Cinema


Did you ever see that movie with Sir Anthony Hopkins when he was a primatologist and he was doing work out in the jungle when he befriended a group of silverbacks? Well, what happens is that these bastard gorilla poachers come by and attack the group. What do you know but, the gorillas and Hopkins(!) fight back and kill a couple of the poachers. He goes to an insane asylum and the great silverback goes to the zoo. Mind you, this thing was fierce and desired freedom more than any star and stripe waving, apple pie eating red-stater could even fathom. But, once he’s in the zoo for so long, when they finally open his cage, he’s too broken to attempt to walk out. Well, that’s like me. Blinking is sometimes too much effort.

But, just today I ran across something that has put the glimmer back in my eye. If you like movies and you ave an ipod photo, then let’s talk. Ipod movies are now within the reach of us serfs and peasants, albeit with a little work. Because, the fact of the matter is, ipod movies are not in the realm of ipod photo, no, basically it’s for photos. But some tenacity and a desire to watch oddly paced, effort draining clips and you’ve got yourself a movie night.

You’ll need to get yourself set up with quicktime pro, itunes and your ipod, of course. Now you’re going to take your movie, I would probably start with something short, like those clips you download from the internet. Get it in your computer and export the clip. Put the sound in your itunes, and then (here’s the great part) put all the thousands of individual frames in your ipod photo. Now you get the volume rolling and use the click wheel to scroll through all the frames…and you are watching ipod movies my friend. Technology is beautiful, take advantage, man, take advantage.

Galadriel Anderson is mighty proud about her iPod. Check out more info on iPod movies and iPod Nano accessories.

While reality based TV shows come and go the originator is still going strong. Jeff Probst returns to host the popular Survivor series as contestants are abandoned in an ancient Mayan city in Guatemala. In Season 11 the familiar premise of 16 castaways divided into two tribes continues, however producers will keep things interesting with not one big surprise this year but two.

The contestants will spend 39 days in Yaxh-Nakum-Naranjo National Park located in the jungles of Guatemala. The site is the third largest Mayan city complete with ziggurat pyramids, burial grounds, sacrifice altars and legends of spirits from past. The contestants will build shelters and live in communities, work, and play and compete against each other on a weekly basis. They build alliances, friendships and enemies, and vote one member out each week at tribal council. They will be trying to outplay, outwit, and outlast each other in an attempt to become the sole survivor and win the 1 million dollar prize.

Another change that will create some interest is the inclusion of celebrities into the cast. One of the contestants for this season is ex Dallas Cowboys Quarterback Gary Hogeboom. The second is sports radio personality Danni Boatwright who was also Miss Kansas in 1996. While these popular figures will create interest for the viewers it’s unclear if this fame will be an asset or liability with other members of their tribe.

To keep up with all of the latest news from Survivor Guatemala be sure to visit SurvivorScoop.com. This article was written by Gary Mitchell who runs SurvivorScoop and several other entertainment based websites.

NOTE: You’re welcome to “reprint” this article online as long as it remains complete and unaltered (including the “about the author” info at the end).

What Are Movie Download Services?
Movie download services are exactly what they sound like: a service that allows you to download movies from the Internet onto your hard drive or a DVD. Though this isn’t a new concept, it is relatively new to the legal world of consumerism. Though ‘pirates’ have been making free download of movies available for quite some time, movie studios are now getting in on the action and offering access to their movies for download the day they hit the stores in DVD format - for a fee, of course.

Who’s Who In Movie Download Services?
In the relatively new world of legitimate movie download services, there are surprisingly many players, but only a few of them are major. There’s Movielink and Sony’s CinemaNow which offer old and new movies for purchase or 24 hour rental. Rental fees are comparable to the local video store but purchase is more expensive than if you were to buy the DVD. ClickStar, backed by Danny DeVito among other big names in Hollywood, is another up and comer in the world of movie download services, but this one’s draw is that it will offer movies for download while they are still showing in the theater. It will also feature a streaming channel devoted to documentaries.

AT&T is teaming up with Vongo, another movie downloading site, to offer its DSL service in concert and duo promotions. Different from Movielink and CinemaNow, Vongo is a subscription service offered for a monthly fee which allows its members unlimited access to movies, videos, and a streaming Starz channel. Pay per view movies are available as well for an additional fee.

Movie Download Services: The Nitty Gritty

- Price - Ranging anywhere from $10-$20, the irony is downloading movies legally isn’t cheap. In order to appease the retailers who make big bucks on DVDs released in stores, the online downloading services are keeping their fees in the clouds. Which of course, doesn’t hurt their pocketbook, either.

