Category Archives: Film Fodder

Tumbler Tour offers a close-up look at Batman’s vehicles

Unfortunately we still have to wait a few weeks before we see Batman take on Bane and Catwoman in The Dark Knight Rises. But in the meantime you can see the intricate details of the actual vehicles you’ve seen in Batman Begins and The Dark Knight as they visit cities across the country on the Tumbler Tour. And given the technologically-advanced nature of the Tumbler (the tank-like vehicle commonly known to fans as the Batmobile) and the Bat-Pod (the Tumbler’s motorcycle-like escape pod), it takes a special person to operate these vehicles. Wrestling with Pop Culture caught up with Jim Johnson, the transportation manager for Wayne Enterprises, on a recent tour stop. But as you might expect from someone who works for a reclusive billionaire like Bruce Wayne, Johnson wasn’t willing to reveal too much about the vehicles, the new movie or any possible connections between Bruce Wayne and Batman.

As the only authorized driver of the Tumbler and the Bat-Pod on the Tumbler Tour, how did you become qualified for such a job?

I work in the transportation department of Wayne Enterprises. The vehicles were built by Wayne Enterprises and Batman uses them for fighting crime.

That implies that there may be a connection between Batman and Bruce Wayne, and there’s already some speculation as to who Batman is. Do you have any thoughts on that?

Nobody knows who Batman is.

These vehicles appear to be military in nature, which means operating them probably isn’t very simple. What was your background prior to being hired by Wayne Enterprises that led to you being chosen to operate these vehicles?

I’ve always been in the transportation field. I drive everything and we’re just taking them on tour to promote the new movie.

I understand the original intended use of the Tumbler was for bridging for military purposes…

Yeah, it was originally designed for the military to bridge open areas and to cross large distances. It’ll jump about four feet high.

As we saw in The Dark Knight, the Bat-Pod was originally inside the Tumbler for use as an escape pod. Since they are being displayed as individual vehicles, does that mean we will see both of them used separately in The Dark Knight Rises?

We just want to show them both on the Tumbler Tour. He uses the Bat-Pod to escape from the Tumbler when he needs to. It’s more agile for moving around the city. But I have not seen anything about the new movie and I’m very limited about what I’m allowed to say.

How often do you actually talk to Bruce Wayne? What is he like?

I’ve never talked to him. Wayne Enterprises is a big company and he’s a very busy man.

For more information, go to www.tumblertour.com.

Ted brings Seth MacFarlane’s potty humor to life on the big screen

If you’ve seen the trailers for Ted, you’re going to find this movie hilarious. If you haven’t see any trailers for Ted, your going to find this movie ridiculously hilarious.

Ted is a story of a man named John (Mark Wahlberg) and his lifelong friend Ted (Seth MacFarlane). After receiving a teddy bear for Christmas, a 12-year-old John makes a wish on a magical shooting star that brings Ted to life. It’s weird for everybody, but soon enough the world accepts that he’s a talking, walking teddy bear. And then the real fun begins.

Ted (Seth MacFarlane) and his best buddy John (Mark Wahlberg) in "Ted" (photo courtesy Universal Pictures/Iloura)

Ted is John’s best friend (“Thunder buddies for life!”). But when John grows up and meets a girl (Mila Kunis), tensions arise and John must choose between his best friend and his best girl. Just as MacFarlane’s animated shows such as Family Guy and American Dad! are intended for adults, Ted is not for kids. Yes, it has a talking teddy bear. But this teddy bear has a dirtier mouth than George Carlin. He’s crude, brash, rude and utterly hilarious. But he’s not for kids, hands down.

Seth MacFarlane co-writes, directs and stars in this movie, so fans of his work should know what to expect. For those of you unfamiliar with his work, this movie is still highly recommended as good old fashioned slapstick, combined with smartly written vulgarities and poop jokes. Trust me, it’s a lot funnier than it might sound. I’d even venture to say that Ted might be this summer’s funniest movie.

