6:00 am "Cabin in the Sky" (1943)
2:45 pm "Lili" (1953)
9:45 pm "Four Weddings and a Funeral" (1994)
I watch silly movies so you don't have to...
Year 18, Day 44 - 2/13/26 - Movie #5,244
BEFORE: Let's get back on track here, just a simple rom-com that will set me up for Valentine's Day. No heavy lifting here, I think, just a typical fish-out-of-water with a mismatched couple that turns out to be a better match over time. Frances Conroy carries over from "The Tale".
AFTER: We've got the fish out of water in Lucy Hill, a Miami businesswoman who's trying to advance in her career, she gets sent to Minnesota to automate a food manufacturing plant and also "downsize" (aka fire) half of its workers. But first she needs to get them to install the new machinery before they're let go. Gee, you don't suppose she'll be won over by their folksy ways, do you? It's a bit hard to take her seriously because at first she's so dumb that she didn't realize it was going to be COLD in Minnesota in the winter? Come on, she brought 17 bags of luggage with her but she didn't pack a winter coat? How can someone so business-savvy (supposedly) be so stupid that she didn't check the weather in the city she was flying to?
And similarly did she somehow expect a warm reception from the people that she's there to fire? She thought it was going to be easy to trick everyone into working themselves out of a job? What the hell, if you're going to make this character a smart businesswoman, you can't make her clueless at the same time, that's just not going to work, but yet it's where we're going to find out comedy tonight. The plant foreman tells her that "Gopher Day" is a state holiday and his crew needs to get the day off, and she FALLS FOR THAT? Give me a break...
Sure, it's a different world, one with ice fishing and potluck dinners, snow days and fish frys and sure, there are going to be some culture clashes. Lucy starts making a list of the people who cross her path or seem weird to her, and those are going to be the first people fired. I'm sure that making that list and leaving it where people can find it won't have any possible repercussions at all... In the same fashion, she manages to bad-mouth country music, pick-up trucks and beer during her welcome dinner, and these are all the things held sacred by Ted, the guy she thought she was being set up with, only he turns out to be the union rep, somebody she needs to deal with on an almost daily basis at the planet. Whoopsie. Yeah, when you're "New in Town" you should probably not try to piss off so many people, especially the local waitress at the diner.
It's a long turn-around for her to appreciate this town's people and their way of life, and things get worse when she swerves to avoid hitting a cow in the road during a snowstorm and getting her car stuck in a ravine. That union rep also happens to be the guy with the snowplow who rescues her, she kept warm by drinking alcohol (not recommended) and then said some more things about him while she was drunk. But she gets back in his good graces by giving his daughter a make-over before her first high-school dance. She and Ted start a romance, only it's probably a very bad idea for the plant executive to be dating the union rep, right? RIGHT?
Christmas comes and goes, and so does Valentine's Day (seasonally appropriate!) but before the spring thaw, Lucy's corporate overlords want her to close the plant because the yogurt line is not selling well and is going to be discontinued. So now rather than laying off 50% of the staff (or perhaps because she sort of never got around to DOING that...) she's tasked with laying off 100% of the staff. But instead of doing that, she goes rogue and has the workers re-tool all the machines to make tapioca pudding instead, based on her assistant's family recipe, which they also somehow test-market and promote in just a matter of weeks, all without corporate's permission. Surprisingly, the new product is a hit and Lucy is somehow not fired outright for disobeying her bosses. Only in a movie, right?
In a possible similar fashion, the director of this movie quit halfway through post-production. It sounds like he has just as many disputes with his producers as Lucy had with her company's executives. So you kind of have to wonder what sort of product he was trying to put out, and how that might have differed from the film that did get released. The end result isn't terrible, but it's hardly one of the best romance films out there either - still, it does conform to all of the standard rom-com techniques.
