Today is the 64th Birthday of Lynda Carter, perhaps most famous for her role as Wonder Woman in the 1970's TV series.
We're big fans of Ms. Carter here at League HQ, and we hope she's twirling herself into a fantastic birthday.
In addition to still appearing on TV and in movies, of late, Lynda Carter has been lending her voice to a series of video games called The Elder Scrolls and has been singing in various venues across the country.
Friday, July 24, 2015
Shark Watch: Sharknado 3
I don't know how you people are wasting your life, but here's how I'm wasting mine:
Thursday evening saw the broadcast of Sharknado 3: Oh Hell No!, the third installment in the Sharknado franchise which seems like it started a million years ago, but, no, apparently began in 2013.
The first Sharknado movie I caught on the 10:00 PM rebroadcast after twitter blew up and piqued my curiosity. I hadn't initially tuned in, as the matching of the SyFy Network, slumming actors and sharks was absolutely nothing new. For good or ill, I can't tell you how many shark-related Asylum films I've seen on the network, but it's been way, way more than I should really be talking about if I want to retain any credibility, anywhere.
In the end, the combo of clearly-not-quite-recovered actress Tara Reid, world's best sport Ian Ziering, veteran actor John Heard, and a water spout full of sharks making its way across LA was, indeed, chicken soup for the soul.
Thursday evening saw the broadcast of Sharknado 3: Oh Hell No!, the third installment in the Sharknado franchise which seems like it started a million years ago, but, no, apparently began in 2013.
The first Sharknado movie I caught on the 10:00 PM rebroadcast after twitter blew up and piqued my curiosity. I hadn't initially tuned in, as the matching of the SyFy Network, slumming actors and sharks was absolutely nothing new. For good or ill, I can't tell you how many shark-related Asylum films I've seen on the network, but it's been way, way more than I should really be talking about if I want to retain any credibility, anywhere.
In the end, the combo of clearly-not-quite-recovered actress Tara Reid, world's best sport Ian Ziering, veteran actor John Heard, and a water spout full of sharks making its way across LA was, indeed, chicken soup for the soul.
Monday, July 20, 2015
Signal Watch Reads: Flashfire (a Parker Novel)
As much as the folks write the introductions in these books want to say otherwise, when Stark came back to Parker after decades of being away, it's pretty clear his worldview had changed a bit, what he could and wanted to do in a heist book had altered. But, you know, you're talking about the 15th or so book of the Parker series, and, if you include the 4 Grofield novels, this is the 19th written under the nom de plume of Richard Stark rather than Donald Westlake.
It's an oddly silly Parker novel, a pretty far cry from The Seventh or The Sour Lemon Score, and after however many years of writing Dortmunder novels, I have to assume it all bleeds together for the writer. Also, as in the return novels, a lot relies on coincidence and hoping the reader isn't thinking too hard about possible holes in the plot.
It's an oddly silly Parker novel, a pretty far cry from The Seventh or The Sour Lemon Score, and after however many years of writing Dortmunder novels, I have to assume it all bleeds together for the writer. Also, as in the return novels, a lot relies on coincidence and hoping the reader isn't thinking too hard about possible holes in the plot.
Sunday, July 19, 2015
Marvel Watch: Ant-Man (2015)
I was never skeptical of an Ant-Man movie. For folks who have long followed my ramblings, you know I have a very simple rule for why I'll give anything a go when it comes to sci-fi and superheroes: there is no such thing as a bad idea, only bad execution. Frankly, when people were predicting doom for Guardians of the Galaxy because (oh my goodness!) it wasn't a known quantity! and it had a raccoon and tree-man! I was left scratching my head and saying: well, those aren't actually problems for a movie. Those are just new or odd things.
Re: Ant-Man comics: I have a pretty huge gap in my comics' knowledge regarding Hank Pym as Ant-Man from the classic Marvel U, and I was just left confused by Mark Millar's take on Pym in The Ultimates, that I sort of believe has taken Pym off the playing board for Marvel forever. I'm totally unfamiliar with anything about Scott Lang other than that - he exists in the comics, I guess? It seems like I saw him in a Marvel role-playing game supplement. At some point I read one issue of something called Irredeemable Ant-Man, which didn't really work for me.
