Tuesday, August 30, 2016

The Skateboard Kid [1993]

[Cross-posted on the Bad Movie Night Facebook page.]

It has been mentioned before that the majority of the Bad Movie Night crew consists of millenials: born in the late 80s, once 90s kids, and now sad 20-somethings. As such, we are amused by anything that is a movie time capsule of the 90s; anything that was completely topical when it was made but is now a hilarious product of its time. Enter "The Skateboard Kid," a movie whose title alone places it right where we were expecting. I took so many notes on this movie that I decided to just make some of them into a 90s Bingo game rather than comment on every little silly 90s thing that happens in the film. 

The plot of "Skateboard Kid" is exactly what you want from a 90s movie. A kid who likes to skateboard moves to a new town with his dad because his dad got a job running a really crappy television station. Skateboard Kid doesn't get along with the other skateboarders in town, particularly Eddie Vedder Wannabe Ponytail Guy who is the son of a crooked used car salesman. Ponytail breaks Skateboard Kid's skateboard and he ends up getting another one for free from a nice lady who runs a pawn shop who he helped fudge some bills for (and whose bill collector he made eat a goldfish; this doesn't make more sense in context). This skateboard belonged to a magican in the 70s and after he pimps it out with a motor and lights, lightning strikes and the board comes to life. Pawn Shop lady and her daughter come over for dinner and there is a clear love triangle between SK's dad, Pawn Shop lady, and crooked salesman who blackmail Pawn Shop lady into marrying him because she has a treasure map or something and she needs money to pay for her house and her daughter's heart surgery. Meanwhile Skateboard Kid is . . . trying to help by flying around on the skateboard and ripping off the silhouette on the moon scene from "ET." At one point the skateboard breaks so Skateboard Kid makes a sail out of his flannel shirt and rides his only friend's corpse to stop the wedding. Pawn Shop lady delivers a solid not joke ("I do . . . NOT!") and the treasure is found. Presumably SK's dad and Pawn Shop lady get married and everyone lives happily ever after but the last few minutes of our copy of the movie cut off so we can't be sure.

I can't for the life of me figure out who this movie is supposed to be for. The skateboarding seems like it should appeal to teens but the movie is completely for young kids. It's low budget, the acting is often bizarre, the special effects on the skateboard are nightmare-ish, and the plot is just so conventional and dry that we were really thankful for all the other things that kept us laughing. It wasn't very radical, tubular, or x-treme, but it was a better use of our time than a lot of the films we have seen lately.

Play some 90s Bingo!
Quote:
"If that kid gets anywhere near Maggie Mills, you're an organ donor!"

Spoon Rating: 6

Grandma's Review: "It was good."

Tuesday, August 23, 2016

REWATCH: Foodfight! [2012]

[Cross-posted on the Bad Movie Night Facebook page.]

It has been a little while since we watched "Foodfight!" but since Adam's nieces were over for the evening, it made sense to watch a kid's movie. Although, as previously stated, this is one of the worst kid's movies in existence. It's full of sexual innuedos, bizarre "Casablanca" references, animation that is barely as good as Playstation graphics in 1996, and villians that were terrifying enough to make Abby (age 11) and Madison (age 7) avert their eyes. Of course, to us the villains were the best part including Christopher Lloyd's deranged, cross-eyed Brand X salesman (Adam) and the Nazi-esque officier of Brand X's regime who really needs to be kinkshamed (Kay). Throughout the movie, the girls kept asking very reasonable questions like, "What's going on?" "Why are the good guy and the bad girl dancing while arguing?" and "Why did you make us watch this? This is worst than 'To Catch A Yeti'!" We'll make bad movie converts of them one day.

To read the original review of this movie that details all the terrible innuendos, click here.

Spoon Rating: 7.5

Adam's Grandma's Review: *no answer*

Abby's Review: "Two words for you: very bad. One word: disgusting."

Madison's Review: "Hated it."

Saturday, August 20, 2016

The Conquerer [1956]

[Cross-posted on the Bad Movie Night Facebook page.]

Usually at Bad Movie Night we end up watching the lowest of the low budget films. Maybe there's a famous person in it but that person usually has another job as a martial artist or a rapper. If there is an actor of some renown, that actor is usually something of a punchline by the point in their career that they are staring in the film we're watching. The sets are usually poorly constructed and the costumes are cheap. The production itself is sometimes the product of one man's ego. And any kind of historical accuracy is out the window. "The Conquerer" distinguishes itself by being none of these things except for historically inaccurate. It's high budget, has a big name actor, and there was definitely money put into the production. It is the very embodiment of the worst things about old Hollywood. We really want to rename this movie, which is about Genghis Khan, as "White Men Squinting."