- Availability - It depends. Different services have different deals with different movie studios. As for old movies, those are being added all the time. But the nice thing is, if they have it, you can get it - instantly.

- Space - You will need between 1200 and 2000 MBs of free space to store your movie. Depending on your system, this may be a lot or a little. Some services may allow you to burn your download to a DVD, but only if you’re buying the movie and even then, most won’t.

- Download Time - This is no time for dial-up, that’s for sure. Anything DSL and faster should get you your movie in under an hour with an average of 35 to 40 minutes, and that’s if you want it fast and grainy. If you’re willing to wait a little longer, say, up to two hours, you can download a higher quality version. A nice feature that some services offer is the ability to start watching the movie while it’s still downloading.

- Technical Requirements - At least Windows Media Player 10, fast Internet connection, Internet Explorer 6.0, Windows XP. You might be able to get away with older versions, but it isn’t recommended. And yes, did you note - it’s all PC and no Mac. That’s right. PC users only, please.

- Computer Viewing Only - Currently, that’s the state of things. That is, unless you choose a service that allows you to download it to some other electronic handheld device of your choosing, like PSP or iPod. Of course, you could always use an S-video jack to hook your computer to your TV and watch it on the big screen. Some services allow limited DVD burning, but they may restrict the DVD to playing only in the computer to which the movie was downloaded, allowing your fancy DVD player to gather dust.

- Buy Versus Rent - It’s a strange situation at this point, but different studios offer different services different licenses to different movies. So, you may only be able to rent a title through one service that another is offering for sale. Other services may not have any access to certain titles while others do. There’s no standard just yet, so it’s a bit of a crap shoot.

What’s the Benefit of Movie Download Services?
Convenience! Forget long lines at the theater, the video store being out of a new release, or waiting in virtual queue to get your mailed DVD through a subscription service. No more concern about court cases and legal fees for downloading movies illegally or spyware from file sharing applications that will slow down your computer if not cripple it beyond repair. Then, of course, there’s the fact that you can watch the newest movies as many times as you like on your personal computer and instantly upon purchase - no waiting and no driving to the store.

What’s the Downside of Movie Download Services?
At the moment, cost and restricted viewing access. You may not necessarily want to watch a movie on your computer when you just invested $2000 in a big screen HDTV. And you may not want to invest $20 in a movie that you can’t even resell online if you don’t like it. If you have a slow internet connection, the download time may be a bummer, too, especially if you’re trying to use your computer for other things while the process slows your computer to a painful snail pace. And if you use a Mac, well, obviously, the downside is that movie download services simply don’t exist. Then, what if a virus infects the computer where all your movies are stored? Yup. Have to buy them all over again.

Movie Download Services - Yay or Nay?
The state of affairs being what they are - that is, in their ugly braces and zits prepubescent stage - probably nay. Remember the first BETA machines? Or the $700 CD players back in the ’80s? When movie download service lowers their prices and speed up the technology, allow for actual DVD burnings that include the extras and TV viewings as well as access to films that are still in theaters, then yay! In the meantime, sticking with higher quality DVDs that don’t discriminate against Mac users and big screen television sets and allow for resale later on. Unless you have to see the movie This Very Second, movie download services are not yet the incredible service they have the potential to be in the future.

Madison Lockwood is a customer relations associate, specializing in small business development, for Apollo Hosting. Apollo Hosting provides website hosting, ecommerce hosting, vps hosting, and web design services to a wide range of customers.

These days going to movies seems like it requires taking out a small loan. Not only are ticket prices hovering around $10 each but popcorn and soda are approaching prices that the oil companies would be proud of.

On top of this, you are expected to decipher the movie ratings which can seem rather foggy at times. Is a movie that’s rated PG suitable for your four-year-old? How about a PG-13 movie? Should a child really be 13 in order to see it?

When trying to figure out if a movie is suitable for your child the best place to start his understanding what the movie ratings mean.

The Motion Picture Association of America has five official ratings for movies. These are:

  • G for general audiences
  • PG for parental guidance suggested
  • PG-13 for parental guidance strongly suggested for children under the ages of 13
  • R for restricted to children under the ages 18 unless accompanied by adults
  • NC-17 for no one 17 and under will be permitted into the theater.

You’re most likely to G rating on strictly children’s movies. These will be movies that have happy endings and are completely without violence or any sexually suggestive situations and language. These movies are absolutely safe to lets children of any age watch.

