Eric’s non-Anime Pick — Linda Linda Linda

Eric’s first non-Anime contemporary Japanese movie pick was the winning romantic comedy Train Man. Now he has us watching another winner. We haven’t finished Linda Linda Linda yet, but already we can recommend it with confidence. Below is a review from The Boston Globe. And here’s a clip from the movie.

[flv:http://www.dograt.com/Video/JUL07/LindaLindaLinda.flv 425 240]

Schoolgirl charm rocks sweetly funny ‘Linda’

By Wesley Morris, Globe Staff | January 12, 2007

Don’t let the lack of punctuation fool you. “Linda Linda Linda” is a peachy two-hour delight that ends with a flurry of exclamation points. If the Beatles were teen girls starring in a John Hughes picture made with a distinctly Japanese attention to the comedy of everyday life, the movie showcasing it all would go something like this.

The members of an all-girl punk quartet have about three days to learn a number for the spring rock show at their high school. The new lead singer, Son (Doona Bae ), is a solemn Korean exchange student whose face contains limitless ways to touch you with its sleepiness. The group’s chosen song is a fuzzy firecracker called “Linda Linda,” an ’80s classic (in Japan) by the Japanese group the Blue Hearts. I’m still singing it.
Continue reading Eric’s non-Anime Pick — Linda Linda Linda

Eric Reviews Transformers: The Movie

It’s been four long, impatient months since the spectacle of Ghost Rider, but at last there’s finally a movie that can match it. Transformers: The Movie! Here’s Eric’s review.

Seeing it on opening day, I had relatively high expectations for the new live-action Transformers movie. Sure, I knew the changes from the source material were drastic, but I figured it could still be an enjoyable popcorn movie. Little did I know what horrors had been inflicted upon Optimus Prime and Megatron by Michael Bay and his cronies. Like the over-nourished kid you wouldn’t let handle your toys in kindergarten, Michael Bay has wrapped his presumably greasy hands around the legendary Transformers license and ripped out almost all its redeeming qualities, transforming (pun not intended) it into an amalgamation of every bad summer movie you’ve seen.

Transformers starts off at an American army base in Qatar, presumably because the writers figured Iraq was too risky. (more on this later) This sequence feels like the most generic war movie you’ve ever seen, and if you didn’t know what you were watching you would never guess that it was a film supposedly about big alien mecha. Soon afterwards you’re flung into a bad ripoff of Napoleon Dynamite, with unrealistically dorky kids and teachers and a Biff (Back to the Future) clone who thankfully doesn’t show up anywhere else. And in the tradition of stupid teen movies, there’s ridiculous and offensive racial stereotypes to be found, like a “loco” Hispanic and one of the most stupidly racist depictions of a fat black guy I’ve ever seen. Unfortunately the latter is a recurring comedy relief character. Throughout this whole segment, you’re thinking “Where are the robots?”, especially considering that the original animated series had very few human characters. This bad teen comedy sidetrack keeps popping in, as if trying to push the robots out of their own movie.

Well, the Transformers show up eventually. A used car bought by the one-dimensional kid protagonist turns out to be the righteous Autobot Bumblebee. He finds that thanks to his arctic explorer ancestor, he holds the key to the ultimate force in the universe in his great-great grandfather’s glasses(!) However, the plot is so horridly developed upon and shallow that I enjoyed it more by just turning my brain off and watching the CG models scrap. Now about the robots: they look amazing. I’m not the biggest fan of the new designs, Optimus’ flame decals, or the shameless plugs for GMC and Hummer on their vehicular forms, but you can tell a heck of a lot of work went into this movie’s CG budget. The non-existent robots blend convincingly into their existent surroundings, and the fight scenes are intense and spectacular. Along with Star Wars Ep. III and King Kong 2006, this is a good contender for best special effects in a movie ever. The problem is that the robots are upstaged by the far less interesting human characters time and time again, and boredom builds up like plaque on almost all the times there aren’t robots on the screen, thanks to the extremely low IQ of the writing and acting. We don’t see any mecha besides the two mentioned previously for quite some time.

There’s also an annoying Scrat (Ice Age)-like little robot who has way too much screen time, but I’d rather not talk about him.

After we see our first robot fight between Autobot Bumblebee and evil Decepticon Barricade, the movie becomes a blur of more robot fights and inane dribble. The problem is that almost all the fights are crammed into one very long sequence of mayhem that takes up at least a fourth of the over-2-and-a-half-hour long movie. This film should be the absolute criterion of how NOT to pace an action movie: there is absolutely no balance between the spectacular fights and the quieter comedy and “plotting.” Several tense scenes are ruined by that fat black stereotype popping out of nowhere. The “climax” is unsatisfying, extremely confusing, and far too abrupt. Thankfully, the original Transformers theme is heard at the end of the credits, but it’s so heavily remixed you can barely tell.

