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July 17, 2010

OCEAN'S 11


Your July Unrandom Movie Club Results Are In!

Tagline: You wouldn't call it a gang. Just Danny Ocean and his 11 pals - the night they blew all the lights in Las Vegas!...

Pizza: Little Toni's

Preshow Entertainment: None






OCEAN'S 11
MAY STAR
FRANK SINATRA, BUT
IT WAS ME WHO FELT LIKE
THE CHAIRMAN OF THE BORED


Los Angeles has some eateries that people swear by, like hot dog landmark Pink's, where at any hour of the day and night lines snake down the block. The truth is, Pink's makes a good doggie, but it ain't the king of the pack. Not even close. People have an innate desire to attach themselves to both history and tradition, even though they weren't there for either. And that's how I feel about the Rat Pack movie OCEAN'S 11 (1960). It's all about the time period and the personalities, because if you stripped those away, you're left with a truly terrible hot dog.

It's not just that the plot is ridiculous, it's that the movie itself is, well, not really a movie. No drama, suspense, action, romance or even humor. It's two hours and change of people talking and nothing happening, which is a no-no since this is meant to be a caper movie. Confounding me more than anything...how can a Rat Pack movie be so swaggerless?

PoolTable-Color

Frank Sinatra, Sr. plays Danny Ocean. Good thing his name wasn't Danny Mandelbaum, or we'd be watching a movie called MANDELBAUM'S 11. Danny's a wiseass WWII vet who, a la the Blues Brothers, is bringing the band back together again, this time for a heist...a heist that any living organism right down to a cell on a cuticle of a schnauzer would realize is impossible to pull off. At best, it's an insane notion. Not only that, but their sliver of a plan, which would require years of prep, is to be executed in the next few days. Maybe their stint in the army has left them with Post Dramatic Stress Syndrome (Rimshot!). The plan is to rob five casinos...in one night...at midnight...on New Year's Eve...all in 10 minutes. But while the players casually yap about this heist, we realize we're the ones being robbed. Why? Because they're cocky and bratty and spoiled, and...they are criminals. Now I'm all for rooting for criminals (Go Leon, Luke, Butch and Clyde!), but there needs to be something about them to like, or at the very least, understand. All we know about these guys is that they're entitled idiots. It's my least favorite type of person in the real world as well as movies, so why would I want to watch them get away with a theft?

There's so much margin for error in nearly everything they do, like sneaking into the back rooms of all five casinos to rewire their alarm systems, but they never address any of that. They're betting against the house, and you know what that means. And again, these guys are dopes. Case in point; while the whole city is looking for them, they decide to smuggle money out in a coffin. So to keep their plan a secret, they call it...Operation Pinebox. They might as well have called it Operation We Are The Thieves And The Money Is In The Coffin.

Okay, I'll stop getting mad about being insulted by O11's plotless plot. Now I'll move on to this; where the hell is the entertainment in this movie? What's that you say? It's the Rat Pack and they can make any movie they want and get away with it? No one will care? Well I care. And just like their screen characters, they can rob anyone they want and get away with it. So now I'm calling them out on it, easy for me to do now that they're all dead, I suppose.

Sammy-Truck

The rest of the Rat Pack is on board. Sammy Davis, Jr. plays garbageman Josh, who, on a break, manages to sing to his fellow workers (EE-O-LEVIN, one of the only highlights of the film). Peter Lawford is Jimmy Foster, still living off the money of millionaire mommy. Joey Bishop plays Mushy Connors...I'm not sure what his story is. Dino gets to sing AIN'T THAT A KICK IN THE HEAD after somehow getting a job as a singer at a casino on New Year's Eve (I guess they had no one booked for New Year's Eve). Others get jobs as porters, collecting ashes from ashtrays. Ya know...it's not that easy to get these jobs the day before New Year's. Sadly, what could have been a smart and fun caper movie is nothing more than an Elvis movie. And it's top-heavy beyond belief. It's nearly one hour into O11 before they ever mention what the plan is.