PG movies are more along the lines of a family film, something that both mom and dad and the kids will enjoy. PG films may have some low-level violence such as a fistfight, mildly sexually suggestive situations such as a kissing scene or is slightly stressful situations such as when the bad guy has the good guy in a tough spot. Most children over the age of eight are more than capable of handling situations they see on screen in PG films. Children under the age of eight may be either frightened by or unable to understand some of the situations that happened in a PG film, depending on the emotional age of the individual child.

PG-13 movies are meant for a slightly older audience than PG films. In PG-13 films you are likely to find higher levels of violence such as gunfights and blood, more sexually suggestive situations, though not overly sexual, such as long involved kissing or some fondling and more suspenseful and intense situations. PG-13 may also have explicit language such as curse words or descriptive sex words. Parents should think carefully and perhaps preview the movie before taking children under the age of 13 to the movie. That being said, most children over the age of 10 are capable of handling the situations and language seen in these movies.

R movies are meant for adults. Rated R movies may have extreme violence, sexually explicit situations, extremely intense situations or a lot of extreme language. R rated films may also show drug use or more serious criminal activity. Children under the age of 16 should not be permitted without adults. Technically, movie theaters are suppose to ID children and verify that they have an adult with them but most of the time this does not happen. Parents should probably not take children under the age of 10 to these movies. For children between the ages of 10 and 16, parents should give serious consideration as to whether or not the child is mature enough to handle situations found within the movie.

NC-17 is a relatively new rating. It was created to replace the generic X rating. It is unusual to find a movie in theaters with a rating of NC-17. Most filmmakers wish to avoid this rating as is considered by the public to be the same category as porn. While movies do receive the NC-17 rating due to extremely sexually explicit situations, the NC-17 rating is meant to help a movie viewer know the difference between a crafted movie with a developed plot and characters and a movie whose sole purpose is to show sexually explicit scenes.

Unofficially, there is a rating of X. This rating has been adopted by the pornography industry in order to indicate to a customer that the film they are buying contains extremely sexually explicit situations and has made for the sole purpose of showing those sexual situation. As most porn movies are released straight to video or are shown on only a very limited release, they are not subject to the normal rating system.

With all movies, parents need to consider the emotional maturity of their children when deciding if a child is old enough to watch the movie. Now that you understand a little bit better about the movie rating system, you should feel little more comfortable about taking your children to the movies. That is of course, if you’ve taken out a large enough loan in order to cover the cost.

This article was written by Heather A Rhoades and was sponsored by the Compare Best DVD Home Delivery Services website which allows you to compare different DVD home delivery services and choose the right one for you. The article is available for reprint as long as a live link is provided back to http://www.compare-best-dvd.com

During my junior year in high school, my best friend told me he was making a parody of Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan. What was really cool about this short project was that I would play a version of Khan and do my Ricardo Montalban impersonation. But much to my excitement, the material never happened, as those involved later graduated, as did my buddy and I would a year later.

Space Cadets, my short film, would never die, as wouldn’t Captain James Kirk, if he and his crew were caught in a same situation on a reality show. After high school, I pretty much bumbed around taking odd jobs before I finally enrolled in a small (but expensive) college as a Communications Major. Since I was raised in a Catholic home, my mom encouraged me to attend a religious youth group that met every Sunday. The members that preached the word of God also acted in skits, and before I knew it, I was acting in those skits as well. It took a year before I introduced the members a skit I had written based on the original Star Trek series, but with a Holy-twist: Jesus vs. Khan. They liked it, but the skit, some felt, was long, and to design the bridge of the Enterprise would have been too costly for a church budget. Again, my dream of playing a villain from a popular series was closed out.

One day I was channel flipping on my television when I saw what was a home made, video spoof of James Bond. I thought this was the coolest thing since cable was invented. When the program was over, a screen appeared with a number for anyone who wanted to do his or her own program. The way it works is that I would take a class in learning to run a camera, shoot a scene, and then edit my program, all for free! What excited me more was that any program I created would appear on this particular channel, public access television. Well, I called that number, but it took about two to three months before I took my first class. I graduated, thank you, thank you, and directed subjects for other producers and acted in several spoofs. In 1995, I felt the time was ripe to make Space Cadets! I had created my first screenplay and showed it to my friend Scott John, whom I had acted for his programs. After looking over the script, he phoned me and said, “Jose, this is too long.”

My script was about 50 pages. John told me to consider how difficult it was to make any video based on sci-fi, especially when it came to designing the props, the costumes, etc. He should know: he did a version of Doctor Who that took months and labor. He recommended that I trimmed the script down, maybe to twenty pages. But I felt that every page could be done. I wish I had listened to him.

