I feel I should point out that Halloween is a momentous occasion in the Scarlet Knight universe. Four different characters were born on that day. Dr. Emma Earl was born on October 31, 1980, her friend Becky Beech was born a year earlier, parallel universe Dr. Emma Earl was born 10 years earlier, and parallel universe Emma's daughter was born like October 31, 2000. I think I'll go buy an ice cream cake and eat it for them. If you wonder, why that date? I would of course say, Why not that date? I used to know someone in school who was born on Halloween. Me, I'm a sometimes Thanksgiving baby. It's about once every 5 years; I think 2018 is the next time it comes up.
True confession: I've never much cared about Halloween. After about age 7 I really hated the costume thing; I was always afraid of being judged about a terrible costume and thus probably wore a terrible costume as a self-fulfilling prophecy. Plus we lived in a rural neighborhood so trick or treating involved a lot of driving around and you have to worry about stupid rednecks who don't chain up their dogs or stuff like that. It seems more efficient to me nowadays to just go buy a bag of candy for myself and screw the rest of it--except the movies; I like some scary movies.
Now for Halloween it's a ghost story! Written by one of those online "friends" who does nothing for me. What, you think you're better than me with your fancy publishing contract and agent and stuff?
The Unquiet
by Jeannine Garsee
(4/5 stars)
As full disclosure, I won a copy of this from the author. I just want
you to know that so you don't think this is one of the author's friends
or family or something like that.
Anyway, I'm glad I did win this book because it was a fun read. I
recently read an advance copy of the new Amanda Hocking book that is in
the same genre and I have to say I liked "The Unquiet" a lot more. I
think the primary reason being that the main character Rinn is a lot
brighter than the main character of Hocking's book. That and there
weren't obvious typos and bad writing, just one slight factual error
concerning slasher movie killer costumes.
As I said the plot involves a girl named Rinn. Like so many of these
type of books or movies, Rinn and her mom are new to town. Or at least
Rinn is new to town; her mom used to live here before college. They've
fled La Jolla, California after Rinn accidentally burned down her
grandmother's cabin with her grandmother inside. The main cause for the
fire is that Rinn is bipolar and at that time was off her medication
and thus careless.
In River Hills, Ohio, she figures she'll get a clean start. She even
makes friends with the head cheerleader Meg and her friends Tasha and
Lacy. She also makes friend with the neighbor/landlord's son Nate.
Her new friends introduce her to the legend of Annaliese Gibbons, a girl
who drowned in the school pool about 20 years ago, back when Rinn's mom
went to the school. The pool area is now closed, but Annaliese's
spirit is said to live on.
After Rinn and her new friends hold a seance around Halloween, strange
things begin happening. The lives of Rinn's new friends begin to
unravel and then one dies. Is it Annaliese striking from beyond the
grave? Or is it just that Rinn is having a relapse?
I figured out most of the plot well before the ending. If you're
familiar with either the original or remake of "A Nightmare on Elm
Street" then you might be able to figure it out as well.
Still, as I said, it's an entertaining read that I breezed through in a
few hours. As far as the young adult books I've read it might not be
more or less wall-to-wall action like "The Hunger Games" but it's less
dull and stupid than "Twilight" or that new Amanda Hocking novel I
mentioned.
So I would definitely recommend reading it, even if you weren't lucky enough to win a copy of your own.
That is all.
Thursday, October 31, 2013
Wednesday, October 30, 2013
October Recap
So some stuff happened in October. Here are the most popular posts for the month. I'm not sure why Comics Recap was so popular this month except Google must have brought it up a lot because it mentions Batman and the like.
Now here's my viewing diary since the last recap.
Red Dawn (2012): You have to hand it to the filmmakers for making a ludicrous movie from the 80s even more ludicrous. What's especially hilarious (unintentionally I assume) is that Thor plays a Marine who's been in Iraq and then teaches a bunch of teens basically how to become a terrorist cell like the ones that were killing his buddies in Iraq. It's especially funny when he says, "Over there we were the good guys bringing order." Um, yeah, maybe that's not how some people in Iraq saw it. He even references the mujaheddin in Afghanistan who went on to become Al-Qaeda! Honestly does this movie have any awareness of just how idiotic that appears in 2012? I'm reminded of this exchange in The Heart of Emma Earl, Tales of the Scarlet Knight #8:
Bullet to the Head: This is one of those inexpensive, fairly competent action movies that may as well have gone straight to Redbox instead of detouring to theaters for a couple of weeks. It follows a predictable buddy action movie plot where Stallone is a hitman who teams up with a cop to hunt down the people who double-crossed him. The main takeaway is that Sylvester Stallone needs to never, ever, ever take his shirt off in a movie again. With all the HGH and steroids and whatnot he is completely gross. I mean fat guys like me are on one end of the grossness scale and then guys like him with all these veins about to pop out at any second are on the opposite end. You want to be somewhere in the middle of that. Unfortunately he's going to be in a boxing movie with de Niro this winter. Who wants to watch two gross old guys without their shirts on for like 90 minutes? Ew. (2.5/5)
Life of Pi: This makes the same mistake as the book in wasting the first 1/4 on boring crap like how he got his name or some girl he likes. BORING. Get to the shipwreck and tiger already! At least in the movie it's a little more clear early on there's a tiger. In the book it seemed like the tiger was somehow hidden away for essentially days without him knowing it. Dude, the life boat isn't THAT big. The 70 minutes or so focusing on Pi and the tiger at sea are the best parts. They'd probably look better on Blu-Ray and in 3D and stuff. Other than that first half hour it wasn't as boring as I feared it might be. Backhanded compliment! (4/5)
The Double: Like "The Departed" or "No Way Out" this is about a double agent (hence the title) who's put in charge of finding himself. In this case Richard Gere was an assassin known as Cassius in the Cold War and was also a CIA agent named Paul who was dispatched to find Cassius. Eventually he retired and convinced everyone that Cassius was dead. 20 years later when it seems Cassius has returned, he's put in charge of finding himself again only it's complicated by the fact he's working with an eager young agent. There's a surprise twist at the end involving this agent. This was an effective enough thriller. It was more fun for me because this was another movie filmed in Detroit, which in this case was subbing for the nation's capital. What first tipped me off is the "Meet the Press" type show is hosted by a local news anchor; I guess he got to live his dream of being someone more important. Anyway, I can just imagine producers saying, "We need a city with a lot of trash-strewn, graffiti-covered alleys and abandoned factories. I know--Detroit!" Hooray for us! The movie also features not one but two "cat wranglers" despite that I can't even remember a cat being in the movie. Anyway I watched it on Amazon (free with a Prime membership); I'm not sure if it's on Netflix. (3/5)
The Great & Powerful Oz: We needed another prequel to The Wizard of Oz like we needed a Tea Party government shutdown, but hey there was money to be made! Despite my cynicism the movie was OK. Not as good as Wicked, at least the musical which I've seen twice; I have the book on my Kindle but have yet to get to it. Surprisingly this movie was directed by Sam Raimi. Aren't all whimsical fantasy movies supposed to involve Tim Burton and Johnny Depp? Isn't that like a law or something? Anyway, James Franco plays the erstwhile "wizard" who scams all of Oz into thinking he's a great and powerful wizard to fend off two evil witches. Mila Kunis sucked as the Wicked Witch of the West but the other two witches were OK. And since this is a Sam Raimi movie we get the mandatory Bruce Campbell cameo; I'm pretty sure that is a law. I don't think he managed to work his brothers into it though. Maybe next time. (3.5/5)
Hansel & Gretel Witch Hunters: Speaking of witches, there was this movie. It would have been OK if it weren't so aggressively stupid. I mean apparently these two are as smart as Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Edison, and Samuel Colt among others. Even though this is like the 17th Century or so they're running around with revolvers, Gatling guns, a phonograph, and even a defibrillator! Plus most everyone goes around speaking like Americans and using modern slang; at some point I expected them to say "Hashtag: [something or other]". Come on! And absolutely no explanation is given as to how they obtain these genius skills since they were orphaned at a young age and obviously not going to university or anything. At least the Sherlock Holmes movies keep the steampunk in the realm of possibility. Then you have the weirdness of a troll that looks like a theme park mascot stomping someone's head into mush. Big loud and dumb can work sometimes, but not this time. BTW, I bet my witches from the Scarlet Knight stories, Sisterhood, and Awakening could kick Hansel and Gretel's ass. (2.5/5)
Silver Linings Playbook: bipolar boy meets depressed girl. All hell breaks loose. That's about the size of it. If the title "Crazy Stupid Love" hadn't already been used that could have fit this movie as pretty much everyone is crazy. Even the Indian shrink is a crazy Philadelphia Eagles superfan! Anyway, I liked it but the end had a little too much silver lining for me. (3.5/5)
Spring Breakers: Three skanks and their uptight religious friend go to Florida for spring break after they rob a chicken restaurant to pay their way, end up getting busted, and then get bailed out by a wanna-be Scarface named Alien (James Franco). He keeps that movie on repeat, though apparently he never saw the end to find out what became of Scarface. If I were like some people I'd hate it because it wasn't what I was expecting. I thought it would be more of a comedy but really it's a crime drama, sort of like "Breaking Bad" if it involved girls on spring break instead of making meth. Selena Gomez is the uptight religious girl who's smart enough to bail before the shit hits the fan. Another finds it's all fun and games until you get shot in the arm. My main bone to pick is actually with Cliff Martinez's soundtrack. The music is all thoughtful and dreamy, which is tonally incompatible with what's going on in the movie most of the time. I guess that was the idea, but it just seems odd. (3/5)
The Call: As a fan of Brad Anderson's movies I found this one a little disappointing because it's so predictable. Since he didn't write or produce it, I sense he was just doing this to pay his mortgage. It was his biggest commercial success to date so I suppose that worked. The story follows the "Top Gun" mold where Halle Berry is a hotshot 911 operator who gets someone killed and then has to get back in the saddle again when Abigail Breslin is kidnapped. And golly gee, wouldn't you know that it's the same kidnapper who killed the woman Halle Berry was on the phone with at the start of the movie? And that despite all the efforts of her police boyfriend (Morris Chestnut) and the rest of the LAPD only Halle Berry can find the guy? It is less implausible than the similar "Cellular" I watched last month. It also makes me kind of want to ditch my prepaid phone since apparently those don't have GPS chips. Then again I doubt anyone would try to kidnap me for my hair. (Seriously, that is the plot.) (3/5)
Shooter: This was an OK action movie but a little too long. I mean after Marky Mark has killed most of the bad guys and got the others incriminating themselves on tape, why does he destroy the tape? That just unnecessarily adds to the length of the movie which really should have been 15-30 minutes shorter. (3/5)
Idle Hands: Since it was October I felt like watching a dumb horror movie and I remember this was parodied on Robot Chicken because it co-stars Seth Green. Unfortunately I took a catnap in the middle of the movie and missed how exactly the one stoner kid realizes his hand is evil and cuts it off and how Seth Green and the other stoner kid become zombies. Anyway, what I watched of it was OK. (2.5/5)
Vacancy: This starts off with one of those big horror movie cliches where a couple's car dies in the middle of nowhere and the only place they can go is a crappy motel. They soon find out the motel is used for shooting snuff films. Then they have to find a way to escape. It follows the Hitchcock rule of if you show a gun it has to eventually be used. Anyway, it was a decent thriller. (3/5)
