Monday, December 28, 2009

Sherlock Holmes (2009)

Tagline: Nothing escapes him.


Curiosity: The guy from Iron Man, the director from Snatch, and some other people made a movie about Sherlock Holmes.


Plot: This ain’t your momma’s Holmes (except it sort of is?). Detective, martial artist, and nutjob Sherlock Holmes (Robert Downey Jr.) and his hetero life mate, the mustachioed gambling addict Dr. Watson (Jude Law), are in the middle of a trial separation after bringing down fellow nutjob Lord Blackwood (Sunshine’s Mark Strong). But they rejoin at the junk when Blackwood returns… FROM THE MOTHAHUGGIN’ GRAVE. This is bad, since 1) Blackwood promised Holmes that more people would die prior to his own hanging and 2) Watson totally pronounced Blackwood dead and now er’rybody is gonna think he’s a crappy doctor oh nos. Into this kafuffle enters Irene Adler (Rachel McAdams), the only lady to ever best Holmes… in bed (oh snap). She wants to help stop Blackwood, but she’s also got this thing? This thing involving a dark past and a mysterious employer? That might be important later.


Thoughts: Let me preface this by saying that I know it’s really the other way around, but holy crap Sherlock Holmes plays out like a bastard mix of the Batman films. Part Batman Begins’ gritty modernization (and, SPOILER ALERT, ending), part Tim Burton’s “I don’t really feel like establishing the characters or their relationships” original (but, alas, no Prince songs). I know, I know; Bob Kane cribbed the “world’s greatest detective” bit from Arthur Conan Doyle and then added a dash of Zorro. But through the magical world of cinema and adaptation, Holmes, a character that’s influenced the last 100 years of storytelling, comes off feeling a little hackneyed.


That’s not to say that Downey fails in the role, though. He actually kicks quite a bit of ass, and his chemistry with Law is delicious, even if his scenes with McAdams seem dead by comparison (I’d rather watch Batman and Catwoman go at it). Director Guy Ritchie highlights certain aspects of Doyle’s character directly from the books – he’s twitchy, neurotic, a good fighter, a better tactician, and just spastic enough that you’d believe he was a cocaine addict, just like in the books, even though the film never directly states whether or not Holmes is into drugs. Downey embodies these qualities perfectly. Same goes for Law – the film drops the bumbling Watson that originated in the ’30s for someone a bit more reliable, making Holmes something of a Victorian buddy cop picture.


But solid casting can’t quite save a sorry story. Holmes starts off exhilarating enough – scenes of Holmes planning out every minute step of a fight scene or two are welcome – but the movie eventually gets bogged down in exposition. It’s repetitive. Too much talking, not enough shirtlessness.


Yum!


Reflection: …I’m gonna see the sequel, though…

Friday, December 25, 2009

The Star Wars Holiday Special (1978)

Tagline: Luke Skywalker and Han Solo battle evil Imperial forces to help Chewbacca reach his imperiled family on the Wookiee planet – in time for Life Day, their most important day of the year!


Curiosity: It is the single most reviled moment in Star Wars history. Yes, more than Attack of the Clones. When I decided to do a week of shitty Christmas movies, this was the first title that popped into my head.


Plot: Imperial forces are pursuing Chewbacca (Peter Mayhew) and Han Solo (Harrison Ford), much to Chewie’s dismay as he’s trying to make it home for Life Day, the vague Wookie equivalent of Christmas or Hanukah or whatever. Meanwhile, his wife Malla, father Attichitcuk, and son Lumpawarrump grow anxious when Chewie doesn’t show. They become so anxious that the show follows their exchanges for about 10 minutes. That’s right, the first scene after the opening credits consists of 10 minutes worth of Wookies doing that weird mix of walruses, bears, and whatever the fuck. If only Wall-E could be this ambitious in its defiance of dialogue. From there, the Wookie clan divides time between preparing for Life Day and trying to find Chewie. Musical numbers, surprisingly bloodless battles with stormtroopers, and weird sex fetishes abound. Boba Fett does some stuff too.


Thoughts: The Star Wars Holiday Special has only been officially shown once, when it aired on CBS in 1978. It has never been rebroadcast or officially released on VHS, Laserdisc, DVD, or Blu-ray. You can watch the entire special – just shy of two hours with commercials – below. Merry fucking Christmas, assholes.