What begin as a spoof of Star Trek turned into a version of Kevin Costner’s Waterworld, which had premiered in theaters that summer. In fact, this was the nickname I gave my short film. And soon all the volunteers of the cable station would peak in the editing room and ask, “So Jose, how’s Waterworld coming out?”
They mocked and laughed as my production took from spring to the end of the Christmas holidays to make.

During a fight scene between two actors, one of them accidentally hit his head against a wall when he was thrown against a stack of chairs. When he got off the floor after I yelled, “Cut”, he had lost some of his memory! I rushed this guy, who had done stunts for other films, to the hospital. The following day he recovered, thank goodness, and he repeated the same stunt the following week! As month passed, I was burning grudges with the Director of Program at the cable station, and the volunteers were upset with me for using up the editing room. Everyone was soon advising me to put Space Cadets! in the can. They wanted me to quit. But whenever I had faced discouragement, I pictured myself having a conversation with William Shatner and telling him my nightmare on filming this parody. And I fantasized that he had encouraged me by saying, “Finish Space Cadets!”

In 1996, I had moved far away to attend (a bigger and less expensive) college, leaving Space Cadets half way done. I actually didn’t finish the film until I returned for Spring Break of that year. When it was over, Space Cadets premiered on public access television on April 1st, my birthday! And what was also special about that year was that Star Trek was celebrating its 30th anniversary. Ironically, in the ST episode Space Seed, 1996 was also the year that Kirk had discovered Khan and his people frozen in a space ship! Go figure on this one!

Jose Guzman is an actor and director of Space Cadets, A Star Trek fan film, which can be downloaded at http://www.shortfilmfanatic.com

Premiering in Fall 1996, Everybody Loves Raymond struck an instant chord with TV audiences, becoming a beloved fan favorite that would last for nine successful seasons. Modeled after other successful TV series that cast stand-up comics in starring roles - Seinfeld, The Drew Carey Show, and Home Improvement - all come to mind, Everybody Loves Raymond relied on the talents of comic Ray Romano, but also drew upon a vast well of hilarity present in his fellow cast members…

The Everybody Loves Raymond (Season 2) DVD features a number of hilarious episodes including the season premiere in which Ray appears on a television sports talk show only to turn in a less than flattering appearance. When his family reveals the truth about his awkwardness, Ray is determined to perform better on TV, but his second stint is worse than his first… Other notable episodes from Season 2 include “Brother” in which Ray attempts to bond with Robert on the anniversary of his divorce, and “The Children’s Book” in which Debra’s noble attempt to write a children’s book is turned into a one-on-one writing competition by Ray… Season 2 also features guest appearances by sports figures Roy Firestone, James Worthy, and Pat O’Brien…

Below is a list of episodes included on the Everybody Loves Raymond (Season 2) DVD:

Episode 23 (Ray’s on TV) Air Date: 09-22-1997
Episode 24 (Father Knows Least) Air Date: 09-29-1997
Episode 25 (Brother) Air Date: 10-06-1997
Episode 26 (Mozart) Air Date: 10-13-1997
Episode 27 (Golf) Air Date: 10-20-1997
Episode 28 (Anniversary) Air Date: 10-27-1997
Episode 29 (Working Late Again) Air Date: 11-03-1997
Episode 30 (The Children’s Book) Air Date: 11-10-1997
Episode 31 (The Gift) Air Date: 11-17-1997
Episode 32 (High School) Air Date: 11-24-1997
Episode 33 (The Letter) Air Date: 12-08-1997
Episode 34 (All I Want for Christmas) Air Date: 12-15-1997
Episode 35 (Civil War) Air Date: 01-05-1998
Episode 36 (Mia Famiglia) Air Date: 01-12-1998
Episode 37 (Marie’s Meatballs) Air Date: 01-19-1998
Episode 38 (The Checkbook) Air Date: 02-02-1998
Episode 39 (The Ride-Along) Air Date: 02-23-1998
Episode 40 (The Family Bed) Air Date: 03-02-1998
Episode 41 (Good Girls) Air Date: 03-09-1998
Episode 42 (T-Ball) Air Date: 04-06-1998
Episode 43 (Traffic School) Air Date: 04-20-1998
Episode 44 (Six Feet Under) Air Date: 04-27-1998
Episode 45 (The Garage Sale) Air Date: 05-04-1998
Episode 46 (The Wedding: Part 1) Air Date: 05-11-1998
Episode 47 (The Wedding: Part 2) Air Date: 05-18-1998

Britt Gillette is author of The DVD Report, a blog where you can find more reviews like this one of the Everybody Loves Raymond (Season 2) DVD.