All Superheroes Must Die: This was recommended to me when I added Kick-Ass 2 to my queue on Blockbuster. With such a provocative title I figured I might as well watch it. It's one of those really low budget movies so I wasn't expecting too much. Considering the budget it's not bad. The overall plot is sort of like Grant Morrison's famous Arkham Asylum where to save a bunch of civilians a hero (or 4 in this case) have to navigate a bunch of hazards concocted by villains (or 1 villain who's named Rickshaw and yet is white). The idea is these heroes have lost their powers and have to go through some sadisdic challenges to try to save the people. The heroes aren't all that bright. But like my Girl Power book it's the one who never had powers who saves the day. Like the big superhero movies there's even a cookie scene at the end! (3.5/5)
Dead Snow: Don't you just hate when you go away for a ski weekend and then you end up having to battle Nazi zombies? I know, right? I'm not sure which Scandinavian country this originated in but it was surprisingly good. The filmmakers really did their homework on zombie/slasher movies like Evil Dead 2, Friday the 13th, etc. (They even reference Briane Pagel's favorite horror movie "April Fool's Day.") A bunch of med students go up to a remote cabin in the mountains for Easter weekend but their vacation is spoiled by Nazi zombies who haunt the mountains. There's the requisite creepy old guy who shows up to explain the legend of the undead Nazis to the kids and then of course they start to get picked off one by one. The med students are surprisingly resourceful though in combating the Nazis using everything from hatchets to a chain saw to a machine gun mounted on a snowmobile. There's a touch of Pirates of the Caribbean in the ending too. Overall this was much better than I thought it'd be. The only drawback was having to read subtitles since the movie is in German or some damned thing and yet the slogans on their T-shirts are in English. Yay, America! (4/5)
Much Ado About Nothing (2012): After you make the highest-grossing superhero movie ever, what better to follow it up with than Shakespeare? Yeah, that's what Joss Whedon did with this classic play set in modern day. This doesn't really make a lot of sense with all these counts and princes and whatnot running around what looks like California. As always the Shakespeare dialog is hard to follow. From what I gather there's some kind of arranged marriage deal where this Claudio guy is supposed to marry a girl with the unlikely name of Hero. Except Claudio's evil brother gets him to believe Hero isn't a "maiden" which I presume to mean not a virgin. Again the modern setting doesn't really fly here. And then instead of just talking things out, the priest(!) convinces Hero and her dad (Agent Coulson) that they pretend Hero is dead so Claudio will realize how much he loves this girl he just met. It's the kind of zany scheme sitcom writers have been borrowing from for decades now. And meantime Hero's cousin and some guy decide they love each other. The end. There, I saved you 109 boring, boobless minutes. (2/5)
Green Lantern: Emerald Knights: Funny story: I got a digital copy of this free on a site called Vudu when I bought the Green Lantern 2011 movie but I'd forgotten I owned it until a couple weeks ago. Except when I loaded it on Vudu their site buffers like every 10 seconds. Fortunately Amazon had it free for Prime members--in HD even! (OK that wasn't a funny story.) Anyway, I guess it was like a Green Lantern version of "Gotham Knights" from 2008 which was a series of vignettes about Batman. Except unlike Gotham Knights there's actually a central story and it pretty much uses the same animation throughout. There are stories about some of the non-Hal Jordan Lanterns including Mogo, who is a planet. In between these is a story about a bad guy from the antimatter universe trying to kill everyone until one girl uses physics to save the day! It is pretty good and might help if you know nothing about Green Lantern comics. I think my biggest complaint was whoever they got to do Killowog (the pig guy)'s voice sucked. Michael Clarke Duncan's voice was a lot better in the movie because Killowog is supposed to be big and tough; he shouldn't sound like some ordinary schlub. (4/5)
Green Lantern: First Flight: This was also on Amazon Prime, so why the hell not watch it too? In some ways this would have been a better movie than what they ended up using. The only drawback is Hal Jordan gets the ring and pretty much right away knows how to use it and goes flying around with Sinestro like "Training Day." They head out to something akin to the Star Wars cantina, where Sinestro forcefeeds an alien chick some space heroin to make her talk. This was my first real clue that while this was a cartoon it was pretty PG-13. Anyway, the gist is that Sinestro is sick of the wimpy Guardians and wants to bring order to the galaxy, so by working with some other dude they make a yellow Lantern. And gee, who do you think is the only one who can stop him? Duh. Almost none of this takes place on Earth, which is why I suppose they didn't use it for the movie. There are some differences from the other cartoon I watched about how the ring gets passed on when the owner dies. In Emerald Knights the ring chooses a successor while in this the ring flies home and the Guardians pick someone. I think the former is what they use nowadays in the comics. (4/5)
Superman: Doomsday: Again it was free on Amazon, so why not? They had to do a fair bit of rejiggering to get this 90s plot to work. Now LexCorp digs up an alien pod in South America and out pops Doomsday, who's like the Hulk crossed with the Predator from that Ahh-nold movie. There's a massive battle that makes the fight in Metropolis in "Man of Steel" look pretty tame and then Doomsday is killed and Superman "dies." A few weeks later Superman seemingly comes back to life, but is it the real one? If you remember the comics from the 90s, then no. Except instead of 4 pretenders we just have one. And only mullet-sporting Superman in black can save the day! Again this was pretty PG-13 with blood and fake Superman killing the Toyman and stuff like that. I got bored after the Doomsday battle. I guess the problem is that's so epic that everything after that feels like a 45-minute epilogue. Makes me wonder, have they made a Batman: Knightfall animated movie yet? That would be cool. (3/5)
Wonder Woman (2008): Yet another animated movie free on Amazon so what the hell. Michael Offutt would like this one as it mostly sticks to the '80s reboot of the comic book where Diana's mother makes her out of clay and whatnot. She grows up to be a great warrior and when Steve Trevor crashes on the island, she sneaks into a tournament to win the right to take him back. The characterization of Wonder Woman was really well done, as was her relationship with Steve. The Clash of the Titans stuff was a little goofy. I especially wasn't sure why Hades looked more like Dionysus, the god of pleasure and gluttony. Also not sure why Steve was flying an F-23, which never went into production. And how do a bunch of Amazons make an invisible jet? I thought maybe they fixed up Steve's plane but it looked different. Also, Alfred Molina (of Dr. Octopus fame) sounded like Donald Trump as Ares; at any moment I expected him to say, "Wonder Woman, you're fired!" Still, this wouldn't be a bad start for an actual movie. (4/5)
Batman: Mystery of the Batwoman: This "mystery" was pretty easy to unravel. I think I had it figured out after about 20 minutes. Basically you just have to think of the movie Scream and how that ended. The gist is that some girl dressed like a bat shows up on the scene and doesn't play as nice as Batman, so he has to figure out who she is before she can cause too much damage. It was OK but as I said too easy to figure out. (3/5)
Justice League: Crisis on Two Earths: I figured I might as well complete my week with another DC Universe animated movie. In this one good Lex Luthor from a parallel Earth ventures over to our world to get the Justice League's help in stopping the Crime Syndicate, who feature evil versions of Superman, Wonder Woman, Batman, Green Lantern, and Flash. They pretty much rule the Earth, operating as a superpowered Mafia. Naturally the Justice League agrees to help and then there's a lot of fighting between the two sides. The end game is kind of stupid as Owlman (evil Batman) decides to use a quantum bomb to destroy all reality. When evil Wonder Woman hears his plan, she's like, "Cool!" Not seeming to understand destroying all reality means destroying her too. Of course in the end Batman has to save the day. There's a subplot where Martian Manhunter and the president's daughter fall in love and they mindfuck, which I guess is how Martians do it. Gross. Since there was only like 70 minutes Green Lantern is pretty much relegated to the background and the Flash is only there for comic relief. So not the strongest in story, but I guess if you're more into slugfests it's fine. Incidentally the current Justice League comics involve the Crime Syndicate coming to our Earth. (4/5)
P2: This was an effective enough thriller. The gist is that a girl working late on Christmas Eve gets trapped in a parking garage with a psycho security guy and his Rottweiler. A little more background on both characters might have made it a little better. (2.5/5)
Dylan Dog: Dead of Night: If I'd ever watched more than one episode I could probably compare this to "True Blood" on HBO. It involves New Orleans and vampires, werewolves, and zombies. Superman from "Superman Returns" has to battle the various undead for some kind of artifact to raise an ancient demon to destroy the world or something. This was an OK mix of horror and humor (the idea of a "body shop" for zombie spare parts was pretty funny) but it dragged on 15-30 minutes too long. Or that might be because I was watching it at like 1am. (2.5/5)
Snitch: Minimum sentencing laws for drugs have essentially created a scenario like during McCarthy times where the only way to save yourself is to rat out your friends, whether they did something or not. So when the Rock's son gets arrested for accepting a shipment of Ecstasy thanks to his friend ratting him out, the only way for him not to get 10 years in jail is for the Rock to go find some drug dealers to rat out to the Feds. Which he does with the help of an ex-con who works for his trucking company. It was OK but dragged a little. (2.5/5)
Session 9: An asbestos removal company owner whose business and marriage seem to be on the rocks takes a job to clean out an old mental asylum. With the help of David Caruso, Josh Lucas, and a couple other guys they get to work, but naturally things start to get ugly. Josh Lucas finds some buried treasure presumably taken from the inmates while another guy finds a cache of old tapes concerning a schizophrenic woman with a dark past. The title comes from the box of tapes he finds, each labeled Session 1, Session 2, etc. Session 9 is the last one and we know there has to be some nasty shit on there. Anyway, this is another low-budget thriller from Brad Anderson that does a good job of creating tension without it turning into one of those ghost hunting TV shows or The Blair Witch Project. The final solution was a little too obvious and the film drags a little but now that it's on Netflix Instant it's a good deal for some Halloween entertainment. (4/5)
The Last Man on Earth: This is the old Vincent Price adaptation of Richard Matheson's I Am Legend. It's much more faithful to the book than more recent versions, like that Will Smith abomination. There's still a lot cut out and the first half-hour or so is almost like a silent movie because it's pretty much just Price going around scavenging supplies and such. If you're too lazy to read the book this is a good way to get the gist of it. (3/5)
Event Horizon: I'd most heard of this movie because it's referenced in a Family Guy episode. Anyway, it's kind of like "Alien" meets "Hellraiser." A crew goes out to rescue a ship called the Event Horizon that was testing a "gravity drive" that would allow it to jump from one place in the universe to the other. But of course something went wrong. The people in this are at least not as dumb as the supposed scientists in "Prometheus." And hey, it's one of those rare horror movies where a black guy survives--just probably not the one you'd think. (3/5)
Friday the 13th X: It should have been called Jason in Spaaaaaaaace! Because that's what happens. They sort of borrow from "Aliens" in that a woman is found in stasis. She's an expert on Jason Voorheis, who also happens to get unthawed and predictably starts killing all the dumbass college kids on board the ship. It's a completely ridiculous movie but since it knows how ridiculous it is it's fine. My favorite part is when they use the holodeck to make Jason think he's back at Camp Crystal Lake. (2.5/5)
Comics Recap 10/13
My entry on paying for reviews that convinced me that Me, Cindy Borgne, and Rusty Webb should open up a book reviewing business.
