Categories
Back Seat Box Office Shows

Back Seat Box Office #102

Picks:

Tony, Lena

  1. The Possession
  2. Lawless
  3. The Expendables 2
  4. The Bourne Legacy
  5. ParaNorman

Scott

  1. Lawless
  2. The Expendables 2
  3. The Bourne Legacy
  4. ParaNorman
  5. The Possession

William

  1. The Expendables 2
  2. The Possession
  3. The Bourne Legacy
  4. ParaNorman
  5. Lawless

Also in wide release this weekend, Oogieloves In The BIG Balloon Adventure

Categories
Back Seat Quickies Shows

Back Seat Quickies #60: Superman: Doomsday

In the seat:

  • Scott
Recorded: 08/27/12
Categories
Back Seat Producers Season 07 Shows

BSP Episode 239: Stand By Me

Show Notes to follow

Categories
Announcement

Theatrical Review: Killer Joe

(I’m in the midst of taking a little break from regular movie reviews for awhile now- after doing this sort of thing for around ten years now, it was just starting to seem more like work than fun, so I thought a little break was in order. But still, I had it in the back of my head that if I something that truly inspired me to get back to the keyboard during the break, I’d do it. Well, here you go…)

It’s a rainy night in a trailer park in Texas and young Chris Smith is a desperate man. He’s been involved in a small-time drug deal gone south and now he’s seeking the help of his father Ansel, much to the chagrin of Ansel’s new wife Sharla- who answers the door in the most revealing of ways. Chris needs $6,000 to pay for his problem, and of course, he doesn’t have the money and neither does Ansel. Chris has a plan though; Chris’ mother and Ansel’s former wife, Adele has an insurance policy worth $50,000 and Chris believes that the sole beneficiary is his sister Dottie, who also lives with Ansel and Sharla, and now Chris is plotting to have his mother killed.

Chris’ plan involves enlisting the services of a police detective named Joe Cooper who also acts as an assassin in his off-hours, and is known in certain circles as Killer Joe. Reluctantly, Ansel gives in to the plan, and Dottie, a “special” girl in many ways, also gives in, though not reluctantly at all… and from there, hijinks ensue.

This is the premise to Killer Joe the latest collaboration between celebrated director William Friedkin (The Exorcist, The French Connection) and playwright Tracy Letts, adapting his own play of the same name. Previously, the two collaborated on Bug with Ashley Judd, Michael Shannon and Harry Connick, Jr. I absolutely loved Bug to death and just was amazed at the directions that movie took, so I was certainly eager to see this latest collaboration between the two.

They did not disappoint at all, and for me personally, Killer Joe is one of the best movies that I’ve seen all year. This redneck-noir black comedy is your literal ride from start to finish, and honestly I could not tell how this was going to go from one moment to the next, though it’s all absolutely fitting in this little microcosmos that Letts and Friedkin have fashioned. The resulting film, at least to me, is sort of what you might get if you took a bit of David Lynch, a bit of John Waters, a whole lot of the Coen Brothers, and a dash of Gaspar Noe’s Irreversible and mixed them all together.

This is economical filmmaking from Friedkin, though it goes a little beyond what he did with Letts prior in Bug which primarily takes place in one single location. The scope here is a little larger than that, but not by much. There’s not a wasted shot or moment in the entire film and I was literally on the edge of my seat to see what I was going to be hit with next.

The cast here is phenomenal. Emile Hirsch plays Chris, and he’s just wallowing in his own depravity- you just don’t like him from the start and want to see him get his comeuppance in the end, though Hirsch certainly does have that one thing that gives him some hope, and that’s his feelings for his sister Dottie, though that’s certainly questionable as well. Thomas Haden Church plays Ansel, and Ansel’s about as clueless as it gets and Church just eats that up in his portrayal, but when his eyes get opened later in the film, you can just feel the anger that’s going through him. Gina Gershon plays Sharla, a plotting and scheming bitch to the core and like Hirsch and Church, she’s just basking in it, and doing some particularly brave stuff on-screen near the film’s end. Juno Temple plays the virginal Dottie who has so much more going on with her than her family knows. There’s something extremely special about her, we know it and so does Killer Joe.

And speaking of Killer Joe, Matthew McConaughey is playing the part of his life with this one. It’s without a doubt one of the most intense performances he’s ever delivered and it literally shatters the image that’s been built up for McConaughey over the the course of all of the recent romantic comedies that he’s been a part of. Joe Cooper just oozes magnetism right from the start and at the same time, there’s extreme danger there as well. Kudos to McConaughey for taking this part and investing so much of himself into it. As far as I’m concerned, this is Oscar-worthy work, though I doubt he’ll get nominated.

