Saturday, December 21, 2024
Prince Avalanche
Thursday, December 19, 2024
Speed Racer
Year 16, Day 353 - 12/18/24 - Movie #4,897
BEFORE: Emile Hirsch carries over from "Force of Nature", and I'm not sure yet, but it's possible that Emile Hirsch could be the last actor with three or more appearances this year who will get added to my year-end countdown. The leader at the end of the Doc Block is still the leader, that hasn't changed, all that remains now is for me to double-check my stats, as anyone with three or more appearances will make the cut. Paul Rudd is already in with four appearances, but he's going to make two more in the last three films of the year, while Emile Hirsch also has four appearances after tonight, but he's only got one more coming up.
You never know, there could be a surprise latecomer, but I'm going to start totalling things up using a different method in order to check my own work. This process usually takes a few days, a lot of cutting and pasting names into a spreadsheet, but when all that's done, I'll feel a lot better about the certainty of my record-keeping.
THE PLOT: A young driver, Speed Racer, aspires to be champion of the racing world with the help of his family and his high-tech Mach 5 automobile.
AFTER: I stand corrected - I'd cut "Speed Racer" from my chain back in June, initially it was going to go between "The Company You Keep" and "Blue Beetle", with Susan Sarandon appearing in all three films. But I cut it so I could land the right film on Father's Day, and what a great idea that turned out to be - I couldn't possibly have known that I'd have another chance at the end of the year to work it in, but I suppose it doesn't matter whether I watched this in June or December, either way it's the middle film in a chain of three films with the same actor or actress. And either way I get to delete it from my DVR and clear up some space. BUT, now Susan Sarandon's going to make the year-end countdown, too. It's funny, just last night I watched a few minutes of her on the big screen in "The Six Triple Eight", the new Tyler Perry movie in which she plays Eleanor Roosevelt.
OK, I really don't know how to process "Speed Racer". I never watched the old cartoons, not in any form or incarnation, and I certainly never read the old manga (?) comics that are the original form of the stories. How do you even write a comic book about racing cars? I mean nothing even MOVES in a comic book, and racing is all about fast movement. How do you even DRAW that to being with?
Then there are aspects of this story that are so silly, so childlike and simplistic that I don't even understand how they can exist - "Speed Racer" is his actual NAME? I thought it was a title, like "Grand Champion" or a job description, not the name on his birth certificate. First name "Speed", last name "Racer"? That's just stupid, right? Everyone in his family has the last name of "Racer", I mean I guess that works but most people with the last name "Baker" are not really bakers, maybe some are but I'm thinking only a very small percentage. How many people with the last name of "Cooper" actually manufacture barrels, or wagon wheels or whatever that means? Sometimes people have a first name that tips off what their parents wanted them to grow up and do, like there's a football player named "Lawyer Milloy", and he's, well, he's not a lawyer but I guess you can't really name your kid "Football Player" or "Running Back", so I guess you do what you can. So OK, if he was born into a family of Racers who are also racers, I guess maybe "Speed" works as a first name - hey, his older brother was named "Rex", which means "king" and his younger brother is named "Spritle" which is three times as ridiculous. And his father is Pops Racer and his mom is just "Mom", again, what are the odds? Or was some writer just too lazy to give them first names?
Then there are the racetracks which are all over-the-top, flat-out ridiculous, I mean there's not one of them that could exist in the real world. This is because the movie was made in a world where we have fantastical video-games, and supercomputers that can do CGI animation, making the impossible look real. OK, real-ish. There are racetracks that are hundreds of miles long, they do spiral shapes and loop-de-loops and they go up mountains and across deserts and ice fields, it would all be impossible in actual live racing, but hey, it's a movie and it doesn't have to be real. But the flipside of that is, just because you CAN animate these impossible racetrack scenarios, that doesn't necessarily mean that you SHOULD. I was left with this whole artificial feeling, like I know that movies don't reflect reality, but then if nothing is really real, then what the hell am I watching? I guess it's like "Star Wars", we don't have any spaceships that can go into hyperspace and fly from planet to planet, but it's a fun thing to see happen in a movie, and we all get to visit Tatooine and Hoth and Bespin vicariously.
The problem here is, I just don't CARE about these characters, not in the way I found myself caring about Luke, Leia, Han & Chewie over the years. Who gives a crap whether Speed Racer joins this racing team or that one? Whether he knocks Snake Oiler's car off a mountain or gets rear-ended by Pitter Pat? Again, it's all cartoony, I get it, and expecting all these minor character to be realistic is a bit like wishing that "Mike Tyson's Punch-Out" more closely resembled real boxing. It's just not going to happen.
What's also kind of weird here is how straight everybody is forced to play things - like discussing these cartoony races where cars have circular saws coming out of their wheels, trying to slash the other racer's tires, or cars that can dispense oil slicks at the push of a button. It's ridiculous on top of ridiculous, and it's all so over-the-top that I didn't know which end was up, I couldn't keep track of where reality stopped and fantasy took over, and I sure couldn't tell which car was ahead in any race at any given time. To be honest, I can say the same thing about "Gran Turismo" or any auto race on TV, I can never tell who's winning without the graphics on the screen pointing that out. Auto racing is a very confusing sport, and this movie about it doubly so.
Supposedly there's a big villain here, and it's the corporate billionaire who signs racers to his team, wines and dines them, gets them to wear his uniforms and puts his team logos on their cars, but make no mistake, he's EVIL. And because the movie can't really express this simply, there's the fact that the Grand Prix Championship Super Bowl of Racing is always fixed, and that's about the only way we know how bad this guy really is. Look, I don't have any idea how NASCAR works or what it takes to run a racing team or be competitive in this particular sport, but as far as I know, every racer has an equal chance of winning any given race. Or so I've been led to believe. Or maybe it comes down to the pit-crew, right?
