Author: Brad

His earliest memory of nerdiness is discovering the Star Trek motion pictures when his parents (presumably) accidentally rented the first one on laser disc. He attended his first convention at the age of 12 and has been to many Star Trek conventions since, as well as SDCC, NYCC, and E3 twice. He’s also an avid TMNT fan who has each of the first four issues of the original comic book signed by Eastman AND Laird. Brad also favors Batman and loves Nintendo so much he still plays his Virtual Boy from time-to-time. When he’s not immersed in nerd media, he’s out competing at bar trivia or working on several creative projects like podcasting, producing short films, publishing books, and drawing cartoons. His favorite film of all-time is Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Movie and with over 600 DVD’s and blu-rays in his collection, Brad is surely a Reel Nerd.

The Diary of Anya Frank Selected to Denver 48 Hour “Best Of” Screening

(This teaser was for the Oriental premiere Aug 10th. I’m including it just so you can see some footage. Ignore the screening info and pay attention to the poster below)

Of course I’m going to exploit my podcast to promote the screening of my 2014 48 Hour Film ‘The Diary of Anya Frank”!

August 3rd-5th, I embarked on my 5th 48 Hour Film Project. Back from the previous years were Adam Smith, Robert Tanaka, and Eileen Agosta, but because of all of our JCVDDV filming, we were tepid about participating in this year’s competition. It’s exhausting and we’re not as young as we used to be. Last year we busted our asses making the action comedy Thunderbolt but ultimately crossed the finish line a bit too late (the second time that’s happened). The film turned out really well and audiences enjoyed it, but because it was turned in late, it had NO chance of getting screened at the Esquire for the “Best Of” screening.

Thus, my number one priority as team leader this year was: TURN IT IN ON TIME, no matter how polished it was. Impressively, this year, we turned “The Diary of Anya Frank”, early, and in solid condition, and I actually slept twice throughout the weekend! Big thanks are deserved for my teammates Adam Smith, Eileen Agosta, Jami Haber, Kendra Buck, Nathan Westlake, and Robert Tanaka for making the weekend easy.

Last week I was informed that our film was one of 14 films from the 54 competing this year that was selected to screen September 18th, 7pm, at the Esquire Theater. Although our only goal each year is to make something cool with cool people, it’s also nice for those involved to feel some outside validation for donating their time and energy over an exhausting three day weekend. Not only is our film in the running for “Best Film”, but other awards are handed out on this night for things like “Best Actor/Actress”, “Best Writing”, “Best Use Of…”, etc., and it would be exciting to see anyone from our crew go home with one.

Of course, there are 13 other amazing films (they’re still choosing a 15th) in contention next Thursday that demand your attention and this why should get your tickets to the screening as soon as you can. THIS EVENT SELLS OUT! I highly encourage you to attend and support the films and purchase tickets well in advance.

You can purchase tickets online here: http://tickets.landmarktheatres.com/%28S%28f5xplgbkmjwoqdvdfopk1kvv%29%29/Ticketing.aspx?TheatreID=228&MovieID=14064&ShowDate=9%2F18%2F2014&ScheduleID=31052

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Brad’s Top Ten (and more!) of 2013

2013 is behind us and overall there were few films that I adored on a Wall-E or The Dark Knight level and plenty that I felt an indifference toward. I saw a lot of indie pictures but almost none of them I wanted to recommend to people. Compared to last year, I actually went to a theater less and I saw much fewer movies more than once and made room for more different titles, while I saw almost the same amount of re-releases. Before we examine each film on the list, let’s look at a breakdown of this year’s stats.

Statistics

Total theater viewings: 89

  • Alamo Drafthouse: 29
  • Highlands Ranch AMC 24: 16
  • Sie Filmcenter: 14
  • Colorado Mills: 14
  • Denver West: 5
  • Landmark Esquire: 5
  • Landmark Mayan: 1
  • Landmark Chez Artiste: 1
  • Denver Pavilions: 1
  • Tiffany: 1
  • Aurora Movie Tavern: 1
  • Harkins: 1

(Did I really not set foot in the Landmark Greenwood Village at all this year? Wow.)

