|
Guilty Pleasures (or, Bad
Movies We Love)
(in no particular order)
|
From Dusk Till Dawn
From Dusk Til Dawn (1996, Dimension/Miramax). An early screenplay that
Quentin Tarantino sold for $15,000 finally comes to life, so to speak, in this half road
movie, half gore fest from Desperado director Robert Rodriguez. George Clooney and
Tarantino (who never would have gotten this part if he hadn't written it and was in tight
with the Miramax Mafia) are Seth and Richie Gekko, two bank robbers, one of whom is a sex
offender (I'll let you guess which one), on the lam and despreately trying to get over the
Mexican border so they can lay low with their most recent score. Seth has a friend in El
Rey (Cheech Marin, playing one of three roles) who recommends a bar to hang out in until
they meet the next morning. In order to get over the border, they hijack a family
traveling in an RV (including Harbey Keitel and Juliette Lewis) and use them as cover From
there, all hell breaks loose, literally. Rodriguez was the perfect person to direct this
movie, as he already stages fight scenes and shootouts in outgrageous fashion. But with
this subject matter, he was able to be deliriously cartoonish. Ridiculously viloent,
emotionally hollow, and absolutely hysterical.
|
|
Independence Day
Independence Day (1996, 20th Century Fox). Redefining the summer Event
Movie with the cash cow of 1996, ID4 was, despite its completely absurd premise, marketed
better than any movie I've ever seen. The teasers started in the second half of the Super
Bowl that year. One small shot of the White House being blown to smithereens, and I was
hooked. When the movie finally came in July, I was foaming at the mouth to see it. Opening
night, a rowdy packed crowd, and after the ten minute special effects orgy where New York,
Los Angeles and Washington DC are decimated, I was so blown away that I didn't even notice
how laughable the dialogue and plot devices were. Nobody goes to see movies like ID4
looking for realism (I mean, come on, uploading a computer virus onto the mother ship?),
and that is why I still stand by Independence Day director Roland Emmerich for building
great tension up to the annihilation sequence, for putting together some mind blowing
special effects, and for creating one of the best movie experiences I've ever had. Not the
best movie, mind you, but the best experience watching a movie.
|
|
Con Air
Con Air (1997, Touchstone). Apparently, Jerry Bruckheimer thought his
previous efforts (Crimson Tide, The Rock, Bad Boys) didn't have enough testosterone in
them, so he creates Con Air, a movie so loaded with homoerotic moments that it makes Top
Gun look like Little Women. Nicolas Cage is Cameron Poe, an Army Ranger sent up the river
for eight years for killing a man in self defense. On the day of his parole, he is sent
home on a flight filled with incorrigibles being transferred to a new maximum security
prison (John Malkovich,the excellent Ving Rhames, and
Steve Buscemi?). Wouldn't you
know it, the bad guys have a plan to take over the flight, and Poe teams up with a Federal
Marshal (John Cusack) to bring them down. The scene where Cage takes care of a friend
who's in dire need of some insulin (Mykelti Williamson) is far more touching than any of
the scenes between him and his wife (Monica Potter). Cage's southern twang is way off
base, which is odd given that he did quite well with one in Raising Arizona. Buscemi gets
most of the laughs in Scott Rosenberg's snappier-than-typical-action-fare screenplay, but
his actions deeply compromise his characters (for such a dreaded killer, why did seem like
such a wuss?). Malkovich can do this stuff in his sleep now. Cusack, however, is exactly
the kind of actor Con Air needs: He brought a level of believability to a movie whose last
twenty minutes border on downright stupid. Despite all of these complaints, I thoroughly
enjoyed Con Air. Classic Jerry Bruckheimer escapist fun.
|
|
The Long Kiss Goodnight
The Long Kiss Goodnight (1996, New Line). Shane Black was paid $3
million for the script for The Long Kiss Goodnight, which is roughly the budget for
Trainspotting, but I digress. Geena Davis stars as a mild mannered housewife do gooder who
can only remember the last eight years of her life. She hires a down and out private
detective (Samuel L. Jackson, who rises above any material he works with) to try and find
out who she used to be. What he discovers, unfortunately, is that she used to be a
ruthless assassin for the government, who was seemingly left for dead. Now that the bad
people have found out she's still alive, Davis is soon running for her life, with her
killing ways slowly coming back to her. This movie all but buried director Renny Harlin's
fledgling reputation is the Finnish Spielberg (a claim I always thought to be extremely
generous, despite his talents), and it also proved to be the last time Davis and Harlin
worked together professionally and personally (the couple divorced soon after this movie's
release). But if you go into it with the right frame of mind, you'll find that this movie
has some spectacular stunts, one pretty nifty explosion scene and has a decent sense of
humor, even if some of it is pretty nasty and mean spirited. It also contains one of the
most famously bad lines of dialogue ever written: When Davis has showdown with her
nemesis, she utters the classic "Suck my dick." Imagine my surprise when, ten
months later, Demi Moore says the same thing in GI Jane.
|
|
Starship Troopers
(1997, Columbia/TriStar). Or, as one magazine called it, Melrose Space.