So they knock out a power line which will black out the casinos for a full ten minutes (that's enough time, right?). All I kept thinking of is that when Sinatra died, they blacked out the strip in his honor for ten minutes, and how cool it would have been for someone to have robbed some casinos during that honorary blackout. Anyway...

But can they be stopped? Or caught? Even with the police setting up a city-wide dragnet? And ex-gangster/current fiance to Jimmy Foster's mom Duke Santos' (Cesar Romero) promise to the casinos that he'd get their money back?

Romero

Also included in this great cast is Angie Dickinson as Danny's wife (backstory that doesn't quite help the film at all). There are also some great cameos, like George Raft as a casino owner and the great Red Skelton (one of two cast members who go by "Red," vibe man Norvo being the second) who plays himself. Shirley MacLaine shows up during a quick break on THE APARTMENT to do a few minutes of screen time. It's said Jack Warner gave her a car for that.


MacLaine

I did love the way the various casinos' names and logos were written on the insides of all of the safes as well as on the garbage cans (cans that you'd find on a suburban street rather than a casino's maintenance area, you know, the kind Top Cat and Oscar hung out in). But the love of a couple of garbage cans doesn't a good movie make. I mean, the film didn't really kick in until maybe an hour and forty five minutes. And we only laughed once all night - when reporter Don Murphy (Tom Middleton) came on sporting his hipster beard. We all lost it.

There are those who love O11. I'm sure Tarantino's a fan (see above). Many love the O. Henry ending, which I saw as a rip-off of Kubrick's THE KILLING, released four years earlier. Others just like the time period and the Vegas travelogue, an argument that seems thin, as there are documentaries on old Vegas that have much better footage.

Like their characters (once again), the Rat Pack were often spoiled brats who used Vegas as their sandbox. Yet somehow they're now romanticized. This is not to say they weren't talented. They all had amazing amounts of talent. Sinatra? Sammy? Wow. Man, I even love Joey Bishop. So it's weird for me. I love the Rat Pack, yet I hate the Rat Pack. But getting back to them being babies; it's widely known that the only reason they made this movie was so they could hang out with each other, drink, chase women and make a lot of money. They had the power to do so, but if that's your reason to make a movie, you're in danger of making a bad movie. Cases in point, when a scene was taking too long, Sinatra actually tore pages out of the script. He was also notorious (though not exclusive to O11) for doing just one take. Add to this that all of them were doing two shows a night (for under $6, you got to see them in a small room...and that came with dinner!) at the Sands. They'd get off work at 2am and be shooting by 3am. Then they'd gamble, drink and play around. Okay, okay, I guess I'm just jealous.

O11 was directed by Lewis Milestone (ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT), who had to concede on creativity more than once just to keep the kids happy. But who wrote OCEAN'S 11? Well, that depends on who you ask. Frank Sinatra, Jr. (who actually calls his dad "Sinatra") says it was a book (untrue). Others say a gas station attendant gave the script to Frank Sinatra when he was getting gas. Others will tell you that Peter Lawford bought the idea for 10K (from either said gas station guy or from producer Gilbert Kay, again, depending on who you ask). But I believe the true story to be that it was a spec written by George Clayton Johnson (Yep...he of the TWILIGHT ZONE scripts) and Jack Golden Russell (sounds like a dog pedigree breed name to me). It was rewritten by others, including (supposedly) Billy Wilder. That breaks my heart. Really, Billy?

Sinatra-Martin-Lawford-HotelRoom

One of the highest grossing films of the year, OCEAN'S 11 is more of a testament to who they were and the times they were in. People were becoming looser, less square. The Civil Rights Movement was brewing. Change was in the air. There was an audacity of hope. Camelot was approaching and the Rat Pack was part of it, as Lawford married Kennedy's sister and Sinatra pimped for Kennedy.

So yes, you can tell me that OCEAN'S 11 is an important movie for its time. And you can tell me that it's the Rat Pack and they are ring-a-ding cool cats. And you can tell me it's great to see Vegas in its heyday. I'm with you on all that. But don't you dare tell me OCEAN'S 11 is a good movie. Because it's not. Now if you'll excuse me, I'm off to Pink's for the best hot dog around.