Ted. Written and directed by Seth MacFarlane. Starring Mark Wahlberg, Mila Kunis and Seth MacFarlane. Rated R. www.tedisreal.com.

“Magic Mike” reveals more than just hard bodies and party lifestyle

Tito (Adam Rodríguez), Big Dick Richie (Joe Manganiello), Adam the Kid (Alex Pettyfer), Dallas (Matthew McConaughey, Magic Mike (Channing Tatum), Tarzan (Kevin Nash) and Ken (Matt Bomer) offer a unique salute in “Magic Mike” (photo courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures)

 

 

 

If it seems like Channing Tatum was made for the role of Mike Lane in Magic Mike, it’s because he was. Before he was the charmingly chiseled star of chick flicks, dramas, comedies and action movies, he spent some time on the stage of a Tampa strip club. And since this ultimate girls-night-out indulgence is about an exotic dancer starring in a male revue at a Tampa strip club, this truly is the role Tatum was meant to play (mostly because he already has).

But as is the case with most strippers (male or female), dancing is just a means to an end for Mike, who hopes to utilize his talents as a furniture designer to get out of the club world before it’s too late (and before he’s too old). And when he meets Adam (Alex Pettyfer), a good-looking kid struggling to secure an income while freeloading off his sister (Cody Horn), it seems like it’s only a matter of time before Adam replaces Mike (already in his 30s, which is ancient in this world) as the star of the show. It looks like one big cheesy cliché, and it is in many ways. But somehow it’s not as gratuitous as it seems, with intriguing characters and plot that have depth while remaining superficial enough for those looking for a bachelorette party without needing a stack of ones.

Mike (Tatum), Brooke (Cody Horn) and Joanna (Olivia Munn) have an awkward moment in “Magic Mike” (photo by Claudette Barius)

What I didn’t realize before seeing Magic Mike is that it’s directed by Steven Soderbergh, who previously worked with Tatum on 2011’s Haywire (read my review here). And just as he’s done with the Ocean’s Eleven series, Traffic and other films, he handles this ensemble cast (Matthew McConaughey, Matt Borner, Joe Manganiello, Gabriel Iglesias, Adam Rodríguez, Kevin Nash) rather adeptly. But given the subject matter, Magic Mike strikes a balance between comedic ridiculousness and the grim realities of a man who works odd jobs by day, but whose professional life (and social/sexual escapades) revolves around a dangerous and empty lifestyle.

That being said, Magic Mike never falls into the typical stripper movie trappings of getting too depressing. Sure, Adam (usually referred to simply as “The Kid”) gets caught up in the lifestyle while also becoming the favorite of Dallas (McConaughey), the former dancer now running the show. And while Mike’s charm allows him to work such magic as the occasional threesome with his regular booty call (Olivia Munn) and working roomfuls of horny women into a frenzy, he struggles to maintain any meaningful relationships or achieve his real creative passion. But we’re still talking about male strippers here, so even if seeing a guy shave his legs for the first time and put on a patriotic thong wasn’t funny enough on its own, Soderbergh and his cast deliver such scenes with enough lighthearted comic relief to counter the otherwise depressing reality of it all.

Kevin Nash as Tarzan in “Magic Mike” (photo courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures)

Not that most people will be paying much attention to him, but Nash‘s performance here is about as good as his last few in-ring showings (which is to say that he has a hard time keeping up with the moves of the much younger and more athletic guys around him). But given his character Tarzan’s obvious age difference and his predisposition for an occasional overindulgence, Tarzan’s tear-away pants fit Nash pretty well. And as the layers are gradually peeled off the nervous chemistry between Tatum and Horn, we see that opposites really do sometimes attract, especially when they realize they actually have similar interests (and not just a love for breakfast food). So don’t let Magic Mike‘s outer appearance fool you; once you see what’s underneath it’s a lot more than just hard bodies and fast living.