The plot of this film is really hard to follow. Sarah, resident plot follower, seemed to somewhat know what was going on but mostly it's just a lot of different tribes waring with each other. Early on in the movie, Genghis Khan, played horribly by John Wayne, a man whose appeal I genuinely don't understand, kidnaps the daughter of the Tartar king (or something) after ripping her dress off her body in one motion. Yes, it's that kind of film. If you think his rough and unquestionably rapey ways will eventually woo her into submission, you must have seen this kind of movie before. There's a lot of running around, meeting different important Asian characters played by white or HIspanic guys, totally superfluous dance scenes with scantily clad ladies, and a bunch of scrapes they must get out of. In the end, Khan is leader (or something) with the Tartar princess as his bride and his adopted brother shamefully leaves to go die for reasons none of us really understand.

This movie is a trainwreck. The acting is deadpan and the dialogue has this odd construction that sounds like it is supposed to be old-fashioned or possibly in translation but just doesn't work. The costumes are horrendously inconsistant to the point where we had no idea what the weather was like on any given soundstage and the lead actress just straight up wore whatever nice gowns were in the storage closet from the 1930s. And it was rapey. And non-Asian actors squinting. Anyone who idealizes old Hollywood without discrimination is nuts. One nice thing I can say though is that this movie had some of the finest horse acting any of us have seen in film. All we ever wanted were horse scenes so we could marvel at the only good actors really making their money in hay.

Spoon Rating: 3

Adam's Grandma's Review: *makes a zero motion with her hand*

Wednesday, August 10, 2016

China O'Brien [1990]

[Cross-posted on the Bad Movie Night Facebook page.]

We have been itching to watch another Cynthia Rothrock movie since the real glorious mess that was "Undefeatable." It only made sense that we would turn to one of the most famous of Rothrock's films and one of the earlier ones: "China O'Brien." While this movie wasn't quite the masterpiece that "Undefeatable" was, it was decent enough for us to consider watching "China O'Brien II" in the future so that's saying something. The most amazing thing about it was the abysmal sound effects. Aside from the fact that the sound effects were never synced properly, a lot of them were just wrong. Punches don't sound like punches. Kicks don't sound like kicks. And dropping a weight on the ground usually doesn't sound like a delicate plop but that didn't stop us from watching those wonderful two seconds over and over.

The plot of China O'Brien is pretty standard martial arts movie fare. China is a cop who also runs a martial arts studio and is then challenged to a fight one day by some gang members. In spite of her claims of a strict "no street fighting" policy, she immediately gives in and fights them anyway and accidentally kills a kid. Guilt-ridden, she quits her job and moves to her hometown which is not unlike the town in "Road House." Some gang runs the town and her dad, the sheriff, can't do anything. Regardless of his ultimate powerlessness in the face of the gang, they blow him up with a car bomb for good measure. Then they blow up another cop with a car bomb. Somehow, this doesn't put China entirely off cars but does encourage her to run for sheriff. In spite of the gangs trying not to make it happen (by stealing the ballot box from some high school students and killing O'Brien's housekeeper) she wins the election. She decides to fix things in the last twenty minutes of the film with her strangely accented (Australian but trying not to be?) ex-boyfriend and a Native American biker guy. They lock up the bad guys. Freeze frame. Sequel: coming soon.

Spoon Rating: 5

Tuesday, August 2, 2016

REWATCH: Miami Connection [1987]

[Cross-posted on the Bad Movie Night Facebook page.]

Yesterday we watched everyone's favorite black-belt, crime-fighting, orphan college students who are also in a band. We started off the evening with a half hour long PSA about the dangers of pornography and how once you become perverted, you can never be pure again. We learned all about the dangers of homosexuality and S&M and got to see many examples that you can look up later for further information.

I recommend that you read my previous review of "Miami Connection" here and definitely watch the video of the song "Friends" which gets sung by us every month or so. It's also worth noting that we ate really cheesy mac and cheese, chedder popcorn, and asiago crackers, making this the cheesist night ever. Also, here's the new fairweather set-up for watching the movies:

Spoon Rating: 9

Adam's Grandma's Review: "It was good!"