I have two regrets in watching this: 1) I didn’t see it in its entirety until after the new trilogy broke my heart and 2) I wasn’t drunk during the viewing. Even with the new films taken into consideration, TSWHS is by far the worst Star Wars installment. Oddly enough, even though George Lucas hates it and had next to nothing to do with it, he still considers it canon. That means this really did take place in between A New Hope and The Empire Strikes Back. Ugh.


I entered the film with high hopes for low culture, though. And for the first half-hour or so, the special really is surreal tits a go-go. The whole cast is introduced as actors, except R2D2 is billed as himself. Like I said before, the first major scene is completely English-free. The Wookies roar and grunt at each other for a long-ass time. Little Lumpy watches some sort of futuristic Cirque de Soleil shit on his holoboard. It’s trippy enough on its own, even more so given its surroundings. Ford’s line readings are deliciously flat; he clearly does not care.


But the best moment comes when Attichitcuk gets a virtual reality doohickey from Shaun Dann (Art Carney, The Honeymooners… this guy is so much better than the special deserves) and pretty much uses it to have virtual sex… with a black chick (Diahann Carroll). Sample line: “Oh yes, I can feel my creation!” It’s the most beautiful yet horrifying scene, letting Star Wars fans know that Wookie males also grow up to be old pervs.


After the first 30 minutes, though, the film pretty much nosedives. Lumpy watches a Star Wars cartoon that’s actually good, all things considered, but other than that it’s Shit City, Kashyyyk. Stormtroopers stormtroop up and menace the Wookies. Carrie Fischer sings a song. Bea Arthur sings a song. And some bald guy from a “lady garments” company shames the crap out of me during the commercial break. Which reminds me – there are more commercials for pantyhose than there are for toys or cars. I’d say WTF, but that phrase belongs to many other moments in the special.


Reflection: Wookie-bation is the best ’bation?

Thursday, December 24, 2009

Santa Claus Conquers the Martians (1964)

Tagline: Santa brings Christmas Fun to Mars!


Curiosity: It’s such a legendarily awful Christmas movie.


Plot: Troubled that his children are losing their identities due to Mars’ increasingly technology-based society, Kimar (Leonard Hicks) travels to Earth to capture Santa Claus (John Call) after seeing an interview with him on Earth TV. He successfully kidnaps St. Nick, as well as two human children, Billy (Victor Stiles) and Betty (Donna Conforti). On the way back to Mars, the traitorous Voldar (Vincent Beck) tries blasting Santa out the airlock (like in Alien!) only to realize THAT HE CANNOT BE KILLED. Santa survives the trip to the Red Planet and forces Kimar’s kids into fits of uncomfortable, troubling laughter. But all is not well, as Voldar plots to kill Kris Kringle.


Thoughts: I’ve seen some ludicrous motion pictures in my day, but Santa Claus Conquers the Martians might be the most preposterous (Preposterous I say!). The Martians all speak English, their technology makes no sense, and the ease with which Santa teaches Martian children to love makes me wonder why Kimar traveled to Earth in the first place.


This is also one of the creepiest movies I’ve ever seen. Maybe I’m just put off by Santa thanks to working near drunken imposters in my days as a mall employee, but John Call’s interaction with the child actors here is damn off-putting. Fast-forward to 6:40 and try not to be skeeved out:




Santa Claus Conquers the Martians - MST3K
by SFLTV


WHY ARE YOU LAUGHING? DAMN YOU.


At the same time, though, I have overflowing love for Kimar’s bungling robot from the film’s North Pole scenes. I also found his freeze ray interesting, in that no beam/special effect occurs whatsoever when it fires at a person. I like to think it emits a signal that induces a brain fart or something, providing the one kernel of plausibility in this Christian sci-fi epic.


Reflection: Voldar is a lousy terrorist. Also, ya know what, here's the whole MST3K episode. Happy holidays:



Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Santa's Slay (2005)

Tagline: Spreading holiday fear this Christmas.


Curiosity: Nick Elmer promised me that professional wrestler Bill Golberg would star as Santa Claus, the murderous son of Satan.


Plot: After a murderous introduction, we learn that Santa (Golberg) loves to kill people regardless of their placement on the naughty/nice list. Meanwhile, teenage delicatessen employee Nicholas Yuleson (Douglas Smith) is trying to navigate the murky depths of romance with Mary (Emilie de Ravin, Lost, Roswell). They eventually bond over the Christmas spirit, or rather the lack of it. Nicholas lives with his grandfather (Robert Culp), and that guy hates Xmas to the max. Like, he wouldn’t even buy Nicholas an Optimus Prime action figure. What a humbugger!