Magic Mike. Directed by Steven Soderbergh. Starring Channing Tatum, Alex Pettyfer, Matthew McConaughey and Cody Horn. Rated R. magicmikemovie.warnerbros.com.

“Brave” courageously goes where Disney and Pixar haven’t really gone before

Disney has obviously built its kingdom on recreating ancient folk tales that center around the animated adventures of various mythical princesses. Pixar, however, usually sticks to more contemporary computer animated tales about creatures in the toy box, in the closet or under the sea. With Brave, the two combine their talents for a visually magnificent CGI fairy tale filled with somewhat subversive adult humor and a moral that’s more empowering than the typical Disney damsel in distress.

 

Merida (Kelly Macdonald) follows a will o' the wisp to her new fate in "Brave"

Merida (voiced by Kelly Macdonald) is a defiant young princess who would rather explore her Scottish Highland surroundings with her trusty bow and arrow than be the prim and proper lady Queen Elinor (Emma Thompson) wants her to be. Her father, King Fergus (Billy Connolly), finds Merida’s defiance endearing, and her trouble-making triplet siblings appreciate that she sneaks them fresh-baked sweets under the dinner table. But when her parents invite three suitors to compete for Merida’s companionship, the young princess flees into the woods, only to have will o’ the wisps (small blue fairy flames known for leading people to new fates, not the masked character once portrayed by Jeff Hardy) direct her to a mysterious cottage occupied by a strange old woman (Julie Walters) who carves things (mostly bears) out of wood.

The triplets have a sweet tooth, which means trouble when there's a pastry with a spell on it lying around

Preying on Merida’s apparent adolescent frustrations towards the queen, the old woman offers Merida a pastry that will “change” the queen after she consumes it. But the change that takes place isn’t quite what Merida had in mind and she soon finds herself hiding in the woods with the bear that used to be her mom. To make things worse, Fergus is highly regarded for his conquests over ferocious bears and has an innate desire to add more to his taxidermy collection. And don’t forget about the triplets and their collective sweet tooth.

All Merida asked for was to change her fate, and she soon realizes she should have been a little more specific about that before making a deal with a witch in the woods. But as this red-haired beauty and her beast of a mother try to figure out how to undo this spell, they not only have to comically evade the bear-hungry king, they also learn a lot about themselves and each other. But the queen is becoming more and more like a bear and less and less like her human self as time goes on, so they must hurry before the curse becomes permanent.

While the girls are away, the three potential suitors have created chaos back at home, and the king seems to be reveling in it. But at the urging of her mother (who’s transformation has given her a fresh perspective and a change of heart), Merida brings order back to the castle by breaking tradition and introducing the novel idea that people should have free will when it comes to marriage rather than going along with arranged romances. But before we see a happily ever after, there just has to be a big bear battle. And it’s a good one as the very same bear responsible for the king’s peg leg shows up and Merida’s mommy bear takes on the challenge.

Mama bear saves Merida from the mean bear in "Brave"

Brave showcases the courage of women (and men) who stand up for what they believe in, while also teaching lessons about how to do that without harming those around them. It’s when that balance is struck that the fairy tale ending can truly happen. But the real star of this movie is Pixar, whose work here is unlike anything that’s been seen in the studio’s previous movies. From Merida’s realistic red hair to the rain cascading down the castle’s stone walls to astonishing aerial views of Scottish landscapes, the animation in Brave blends surrealistic caricatures with eerily realistic elements for visual magic unlike anything Disney has done before. And it’s these visual and thematic progressions that make this otherwise traditional Disney tale an eye-opening new adventure.

Brave. Directed by Mark Andrews, Brenda Chapman and Steve Purcell. Starring Kelly Macdonald, Emme Thompson and Billy McConnolly. Rated PG. www.disney.com/brave.