Total repeat viewings: 5

Total different movies watched at the theater: 84

Total new release movies: 73

Total re-release movies: 13

Estimated money spent: $934.50 (@avg $10.50 per ticket)

 

Midnight Madness and Alamo Specialty Programming

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles

My all-time favorite film and I got to see it again at the Esquire.

The Room

I saw this twice, once with Tommy Wiseau there for a Q&A. The movie is notoriously bad, but the fun is in how the audience reacts by throwing spoons, quoting lines, and laughing at it.

Ghostbusters

The first film we watched at the Alamo Drafthouse during the grand opening.

Sleepaway Camp

The twist at the end is its claim to fame and Jonathan Tiersten is pretty much the only actor acting naturally.

Jason X

The print was kind of washed out and not as fun as I remember, but it has some cool ideas sometimes and a great holodeck gag.

Terminator 2: Judgment Day

One of the most bad-ass action films of all-time and, in a way, one of the best remakes.

Akira

The animation is still great, but I think this was a new dub and I can’t stand the fluff lines they use to match the characters’ japanese lines.

Superman

Still a great film, but the effects and goofy sensibilities really date it.

The Benson Interruption: Lethal Weapon

Doug Benson and other comedians pulled an MST3K on this and, having never seen it without commentary, I can’t imagine enjoying it without their jokes.

2013 New Releases

Texas Chainsaw 3D

I can’t remember if we saw this in 3D or not. Doesn’t matter. I don’t think I should be sympathizing with Leatherface by the end of the film. Slasher-fail.

Gangster Squad

Like a dumb L.A. Confidential complete with Sean Penn shouting, “Here comes Sant-y Claus!” Yuck.

Bullet to the Head

There a sweet axe fight… that’s about it.

Evil Dead

Impressive in-camera gore effects. But I don’t think it pushed the envelope as much as the poster claimed it would.

A Good Day To Die Hard

Awful. Really disappointing given the pedigree of the franchise. Willis seems bored. McClaine has nothing clever to say. The plot is the same as ever. It’s no wonder they dumped this in February instead of summer.

Snitch

Don’t remember much of this. I think I was just indifferent.

Jack the Giant Slayer

The CGI giants aren’t impressive and it feels like the movie has an identity crisis between being a fun kids film and a mature action flick for adults.

Oz the Great and Powerful

Has some clever moments, but the production design is lifted right out of Alice in Wonderland. Can’t remember if this was a 3D screening. Either way, I felt like it was all in front of a green screen. Oh, and the love triangle story was annoying and Oz barely earned redemption.

The Last Stand

Has some fun moments, but otherwise, not very memorable.

John Dies at the End

Not sure what even was going on for most of this film. Feels like it’s being weird just to be weird.

The ABC’s of Death

An interesting anthology of horror, if your idea of horror is asian men forced into a masturbation contest to obtain their freedom.

Olympus Has Fallen

Even I confuse this with White House Down. Which one has James Woods as the villain? Which one has Jamie Foxx in it? The answer to both is: not this one. Gerard Butler does Die Hard in the White House to save Aaron Eckhart. Coincidentally, a better Die Hard than A Good Day To Die Hard.

G.I. Joe: Retaliation

Better than the first unless you’re a fan of the 80’s cartoon apparently.

The Great Gatsby

Obnoxious and boring at the same time. Production design is a feast for the eyes, but I didn’t for the most important parts… the characters and their story.

From Up On Poppy Hill

A nice, sweet animated movie, kind of boring in the middle though.

Jurassic Park 3D

The 3D conversion of this 1993 classic was actually not flat and pretty decent.

42

Certainly a good film and worth the watch to see Harrison Ford’s performance.

Identity Thief

More enjoyable than I expected. Actually has some heart to it.

Oblivion

Spectacular production design. But the story didn’t capture my imagination.

It’s A Disaster

A fun, character-driven end-of-the-world comedy that works even in just the one location.

Upstream Color

Beautiful cinematography. Maybe the best of the year. But the story was hard to follow.

Thale

Not sure if I can fairly judge this as I did sleep through some of it.

Pain and Gain

Kind of fun, but in the end, the characters aren’t likeable and thu, can’t stick with me.