My Breaking Bad Finale Review
Now here's my viewing diary since the last recap.
Scarlet Knight > Thor |
It might have been nice if the people who wrote this movie had that much awareness. But hey, I'm a genius and they're not. About the only positive I'll say is Adriana Palicki's breasts are pretty spectacular in a tight T-shirt; too bad this wasn't R-rated. I should head over to Mr. Skin now. (2/5)"We go into the city and then we fan out in two-man teams. Each team will pick a target of opportunity: set fire to an abandoned apartment building or blow up a warehouse or shut down power to the subways. Whatever we can do without hurting innocent people. With these diversionary raids—”
“Sounds more like terrorism,” Tim said.
“We are not terrorists. We’re the good guys. That makes us freedom fighters,” Joanna said.
Bullet to the Head: This is one of those inexpensive, fairly competent action movies that may as well have gone straight to Redbox instead of detouring to theaters for a couple of weeks. It follows a predictable buddy action movie plot where Stallone is a hitman who teams up with a cop to hunt down the people who double-crossed him. The main takeaway is that Sylvester Stallone needs to never, ever, ever take his shirt off in a movie again. With all the HGH and steroids and whatnot he is completely gross. I mean fat guys like me are on one end of the grossness scale and then guys like him with all these veins about to pop out at any second are on the opposite end. You want to be somewhere in the middle of that. Unfortunately he's going to be in a boxing movie with de Niro this winter. Who wants to watch two gross old guys without their shirts on for like 90 minutes? Ew. (2.5/5)
Life of Pi: This makes the same mistake as the book in wasting the first 1/4 on boring crap like how he got his name or some girl he likes. BORING. Get to the shipwreck and tiger already! At least in the movie it's a little more clear early on there's a tiger. In the book it seemed like the tiger was somehow hidden away for essentially days without him knowing it. Dude, the life boat isn't THAT big. The 70 minutes or so focusing on Pi and the tiger at sea are the best parts. They'd probably look better on Blu-Ray and in 3D and stuff. Other than that first half hour it wasn't as boring as I feared it might be. Backhanded compliment! (4/5)
The Double: Like "The Departed" or "No Way Out" this is about a double agent (hence the title) who's put in charge of finding himself. In this case Richard Gere was an assassin known as Cassius in the Cold War and was also a CIA agent named Paul who was dispatched to find Cassius. Eventually he retired and convinced everyone that Cassius was dead. 20 years later when it seems Cassius has returned, he's put in charge of finding himself again only it's complicated by the fact he's working with an eager young agent. There's a surprise twist at the end involving this agent. This was an effective enough thriller. It was more fun for me because this was another movie filmed in Detroit, which in this case was subbing for the nation's capital. What first tipped me off is the "Meet the Press" type show is hosted by a local news anchor; I guess he got to live his dream of being someone more important. Anyway, I can just imagine producers saying, "We need a city with a lot of trash-strewn, graffiti-covered alleys and abandoned factories. I know--Detroit!" Hooray for us! The movie also features not one but two "cat wranglers" despite that I can't even remember a cat being in the movie. Anyway I watched it on Amazon (free with a Prime membership); I'm not sure if it's on Netflix. (3/5)
The Great & Powerful Oz: We needed another prequel to The Wizard of Oz like we needed a Tea Party government shutdown, but hey there was money to be made! Despite my cynicism the movie was OK. Not as good as Wicked, at least the musical which I've seen twice; I have the book on my Kindle but have yet to get to it. Surprisingly this movie was directed by Sam Raimi. Aren't all whimsical fantasy movies supposed to involve Tim Burton and Johnny Depp? Isn't that like a law or something? Anyway, James Franco plays the erstwhile "wizard" who scams all of Oz into thinking he's a great and powerful wizard to fend off two evil witches. Mila Kunis sucked as the Wicked Witch of the West but the other two witches were OK. And since this is a Sam Raimi movie we get the mandatory Bruce Campbell cameo; I'm pretty sure that is a law. I don't think he managed to work his brothers into it though. Maybe next time. (3.5/5)
Hansel & Gretel Witch Hunters: Speaking of witches, there was this movie. It would have been OK if it weren't so aggressively stupid. I mean apparently these two are as smart as Benjamin Franklin, Thomas Edison, and Samuel Colt among others. Even though this is like the 17th Century or so they're running around with revolvers, Gatling guns, a phonograph, and even a defibrillator! Plus most everyone goes around speaking like Americans and using modern slang; at some point I expected them to say "Hashtag: [something or other]". Come on! And absolutely no explanation is given as to how they obtain these genius skills since they were orphaned at a young age and obviously not going to university or anything. At least the Sherlock Holmes movies keep the steampunk in the realm of possibility. Then you have the weirdness of a troll that looks like a theme park mascot stomping someone's head into mush. Big loud and dumb can work sometimes, but not this time. BTW, I bet my witches from the Scarlet Knight stories, Sisterhood, and Awakening could kick Hansel and Gretel's ass. (2.5/5)
Silver Linings Playbook: bipolar boy meets depressed girl. All hell breaks loose. That's about the size of it. If the title "Crazy Stupid Love" hadn't already been used that could have fit this movie as pretty much everyone is crazy. Even the Indian shrink is a crazy Philadelphia Eagles superfan! Anyway, I liked it but the end had a little too much silver lining for me. (3.5/5)
Spring Breakers: Three skanks and their uptight religious friend go to Florida for spring break after they rob a chicken restaurant to pay their way, end up getting busted, and then get bailed out by a wanna-be Scarface named Alien (James Franco). He keeps that movie on repeat, though apparently he never saw the end to find out what became of Scarface. If I were like some people I'd hate it because it wasn't what I was expecting. I thought it would be more of a comedy but really it's a crime drama, sort of like "Breaking Bad" if it involved girls on spring break instead of making meth. Selena Gomez is the uptight religious girl who's smart enough to bail before the shit hits the fan. Another finds it's all fun and games until you get shot in the arm. My main bone to pick is actually with Cliff Martinez's soundtrack. The music is all thoughtful and dreamy, which is tonally incompatible with what's going on in the movie most of the time. I guess that was the idea, but it just seems odd. (3/5)
The Call: As a fan of Brad Anderson's movies I found this one a little disappointing because it's so predictable. Since he didn't write or produce it, I sense he was just doing this to pay his mortgage. It was his biggest commercial success to date so I suppose that worked. The story follows the "Top Gun" mold where Halle Berry is a hotshot 911 operator who gets someone killed and then has to get back in the saddle again when Abigail Breslin is kidnapped. And golly gee, wouldn't you know that it's the same kidnapper who killed the woman Halle Berry was on the phone with at the start of the movie? And that despite all the efforts of her police boyfriend (Morris Chestnut) and the rest of the LAPD only Halle Berry can find the guy? It is less implausible than the similar "Cellular" I watched last month. It also makes me kind of want to ditch my prepaid phone since apparently those don't have GPS chips. Then again I doubt anyone would try to kidnap me for my hair. (Seriously, that is the plot.) (3/5)
Shooter: This was an OK action movie but a little too long. I mean after Marky Mark has killed most of the bad guys and got the others incriminating themselves on tape, why does he destroy the tape? That just unnecessarily adds to the length of the movie which really should have been 15-30 minutes shorter. (3/5)
Idle Hands: Since it was October I felt like watching a dumb horror movie and I remember this was parodied on Robot Chicken because it co-stars Seth Green. Unfortunately I took a catnap in the middle of the movie and missed how exactly the one stoner kid realizes his hand is evil and cuts it off and how Seth Green and the other stoner kid become zombies. Anyway, what I watched of it was OK. (2.5/5)
Vacancy: This starts off with one of those big horror movie cliches where a couple's car dies in the middle of nowhere and the only place they can go is a crappy motel. They soon find out the motel is used for shooting snuff films. Then they have to find a way to escape. It follows the Hitchcock rule of if you show a gun it has to eventually be used. Anyway, it was a decent thriller. (3/5)
All Superheroes Must Die: This was recommended to me when I added Kick-Ass 2 to my queue on Blockbuster. With such a provocative title I figured I might as well watch it. It's one of those really low budget movies so I wasn't expecting too much. Considering the budget it's not bad. The overall plot is sort of like Grant Morrison's famous Arkham Asylum where to save a bunch of civilians a hero (or 4 in this case) have to navigate a bunch of hazards concocted by villains (or 1 villain who's named Rickshaw and yet is white). The idea is these heroes have lost their powers and have to go through some sadisdic challenges to try to save the people. The heroes aren't all that bright. But like my Girl Power book it's the one who never had powers who saves the day. Like the big superhero movies there's even a cookie scene at the end! (3.5/5)
Dead Snow: Don't you just hate when you go away for a ski weekend and then you end up having to battle Nazi zombies? I know, right? I'm not sure which Scandinavian country this originated in but it was surprisingly good. The filmmakers really did their homework on zombie/slasher movies like Evil Dead 2, Friday the 13th, etc. (They even reference Briane Pagel's favorite horror movie "April Fool's Day.") A bunch of med students go up to a remote cabin in the mountains for Easter weekend but their vacation is spoiled by Nazi zombies who haunt the mountains. There's the requisite creepy old guy who shows up to explain the legend of the undead Nazis to the kids and then of course they start to get picked off one by one. The med students are surprisingly resourceful though in combating the Nazis using everything from hatchets to a chain saw to a machine gun mounted on a snowmobile. There's a touch of Pirates of the Caribbean in the ending too. Overall this was much better than I thought it'd be. The only drawback was having to read subtitles since the movie is in German or some damned thing and yet the slogans on their T-shirts are in English. Yay, America! (4/5)