Adam Sandler’s hot for teacher in “That’s My Boy”

Oh yeah? Well my dad's friends with Vanilla Ice. Oh, never mind (photo by Tracy Bennett)

He’s got it bad, got it bad, got it bad. He’s hot for teacher. That should be the theme song for Donny Berger, Adam Sandler‘s latest lovable loser, who father’s a child with his hot junior high school teacher (Eva Amurri) in That’s My Boy. But even though the soundtrack has at least three Van Halen songs (including “Cradle Will Rock,” which is equally appropriate), “Hot For Teacher” isn’t one of them. But with all the other jackassery that follows Donny’s endearingly dimwitted adventures, most people probably won’t even notice.

After Miss McGarricle is sent to prison for having sex with her student, a media frenzy makes Donny a pseudo-celebrity before he’s even out of high school. The 30-something Donny, however, finds himself guzzling beer, owing thousands of dollars in taxes and estranged from his son Han Solo Berger (Andy Samberg), who has changed his name to Todd Peterson and created an entirely new life for himself. But when Donny is propositioned with an offer that will eliminate his tax debts if he can arrange a reunion between his son at the women’s prison where McGarricle has been serving her sentence, he’s unable to refuse.

What better place for father/son bonding than an all-night strip club/omelette bar? (photo by Tracy Bennett)

Though money is his initial motivation, once Donny arrives unannounced (and uninvited) in a run-down Fiero with a Rush logo on the hood just days before Todd’s wedding, he and Todd gradually develop an odd bond that forces Donny to reconsider exploiting his son’s anonymity on a reality show. And although his son and bride-to-be Christina (Leighton Meester) are appalled at Donny’s immature and slovenly behavior, he has a charm that wins over the rest of their family and friends.

Before you know it, Donny’s showing Todd how to have a real bachelor party as he and his friends go to an all-night strip club/omelette bar (yep) where the featured dancer is that overweight black hooker from Borat (Luenell). Then they go ice skating with Vanilla Ice and Todd Bridges. Then Donny finds out Christina’s been engaging in acts that make his whole student/teacher thing look downright wholesome. This all, of course, ruins the wedding, which turns out to be a good thing for Todd.

White trash family reunion (photo by Tracy Bennett)

There’s a whole bunch of Sandler and Samberg’s Saturday Night Live buddies in this movie (Colin Quinn, Will Forte, Ana Gasteyer, Rachel Dratch), as well as plenty of inane comedy, toilet humor and the kind of sophomoric laughs you’d expect from a movie about a teenager living out every boy’s fantasy starring Adam Sandler. The moral of the story (if there is one) is that age ain’t nothing but a number when it comes to true love. And when Todd and Donny pay a visit to the present-day Miss McGarricle (Susan Sarandon, who flashes a vintage Hulk Hogan shirt from under her orange jumpsuit), the connection she and Donny have is still apparent with the fingering gestures they give each other against the prison’s glass partition.

That’s My Boy is retarded and inappropriate on just about every level. I happen to think that makes it pretty hilarious.

That’s My Boy. Directed by Sean Anders. Starring Adam Sandler, Andy Samberg and Leighton Meester. Rated R. www.thatsmyboy-movie.com.

“Rock of Ages” is an ’80s rock musical for almost all ages

Sherrie (Julianne Hough) and Drew (Diego Boneta) serenade each other at Tower Records in "Rock of Ages". (photo by David James)

Based on the Broadway musical of the same name, Rock of Ages initially looks like an ’80s hair metal version of Glee. In many ways, that’s exactly what it is. Yet somehow Rock of Ages is a lot of fun to watch, especially if you’re a fan of (or grew up in) the ’80s.

