Friday, April 25, 2014

Favorite (Animated) Scene Friday! The Incredibles: Brace Yourselves

By far one of my favorite Pixar movies is The Incredibles. The movie about Mr. Incredible, AKA Bob Parr (Craig T. Nelson) and Elastigirl, AKA Helen Parr (Holly Hunter) starting a family and settling down is the perfect combination of fun and action, even if it is a cartoon. The flick turns 10 in November of this year, and only now is there real talk of another film, despite Pixar's worst movie - Cars - getting sequels and spin-offs left and right.

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Not content with retiring his super alter-ego and his boring day job, Bob has secretly reentered the superhero workforce for a mysterious, private client, but all is not as it seems and our hero is captured. The scene I’ve chosen today is where Helen is flying to Bob's GPS coordinates in order to find out what he's up to, unaware that he's been captured. Shortly after discovering that her children Dash (Spencer Fox) and Violet (Sarah Vowell) have stowed away on the plane, this happens:



This is truly a thrilling scene, especially for a cartoon (I have a thing for plane scenes). It’s nail biting as the missiles appear, Helen fires countermeasures, pleads with her attackers to call off their assault (that's all accurate lingo she's spouting, by the way), and argues with Violet about using a force field to protect the plane. The scene cuts back and forth to the imprisoned Mr. Incredible and it's painful to watch, especially when he learns that his kids are on the jet. This scene also has an incredible climax when the missiles finally hit the plane and Helen uses her stretching powers to protect the kids. The way Helen says “Brace yourselves,” at the end of the scene is funny and the perfect conclusion to the action.

This ends our month of animated favorite scenes! Check out the others below and thanks again to Jay from Life Vs Film and Jess from French Toast Sunday for contributing!

Favourite (Animated) Scene Friday! Wall-E: The Space Dance
Favorite (Animated) Scene Friday! The Land Before Time: Littlefoot's Mom
Favorite (Animated) Scene Friday! Sleeping Beauty: Birthday Prep

Friday, April 18, 2014

Favorite (Animated) Scene Friday! Sleeping Beauty: Birthday Prep

This week Jess from French Toast Sunday has our third entry in our month of animated scenes!

Like many young girls growing up, I watched a lot of Disney movies. Probably my favorite of all the classic Disney movies was Sleeping Beauty. I loved the hidden princess Aurora, the beautiful song “Once Upon a Dream”, one of Disney’s darkest villains Maleficent, gorgeously detailed animation, the silly comedy parts, and the exciting action sequences (I was in elementary school guys…). Part of me wanted to go with the adorable meet cute between Aurora and Prince Phillip where they sing the film’s main theme together. Another great one is one of Disney’s scariest sequences when Aurora enters the secret passage in the castle and finally pricks her finger on the spindle.

Wikipedia

However, I bypassed the romance and horror to showcase a funny scene instead. One of my favorite moments comes from the three good fairies who take care of Aurora deep in the forest. To keep the princess safely hidden from Maleficent they haven’t used magic as to not draw attention. On her sixteenth birthday they decide to break out the wands because baking, sewing, and cleaning is just too darn hard for three fairies that have been doing it for over a decade.

First of all, this scene starts with some ridiculous attempts at all of these things. The dress is hideous, the cake is some nasty dough, and that cottage hardly looks presentable. It’s all really silly, but it still makes me laugh when Fauna reads “Two eggs – fold in gently” and literally puts two whole eggs into the mix. It would all be cute enough, but then the magic breaks out and things just get more goofy, when Flora and Merryweather start fighting over the colors of Aurora’s birthday dress. It all takes a darker turn.





Okay, maybe this all would be a lot more entertaining if you were me at 6 years old, but I still think it’s quite the cute scene and gives me a healthy dose of nostalgia.

Monday, April 14, 2014

Cheap Thrills Interview

Over the weekend some folks here in Jacksonville got the chance to catch Cheap Thrills at Sun-Ray Cinema. The movie follows two old friends, Craig (Pat Healy) and Vince (Ethan Embry), who end up committing progressively crazier tasks in order to win cash from mysterious couple Colin and Violet (played by David Koechner and Sara Paxton). Thrills is a dark comedy but, as the name implies, it's just as easily a thriller and it's not for the faint of heart - I literally gasped in shock towards the end. I had the chance to ask director E.L. Katz a few questions about the movie.