So, there you go. I basically can't tell you anything about Ant-Man as a comics figure beyond the period in the 1980's when Hank Pym was adventuring with no mask and just growing and shrinking things and using the heroic name "Hank Pym" as part of West Coast Avengers. But check in with me if you have questions about Super Turtle. I have wisdom.
As per the movie?
Saturday, July 18, 2015
Noir Watch: 99 River Street (1953)
As part of TCM's Summer of Darkness, this evening Eddie Muller showed 99 River Street (1953), a noir I'd somehow started once but never quite finished. Given the issues we had with our last DVR, I believe that it just got pushed off the DVR when we accidentally recorded an all-day Archer marathon or something.
I'm not surprised Muller showed this one, but am, perhaps, surprised it took him this long. I've heard him speak about Evelyn Keyes, a woman he met before her passing, and he spoke with tremendous admiration, and this movie fits as neatly in with the more rough and tumble noir as anything. I've seen Keyes in a few movies, and she's a surprising talent. Maybe more striking than beautiful, but with a certain calculating intelligence she brings to her roles that I like.
I'm not surprised Muller showed this one, but am, perhaps, surprised it took him this long. I've heard him speak about Evelyn Keyes, a woman he met before her passing, and he spoke with tremendous admiration, and this movie fits as neatly in with the more rough and tumble noir as anything. I've seen Keyes in a few movies, and she's a surprising talent. Maybe more striking than beautiful, but with a certain calculating intelligence she brings to her roles that I like.
Friday, July 17, 2015
Comedy Subterfuge Watch: Spies Like Us (1985) and Top Secret! (1984)
I dunno. Do I really have to talk about these movies? I'm tired.
Yeah. I'm not going to write about these movies. I like Top Secret! much, much more than Spies Like Us. How's that?
Yeah. I'm not going to write about these movies. I like Top Secret! much, much more than Spies Like Us. How's that?
Thursday, July 16, 2015
Ape Watch: Tarzan The Ape Man (1932)
As you may recall, I recently read Tarzan of the Apes. I don't tend to believe the cosmos is telling me anything, but I also try not to ignore coincidence. Because, hey, serendipity counts for something.
TCM featured "Ape Day", I believe, the other day, with all sorts of simian cinema, with everything from King Kong to Planet of the Apes to Every Which Way But Loose, and, of course, Tarzan the Ape Man (1932), the first Johnny Weissmuller/ Maureen O'Sullivan Tarzan movie.
I have seen this movie in bits and pieces, but I don't think I'd seen it straight through until now. And, people, it's pretty amazing. In fact, we're going to roll out our new feature... the Stefon. So you'll know when:
TCM featured "Ape Day", I believe, the other day, with all sorts of simian cinema, with everything from King Kong to Planet of the Apes to Every Which Way But Loose, and, of course, Tarzan the Ape Man (1932), the first Johnny Weissmuller/ Maureen O'Sullivan Tarzan movie.
I have seen this movie in bits and pieces, but I don't think I'd seen it straight through until now. And, people, it's pretty amazing. In fact, we're going to roll out our new feature... the Stefon. So you'll know when:
Happy Birthday to Barbara Stanwyck (b. 1907)
It's funny how the mass audience only remembers a few actors from says gone by. I am sure most people know the name Barbara Stanwyck, but as time marches on, I'm not sure how many folks know her by site or have seen her films. I haven't seen that many, and I tend to give a movie a chance if I know she's in the credits.
She's an amazingly versatile actress from an era when that wasn't always appreciated so much as playing yourself in different costumes and time periods (see: Judy Garland). But here's just a few highlights.
She's an amazingly versatile actress from an era when that wasn't always appreciated so much as playing yourself in different costumes and time periods (see: Judy Garland). But here's just a few highlights.
