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Thursday, September 30, 2010

Warp Zone Nerds Episode 3.04 - "The Next Big Thing Part 3"

The Nerds conclude their conversation on the next big thing with what will come in the future of media.

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Chase's 100 Movies/100 Scenes: 97 - National Lampoon's Animal House (1978)



Back in the days before I was born and my parents were still in college existed some of the funniest people to ever work in Hollywood. I mainly say existed because many of them have fallen off the map, died or are no longer funny. John Belushi was god and Harold Ramis and Dan Aykroyd were still funny. Also, during this wonderful and mythical time that was the late 70s and early 80s was one of the only comedies about college life that is actually coherent and funny. Animal House created the sub-genre of the college comedy and excluding Revenge of the Nerds, is the only good member of the sub-genre. Animal House follows the adventures of Delta Tau chi House as they try to tear down the prestigious and snodish Omega Theta Pi house and have a good time. While this is happening, the dean of the college is trying to destroy the Delta house and have them kicked out of the school. This plot might sound cliche, but Animal House created these cliches that so many films use to sleep walk through a film.



This is going to be short since the scene which I love the most is literally a small moment in the film. The Delta house has a massive party at around halfway into the film. It is a massive toga party with many sheet clad college students running around and dancing in a decrepit old building. There is band playing "Shout," people that are completely trashed and John Belushi...pretty much the greatest party in history. There is a small moment where John Belushi is sitting in a chair by himself. He is holding a jar of mustard and is obviously drunk out of his mind (most likely in reality as well). he is staring at the mustard in this weird sneering sort of way then pours it all over his chest.



Before you as an audience member can go"What the hell?" the scene cuts away to another part of the party. I laugh every time I see this scene. it is perfect because it demonstrates the mind set of most people while they are drunk. Suddenly a jar of mustard takes on the attributes of something that is meant to be on your chest. it is stupid and wonderful all at once. The movie never seems to live up to the comedic timing of this moment. If you have not seen Animal House I suggest you get together with a group of people that share your sense of humor and enjoy this pitch perfect comedy about being stupid and in college.

The scene I was talking about is at the end of the trailer:


Monday, September 13, 2010

Chase's 100 Movies/100 Scenes: 98 - Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull (2008)

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This film is mainly on the list because I feel like it gets nothing but a bad rapt. When Indy 4 came out it broke a nearly 13 year long tension in me that had been brewing ever since I'd heard the possibility of a sequel to one of my favorite films of all time. For me, I was an Indiana Jones kid, I saw Star Wars later in my childhood. Indiana Jones was there from the beginning. I mean I was there back in the days when we thought this movie was going to be about Indiana Jones searching for the lost city of Atlantis or fighting the Chinese in San Fransisco trying to solve a mystery involving Chinese workers who built the American Rail system. I saw this film at a midnight release with many of my friends. I was so excited I could barely contain myself. It felt like I was on the edge of the biggest unknown of my younger days. Finally, I reached the end and asked my friends what they thought.

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Really the plot for this film is one that I love. I have always had a thing for the stories of extra terrestrials and their involvement in shaping ancient history. Those were my bed time stories if I were to quote Indy, so I never really felt lost in this film as it seemed others were. The story takes place during the Cold War era, 1957 (just a year before my mother was born). the Soviets are hunting down the famous oblong Crystal Skull that is said to be part of a set of thirteen that once belong to a race of beings that inspired the Mayans. Indy is trying to stop them, but the Red Scare cause him to lose his job as a professor, so now he needs to stop the Russians to regain his position.



The Scene that truly reflects my feelings on this film is in the very first moments of this movie. Indy and his colleague are captured in Mexico and brought back to the states by a "rag-tag" team of Russian soldiers. They break into Area 51 where the leader of the "group," Irina Spalko, forces him to find a box that contains the remains of a creature who crashed his ship just outside of Roswell, New Mexico. Indy helps them find it, but escapes and so ensues a wonderful/classic Indiana Jones chase through the warehouse. Indy menages to escape but not after a mixture of "whip-swings," double crossing, a car chase and an interesting fist fight around a rocket sled.

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I love this scene for many reason. Right off the bat it was god damn Indiana Jones through and through. Several years had been leading to this and the opener did not disappoint. Second, by combining Roswell Mythos and Indiana Jones in a clear cut manner was nothing more than pure nerd-gasm for me. Thirdly, it is just an all around wonderful scene. It is daring, intriguing, mysterious and above all else incredibly fun. Now, I'm not saying this film is perfect or that it is the best Indiana Jones film, but I still call it a highly underrated film.

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I do have many issues with this film as well, anything that I could tell George Lucas's hands on (Monkey's on vines, "I've got a bad feeling about this," many of the CGI sequences) I had a real issue with. Also, I feel like Spielberg should have made this film in the 90s. However, Harrison Ford comes back in prime fashion, John Williams creates a wonderful score and there are some impressive scenes that feel like an Indiana Jones film instead of just acting like it. I have this movie along with the other Indiana Jones films on my iPod. If I'm in a bad mood, I'll watch this film and instantly feel better, because sometimes waiting really does pay off. I really enjoyed this movie and overall I'm happy I live in a world where it exists.