HAPPY 11th ANNIVERSARY!


LIKE NIGEL TUFNEL'S MARSHALL AMP,
RANDOM MOVIE CLUB

ALSO GOES TO 11


That's right, RMC is now 11 years old. That means Polanski will be taking an interest in us any day now.

I've said it before and I'll say it again - Random Movie Club is awesome. No, it's more than awesome. It's moresome. At RMC, we have feasted on BANANAS, DUCK SOUP and RUMBLEFISH. We've been ATTACKed by MARS and THE 50 FOOT WOMAN. We've separated the CHILDREN OF MEN from the BOYS FROM BRAZIL. We've watched two KIDS - one FROM LEFT FIELD, the other from CINCINNATI. We saw ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO'S NEST and TWO FOR THE ROAD. We watched as MAX got MAD and as SAM PLAYED IT AGAIN. We ogled BROTHERS that were BLUE and a RIVER that was RED. We watched a TREE GROW IN BROOKLYN and a RUMBLE IN THE BRONX. The final score? STALAG 17 - SPIDER-MAN 3. Yup. When you show up at Random Movie Club, you never know what the hell you're going to see until it lights up on the screen.

So thanks for supporting us! And remember to spread the word. For everyone you sign up, we will donate, well, we won't donate anything. But we sure will like you even more than we already do. And get this - now people can sign up for write-ups directly at RandomMovieClub.com! Actually, that's been true for years, I was just trying to make it sound exciting. You can also click a link on the RMC site (or just click HERE) to buy the new line of RMC Apparel designed by Selena Gomez! Well, okay, not really, but you can buy some tee shirts. Just look at how hot these RMCers look in theirs!

Awesome RMC Swag Models

Once again, I'd like to thank you for playing along. Whether you make it to the screenings or simply follow along at home, thank you thank you thank you.


July 03, 2010

POLTERGEIST

Your July Random Movie Club Results Are In!

Tagline: They're here.

Preshow Entertainment: THINGS THAT AREN'T HERE ANYMORE

Pizza: Joe Peeps





"THEY'RE HERE," THEY'RE SHEER, GET USED TO IT.

OR YOU CAN SIMPLY MOVE OUT.


Another great crowd. I was surprised there were people here who had never seen POLTERGEIST, and even more surprised that some attendees didn't like the movie. I love it.

1982 was a great year for movies. True, we lost Vic Morrow - but who cares, we got Thora Birch! We also got FAST TIMES AT RIDGEMONT HIGH, TOOTSIE, MISSING, ONE FROM THE HEART, AN OFFICER AND A GENTLEMEN, GANDHI, THE WALL and THE WORLD ACCORDING TO GARP (saw those last two on the same day), ROCKY III, THE YEAR OF LIVING DANGEROUSLY, VICTOR/VICTORIA, BLADE RUNNER (not for me, sadly), THE THING, STAR TREK II (the only good one, right?), NIGHT SHIFT, SOPHIE'S CHOICE, MY FAVORITE YEAR (yay!), FRANCES, DINER, and of course, the greatest movie in the world, BUTTERFLY.

We also got a little movie Spielberg made called E.T. I said "little movie" not to be cute, but because that's what Spielberg himself thought - that POLTERGEIST, which he produced (Tobe Hooper directed), would be the huge movie and E.T. the small one. He was wrong. The-little-alien-that-could beat the shit out of the ghost (and every movie) at the box office...by a lot. Looking back, it's hard to believe that POLTERGEIST and E.T. were released one week apart. Anyway, this is not to say POLTERGEIST failed...it was still in the top ten of '82. Makes sense, because POLTERGEIST is scary good.

While a family sleeps, a being, not human, skulks around their house. Starting in the living room, where dad has fallen asleep in front of the TV, it then makes its way upstairs to the kids' rooms, enticed by leftover potato chips like E.T. to Reese's Pieces. Its name is E. Buzz, and he's the family dog. And the family is The Freelings.