But when Santa starts murderizing strippers, Nicholas realizes that maybe his grandpa wasn’t such a crazy Scrooge after all…


Thoughts: I’ll say it now. Santa’s Slay peaks with its ridiculous opening scene:




Yeah, that’s right; Goldberg just murdered Fran “The Nanny” Drescher and James Caan – mother-hugging Sonny from The Godfather! He survived Misery! Still, this opener is pure comic-horror greatness, and it’s kind of better than the rest of the movie, which gets bogged down in concepts like “plot” and “backstory.”


The film never quite recaptures its madcap magic from the first scene, but it does add some appreciated touches along the way. Santa’s reindeer turn out to be… a demon buffalo thingy? The fate of the world is nearly dictated by… curling? Santa’s origin can be explained by… a Rankin/Bass-style stop-motion animation involving curling?


The script is a bit weak, so it’s up to the cast to carry the material. Golberg is about as good in the title role as one could reasonably expect him to be. Dave Thomas (Strange Brew, SCTV) improbably shows up as an adulterous pastor. The other leads are… good enough OK dot dot dot question mark. Smith comes off as a dick, but that might be inherent in Nicholas’ character. I can’t believe Culp (the original I Spy) is here, but that goes for pretty much the whole cast. de Ravin is solid though, to the point that I’m willing to forget the major deus ex machina ending her character brings about. Still, though, whenever Santa kills people – even non-Christians – I chuckled a bit.


Reflection: Holy crap – according to scholarly source Wikipedia, Golberg met his future wife on the set of Santa’s Slay. Also, I still don’t know how to spell “delicatessen.”

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Christmas on Mars (2008)

Tagline: A fantastical film freakout featuring The Flaming Lips.


Curiosity: Please see above.


Plot: Christmas time is approaching at an American base on Mars, but there is little reason to celebrate. First, the crewmember chosen to play Santa Claus for a Christmas pageant (Kenny Coyne) goes insane and commits suicide. Then, the device that generates oxygen for the base breaks. With the crewmembers’ sanity deteriorating and the birth of the first space baby from an artificial womb in jeopardy, Syrtis (Steven Drozd) can’t figure out how to pull everything together. Then he meets a pretty psychedelic alien (Wayne Coyne).


Thoughts: OK, wow. Strap in. You know how The Flaming Lips’ albums are bright, Technicolor showstoppers? Yeah, Christmas on Mars is the opposite. It has less in common with Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots than it does, say, Eraserhead. Actually, it’s a lot like Eraserhead, in that both films are slow, took way too much time to complete, were shot in grainy black and white, and are really, really quiet until something super fucked up happens:


Yeah, that’s a marching band with vaginas for heads. Not pictured is the part where they crush a baby’s head with their feet. Which reminds me, the crewmembers’ hallucinations are truly horrifying, because they dream of demon-vaginas ALL THE GOT-DAMN TIME. Sex-ed teachers could show this film in class and it would make abstinence seem like the only logical, not-pants-shittingly frightening option.


The film is awfully slow, which makes the scary parts that much scarier. The majority of scenes consist of a mumbley guy (usually Drozd) and a guy who curses all the time (pretty much everyone else except for Coyne and Fred Armisen, whose non-vaginality is welcome) talking about whatever the fuck, then some walking, and then something REALLY LOUD AND PSYCHEDELIC AND VAGINAL HAPPENS. Seriously, this movie has got vaginas for days. I think there’s a pro-Christmas moral in there somewhere too.


Reflection: Song titles from the soundtrack include “In Excelsior Vaginalistic” and “The Gleaming Armament of Marching Genitalia.” So, I guess I should have known what I was in for.



Monday, December 21, 2009

The Angel of Pennsylvania Avenue (1996)

Tagline: This is the first time I’ve been unable to find a tagline for a film. Damn you, cable movie studio RHI Entertainment and your refusal to “sell” your art!


Curiosity: When I was told that President Herbert Hoover (Thomas Peacocke) helps a trio of runaway kids save their father, I naturally assumed it would A) be set in modern times and therefore B) feature Hoover’s ghost in all manner of spoOoOoky Christmas fun. Like, Hoover has to earn his entry into heaven/make up for the Great Depression by helping these kids. It would be great! I was, sadly, wrong on both points. Forever.


