Thriller Rod Lott
A guy walks into a police station to report a murder: himself! With that
setup, one could make a tight, terrific crime film — and D.O.A.
is that movie ... in 1950. The 1988 remake doesn't fare as well, but at
least it's been preserved on Blu-ray by Mill Creek Entertainment.
Sci-Fi Rod Lott Alien has no shortage of rip-offs, but Sector 7 has the distinction of hitting video while Prometheus is in theaters. While Prometheus isn't great, it's better than Sector 7. Heck, even the much-maligned Alien vs. Predator is better than Sector 7.
Drama Rod Lott
Its plot may stretch the boundaries of believability, but damn it,
feature-debuting director Brian Crano nails the alternately comedic and
dramatic tone of the appealing A Bag of Hammers.
Talking with the mastermind behind ‘Monster Brawl,’ the movies’ ultimate fight of the living dead.
No apologies necessary if you don’t recognize the name of Jesse Thomas Cook. Just know that the Canadian filmmaker is to the new film Monster Brawl what Vince McMahon is to the WWE: its supreme leader. The wrestling analogy is apropos, given that the writer/director’s movie is, as the title promises, all about creatures battling it out in the ring.
R&R: From watching the movie, it's obvious you love wrestling and monsters, but what about comic books? Because I got a definite comic-book vibe from it.
Cook: Yeah, I mean there is that feel to it. I wasn't a huge comic book fan, but a lot of the people involved in the movie were, especially Jason Brown, who designed all of the monsters and the sets.
R&R: Being structured as a wrestling match, Monster Brawl is not traditional storytelling. And you’re catching flak for that from some reviewers. Did you expect that going in?
Cook: It exists outside of a traditional movie structure, for sure. It's more of a pay-per-view event and tournament-style movie. That's why we put in the backstories, that let us cut away here and there to get a glimpse of each monster.
R&R: Was DVD your ultimate goal from the start, or did you have visions of a huge theatrical release?
Cook: We knew going in this would be probably more of a VOD and DVD and Blu-ray. It's really hard to do theatrical nowadays as an indie film. No, we didn't have huge ambitions for that. We had a limited theatrical release in Canada and thought it would play well at midnight screenings, and it has.
R&R: I was surprised at how kid-friendly it actually is. Other than the character being named Witch Bitch and some minor gore, I could let my 7-year-old watch this. And believe me, he really wanted to, but since I hadn’t yet seen it, I couldn’t find any info online at how appropriate it was.
Cook: We wanted to make it accessible to everyone, even people who weren't huge fans of wrestling and monsters. We just wanted to make a fun movie.
R&R: And you may be too close to it to answer this, but are you pleased with it?
Cook: Absolutely, looking back a year or two after, we could've done things here and there, but with the money with had and such a small crew, I think we pulled off something really special. The budget wasn't much more than a documentary film would have. If there were ever a sequel, it'd be nice to have a bigger budget, but that's something down the road.
R&R: How possible is that?
Cook: I think it's very possible. There's been talks of a remake. We've had discussions about that with a few companies. If that weren't to happen, we'd definitely explore trying to do a sequel or turning it into some kind of franchise.
R&R: If you do have a sequel, what monsters might be in it? Or were they any you had to cut that you’d want to bring into another one?
Cook: We definitely wanted to do a yeti and a sasquatch as a tag team. We wanted to do a Royal Rumble with some zombies against some trolls. We had a list, but logistically and practically, some we could not afford to do with our special-effects budget, so the monsters we did select, we wanted to appease fans of the classic monsters and toss in a couple of ones that would kind of mimic wrestling archetypes.
Like, Swamp Gut is the essential obese wrestler, like King Kong Bundy. Witch Bitch, we wanted to have a couple of female wrestlers in there. We had a list of several mythological monsters, but Cyclops is the only one off that list we chose. But yeah, there's a long list of possibilities. And obviously, in a sequel, you could bring monsters back to life. —Rod Lott
Don’t go near the directorial debut of Vincent D’Onofrio.
Horror Rod Lott
New to DVD, 2010’s Don't Go in the Woods is not to be confused with 1981’s Don't Go in the Woods.
That one was a cheap slasher movie; this one is a cheap slasher movie
in which characters wonder what John Fogerty and the Donner party have
in common, and then sing songs.
Oklahoma City’s favorite millionaire fronts ‘Nothing but Net.’
Whether or not our Oklahoma City Thunder power through to victory in the NBA Finals, one thing’s for sure: Kevin Durant is soon to be seen on MTV.
Well, MTV2, that is. Durant is scheduled to appear on the channel’s sports documentary, Nothing but Net, at noon July 17. Here, have a preview clip of KD playing ref at Douglass High School:
Nonfiction Rod Lott
Zines were the blogs of their day, but you could read them in the
bathroom. In the early 1990s, I was heavily plugged into the zine
culture, sending stamps and dollar bills away in exchange for these
indie pubs. Soon, during a short period of boredom and unemployment, I
started one of my own.
Thriller Rod Lott
With little exception (National Treasure, Kick-Ass, about one minute of Grindhouse),
there’s no denying that Nicolas Cage has spent the better part of the
past decade in a career slump. Witness such critically lambasted
underperformers as The Sorcerer’s Apprentice, Season of the Witch, Bangkok Dangerous and, most recently,Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance.
What a beautiful introduction Nothing Proper is to Cusp and the man behind it, Taylor Rapp, who should become a force in Oklahoma music sooner, rather than later.
For the rock act Stars in Stereo, its meteoric rise toward the big leagues is just part of the plan.
Music Joshua Boydston Stars in Stereo with Foxy Shazam and Maniac 7 p.m. Wednesday, June 27 Diamond Ballroom 8001 S. Eastern diamondballroom.net 677-9169 $9-$11