The Freelings live in pop-culture infested suburbia (mom sings a Miller beer jingle as she puts a Star Wars sheet on her son Robbie's bed). Robbie (Oliver Robins) reads a Captain America comic and sleeps in his Dodgers cap. Dad and his friends watch the football game while fighting with the neighbor. At night, mom smokes pot while dad reads REAGAN: THE MAN, THE PRESIDENT. It's 80s America, and as if to drive the point home, the first thing we hear is THE STAR SPANGLED BANNER.

parents

Steve and Diane Freeling (Craig T. Nelson and JoBeth Williams, a Mother I'd Like To Haunt) are Yuppies. Once teens in love - if you do the math, Diane was 15 and pregnant with their first child, Dana (Dominique Dunne), they're now suburban potheads with three kids. Steve sells houses for the new and blossoming Agrestic-like community they live in called Cuesta Verde, and he's the top sales person. Until their house gets haunted.


It starts off slowly. Why is that, anyway? Can't ghosts just haunt out of the gate? Must they slowly make their way into our world through TVs, scary trees and murderous clown dolls that make Chucky look like Malibu Ken? Anyway, it starts with their youngest, Carol Anne (Heather O'Rourke). Apparently, she can speak to people in the TV set after the station goes off the air and turns to snow (remember TV snow? No???). The family isn't disturbed by this...at first; but as more and more unexplained phenomena occur, they become aware of something in the house. Chairs not only slide across the kitchen floor but assemble themselves into a pop art sculpture you'd see at MOCA. Soon, their cutlery won't be the only thing that gets bent out of shape.

chairs-2

Of course by this time, you and I would have moved someplace safer, like 1982 Beirut. "Want my house, Casper? Sometimes you have to jiggle the toilet handle, the gardeners come every other Thursday, here's the key...bye!" Why do humans always feel attached to their houses? It's still going on. Decades later, PARANORMAL ACTIVITY finds the couple haunted nightly, yet they stay. In that movie, they claim it's her, not the house. But me? I'd still move. I moved once because my neighbors were noisy. But the Freelings stayed. That's just Darwinism at work, which is fine by me. It's time to thin out the herd, and if it takes spooks to do it, then so be it. Anyway...


In a turn similar to the original TWILIGHT ZONE episode LITTLE GIRL LOST, Carol Anne disappears, yet she can still be heard through the TV set, though she sounds like a Beatles' record being run backwards. At this point, if you're still moronic enough to stay in the house, at least call the cops. Your kid is gone "for weeks" (man, she must be starving), file a damn missing persons report. Sure, you can go get a ghostbuster, but why first? That's not just my gripe, it's pretty universal.
Even Eddie Murphy did a bit on this the following year in his can-one-person's-act-really-be-this-funny HBO stand-up special DELIRIOUS. So yeah, instead of leaving, they call up some parapsychologists to assess the situation. Even this trio, with all their experience, cameras and oscilloscopes have never witnessed Industrial Light & Magic effects of this caliber. Unable to help, they call in Tangina (isn't that an orange drink?), played by the colorful Zelda Rubinstein. And that's where the fun gets...funner.

And just like the TOWERING INFERNO burns because someone cut costs by installing inferior wiring, Cuesta Verda (Spanish for "I want the green") harbors a similar secret. A secret that will bring skeletons out of the closet and into their faces.


POLTERGEIST had no buzz before it was released. I saw it in NYC at a sneak preview two weeks before it opened (I got lucky doing that with E.T. as well). The two women on line in front of me said something like this - Woman 1: "What's the name of this movie, anyway?" Woman 2: "I dunno. POLAR GEESE, or something like that."

Attached to the movie itself is the famous and silly Poltergeist Curse. Because Dominique Dunne died right before the movie came out (strangled by her boyfriend), and then Heather O' Rourke died six years later, all of a sudden the movie is cursed.
I was more weirded out by the fact that I was just thinking about POLTERGEIST yesterday, and then it gets randomly selected from over 2000 movies. I was channel hopping when I came upon RAIDERS and noticed how much of it looked like POLTERGEIST (the skeletons, that ILM sky). Doubly odd, this movie is the #1 movie in my collection, meaning, it was the first movie on Tape #1 (sharing the tape with TAXI DRIVER and AND NOW FOR SOMETHING COMPLETELY DIFFERENT). Yep. Those darn poltergeists must have hacked into the Random Movie Generator.