Killer Joe is rated NC-17 and it earns that to the extreme. This is not for the faint of heart especially as the film builds to it’s cataclysmic ending. The vision here from Friedkin and Letts is totally uncompromised and it’s sure to spark conversation by it’s end. I’ve heard it said from Friedkin that you’re not supposed to “enjoy” this film in the traditional sense. I know where he’s coming from with that statement, but still, I enjoyed the hell out of this thing. I’m a big fan of the movie Glengarry Glen Ross another play adapted to film that at it’s core is about as dark and depressing a film as it gets, and yet I enjoy it to death and that common enjoyment is shared with Killer Joe. The enjoyment here is in watching this come to life, seeing these actors go to some places that you wouldn’t normally see them go in typical Hollywood productions and creating truly memorable moments that are indelible on the mind. Killer Joe is for me one of the very best movies I’ve seen this year, if not the best and for the truly adventurous out there when it comes to want you want to see on film, this, of course, is highly, highly recommended. Outstanding.

Categories
Back Seat Box Office Shows

Back Seat Box Office #101

Picks:

Tony

  1. The Expendables 2
  2. Premium Rush
  3. Hit & Run
  4. The Bourne Legacy
  5. ParaNorman

Scott

  1. The Expendables 2
  2. Premium Rush
  3. Hit & Run
  4. The Bourne Legacy
  5. 2016 Obama’s America

Also being released this weekend: The Apparition

Categories
Back Seat Box Office BSBO Results Shows

Back Seat Box Office #100 Results and Voice Mail

Thanks to Tad for the voicemail!

Congrats to

  • Andrew
  • Tad
  • Tony

for their 23s… the high score of the week.

Categories
Announcement

Weekend Box Office: Aug 17-Aug 19

#1 The Expendables 2 from Lionsgate opened at #1 with a gross of $28.6 million in 3,316 theaters.  Budget was unknown.

#2 The Bourne Legacy from Universal fell to #2 with a gross of $17.1 million (-55.3%) in 3,753 theaters (+8).  Total gross to date is $69.6 million.  Budget was $125 million.

#3 ParaNorman from Focus Features opened at #3 with a gross of $14.1 million in 3,429 theaters.  Budget was unknown.

#4 The Campaign from Warner Bros. fell from #2 to #4 with a gross of $13.1 million (-50.6%) in 3,255 theaters (+50).  Total gross to date is $51.4 million.  Budget was unknown.

#5 Sparkle (2012) from Sony/Columbia opened at #5 with a gross of $11.6 million in 2,244 theaters.  Budget was $14 million.

#6 The Dark Knight Rises from Warner Bros. fell from #3 to #6 with a gross of $11 million (-42%) in 3,157 theaters (-533).  Total gross to date is $409.8 million.  Budget was $250 million.

#7 The Odd Life of Timothy Green from Sony opened at #7 with a gross of $10.8 million in 2,598 theaters.  Total gross to date is $15.1 million.  Budget was unknown.

#8 Hope Springs from Sony fell from #4 to #8 with a gross of $9.1 million (-37.8%) in 2,361 theaters.  Total gross to date is $35.1 million.  Budget was unknown.

#9 Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Dog Days from Fox fell from #6 to #9 with a gross of $3.8 million (-52.1%) in 2,737 (-664) theaters.  Total gross to date is $38.7 million.  Budget was $22 million.

#10 Total Recall (2012) from Sony fell from #5 to #10 with a gross of $3.5 million (-56.7%) in 2,434 theaters (-1,167).  Total gross to date is $51.8 million.  Budget was $125 million.

#11 Ice Age: Continental Drift from Fox fell from #7 to #11 with a gross of $3 million (-52.9%) in 2,274 theaters (-829).   Total gross to date is $150.2 million.  Budget was $95 million.

#12 Ted from Universal fell from #8 to #12 with a gross of $1.5 million (-52.1%) in 1,169 theaters (-1,039).  Total gross to date is $213.1 million.  Budget was $50 million.

The combined gross of the top 12 movies this weekend was $127.3 million.

Sources:
Box Office Mojo

Categories
Back Seat Producers Season 07 Shows

BSP Episode 238: Car Wash

Release date:  10/22/1976

Universal Pictures

Directed by

  • Michael Schultz

Produced by

  • Art Lindstrom
  • Gary Stromberg

Written by

  • Joel Schumacher

Cast

Lonnie

  • Ivan Dixon

Lindy

  • Antonio Fargas

T.C.