Clash by Night |
Bloom County Returns
Kids today will never understand a world with 3 TV networks, 1 or 2 newspapers and you all kind of know what's going on with those media outlets at all times. Up to and including newspaper comic strips.
I was a kid who got up every morning to make enough extra time to read the funnies in their entirety. I followed Mary Worth for years and will never understand any appeal to that strip that wasn't entirely ironic, but read it every day in order to not miss the one or two days per year where something actually happened.* Like every other kid of the early 1980's, I liked Garfield first, and spread out to the rest of the comics page thanks to, first, stuff like Peanuts and Tumbleweeds, and later The Far Side and, of course, Calvin and Hobbes.
Back then, syndicated comic strips were big, big business. Because strips appeared in the paper, you bought collections, the cartoonists would sell dolls, t-shirts, etc... Maybe even cartoons, like Peanuts. But if you did well, you could become a household name.
I don't remember exactly when I first noticed Bloom County, but I do remember my brother purchasing the first collection somewhere along the line. He kept reading, bursting into laughter, then showing me the strip, so we wound up sitting on the floor reading it together, laughing so hard we cried.
I was a kid who got up every morning to make enough extra time to read the funnies in their entirety. I followed Mary Worth for years and will never understand any appeal to that strip that wasn't entirely ironic, but read it every day in order to not miss the one or two days per year where something actually happened.* Like every other kid of the early 1980's, I liked Garfield first, and spread out to the rest of the comics page thanks to, first, stuff like Peanuts and Tumbleweeds, and later The Far Side and, of course, Calvin and Hobbes.
Back then, syndicated comic strips were big, big business. Because strips appeared in the paper, you bought collections, the cartoonists would sell dolls, t-shirts, etc... Maybe even cartoons, like Peanuts. But if you did well, you could become a household name.
I don't remember exactly when I first noticed Bloom County, but I do remember my brother purchasing the first collection somewhere along the line. He kept reading, bursting into laughter, then showing me the strip, so we wound up sitting on the floor reading it together, laughing so hard we cried.
Tuesday, July 14, 2015
Noir Watch: The Third Man (1949)
In general, it seems that at some point someone will suggest The Third Man (1949) to you. I know the name had been thrown at me for years, especially when I started digging into film noir, but there seemed to be a certain lack of availability to the movie, and I wasn't going to just buy it on DVD of Amazon, site unseen.
A year or three ago, it was included in the Paramount Summer Film Series, our local grand theater's showcase of classic film.* Jamie and I went and saw it, sitting up in the balcony (my prime spot). And while I often watch and enjoy a movie, it is all too rare that I go back to that place where I can both become utterly absorbed in a movie and enjoy the construction of the movie simultaneously. these days, even if I enjoy the hell out of a movie - let's say Captain America 2, for example, I'm generally just enjoying watching a fun entertainment with characters I like, blowing up floating aircraft carriers and whatnot.
But The Third Man takes me not just back to how much I liked the parts of a film during film school, but wanting to take it all apart and look at how it's assembled - the reason I wanted to go to film school - more to learn how it all worked more than I suspect I ever really had any intention of going off to be the next jodhpur-clad director that America did not need.
new poster by ace artist Francesco Francavilla |
A year or three ago, it was included in the Paramount Summer Film Series, our local grand theater's showcase of classic film.* Jamie and I went and saw it, sitting up in the balcony (my prime spot). And while I often watch and enjoy a movie, it is all too rare that I go back to that place where I can both become utterly absorbed in a movie and enjoy the construction of the movie simultaneously. these days, even if I enjoy the hell out of a movie - let's say Captain America 2, for example, I'm generally just enjoying watching a fun entertainment with characters I like, blowing up floating aircraft carriers and whatnot.
But The Third Man takes me not just back to how much I liked the parts of a film during film school, but wanting to take it all apart and look at how it's assembled - the reason I wanted to go to film school - more to learn how it all worked more than I suspect I ever really had any intention of going off to be the next jodhpur-clad director that America did not need.
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