Directed by Jonas Elmer
Also starring Renee Zellweger (last seen in "Bob Fosse: It's Showtime!"), Harry Connick Jr. (last seen in "Basic"), Siobhan Fallon Hogan (last seen in "Daddy Day Care"), J.K. Simmons (last seen in "The Accountant 2"), Mike O'Brien, Ferron Guerreiro, James Durham, Robert Small (last seen in "Transporter 2"), Wayne Nicklas, Hilary Carroll, Nancy Jane Drake, Stewart J. Zully (last seen in "Malcolm X"), Marilyn Boyle (last seen in "Elvis Meets Nixon"), Dan Augusta, Jimena Hoyos (last seen in "The Devil Wears Prada"), Suzanne Coy, Ordena Stephens-Thompson, Devin McCracken, Leif Lynch, Adam Cronan (last seen in "They Cloned Tyrone"), Tom Wahl, Christopher Read, Peter Jordan, Vanessa Kuzyk, Matt Kippen, Ben Beauchemin, Kristen Harris (last seen in "Nobody"), Blane Cypurda, Brett Sorensen
RATING: 6 out of 10 scrapbook photos
Year 18, Day 39 - 2/8/26 - Movie #5,239
BEFORE: It's Super Bowl Sunday, and I suppose I should be glad that the Patriots are back in it, because that's my home team from my teen years - but they were never great when I lived in Massachusetts, they only won Super Bowls after I moved to New York. But I worked in an electronics store when they first played in the post-season (and lost) and I had to deal with the wave of people buying big-screen TVs and VCRs. Then later for maybe 20 years I was paid to watch the game and track the commercials that used animation or visual effects, so that got me in the pattern of paying attention to the annual most important televised event. So I still record the game every year, and mostly I fast-forward through the game and watch the cool ads. Yeah, if something really happens during the game or the half-time show, I'll pay attention just so I know what the late-night hosts will be making fun of in the coming week. But going to a party with friends, or paying top dollar to watch the game in a restaurant or bar? Yeah, not my thing.
Today I'll be working a shift at the theater, just baby-sitting the construction of a tent for tomorrow's red-carpet event. Sure, an outdoor space during February, what could POSSIBLY go wrong there? It's only the coldest damn weekend of the year, hell it's the coldest weekend of the last few years, but I'll only have to do an outdoor patrol like every 30 minutes - so yeah, I'll take the shift while all the young kids are out partying and watching the big game together. I'll watch it tomorrow, from the warmth and comfort of my bedroom, and I'll fast-forward through most of it, it should only take me an hour or two - just trying to make efficient use of my time.
Paul Dano carries over from "The Extra Man".
AFTER: Last year's romance film that fell on Super Bowl Sunday (it's a bit inevitable...) was "Murphy's Romance", and there was just zero tie-in with football. But it was on Carole King's birthday, so if you're going to insist on merging those two national holidays, well, what do you expect, something's got to fall by the wayside. Today's film doesn't really have any good tie-in opportunities, either, except that it's set in a high school and there is a football team and cheerleaders and all that. There are jocks, and for my purposes that can be enough. The climax (!!) of the film takes place during prom night, and the main character is involved with making a sex-ed video in the school during prom, using porn stars and some of the school's students. It's a case of zigging when everyone else is zagging, sure, why not make a porn video during prom, what could POSSIBLY go wrong there? As mentioned above, I'm also zigging today by working when everyone else is partying, so yeah, I get it. I would have loved to spend the day eating snacks and drinking beer and being warm in bed while fast-forwarding through the sportsball, but it's just not where we find ourselves today. Whatever.
It kind of feels like I watched this film before, especially near the end. I think maybe I saw a bunch of things as I was dubbing this film to DVD, and so I kind of maybe stopped to take a look at a few scenes, but since MOST of the film was unfamiliar to me, I'm fairly sure I have not watched it through. Still, it feels like since this was released in 2004, that I had ample time to watch this before, so, umm, why didn't I? I think it's been on the list for a while, so if it feels like I'm crossing off a number of romance films that I should have gotten to by now but just didn't, it's only because I'm doing exactly that this year - I'm clearing the category as best as I can. When I'm done with this topic in mid-March, the romance section may only be half the size it was in January - here's hoping.
This film was based on "Risky Business", a film from 20 years earlier that featured a high-school student falling in love with a call girl, they just updated this by turning her into an adult-film actress, and turning the film's villain from her pimp into her producer. What changed in those 20 years was the invention of the internet, and the creation of the first generation to be able to see every kind of pornography for free with just a few clicks on a computer. I don't think we all quite realize what this has done to American males (and I assume a few females) who can now watch as much porn as they want - my generation used to have to work for it, you had to either steal a couple Penthouse magazines from an adult or a newstand, or look old enough to rent porno VHS tapes from your local video store. Usually there was a room in back hiding behind a curtain and you had to kind of let somebody at the store know what kind of movie you wanted to rent, it was all very embarrassing. Umm, or so I heard.
Matthew wouldn't have even known about his new neighbor's porn career if one of his besties, Eli, hadn't recognized her - so Eli's the one who's seen nearly every porn movie, and then by the end of this film he's directed his own porno/sex ed video, and then he's a diva bully like Brett Ratner, yelling at the audience during a Q&A. Meanwhile, Klitz, who starred in the porno video, only with a fencing mask covering his face, is secretly famous for his impressive full frontal scenes. Well, everybody's got to have a talent, I suppose.