Much Ado About Nothing (2012): After you make the highest-grossing superhero movie ever, what better to follow it up with than Shakespeare? Yeah, that's what Joss Whedon did with this classic play set in modern day. This doesn't really make a lot of sense with all these counts and princes and whatnot running around what looks like California. As always the Shakespeare dialog is hard to follow. From what I gather there's some kind of arranged marriage deal where this Claudio guy is supposed to marry a girl with the unlikely name of Hero. Except Claudio's evil brother gets him to believe Hero isn't a "maiden" which I presume to mean not a virgin. Again the modern setting doesn't really fly here. And then instead of just talking things out, the priest(!) convinces Hero and her dad (Agent Coulson) that they pretend Hero is dead so Claudio will realize how much he loves this girl he just met. It's the kind of zany scheme sitcom writers have been borrowing from for decades now. And meantime Hero's cousin and some guy decide they love each other. The end. There, I saved you 109 boring, boobless minutes. (2/5)
Green Lantern: Emerald Knights: Funny story: I got a digital copy of this free on a site called Vudu when I bought the Green Lantern 2011 movie but I'd forgotten I owned it until a couple weeks ago. Except when I loaded it on Vudu their site buffers like every 10 seconds. Fortunately Amazon had it free for Prime members--in HD even! (OK that wasn't a funny story.) Anyway, I guess it was like a Green Lantern version of "Gotham Knights" from 2008 which was a series of vignettes about Batman. Except unlike Gotham Knights there's actually a central story and it pretty much uses the same animation throughout. There are stories about some of the non-Hal Jordan Lanterns including Mogo, who is a planet. In between these is a story about a bad guy from the antimatter universe trying to kill everyone until one girl uses physics to save the day! It is pretty good and might help if you know nothing about Green Lantern comics. I think my biggest complaint was whoever they got to do Killowog (the pig guy)'s voice sucked. Michael Clarke Duncan's voice was a lot better in the movie because Killowog is supposed to be big and tough; he shouldn't sound like some ordinary schlub. (4/5)
Green Lantern: First Flight: This was also on Amazon Prime, so why the hell not watch it too? In some ways this would have been a better movie than what they ended up using. The only drawback is Hal Jordan gets the ring and pretty much right away knows how to use it and goes flying around with Sinestro like "Training Day." They head out to something akin to the Star Wars cantina, where Sinestro forcefeeds an alien chick some space heroin to make her talk. This was my first real clue that while this was a cartoon it was pretty PG-13. Anyway, the gist is that Sinestro is sick of the wimpy Guardians and wants to bring order to the galaxy, so by working with some other dude they make a yellow Lantern. And gee, who do you think is the only one who can stop him? Duh. Almost none of this takes place on Earth, which is why I suppose they didn't use it for the movie. There are some differences from the other cartoon I watched about how the ring gets passed on when the owner dies. In Emerald Knights the ring chooses a successor while in this the ring flies home and the Guardians pick someone. I think the former is what they use nowadays in the comics. (4/5)
Superman: Doomsday: Again it was free on Amazon, so why not? They had to do a fair bit of rejiggering to get this 90s plot to work. Now LexCorp digs up an alien pod in South America and out pops Doomsday, who's like the Hulk crossed with the Predator from that Ahh-nold movie. There's a massive battle that makes the fight in Metropolis in "Man of Steel" look pretty tame and then Doomsday is killed and Superman "dies." A few weeks later Superman seemingly comes back to life, but is it the real one? If you remember the comics from the 90s, then no. Except instead of 4 pretenders we just have one. And only mullet-sporting Superman in black can save the day! Again this was pretty PG-13 with blood and fake Superman killing the Toyman and stuff like that. I got bored after the Doomsday battle. I guess the problem is that's so epic that everything after that feels like a 45-minute epilogue. Makes me wonder, have they made a Batman: Knightfall animated movie yet? That would be cool. (3/5)
Wonder Woman (2008): Yet another animated movie free on Amazon so what the hell. Michael Offutt would like this one as it mostly sticks to the '80s reboot of the comic book where Diana's mother makes her out of clay and whatnot. She grows up to be a great warrior and when Steve Trevor crashes on the island, she sneaks into a tournament to win the right to take him back. The characterization of Wonder Woman was really well done, as was her relationship with Steve. The Clash of the Titans stuff was a little goofy. I especially wasn't sure why Hades looked more like Dionysus, the god of pleasure and gluttony. Also not sure why Steve was flying an F-23, which never went into production. And how do a bunch of Amazons make an invisible jet? I thought maybe they fixed up Steve's plane but it looked different. Also, Alfred Molina (of Dr. Octopus fame) sounded like Donald Trump as Ares; at any moment I expected him to say, "Wonder Woman, you're fired!" Still, this wouldn't be a bad start for an actual movie. (4/5)
Batman: Mystery of the Batwoman: This "mystery" was pretty easy to unravel. I think I had it figured out after about 20 minutes. Basically you just have to think of the movie Scream and how that ended. The gist is that some girl dressed like a bat shows up on the scene and doesn't play as nice as Batman, so he has to figure out who she is before she can cause too much damage. It was OK but as I said too easy to figure out. (3/5)
Justice League: Crisis on Two Earths: I figured I might as well complete my week with another DC Universe animated movie. In this one good Lex Luthor from a parallel Earth ventures over to our world to get the Justice League's help in stopping the Crime Syndicate, who feature evil versions of Superman, Wonder Woman, Batman, Green Lantern, and Flash. They pretty much rule the Earth, operating as a superpowered Mafia. Naturally the Justice League agrees to help and then there's a lot of fighting between the two sides. The end game is kind of stupid as Owlman (evil Batman) decides to use a quantum bomb to destroy all reality. When evil Wonder Woman hears his plan, she's like, "Cool!" Not seeming to understand destroying all reality means destroying her too. Of course in the end Batman has to save the day. There's a subplot where Martian Manhunter and the president's daughter fall in love and they mindfuck, which I guess is how Martians do it. Gross. Since there was only like 70 minutes Green Lantern is pretty much relegated to the background and the Flash is only there for comic relief. So not the strongest in story, but I guess if you're more into slugfests it's fine. Incidentally the current Justice League comics involve the Crime Syndicate coming to our Earth. (4/5)
P2: This was an effective enough thriller. The gist is that a girl working late on Christmas Eve gets trapped in a parking garage with a psycho security guy and his Rottweiler. A little more background on both characters might have made it a little better. (2.5/5)
Dylan Dog: Dead of Night: If I'd ever watched more than one episode I could probably compare this to "True Blood" on HBO. It involves New Orleans and vampires, werewolves, and zombies. Superman from "Superman Returns" has to battle the various undead for some kind of artifact to raise an ancient demon to destroy the world or something. This was an OK mix of horror and humor (the idea of a "body shop" for zombie spare parts was pretty funny) but it dragged on 15-30 minutes too long. Or that might be because I was watching it at like 1am. (2.5/5)
Snitch: Minimum sentencing laws for drugs have essentially created a scenario like during McCarthy times where the only way to save yourself is to rat out your friends, whether they did something or not. So when the Rock's son gets arrested for accepting a shipment of Ecstasy thanks to his friend ratting him out, the only way for him not to get 10 years in jail is for the Rock to go find some drug dealers to rat out to the Feds. Which he does with the help of an ex-con who works for his trucking company. It was OK but dragged a little. (2.5/5)
Session 9: An asbestos removal company owner whose business and marriage seem to be on the rocks takes a job to clean out an old mental asylum. With the help of David Caruso, Josh Lucas, and a couple other guys they get to work, but naturally things start to get ugly. Josh Lucas finds some buried treasure presumably taken from the inmates while another guy finds a cache of old tapes concerning a schizophrenic woman with a dark past. The title comes from the box of tapes he finds, each labeled Session 1, Session 2, etc. Session 9 is the last one and we know there has to be some nasty shit on there. Anyway, this is another low-budget thriller from Brad Anderson that does a good job of creating tension without it turning into one of those ghost hunting TV shows or The Blair Witch Project. The final solution was a little too obvious and the film drags a little but now that it's on Netflix Instant it's a good deal for some Halloween entertainment. (4/5)
The Last Man on Earth: This is the old Vincent Price adaptation of Richard Matheson's I Am Legend. It's much more faithful to the book than more recent versions, like that Will Smith abomination. There's still a lot cut out and the first half-hour or so is almost like a silent movie because it's pretty much just Price going around scavenging supplies and such. If you're too lazy to read the book this is a good way to get the gist of it. (3/5)
Event Horizon: I'd most heard of this movie because it's referenced in a Family Guy episode. Anyway, it's kind of like "Alien" meets "Hellraiser." A crew goes out to rescue a ship called the Event Horizon that was testing a "gravity drive" that would allow it to jump from one place in the universe to the other. But of course something went wrong. The people in this are at least not as dumb as the supposed scientists in "Prometheus." And hey, it's one of those rare horror movies where a black guy survives--just probably not the one you'd think. (3/5)
Friday the 13th X: It should have been called Jason in Spaaaaaaaace! Because that's what happens. They sort of borrow from "Aliens" in that a woman is found in stasis. She's an expert on Jason Voorheis, who also happens to get unthawed and predictably starts killing all the dumbass college kids on board the ship. It's a completely ridiculous movie but since it knows how ridiculous it is it's fine. My favorite part is when they use the holodeck to make Jason think he's back at Camp Crystal Lake. (2.5/5)
Tuesday, October 29, 2013
Two Cent Tuesday: The Hierarchy
Unleash the grumpiness! |
I'm in a grumpy mood, so here's a Grumpy Bulldog rant that you may not agree with it. Which is fine, it just means you're wrong and stupid because I am always right. (Except all those times I'm not right in which case it's the world that's wrong, not me.)
