Tuesday, January 26, 2016

The Garbage Pail Kids Movie [1987]

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

Sometimes we simply fear that which we do not understand. This is both a theme of this movie and our collective attitude in relation to this movie. This one seems to be a classic of bad movies, one that appears on every list and seems pretty universally disliked. No one talks about "Garbage Pail Kids" like they talk about "The Room" or "Birdemic." This one is supposed to be bad-bad and we have been fittingly dreading it. However, on watching it, most of us actually thought it was more silly and amusingly bad than painful bad with the notable exception of Sarah who vehemently hated it, dropped a lot of F-bombs at Adam while blaming him for inflicting it on her, and tried actively to fall asleep many times. We are a crew divided.

A kid who looks about 13 but regularly gets beaten up by 20-something year old bikers works in an antique shop that seems to be run by a time travelling wizard (this is only a theory divised by Kay and Sarah because he never actually defines himself). For whatever reason, this man has a garbage pail full of ugly, gross large-headed children that, though magically sealed, can apparently be easily opened. Kid knocks over pail. GPKs enter the world and mainly just do low level mischief like going into places like "The Toughest Bar In The World" while looking for others like them. In truth the GPKs, while obviously the most bonkers part of the movie, are mostly the B-plot. In the A-Plot, Kid is trying to impress this girl named Tangerine who designs really horrifying 80s clothes that she mostly sells to strippers out of her car. The GPKs help out by making him an outfit so shiny that she is blinded into believing she could profit from this and he promises to make her more clothes using the GPKs as willing slave labor. They steal from the "Non-Union Sweat Shop", make a bunch of stuff for her in spite of the fact that she's a jerk to them, and she pretends they're her designs while the GPKs are carted off to the "State Home For The Ugly." The Kid and the Wizard free everyone in the Ugly Home and then the GPK crash Tangerine's fashion show by vomiting, farting, and peeing all over everyone and everything there. This is high class content.

There's a lot to enjoy in this movie in terms of ridiculousness if you have a soul as dead as ours (expecting Sarah). The GPKs are just awfully made with mouths that don't move correctly and voices that are like death rattles. There's one that looks like a baby in a straight jacket that creepily says, "mama" at everything who will haunt your nightmares. There's one with zits who sounds like he's constantly mid-yawn. They sing a fantastically terrible song called "We Can Do Anything By Working With Each Other" that we will be singing for eternity. There's rampant product placement when the movie is already just capitalizing on the fad of Garbage Pail Kid cards. And, of course, revolves around about clothing from the 80s, the worst decade of clothing in history. The whole movie is one big eyesore that you can't look away from because you want to understand why.

Listen and join the cult:

Quote: "My kinda guys . . . psychos!"

Spoon Rating: 5

Adam's Grandma's Review: *a dismissive hand gesture*

Thursday, January 21, 2016

Simon Sez [1999]

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


A fairly recently proposed improvement to the Bad Movie Night selections rules, of which at this moment there are technically none aside from having a general idea that it might be bad, is "no comedies." This isn't because we hate fun (only Adam hates fun) but because so often the movies that we watch that are advertised as being comedies are more painful than funny. Some of the must awful things we've had to sit through like "Christmas Vacation 2" and "Bucky Larson" were movies that were trying to be funny and were really bad at it. Alternatively, you also sometimes get comedies that are too self-awarely ridiculous like "WolfCop." What we want are movies that are funny because of a lack of self-awareness. This movie may not be as painful as the other ones mentioned but it does hold the distinction of having one of the most painfully unfunny people on the planet in it: Dane Cook.

The plot of this movie, which is kind of unnecessarily convoluted, was summed up in one sentence on Wikipedia as, "Interpol agent Simon goes on a mission in France to save a kidnapped girl and defeat an arms dealer." There. That's all you need to know. Most of the plot is rushed and nonsensical and the rest of the movie is padded out with weirdly long comedy bits by either Dane Cook, who mostly does impressions, or two friars whose devotion is definitely questionable or with long action sequences that almost always have visible wires. There are a couple gloriously bad bits of CGI, one where Dennis Rodman and Dane Cook are in a car with a parachute and one where Dennis Rodman is being a cool guy who doesn't look at the really fake fire behind him. There's also a scene where Rodman and the required female character fight each other naked and then she hits a button and they are suddenly in a rave bedroom listening to 90s pulse while getting their swerve on. Oh, and the villain is ambiguously-accented Grade A ham. That's all. You're better off focusing on the lovely setting than anything having to do with the plot or characters. Have some pictures:

I totally believe they're there.

