Thursday, June 30, 2016

Gorgo [1961]

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

Have you ever thought to yourself that there really aren't enough "Godzilla" rip-offs in the world even with Japan making a new one pretty much every year since the 50s? Well, I've got a film for you then! It's a British production but trust me when I say that this does not make it any better than the numerous American faliures to adapt this same monster movie format. Can we, as a people, just stop? I mean, let Japan keep doing it over and over because they invented it but there is no reason to have this many prehistoric-dinosaurish-animal-attacks-city movies. The movie this week was selected by Paul, our special guest, and Keith had already seen it but he had been a child at the time and couldn't really remember it. We ended our evening by showing each other the weirdest music videos we know of which were more exciting than this film.

While fishing off the coast of Ireland, a bunch of dudes in a ship stumble upon a mysterious being in the water. They go to a tiny island nearby where they encounter a very questionable "scientist" and his orphened child slave who aggressively doesn't think they should try to catch the monster. They do and sell it into the circus in London where they name it Gorgo (I guess they didn't really consider that there's an "n" at the end of the Greek mythical being), parade it around the streets, and put it in a pit in the ground at Battersea Park so they can sell tickets to see it. The orphaned Irish child stowed away on the fishermen's ship and constantly looks sadly at Gorgo in confinement but doesn't ever actually mess things up even though we really thought he was going to. Everything is going okayish aside from the moral questions, until a scientist discovers that Gorgo is actually a small child and not a fully grown adult and that mommy is coming to collect. The end result is the destruction of London landmarks like Tower Bridge, Big Ben, and the entire West End because we built these models and Goddammit we're going to use them. People die. Beasts go home. Irish child still curiously homeless.

This movie was pretty generic overall. We had a couple laughs and actually found the special effects to be pretty good compared to a lot of the films we watch, but it wasn't strange or interesting enough to warrant much attention.

Quote:
"All hands on net!"

Spoon Rating: 3

Paul's Review:
"My emotions:
"

Monday, June 20, 2016

I Am Here.... Now [2009]

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

Now that we have watched Neil Breen's first three movies we can say with confidence that he really does grow as an artist over time. He doesn't get better necessarily but his stories develop more coherency which makes it easier to focus on the delightful aspects of them like the bad acting and dialogue without getting bogged down in the frustration of wondering what is going on. This movie, "I Am Here.... Now" is more watchable than last week's "Double Down" but did not provide nearly as much joy as "Fateful Findings." We can only that "Pass Thru" which is coming out this year will be a solid 10 on our Spoon Rating scale. Also, I just want to point out that he uses what seems to be the exact same picture of himself on every one of his movie posters. Brilliant.

The movie starts with Neil Breen and his dead eyes being beamed down to Earth as some sort of alien mecha Jesus (who can transform into a Neanderthal/alien thing) into a remote part of the Nevada desert where there are six doll heads on the ground, some skulls, and six crosses. He is dissatisfied with how the humans are treating each other and the planet (which he made, I guess) so he hypnotizes a couple drinking beers in the desert and steals the guy's clothes so he can go into Vegas as a normal guy. In some unlinear side story, two sisters get laid off from their jobs at natural energy companies because greedy corporate types don't care about the planet and they decide to become hookers. One has a kid and doesn't go through with it and is rewarded by being given a man to date who was once an old guy in a wheelchair but Breesus made him young again. The other sister . . . has sex with Breesus, I guess. Also, all the women in the movie with more than three lines are wearing the same button up tank top in different colors. The girls get kind of mixed up with trying to hook the evil corrupt politicians and businessmen who hang out with more traditional low lifes but in the end Breesus crucifies them on the crosses we saw in the desert. He looks into his glass table centerpiece and decides to give the humans one more chance before he destroys the world for good. In the slowest moving credits in movie history, his character is listed as "The Being."

This movie had all the traditional Breenness but had the special award of probably being a coherent story if the editing hadn't been so atrocious. The best scene is when a guy gets shot and one of the sisters screams three times at seeing his corpse in the most unfeeling and brief way possible.

Spoon Rating: 7

Wednesday, June 15, 2016

Double Down [2005]

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

After the glory of "Fateful Findings," we decided to give Neil Breen's first movie "Double Down" a try and it was actually really rough compared to the joy of "Fateful Findings." The bulk of the movie involves Neil Breen wandering around the Nevada desert, eating enough tuna to give him mercury poisoning, having visions of his dead girlfriend who keeps asking him to "stop time" and whose bones he carries with him in a body bag, and watching an old man die as he gives him a rock that he tries to use to cure a girl's brain cancer (it doesn't work). Over all this footage, a lot of which is repeated multiple times or stock footage, you get a voiceover of Breen explaining how awesome his character is and how he is being recritted by the government for hacking missions. I'm not entirely sure this film had a conclusion.