The premise is basically the same as Poison‘s “Fallen Angel”; a pretty Midwest girl takes a bus to Los Angeles in hopes of finding fame alongside the likes of her favorite bands such as Aerosmith, Poison and Lita Ford. Played by Julianne Hough, who has parlayed her Dancing with the Stars and country music talents into starring roles in cheesy musicals like Footloose and Rock of Ages, this small-town girl soon meets her male counterpart (Diego Boneta), an aspiring singer currently sweeping floors at the famed Sunset Strip dive The Bourbon Room. Both struggling to make it, the couple is equally excited to find out that rock messiah Stacee Jaxx (Tom Cruise) will soon be at The Bourbon Room as part of his band Arsenal’s final show.

Stacee Jaxx (Tom Cruise) confronts his sleazy manager (Paul Giamatti) in "Rock of Ages". (photo by David James)

But Jaxx is equal parts Jesus and Satan, and his aura creates desire and destruction wherever he goes. Like a cross between Axl Rose, David Lee Roth and Jim Morrison, Jaxx has developed a reputation for being the most unreliable man in rock ‘n’ roll. He’s rarely seen without a liquor bottle in hand and without at least three groupies at his side (or piled on top of him), he travels with an eccentric baboon named Hey Man, and Kevin Nash is one of the hired muscles that makes sure no one gets too close. Catherine Zeta-Jones plays the conservative wife of the mayor determined to shut down The Bourbon Room and take Jaxx with it, but it turns out her fight is personal as she has some history with Jaxx herself. And when Jaxx finally arrives at the club for his performance, it is both a blessing and a curse for Sherrie (Hough) and Drew (Boneta) as Drew’s band gets to open for Arsenal, but not before Drew sees Sherrie coming out of Jaxx’s dressing room and gets the wrong idea.

Club owner Dennis Dupree (Alec Baldwin) and manager Lonny Barnett (Russell Brand) have a lot to sing about in "Rock of Ages". (photo by David James)

The second act is nothing but tragedy as Sherrie meets the owner of a gentlemen’s club (Mary J. Blige) and becomes a star stripper while Drew signs a deal with Jaxx’s sleazy manager (Paul Giamatti) and ends up in a ridiculous boy band. The Bourbon Room is on the brink of closing due to unpaid taxes and a lurid Rolling Stone cover story reveals the inner workings of Jaxx’s world (including some dishonesty on the part of his slimy manager).

But all is soon well for everyone as Jaxx performs his first solo show at The Bourbon Room (but not before Alec Baldwin and Russell Brand profess their love for each other), Sherrie and Drew work things out and actual ’80s rockers like Sebastian Bach, Extreme‘s Nuno Bettencourt, REO Speedwagon‘s Kevin Cronin and, uh, Deborah Gibson (?) make cameos. And the whole thing is set to the tunes of Skid Row, Twisted Sister, Guns N’ Roses, Def Leppard and Journey, with mash-up medleys to help further the story.

Is it cheesy as hell and dimensionally simplistic? Of course. It’s a musical based on hair metal. It ain’t lookin’ for nothin’ but a good time. How can I resist?

Rock of Ages. Directed by Adam Shankman. Starring Julianne Hough, Diego Boneta, Tom Cruise, Alec Baldwin and Russell Brand. Rated PG-13. rockofagesmovie.warnerbros.com.

“Prometheus” creates an entirely new look at a familiar film

Something is watching over these egg things. But who or what is it? (photo by Kerry Brown)

For a film that’s supposedly not a prequel to 1979’s Alien, Prometheus sure does bear a lot of similarities to that movie. And considering the standard that Ridley Scott set for sci-fi horror with that film, any correlation is a lot to live up to. Which is exactly why film-goers’ guts are ready to burst with excitement over this latest installment in the franchise. Or not installment. Or whatever. But even after a few days of gestation, I’m not quite sure whether or not Prometheus quite stands up to the film that may or may not have given it life more than 30 years ago.