  • Franklin Ajaye

Duane/Abdullah

  • Bill Duke

Daddy Rich

  • Richard Pryor

The hosts review:

Darrell found it kind of rough to watch a 35 year old film with no plot and a very thin story line because you’re waiting for something to happen… and it never really does.  Tony describes it as a ghetto slice of life movie, set in a car wash, with no over arcing plot.  It’s just a day in the life of guys who work in a car wash, although there are some very interesting characters who he would have liked to have had more of a story.  It’s basically a character study loosely strung together, which Darrell found to be the movie’s downfall.  Tony #2 brought up that, during the 1970s, there were quite a few films that experimented with character study as a structure.

They liked the character of Lindy, a flamboyantly gay man.  What they also liked was that their coworkers were supportive and, when Lindy was hassled, defended him, as well.

While Darrell thought it came close to being a Blaxploitation movie, Tony and Tony #2 disagreed and thought it was very much the opposite.  They go into a brief listing of Blaxploitation films… then drift back to Car Wash.  The only scene in the film that possibly came close to being a “stereotype” is the scene where the employees were dancing and singing while washing cars.  Tony thought that Kevin Smith borrowed heavily from this structure in making Clerks… slice of life study and people whose only common thread is working together.

They talked about Richard Pryor being one of the top-billed actors in the movie, although he was in only one scene.  One of Tony’s most memorable “one of” scenes in the movie was the Beverly Hills woman who comes to the car wash with her son with an upset stomach.  Her main concern is that the employees clean up her son’s vomit from the car, and NOT that fact that her son is sick.  When she drives away, her son projectile vomits all over the inside of her car and her.

The hosts discuss the more tragic story lines in the film.  T.C., who spend the entire movie trying to win concert tickets for a girl that he likes, but this girl barely gives him the time of day.  Lonnie, who works in an almost supervisory role, but doesn’t have the title or the pay that goes with it.  He’s also struggling to be a good father while dealing with a parole office that keeps popping in to check up on him.  Duane/Abdullah, the “angry young man,” knows most of the employees are slackers and he wants more for himself.  These also provided some of the serious moments in the midst of the comedy.

They note that the movie didn’t really become cohesive until the end when the different story lines came to a close, specifically the scene in which Lonnie is closing the car wash and Abdullah (after being fired) returns to the car wash with a gun.

They were also a little disappointed in George Carlin’s cab driver character.  They wished it was more like George Carlin – he wasn’t an intelligent character, he was a goofball character.  Carlin also had a high billing on the movie and wasn’t in it all that much.

Darrell brought up that there was a number of well-known actors whose scenes ended up on the cutting room floor; Brook Adams and Danny DeVito, to name a few

Darrell mentions that Car Wash was Ivan Dixon’s last movie role, and they briefly mention his long list as a Director.

Tony brings up Richard Pryor’s quote about his role in Car Wash: “On the set of ‘Car Wash’ I was too coked out to know any better.”

Trivial bits ‘n pieces:

This was Ivan Dixon’s last movie acting role and Bill Duke’s first movie acting role, who also became a Director in later years.

The name of the Los Angeles car wash used to film the movie was the Figueroa Car Wash, near MacArthur Park.

The movie’s title song was a #1 hit and was also one of the biggest selling singles of  the 1970s disco era.

Your Producers for this episode were:

  • Tony
  • Darrell
  • Tony (say what?) It’s the return of Tony #2!

This episode was recorded: 8/8/2012

Categories
Back Seat Box Office Shows

Back Seat Box Office #100

Picks:

Tony

  1. The Expendables 2
  2. The Bourne Legacy
  3. ParaNorman
  4. The Campaign
  5. The Odd Life of Timothy Green

Lena

  1. The Expendables 2
  2. ParaNorman
  3. The Bourne Legacy
  4. The Odd Life of Timothy Green
  5. Sparkle

 

Scott, of Back Seat Quickies fame and one of the rotating talking heads on Back Seat Box Office, is raising money for his local Children’s Miracle Network Hospital by participating in a 24-hour video game marathon.  Read more about his mission and how you can help here: http://www.extra-life.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=donorDrive.team&teamID=8287

 

Categories
Back Seat Box Office BSBO Results Shows

Back Seat Box Office #99 Results and Voice Mail

Thanks to Tad and Art for the voice mail.

Congrats to Jeff and Cougron for their perfect scores this week.