I’m Doing a Giveaway!

Yes, you heard that right! I am doing a random drawing one week from today. Instructions are simple: drop ONE comment below about this or any of my previous videos, and next week I’ll plug the comments into a random comment picker and send you the goodies featured in this video.

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Joker: A Riveting, Anti-Capitalist, Anti-Conservative Vehicle

TruthDig’s review of Todd Phillips’ Joker is accurate but for one thing: What we call “neoliberalism” is really just conservatism under a different title. But whatever you call it, that the film so boldly attacks the very political-economic system that has inflicted Caligula Drumpf on the world may help explain why its net profit after taking costs into account is set to give Avengers: Infinity War serious competition.

There have been accurate comparisons of Joker to Joel Schumacher’s 1993 film, Falling Down. As in that earlier motion picture, the protagonist is a pathetic loser who has been rendered “not economically viable” in an increasingly corporatist society in which those who for whatever reason cannot fend for themselves are looked down upon and considered good only for public ridicule and as targets of violence. When at the start of Joker a group of young ruffians steal Arthur Fleck’s sign and subsequently savagely beat him with it following a chase into an alley, we immediately see that Gotham circa 1981 reflects how modern American society treats its discarded citizens: the mentally ill and the homeless are treated like scum, and although we might react with shock, horror, and righteous condemnation, we aren’t really pushing those in power to do anything about it.

As Fleck’s mental condition deteriorates, with a large amount of help from cuts to social services that likewise cut him off from badly needed medication, his reactions to the system that has kept him down become increasingly unhinged and violent, although he spares those who have not wronged him in some way.

All of this leads to a bloody conflagration by the film’s climax that the audience can see coming from miles away, and we fully understand why the elites within the story fail to see the logical response to their own hubris, because they are realistically portrayed. The character of Thomas Wayne is re-imagined here as a combination of Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton, blending a corporate CEO who has decided to cut out the middle men of bribed politicians to run for public office himself and an out-of-touch elitist who ridicules the very people he seeks to “save” from their own “failings” and can’t understand why no one sees how much the city “needs” him.

There are a lot of nods to Martin Scorsese’s works including The King of Comedy and Taxi Driver, both tonally and visually. Robert De Niro’s character, Murray Franklin, is clearly modeled on Jerry Langford from the former, and in many ways, Joaquin Phoenix’s Arthur Fleck reminds us of the latter’s Travis Bickle. How much of Joker takes place in Fleck’s increasingly deranged mind and how much within the “real” world of the story itself is left to the interpretation of the viewer, another nod to King of Comedy. This is especially relevant in the ending to the film.

Indeed, this whole film might be interpreted as partly a defense of Scorsese in the wake of the auteur’s recent comments about Marvel movies not being ‘cinema’, an argument also made (albeit somewhat condescendingly) on Variety.com by Owen Gleiberman.

But here’s why I think that Scorsese and Coppola are actually right — and why in their high-minded and disgruntled what’s-the-world-coming-to? way, the two are doing American movie culture an incredible service. The way I see it, they’ve planted this issue at the center of the conversation, staking their credibility on an argument that radically challenges the status quo. And instead of carping about them, we should all take a big pause and listen to what they’re saying. Because this isn’t really about putting down Marvel movies. It’s about asking what, in the future, we want our popular culture to be.

Over the years, I’ve written positive reviews of more than my share of Marvel films. This year alone, I liked at least one (“Captain Marvel”) that most critics didn’t, and at least one (“Dark Phoenix”) that most critics thought was beyond abysmal. I stand by both opinions, so mock me if you will, but I am no Marvel basher. I think that the first “Guardians of the Galaxy” is the greatest Marvel movie, and close to a work of art.

Yet here’s why I agree, in spirit, with Scorsese and Coppola (and with Ken Loach and Fernando Meirelles, the two other directors who’ve since chimed in on this issue). What, deep in its bones, does the word “cinema” mean? If it’s merely a synonym for “motion-picture spectacle,” then obviously the two are wrong. (If “Avengers: Endgame” isn’t a spectacle, I don’t know what is.) But that’s not actually what cinema means. Scorsese said that a Marvel movie “isn’t the cinema of human beings trying to convey emotional, psychological experiences to another human being.” On a literal level, you could say that he’s wrong (the hero of “Guardians of the Galaxy” tries to do those things), but what he’s really speaking about comes down to a different word. The word is mystery.

The trouble with our blockbuster movie culture, and not just Marvel movies, is that there’s no mystery to it. None at all. It’s all on the surface; what you see is what you get. Whereas cinema, as it has stood for 100 years, represents a realm in which stories vibrate with an emotional and psychological reality that transcends the design of the film we’re watching. Cinema is about what happens, in a movie, right in front of you, but it’s also about what happens between the lines. It’s about a place where what the film brings to the audience is met by what the audience brings to the film — a sacred zone of spirit and empathy, where the identification you feel with a character takes you to someplace unknown.