Q: The film explores what main characters Craig and Vince are willing to do for money, and the character Violet obviously enjoys documenting the events of the film with her phone. Is it safe to say that Cheap Thrills is a commentary on our reality show obsessed culture?

Katz: I think that’s one element of it for sure. I think that reality shows can sometimes be so much more screwed up than any sort of horror film or dark comedy, because they have such a twisted world view, and yet it’s presented as just sort of normal mainstream viewing. We get used to watching real people suffer, and be humiliated for the purposes of a shitty show, and we’re not supposed to care.

Q: Did you find yourself having to reign in either the comedy or thriller aspects while you were shooting or did they balance and blend well?

Katz: I really tried to focus on just making everything feel “real” and just trusted that the humor would come through naturally if something was funny… and if it wasn’t, then that was okay too. I never wanted to try to film it as a comedy or anything like that. When it came to the thriller elements, I tried to push things visually a little bit more towards the end of the film… made the lighting slightly darker, would film around corners a little, just tried to make things a little more off-kilter.

Q: Was it more daunting or liberating bringing these different genres together?

Katz: I’ve always wanted to blend these kinds of tones and genres, so if anything it was really freeing. I’d spent so much of my career working on more straight-forward horror, that it was very liberating to throw out the playbook so to speak, and just go a little crazy with it.


Q: How important was it for the two “contestants” to be old friends who hadn’t seen each other in years as opposed to strangers? There seemed to be a conscious theme of facing your past.

Katz: I think the film does have themes about facing who you are, against the expectations of who you might have wanted to be… and being faced with your best friend from a time where everything seemed possible felt like it would service that. Also, it seemed like, Colin and Violet would prefer to find a duo that could perhaps have some baggage that [they] could use to turn the contestants against each-other. It might have been less charged if they were just two strangers off the street.

Q: Is there a particular bit of trivia from the film that you like sharing? 

Katz: We shot the film in 14 days during one of the hottest LA summers in recorded history. 

Cheap Thrills is now in theaters and on demand.

Friday, April 11, 2014

Favorite (Animated) Scene Friday! The Land Before Time: Littlefoot's Mom

Our month of our favorite animated scenes continues! Last week Jay from Life Vs Film brought us a scene from Wall-E, but this week I'm going old school. Some of you may not remember The Land Before Time, but it's one of my favorite animated movies and hearkens back to a time when animated films were gorgeously hand drawn. Unfortunately, I'm sharing not only one of TLBT's saddest scenes, but possibly one of the saddest scenes in any cartoon.


If you're anything like me, you grew up watching this flick (and avoiding its horrible, song-filled sequels [holy shit, apparently they made 12 of them!]). Directed by Don Bluth, the fella that also helmed An American Tale (and would go on to do a ton of other animated flicks), and executive produced by Spielberg, George Lucas, Kathleen Kennedy, and Frank Marshall, TLBT tells the story of Littlefoot, an apatosaurus or, "Long Neck", and his group of mismatched dino pals. Littlefoot's group is trying to make it to "The Great Valley" after an earthquake strikes the land. This week's scene focuses on the quake and its emotional aftershocks...



Movies teach us a lot growing up, and death is usually one of the subjects. It may not be pretty, but The Land Before Time didn't shy away from it. I really don't have any firm memories of this scene from when I was a kid, but surely this had to have been the first time I saw a death on screen. The scene still gets to me. When Littlefoot's mom tells him she'll be with him, even if he can't see her...

The Meta Picture via Pinterest

I'm not sure what my deal is with sad cartoon scenes. I promise I'll share something happy later this month. Or, at least, not sad.

Tuesday, April 8, 2014

Escape Artists: March and April 2014

So we’re finally rolling out our “Escape Artists” series, something I’ve been meaning to focus on for a long time. What in the holy hell is this about, you may ask? Well, we’re highlighting escapist people and events, whether they're here in Jacksonville or elsewhere. So check out the report below - and don't forget to submit your own escapism in the comments or to totheescapehatch(at)gmail(dot)com!

Past Escapism

Nerd Lunch Meetup

A few weeks back the nerds from Nerd Lunch met up with the Cult Film Club in Atlanta and a nerdy, culty time was had by all. Visit to the World of Coke? Check. Chowed down on tasty looking food? Check. Read more here. You can also listen to the podcast they recorded here.