Anyway, you know how in movies and TV and such when they depict high school they also have all these social castes: cool kids, jocks, stoners, poor kids, geeks, whatever? Like in "The Breakfast Club" or "Clueless" or "Mean Girls" and shit like that. (I've honestly never seen the latter, nor do I intend to.) It's occurred to me that writing is a lot the same thing. There's basically a social hierarchy at play when writers socialize. I imagine it goes something like this:
Top: Household Names
This would be Stephen King, JK Rowling, John Grisham, and their ilk. The authors who make billions of dollars and people line up to buy their books. It's like the 1% of the writing world.
Second Tier: Bestsellers
These would be authors who sell a lot of books but probably aren't as well known as the Household Names. I'm trying to think of specific names but I really can't at the moment, so feel free to suggest someone.
Third Tier: Midlisters
These are the authors who might be published by the Big publishers but don't sell enough to get on the bestseller list or on the Today Show or Good Morning America or anything like that.
Fourth Tier: Small/Self-Published
This is Me and pretty much everyone who participates on my blog. The people who have a book published by a small-time publisher or self-published.
Lowest Tier: Unpublished
This tier used to be a lot bigger in the old days before anyone could self-publish on Amazon or Smashwords or whatever. But there are still those people who keep trying to get traditionally published instead of self-publishing or else just haven't quite finished that novel they've been working on for the last fifteen years.
And then each tier can probably be subdivided into other tiers.
The thing is, if you're in one tier it's hard to interact with a tier above you. Again think of it like high school where if a nerd tries to sit with the cool kids, he's liable to end up with an atomic wedgie. (Honestly though I never got any wedgies in high school or shoved into a locker or any of those TV/movie things bullies do.)
For instance, I follow a few Midlisters on Twitter and Facebook and whatnot. Do any of them ever come to this blog to check out my musings? No. Do they ever reply to any Tweets I make that don't reference them specifically? No. Do they Like my random Facebook posts that again don't mention them specifically? Hardly ever. Because they stick to their little clique of friends and acquaintances and I, being only a small/self-published author am not worthy of being in their circle.
At the same time, those Midlisters who shit on me, do you think they can get into the inner circle of a Bestseller? Unlikely. And Stephen King sure as hell isn't going to give them the time of day if they call his mansion. And if some Unpublished schlub wants me to read his latest opus do you think I'm going to make time for him? Um, probably not. Step off dude, I got Big Important Author stuff to do.
I imagine even if you sell enough books to no longer qualify for a lower tier it's still got to be hard to move up socially. I mean if EL James goes to a big fancy cocktail party with a bunch of authors do you think Jonathan Franzen is going to let her into his group of literary snobs? Maybe at first just so they can dump pig's blood on her later.
Anyway, this is my observation of the literary world that is let's face it built on scant anecdotal evidence. Maybe certain Midlisters don't really mean to freeze me out, just like I may unintentionally freeze Unpublished people out. It's just that we've all got our little worlds and it's hard as hell to try to break through the force field keeping you out of someone else's little world. Since we're all authors or would be authors we should probably try to treat each other with mutual respect and stuff, but hey, we're busy right?
Monday, October 28, 2013
Comic Captions 10/28/13
It's time for another Comic Captions, where your job is to recaption a
comic book panel. The goal of course is to make it as humorous as
possible.
This week's comes from Blackest Night #1
This week's comes from Blackest Night #1
I'll go first
Black Hand: Hey, baby, how bout some tongue?
Now it's your turn!Sunday, October 27, 2013
Box Office Blitz Week 16 Results (Reposted)
(Stupid Blogger backdated the original post.)
Because I can't start writing until November 1 for stupid Nano, I was bored this Saturday. So I decided to go watch a movie. What's annoying is it's almost Halloween and yet the only horror movie playing for the most part is the Carrie remake. I already saw the original so I don't see any reason to go watch that. Hollywood really dropped the ball here by scheduling all their horror movies for July-September.
Instead I saw Runner Runner. It was OK but definitely not worth $10.25. It would've been better with a stronger actor than Justin Timberlake in the lead role. I don't even know anymore; who is a 30-ish actor they could have used instead? It was produced by Leonardo DiCaprio, who probably would have fit the role about 5 years ago. Of course I couldn't help watching Affleck and trying to picture a Batsuit on him. Except he's evil in this one. Anyway, it was kind of "Wall Street" only set in Costa Rica and with online gaming instead of stocks...so it's not much like "Wall Street." Really online gaming seems like the dumbest thing ever. How can anyone think they're really going to win money from some foreign website? Probably the same people who think a Nigerian prince will pay them millions.
Anyway, the same morons who watched old comedians fall down in "Grown Ups 2" instead of watching monsters fight robots in "Pacific Rim" went to watch "Bad Grandpa." Seriously, you paid $10 or more for what's essentially an episode of "Candid Camera?" Yeesh. Inexplicably the budget was $15M. Is latex makeup that expensive?
The results were:
Bad Grandpa $32M
Gravity $20.3M
Capt Phillips $11.8M
I foolishly picked:
David Walston picked:
1. Bad Grandpa $30M
2. Gravity $21M
3. Captain Phillips $11M
That's a trifecta for 900 points.
Maurice Mitchell picked:
1. Gravity $24M
2. The Counselor $21M
3. Captain Phillips $11M
That's also 100 for Gravity and 400 for Cpt Phillips for 500 total.
Chris Dilloway picked:
GRANDPA $29
GRAVITY $20
COUNSELOR $12
That's 200 for Bad Grandpa and 300 for Gravity for 500 total
Briane Pagel picked:
1. Captain Phillip: $20 mil
2. Gravity: $19 mil
3. The Counselor $18 mil.
That's 100 for Cpt Phillips and 300 for Gravity for 400 total.
Andrew Leon picked:
1. Bad Grandpa -- $31m
2. Gravity -- $24m
3. The Counselor -- $15m
That's 200 for Grandpa and 300 for Gravity for 500 total.
Rusty Webb picked:
Grandpa $30 mil
Gravity $25 mil
Cap'n Phillips $10 mil
That's also a trifecta.
Rusty and David tied on Grandpa but David is closer on Gravity so he wins the round for 300 bonus points.
No changes in the standings this week:
Because I can't start writing until November 1 for stupid Nano, I was bored this Saturday. So I decided to go watch a movie. What's annoying is it's almost Halloween and yet the only horror movie playing for the most part is the Carrie remake. I already saw the original so I don't see any reason to go watch that. Hollywood really dropped the ball here by scheduling all their horror movies for July-September.
Instead I saw Runner Runner. It was OK but definitely not worth $10.25. It would've been better with a stronger actor than Justin Timberlake in the lead role. I don't even know anymore; who is a 30-ish actor they could have used instead? It was produced by Leonardo DiCaprio, who probably would have fit the role about 5 years ago. Of course I couldn't help watching Affleck and trying to picture a Batsuit on him. Except he's evil in this one. Anyway, it was kind of "Wall Street" only set in Costa Rica and with online gaming instead of stocks...so it's not much like "Wall Street." Really online gaming seems like the dumbest thing ever. How can anyone think they're really going to win money from some foreign website? Probably the same people who think a Nigerian prince will pay them millions.
Anyway, the same morons who watched old comedians fall down in "Grown Ups 2" instead of watching monsters fight robots in "Pacific Rim" went to watch "Bad Grandpa." Seriously, you paid $10 or more for what's essentially an episode of "Candid Camera?" Yeesh. Inexplicably the budget was $15M. Is latex makeup that expensive?