Plot: Apparently, Detroit always sucked, as laid off family man Angus Feagan (Robert Urich) has to travel all the way to Kansas City to find work at a factory… just two weeks before Christmas, which I’m told is a very important day. Once he shows up for an interview, though, Angus finds out that the job posting he found was bogus. After a riot, he gets arrested for attacking a factory worker, even though he’s innocent. Back home in Michigan, Angus’ daughter, Bernice (Tegan Moss), freaks the fuck out and sets off for Washington, D.C. with her sister Lilly (Brittney Irvin) and brother asshole Jack (Alexander Pollock). Their mission: Use an emotional appeal to convince President Hoover to pardon their papa.


Thoughts: Setting aside my disappointment over the lack of Ghost-Hoover, The Angel of Pennsylvania Avenue is a mighty piss-poor film. First of all, most of the American characters are portrayed by Canadians! Is this how minorities feel when they watch Alfred Molina? It’s weird, man. Plus, Hoover – the supposed angel of Pennsylvania Ave. – is only in the film for like five, maybe 10 minutes. Furthermore, there are so many times these kids should’ve died. My gosh, how did they avoided having their organs harvested for the black market, I don’t know.


Ah, but here’s my biggest complaint: Jack. Fuck that kid. In the great tradition of asshole boys, Jack doesn’t really seem to care much about his father’s wellbeing. When Bernice and Lilly hatch their plan to save their dad, he nearly sells them out to their mother (Diana Scarwid) out of spite because they want him to stay home. They allow him to come along, but for a second there, he almost condemns his father to hell. HELL! Later, he forces his siblings to stop their frantic journey to save Angus so he can watch a puppet show. What a gosh dang asshole.


Also of note: As it turns out, The Angel of Pennsylvania Avenue is loosely based on a true story – Bernice Feagan was a real girl who really asked the real President Hoover to really pardon her real father. The only difference is that A) she wrote him a letter instead of running away from home, B) Hoover responded right away because he saw the pardon as a publicity stunt, which was greatly needed given that he might have helped ruin the country, C) her dad’s name was actually Charles, and D) he sorta kinda maybe was arrested for car theft. But whatever! It’s uplifting! Lift!


Reflection: I love Christmas films that only vaguely explain why I should care about Christmas, so in that regard, I guess The Angel of Pennsylvania Avenue is a success.


Sunday, December 20, 2009

Jingle All the Way (1996)

Tagline: Two Dads, One Toy, No Prisoners.


Curiosity: It’s Arnold Brownschwagger and Sinbad in a movie about how kids make Christmas suck. It’s the kind of film that sums up everything I’ve ever felt.


Plot: Hardworking dad Howard (Schwarzenegger) can only find one way to get his shitty son Jamie (Jake Lloyd) to love him: through material possessions. Sadly, all of his attempts to build a stable home environment and college fund for his son are for naught, as the only thing Jamie craves is a Turboman doll. Love, security, education… these things hold no meaning to Jamie and his twisted plastic addiction. It’s not until Howard’s wife Liz (Rita Wilson) mentions that the toy will be neigh impossible to find this time of year that he realizes the hell he has entered.


The next morning – Christmas Eve – he embarks on a journey of epic Lord of the Rings proportions to find the got-damned toy. His enemies are many: Myron (Sinbad), a rival father also looking for the action figure; Officer Hummell (Robert Conrad), the malicious cop looking to abuse his authority over Howard; Ted (Phil Hartman), a neighborhood lothario out to seduce Liz; and Santa Claus (James Belushi), a mysterious man who may not be what he seems.


Thoughts: At a tight 85 minutes, Jingle All the Way never stops punishing Howard with one obstacle after another, building towards a series of twists that no one could possibly see coming. There’s just no gosh dang way. Yet he pushes, oh Lord how he pushes. That’s what gives Jingle All the Way its inspirational edge; Howard’s determination to get the job done. At the same time, though, this is one of the saddest Christmas movies I’ve ever seen. Forget The Christmas Shoes; Jingle All the Way is about one man’s insane devotion to his child, which is depressing because of how irredeemably terrible that child is. Jamie yell-whines at everyone and everything without the slightest provocation. He has a Captain America mural in his freaking room, a room that just so happens to be located in a nice house in a nice neighborhood. In a town riddled with single parents, his folks somehow make it work in spite of Howard’s stressful job. None of this matters to him. Jamie is a self-centered addict. One day he is going to harvest his mother’s organs for the black market, just so he can placate his Dragonzord fix. Unbelievable.


Reflection: I think I’ve stumbled upon a trend in Schwarzenegger films: The shitty kid. There are exceptions – Edward Furlong in T2: Judgment Day and the unborn fetus from Junior – but I think Kindergarten Cop has enough crappy tots to balance that out. I must conduct more research.


