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Mystery Men
Just who are these guys, and why are the dressed so funny?
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Mystery Men
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Rated PG-13
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Starring Hank Azaria, Janeane Garofalo, Greg Kinnear, William H. Macy,
Kel Mitchell, Paul Reubens, Geoffrey Rush, Ben Stiller, Wes Studi
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Written by Neil Cuthbert and Brent Forrester
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Directed by Kinka Usher
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Review by Melissa J. Perenson
veryone dreams of being a superhero. But for three men in
Champion City, dreaming just isn't enough. Instead, Roy (Stiller),
Jeffrey (Azaria), and Eddie (Macy) convene night after night, bumbling
their way through their attempts to keep Champion City free of
crime--something that the flashy, endorsement-hungry Captain Amazing
(Kinnear) already does quite well. By day, each toils at his
ordinary blue-collar job. By night, they assume the personas of Mr.
Furious, The Blue Raja, and The Shoveler, roaming the city for any
errant villains while refining their respective skills (Raja
specializes in foiling villains with forks and spoons, while The
Shoveler wields the fastest digging implement in the city).
Looking for a new challenge to spice up his image, the somewhat
daft Captain Amazing arranges for the diabolic Casanova Frankenstein
(Rush) to be released from the asylum for the criminally insane, where
the villain has been held since the decade that disco was still in vogue. Once freed,
Frankenstein turns on Captain Amazing and proceeds with his plot to
destroy Champion City.
In an ironic twist, the fate of Captain Amazing and Champion
City is in the hands of Roy, Jeffrey, and Eddie. But before they can
take on Frankenstein and his league of aging cronies,
Mr. Furious, The Blue Raja, and The Shoveler must first recruit
reinforcements. Joining their oddball team are: The Spleen (Reubens),
whose specialty is releasing noxious fumes at will; Invisible Boy
(Mitchell), whose years spent in obscurity have given him the power to
turn invisible when no one else is looking; The Bowler (Garofalo), a
young woman with a flair for tossing a bowling ball; and The Sphinx
(Studi), the mysterious mentor who spouts out wisdom in the form of
cliches. But can this motley band of aspiring superheroes rise to the
challenge?
Revenge of the misfits
Adapted from the popular Dark Horse Comics title Flaming
Carrot, Mystery Men is an offbeat comedy with several
hits--and just as many misses. Some scenes breeze by airily, while others seem to trudge along.
Some are well-written--witness Macy's
inspirational speech to the group--while others devolve into the latest
variant on the bathroom humor that's been all the rage this summer. The
movie would have been better had it been 15 minutes shorter.
At nearly all times, though, Mystery Men is self-aware, and
the fact that the actors aren't taking things too seriously makes the
comic book-esque story more palatable. Likewise, the crafty production
design--which consists of just the right blend of cartoonish influence
and real life--helps to maintain the tone of the movie.
Director Kinka Usher
employs a unique visual style and doesn't hesitate to use unusual
camera angles--a methodology that keeps both viewers and the actors on
their toes. Unfortunately, not all of the scenes flow smoothly from one
to the other. Mystery Men is more
easily remembered for its discrete parts rather than its sum total. One
of the trickiest things in the movie is to get the comedic timing
right, and that's something that Usher did manage with aplomb.
The movie is packed with a star-studded ensemble cast, and viewers can't help but want
something more from the film. The standout is Garofalo, who has some
of the best lines in the film. Coming in a close second is Macy, who
shows he can handle comedy just as well as the more serious dramas
he's known best for. In fact, Macy's The Shoveler ends up stealing the
show--not to mention the leadership of the group. Stiller's character comes
across as annoying, but he redeems himself by the end of the film.
Azaria falls a bit flat, while Reubens shows he still has comic life
left in him--even though it's hard to understand everything his character is
saying.
The story of the Mystery Men is something we can all relate
to: wanting to break out of the doldrums and save the world. While
the bungling would-be heroes can become tedious simply because they are
predictable, the movie is worthwhile if only for its occasionally
snappy dialogue.
-- Melissa
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The Iron Giant
Something really big is happening in the small town of Rockwell
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The Iron Giant
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Rated PG
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Voiced by Jennifer Aniston, Harry Connick Jr., Christopher McDonald,
Eli Marienthal
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Screenplay by Tim McCanlies
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Directed by Brad Bird
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84 Minutes
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Review by Jeff Berkwits
t's 1957, and the Soviet Union has just launched Sputnik, the world's
first artificial satellite. Nearly everyone in the United States is fearfully
looking skyward, but in picturesque Rockwell, Maine, day-to-day life remains
pretty much unchanged. Even when a local fisherman reports seeing a huge
robot hurtling down from the heavens into the ocean, folks ignore him,
thinking that the story is nothing more than a figment of the old man's
imagination.
In fact, the only person who believes the tale is nine-year-old Hogarth
Hughes (Marienthal), who, in the diner where his mother Annie (Aniston) works
as a waitress, overhears rumors about a gigantic metal monster. So later that
evening, when the TV program Hogarth is watching suddenly turns to static and
he discovers that the rooftop antenna has apparently been eaten, the boy sets
out to find the gargantuan spaceman.
He quickly discovers the invader, and though initially scared, he ends up
befriending the 50-foot-tall robot. But the enormous entity's appetite for
metallic munchies also attracts the attention of the federal government.
Washington dispatches special agent Kent Mansley (McDonald) to figure out
what's happening, and before long he realizes that Hogarth is hiding a truly
"big" secret.