The whole thing started when Matthew tried to fill out his yearbook entry with the things he'd done or remembered, and somehow he came up blank, meaning he felt like he hadn't accomplished anything during high school, but how is that possible? He's got two close friends, and some people don't even have that, then we find out he's the student council president - that's not nothing, it means his classmates voted for him. Also, he raised $25,000 so that a Cambodian math prodigy could come study in an American high school - did Matthew somehow forget about this? Because the film keeps reminding us about Samnang, so how the hell could he forget? Why does Matthew have FOMO if he's been so busy? I guess he's just hung up on the fact that he hasn't dated anyone or slept with a girl yet - but all those jocks who skip out of school early every day to go to the beach aren't going to get into Georgetown, are they? Focus on the academics, Matthew...
This kid's infatuation with his neighbor and his academic career are on a collision course, because not only does he miss the pop quiz - no matter, he already got accepted into college - but they go swimming at night in his principal's backyard pool, and then Kelly shows up to bring Danielle to the Adult Video Convention in Las Vegas. Matthew and his two buddies drive there, too, what could POSSIBLY go wrong there? After that, Kelly manages to remove from the bank all of the $25K that Matthew raised to bring the Cambodian genius to the U.S. The only way Matthew can imagine fixing everything at once - his relationship with Danielle, the missing funds and getting revenge on the jock bullies - is to enlist the A/V squad minions to make an adult film which is really a sex-ed film. Their high school, and thousands of others, is still showing old films about STDs and condoms that were made in the (shudder) 1970's, or earlier. If only somebody could make one that looked more like internet porn and licensed that to schools, that could be a profitable venture - but enough to pay for a college education? Unclear.
NITPICK POINT: The updated sex ed video claims it will demonstrate how to put on a condom WITHOUT using a banana, like the outdated instructional videos all do. So, they're going to use a real penis for this, and then show THAT video in class? Even though dicks are all over the internet, there would still be a scandal in high schools if they were to screen a film with actual frontal nudity in it. Some parents in each town would immediately file a lawsuit or ask for teachers or principals to be fired, even if their precious children were already sexually active.
NITPICK POINT #2: Kelly does have a point, he DID think up the idea for the updated sex ed film, shot like a modern porno. Or, rather he thought it would be great to make a porno film using high-school jock and cheerleader energy, same difference. Yes, he should not have stolen the $25K, or the master video of the sex-ed film, but neither should Matthew and Eli stolen his idea without at least offering him a writing credit, or a percentage of the royalties.
Well, this film isn't terrible, as teen high-school sex comedies go - but then, I'm probably grading on a curve here. Three of the actors from this film, Emile Hirsch, Timothy Olyphant and James Remar, all appeared in Tarantino's 2019 film "Once Upon a Time...in Hollywood". Gee, I wonder why Paul Dano didn't?
Directed by Luke Greenfield (director of "Something Borrowed" and "Let's Be Cops")
Also starring Emile Hirsch (last seen in "Prince Avalanche"), Elisha Cuthbert (last seen in "Bandit"), Timothy Olyphant (last seen in "Stop-Loss"), James Remar (last seen in "Oppenheimer"), Chris Marquette (last seen in "Nostalgia"), Timothy Bottoms (last seen in "Elephant"), Donna Bullock (last seen in "All Good Things"), Jacob Young, Brian Kolodziej, Brandon Irons, Amanda Swisten, Lee Sung-Hi, Ulysses Lee, Harris Laskawy (last seen in "Slums of Beverly Hills"), Julie Osburn (last seen in "Intolerable Cruelty"), Laird Stuart (last seen in "Ace Ventura: Pet Detective"), Dane Garretson, Richard Fancy (last seen in "Species"), Catherine McGoohan (last seen in "Imagine That"), Josh Henderson (last seen in "Yours, Mine & Ours"), Nicholas Thomas, John-Clay Scott, Matthew Wiese (last seen in "Let's Be Cops"), Maria Arcé (last seen in "The United States of Leland"), Alonzo Bodden (last seen in "The Onion Movie"), Stephanie Fabian (last seen in "New Year's Eve"), Michael Villani (last seen in "Up Close & Personal"), Steven St. Croix, John Harrington Bland (last seen in "The Tao of Steve"), Shu Lan Tuan (last seen in "Crank: High Voltage"), Kayla Tabish, Nicholas Downs (last seen in "The Holiday"), Danny Seckel, Katie Stuart, Autumn Reeser (last seen in "Smokin' Aces 2: Assassins' Ball"), Olivia Wilde (last seen in "Love the Coopers"), Reda Beebe (last seen in "Kill Bill: Vol. 2"), Rudy Mettia, Chris Leone, Tara Gerard, Mike Sabga and the voice of Paul Aulicino.
RATING: 6 out of 10 release forms