Dennis Rodman's face speaks for the audience.

Dane Cook's dinosaur impression. Painful.

Sure. That's a fire.

Odd Credit: "Cleaning Lady - Fatty"

Spoon Rating: 1

Adam's Grandma's Review: "There were certain parts I liked."

Tuesday, January 12, 2016

Jupiter Ascending [2015]

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

Oh, the Wachowskis: always high concept and wildly inconsistent. On the one hand they are responsible for "The Matrix" and the screenplay for "V For Vendetta", on the other hand they gave us "Speed Racer" and the "Matrix" sequels. Let's just say this one tends towards the latter films. As with the directors, the main and supporting cast of this movie is full of actors who have proven that they can do better including Mila Kunis, Sean Bean, Eddie Redmayne, Douglas Booth, Tuppance Middleton, Maria Doyle Kennedy, and Gugu Mbatha-Raw. Also, Channing Tatum is in this. And a cameo by Terry Gilliam. Now that I have given you plenty of ways to avoid this movie, let's try to make sense of this. For a moment there was genuine concern that we had found a movie that would take down Sarah, our plot decoder, but although this was clearly one of her toughest challenges, she endured and was able to give us the plot about halfway through the movie because this movie made the curious decision to have nonsense happen and explain it way after the fact.

Jupiter Jones, Kunis, is a cleaning lady with consistently perfect eyeshadow who one day witnesses some aliens trying to harvest one of her employers. The same aliens try to harvest her during an egg donation but she is saved by a half dog/half human who used to have wings, Tatum. Long fight scenes ensue with shoddy explanation by Tatum and Sean Bean in which we find out that Tatum is some sort of former military tool who is to protect her and she's also a queen of something because bees don't sting her. If this doesn't make sense, it's okay. We find out the universe is actually divided up among three immortal siblings, raspy ham Balem, overly optimistic Kalique, and lazy Titus, who harvest people on their planets to remain forever young. Jupiter has the same genetic sequence as their dead mom, the queen, which means technically that she owns the universe because to them genes imply reincarnation. Kalique invites her over to hang out, Titus tries to marry her to get her fortune, and Balem blackmails her. Many, many, many fight scenes ensue as well as a romance between Jupiter and Dog Boy. Good guys win over Balem (I don't know about the other two; were they setting up for a potential sequel?), Jupiter becomes owner of the universe which essentially means nothing, and she hooks up with Dog Boy who got his wings back (ask Sarah why and what this means). 

This movie is apparently a guilty pleasure for some people and its actually pretty easy to see how. It's got the space opera thing and the costumes and sets (that aren't egregiously bad CGI) are actually very impressive and interesting. The problem is, the plot is poorly delivered and poorly constructed and those fight scenes are just so long and so low-stakes you can't even slightly care. I almost think you could keep this same general verse and make a completely different movie in it that would actually be good but we only have this one and WE ONLY NEED THIS ONE, WACHOWSKIS.

BMN Quotes:
Kay: Whenever I look at Channing Tatum I am reminded that we are all just meat concealed in bags of flesh. We are all just sentient meat.
Adam: I used to play bass for Sentient Meat.

Keith: What did that guy [Eddie Redmayne] win an Oscar for?
Kay: For playing Stephen Hawking.
Keith: In "The Theory Of Everything"? But . . . he was really good in that!

Quotes:
"I have more in common with a dog than you."
"I love dogs."

"Is there any part of you that wants to bite me?"

And Eddie Redmayne's entire performance.

Spoon Rating: 4 [This is our new rating system for how unintentionally funny a movie is with 0 being not unintentionally funny at all and 10 being a film like "The Room."]

Adam's Grandma's Review: *silence*

Monday, January 4, 2016

REWATCH: Johnny Mnemonic [1995]

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

I did a full review of this movie in June 2014 when we first watched it that can be read here. It's still great although one wonders how awkward it would be for Dolph Lundgren if they had named the heroin addict hacker dolphin Dolph. 

Speaking Of Mr. Lundgren, we ended the evening by watching a video of him singing Elvis, playing drums, and breaking boards and you should too. End all your evenings this way.

(New) Quote:
"You are fucked up severe."

Adam's Grandma's Review: "Good."