What I can say is that Scott is clearly following a similar formula here. And I don’t mean that in a bad way. It’s actually quite clever. But you tell me if any of this sounds familiar. After archeologists in the near future conclude that some sort of Promethean being on a distant planet could very well have engineered humanity, a ragtag group of scientists, crewmen, corporate scum and an android fly to this distant place (on a ship called Prometheus) in hopes of meeting their makers (or making a quick buck). It’s all funded by Weyland Industries, the company that has been (or will be, since the events in the previous films have yet to happen) willing to sacrifice the lives of humans in exchange for exploiting what they find on other planets.

 

Meredith Vickers (Charlize Theron) and Janek (Idris Elba) look out at the unknown in "Prometheus". (photo by Kerry Brown)

Charlize Theron plays the icy cold Weyland employee overseeing the expedition, and her suspicious nature makes for some uneasiness amongst the rest of the crew. Her seemingly evil empowerment is offset by the optimistic archaeologist (Noomi Rapace) who chooses to believe that she is answering a call from a godlike being. Michael Fassbender plays David, the android, and he accurately captures the creepy nature of a being that is almost human, but not quite (and who has likely been programmed with some sort of ulterior motives, if the other movies have taught us anything). Powerful female characters and androids have become standard in the Alien films and Prometheus is obviously no exception to that rule. These are also the characters that typically weather the most abuse, only to come out stronger (and still alive) after all is said and done (with the heroine reluctantly relying on what’s left of the android in order to escape).

But it’s not just the characters that are familiar here. Once they land and begin exploring this mysterious planet, they discover a series of cavernous structures where someone (or something) has created a livable habitat beneath the surface of an otherwise uninhabitable terrain. These caverns, as well as the things found inside them, are clearly from the same eerily imaginative settings of H.R. Giger, the artist whose work heavily inspired the Alien movies. And the farther they go into the ribcage-like tunnels, the more biomechanical discoveries they make until they eventually end up in a dark room with large egg-shaped things meticulously lined up all over the ground.

I know what you’re thinking, but it’s not an alien hive. At least not like the ones we’ve seen before. But these canisters are shaped like eggs for a reason, and it has nothing to do with omelettes. Things continue to be simultaneously familiar and shockingly new as the story really starts to hatch, with phallic creatures that like to shove themselves down people’s throats, corpses found with their chests opened from the inside and unknown life forms that are conceived in the womb’s of other species. And while Weyland was just an ambiguously Orwellian notion in the previous films, the old man himself makes an appearance here (thanks to holographic technology, initially) to reveal his own personal agenda. The fact that he’s played by Guy Pearce in old-man prosthetics not unlike those worn by Theron in Monster implies that we might see Pearce as a younger Weyland in subsequent films (at least I hope that’s why Pearce was cast here instead of an actual old man).

David (Michael Fassbender) studies this omnipotent view in "Prometheus". (photo courtesy Twentieth Century Fox)

Whatever was inhabiting this underworld (and may still be lurking there) definitely has some omnipotent technology, which offers some splendorous visuals that help explain what’s actually going on here. But as the aliens did in the previous films, it seems that something with no regard for anything other than a primal need to kill has violently wiped out these not-so-heavenly creatures. You do eventually get to see the humanoid beings that supposedly set all this in motion. You also get to see some things that are definitely directly connected to scenes from Alien. And after one character successfully removes an in utero creature in a gruesomely intense scene, that familiar feeling that the only way to survive is to blow everything up and hope for the best really starts to set in.

While it all sounds like what you’ve seen before, Scott’s ability to tell this parallel story without it being the exact same thing is quite impressive. And the way Prometheus ends definitely puts an entirely new perspective on the events that will presumably lead into the beginning of Alien, while also leaving things open to a Prometheus sequel. But for as many questions as it seems to answer, it presents at least as many new ones, which is truly what brings things full circle. And in true Scott fashion, you don’t truly see “it” until the very end.

Proemtheus. Directed by Ridley Scott. Starring Noomi Rapace, Michael Fassbender, Charlize Theron and Guy Pearce. Rated R. www.projectprometheus.com