Honestly, there's not much more I could say since this movie was so disjointed so instead here's a list of things Neil Breen likes based on the two movies we've seen by him:
  • people's feet
  • showing his butt
  • rocks with special powers
  • repeating footage
  • abusing broken laptops
  • free locations
  • falling for a girl in elementry school and loving her still as an adult (there is some poor lady who knew Neil Breen when he was seven who wants him to stop calling her)
  • government conspiracies
  • being the good guy computer hacker who saves the world from corruption
  • tragic death scenes that he can overact in
  • magical realism (although he doesn't know how it works)
  • shots that seem cool but make no logical sense
  • ambiguous dialogue
  • Sleeping on your stomach
  • weird credits ("Location - Neil Breen", "Hair & Makeup - None", "Lighting - None")
  • pretending he's David Lynch and that his movies are really deep
Quotes:
"It kills immediately on contact. He'll be dead in five minutes."

Spoon Rating: 5

Tuesday, June 7, 2016

Fateful Findings [2013]

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

Guys, this one is very important. For long we have wandered through the vast wasteland of bad movies in hopes of a new savior who can help elevate the art and provide us with hours of delicious schedefreude. Tommy Wiseau is busy trying to fund a pointless television show that is almost as painful as it is funny, Ed Wood is dead, and James Nguyen . . . apparently made a "Birdemic" sequel but no one seems to be talking about it so, whatever. Maybe another week. This week we are talking about the new name in bad movies: Neil Breen, a man who sort of looks like a Hobbit crossed with a melting Alan Rickman mask who you definitely don't want to introduce to your kids. Not only did Neil Breen direct, produce, write, edit, and star in "Fateful Findings"; he also did the casting, production design, sound editing, and makeup. It is a doozy.

In a flashback, a girl and a boy find a mushroom in the woods that transforms into a fancy box with a black rock inside that they take with them. The girl moves away and the boy is presently an author, struggling to write his second book while dealing with depression (I think?) and his Polish wife's pill-popping addiction. Neil Breen, the man, gets hit by a car but survives because of the black rock that seems to have magic powers that call on a crappy wind effect. Out of nowhere at home with his wife he says that he hasn't been researching his novel but has been "hacking into national and international databases" on his six computers that he often abuses. He also dreams a lot about being in a room covered in black garbage bags and about a giant mystical book. Meanwhile, Breen's alcoholic best friend is sorta accidentally killed by his wife who frames it as a suicide. That subplot is dropped. The best friend's underage daughter tries to seduce Breen for no discernible reason. That subplot is dropped. Breen meets the girl from his past and they have an affair right before his wife ODs. This means relatively little. You start to wonder how so many things can be happening when there isn't really a plot. Breen has a green-screen press conference where he talks about his hacking discoveries that are apparently in the rock (the rock was a thumb drive?) and a bunch of CEOs kill themselves. You wonder how if that was the whole point, why did the movie talk so little about it? You want to watch more Neil Breen movies.

While the plot may not show it, this movie is a masterpiece of terrible movies. About halfway through the film, I noticed that if you start imagining that you are actually watching a David Lynch movie in the vein of "Rabbits" or "Inland Empire", the movie actually gets better until something happens to remind you that this man is definitely not David Lynch. You get the impression that Neil Breen read a book on acting and one on directing and managed to walk away with concepts but not understanding and application. For example, Breen sees two therapists in the film: one who is a pill pusher who doesn't do much and who always sits at the other end of a seriously long table and the other who is very in tune with him whose office is essentially a broom closet. Breen clearly understood that one can show emotional distance in a film with physical distance and emotional closeness with physical closeness but never actually considered how bonkers this would actually look on screen if done wrong. He also is aware that when acting you can sometimes show anger not just with a raised voice but also by throwing things. So he does this no less than four times in the movie, often over very little. This is what makes his level of incompetency so glorious to watch. Another unique trait is that not only do certain scenes repeat but there is the definite sense that he shot the same scenes multiple times and put every take into the movie regardless of coherency.The regular bad movie issues are all present too: dialogue that doesn't sound human, monotone acting, incomprehensible plot (Sarah was practically crying by the end of it), one set used over and over, blatant disregard for basic medical science, everyone made up to look like wax figures, excessive shots of people's feet, really slow moving scenes for no reason, bad special effects, you name it.

I do want to specifically give a shout out to the actress who played the stepdaughter though. She was fantastic. She seemed to be high throughout the entire movie (and I mean the actress seemed high, not the character) and she had one of the most beautiful moments of the film. After her "seduction" of Breen, he sits her down to have a talk about how she can't do this and then she looks directly into the camera like she's on "The Office" as if to say to the audience, "Can you believe this shit?" Then she seems to forget her line and just nods at him for an awkward few seconds. I have never felt more connected to an actor.

You can be damn sure there will be more Neil Breen films coming up.
The credits listed a lot of companies like "NNN Productions" or "Eats N Eats Food Services" and then they ended with this message. How cute. He tried to be humble.

Quotes
[a sample of the kind of dialogue this movie has]
"I want you to try this new wine."
"I would love to try your new wine."

[while awkwardly holding his friend's dead body; with monotone exasperation]
"I can't believe you committed suicide. I can't believe you committed suicide. How could you have committed suicide? How? I can't help you out of this one, Jim."

Spoon Rating: 9.

Grandma's Rating: "It was pretty good."