Speaking of similarities between RAIDERS and POLTERGEIST, you may know about the brouhaha regarding who actually sat in the POLTERGEIST director's chair. Spielberg was forbidden to direct a movie while working on E.T.(FUN FACT! Drew Barrymore got her part in E.T. by auditioning for POLTERGEIST), so he produced it and gave the keys to Tobe Hooper, who had already made one of the scariest movies ever - THE TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE (1974). The DGA even investigated. Why? Because POLTERGEIST looks, smells and tastes like a Spielberg movie. And I agree. With its sloppy kids and floppy dog, its fumbling father and merciful mother, its comedy pulled from character over situation...and the fun yet exaggerated suburbia found only in his movies, it's clear to me that Spielberg "ghost" directed (ha ha!).
But even if Hooper did do the entire movie, and Spielberg was stuck in a bear trap in Alaska the entire time, make no mistake - POLTERGEIST is a Spielberg movie. In fact, one early scene has the TV showing the 1943 movie A GUY NAMED JOE. At first, I thought it was just Spielberg winking at us, as only a few years later he would remake JOE as the movie ALWAYS. But I just now realized JOE is about a guy who dies but doesn't know he's dead. Same in POLTERGEIST. To quote Tangina: "People who are not aware they've passed on." And speaking of Tangina, Zelda is terrific in this, which, at nearly 50 years old, was her first meaty role in a movie. I once spotted her at local eatery El Cholo. Zelda died earlier this year. See? It's that Poltergeist Curse!!


I really loved how POLTERGEIST is now an old movie, with TV remote controls that effect your neighbors' sets, TV stations that sign off the air, and even...black and white TV sets. I'm sure some of you reading this don't even know about this stuff. And after watching it again, I realized something that hadn't occurred to me before. Though it's called a horror movie, POLTERGEIST is secretly a comedy. Watch it again and see for yourself. Keep a tally of laughs vs. scares. You'll see. POLTERGEIST is fun, funny, scary and smart (well, aside from that whole "not leaving the house" part). SLIGHT SPOILER: It's also the only horror film I could think of where nobody dies.

Oh, did I mention the scary tree?


Not scary were an assortment of Dawn's baked goods. If I'd known what movie we were seeing beforehand, I'd have asked her to bring them out while saying, "They're he-e-re!"

4th of July Goodies


Preshow Entertainment: THINGS THAT AREN'T HERE ANYMORE

It's just a coincidence that a movie whose tagline is "They're Here" came up after we watched a documentary about things that aren't here. In fact, we started watching this two-hour doc (the first of three) about historic Los Angeles last year, and loved it so much we decided to watch some more.

Despite its incredibly confusing and cryptic title, THINGS THAT AREN'T HERE ANYMORE is about things that aren't here anymore. This time round, we got to see the Cawston's Ostrich Farm in Pasadena. Man, if this place were still around (it was gone by the Depression) I'd be there once a week. You could actually ride an ostrich.

Next up, Mt. Lowe, where you can ride a 7 mile trolley up the mountain (also in Pasadena). Lowe (they ended up naming the mountain after him) also built a hotel at the top, as well as tennis courts, restaurants, an observatory and...a mule ride. Some really great footage (I wish there was more) of yet another destination I wish I could go to.

The next segment was on amusement parks; one in Venice, where you could actually ride gondolas through the canals and one in Long Beach which boasted The Pike coaster among many other attractions.

Other spots included Gay's Lion Farm, Beverly Park where the Beverly Center stands today, and Pacific Ocean Park which sometimes rivaled Disneyland in attendance (and at a cost of 90 cents for everything) and closed in 1967.

This show should have been called COOL PLACES YOU CAN'T GO TO ANYMORE....NYA NYA NYA!!!







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