The reason I bring all this up is that Todd Phillips has so obviously done with Joker what Scorsese and Coppola lament the lack of in Marvel blockbusters, and that Warner Bros. is jeopardizing (along with its potential DCEU revival) by joining forces with the boy who has ruined both Star Trek and Star Wars. To bring in a no-talent hack like Abrams guarantees that the sort of badly needed socio-political messaging Phillips employs will die an unnecessary and pointlessly cruel death, doing to films such as Joker what the thugs—high and low—do to Arthur Fleck that drive him to such extremes.

Whatever your thoughts are of this film, it IS definitely CINEMA, the kind desperately needed at a time when movies are increasingly corporatized, sanitized, and bereft of any meaning other than making a profit at the insult of audience intelligence. Joker has several messages, the most important being what late-stage capitalism and the hyper-conservatism that nurtures and protects it does to people and the logical outcome that will result if we do not reverse course. Who today remembers, or knows at all, the words of John F. Kennedy, who warned that “those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable”? That’s the central message of Joker, and the wealthy elites who run their callous, dystopian paradise from their gated mansions and corporate boardrooms ignore it at their peril no matter how much they may pretend that they’re untouchable.

Anyway, below you’ll find my video review of Joker.

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Overdue Review: Halloween (2018)

It’s been a while since I updated this blog, and the reason for that is a whole lot of stuff going on in my life that I won’t go into here. Suffice to say, it’s been a hell of a ride and it’s not over yet. Anyway, down to business. I had the opportunity to see the new Halloween movie the day after the holiday from which it derives its title. I liked it, but it does have its share of flaws that detract from its overall effectiveness.

After forty years of increasingly convoluted sequels, reboots, and diminishing returns, it shouldn’t be surprising that upon gaining back the rights, original creator John Carpenter would want to take another stab at his baby (pun intended). Taking the executive producer’s role and handing directorial reins to David Gordon Green through horror movie studio Blumhouse, writers Jeff Fradley, Danny McBride, and Green decided, perhaps wisely, to take the TOHO route and eliminate all the previous sequels — inluding the original Halloween II — from continuity in favor of a direct sequel to the first film.

The franchise is restored here both rhetorically and symbolically, with the opening credits depicting a rotted Jack-o-Lantern reverting to a fresh one as the titles fade in and out. The sequence has dual meaning: hitting the rewind button on forty years of a mess of contradictory, often inconsistent sequels and re-imaginings, and reviving a franchise that had collapsed under its own weight long ago.

The result is something of a mixed bag that has nevertheless earned huge box office success with a global box office gross of $253,445,475 as of this writing. On an estimated total budget of $15,000,000 that is a stunning bit of movie magic.

The movie opens with a pair of British podcasters trying to talk to Michael Myers (played by James Jude Courtney and Nick Castle reprising his iconic role), locked up at Smith’s Grove Sanitarium since his murder spree in 1978. His psychiatrist, Dr. Ranbir Sartain (a protégé of the late Dr. Loomis), explains that he can speak but chooses not to, and the podcasters try without success to get the serial killer to talk, with one going so far as to brandish his preserved mask at him.

Leaving without having achieved their goal, the pair then go to Haddonfield to interview Laurie Strode (played by Jamie Lee Curtis reprising her role once again) in hopes of arranging a reunion between the two that they think might get Michael to finally speak. Laurie, dealing with four decades of survivor’s trauma, two failed marriages, an estranged daughter, and a drinking problem, is in no mood for their bullshit and shows them the door, though not before taking the money they offer. Later, she gives it to her teenage granddaughter as a gift, urging her to live and see the world.

In the decades since her encounter with the Shape, Laurie has gone full survivalist preparing for the day she knows is coming: the day Michael Myers escapes to kill again. Her cabin home is loaded with weapons, target dummies, and booby traps.

Of course, that day is the day before Halloween, and after dispatching the Brits and recovering his mask, Michael takes their car and returns to his old stomping grounds. But Laurie isn’t gonna wait for him to come to her; she’s coming to him, with a vengeance — and that’s when all Hell breaks loose.

In John Carpenter’s original Halloween, we as the audience were given a presentation of the classic game of chicken, with Michael Myers’ unstoppable force meeting Laurie Strode’s immovable object. Meyers represents, as did Norman Bates in Psycho, the emasculated male trying to regain his lost manhood through violence, whereas Laurie stands in for the Primal Mother defending her children and her territory against a murderous intruder. Michael also represents what one might get when you strip away all humanity from a person leaving only his or her most bestial, predatory nature. The Shape bides its time, picks its moments, lays the bait, and finally springs the trap, like a primal hunter. When he lures Laurie in to his trap, she runs away in a panic while he calmly strolls after her, able to take his time because he knows exactly where she’s going and that she’s not getting away.

