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  • Bad Movies

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    Under discussion:

    lindsaylohanOn last week’s edition of FilmCouch, I revealed one of my dirtiest secrets: on some level, I’m more interested in bad movies than good ones. You’ll have to listen to the podcast to hear my explanation, but coincidentally, I’ve come across a number of stories over the past few days that revolve around quantifying and qualifying movie badness.

    Going into the weekend, FILMMAKER’s Scott Macaulay noticed that the apparently unwatchable (and unscreened for critics) Lindsay Lohan vehicle I Know Who Killed Me was rocking a rating of 0% fresh on Rotten Tomatoes. “In our long-tailed world of a million and one tastes, it would seem impossible to make a film that simply nobody likes,” Macaulay wrote. “If you believe the tomato squad, however, it’s been done.” A commenter on that post noted that once a few more reviews started to roll in, its score skyrocketed to 8%; five days later, it has actually dropped to 7%.

    Only two of the reviews listed at Rotten Tomatoes are positive enough to earn a juicy red tomato; one of them, by the McVoice syndicate’s Jim Ridley, has essentially convinced me that I Know Who Killed Me is a must see. “Watch the mallrats’ jaws drop as they pay to see the same old teen slicer-dicer, only to get this wacko hodgepodge of the Brian De Palma horror filmography and—I swear to God—Kieslowski’s The Double Life of Veronique,” Ridley begins. The critic only has about 200 words to work with, but he manages to call it a “a surreal, disjointed mood piece about teen alienation,” AND commend Lohan for playing “her good-girl/bad-girl role with wit and an air of sly calculation,” AND toss off a reference to Kafka just before the clock runs out. Well played, indeed.

    (more…)


    Originally posted on:Spoutblog

  • Trapped in the Closet Preview — Clip of the Day, Take 2

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    picture-1.png

    Sorry, I can’t resist. Remember when I warned you about IFC’s plans to produce and distribute 10 additional episodes of Trapped in the Closet? Um, well, a preview of the first of those episodes is now up on Stereogum (via Fimoculous). Actually, it’s only about 16 seconds of preview–the first minute forty is an R. Kelly-guided recap of the first … uh … season?–but in that 16 seconds, we get glimpses of a gospel choir, an aircraft that at first looks kind of like a spaceship but on further inspection seems to be a helicopter, and the return of the midget.

    All that’s great, but I’m really posting about this for two reasons: 1) R. Kelly told Variety that he thinks of Trapped in the Closet as “an independent film,” and 2), the first comment on Stereogum made me laugh out loud: “I like this better when it was called Blue Velvet and it didn’t star R. Kelly.” You may now tell me about your dream R. Kelly/David Lynch collaboration in the comments.


    Originally posted on:Spoutblog

  • Herzog and Donahue in Toronto: Trade Roughage 08/01/07

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    • ricky-gervais557_mainpicture.jpgDocumentaries directed by Werner Herzog and Phil Donahue will face off on the Reel to Reel program at the Toronto Film Festival next month. Herzog’s latest, called Encounters at the End of the World, was filmed in Antarctica; Donahue will be making his film festival debut with Body of War, his afore-mentioned examination of the mishandling of the Iraq war.
    • Amazon, in partnership with their subsidiary CustomFlix, has struck a deal to sell DVDs of public domain films from the National Archive. Laypeople already have access to the Archive’s headquarters in Maryland, where they can watch and even copy the films themselves, but this project will open up access to those who can’t make the trip. First up for sale: a collection of newsreels dating from 1920 to 1967.
    • Can’t Ricky Gervais do better than this? The British creator/star of the original  has signed on to star in Early Retirement, a drecky-sounding Warner Brothers comedy about “an work-obsessed man who quits his demanding job to spend more time with his family.” Maybe they’ll give him a ton of creative control and he’ll be able to make it work … ?

    Originally posted on:Spoutblog