With Mansley hot on his trail, the youngster turns to Dean McCoppin
(Connick) for help. McCoppin, the beatnik owner of a local junkyard, reluctantly agrees to
conceal the colossal creature amidst the scrap littering his property. For a
short time everything seems fine, until Mansley uncovers the ruse and calls
in the army. However, things don't go quite as intended, and before long
Hogarth and the townspeople realize that the Iron Giant is far more complex--both mechanically and emotionally--than anyone could have imagined.
An iron man with a heart of gold
Long-time SF fans have probably heard the saying, "The Golden Age of
science fiction is 14." That adage is perfectly
suited to The Iron Giant, a film that gleefully emphasizes the
childlike sense of wonder necessary (at any age) to enjoy speculative storytelling.
Although the narrative ostensibly takes place four decades ago, in many respects this motion picture is timeless. Like any young boy, Hogarth
possesses a marvelously overactive imagination, and that leads to some warm and funny moments. He injects his Twinkies with whipped cream, uses comic books to
teach his robot buddy the concept of good vs. evil and--like many preadolescent science fiction buffs--is both frightened and fascinated by
low-budget, late-night TV movies.
His gigantic playmate is also engaging. While the Iron Giant
rarely speaks (his few words are voiced by actor Vin Diesel), through his
oftentimes humorous interactions with Hogarth he becomes, like the Tin Man
from another famous tale, both a human and a humane character. Rendered via
computer, the massive mechanical creature also looks slightly otherworldly
(though not out of place) compared to his traditionally animated
surroundings. This technique lends an appropriately alien air to the
extraterrestrial robot.
Folks familiar with The Iron Man, the well-known children's book
upon which this feature is based, should be forewarned that the film tells a significantly different story. Yet director Brad Bird and his production team have clearly labored to craft a picture that retains the innocence and charm of the source material. The Iron Giant also successfully captures the look and feel of vintage animation and 1950s science fiction filmmaking. The result is a movie that's both memorable and meaningful, and a must see for any SF fan.
When I was growing up, Tobor the Great was my favorite robot flick.
I still have fond memories of watching that admittedly cheesy adventure on
television, but I sure wish I'd had a film like The Iron Giant
instead.
-- Jeff
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Mystery Science Theater 3000 Finale
So long, and thanks for the giant spaghetti ball
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Mystery Science Theater 3000 Finale
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"Danger Diabolik"
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The SCI FI Channel
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Sunday, Aug. 8
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9 p.m. & 11 p.m. ET
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Review by Tamara I. Hladik
steely-eyed Italian techno-thief, high-risk capers and fast-paced
dubbing. That's what Mike and the bots are served by Pearl Forrester in
the very last Mystery Science Theater 3000 experiment, Danger
Diabolik. As a devilishly handsome, devil-may-care antihero, Diabolik
proves that no prize, no matter how strongly guarded, can withstand a
lantern jaw and the religious use of a bronzer. And apparently bondage wear can be daywear, if accessorized properly. Multo sporto.
Because Danger Diabolik was produced by Dino De Laurentiis, the MST3K crew has an easy time of it as they ape the James Bond tradition and fire off a cornucopia of I-Spy cliches. For added (though small) drama, Mike and the bots must do their quipping while the Satellite of Love is headed towards re-entry into Earth's atmosphere.
This final episode is very much like an average one: Pearl snarls and
titters evilly, and Mike and the bots amiably riff the film and trade adolescent prattle during breaks. As befits the last MST3K episode, there's a story line to pull all 10 seasons of the show together (the SOL crew is coming home), and there are references to what everyone's going to do afterward. Along the way, Pearl breaks up her world domination think-tank and dismantles the lab.
But this is no hyperly self-aware, maudlin or even dramatic last episode.
While they watch the experiment, Mike and friends only quip. They don't trade any comments--clever, true or otherwise--about it being their last show. No
parting shots, even. Perhaps after 10 seasons there's no way to make it
anything but the usual scrapple without turning it mawkish. Viewers could
almost expect the SOL crew to be doing the same thing next week.
And indeed, the writers have left room for fans to think so.
A fitting end or a riff-off?
It's got to be a great challenge to bring something to an end that no one
really wants to see go. To their credit, the MST3K folks take no shots at the SCI FI Channel's decision to cancel the series, not even good-natured ones. And it's clear that making this episode sentimental would have made it a parody of itself. Unfortunately, not trying to make it special in some way made it a little flat. The quip-scripting is a bit one-dimensional as well.
There are a few special, nicely clever references and moments that are
in keeping with the grand comic buffoonery MST3K is known for. Pearl and her minions depart their set a la Mary Tyler Moore and the WJM crew in
that show's last episode. Mike and the bots score a new gig that is fitting and satisfying. And Gypsy lands a really sweet deal.
But overall, the simplicity and the it's-nothing-special tone of this finale are unsatisfying. Apart from its last-episode status, this MST3K installment is not an effort worthy of the scrapbook. Perhaps they could have included references to several famous last episodes, not just one. Perhaps they could have mentioned the auctioning off of MST3K props. At the very least they could have chosen a better, more nostalgic film as their final experiment, like a good old '50s science fiction or monster flick. Even Squirm, which received the MST-ie treatment earlier in the season, would have been a better choice for the wrap-up episode.
Nonetheless, it is goodbye, though only of a sort. This show will survive as it did before, in an endless chain of bootleg tapes. The auctioning
off of the props certainly had a heavy, final feel to it, but there's no
way to kill this series. It's survived Comedy Central and last-chance
renewal deals and graveyard time slots. It's already as timeless as
Monty Python. As long as there are avaricious producers willing to
slash production budgets, as long as there are directors with a keen eye
for mediocrity, as long as there are actors with Keanu-vian delivery--the
clever underbelly of America will keep the riffing rolling.
Ten seasons is very respectable for any show. Hopefully we will see it again in syndication. PBS, are you listening?
-- Tamara
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