Speed Racer doesn't really have a pit crew, instead he's got a spotting team out in the field with binoculars, or a girlfriend flying in a helicopter to alert him to the ludicrous dangers coming up on the track. But who needs a pit crew, since it's a movie and he doesn't need to change his tires or even refuel? Movie magic is in play and we wouldn't want nasty reality having any effect on our characters. It's a fantasy film across the board, but that's what makes it weirder that everyone takes things so seriously. Kind of like "Fatman", the story dictates that Santa needs to work with the Pentagon so he can fly all around the world in one night and NORAD doesn't totally freak out or confuse him with a missile, he's traveling THAT fast after all. Really, it's not the speed that Santa Claus would have to travel at that makes his annual journey impossible, it's the fact that he has to stop every 100 feet or so if he's going to visit every damn house. Do you have any idea how many houses are in just one city, let alone every city and town? Even if you factor out the non-believers, and the people of other faiths, still, the number of Christian households alone is a killer, that's why he travels east to west and takes advantage of the time-zones. Right?
Anyway, somebody spent a LOT of money making "Speed Racer", I'm almost afraid to see how much, it was probably bigger than the GDP of most countries. Which number do you figure is larger, the amount of money Hollywood spends each year to make movies, or the amount the U.S. government spends across all its cabinet departments? When you include movies like "Speed Racer", I'm guessing it's the former. EDIT: I guess I'm wrong, thanks to Google I learned that the U.S. film & video industry spent $66 billion in 2021, while the U.S. federal government spent $6.2 trillion in 2023. Different years, but a trillion is a lot more than a billion. OK, good to know. But "Speed Racer" only made $93 million against a $120 million budget, so it was not profitable. Therefore maybe a big waste of everyone's time.
That's really how I'm going to treat this one, a big pile of mindless fun, or it would have been fun if I could have just relaxed and enjoyed it. But I think I'm out of the age-bracket for this one, the subject matter doesn't really appeal to me, and I just have more important things to think about, sorry. They shot this in super HD, which meant they could basically do anything they wanted with every image, like pixel-wise, but mostly they just did a bunch of fancy wipes which created this weird layering effect. I'm not really impressed by that, like you could do ANYTHING you wanted, so why that?
Well, anyway, it's off the DVR and I freed up some more space. Three films left to go in this Movie Year before the break. I'll be back here Friday or Saturday and then I'll watch the other two films next week. I've also got to save some time for my annual viewing of "Bad Santa" and "Bad Santa 2".
Also starring Christina Ricci (last seen in 'The Matrix Resurrections"), John Goodman (last seen in "Once Upon a Time in Venice"), Susan Sarandon (last seen in "Blue Beetle"), Matthew Fox (last seen in "Smokin' Aces"), Roger Allam (last seen in "A Royal Night Out"), Paulie Litt (last seen in "Doubt"), Benno Furmann (last seen in "Joyeux Noel"), Hiroyuki Sanada (last seen in "Army of the Dead"), Rain (last seen in "The Prince"), Richard Roundtree (last seen in "Shaft" (2019), Kick Gurry (last seen in "Jupiter Ascending"), Ramon Tikaram (ditto), John Benfield (last heard in "Mowgli: Legend of the Jungle"), Christian Oliver (last seen in "The Good German"), Ralph Herforth (last seen in "Aeon Flux"), Scott Porter (last seen in "Music and Lyrics"), Yu Nan (last seen in "The Expendables 2"), Nayo Wallace, Melvil Poupaud (last seen in "Le Divorce"), Ben Miles (last seen in "Napoleon"), Cosma Shiva Hagen, Moritz Bleibtreu (last seen in "Woman in Gold"), Karl Yune (last seen in "Memoirs of a Geisha"), Togo Igawa (ditto), Joon Park, Nicholas Elia (last seen in "White Noise"), Ariel Winter (last seen in "I Am Burt Reynolds"), Corinne Orr, Milka Duno, Melissa Holroyd (last seen in "Mute"), Giancarlo Ganziano, Peter Fernandez (last seen in "Cradle Will Rock"), Harvey Friedman (last seen in "She Said"), Sadao Ueda (last seen in "Gran Turismo"), Valery Tscheplanowa, Sami Loris, Olivier Marlo, Sean McDonagh, Mark Zak (last seen in "Bridge of Spies"), Julia Joyce, Clayton Nemrow, Ricky Watson, Brandon Robinson, Julie T. Wallace (last seen in "The Living Daylights"), Waldemar Kobus (last seen in "The Zookeeper's Wife"), Matthias Redhammer, Eckehard Hoffmann, Art LaFleur (last seen in "Maverick"), Peter Navy Tulasosopo (last seen in "Fun Size"), Paul Sirr, Kady Taylor, Jana Pallaske (last seen in "Inglourious Basterds"), Bojidara Maximova, Werner Daehn (last seen in "The Operative"), Komi Togbonou, Joe Mazza, Ludmilla Ismallow, Ashley Walters, Jeng Neuhaus, Sesesa Terziyan, Ill-Young Kim, Yuriri Naka (last seen in "Kingsman: The Golden Circle"), Oscar Ortega Sanchez (last seen in "The Musketeer"), Yu Fang, Nargess Rashidi, Andrés Cantor (last seen in "Muppets Most Wanted"), Luka Andres, Joel Cross, Alister Mazzotti
RATING: 4 out of 10 pancakes
Monday, December 16, 2024
Force of Nature
Saturday, December 14, 2024
Fatman
Monday, December 9, 2024
Bandit
Saturday, December 7, 2024
On the Line