and its sister titles to be published, EC ruled the racks. And it wasn’t just the horror angle that hooked and reeled readers in. The books adhered to a staggeringly popular formula that was actually quite simple, yet couldn’t seem to be replicated by EC’s competition.

    The first ingredient was humor which was provided through the use of hosts like the Crypt Keeper, the Vault Keeper and the Old Witch.  No matter how terrible the tale to be told, the gruesome guides were always there to lighten things up with a wise crack or well placed pun. “By using the horror hosts” explains comic historian Jerry West, “EC kept the perspective on what they were doing, and they reminded their readers that this was fiction and entertainment.” The second ingredient was gore, lots and lots of gore. When Gaines was brought before the Senate Subcommittee on Juvenile Delinquency in 1954, he was asked if there was any limit he could think of that he wouldn’t put in a magazine because he thought a child should not see or read about it? Gaines responded, “My only limits are the bounds of good taste, what I consider good taste.” When questioned as to whether or not  he thought a cover depicting a man with a bloody ax holding up a woman’s severed head was in good taste, Gaines answered, “Yes, sir, I do, for the cover of a horror comic.” With that standard as its guiding principle, EC Comics produced some of the most grotesque imagery imaginable, stuff that movie screens wouldn’t get around to showing for decades. And with an artists pool that included the likes of as Al Feldstein, Wally Wood, Al Williamson, and Jack Davis, you can be sure that EC had the best drawn intestines in the comics biz.

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    The final ingredient should be apparent to anyone who has ever read the comics, but it was somehow missed by the U. S. Senate when they made EC the target of their scorn. In his article How The Jews Created The Comic Book Industry  published in Reform Judaism, Arie Kaplan notes that “what set EC apart from its competitors was a commitment to moral themes. Story lines often dealt with the evils of abusive relationships, misguided patriotism, and racism. In writer Al Feldstein's "Judgment Day" (from Weird Fantasy #18, March/April 1953), for example, an Earth astronaut named Tarlton is sent to the planet Cybrinia to judge whether its robot inhabitants are socially and technologically advanced enough to join the Earth's Galactic Republic. Determining that Cybrinia is a segregated society (the orange robots consign the blue robots to economic discrimination and ghettos), Tarlton decides that Cybrinia cannot be part of the Republic until its people, like those on Earth, have learned to live together without discrimination. When Tarlton returns to his space-ship, he removes his helmet, and we see that he is a handsome Black man, "…the beads of perspiration on his dark skin twinkling like distant stars…" This O. Henry-style twist ending, typical of EC's horror and sci-fi stories, presaged the morality tales of later TV shows such as Twilight Zone, Alfred Hitchcock Presents, and Star Trek.” In EC comics, the bad guy never got away, not in one piece anyway.

    So successful was the EC method that even after the newly established Comics Code Authority forced an end to the print stories in 1955, the memories of them lingered in the minds of many a impressionable young future filmmaker. The first Tales From The Crypt movie hit the big screen in 1972, and though censors prevented British filmmakers from duplicating much of the comics’ more grotesque imagery, the formula was intact enough to please audiences and spawn a few sequels. That being the case, when the horror boom of the 80s hit, it was only natural that Tales From The Crypt would get another visit. Only this time, it was HBO bringing the stories to pay cable, so showing gory graphics wasn’t going to be too much of a problem (nor was gratuitous nudity and profanity for that matter). Complete with storylines and images taken directly from the comics, the show was an immediate hit. In fact, The Cryptkeeper himself (kind of a muppet from hell), would become such a cultural icon that he starred in two spin-off series, a tamed down Saturday morning cartoon version of the show (sorry kiddies, no piles of guts for you) and (inexplicably) a gameshow. Which finally brings us back to the subject of this review. You see, by the time the television show was nearing the end of its seven year run, HBO decided the EC formula was strong enough to once again apply it to a movie series. Tales From The Crypt:  Demon Knight was their first effort.

    So given what we know of the traditional EC formula, how well does Demon Knight hold up as a Tales From The Crypt movie? Well, as far as the humor goes, the movie has a pretty good head start in that its host is a decaying animatronic puppet with a penchant for punnery. The Cryptkeeper is never laugh out loud funny, but he serves his purpose admirably enough by keeping the proceedings light. Billy Zane, on the other hand, is often hilarious, chewing up the scenery like he might never get to act again (which, considering all those Cinemax movies, is always a possibility). In fact, his crazed I hate hillbillies dance routine is arguably the best 15 seconds in the entire movie. As for the gore, the movie does quite well in that area also. Even though CGI was becoming commonplace by the mid-90s, the old fashioned goo-covered latex monster effects in Demon Knight are top notch and much welcome. All one has to do is watch an episode of Hercules The Legendary Journeys, which was just getting underway at the same time, to appreciate just how lousy low budget computer generated beasties could look back then. (For that matter, just watch some recent SyFy originals to see how bad they can look today.) So it’s kind of nice, relatively speaking of course, to see the rubber body parts fly.

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    As for the third ingredient, the moral component, well, the film sets up the parameters of good and evil pretty clearly from the beginning. Refreshingly, there are few gray areas, the demons are completely unsympathetic, and all of the people who switch to the side of evil get there’s and then some. In fact, the movie goes so far as to show that Brayker’s demon killing key actually received its powers by being filled with the blood of Jesus during the crucifixion. (You know, you would think the gospels might have mentioned this fact. Like maybe Matthew would have written “After they had crucified him, they divided his garments by casting lots; then they sat down and kept watch over him there.” And, lo, a goo-covered demon did come running by chasing some guy, and they all did say WTF! But since I didn’t see that in my bible anywhere, I strongly suspect the filmmakers made this part up.) And while one evil in the movie is defeated, only to be replaced with another, that’s okay. As director John Carpenter once said when discussing Tales From The Crypt, “In EC comics, and in much of horror, there’s a code that allows the bad guy, or the evil force, or whatever it is, to be, if not vanquished, then at least put at bay at the end so we can walk out safely.”