Many folks complain about violence in films and on television. Quite honestly, I don’t see much violence either place because I’m extremely selective in what I view. I was having a discussion with a friend the other day about this topic. It reminded me that I had written an article a while ago, and tracked it down.

It’s a true story, which happened in December, 1994. With hindsight, this story feels more like a planned experiment than a spontaneous happening.

I attended three films within a period of seven days. Where I lived at the time in Santa Monica, I had the luxury of being within easy walking distance of five movie theaters which can show a total of 22 films simultaneously. Most are hot out of the studio. (I still live in Santa Monica, but a little further away from these theaters.)

The first film was “Legends of the Fall,” which everyone can admit is violent. How I got to that one is a mystery, why I stayed is more of a mystery. Perhaps it was so I could have this experience and tell it.

The second film was “Jungle Book,” which parents actually take little children to see! I found it appallingly violent and distorted.

The third one was “I.Q.,” a film I found delightful. Wa Who! Walter Matthau is one of my all-time favorite actors. No violence. Many would probably say “no depth,” to which I shrug my shoulders without comment. I went to the film to be entertained, and was. I have considerable depth in my work every day.

So now you know the films, here’s the experience. As blood and gore flashed across the screen in “Legends of the Fall,” I sometimes watched and mostly closed my eyes. About three-quarters of the way to the end, advertisements that are usually shown at the beginning began to play. The audience exploded!

Yelling and feet stomping were the norm. One man in particular seemed to go crazy. He screamed obscenities and could not say more than three words before repeating his favorite word, “f___ing.”

I’ve not ever been in a riot, but it felt to me as if one was about to happen. I sent lots of love and light to the projectionist and to the audience. Soon the right reel was playing. Oops, no sound. More jeers from the audience. Then the film’s sound came on. More jeers to rewind and begin the new reel again. Finally the film ended, although I have no memory how.

Several days later, I was off to the second film at another theater…. “Jungle Book,” a classic, considered to be a children’s film. The audience that day included little boys and girls accompanied by adults. The children were quite frightened. This was a tense fright, though, not an exhilarating one.

Three-quarters of the way through, the film broke. The audience exploded with yells and screams. The theater was not as crowded as the previous film, or the responses would undoubtedly have been multiplied. Soon the film returned to the screen for its finale.

Several days later, I attended “I.Q.” at a third theater. This is a romantic comedy requiring the wits of Albert Einstein with tee-hees and wide smiles for the audience throughout.

Are you ready for this? Three-quarters of the way through, the film broke. Not a sound came from the audience. Everyone sat quietly, waiting for the repair or whatever was needed. This soon happened, and the film played to the end without interruption.

Something in me wants to end this article with a profound and pithy statement that summarizes the whole experience. But something stronger in me just wants it to stand on its own — you make of it what you will. It’s a true story.

Jeanie Marshall - EzineArticles Expert Author

Copyright © 1994, 2005 Marshall House. All rights reserved. You may save this article, send it to a friend, or reprint it in your online publications, provided the article remains complete and this information is attached. Please visit Marshall House at http://www.mhmail.com and Voice of Jeanie Marshall at http://www.jmvoice.com

The housemates have been banged up in the lunatic asylum that is the Big Brother house and one will be leaving this weekend. Here are the “first impressions” of the housemates during their short stint as reality TV stars thus far.

Pete Bennett
Win Odds: 11/10
Since falling down the stairs to enter the house and being asked if he was “on something” by Bonnie, Pete has emerged as the favourite to win and at present looks unstoppable. The Tourette’s sufferer is genuine, funny and at the moment is liked by all the housemates despite him not joining one of the two “camps”. It’s early days yet but Pete will be odds on to win within the next few days.

George Askew
Win Odds: 16/1
George has not come to the forefront as yet in that he has not paired off with one of the female housemates nor has he done anything to rile anyone else. He has bonded with Mikey and appears to be part of the “in crowd” for the time being at least and should be safe for a few weeks yet.

Mikey Dalton
Win Odds: 16/1
Mikey has emerged from the shadows this week and has taken over the mantle as the leader of the “Big Brotherhood” following Shabaz’s exit. He has also paired up with Grace and has formed an alliance with George. Originally thought to be quite a boring housemate, Mikey looks to have done enough to stick around until the latter stages.