The results were:
Bad Grandpa $32M
Gravity $20.3M
Capt Phillips $11.8M
I foolishly picked:
- Gravity $25M
- The Counselor $20M
- Captain Phillips $10M
David Walston picked:
1. Bad Grandpa $30M
2. Gravity $21M
3. Captain Phillips $11M
That's a trifecta for 900 points.
Maurice Mitchell picked:
1. Gravity $24M
2. The Counselor $21M
3. Captain Phillips $11M
That's also 100 for Gravity and 400 for Cpt Phillips for 500 total.
Chris Dilloway picked:
GRANDPA $29
GRAVITY $20
COUNSELOR $12
That's 200 for Bad Grandpa and 300 for Gravity for 500 total
Briane Pagel picked:
1. Captain Phillip: $20 mil
2. Gravity: $19 mil
3. The Counselor $18 mil.
That's 100 for Cpt Phillips and 300 for Gravity for 400 total.
Andrew Leon picked:
1. Bad Grandpa -- $31m
2. Gravity -- $24m
3. The Counselor -- $15m
That's 200 for Grandpa and 300 for Gravity for 500 total.
Rusty Webb picked:
Grandpa $30 mil
Gravity $25 mil
Cap'n Phillips $10 mil
That's also a trifecta.
Rusty and David tied on Grandpa but David is closer on Gravity so he wins the round for 300 bonus points.
No changes in the standings this week:
Box Office Blitz | |||
Scoreboard | |||
16 | Total | ||
1 | Rusty Carl | 900 | 10900 |
2 | David Walton | 1200 | 10000 |
3 | Chris Dilloway | 500 | 9100 |
4 | Maurice Mitchell | 500 | 8800 |
5 | Andrew Leon | 500 | 8400 |
6 | PT Dilloway | 500 | 8200 |
7 | Briane Pagel | 400 | 5400 |
8 | Michael Offutt | 0 | 4900 |
9 | PK Hrezo | 0 | 600 |
4500 | 66300 |
Saturday, October 26, 2013
Books, Books, and Additonal Books
No one here has read the entire Scarlet Knight series let alone the Chances Are series or my many, many other books, but just for the hell of it, here are some more books to add to your To Be Read wishlist!
First off, there's the Girl Power sequel The Impostors. It's now available in ebook and paperback! You can only buy the paperback from Amazon or Createspace, though. What's annoying is I ordered a copy of the paperback and only then realized the cover looked like shit. The girl half was showing up well enough but the guy half was really fuzzy because the image was too small. I ran through about as many versions of the guy half over the last month or so as there have been Doctor Whos. I never thought finding a picture of a guy in a superhero mask would be that difficult. Eventually I had to spend $14 to buy a picture on iStockphoto. Their site sucks anymore because now the minimum credits you can buy cost $35. Back in 2010 it was like Fotolia where you could buy 10 credits for like $12.50 or something like that. It was a better deal. At least they let you one-time buy something, though obviously it's not as good of a value. Still, when you only want one image, it's a lot better. So here now is the final version:
It may not be perfect but at this point I don't care anymore. It's just been way too much of a hassle. I really ought to go to plain covers so I don't have to worry about it.
And now for 2 books that are very much similar.
Sisterhood (Tales of the Coven) is the sprawling tale of Sylvia Joubert starting in about 1500 in France. Sylvia is the youngest of three sisters, all of whom are witches in a secret coven--as is their mother. Over the 400 years Sylvia does a whole lot of stuff like battle demons, vampires, and other witches. It's not really an action story though as it focuses more on the heartbreaks Sylvia suffers along the way as one relationship after the other is torn apart by war, betrayal, and time. This isn't exactly plotless, but there's not a really strong plot pulling it along. It doesn't follow that model of having a main antagonist because Sylvia ends up deal with several antagonists over 400 years. The toughest antagonist is her own heart, which gets her into a lot of trouble.
In the end I think Sylvia has about as many jobs as Barbie or Homer Simpson. It's in ebook right now and paperback will be out next week. If you read the 5th and 6th Scarlet Knight books (which you haven't) then you'd know some of what's in this book and how Sylvia's greatest mistake comes to haunt Emma Earl nearly 200 years later. Since this is a prequel to the Scarlet Knight stories it doesn't exactly jive exactly with everything in those books, or especially the Dark Origins novella.
Note that the cover to the left is the paperback cover. I mirrored the image and slid the text over so that way the text wasn't too close to the edge. And the added benefit is the girl's face isn't on the fold line by the spine. I still have it the other way for the ebook because I'm lazy and don't feel like updating Smashwords, Amazon, and B&N.
Awakening (Birth of Magic) is somewhat of a reboot of the Sisterhood story, only not covering so much time and with a more action-themed format. Originally the character was named Sylvia Joubert and her sister was named Agnes just like the Scarlet Knight books but now I've changed it to Stephanie Joliet and her sister Alexis. Hooray for find-and-replace in MS Word! Stephanie's background is still the same as Sylvia's for the most part.
This story takes place in the mid-1930s. Stephanie is assigned by the coven to investigate some weird magic readings near her. They're centered in a local college, in the lab of a guy named Ethan Fraser. When Nazis pay a visit to Ethan's lab to steal his work (and him) Stephanie rescues him and they go on the run. The greatest mistake of Stephanie's life comes back to haunt her, putting her, Ethan, and the world in general in terrible danger.
It should be available sometime next week in ebook and by the end of the week or the next week in paperback. You can download an ARC at Smashwords but it has quite a few typos and even some notes I wrote to myself that I meant to correct but haven't yet. It's free right now so I guess you get what you pay for.
Instead of a person for this cover I found a picture of someone with a magic wand because a "magic wand" is at the heart of the story. And there's a big ass Nazi symbol on there so you know this is taking place in Nazi times. That symbol really stands out, don't it? The background I picked up on Fotolia when I was buying other stuff; it's supposed to be blood-like. It might be cool if I could get some blood on the Nazi sign, but whatever.
That just about empties out my archive of finished stories. All that's left now are two different versions of my story First Contact. The first dates from 2000-ish and the second dates from 2008. They are very different. The 2008 one has some almost Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy-type stuff in it, like how gangsters took over the moon and how mercenaries formed a labor union and how sweets are the real currency on Mars. The 2000 one plays it straight. I might get bored enough to give those different titles and toss them out there too. Since the 1995 First Contact and its sequels have been my best-selling ones behind the Chances Are series and Where You Belong, maybe those would make some money. After that all I have are two Batpooh State kid stories I don't think are very strong and some old Transformers, Star Trek, and Star Wars fanfics.
First off, there's the Girl Power sequel The Impostors. It's now available in ebook and paperback! You can only buy the paperback from Amazon or Createspace, though. What's annoying is I ordered a copy of the paperback and only then realized the cover looked like shit. The girl half was showing up well enough but the guy half was really fuzzy because the image was too small. I ran through about as many versions of the guy half over the last month or so as there have been Doctor Whos. I never thought finding a picture of a guy in a superhero mask would be that difficult. Eventually I had to spend $14 to buy a picture on iStockphoto. Their site sucks anymore because now the minimum credits you can buy cost $35. Back in 2010 it was like Fotolia where you could buy 10 credits for like $12.50 or something like that. It was a better deal. At least they let you one-time buy something, though obviously it's not as good of a value. Still, when you only want one image, it's a lot better. So here now is the final version:
It may not be perfect but at this point I don't care anymore. It's just been way too much of a hassle. I really ought to go to plain covers so I don't have to worry about it.
And now for 2 books that are very much similar.
Sisterhood (Tales of the Coven) is the sprawling tale of Sylvia Joubert starting in about 1500 in France. Sylvia is the youngest of three sisters, all of whom are witches in a secret coven--as is their mother. Over the 400 years Sylvia does a whole lot of stuff like battle demons, vampires, and other witches. It's not really an action story though as it focuses more on the heartbreaks Sylvia suffers along the way as one relationship after the other is torn apart by war, betrayal, and time. This isn't exactly plotless, but there's not a really strong plot pulling it along. It doesn't follow that model of having a main antagonist because Sylvia ends up deal with several antagonists over 400 years. The toughest antagonist is her own heart, which gets her into a lot of trouble.
In the end I think Sylvia has about as many jobs as Barbie or Homer Simpson. It's in ebook right now and paperback will be out next week. If you read the 5th and 6th Scarlet Knight books (which you haven't) then you'd know some of what's in this book and how Sylvia's greatest mistake comes to haunt Emma Earl nearly 200 years later. Since this is a prequel to the Scarlet Knight stories it doesn't exactly jive exactly with everything in those books, or especially the Dark Origins novella.
Note that the cover to the left is the paperback cover. I mirrored the image and slid the text over so that way the text wasn't too close to the edge. And the added benefit is the girl's face isn't on the fold line by the spine. I still have it the other way for the ebook because I'm lazy and don't feel like updating Smashwords, Amazon, and B&N.
Awakening (Birth of Magic) is somewhat of a reboot of the Sisterhood story, only not covering so much time and with a more action-themed format. Originally the character was named Sylvia Joubert and her sister was named Agnes just like the Scarlet Knight books but now I've changed it to Stephanie Joliet and her sister Alexis. Hooray for find-and-replace in MS Word! Stephanie's background is still the same as Sylvia's for the most part.
This story takes place in the mid-1930s. Stephanie is assigned by the coven to investigate some weird magic readings near her. They're centered in a local college, in the lab of a guy named Ethan Fraser. When Nazis pay a visit to Ethan's lab to steal his work (and him) Stephanie rescues him and they go on the run. The greatest mistake of Stephanie's life comes back to haunt her, putting her, Ethan, and the world in general in terrible danger.
It should be available sometime next week in ebook and by the end of the week or the next week in paperback. You can download an ARC at Smashwords but it has quite a few typos and even some notes I wrote to myself that I meant to correct but haven't yet. It's free right now so I guess you get what you pay for.