Gremlins (1984)

Tagline: What you see... isn’t always what you get.


Curiosity: I haven’t watched this film in like 15 years; I’d say it’s due for a revisiting.


Plot: Inventor Randall Peltzer (Hoyt Axton) is trying to hock some of his creations when he stumbles upon a mysterious creature called a mogwai (Howie Mandel). It’s cute, fluffy, and named Gizmo, and it would make a perfect Christmas gift for Peltzer’s son, Billy (Zach Galligan). After Gizmo’s owner, Mr. Wing (Keye Luke), refuses on the grounds that mogwai are too difficult to raise, his grandson (John Louie) sneaks the pet out and gives to Randall. There are three key rules for raising mogwai:


  1. Don’t let it near bright light, especially direct sunlight.
  2. Don’t let it touch water.
  3. Don’t feed it after midnight.


When Billy botches these guidelines, there’s shenanigans a-doing.


Thoughts: I’m really surprised my parents let me watch Gremlins when I was a kid. While it was only rated PG, it’s awfully violent. Of course, given that it’s a horror-comedy from director Joe Dante (The Howling, Piranha), I guess I should’ve known. Still, there were so many scenes that I flat out did not remember: Mrs. Peltzer (Frances Lee McCain) brutally slaughtering three gremlins in a row. Phoebe Cates’ disturbing monologue about her dad. The presence of Corey Feldman. On a really uncomfortable note, I never picked up on the quasi-racist “Ancient Chinese secret” tone of the film’s opening scene before. The ’80s were a great time for making Western films that totally bullshitted Chinese culture (Helloooo Big Trouble in Little China).


Gosh dang do I love this movie, for the reasons above and more. The cast is great, and Gizmo looks awesome. He is legitimately adorable, and I would totally buy a mogwai if they A) were real and B) didn’t come with the three rules attached. I just know I’d fuck that up within 24 hours. Gremlins strikes me as yet another childhood favorite that could never be made today, in that no one would be able to handle the violence, dark humor, slapstick, and (potential) racism. Well, maybe Guillermo del Toro, but I’ve yet to see him handle comedy. He’d prolly CG Gizmo anyway. Boo-urns.


Reflection: Got-damn I love my mom and dad.


Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Stick It (2006)

Tagline: It’s not called gym-nice-tics.


Curiosity: This one was my buddy Drew’s doing. Although, seriously, it’s a gymnastics film written/directed by Jessica Bendinger (Bring It On) and starring Jeff Bridges (Tron, Tron Legacy).


Plot: After getting arrested for the umpteenth time, rebellious extreme sports enthusiast Haley (Missy Peregrym) has two options – attend military school or a gymnastics academy run by Burt Vickerman (Bridges), who has a reputation for pushing his students to the point of injury. Her father forces her to go to the latter. There, Haley chafes the craw of everyone around her, from Vickerman (“No one cares what you do,” he tells her often) to fellow students like Joanne (Vanessa Lengies). Over time, though, her sassy brand of independence teaches her peers that gymnastics can be a sport about individuality instead of a forced routine meant to entertain the evil, baby-killing judges in this heartwarming tale of feminism or whatever.


Thoughts: While I generally hate the phrase, “guilty pleasure” sums up my appreciation for Stick It, as it liberally uses one of my biggest pet peeves, narration, to skip over character development. Everything we know about Haley’s family and gymnastics outside of Vickerman’s gym comes from narration. Speaking of Vickerman, we’re told that he’s a terrible coach with a knack for hurting his students, yet he never exhibits those qualities during the film’s 103 minute running time. The narration is lame.


And yet, when Electric Six comes on and the spinning, flying, psychedelic gymnastic visuals kick in, I don’t care. Let the record show that this is the first “bad” movie discussed here that my girlfriend actually liked. Oh sure, she spent the first hour or so trying to figure out why I was so absorbed in a film geared towards 13-year-old girls, but once the athleticism kicked in, she was astounded. More importantly, she was entertained by the way strong female characters subverted authority figures – BAM INSTANT FEMINIST MANIFESTO I WIN. This shit is uplifting, I’m a good person, the end forever.


Reflection: Seriously, who thought to include “Dancer Commander?” Fast-forward to 4:11:


Monday, November 30, 2009

so this is christmas.

Let's brainstorm, ya'll. I had a lot of fun doing a month of horror films in October for Halloween. I want to try something similar but less ambitious for Christmas: seven films for the week of Jesus Day: Birth Edition. I have five that I am absolutely going to do. There are two others that I'm on the fence about, so I wanted to reach out for idears. Send me an e-mail at pelonej1@gmail.com and help me pick two pretty awful, kinda hilarious Christmas films.

