The reports of Ringo Starr’s luck are greatly exaggerated. He wasn’t some half-talent along for the Beatlemania ride, as his most heartless and clueless critics insist. His solid backbeat was essential to holding the band together and his quirky way with a drum fill was as essential to The Beatles’ distinctive sound as George’s ringing 12-string or Paul’s leaping bass lines. However, there is no question that Ringo would not have had a career as a solo artist if not for his old band. While Ringo-led tracks such as “Yellow Submarine”, “With a Little Help from My Friends”, and “Octopus’ Garden” are much more than novelty spots for the goofily charming drummer, one probably doesn’t hear even these classics and think, “Gee, this guy needs a whole album to himself.”
Wednesday, January 24, 2018
Review: Vinyl Reissues of 'Ringo' and 'Goodnight Vienna'
The reports of Ringo Starr’s luck are greatly exaggerated. He wasn’t some half-talent along for the Beatlemania ride, as his most heartless and clueless critics insist. His solid backbeat was essential to holding the band together and his quirky way with a drum fill was as essential to The Beatles’ distinctive sound as George’s ringing 12-string or Paul’s leaping bass lines. However, there is no question that Ringo would not have had a career as a solo artist if not for his old band. While Ringo-led tracks such as “Yellow Submarine”, “With a Little Help from My Friends”, and “Octopus’ Garden” are much more than novelty spots for the goofily charming drummer, one probably doesn’t hear even these classics and think, “Gee, this guy needs a whole album to himself.”
Monday, January 15, 2018
Review: 'Superman: The Atom Age Sundays-1956 to 1959'
Superman has gone through all sorts of variations
in his 80
years, including— stupidly enough—dark, broody Superman. Like most of the comic
book heroes who followed him, Superman was always best when he was at his most
whimsical. Delightfully, IDW’s new collection Superman: The Atom Age Sundays-1956 to 1959 catches him at one such
point. Without the depressing, often racist baggage of the war years, Superman
is free to use the sun as his personal Turkish bath after gaining some extra
pounds, match wits with an alien race of talking mushrooms, and testify at the trial of a giant chimp that shoots kryptonite beams from its eyeballs. Even his origin story is told after a wacky visit by G-Men from the future who insist that the "S" on Superman’s chest is for "Shark." Hooray for Superman and the goofy
scripting of writers such as Batman-creator Bill Finger!
Another pleasure of The
Atom Age Sundays is how fluidly these one-a-week chapters coalesce into
complete stories. With the exception of one of the three Lois Lane-centric stories that end the book, there is a minimum of annoying exposition intended to remind
the reader of what happened the previous weekend. Since these are Sundays only,
every comic is in full color. Consequently, this volume reads more like a
collection of comic book stories than newspaper ones, and interestingly enough,
the book’s introduction notes that the comic book and newspaper stories were
mirroring each other at this point in Superman history (though writers Mark
Waid and John Wells can’t reach a definitive conclusion about which medium was
the chicken and which one was the egg). As usual, the packaging is beautiful with comic book-style textured paper, ribbon bookmark, and colorful hardcover. All of this makes for one of the very
best volumes in IDW’s ongoing series of Superman
newspaper comics.
Friday, January 12, 2018
Review: 'Opera' Blu-ray
Evaluating a Dario Argento movies requires its own rule book
since his methods are so unlike anyone else’s. In a movie such as Opera, he may liberally borrow from
horrors past ranging from The Birds
to Halloween to A Clockwork Orange to (of course) Phantom of the Opera, but his films are always entirely his own no
matter how referential or how successful they are. Opera is no Suspiria or Deep Red, but it is still one of Argento’s
more successful pictures despite its absence of logic and ridiculous musical
choices. While the latter undermines Argento’s purposes as he renders his most
shocking scenes comical by scoring them with awful heavy metal tunes, the
former just adds to the dreamy unreality that is one of his more appealing
signatures.
Opera finds the
soprano starring in a production of Verdi’s Macbeth
being stalked by a masked killer. Instead of targeting the life of the singer
(Christina Marscillach), he merely forces her to watch while he slays other
folks in her theatrical inner circle. He ensures her peepers remain open by Scotch-taping
rows of needles under her eyelids. If you’re like me and have a thing about
your eyes, these scenes are almost impossible to watch (oh, the irony!).
Like any Argento picture, Opera is not a matter of plot. It is the sum total of Argento’s
audacious flights of fancy and weirdly poetic extreme violence. We get plenty
of this stuff with a disorienting opening filmed in the first-person pov, a
gory raven raid on an opera audience, and of course, that vicious gimmick with
the needles. An extended scene that finds the heroine trapped with the killer
in her own apartment and escaping through an air duct with a little girl out of
a Lewis Carroll story could be the most masterfully suspenseful set piece in a
career littered with them.
