Monthly Archives: June 2009
DVD Tuesday with Scotty G
It’s not a great week for new releases on DVD. You get some B movies, and re-release of an 80’s classic, and a cult TV show arrives on DVD.

Street Fighter: The Legend of Chun-Li – Not much needs to be said about this one. The Street Fighter franchise is nowhere near as big as it once was, so it surprised me when a film version was green lit. Starring Kristin Kreuk and Michael Clarke Duncan, the film is what it is. It was a disappointment at the box office [and to be honest I’m surprised it got a box office release], and hopes to find a following on DVD. Street Fight: The Legend Of Chun-Li continues the rule that video games make bad movies.

12 Rounds – WWE star John Cena stars in this Renny Harlin directed film. I’ll be honest, I actually want to check this movie out. I wasn’t going to see it in theatres, but it looks like it could be a good time-waster. The basic plot is Cena is a cop, and a villain that he captured before escapes from prison. The bad guy kidnaps his wife, and it’s up to Cena to play his game to get his wife back. Based on the trailer, it reminds me a little of Die Hard With A Vengeance, which is a little funny to me, because Renny Harlin directed Die Hard 2: Die Harder, so he knows how to do a great action movie.

Two Lovers – This film did not get a big release, and is probably best known as the last film Joaquin Phoenix made before he quit acting. This was the film that Phoenix was promoting when he made his famous appearance on Letterman. It’s an adult drama that stars Phoenix, Gwyneth Paltrow and Vinessa Shaw, and deals with Phoenix having an affair and the consequences that causes. Despite not getting a very big release, Two Lovers was a big hit with critics, as it currently has a rating of 84% at Rotten Tomatoes.

Eastbound and Down – Danny McBride stars in this HBO series of a baseball player who alienates everyone in the major leagues, and ends up going back to his high school to be a phys-ed teacher. There is some great talent behind the scenes with Will Ferrell, Jody Hill, and Adam McKay, but like most things that Jody Hill works on, this is not a series for everybody. Danny McBride’s character is dark, mean, and you almost feel guilty laughing at the things he does. It’s not a show for everyone, but for fans of any of the people listed above, this six episode season is worth checking out.

Do The Right Thing: 20th Anniversary Edition – I did not see this film until almost 10 years after it was released, and it really is fantastic. I still think it is Spike Lee’s best film, and it revolves around the lives of people at a pizza shop on the hottest day of the summer of the Bedford-Stuyvesant neighbourhood. All different races come and go from the pizza shop, and you care about every single one of them on the screen. The music is great [Public Enemy’s "Fight The Power" is the main theme of this movie], the lighting and cinematography is unreal, as it looks so hot on the screen, that you want to have a shower by the end of it, and the ending is one of the most polarizing in all of film. Love or hate this film, it is definitely worth seeing. Check out Do The Right Thing!
Ian Rogers Reviews: Johnny Gruesome by Gregory Lamberson

Johnny Gruesome, by Gregory Lamberson, is the muscle car of horror novels. A hot-rod gorefest of rapidly-building suspense and high-adrenaline violence.
Johnny Grissom is a hot-headed teen who dies in what the people of his small town believe is an accident. But it was no accident, and Johnny isn’t going to take his death lying down. Grissom comes back from the dead as Gruesome and begins a spree of violent retribution against those who wronged him in life. And Johnny has a very long shit list.
Lamberson doesn’t pull any punches in this brutally powerfully ode to the classic E.C. horror comics of the 1950s. Most writers of gore tend to overdo it to the point where the descriptions become boring and facile. Not so in Lamberson’s case. The writing is taut and balanced with just the right amount of grisly vivid detail.
Johnny Gruesome runs so hot and fast you should probably put on a seatbelt before opening this book. Not that it’s going to help you.
Scotty G’s Box Office Wrap Up Report

