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  • 007 Bond Parodies: A Stirred, But Not Shaken History

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    A man was arrested in London last week for imitating James Bond. He wasn’t going around and ordering vodka martinis though, he had numerous fake IDs, replica guns, and even a personalized wallet styled after From Russia With Love. That’s dedication right there. We’ve had James Bond imitators in the movies for more than 40 years, but sadly none of them have ever been arrested. Although thankfully, a few of them have been entertaining. Check out the James Bond knockoffs in the list below, as we ramp up towards Quantum of Solace.



    Our Man Flint

    The United States didn’t have a dashing and cool super-spy hero like Britain’s James Bond, so in 1964 James Coburn stepped into the role of Derek Flint. Flint was an ex-spy for Z.O.W.I.E. (Zonal Organization World Intelligence Espionage… I kid you not) who was lured out of retirement and forced to battle three mad scientists who wanted to control the world’s weather. At one point, he meets up with an agent 0008, who looks and dresses like Sean Connery. The movie spawned a sequel, In Like Flint, and later helped inspire Austin Powers.


    The Matt Helm Movies

    Between 1966 and 1969 Dean Martin starred as Matt Helm in The Silencers, Murderers’ Row, The Ambushers, and The Wrecking Crew. He was a wisecracking super-spy who often found himself in comedic situations. Although the books these movies were based on were fairly serious, the producers decided not to try and compete with James Bond and made these a lot lighter. These movies were also cited as direct inspirations for Austin Powers, and later for the 1970s James Bond films, which often copied the set pieces from the Helm films. Dreamworks currently holds the rights to the Matt Helm series, and is apparently working on a new adaptation.


    Casino Royale

    Long before Daniel Craig stepped into the tuxedo as James Bond, there was an original James Bond spoof of Casino Royale in 1967. Produced as a comedy by Columbia Pictures, this movie features six different James Bonds in an effort to throw off his enemies, and is most famous because Peter Sellers (as Jimmy Bond) walked off the set and didn’t return to finish his role. Although most of this was blamed on uneasy feelings between Orson Welles and Sellers, the movie The Life and Death of Peter Sellers portrays it as Sellers trying to play the role seriously, and walking off when people wanted him to play it slapstick.


    OK Connery

    This actually happened. Italian producers hoping to cash in on the spy craze of the 1960s wrote this James Bond parody where James Bond isn’t available, so they use his kid brother. What’s even more bizarre is that they used Sean Connery’s actual brother Neil in this film, and his character is named Connery, although his lines were all dubbed by an American actor. Lois Maxwell and Bernard Lee reprise their roles as Moneypenny and M in this movie, it was released in the U.S. as Operation Kid Brother, and was later razzed on Mystery Science Theater 3000 as Operation Double 007. Truly bizarre.


    Spy Hard

    This Leslie Nielsen movie tried to ride in on the Naked Gun coattails, but just showed us a fairly tired and overused character. Nielsen played Agent Dick Steele (ouch), and would go on to play the same bumbling character with different names in other movies, but this one is especially bad. You know it’s a bad sign when Mr. T, Hulk Hogan and Pat Morita are your “guest stars.” The best thing about this movie is the James Bond-esque opening title sequence from Weird Al Yankovic. Which also belabors the point about guest stars.


    Johnny English

    Most people know Rowan Atkinson as Mr. Bean, and they either love him or loathe him. I fall in the former camp, which is probably why I enjoyed this parody of the Bond films so much. The character was actually based on another Atkinson role, Richard Latham from the Barclaycard ads in the UK. He works for MI6 and is actually a bumbling spy wannabe who constantly makes mistakes. Many of the gags from the commercials made it into the movie, and last year Atkinson said on British TV that a sequel is in the works.


    Austin Powers

    Easily the most famous parodies of James Bond, the Austin Powers franchise is three films long, and during junkets for The Love Guru earlier this year Mike Myers said that he has an idea for a new Powers movie, so chances are you’ll see the crushed velvet suit and bad teeth once again. Myers has said that his inspirations included Our Man Flint, the Matt Helm movies, Vincent Price’s movie Dr. Goldfoot and the Bikini Machine, Michael Caine in The Ipcress FIle, and plenty of others. While it’s obviosuly an amalgam of many roles, the James Bond influence is the strongest throughout all of these films, as evidenced by the subsequent titles The Spy Who Shagged Me, and Goldmember.