Richard Newman
Win Odds: 16/1
With Shabaz gone, Richard looks set to revel as the “only gay in the village”. He sees himself as a father figure to the group and looks set to battle Sezar for the role of alpha male. He has found friends in Lea and Nikki but may find his position in the house precarious after some of the weaker members of the group are picked off.

Nikki Graham
Win Odds: 20/1
Given that Nikki’s pre-entrance video suggested she wanted to find love in the house, she hasn’t made any effort to pair up with any of the available men in the house, preferring to find comfort in gay Richard. Nikki may adopt the role of “baby” in the group due to her childlike behaviour despite being older than six other housemates and showed during the infamous “bottled water” scene she could explode into fits of tantrums should she not get her own way. Despite being part of the London nightclub circuit scene, she has not formed alliances with Sezar, Imogen, Grace or George and is in danger of finding herself an early casualty if her behaviour irritates the others.

Lisa Huo
Win Odds: 20/1
Lisa is the other leader of the “Big Brotherhood” but could also find herself in a precarious position when she is eligible to be voted out of the house. She has found a friend in Pete but her laddish behaviour, coarse language and chainsmoking could grate on the other housemates when they are looking for reasons to nominate people for eviction.

Imogen Thomas
Win Odds: 20/1
Before entering the house Imogen said she would “make all the boys fancy her” and she has certainly done that. She shared a kiss with Sezar after three days and appears to revel in stringing him along. Should he grow bored of her and if she wanted to score points off Grace, Imogen could also move on to Mikey who described her as “beautiful”. Bar a short interaction in Welsh, she has failed to bond with fellow countryman Glyn, preferring the company of the London social set.

David Walker runs free Big Brother bets and Mikey Dalton websites. Updated Big Brother 7 articles are available at both of these websites.

When it comes to delivering scares, When a Stranger Calls is about as effective as the UN during a major humanitarian crisis. Director Simon West (Con Air, Tomb Raider) doesn’t do much by way of creating suspense other than making some sudden noises and playing the what’s-beyond-the-dark-corner/doorway trick, which becomes tedious in a hurry. And then there are the phone calls. What’s meant to create tension and dread simply becomes irritating. The phone just rings again, and again, and AGAIN. Most people would be mighty fed up if they were interrupted by phone calls every 5 minutes, yet protagonist and uber-hottie Jill Johnson (played by Camilla Belle) consistently and patiently picks up the receiver every time after fielding more calls than Donald Rumsfeld on a Monday morning.

Anyway, the story of When a Stranger Calls is pretty straightforward. Soon after the opening credits, following a brief introduction of the villain’s messy killing habits, we meet the lovely Jill. Like most teenagers, she’s a midriff-baring track star, a good student, and a pretty good artist too. Oh, and she just happens to be hotter than most magazine cover girls. Like I said, a typical teen. Right. Whatever. She also has two cute midriff-baring friends who appear to be from planet WB, and of course, there’s the ex-boyfriend Bobby (Brian Geraghty, who I guess is supposed to be cute too) for whom she still has feelings. Life is tough for Jill. She’s angry at one of her friends for kissing Bobby, angry at Bobby for allowing himself to be kissed by her friend, and to top it all off she’s been grounded by her dad (Clark Gregg) for using 800 excess minutes on her cell phone. As punishment for this heinous deed, she is forbidden from going out or using the phone for an entire month. I’d hate to see what would happen if she’d flushed a cherry bomb down a toilet or gave her ex-boyfriend a wedgie, but alas dear reader, this movie is only rated PG-13. As a “lesson in responsibility,” Jill’s dad makes her baby-sit for Mr. and Mrs. Mandrakis (Derek de Lint and Kate Jennings Grant, respectively), a well-to-do couple. After Jill shows up to the Mandrakis residence wearing a tight orange top, Mrs. Mandrakis immediately gives her a tour of the place. During said tour, Jill and the audience are pleasantly introduced to the enormous house, complete with big scary spaces, dark hallways, a murky lagoon, and a faulty alarm system. Gee, I wonder what’s going to happen in the next hour? We also learn that the Mandrakis’ have two small children (who probably wear the same shirt size as Jill) who are recovering from the flu and will therefore be sleeping in their room throughout most of the movie- I mean, evening. Their room, as one might guess, is conveniently located in a spooky part of the house where no one in their right mind would want to go after dark. We then meet Chester the cat. And it’s strange how cats in horror movies have a tendency to knock stuff over and make more noise than a drunken hippo in a glassware shop. Finally, the Mandrakis’ are also kind enough to employ Rosa (Rosine Hatem), a cheerful housekeeper whose sole purpose is to turn up dead at some point in the near future.