Iron Man 3

Keeps things fun as RDJ owns the movie sans the Iron Man suit. Awesome surprise in the middle.

The Hangover 3

I’ve been indifferent to this franchise but this movie was really fun in my opinion.

Now You See Me

Again, kind of boring, I slept through a good chunk of the middle and the protagonists are so smug it’s unlikeable.

World War Z

The end sequence was about the only thing that captured my attention.

White House Down

Another absurd version of ‘Die Hard in the White House’ scenario.

The Lone Ranger

Better than most people give it credit for. The end sequence on the train is clever and inventive.

Maniac

Wasn’t crazy about the inner monologue.

Pacific Rim

So much like a live-action Neon Genesis Evangelion, all I could think of the whole time was, “What isn’t this officially a live-action Neon Genesis Evangelion?”

V/H/S 2

There was much hype about how much more shocking the stories were over the original, but it was only as interesting as the first.

R.I.P.D.

Very much Men In Black but with ghosts and not as witty.

The Internship

Surprisingly entertaining, but doesn’t push any comedy boundaries.

Only God Forgives

Stylish as hell, but not much else. All of the characters are awful and there’s nothing to be invested in.

The Wolverine

Exciting beginning and end, but the middle is a long bore. Not brain-dead like Origins, but nothing special either.

Kick Ass 2

The sequel is fun and the Motherfucker steals the show, but there’s just too much going on I think.

I Declare War

Great idea, and the movie is acted well considering the cast is only children, but because of the trailer I expected more fantasy than drama.

In A World…

Has some funny moments, and it’s entertaining enough for a movie about voice acting.

Insidious 2

Not having seen the first one, I was completely lost and it didn’t make me curious enough to find out what I missed.

Prisoners

A very good film, well-acted, well-made, tough to endure sometimes, except for the Bond-villain-explaining-the-plan climax.

Don Jon

Good movie, funny, not sure what I was supposed to take away from it.

Prince Avalanche

Kinda like Clerks in a forest. Just two road painters talking, sharing stories, dealing with their issues.

Frankenstein’s Army

Aside from the “why are you still filming this? you’re in danger!” problem, the monster and violence effects are pretty awesome.

Bad Milo

I fell asleep through most of it. If you’re gonna make a movie about a demon born from your butt, swing for the fence. Too tame.

Machete Kills

I’m more interested in the next one… in space! It’s wildly over-the-top beyond the grindhouse homage it began as. Mel Gibson excels copying his character from that South Park episode.

Escape From Tomorrow

It’s impressive they actually filmed much of it within the Disney parks without permission, but without an interesting story there’s not much worth watching.

Captain Phillips

It’s an effectively executed dramatization of the actual events. Could have been just as good as a documentary.

Escape Plan

I keep hoping these action icons will come back and somehow advance the genre that made them. Instead, it’s just more of the same.

A.C.O.D.

Amusing, but I guess it doesn’t resonate with me enough not being a child of divorce.

Bad Grandpa

I never thought the old man gags in the previous films were all that funny, but they succeeded in making a funny feature of it. Great gags.

We’re The Millers

Pretty funny, has some heart, but the villain-has-everyone-at-gunpoint-and-gives-the-heroes-time-to-plead-their-case climax needs to stop.

Birth of the Living Dead

Good doc about the making of the Romero classic. Thanks to Ryan, I already knew most of the story though.

Ender’s Game

Not a game I’d want to play again.

Thor 2: The Dark World

Enjoyed it more than the first. Very much a superhero comedy.

The Hunger Games: Catching Fire

Almost a remake of the original, successfully loses some of the goofy shit.

Oldboy (2013)

It’s my opinion that if you’re going to remake a successful film, put a distinct stamp on it that gives you a reason to see it over the other. This doesn’t do that.

Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues

Very funny but there’s so much disposable humor, it’s tough for any of the jokes to leave the theater with you.

Saving Mr. Banks

Very enjoyable. You’ll struggle not to get choked up at the end.

The Wolf of Wall Street

Scorsese can also make a comedy. Anyone who see thinks these clowns are being glorified need a perspective check. They’re clowns.