Instead of a person for this cover I found a picture of someone with a magic wand because a "magic wand" is at the heart of the story. And there's a big ass Nazi symbol on there so you know this is taking place in Nazi times. That symbol really stands out, don't it? The background I picked up on Fotolia when I was buying other stuff; it's supposed to be blood-like. It might be cool if I could get some blood on the Nazi sign, but whatever.
That just about empties out my archive of finished stories. All that's left now are two different versions of my story First Contact. The first dates from 2000-ish and the second dates from 2008. They are very different. The 2008 one has some almost Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy-type stuff in it, like how gangsters took over the moon and how mercenaries formed a labor union and how sweets are the real currency on Mars. The 2000 one plays it straight. I might get bored enough to give those different titles and toss them out there too. Since the 1995 First Contact and its sequels have been my best-selling ones behind the Chances Are series and Where You Belong, maybe those would make some money. After that all I have are two Batpooh State kid stories I don't think are very strong and some old Transformers, Star Trek, and Star Wars fanfics.
Friday, October 25, 2013
Box Office Blitz Week 16 Results
Because I can't start writing until November 1 for stupid Nano, I was bored this Saturday. So I decided to go watch a movie. What's annoying is it's almost Halloween and yet the only horror movie playing for the most part is the Carrie remake. I already saw the original so I don't see any reason to go watch that. Hollywood really dropped the ball here by scheduling all their horror movies for July-September.
Instead I saw Runner Runner. It was OK but definitely not worth $10.25. It would've been better with a stronger actor than Justin Timberlake in the lead role. I don't even know anymore; who is a 30-ish actor they could have used instead? It was produced by Leonardo DiCaprio, who probably would have fit the role about 5 years ago. Of course I couldn't help watching Affleck and trying to picture a Batsuit on him. Except he's evil in this one. Anyway, it was kind of "Wall Street" only set in Costa Rica and with online gaming instead of stocks...so it's not much like "Wall Street." Really online gaming seems like the dumbest thing ever. How can anyone think they're really going to win money from some foreign website? Probably the same people who think a Nigerian prince will pay them millions.
Anyway, the same morons who watched old comedians fall down in "Grown Ups 2" instead of watching monsters fight robots in "Pacific Rim" went to watch "Bad Grandpa." Seriously, you paid $10 or more for what's essentially an episode of "Candid Camera?" Yeesh. Inexplicably the budget was $15M. Is latex makeup that expensive?
The results were:
Bad Grandpa $32M
Gravity $20.3M
Capt Phillips $11.8M
I foolishly picked:
David Walston picked:
1. Bad Grandpa $30M
2. Gravity $21M
3. Captain Phillips $11M
That's a trifecta for 900 points.
Maurice Mitchell picked:
1. Gravity $24M
2. The Counselor $21M
3. Captain Phillips $11M
That's also 100 for Gravity and 400 for Cpt Phillips for 500 total.
Chris Dilloway picked:
GRANDPA $29
GRAVITY $20
COUNSELOR $12
That's 200 for Bad Grandpa and 300 for Gravity for 500 total
Briane Pagel picked:
1. Captain Phillip: $20 mil
2. Gravity: $19 mil
3. The Counselor $18 mil.
That's 100 for Cpt Phillips and 300 for Gravity for 400 total.
Andrew Leon picked:
1. Bad Grandpa -- $31m
2. Gravity -- $24m
3. The Counselor -- $15m
That's 200 for Grandpa and 300 for Gravity for 500 total.
Rusty Webb picked:
Grandpa $30 mil
Gravity $25 mil
Cap'n Phillips $10 mil
That's also a trifecta.
Rusty and David tied on Grandpa but David is closer on Gravity so he wins the round for 300 bonus points.
No changes in the standings this week:
Instead I saw Runner Runner. It was OK but definitely not worth $10.25. It would've been better with a stronger actor than Justin Timberlake in the lead role. I don't even know anymore; who is a 30-ish actor they could have used instead? It was produced by Leonardo DiCaprio, who probably would have fit the role about 5 years ago. Of course I couldn't help watching Affleck and trying to picture a Batsuit on him. Except he's evil in this one. Anyway, it was kind of "Wall Street" only set in Costa Rica and with online gaming instead of stocks...so it's not much like "Wall Street." Really online gaming seems like the dumbest thing ever. How can anyone think they're really going to win money from some foreign website? Probably the same people who think a Nigerian prince will pay them millions.
Anyway, the same morons who watched old comedians fall down in "Grown Ups 2" instead of watching monsters fight robots in "Pacific Rim" went to watch "Bad Grandpa." Seriously, you paid $10 or more for what's essentially an episode of "Candid Camera?" Yeesh. Inexplicably the budget was $15M. Is latex makeup that expensive?
The results were:
Bad Grandpa $32M
Gravity $20.3M
Capt Phillips $11.8M
I foolishly picked:
- Gravity $25M
- The Counselor $20M
- Captain Phillips $10M
David Walston picked:
1. Bad Grandpa $30M
2. Gravity $21M
3. Captain Phillips $11M
That's a trifecta for 900 points.
Maurice Mitchell picked:
1. Gravity $24M
2. The Counselor $21M
3. Captain Phillips $11M
That's also 100 for Gravity and 400 for Cpt Phillips for 500 total.
Chris Dilloway picked:
GRANDPA $29
GRAVITY $20
COUNSELOR $12
That's 200 for Bad Grandpa and 300 for Gravity for 500 total
Briane Pagel picked:
1. Captain Phillip: $20 mil
2. Gravity: $19 mil
3. The Counselor $18 mil.
That's 100 for Cpt Phillips and 300 for Gravity for 400 total.
Andrew Leon picked:
1. Bad Grandpa -- $31m
2. Gravity -- $24m
3. The Counselor -- $15m
That's 200 for Grandpa and 300 for Gravity for 500 total.
Rusty Webb picked:
Grandpa $30 mil
Gravity $25 mil
Cap'n Phillips $10 mil
That's also a trifecta.
Rusty and David tied on Grandpa but David is closer on Gravity so he wins the round for 300 bonus points.
No changes in the standings this week:
Box Office Blitz | |||
Scoreboard | |||
16 | Total | ||
1 | Rusty Carl | 900 | 10900 |
2 | David Walton | 1200 | 10000 |
3 | Chris Dilloway | 500 | 9100 |
4 | Maurice Mitchell | 500 | 8800 |
5 | Andrew Leon | 500 | 8400 |
6 | PT Dilloway | 500 | 8200 |
7 | Briane Pagel | 400 | 5400 |
8 | Michael Offutt | 0 | 4900 |
9 | PK Hrezo | 0 | 600 |
4500 | 66300 |
Box Office Blitz Week 16
Next week begins the last month of the regular season of Box Office Blitz. Thanks to people forgetting to play (or going to Disney in Rusty's case) the standings have tightened up a little bit. Which means everyone needs to step up with their A game. And you know, actually play the game. That sort of helps.
Last week I saw "Gravity" finally and really enjoyed it. It was just the second movie I've watched in 3D. Fake IMAX 3D even because it seemed like the kind of movie where that would be worthwhile. And it was because you get all that debris flying at you and stuff. I'm sure the visuals are even better when you aren't wearing the glasses over glasses. Despite some inaccuracies--like having a space shuttle, what is this, 2011?--I thought it was a really good story of a woman's struggle for survival. More than that it was about Sandra Bullock's character finding her courage to live whereas even before the space mission she had apparently been just been going through the motions of living. I'd give it a 4/5 and I wouldn't be surprised if Bullock gets nominated for an Oscar. But she won't win because there was a preview for a Meryl Streep movie and she by default gets handed the Oscar for anything she does. Anyway, if you haven't seen "Gravity" yet I'd recommend seeing it in the theater so you can get that whole 3D experience. Unless you have one of them fancy 3D TVs.
Now then, it's time for the list of Week 15's offerings at my local megaplex. (* Means it's a new release)
And now you make your picks in the comments. Good luck!
Last week I saw "Gravity" finally and really enjoyed it. It was just the second movie I've watched in 3D. Fake IMAX 3D even because it seemed like the kind of movie where that would be worthwhile. And it was because you get all that debris flying at you and stuff. I'm sure the visuals are even better when you aren't wearing the glasses over glasses. Despite some inaccuracies--like having a space shuttle, what is this, 2011?--I thought it was a really good story of a woman's struggle for survival. More than that it was about Sandra Bullock's character finding her courage to live whereas even before the space mission she had apparently been just been going through the motions of living. I'd give it a 4/5 and I wouldn't be surprised if Bullock gets nominated for an Oscar. But she won't win because there was a preview for a Meryl Streep movie and she by default gets handed the Oscar for anything she does. Anyway, if you haven't seen "Gravity" yet I'd recommend seeing it in the theater so you can get that whole 3D experience. Unless you have one of them fancy 3D TVs.
Now then, it's time for the list of Week 15's offerings at my local megaplex. (* Means it's a new release)
- Bad Grandpa* (if you pay $10 to watch this in a theater you need kicked in the crotch)
- Baggage Claim
- Captain Phillips
- Carrie
- Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs 2
- Escape Plan
- Gravity
- I'm in Love With a Church Girl
- Lee Daniels's The Butler
- Machete Kills
- Prisoners
- Runner, Runner
- Rush
- The Counselor*
- The Family
- The Fifth Estate
- Gravity $25M
- The Counselor $20M
- Captain Phillips $10M
And now you make your picks in the comments. Good luck!
Thursday, October 24, 2013
Thursday Review: Flash Fiction Fest 2
Fake cover! |
Trip, er Trey the Wonder Dog! |
Sean's stories were interconnected (loosely) and several of Neil's were as well.
This year, being lazy, I decided to do a 7-part interconnected story collectively called Mortal Sins. And being really lazy I set it in the Scarlet Knight universe. It doesn't really focus on the Scarlet Knight though. Instead it focuses on a bank security guard named Seth. If you ever saw the movie "Observe & Report" starring Seth Rogen (hence the character's name) it was about a really gung-ho security guard at a mall who thinks he's a total badass. In this story Seth is pretty much the same way.