Braindead / Dead Alive (1992)

Tagline: Some things won’t stay down... even after they die.


Curiosity: Peter Jackson may have a bunch of Oscars on his mantelpiece now, but he was once a pretty gross horror/cult icon.


Plot: Set in 1957, Lionel Cosgrove (Timothy Balme) leads a fairly sheltered life under his mum’s (Elizabeth Moody) oppressive thumb when he Latin meets love interest Paquita (Diana PeƱalver). They go on a date to the local New Zealand zoo, where Lionel’s mum is bitten by a Sumatran Rat-Monkey. The alleged product of a rat raping a monkey, the Rat-Monkey infects Mrs. Cosgrove, effectively turning her into a zombie. Ever the momma’s boy, Lionel tries to keep her condition hidden, but as her infection spreads to more people, that becomes a lonely, grisly goal.


Thoughts: Holy fucking shit. Jackson lets viewers know early on that he’s gonna go for gore, but that didn’t prepare me for this [skip to the six-minute mark if you want]:



Gaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa he gets just the right mix of puss and blood. And that’s not even the grossest part! The film’s final 15 minutes or so are a symphony of bad taste (not to be confused with Jackson’s 1987 film, Bad Taste), not that I’d want to spoil anything. Braindead needs to be spoken of sparingly so as to preserve its shock value, but I will throw out some tidbits: “I kick ass for the Lord,” zombie sex, and the weirdest day in a park with a baby I’ve ever seen. I’m intentionally leaving out one particularly gross gag at the end, but surely the phrase “zombie sex” has already piqued you? Remember, once you see it, you can’t unsee it.


It’s because of the film’s ridiculously traumatic imagery that I found myself loving Balme in the lead role, though. As insane as the story gets, dude’s reactions during what must be the shittiest week in his life seem pretty plausible to me. And really, when this happens:


Wouldn’t you be making faces like this:


Reflection: My dad almost walked in on the zombie sex scene. So, that was fun.

Sunday, November 29, 2009

Beverly Hills Ninja (1997)

Tagline: Kung fool! Ha ha get it?!


Curiosity: I’m still trying to figure out why people love Chris Farley. Also, Mortal Kombat star Robin Shou has a supporting role. Mortal freaking Kombat, with the fatalities and the techno and the punching Goro in the balls.


Plot: As a baby, Haru (Farley) was rescued by a ninja clan. While they initially suspect that he might fulfill an ancient prophecy about a foreigner who goes on to become a master ninja, time reveals Haru to be a clumsy, obese, and poor student. Still, his sensei, named Sensei (Soon-Tek Oh), tries to take care of Haru as best he can. So, when Haru leaves for Beverly Hills to investigate a murder mystery at the behest of buxom beauty Sally Jones (Nicollette Sheridan), Sensei sends his best pupil, Gobei (Shou), to look after him. Given that A) Haru is not a good ninja and B) Sally Jones may or may not be bullshitting about her name. Will Haru ever become a ninja master? Will he be able to stop Sally’s baddie boyfriend Martin Tanley (Nathaniel Parker)? Will fattie fall down go boom?


Thoughts: At this point, I’ve logged about 70 films for SNC. All of them were of questionable taste in one way or another, but some were just so got-damned hilarious or action-packed that I would have watched them whether or not I meant to comment on them. Not so with Beverly Hills Ninja, a film that I struggled through entirely because of this blog. I know Tommy Boy is revered in some circles, but Jesus Christ on Hot Cross Buns, who the hell thinks Farley’s shtick is amusing 24/7? Don’t get me wrong; he could be funny in small doses. But his reliance on lame site gags and physical comedy could never sustain a leading role in a full-length film. He was never exactly Peter Sellers.


Then again, I’ve read that Farley wasn’t happy with Beverly Hills Ninja, so I suppose I can cut him a little slack here. After all, he didn’t write the damned thing. He didn’t necessarily come up with the hacky, quasi-racist premise. At the same time, though, it’s hard for me to separate this from any of his other material. Pretty much every Farley role consisted of a “fat guy + job” formula (See: fat cop in Airheads, fat roadie in Wayne’s World 2, fat North American frontiersman looking to best Lewis and Clark in Almost Heroes). Oddly enough, I can only think of one role – his last – where his weight had nothing to do with his character, that being his supporting turn in Dirty Work.


Reflection: There is no reflection. Only hate.