Scorpion Releasing brings Opera to blu-ray with a meticulous 2K scan. I know, I know—4K is
the ideal way to go, but this is still a very attractive presentation with barely a
speck of dust and organic, lively textures. This is particularly important
since the film is so textural whether lingering on red velvet, the gnarly twine
of a thick rope, or the pearl-like ring around a raven’s eye. There are also two
bonus interviews—a previously issued 21-minute talk with Argento and a brand
new one with actor William McNamara. McNamara has a relatively small role in
the feature, but his interview is still nicely illuminating as he explains the
circumstances that led to the audacious pov of the opening scene and his
reaction to having his voice dubbed by a British actor.
Thursday, January 11, 2018
Review: 'Bela Lugosi and Boris Karloff: The Expanded Story of a Haunting Collaboration'
With the release of Ed
Wood in 1994, “Karloff! That Limey cocksucker!” quite nearly replaced “I
never drink…wine” and “The children of the night…what music they make” as the
go-to phrase when doing a bad Bela Lugosi impression. Tim Burton’s movie hipped
the larger film-going public to some of the real-life seething that went on
during the filming of such Lugosi/Boris Karloff collaborations as The Black Cat and The Body Snatcher. However, Burton’s superb yet cartoonish film
provided little of the complexity behind this classic Hollywood “rivalry.” For
that, one would have to take a trip to the local Waldenbooks and pick up a copy
of Gregory Mank’s Bela Lugosi and Boris
Karloff: The Story of a Haunting Collaboration.
Originally published in 1990, the over 350-page book
attempted a more nuanced view of a relationship that couldn’t simply be boiled
down to a venerated horror star and a jealous, drug-addled also-ran. Swelling
with an additional 250-or-so pages in 2009, the now Expanded Story of a Haunting Collaboration went into even greater
depth with additional information and interviews. By Mank’s analysis, Lugosi
and Karloff may have enjoyed a rather friendly working relationship while
making Son of Frankenstein, and the
alleged hatred Lugosi felt for Karloff may have really been directed at a
Hollywood system that constantly ground the vampire under its merciless stake.
Karloff is not completely without blame in this mostly
one-sided clash of titans. While he never had an explicitly nasty thing to say
about Lugosi, his patronizing insistence on referring to his co-star as “poor
Bela” in private and public could not have endeared himself to the actor who
could be quite proud despite demeaning himself in Poverty Row and Ed Wood
pictures.
Mank’s valiant attempt to uncover how Lugosi and Karloff really felt about each other was doomed
to go without a definitive answer, but that barely matters when the rest of the
story is so fascinating and well told. Mank goes deep into the movies they made
together with nearly scene-by-scene analyses without neglecting the most
important pictures they made without the other. So we get very satisfying
histories of Dracula, Frankenstein, The Mummy, and other key films, as well as quite a bit of
information about other key players in those films such as James Whale and
Colin Clive.
Last updated nearly a decade ago, Bela Lugosi and Boris Karloff: The Expanded Story of a Haunting
Collaboration is now enjoying a new printing though not another updating.
That’s generally fine since there probably haven’t been many new revelations
about the Karloff/Lugosi rivalry in recent years since so many of their other
collaborators have died. Mank’s
incessant leching over Lugosi and Karloff’s female co-stars is more than a
little dated and brings nothing but discomfort to the storytelling, but if you can get past that,
you will find that Bela Lugosi and Boris
Karloff: The Expanded Story of a Haunting Collaboration remains one of the
great studies of classic horror films.
Monday, January 8, 2018
Review: 'Ultimate Spinach" Mono Vinyl Edition
Tuesday, January 2, 2018
Psychobabble’s 100 Favorite Songs of the 1990s!
Wow. A list of Psychobabble’s
100 Favorite Songs of the 1990s. That’s so cool. It’s totally not like
everyone else in the entire universe hasn’t already listed their 100 favorite
songs of the nineties. Like anyone cares. Whatever. Lists are wack, but I don’t
know… music is pretty cool. I mean, not when they’re like “Oooh, look at me!
I’m a big rock star! My hair is so big and I screw so many groupies!” That is
so eighties. But when they…I don’t know… kind of don’t care so much, I guess
I’m kinda like, “That’s pretty cool. I don’t care so much either.” It’s like
sometimes I think Kurt Cobain is singing about my life, you know? I don’t know what the fuck Bob Pollard is
singing about half the time, but Guided by Voices rock so hard because Bob is
like a forty-year-old schoolteacher or something, so it’s so ironic that he’s a
rock star. And then there’s all the “Women in Rock” (I put that in quotes to
show what I really think of the
mainstream media’s “labels”) like Liz Phair, Tanya Donelly, Mary Timony,
Juliana Hatfield, PJ Harvey, and like, all the others. They are sincerely hella
cool. Sincerely! I’m not even being ironic about how totally dope they are.
Don’t think I’m not being ironic? Oh well. Whatever. Nevermind. Then here’s your mom’s 100 favorite songs of the
nineties.