Wow – I finally had a stellar weekend. I correctly picked all top 5 films in order, and I was only off a combined $6.1 million, and two films I correctly predicted the exact total. To me, that’s like winning The Price Is Right’s Showcase Showdown! It’s freakin’ ridiculous. I will say it was more luck then anything, but I’m still happy.
Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen had a very strong weekend. Very strong. It opened at #1, and its Friday-Sunday gross was $112 million [I predicted $115 million], and its per theatre average was a ridiculous $26,453. It gets even bigger. If you take into account the Wednesday and Thursday numbers, Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen has grossed $201.2 million dollars, and that makes it the third highest grossing film of 2009 in only 5 days. The big questions for this film is whether or not it will have a strong hold. Reviews have not been kind, so we’ll see how much repeat business we will have. Now that kids are out of school, they will be wanting their parents to take them to see this film over and over again.
***Note – Final box office #’s come out on Monday, so don’t be surprised is Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen reports less than $112 million when the final #’s come in.
The Proposal held up well in its second weekend, dropping a respectable 45% for a gross of $18.4 million [I predicted it would open hit that exact same number] to finish in the #2 spot. The date film is appealing to its target audience, and the film will finish with over $100 million at the box office, which I doubt many people thought would happen. Its total gross stands at $69 million.
The Hangover continues to roll along, dropping 35.7% from last weekend for a total of $17.2 million [I predicted $18.1 million] to put it at #3in the box office. The comedy smash of ’09 continues to have amazing holds from weekend to weekend, and its current total at the box office is $183 million. It should cross the $200 million mark over the next 7 days, becoming the 4th film of 2009 to do so. It should have another weekend of smooth sailing coming up, as no major comedy is being released, but will face some competition in the form of Bruno when that opens on July 10th.
The newly crowned highest grossing film of 2009 is the #4 movie in the land this weekend. Up became the highest grossing film of ’09, with a weekend gross of $15.2 million [I predicted it would gross $13 million], which was a 44.5% drop from last weekend. Its total gross stands at $250.2 million, which beat former champ Star Trek, which currently has $246 million. Up will not be able to claim this for long as Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen will become the highest grossing film of 2009 in the coming days. Still, Disney/Pixar must be very pleased with how Up has performed.
Rounding out the Top 5 was My Sister’s Keeper with an opening weekend of $12 million [I predicted the exact number]. Unfortunately, it does not have a strong per theatre average, as that was only $4,616, so do not expect it to hang out in theatres very long.
Other notes:
Away We Go cracked the Top 10, by being the #10 movie in the land.
The Hurt Locker opened in limited release in 4 theatres and had the highest weekend per theatre average of $36,000. The film expands into wider release in a few weeks.
So to recap, here are my predictions:
1) Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen – $115 million
2) The Proposal – $18.4 million
3) The Hangover – $18.1 million
4) Up - $15.2 million
5) My Sister’s Keeper – $12 million
And here are the actual #’s
1) Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen – $112 million
2) The Proposal – $18.4 million
3) The Hangover – $17.2 million
4) Up - $13 million
5) My Sister’s Keeper – $12 million
This week brings us Public Enemies, and Ice Age 3D: Dawn of the Dinosaurs. Check back on Friday to see my weekend predictions for those films.
Tales from the Long Box Vol. 2 # 3: Japer Revisits Action Comics Weekly # 601
Every weekend this summer, we’ll be bringing you a new installment of a 12-part series of reviews of meaningful comics found in the collections of our writers. “Long Box” refers to the lengthy, white cardboard boxes most comics find themselves stored within – bagged, alphabetized and numerically ordered.
These reviews, then, are the tales of those collections: illuminating characters, artists, writers – even eras – in addition to the personalities of the very owners of those fine collections.
Writers: Various
Artists: Various
DC Comics
Think back to when you were young.
Remember when the Saturday edition of the newspaper used to arrive early in the morning and you’d quickly scan through it, tossing aside the business and political insight sections and excitedly pulling out the comics insert?
I do.
My parents subscribed to the Saturday edition of the Toronto Star and that was the first thing I did each morning before running to the television to watch my cartoons: flipping pages and reading my favourite comics, getting my finger tips covered with black ink, while eating my breakfast bowl of Cheerios or Fruit Loops or Shreddies. My favourites were The Far Side, Herman, Calvin and Hobbes, as well as the ongoing adventure stories of Spider-Man, which was only published in colour on Saturday.
I remember that extreme sense of Saturday-morning childhood anticipation like it was yesterday. The newspaper comics don’t hold my attention any more, but the continuing, serialized form of comic book storytelling, does. The style is a throwback to those black and white pulp films or radio shows of my father’s generation, where every episode of The Shadow or Doc Savage was a cliffhanger and audiences had to tune in the following week to find out what happened to their favourite heroes.
Over the last few years, DC Comics has aggressively returned to the weekly serialized format. They’ve published the critically acclaimed 52 series, a title that ran every week over the course of an entire year, showcasing a set of B-list characters, each finding their own voice and, more importantly, their own audience over that span of time. Directly following 52 was Countdown, also a weekly, year-long series. DC proved that there were comic collectors interested in the format so long as solid storytelling and consistently good art could be maintained over the frantic pace of a weekly series.