Being a stupid summer movie, Transformers is loaded with tired, crass jokes and stereotypes that we all got way too much of in Scary Movie’s countless sequels. There’s even potty humor. But the most offensive thing of all is the overload of US Army screen time, which is so pervasive you wonder how much funding this movie got from the Army. There are many panning shots of army vehicles and of “heroic” soldiers that look ripped right out of an “ARMY OF ONE” ad. Why, oh why did an originally kiddie Japanese robot saga have to turn into another piece of sly US Army propaganda? Some parting words from Optimus include “sacrifices must be made for victory,” which would serve as a good slogan for any pro-Iraq War campaign. But in sort of a contradictory message, we also see the one truly funny scene in the movie: a flawless Bush impersonator asking an attendant on Air Force One to “wrangle me up some Ding-Dongs.”

If these robots were once Japanese, you can never tell. This movie is steeped in the obnoxious, low-IQ modern American teen “culture,” as well as the US government itself, as I’m sure you’ve gleaned by now. Like a Shrek movie, there are far too many tongue-in-cheek pop culture references for anyone, but thankfully they never go completely overboard. This movie must average at least one product placement a minute. Everyone wants a piece of the marketing pie: Panasonic, Xbox 360, Mountain Dew, HP, even the punk-metal band Misfits, they’re all in plain sight, practically grabbing at your wallet. It’s definitely a reflection on our culture.

With a director like Michael Bay, I guess I set my expectations far too high for this movie. I’d say the main problem with it, summarized, is that it can’t decide whether to be a dumb summer teen comedy or a semi-serious CG spectacle. I would certainly NOT recommend this to any real Transformers fan (which I’m not), they’ll be even more infuriated then myself. But if you actually enjoy these kinds of movies, give it a shot. Just don’t forget what you’re watching.

I feel required to give this a 1.5/4 star rating. Keep in mind that extra half star is only for special effects. Even the ultra-mediocre Superman Returns was a better movie than this.

Eric

June in July

June ForayMark Evanier is helping legendary voice actor June Foray write her autobiography. She turns 90 this year! Evanier recently said he “will soon be announcing some sort of publication date, I hope.” June herself has a slightly different take on the situation. She was on WBZ radio in Boston late Sunday night, and this is what she said.

[audio:http://www.dograt.com/Audio/JUL07/Foray.mp3]

The Real Elmer Fudd

A few postings ago, a little man in a cameo movie appearance was identified as Arthur Q. Bryan. He was a popular voice on radio, mostly in the 40’s, but thanks to TV he’s best remembered today as the voice of cartoon character Elmer Fudd.

For a brief time, director Bob Clampett made Fudd look like Lou Costello, but then wisely returned to Tex Avery’s previous design, patterning Fudd more after Arthur Q. Bryan himself.

Bryan is shown in this photo with Artie Auerbach, who is playing Father Time, in a publicity photo for the Al Pearce Radio Gang show. Pearce was very popular in his day, but now seems to be largely forgotten.

Let’s Play Muzak DJ!

The cable TV service Music Choice has a channel with the genre that, as a kid, made my skin crawl, but now I’m coming to appreciate. Easy listening! It’s called Elevator Music, but for me the reason it made my skin crawl is that I always heard it at the dentist office, while having my teeth drilled!

The video has 12 minutes of the Music Choice Easy Listening channel, started at a totally random point. I’ll use that as the springboard for the rest of the post.

[flv:http://www.dograt.com/Video/JUL07/EZListening.flv 400 300]

Well, let’s see what’s in there. A bit of “Something,” followed by Zamfir doing the love theme to Sergio Leone’s Spaghetti Western, “Once Upon A Time In The West.” Then Acker Bilk did “Jean” — nice coincidence for my sister there — and blind pianist George Shearing had Petula Clark’s “Call Me,” which is a nice coincidence for me! Lastly is a portion of the old standard “Dream.”

Acker Bilk is best remembered for “Stranger On The Shore,” so let’s hear that.

[audio:http://www.dograt.com/Audio/JUL07/AckerBilk.mp3]

And “Jean,” from the movie The Prime of Miss Jean Brody, was originally a single for Oliver. I have that, too.

[audio:http://www.dograt.com/Audio/JUL07/Jean.mp3]

I’ve been woefully lax in posting all of the Petula Clark material that I have. I’ll get back to that at some point, with a vengeance. For the moment, I’ll give you the studio recording of “Call Me”…

[audio:http://www.dograt.com/Audio/JUL07/CallMe.mp3]

… and here’s Pet’s 1970 appearance on Dean Martin’s show, after she stopped being so stiff and stagy, and was truer to herself — smooth and sexy. But yikes, those corny guest cameos are too much to take! Who wrote this stuff? I can see why variety shows didn’t survive the next generational shift. But having Dom Deluise, Paul Lynde, and Alan Sues, and Charles Nelson Reilly all appearing in the same bit …? The times were certainly changing!

[flv:http://www.dograt.com/Video/JUL07/CallMe.flv 400 300]

Sorry about the video quality. It isn’t one of my own transfers. I had to fix the aspect ratio, and that resulted in the jagginess of the image.

Finally, here’s “Dream” from Frankie’s album Nice ‘n’ Easy.

[audio:http://www.dograt.com/Audio/JUL07/Dreams.mp3]