100. “Over the
Neptune/Mesh Gear Fox” by Guided by Voices
So we get started the way every party must get started…with
a chant of “GBV! GBV! GBV!” Then Bob Pollard is all like, “Rock and Roll!” Then
he’s like “This song does not rock,” which is so cool, because sincerely
admitting that you rock is so lame! But the real irony is that “Over the
Neptune” really does rock! It rocks like Cheap Trick (and not lame Cheap Trick,
like “The Flame”). Then “Over the Neptune” morphs into “Mesh Gear Fox” like
that cop in T2 morphs into water or
whatever, and guess what…it stops rocking but it remains awesome as Guided by
Voices get all psychedelic. It sounds like your dad’s best records… and Uncle
Bob is like your dad’s only cool friend.
99. “I Wanted to Tell
You” by Matthew Sweet
Monday, January 1, 2018
Review: 'The Breakfast Club' Criterion Blu-ray
John Hughes only made six movies about high schoolers, but
the fact that he is synonymous with teenage travails isn’t necessarily because Curly Sue wasn’t a great piece of
cinematic art. It also isn’t because he was the only one talking to teens in
the eighties. Filmmakers such as Amy Heckerling, Savage Steve Holland, and Tim
Hunter were too, and probably with more audacity, but there is some intangible
magic about a John Hughes picture. It could be his decision to use the Brat
Pack as his personal casting pool. There certainly is something special about
witnessing Molly Ringwald and Anthony Michael Hall sharing the screen. It might
be the fact that Hughes never shied from the kind of raw, maudlin emotions that
we teenagers loved to wrap ourselves in or the toilet humor we thought was
funny. Or maybe it’s that his films were so hopeful, and hope is what we really
need when twirling down the angst whirlpool. Sometimes we also need a big,
horse-killing dose of eighties, and watching a Hughes movie is like playing
nine hours of Pac-Man while blasting Duran Duran and gobbling a vat of Nerds.
Whatever it is, Hughes movies scratch an itch that Fast Times at Ridgemont High and River’s Edge can’t quite reach, and no
Hughes movie scratches it like The
Breakfast Club. It has it all: the cast, the quotable lines (“No, dad, what
about you?!?”), the puerile humor without the gratuity or racism of Sixteen Candles, the melodrama, the
Simple Minds, and Hughes’s oddball perspective of teenagers that is both
cluelessly unreal, and yet, aspirational. I certainly never attended a
detention group therapy session with a brain, an athlete, a basket case, a
princess, and a criminal, but I and a zillion other eighties teens sure wanted
to after seeing The Breakfast Club.
Which is crazy, since Saturday detention would clearly suck and spending nine
hours with the kids most likely to tape your butt cheeks together would too. But
Hughes made it seem appealing, probably because he made the mutual
understanding these five kids reach seem possible.
The Breakfast Club
may not fit in with the Criterion Collection’s usual crop of cult classics and
art-house achievements, but there’s no question that it is an important movie.
What picture better defines its generation? That’s right, my Neo-Maxi-Zoom-Dweebie…none
of them. So Criterion showers all the respect on The Breakfast Club that it would give to a Bergman film. The 4K
polishing is gorgeous. Extras are abundant. The most attractive will probably
be nearly 52 minutes of deleted and extended scenes. Some of these will be
tough for all but the most hardcore cultists to distinguish from scenes in the final
edit, but other bits certainly stand out. We get Claire and Brian acting out
Bender-style daddy-issue psychodramas. We get Bender calling Brian “smegma
toast.” We get Carl the Janitor’s complete explanation for how he came to
pursue the custodial arts, as well as his really mean predictions for each of
the Breakfast Clubbers’ futures. We get Bender’s bizarre Ricky Ricardo
impersonation and several scenes that help build the argument that Ally Sheedy
was the movie’s MVP (sadly, we also get more of the tragic scene in which
Claire gives the formerly cool Allison a jock-bait makeover. Boo!).
A clutch of cast/crew interviews includes a new 18-minute
recollection starring Sheedy and Molly Ringwald, who discusses the cast’s
atypical role in finalizing the script and gives some theories on what might
have gone down on Monday, February 17, 1985. Period, on-set interviews with
Sheedy and Judd Nelson reveal a couple of rather thoughtful young stars, while
Paul Gleason’s on-set interview reveals that unlike the character he plays in
the movie, he was a nice, goofy guy and not a total dick.
The less substantial supplements are so plentiful that they’ll
still keep you busy for hours. A 23-minute “electronic press kit” to promote
the original film includes interviews with the principal cast. Nelson reads
bits of Hughes’s production notes for twelve minutes. Two segments from the Today show totaling ten minutes find Jane
Pauley picking the brains of Ringwald and Nelson and Sheedy, Hall, and Emilio Estevez.
There’s also an hour of audio interviews with Hughes and a 15-minute one with
Ringwald. Rounding out Criterion’s
exclusive extras are the excellent Sincerely
Yours documentary and Nelson and Hall’s commentary track from Universal’s
2008 “Flashback Edition” DVD.
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