The Secret Life of Walter Mitty

A sweet, nice film about stepping outside your comfort zone. Could have been in my top-ten.

Grudge Match

Characters and story is fun and heartfelt, but lots of old person humor about old people and being old.

The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug

I stayed awake this time and was more into the more adventurous plot. Adding a dragon helps.

Elysium

Awesome effects, sci-fi, but the story is a bit shallow.

The Ten Best of 2013

10. Samurai Cop

samuraicop

Technically, not a movie from 2013, but I saw it this year at a midnight madness screening and had so much fun hearing other people tear it apart. So bad it’s good. Watch it with your friends.

9. Gravity

gravity

The story is nothing special, but the 3D special effects extravaganza gives you the theme park thrills in the comfort of your multiplex.

8. Wrong

wrong

Weird. Just so delightfully weird.

7. Zero Charisma

zerocharisma

An honest observation of nerd culture and examination of the man child.

6. Monsters University

monstersuniversity

Pixar makes solid sequels and this one even teaches you that no matter what your dream is, no matter how hard you try, some people just don’t have what it takes to achieve them.

5. The Incredible Burt Wonderstone

burt

This was the first movie I really enjoyed this year, and it didn’t have to be crude to make me laugh. That’s impressive. Olivia Wilde is nice to look at too.

4. This Is The End

thisistheend

The most relentlessly funny movie of the year to me, meaning more laughs per second consistently.

3. Star Trek Into Darkness

trekdark

The first movie I saw twice this year, and the very next morning at that. I don’t mind they went after the Khan story, especially when I think of this as an adaptation of “Space Seed”, the original series episode that debuted Khan.

2. Man of Steel

manofsteel

DC really needed this to succeed and I think they did an excellent job of making Superman cool again, updating the mythology and bringing him modern sensibilities.

1. The World’s End

worldsend

This layered, clever, and creative examination of middle-age, friendship, and alien invasion scenarios was my favorite film of the year.

Well, that’s it for 2013. Feel free to submit your thoughts, opinions, questions as always.

– Brad

Laugh, You Bastards! Announces 3rd Season Debut

January 28th, 2014, Laugh, You Bastards! returns with the premiere of their third season at the Oriental Theater during Open Screen Night! To announce this glorious debut, they made a short promo that you can watch above.

You can also watch the previous two season for free on YouTube or rent the discs at Video One, just across from the Esquire Theater.

Movies I Want to Watch at the Littleton Alamo Drafthouse

With the Alamo Drafthouse open in Littleton, I have another venue where I can watch old movies. The Esquire is great but they only do it at midnights on the weekends and often recycle the same titles year after year. The Alamo has bigger balls, and has specialty programming every day of the week. Here’s a list of movies I don’t think the Esquire will ever show and whose tickets I hope I can add to my collection soon. Please Alamo?

Super Mario Bros.

mariobros

They had this at the Esquire for the first time a few months back but I’d still like to see it again cuz it’s terribly awesome!

Last Action Hero

lastaction

I know Ryan will back me up here. Look! This belongs in the Tough Guys cinema show!

Batteries Not Included

batteries

This movie is absolutely delightful. But I know this is a long shot.

Back to the Future Marathon

bttf2

I’ve seen the first many times at the Esquire Midnights. Now let’s do the whole thing back to back while I claim tickets for II & III for my collection.

Baseketball

baseketball

A favorite to quote among my friends. Not essential, but I’d like to have the ticket for it.

Hamlet (1996)

hamlet

This would be tough to program given the almost 4 hour runtime, but I want it.

Hook

hook

The Esquire got this finally but I couldn’t get there to see it that weekend. Here’s hoping Alamo will give me that second chance.

Howard the Duck

howard

There has to be some Alamo cult programming this is perfect for right?

First Blood

firstblood

I think I have a good chance of this getting programmed someday. But people will be surprised it’s not balls to the wall action like it’s sequels… which is why it’s my favorite.

Robocop 2

robocop2

I always enjoyed this one. Want a ticket.

Star Trek VI

st6

My personal favorite of the original series. We get Wrath of Khan all the time, let’s change it up.

Suburban Commando

suburban

I got this picture off the Austin Alamo page. This could happen!!!