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • A CHRISTMAS TALE Clip and IFC Series

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    In the middle of Tom Hall’s interview with Arnaud Desplechin, director of my current favorite film of the year A Christmas Tale, indieWIRE has embedded a clip from the film, which I’ve in turn stolen and embedded above. This scene, in which Catherine Deneuve’s ailing (but still gorgeous) matriarch Junon goes shopping with her son’s new girlfriend (played by Emmanuelle Devos), incorporates the film’s running joke about Angela Bassett.

    A Christmas Tale opens in New York and L.A. on November 14, but in the intervening 11 days the IFC Center is hosting a mini-retrospective of Desplechin’s films. I’m hoping to make it out to see L’Aimee, Desplechin’s personal documentary about his own family, and My Sex Life (…Or How I Got Into An Argument), which stars Christmas‘ Mathieu Almaric, and which I’ve somehow never seen. Check out the full details on the program here.


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • Gogol Bordello Non-Stop Director Margarita Jimeno: The Media Diet

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    Gypsy punk band Gogol Bordello have drawn an increasingly large following as the decade as worn on, but this year their cinematic profile has raised dramatically. In Berlin this year Madonna unveiled her Filth and Wisdom, staring frontman Eugene Hutz, and now comes a full blown tour documentary filmmaker Margarita Jimeno, Gogol Bordello Non-Stop. The film made its North American bow at AFI over the weekend and screens again this Wednesday at the Arclight. The Bogota, Columbia born, Williamsburg based Jimeno, who has made shorts and worked in the art and editorial departments of NYC indies for a decade, caught up with us to discuss her fascination with There Will Be Blood, her desire to adapt Que Viva La Musica! and where to catch Sid Vicious on You Tube.

    What films or television shows have you seen recently?

    One film I finally watched recently was There Will Be Blood, I thought I’d fall asleep to be honest, but I stayed up until 2AM+ watching with wide open eyes, ears, and sometimes mouth too. I was blown away, it is a contemporary classic! I recently saw The Pleasure of Being Robbed, Patti Smith: Dream of Life, and La Rabia. I watch You Tube these days (no actual TV for me), so recently I found this amazing clip with Nancy Spungen and Sid Vicious on a NY cable show days before they died, quite a time capsule.

    Which ones stuck with you and why?

    There Will be Blood is a classic piece of cinema. Great acting and music, beautiful sets, and gut-wrenching drama at its center.

    Does your interest in them have anything to do with your own work as a filmmaker? How do the films that you think of as “influences” affect your own style and preoccupations as a filmmaker?

    In some cases it’s not so much a specific film’s influence, but more the point of view of a particular filmmaker or a group of people that has influenced my work. Like Werner Herzog, or Dogma 95. It has been more valuable to my filmmaking process to read interviews with people such as Jean-Luc Godard, Werner Herzog, Lars Von Trier, or Mike Leigh than to make mental notes about their films.

    How often do you read fiction? Do you wish you read more?

    I’ve never spent more than 2 months without reading fiction in the last 15 years, but this year I have been reading academic books and essays, by Zizek, and Daniel Pinchebeck. Actually I’ve read two stories from Jonathan Lethem’s Amnesia anthology. Yes, I want to read more fiction and I already have a few books in my shelf waiting.

    What would be your ideal literary adaptation and why?

    My first option is a novel by Colombian writer Andres Caicedo, Que Viva La Musica! It’s one of those stories that’s close to me…a classic teenage coming of age tale about a girl in the 70’s that lives for music and partying, yet it has a very insightful social commentary; it ponders universal dilemmas. The way the writer wrote about music is fantastic, and for this reason the film would need a big budget because the music ranges from Rolling Stones to Richie Ray. Another obstacle is dealing with a cult classic novel, you don’t want to get a lot of hate mail if you mess it up! It would need some real thought (and money) to do this one right. Perhaps the road to go is to do something inspired by the book, the best film adaptations are the ones where something unique is brought to the story yet the novel shines though, like Blade Runner, or The Dead.

    How, if at all, has reading informed your filmmaking?