As night falls and the scary music ramps up, the house begins looking more and more ominous. Then come the deluge of phone calls. At first they are innocuous: the Madrakis’ checking in, a goofy prank call, then friends via cell phone who are at a place where the bad reception produces annoying crackling noises like a Geiger counter going off in Iran. But I thought Jill was forbidden from using the phone? But wait! This movie is PG-13 so she’s allowed to get around those things! The incessant ringing becomes slightly more interesting because of one caller (voiced by Lance Henriksen) who is unknown to Jill. He doesn’t say much- instead, most of the time he just breathes then hangs up. I don’t understand why Lance Henriksen was cast as the caller. Did the casting director suggest at one point: “Hey, remember the android from Aliens? Man, that guy could really breathe!” And as luck would have it I guess Lance out-breathed everyone else during the casting sessions. The breathing is enough to give Jill the willies, and without giving too much away, things start going “bump” in the night and she decides to investigate these strange noises BY HERSELF. Then at one point she eats a red popsicle in a mildly suggestive manner. In a later scene we see the thing melt, subsequently staining a white napkin and creating a rather graphic visual analogy of female adolescence. Justifiable in the context of the story? Perhaps. Absolutely necessary? NO. Does it make me feel dirty for having noticed it? I’ll get back to you on that after I wash my hands. Back to the review- there are red herrings aplenty, since it wouldn’t make sense for the killer to pop out too early. And as the promos for the film clearly stated, Jill soon discovers that the threatening caller is making calls from within the house. The terrors mount, and as the laws of horror movies dictate, our lovely tight-shirted protagonist trips and falls while running away and manages to get as wet as a PG-13 movie will allow. I knew that lagoon was there for a reason!

The only things WASC has going for it is the absence of gratuitous gore and hard profanity, as it would have only bogged down an already tedious storyline.

If you don’t remember the original version of When a Stranger Calls back in 1979, you are most likely familiar with the popular urban legend from the 1960’s on which it is based: a babysitter encountering a killer who’s making calls to her from inside the same house, blah blah blah. In case you were wondering, the legend has been debunked and you can read about it here: http://www.snopes.com/horrors/madmen/babysit.htm

However, a debunked urban legend is the least of this movie’s problems. Simon West provides virtually no background for any of the characters. Most of the time, Jill’s friends are standing around reciting lines written by grown-ups who think they understand teens. They seem to exist only to remind you that this movie is about mildly frustrated teenagers who are, like, totally bummed out about stuff. Especially weak is the lack of any kind of relationship between Jill and the children she is supposedly looking after, as they all literally do not meet until the movie’s climax. Because of this, they come across as a bunch of screaming kids whom we desperately want to slap. Being the good girl, Jill opts to protect them but her decision to do this creates little emotional connection with the viewer. I’m not sure I’d have been shocked if Jill decided to escape and save her own butt, leaving the brats to run aimlessly about their big house shrieking as though someone erased their Barney tapes. Weakest of all characters is the unscary killer himself (Tommy Flanagan), whose inexplicable presence in the home only becomes more baffling as his razor thin motive is tacked on at the story’s conclusion. How did he find the house? How did he get inside? How did he know Jill would be there? Was he able to go to the bathroom? If so, how did he do it without ever getting caught? Or is that what the lagoon was really for? Further compounding the movie’s problems is the importance of the telephone as a horror device. Yeah yeah…I know the original WASC came out before Wes Craven’s SCREAM. But it is Craven’s film that now defines the murderous phone caller in horror cinema. In that department, Craven set a bar that has yet to be topped.

To be blunt, there was no reason to remake WASC. Although I never saw Fred Walton’s 1979 original, it’s based on a debunked urban legend that made use of horror movie devices that have since become either outdated, overused, or both. Simon West’s updated version carries those flaws into the 21st Century, creating a movie too forgettable and bland to be enjoyed even while intoxicated.

0.5 out of 4 Stars

When a Stranger Calls
Directed by Simon West
Screenplay by Jake Wade Wall
Based on the original screenplay by Steve Feke and Fred Walton
Starring Camilla Belle, Tommy Flanagan, Lance Henriksen (voice)
A picture by Screen Gems, Inc. and Davidson Entertainment

Rated PG-13 for some language, suspense, violence, tight shirts, and some pretty awful acting.

Joe Yang is an independent filmmaker specializing in stop-motion animation and digital compositing. He recently finished the 2005 season as video coordinator for the Urbana University football team in Urbana, Ohio. The team posted its first winning season since 1985.