Nerd Lunch

True Detective Going Away Party

EH Team member Nick is moving to Carcosa North Carolina and we threw him and his bride a True Detective themed going away party. Why? Fugifweknow. Check out the pics below!

Made by hand by Matthew McConaughey himself.

Please join me in the storage shed.

Cake got kind of messed up...
 
"Black stars..."

I wish I could tell you we bought Big Hug Mugs for all of the guests.

Upcoming Escapism

Record Store Day

Record Store Day is once again upon us. Will you be venturing out to find a limited edition Ghostbusters LP? If you’re here in Jacksonville you may find some of us perusing the vinyl at Deep Search Records in Riverside. Check out their site here.

recordstoreday.com

Deep Search Records

Miscellaneous Escapism


  • 6 Famous Movies You Can Walk Around In Right Now - via Cracked
  • The Winchester Mystery House is Now Accepting Guests - via Nerdist
  • CBS Announces The First Official "Star Trek" Beer - via The Hollywood Reporter
  • Speaking of beer - Walking Dead Beer with Actual (???) Brains - via NY Daily News




  • Rolling Road Show Screening of Hot Rod



  • American Theaters are Going to Start Using 4D Tech - via JoBlo
  • Zombie Donut Food Truck - via Bloody Disgusting
  • RDJ Had a Captain America Birthday Party - via Geek Tyrant

Friday, April 4, 2014

Favourite (Animated) Scene Friday! Wall-E: The Space Dance

Hey, look, Jay Cluitt from Live vs. Film dropped by to kick off our month of animated Favorite Scene Fridays! Not only does Jay run LvF, you can hear him every week as the host of the LAMBcast, the podcast for the Large Association of Movie Blogs. He's also a regular contributor over at our sister site, French Toast Sunday - check out his "Jay's USA Roadtrip!" series. He's from the UK, you see. You can follow Jay on Twitter at @LifeVsFilmWithout further ado, here's Jay's scene from a Pixar classic!

Life Vs Film

Wall-E, Pixar's environmental parable starring a couple of initially Earth-bound robots, could well be my favorite animated film, and is certainly my favorite Pixar piece. It receives a great deal of praise for the first reel of dialogue-free insight into the everyday life of Wall-E, the last remaining trash-compacting 'bot charged with cleaning up the human mess on a now deserted Earth. But whilst I do love that period of the film, it is another, similarly silent (dialogue-wise, at least) scene that I love, occurring significantly later in the film once Wall-E and EVE, the droid sent to Earth to find signs of vegetation, have made it into space and to the Axiom, a giant space cruise-ship within which the last of humanity have been living for centuries.



Having narrowly escaped the detonating escape shuttle Wall-E had become trapped in, he and EVE meet in space when she rushes out to save him. EVE propels herself with her futuristic glowing blue in-built jetstream, whereas Wall-E goes typically old-school with a fire extinguisher he picked up from the shuttle. It would only be better if he had been riding atop an office chair during the flight. When they meet, after some playful fire-extinguisher-in-the-face shenanigans, Wall-E - who fell pretty hard for EVE when he first set binoculars on her - goes for the traditional wooing approach by giving EVE a flower. Or, more specifically, the plant-in-a-boot she has been searching for, and which holds the key to her not being de-programmed. She's justifiably elated at his gift, and gives him the spark-kiss he's been longing for all this time.

Wall-E's look of pure ecstasy/short circuiting the kiss causes is both hilarious and heartwarming, causing the little metal dude to drift off aimlessly before he and EVE begin a breathtakingly beautiful dance around the ship, weaving between the thrusters and elegantly gliding around. Thomas Newman's score perfectly encapsulates and accompanies the moment, and I love every second of it.

Just these two dancing around would have been more than enough, but we're also treated to their show causing Jane (Kathy Najimy) and John (John Ratzenberger), the two humans Wall-E has met so far on his journey, to discover one another - and the world around them away from their face-screens - forming what is potentially the first face-to-face human relationship seen on the Axiom in decades. Add to this the Captain (Jeff Garlin) and his boundless quest to discover the wonders of human life - seeds that grow pizza! - and you have one of the most joyous sequences this film has to offer.

Eventually, of course, Wall-E's fire extinguisher must run dry, and EVE gently catches him and takes him back to the ship; their brief moment of shared joy is now complete, and it's time to get back to the mission at hand, in much the same way that this scene has provided us with a breather from the film's message, and instead treats us to a scene of sheer joy.