In Green’s sequel, this entire concept is turned on its end. This time it’s Laurie setting the trap for Michael, who after escaping has no plan, no patience, and no more thought for anything — he simply goes from house to house killing his preferred prey of babysitters and anyone foolish enough to get in his way. Now it is Laurie who has been “inhumanly patient,” as Sam Loomis said of his patient in 1978. It is her turn to hunt Michael.

I loved the setup here and the payoff, and I have few gripes about the story. In fact, I really have only two, but they’re big enough to take away some of my enjoyment.

First, there is the character of Dr. Sartain: he’s pretty much useless. In Carpenter’s film, Donald Pleasence’s not-so-mild-mannered psychiatrist is there largely to provide exposition, explaining to the audience how evil Michael Myers is as we are then shown when he kills his victims. But Sartain’s presence in the story serves little purpose but to help move the plot along in a way that feels contrived. Obsessed with understanding the thrill Michael gets from killing and also with getting his patient to speak to him, he exists simply to provide the killer with opportunities to escape captivity and to bring him to Laurie (albeit not in the way he planned). There were plenty of other ways to move the plot along without this extraneous character.

Second, there’s the inconsistency in how the Shape is depicted. On the one hand, McBride and Green insisted Michael Myers isn’t some immortal, supernatural creature in the new movie. And yet, just as in the original film, he’s shown taking injuries that would kill an ordinary person — or at least incapacitate him long enough to be easily taken back into custody. Green and his fellow writers were trying to have their cake and eat it too, but it just doesn’t work. If he’s immortal, or for some reason much more difficult to kill than a normal human being, then stick with that for the established fact it is within the world of the story. Don’t try to rewrite it, especially if you’re just going to ignore it on screen anyway.

Despite these flaws, I genuinely enjoyed Halloween 2018, and with the box office success it’s gotten, Blumhous would be stupid not to do another sequel. I give it seven and a half out of ten.

The Wilk Report – 2 October 2018: Ruin Johnson Blames Russian Trolls for Criticism

Ruin Johnson has gone off the deep end—AGAIN—this time blaming Russian trolls for the attacks against him and The Last Jedi. Seriously.

Sources:

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Les Moonves, Joe Quesada Twitter-Sunday Brunch Live – M.E.A.D.

Tom Connors from Midnight’s Edge After Dark nd I did a live stream earlier today talking about the latest revelations regarding Les Moonves, Joe Quesada mouthing off on Twitter, and Jon Malin. We’re joined later my MechaRandom42, who has her own channel.

Les Moonves Accused Of Additional Harassment As He Nears CBS Exit: Report

https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/les-moonves-accused-sex-crimes-violence-by-more-women-1141436

https://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/as-leslie-moonves-negotiates-his-exit-from-cbs-women-raise-new-assault-and-harassment-claims

https://www.businessinsider.com/les-moonves-tried-ruin-janet-jackson-career-after-super-bowl-wardrobe-malfunction-report-2018-9

https://money.cnn.com/2018/09/06/media/les-moonves-cbs-exit-talks/index.html

https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/graveyard-shift-graphic-novel/x/5594490#/

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The Wilk Report – 1 September 2018: Ruin Johnson At It Again

Ruin Johnson just can’t seem to stay off Twitter, proving once again that he is a child who has utterly failed to grow up. This time he attacked YouTuber Mike Zeroh for merely asking if rumors are true that Johnson’s trilogy has been cancelled.

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The Wilk Report – 18 August 2018: Jamie Lee Curtis, Matt Groening, Kevin Spacey Woes, & Boots Riley

Jamie Lee Curtis talks about making ‘Halloween’ forty years after the original. Matt Groening’s latest show gets of to a rocky start. Box Office Mojo shows some surprises. Kevin Spacey’s latest movie took in a humiliatingly low amount on its opening night. And Boots Riley has some words for Spike Lee.

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The Wilk Report Live: Freddy vs. Jason 15th Anniversary Retrospective

It’s been fifteen years—a decade and a half—since Freddy versus Jason was released to theaters. Marking this occasion is a discussion on the history of the film, its parent franchises, and some of the odd twists and turns that took place during development.

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Links:

http://collider.com/freddy-vs-jason-ideas-that-never-happened/#jason-on-trial
https://www.syfy.com/syfywire/the-15-most-insane-freddy-vs-jason-moments-on-this-its-15th-anniversary-week
https://nerdist.com/the-9-most-00s-moments-in-freddy-vs-jason/
http://www.aycyas.com/FreddyVsJason.htm

The Wilk Report – 1 August 2018: Live with Midnight’s Edge After Dark

Last night the guys at Midnight’s Edge had me on for one of their live shows. I also did a recording for the regular show.