    So, all in all, Demon Knight is not only a decent piece of B-movie fluff, but it handles the legacy of Will Gaines’ Tales From The Crypt pretty good as well. I have to admit though, as a Catholic, maybe my admiration for the movie is due in large part to the soft spot I hold for anything that shows such a respect for tradition. Of course, I realize that with Demon Knight, we’re only talking about a bargain basement picture show following a formula laid out by a 40 year old out of print comic book marketed towards adolescent gorehounds. With the Church, it’s something else entirely. When we’re talking about tradition in Catholicism, it can be anything from “the various theological, disciplinary, liturgical or devotional traditions, born in the local churches over time” which can be “retained, modified or even abandoned” (stuff like what prayers to say during the day, what saints to celebrate, or what language to say the mass in) to the Sacred Traditions (usually spelled with a capital “T”) the apostles “received from Jesus' teaching and example and what they learned from the Holy Spirit”.

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    Now it’s pretty easy to see why the big “T” Traditions are so important. Since Sacred Tradition is recognized as the entirety of the teachings of Jesus and the apostles which occurred between the time of Christ's birth and the death of St John, the last living Apostle, somewhere around 100 AD, this means essentially that Tradition predates both the first written books of the New Testament as well as the institution of the Magisterium of the Church. And because of that, nothing written in the Bible or taught by the Magisterium can be interpreted in such a way as to contradict Tradition. Recent examples of the restrictive power of Tradition have been Pope Paul VI’s encyclical upholding the Church’s ban on artificial birth control and Pope John Paul II’s Apostolic Letter reaffirming the Church’s inability to ordain women to the priesthood, both of which were released despite the gape mouthed protestations of modern theologians and misguided congregations who wished to see the teachings overturned. So yeah, Tradition’s a pretty big deal, and more than worth defending and arguing over.

    But what about the small “t” traditions, the stuff that can be changed. Is it really worth the time spent on the seemingly ceaseless quibbling over things like eating meat on Fridays, communion in the hand, altar girls, or whether the incense is in a censer or a bowl? Oddly enough, protestant author Dr. L. J. Mark Cooray, former Professor of Law at Macquarie University, thinks so. But, he writes, “the problem with traditions is that since they have been handed down over a long period of time, the rational bases are either not known by those who uphold them or cannot be lucidly explained… There is a rational basis for the traditions. However, they are embodied in evolved institutions based on experience. The rationalisation is often not provided. In this context, it has been easy for the socialists/progressivists to attack many of the values and institutions of the system… The intellectual sets up his own view, which he then parades as objective fact or theory. His analysis often proceeds in violation of the basic dynamics of human nature and human interaction. Such analyses do not take account of the existence of other possible viewpoints. The accumulated experience of the ages is discounted.”

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    This is exactly the problem philosopher and theologian Alice von Hildebrand saw happening in the Catholic Church when she wrote that “Tradition (which for Roman Catholics is as important as the Bible) should not be limited to matters of dogma and morals. It also includes forms of worship which go back for centuries and which establish a living bond between the past of the Church and the present. It is most unwise to proclaim that the second form of tradition is 'secondary' and can therefore be abolished. Let me repeat emphatically; secondary does not mean non-important; it means less important....but nevertheless of great significance.” She goes on to suggest that by turning their backs on the old traditions, “Contemporary Catholics find themselves more and more jailed in the narrow prison of 'their' time, 'their' nations, 'their' secular mores, and of the contemporary mediocrity which seems to be the birthmark of our epoch. Instead of breathing the pure supranational, supra-temporal air of the supernatural, they are more and more forced to breathe the fetid air of moral, spiritual, intellectual and artistic decadence; no wonder they are gasping for breath… We live in a world that is "alienated," cut off from its roots, from its past, from its "source." My students have taught me to sympathize with the anguish of those who do not know where they belong, who do not know “their name”.”

    So, yes, given the consequences of abandoning them, it would appear that even the small traditions are worth arguing over. As Pope Bendict XVI explains, “The Church lives her life precisely from the identity of all the generations, from their identity that overarches time, and her real majority is made up of the saints. Every generation tries to join the ranks of the saints, and each makes its contribution. But it can do that only by accepting this great continuity and entering into it in a living way.” And one of the best ways to enter into that continuity is by exploring the centuries of traditions available to us as Catholics. You don’t have to choose to follow all of them, or even most of them, but you might be surprised at the benefits you get from following even a few. Hey, that game plan worked out pretty well for the folks who made Tales From The Crypt: Demon Knight, didn’t it? And if you need any more encouragement to explore some of the old traditions, just think of what happens when you ignore them. Think of Rob Zombie. With only 27 years between the original Halloween and his (sigh) reimagining, he managed to (purposely) avoid almost every traditional trope established in that series, and instead of creating a Halloween film, ended up producing a pointless vulgar piece of white trash hillbilly horror. Do you really want the spiritual equivalent of that to happen to your soul?

    THE STINGER

    Hard to believe, but 2011 marks the start of the 5th year of this blog. I can’t say I expected to still be around this long. Who knows, another 5 years or so and I could become something of a tradition myself. Ain’t that a scary thought?