Anyone who went into this looking for some serious slice of science fiction was sorely
disappointed. They had good reason to expect something more: Troopers director Paul
Verhoven was the man behind sci-fi cult classics Robocop and Total Recall (we'll overlook
that he also directed Showgirls). This time, however, he took the camp route and delivers
a movie with bad dialogue, even worse acting (Did everyone else want to smack Denise
Richards as much as I did?), but some of the most amazing battle sequences ever filmed,
even if one army was completely computer generated. Loosely based on Robert Heinlein's
book about Earth battling the Bugs, a vicious form of arachnid capable of ripping someone
in half even after they've lost half their limbs, Verhoven's film is a neo-Nazi wet dream,
where the military is the only way to earn citizenship (everyone who doesn't serve is
simply a civilian) and everyone wants to join. (The propaganda films scattered throughout
the movie encouraging people to join the army are hysterical) Virtually everyone in the
cast has a connection to Aaron Spelling (Casper Van Dien, Dina Meyer, Neil Patrick Harris,
Richards, Patrick Muldoon), and the "romantic" subplots are useless. But the
fight scenes are dazzling, (check out those giant fire breathing beetles) and there are
some colorful supporting characters that are fun to watch (Jake Busey, Verhoven regular
Michael Ironside). Big, ultraviolent, and incredibly dumb, Starship Troopers is without a
doubt the best ** ½ movie I've ever seen
|
|
True Romance
True Romance-(1993, Warner Bros.) Tony Scott (Top Gun, Crimson Tide),
directs an old screenplay of Quentin Tarantino's (Q used the money from selling this to
help finance Reservoir Dogs) and turns in the best B-movie he's ever made. It starts with
a Detroit kid named Clarence (Christian Slater) with an simple life who falls in love with
a call girl, (Patricia Arquette) gets married, and accidentally wins up with a suitcase
full of cocaine. From there, they head to Los Angeles to try and get rid of it so they can
live the simple life somewhere nicer than Detroit. Arquette is uncannily convincing as the
slightly loopy Alabama Wurley, though she has to utter one of the most painful lines I've
ever heard (even worse than when Andie MacDowell says "Oh, is it raining? I haven't
noticed," in Four Weddings and a Funeral). When she finds out that Clarence has offed
her pimp (an amazing performance by Gary Oldman, a British guy playing an American guy who
acts like a black guy), Alabama tells Clarence "I think what you did was so
romantic," and smothers him with kisses. It's nearly unbearable. But the scene comes
early, and is quickly forgotten. With one of the biggest and best supporting casts ever
assembled (Oldman, Samuel Jackson, Val Kilmer, Brad Pitt, Tom Sizemore, Chris Penn,
Michael Rapaport, etc.), this movie is worth seeing if only for the scene with Slater's
father (Dennis Hopper, in a piece of inspired casting) and a local drug goon (an ice cold
Christpoher Walken). Luckily for us, the rest of thje movie is just as solid. Tarantino's
screenplay is funny, action packed, (director Scott shows off his Top Gun-ish technique
during a roller coaster sequence) and riddled with bullets, ending with a Tarantino
tradition, a Mexican Standoff, though few have the same twist that this one does. A movie,
like the first Terminator, that didn't do well in the theaters but took off on video.
|
|
Frighteners (1996, Universal)
- While summer audience were blown away
by Twister and Independence Day, New Zealand's Peter Jackson put together a completely
different kind of thrill ride. He made The Frighteners, which had a horrible title but was
actually my favorite movie of that summer (Trainspotting running a very close second).
Picture Tim Burton with a mean streak, and youre almost there. The story starts with
Frank (Michael J. Fox), a con artist of sorts who works under the guise of ridding houses
of unwanted guests (as in, ghosts). The thing is, he can see spirits, due to a previous
traumatic experience that killed his wife, and he and the spirits work together to make
the scam look convincing. Things get weird, however, when people start dying inexplicably
all over town and Frank looks like the prime suspect. The culprit is another ghost,
cloaked ominously like the Grim Reaper, but since only Frank can see him, everyone else
thinks hes making it up. Universal marketed this as a horror movie, and I suppose it
is, but its more creepy than scary (nothing like the first twenty minutes of Scream,
at least) and very funny as well. And Jackson is a master with special effects. The scene
where Frank is chased by the Grim Reaper is stunning. The supporting cast was giddy fun as
well. (Jake Busey looking more like his dad than ever, and a hilarious R. Lee Ermey as a
dead Marine Sargent) The Frighteners is a unique film that never really fit into any
specific genre, and because of that wound up being overlooked by everybody. But I got a
big kick out of it. Rent it over Halloween if you want to be thrilled more than scared,
and get a few laughs at the same time.
|
|
|