Then one day while he's in the john the bank gets robbed. While he tries to heroically thwart the robbers, it's actually the Scarlet Knight who swoops in to save the day. Naturally she gets all the credit. This sets Seth on a dark spiral and an inevitable confrontation with the Scarlet Knight.
It took some thinking to come up with how to work all 7 sins in there. First I had to go to Wikipedia and look up the 7 deadly sins because I'm not Catholic and I hadn't watched "Seven" in a really long time. Then I had to think of some way to connect wrath, greed, sloth, pride, lust, envy, and gluttony. The hardest one was gluttony because really how could I work eating too much into what's supposed to be an action story? You'll find out.
Yesterday Tony Laplume was saying I come up with plot first; such is not always the case. With this I came up with most of the character first to create a basic framework of how the sins should connect but I hadn't figured out entirely who the main character was yet. Then I was driving home and saw a bank and thought, "Hey, why not a security guard?!" The rest started to slide into place then. I wrote the whole first draft on Fourth of July, most of it in a crummy old Arby's near where I live.
It took some thinking to come up with how to work all 7 sins in there. First I had to go to Wikipedia and look up the 7 deadly sins because I'm not Catholic and I hadn't watched "Seven" in a really long time. Then I had to think of some way to connect wrath, greed, sloth, pride, lust, envy, and gluttony. The hardest one was gluttony because really how could I work eating too much into what's supposed to be an action story? You'll find out.
Yesterday Tony Laplume was saying I come up with plot first; such is not always the case. With this I came up with most of the character first to create a basic framework of how the sins should connect but I hadn't figured out entirely who the main character was yet. Then I was driving home and saw a bank and thought, "Hey, why not a security guard?!" The rest started to slide into place then. I wrote the whole first draft on Fourth of July, most of it in a crummy old Arby's near where I live.
You don't need to have read any of the Scarlet Knight books to understand this story since she's a relatively minor character in terms of her onscreen presence. It basically could have been any superhero or vigilante of any sort. You probably don't remember earlier this month I talked about a miniseries called Lex Luthor, Man of Steel that focused the point of view on the bad guy and Superman had like 1 line in the whole thing. It's sort of the same deal here where the point of view is Seth's and the Scarlet Knight gets only a few lines through all 7 stories; some of them she doesn't even appear in! Of course if you have read the Scarlet Knight books you'll understand it better, especially things like who the Headmistress is--which comes from Volume 7 of the series. The stories will begin to post on November 1, though I'm not sure when mine will be posting. This year you can order the ebook straight off instead of waiting until December. So then you don't have to wait for all that flashy goodness!
(Pro tip: The publisher is British so make sure if you're in the US you don't buy it from an international site. I did that by accident with one of their books that was on sale and then got nailed with like $2 in fees from my bank, so it ended up costing me more than if I'd just bought it from Amazon in the US.)
Anyway, get ready for that in November when most people are fretting about NanoWriMo and crap like that. Incidentally this is the first year I'll be participating in the stupid NanoWriMo thing. I figured November 1 was pretty much going to coincide with writing the third (probably final) Girl Power story anyway, so I might as well sign up and reap all that glory when I smoke all those losers who can't get to 50,000 words in a month. I think I'll have to just try to go out of my mind to write 50,000 words that weekend, though it would be extremely difficult to do so. Half that would be more feasible.
Wednesday, October 23, 2013
A Window Into the Creative Process
October has 5 Wednesdays so the Recap will post next week. Here's today's bonus Wednesday post!
First off, what do you think of this cover for Sisterhood (Tales of the Coven #1--and only)? The story focuses on Sylvia Joubert, the redheaded witch from the first 5 Scarlet Knight books so I put "redhead witch" into Fotolia and this picture came up. I think it looks kind of YA-y, though I'm not sure how witchy she looks.
I'm not sure about the font type and color; my options on PowerPoint were somewhat limited. Before I run out and buy images, I like to consult with you people first so I don't waste my hard-earned dough.
Now for the rest of the bonus post!
Early on in my Wordpress blog, back in 2010, I demonstrated how I went from notes on a story to an outline and then eventually into the actual story itself. I've pretty much stopped formal outlining since then, just relying on notes and the seat of my pants for the most part. Anyway, to sort of rehash it, here's some notes I wrote up for a possible story to give you a glimpse into Grumpy Bulldog's creative process. Your process will no doubt differ and also is terrible compared to mine for I am a genius. (note sarcasm)
First off, what do you think of this cover for Sisterhood (Tales of the Coven #1--and only)? The story focuses on Sylvia Joubert, the redheaded witch from the first 5 Scarlet Knight books so I put "redhead witch" into Fotolia and this picture came up. I think it looks kind of YA-y, though I'm not sure how witchy she looks.
I'm not sure about the font type and color; my options on PowerPoint were somewhat limited. Before I run out and buy images, I like to consult with you people first so I don't waste my hard-earned dough.
Now for the rest of the bonus post!
Early on in my Wordpress blog, back in 2010, I demonstrated how I went from notes on a story to an outline and then eventually into the actual story itself. I've pretty much stopped formal outlining since then, just relying on notes and the seat of my pants for the most part. Anyway, to sort of rehash it, here's some notes I wrote up for a possible story to give you a glimpse into Grumpy Bulldog's creative process. Your process will no doubt differ and also is terrible compared to mine for I am a genius. (note sarcasm)
#
Here’s my epic mash-up of “Darkman” and “The Invisible Man” series that used to be on Syfy. (Mission statement)
OK, so we have a guy we’ll call Vince (because I think that was the first name of the actor in the Invisible Man show but I may be wrong about that). He’s an expert con man, who’s been quite
successful at it for a long time, though not so much financially successful in
recent times. Then he cons the wrong
people, some mob dudes, and ends up with some MacGuffin that he shouldn’t
have. The mob guys find him, beat the crap out of
him, and leave him for dead in a building they set on fire. Vince is badly burned but manages to escape. Though he doesn’t get far before he passes
out.
He wakes up some time later in a secret government hospital. He should be in agonizing pain since he has 3rd-degree
burns over like 75% of his body, but he’s not.
This is because he’s a government guinea pig for this wonderful new drug
called Repressitol—or something less stupid.
The drug suppresses the pain in his nerves and has the awesome side
effect of giving him Captain America-type strength and speed because adrenaline
is flowing unchecked. Vince promptly
uses this to try to escape, but doesn’t get far because he’s like a mile
underground or something.
Eventually a hot doctor chick shows up and explains about the
drug. The downside is the drug only
works for 24 hours, which necessitates a shot every morning. Otherwise he’ll be in excruciating pain. Then some dude from the CIA or NSA or
whatever shows up to drop the other shoe.
Basically the government wants to utilize Vince’s unique skill
set. They’ve obtained an artificial skin
formula from a dead scientist (name omitted) and with that and the help of a
make up whiz, they can make Vince look like just about anyone. From there it’ll be up to him to use his con
man skills to fool anyone.
The drawback is the skin only holds together for two hours before it
falls apart. Which means whatever Vince
does, he has to do it quick; no long cons will be allowed.
Vince is reluctant to sign up for this crazy scheme, but it’s explained
to him that either he does it or they cut him off the drug and let him spend
the rest of his life in agonizing pain or in a morphine coma. So he decides to agree.
His first assignment is pretty easy, just something for a warm-up. It goes largely without a hitch. Before they can collect him, Vince sneaks off
to find whatever chick he was banging before he got busted. She of course doesn’t recognize him and it’s
not long before his face starts to melt, so he has to run off until he finally
gets caught.
The CIA/NSA guy chews him out and introduces a handler who will be
keeping a close eye on Vince during his missions. Vince is pretty bummed about his
situation. The hot doctor tries to cheer
him up, but does not welcome any advances.
(Because who wants to fuck a gross mummy?)
Then a bigger assignment comes up.
It just so happens to involve the jerks who fucked up Vince’s life! They’re going to use the MacGuffin to do
something with some nasty people. Vince
has to infiltrate the crew to find out what’s going on.
Things seem to go OK at first, but eventually it starts to fall apart
just like Vince’s face. The head mob guy
gets away with the MacGuffin to complete his nefarious work.
Vince’s handler is pissed and they’re ready to shut down the whole
program. But Vince convinces them to
give him one last shot. He plans to get
close to the mob guy and then impersonate him to recover the MacGuffin and get
the goods on the scheme.
To do this, he gets skin made of himself. He goes to the mob guy to act as if he’s
trying to shake the guy down for some hush money. He gets the guy to tell him where the
MacGuffin is and then knocks him out to steal his identity.
He goes to the meet, but things fall apart when it’s revealed the
CIA/NSA guy is a traitor! He reveals
Vince’s identity and is going to kill him.
But Vince has one last card to play, like the MacGuffin is a fake that’s
actually a bomb or some shit like that.
Then with the help of his handler, Vince takes the bad guys down. He’d like to kill the traitor, but turns him
over instead.
The mission is deemed a success and so the government decides to keep
the program going. As a reward the hot
doctor gives Vince some extra copies of his own face for whenever he feels like
looking human for a couple of hours.
They maybe kiss, but nothing more than that.
On to the sequel!
#
As you can see, at this early point it's a lot like a Mad Lib. There are a bunch of holes to fill in like names, locations, and plot specifics. The point though is to get the overall shape of the story and then start to worry about filling in those holes. As I fill in the holes I might come up with some other ideas for the plot or for characters or whatever, which would probably necessitate a rewrite of the notes in part if not on the whole. Better that than to rewrite the story later, I suppose. And then I'll probably come up with some things as I'm writing the story (if I ever do) that will completely fuck up most of my notes, which will require new notes. Will this idea ever make it to a finished product? I have no idea.
But now's the time to weigh in if you think this is the stupidest idea ever.
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