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II & III

tmnt2

No secret. Huge TMNT fan. But they never show the other two. I lost my mind when the Esquire showed TMNT: The Movie. But they’ve shown it three times since and ever time I went, some jerkoff made a joke about Ninja Rap. So there’s an audience for the second one, I know it! And I never saw the third one in the theater when it came out, so unfinished business.

UHF

uhf

Another fav that is perfect for cult programming.

Predator

predator

I’m surprised that with as many times as I’ve heard people yell “Git to da choppah!” this doesn’t roll through Esquire Midnights more, not even around Halloween. Alamo, “Git it to da projectah!”

48 Hour Film Project Denver Dates Announced!

If you’re looking to compete in this year’s competition, Denver Producer Kristin Nolan, has just announced all the dates for the 2013 project.

From the 48 Hour Film Project website:

  • The 48 Hour Film Project will return to Denver the weekend of August 2 – 4, 2013. Filmmakers from all over the Denver area will compete to see who can make the best short film in only 48 hours. The winning film will go up against films from around the world for the title “Best 48 Hour Film of 2013”.
  • Registration opens Tuesday, June 4. Early Bird Registration is $140. Teams must register on or before Monday, July 8 to get this special rate. Regular registration is $160. If teams register after Tuesday, July 23 they must pay a rate of $175.
  • Sign up for the Denver mailing list and we will inform you when more information is available.

I’ve competed the last 3 years in a row, and while sometimes frustrating and exhausting, it’s a fun experience that I recommend you try if you’re into making your own films. The 48 Hour Film Project runs all year long, all around the world, so if you’re not from Denver, you have can still go to the website and learn more about where you can compete near you!

The Getaway

From last night’s Open Screen Night, Matty O’ Connor and friends showed this hilarious short that’s currently featured on the home page at FunnyOrDie.com. Great job you guys!

Brad’s Favorite Elements of Star Trek: First Contact

For some reason, I watched A LOT of Star Trek lately and A LOT of “First Contact” today. First the film, then the film with commentary, then the film with another commentary, the featurettes… and so forth. I should know everything about this film by now. But because my memory is getting worse with age, I won’t. But for right now, I’m as immersed in “First Contact” as I was in 1996 when the film premiered and it informed all my creative choices throughout high school. The entire aesthetic of the film saturated my short stories and artwork. And now I’m going to explain why “Star Trek: First Contact” is so badass (as if you didn’t already know):

The Enterprise-E

enterprise_e

The Enterprise-D was destroyed in “Generations” so they had to introduce a new Enterprise for this movie and they delivered my favorite starship design yet! The E is sleek and aggressively styled, rebuilt from the ground up. It has an integrated saucer section and body to reduce the chances of it getting separated by enemy fire and has the classically longer warp nacelles to balance out the design. You can also see the escape pods built into various sections and the captain’s yacht embedded under the hull. The interior has been upgraded as well. The bridge has more compact displays and control panels and richer lighting. The D was designed as a science vessel because the mission at the time was cataloging planets and lifeforms, but because of the growing threat of the Borg, the Federation needed a new flagship bred for war. So they christened the E and it’s dazzled the silver screen ever since.

Foreshadowing

foreshadowing

In one of the first few scenes, Riker sarcastically presents Picard with his Neutral Zone sensor-sweep data of which Picard also scoffs at because they both agree they’re resources are better utilized fighting the Borg who’ve now attacked Earth. The Federation has ordered the Enterprise away because they believe Picard’s history (he was assimilated) with the Borg “would introduce an unstable element to a critical situation.” Like Riker, I’d initially disagree, citing Picard’s experience with the Borg would make him the perfect man to lead the assault. But as we discover through the course of the movie, Picard’s experience does negatively impact his handling of the situation, ultimately becoming obsessed with revenge. This is something I’ve only recently come to appreciate and greatly enriches the story.

Almost a Zombie Movie

borg_zombies

Let’s face it. The Borg are basically robot zombies. Being assimilated is like being bitten by a walker. The Borg never seem to run faster than a stagger and their skin looks like it’s decaying. Most of them don’t speak. Also cool: they even assimilate the Enterprise.