I swear my next film will have nothing to do with aliens.


Chase's 100 Movies/100 Scenes: 99 - Signs (2002)

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Okay...right off the bat, I don't like M. Night Shyamalan. After this film he started to fall off the map into the sinking vapor filled hell of the creative nutjob. This is more or less another film on this list that is a bad movie. I really like this movie for multiple reasons, but it isn't a good film. To sum up the story, it is about a family who live on a secluded farm that is in the middle of an alien invasion. They are stuck in their home while the world is decimated by the extra terrestrial force. What works in this movie is the sense of claustrophobia and isolation that comes from following one family. It works very well for some key scenes and adds some really interesting horrifying tension. However, the film falls apart due to its too perfect climax.

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One of the strong moments in this film comes in around the halfway point where we are still uncertain as to what is happening. the family has just come back from a day in town. The boy has been carrying a baby monitor with him, commenting that odd noises are coming from it. When they reach the house the baby monitor starts to emit some very distinct weird sounds. The boy believes it is from the aliens. the father disregards this, but very soon wonder and curiosity leads the family to crawl onto the hood of the car to get a better signal. It quickly becomes obvious that what you are listening to are the communications between two extra terrestrial beings. Then, the signal is lost.

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This scene is compelling for one reason; the horrifying reality that this is the first alien language heard by humans. This is where the film really shines. It is about horror coming from what you hear rather than what you see. You imagination paints a terrifying picture of these unknown beings as they talk to one another miles above the earth. It is extremely effective and still creeps me out today. However, when you start to really study the scene it starts to fall apart. the idea that a baby monitor would be able to pick up an alien transmission is preposterous, but it still remains an effective scene in a film that snowballed in to chaos very quickly. On a side note, James Newton Howard's score for this film is among the best work he has ever done. The track that plays during the Baby Monitor Scene is among my favorites and really add to the near perfect atmosphere of this film.

I'm going to start including the trailer to all the films I talk about:

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Chase's 100 Movies/100 Scenes: 100 - War of the Worlds (2005)

Over the next few/several months, I'm going to be going through my 100 favorite films and my favorite scenes from those movies. I will be counting down from 100, but overall the order does not matter until I reach around the last fourth of the list. I hope all the readers will find this interesting. This list isn't really full of "good" or "timeless" films, but rather what I love.

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To kick off the list I will be talking about Steven Spielberg's 2005 sci-fi "remake" War of the Worlds. Now, I'll be the first to say that this is not a good film. In fact, I have a lot of issues with this movie. For one it exists in too many Spielberg cliches such as broken up families, crazed righteous fathers, so on and so further. the film has a lame ending, poor casting and Dakota Fanning...you get what I'm saying. Where War of the Worlds fails on the big storytelling elements, it makes up in perfect small moments. Spielberg gets family dynamics in big bad way, most of the dialogue is fluid and natural and the special effects are really amazing and terrifying in many ways.

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I like this movie, but it is bad. this is my 100 because of one scene that is one of the most amazing and compelling moments in sci-fi film history. The scene is around 15-20 minutes into the film. We've gotten to know the characters, we get the family dynamics and such. Then a massive lightening storm takes place just down the street from the main character's house. The Tom Cruise character, Ray, leaves the house and follows a massive crowd of people to a hole in the middle of an intersection caused by the lightening storm. suddenly the ground begins to crack and split open and a massive alien/tripod ship...thing comes out of the ground and starts vaporizing people.

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Why this scene is so amazing is in how intense everything is. It seems like such a cliche scene, but these cliches are revitalized in such a brilliant ways where we get something that is more like Saving Private Ryan than an alien invasion film. When people are being vaporized by the alien death ray it is terrifying. The way Spielberg shoots the scene and the effects used make the moment someone is blown to dust horrifying. When I first saw this film I was shaking from fear, the scene truly unnerved me. I watched this film recently and it still holds up in a big way. Again, War of the Worlds isn't a good film, but it has a scene that holds some hope for the future of alien invasion film.

Friday, September 3, 2010

Nintendo topic with Brawl in the family creator

Today, 09/03/10, our topic will be Nintendo, and who better to speak with us than Matthew Taranto, creator of Brawl in the Family. Hope you all can listen in at 88.3Fm or kxua.uark.edu 6-8PM CST.

Thursday, September 2, 2010

New time, New guests, More fun!

Our show will be Friday 6-8. We have great new plans and we will be having fantastic new guests such as Jeff Suter, Senior Art Director of Marvel, and Matthew Taranto, creator of webcomic brawl in the family. Also, with me leaving the show soon, expect to see a revolving fourth person on the show, each giving a fantastic unique point of view. Hope your able to listen in on 88.3fm or kxua.uark.edu.

-- M
LLAP (sorry Nemoy, had to do it once)