Before 52 or Countdown found acclaim, however, DC toyed with the format in their flagship title, Action Comics.
After a company-wide crossover story that reinvigorated the heroes of the DC Universe, including Superman, DC renamed their flagship to Action Comics Weekly with issue #601, published in 1988 which ran double-sized at 48 pages. The series would still boast a Superman story but would also contain tales featuring a host of lesser known or struggling characters in an effort to drum up public interest. Each character would have a limited run, replaced with other heroes once their story ran its course. The first issue contained the characters of Blackhawk, Deadman, Wild Dog, The Secret Six and even Green Lantern, whose series had just been cancelled, all featured in 8-page long segments.
There was something here for every comic fan.
Green Lantern, written by comic book hall-of-famer James Owsley and drawn by the legendary Gil Kane, picked up right where the character’s series had ended, only now, in the first chapter of the serial, the exploits of DC’s favourite science fiction space-cop was narrated by his ex-lover, now turned adversary, Carol Ferris, the Star Sapphire. The story traveled from deep space to planet Earth, the first chapter ending with the mutilation and murder of ex-Green Lantern Corps member, Katma, who also happened to be Green Lantern John Stewart’s wife, at the hands of the evil narrator. Quite the cliff-hanger.
Wild Dog, created and written by mystery novelist Max Collins and artist Terry Beatty, made his first appearance in a four-issue mini-series a few years earlier. His emergence in Action Comics Weekly was a way to drum up interest in the hopes of publishing another mini or even an ongoing series. Part of the appeal of the character during his first outing was the mystery surrounding who Wild Dog actually was, which was eventually revealed in the final issue. Unfortunately, that mysterious lure was gone and Wild Dog simply became a man with a gun out to take on and kill criminals with constant special effect gunplay sounds of “Budda! Budda!! Budda!!!” Not very interesting, the character faded into obscurity.
The Secret Six series within Action Comics Weekly reformed the team originally created in 1968. Veteran writer Martin Pasko and realist artist Dan Spiegel reinvigorated the team for the late 20th century, imbibing the six “agents” with specialized talents in combat, intelligence and espionage. The lure of the series was once again the mysterious Mockingbird, a hooded figure that guided the team from mission to mission. The Secret Six would have two distinct storylines in the anthology and last year, DC Comics revived the title, giving them their own monthly series which has been praised by critics and fans alike.
Deadman, always a character on the outskirts of the DC Universe, found a regular feature home in the weekly anthology. Written by Mike Baron and drawn by long standing DC Comics illustrator Dan Jurgens, the ghost who could posses the bodies of other people took up where his 1986 mini series left off. Fans clamored for more and eventually Baron would write a number of prestige-format mini series featuring the titular character, all drawn to disturbing, decomposing effect by Kelley Jones. Fans loved the new look.
Blackhawk told the period tale of the post World War II fighting pilot ace, once again under the pen of Martin Pasko and joined by the artistic design work of Rick Burchett. Blackhawk gave the Action Comics Weekly title an entirely different feel: globe-trotting high adventure in the late 1940’s, ensuring the parent series contained stories of a different nature, look and feel. Blackhawk would successfully inherit his own monthly series.
Other characters would join the line-up as storylines concluded. Black Canary would find a home in Action Comics Weekly as would the Phantom Stranger, Captain Marvel, Catwoman and Speedy. Only a fleeting few titles were successful, however, and the flagship would return to Superman-centric stories under its old title of Action Comics within a year. Still, it proved to be an interesting way for DC Comics to “try out” new characters and gauge audience reaction.
This July 1st, DC will make another attempt at a weekly installment series featuring different characters. Wednesday Comics will be stylized like those Saturday morning newspaper pull-out section comics of our childhood and feature, over twelve issues, the legendary characters of Superman, Green Lantern and Hawkman. Once again, the stories of these heroes are mixed with “b” and “c” listers such as Kamandi and Metamorpho.
It’ll be exciting to pull the newspaper-sized Wednesday Comics off of the shelf and flip though the pages of favourite and emerging heroes. It’ll be just like when I was a kid.
Instead of Saturday, I’ll just have to save my Cheerios for Wednesday mornings now.
Trailer Time: 2012

As an avowed fan of apocalyptic films, I have to admit that the trailer for 2012, the new cinematic opus from Roland Emmerich, gave me a few chills. If you’re familiar with the significance of the date, 2012 is the end of the Mayan calendar and is suspected by many to be the end of the world.
Personally, I thought it was the end of the world seeing John Cusack in the trailer for a big budget blockbuster. Having spent the last few years in smaller, subtler films, it will be interesting to see how he stands out in 2012. Director Emmerich, the man behind Independance Day and The Day The Earth Stood Still, isn’t one to coax strong performances out of his leads, but it’s rare that he’s worked with a talent at solid as Cusack.
2012 looks to be mining some of the same territory that Alex Proyas’ Knowing worked with earlier this year, minus the aliens and Nicolas Cage. Check out the trailer below. The movie hits theaters in November.