Jerry and Joel Goldsmith’s Score

vulcan

In the eight feature film, the father and son team crafted a variation of the Star Trek fanfare that evokes nobility and an adventurous spirit and use it to great effect in the opening titles and emotionally resonant scene of First Contact. Meanwhile, the metallic and industrial score for the encounters with the Borg provide an ominous quality to those scenes.

Geordi’s Ocular Implants

ocular

It’s the 24th century so this just makes sense. While Georgi’s visor was a visual aesthetic that made his character stand-out, with all the other advanced technology we saw in the Next-Gen universe it didn’t make sense that Geordi couldn’t have cool ocular implants. A bigger budget and CGI certainly helped make that possible and LeVar Burton could finally act through his eyes even though he’d done great so far without them. It was a big “duh, why didn’t they do that sooner?” moment when I first saw the film.

Literary Reference

mobydick

Like another great “Trek” film, this one makes a reference to “Moby Dick” in order to scrutinize a character’s quest for revenge. Picard gets obsessed with punishing the Borg instead of defeating them. It takes a “primitive” 21st century character to expose the perilous path Picard is treading when she references “Moby Dick” (despite admittedly never reading it). This scene will always make you stop and pay attention. Riveting.

Expanding the TV Series

expand

I think “Star Trek” movies have been at their best when they take something from the television series and expand upon it in a film. “Khan” is rooted in a “TOS” episode called “Space Seed”. “First Contact” builds upon “The Best of Both Worlds” by adding the Borg Sphere, a Borg Queen, and making her minions more than guys in black spandex and rubber tubes. Zefram Cochrane originated from a “TOS” episode as well, and his legend as been perpetuated throughout the different series’ ever since. The Dixon Hill holodeck sequence goes back to Next-Gen episodes. There is even a plot point designed to draw Borg from the Delta quadrant in the 21st century to Earth. Luckily for us, that plan fails. Spoiler!

Reluctant Legend

cochrane

Does it ever seem like you grow up idolizing certain people, only to find out they were just regular, flawed people? That’s the fun twist of Zefram Cochrane, the inventor of warp drive and the first man to shake hands with a Vulcan. In the 24th century, the Next-Gen crew knew of Cochrane as a visionary, a historical legend that that ushered in a new era for humanity. There’s a giant statue of him in Montana and Geordi’s high school is named after him. But thanks to the Borg, we discover that Cochrane was actually a profiteer, a boozer, and a skirt-chaser. He built the warp engines with dollar signs in his eyes. “First Contact” eventually turned him around, but it’s interesting to see how history can be written the way we want to perceive it.

Zero-G Combat

zerog

When the Borg attempt to convert the Enterprise’s deflector dish into a beacon to contact Borg reinforcements in the Delta quadrant, Picard enlists Worf and Hawk to walk outside the hull of the ship in order to stop them. It’s clever way to show something we don’t usually see in these films.

The Doctor

doctor

I think it was an inspired idea to include the EMH program from “Voyager” in the film, because presumably, the new Enterprise would have the same technology. What makes this even better is that Crusher uses him for a different purpose, so he gets to homage Dr. McCoy with the line “I’m a doctor, not a doorstop.”

There’s plenty more to love about “Star Trek: First Contact” (Drunk Deanna, “little-ship”, Barclay appearance, “astronauts on some kind of Star Trek”, Worf uses a Borg arm to patch-up his spacesuit, seductive villainess) but these were some of the bigger reasons why this movie succeeds at being so damn entertaining.

Sadd Co. Presents Steamboat Billy Disease and You! Drunk Night #2

Sadd Co. Presents Steamboat Billy Disease and You! Drunk Night #2

January’s Open Screen Night at the Oriental Theater kicked off a brand new year of comedy from screening regulars. This one from Artface Studios had me laughin’. Click here to see other episodes.

– Brad

Guns, Drugs & Synergy Trailer

Guns, Drugs & Synergy Trailer by Matty O’ Connor

The full short played during the January Emerging Filmmaker’s Project and I recently recommended it in Ep. 84. If you have a chance to see it, check it out cause it’s really funny.

– Brad

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