    It has very much, especially when writing characters. I think here’s where I’m influenced the most. Because you are usually reading into the character’s mind, it has been very helpful when I’m directing actors too. I think human understanding would take at least 3 lifetimes, but thanks to literature you can spend a couple of years and you have a very broad understanding. Of course I’m talking about classic literature, like Bronte, Dostoevsky, Austen, Conrad, Orwell, Steinbeck, Voltaire, etc etc etc.

    What are you listening to recently?

    So much I’ll just list in no specific order: Nico Muhly, Sigur Ros, The Doors, There Will Be Blood soundtrack, Devendra Banhart, Megapuss, Virus (80’s Argentinian rock), Reverend Beat Man, Arvo Part, Yann Tiersen, Apocalyptica, Doveman, Likke Li, Entrance, and local bands like Pink Noise, Sea Sick, and Dorit Chrysler.

    If you could collaborate with one musician on a film, who would it be and why?

    Well, I actually have a couple of people who I already contacted for two projects I have. So it is hard to choose only one, but each has a musical and performance quality which I’m interested in capturing on film. For example going back to influences I’m taking Tony Gatlif’s approach to musicians in his films, to make my own films. It’s not a secret about the musicians I have contacted, they are:  Devendra Banhart, Eugene Hutz, Dorit Chrysler, the Kolpakov Trio, Maria Benjumeda (Flamenco singer), and Martin Vejarano (Colombian percussionist).

    What would be the ideal pairing of filmmaker and musician for a concert film?

    Hmm…..what about Werner Herzog and Gogol Bordello (The Circus Tamer) or Harmony Korine and Sigur Ros (Subnatural Powers) or Madonna and Jean Luc Godard (The Odd Couple) or Lars Von Trier and Justice (House Metal Gut Punch..Ahh! So many options…


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • Prop 8 Rally Crashed By Bruno

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    Under discussion:

    Bruno  (2009)

    It looks like the pre-election battle over California’s Propositon 8 (which would render gay marriages illegal in the state) could provide the backdrop to a scene in Bruno, Sacha Baron Cohen’s upcoming Borat follow-up. Cohen Boratshowed up at a Yes on 8 rally this weekend in character as Bruno, the gay Austrian fashion designer, and apparently initally blended into the crowd — camera crew and all — but was eventually recognized, at which point he fled the scene. The write-ups I’ve read don’t indicate that Bruno was doing/saying anything controversial or even contrary to the anti-gay marriage message of the rally, so one wonders what he was saying/doing. Can anyone make sense of that sign he’s holding above?


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • Studs Terkel on Medium Cool. Clip of the Day.

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    Under discussion:

    Medium Cool  (1969)

    Late last Friday, word began to circulate that social historian and famed lefty Studs Terkel had died at the age of 96; Roger Ebert, Chuck Tryon and filmmaker Steven Bognar are among the many who have offered memories and appreciations. I went on YouTube this morning to find footage of the man, and I stumbled on this clip of Terkel talking about his participation in Haskell Wexler’s Medium Cool. The nine minutes of footage were collected by Paul Cronin, ostensibly for his documentary on the making of Medium CoolLook Out Haskell, It’s Real. Make sure to watch it all the way through to find out what happens when Cronin calls Terkel “The Poet of Chicago.”


    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog

  • Porno Blocked By School. Trade Roughage 11/03/08

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    Under discussion:

    • With Halloween dragging the weekend box office down by over thirty percent, High School Musical 3 took the top spot with just $15 million. The Weinstein Company says Zack and Miri Make a Porno came in second with $10.7 million, but rival studios say that projection may be inflated.
    • Meanwhile, Europeans really like James Bond.
    • MSNBC Films has picked up Witch Hunt. The documentary, which premiered at Toronto and is narrated by Sean Penn, willhave an Oscar qualifying run and then air on TV next year.
    • Variety has picked up the “Joaquin Phoenix is quitting movies” story. They’re running an AP item which says the actor, who showed up to Saturday’s Two Lovers premiere at AFI with the phrase “good bye” written on his knuckles, confirmed to reporters that he’s leaving the business to “focus on music,” and promised, “I will emotionally impact you with that, as well.”

    Originally posted on:SpoutBlog