For more information about Joe and his films, visit his website at: www.harboursealpictures.com

“Can’t you ever get off that antique you call a computer?”

It wasn’t my wife it was Xrytspet. My wife says that my computer is too up-to-date, too expensive, and too available. She never calls it an antique.

I didn’t turn my head. I said, “Scram, Xrytspet!”

She said, “Writing about King Kong?”

“Scram!”

“I can take you to Skull Island.”

I said, “There is no Skull Island. There is no King Kong. Scram!”

She said, “I can get you there in a minute.”

The next thing I knew we were on the beach at Skull Island. A heavy fog hovered over us and the surf was swishing up over my feet. I said, “Couldn’t you at least get us on land, Xrytspet?”

“Sorry!” she said. “A few steps and you’ll be out of the water.”

I said, “Now what? I can’t see a thing.”

A bearded man came out of the fog. He wore a Panama hat, a scraggly red shirt, and torn britches that were faded by the sun from a deep blue to a dull gray. I said, “Who are you?”

Xrytspet said, “This is Jonathan Hawthorne. He is our interpreter.”

“Interpreter? Why do we need an interpreter, Xrytspet?”

“So that you can talk with King Kong. My language module does not include the animal dialects. I didn’t think I would need it. I can shoot back to Fenton and get it but that would take me a second but you would have to wait for eons. By the time I got back, you would be long gone with that short meaningless lifetime of yours.”

I said, “You watched Men in Black didn’t you, Xrytspet?”

“What else is there to do at your place? So I watched it. But the Bug was right.”

I shook hands with Jonathan Hawthorne. I said, “I’m sorry we disturbed you. She thinks that King Kong is real.”

He said, “And you think that creature is real?” He pointed at Xrytspet.

I said, “You’ll get use to her. If you want her to change her appearance, just ask her. You know how women are.”

He said, “Over the years I’ve learned to leave things as they are. They can get worse, you know.”

Gradually the sun cleared the fog and we could see the jungle. I said, “I thought there was a big stockade here to keep Kong out of the village.

Jonathan said, “You’ve seen the movie. But think about it, Jarhead. If King Kong can climb the Empire State building, holding a girl in one hand and swinging his fist at airplanes with the other, don’t you think he could climb a 30 foot wall.”

Xrytspet said, “Jonathan, you are getting to know Taylor Jones, the hack writer.

Ignoring the insults I said, “So, where is he?”

Jonathan pointed towards the mountains. “Up there!”

I said¸ “Let’s go home, Xrytspet. I’m not much for climbing.”

Zap! We all three are in the mountains and there is King Kong sitting on a log, his big rump hanging over the edge like a down pillow. Our size was so small that he didn’t even notice we were there.

Jonathan took a big stick and smashed it down on King Kong’s toe. Kong looked down, offered Jonathan a finger, and lifted him up to eye level. Jonathan yelled down, “Shoot!”

“With what? I didn’t bring a canon.”

Xrytspet said, “Idiot! Ask your questions.”

I yelled, “King Kong! I would like to meet your family.”

Jonathan translated and King Kong answered in a voice not proportional to his size. I took my hands off my ears and heard him say, “Kala Topa rak rakka rotofock.”

Xrytspet said, “They are on vacation on an Island called Kala Topa.”

I said, “Why did we hire an interpreter if you can speak Kong?”

She said, “I didn’t know I could until he spoke. I think that one of my modules practiced on the way out here. You can never trust a module. Next question.”

I said, “Xrytspet, ask him how old he is.”

She did and he answered, “Kina lacka knowatol.”

Xrytspet said, “He doesn’t know. But he is 320 earth years old and is still in his teens relative to earthlings like you.”

I said, “Now we are getting somewhere. Here we have something for all mankind. It’s like the fountain of youth. All we need to find out is what he has for breakfast that makes him live so long. This is a worthwhile trip. I’m grateful to you, Xrytspet.”

Xrytspet said, “You don’t want to know what he eats. Now let’s get out of here before he finishes that snack I brought him.”

A piece of Jonathan’s foot fell right next to me. Kong picked it up with two fingers and delicately dropped it into his mouth. That was the last bit of Jonathan.

We ran.

John T Jones, Ph.D. - EzineArticles Expert Author

John T. Jones, Ph.D. (tjbooks@hotmail.com, a retired VP of R&D for Lenox China, is author of detective & western novels, nonfiction (business, scientific, engineering, humor), poetry, etc. Former editor of Ceramic Industry Magazine, Jones is Executive Representative of International Wealth Success. He calls himself “Taylor Jones, the hack writer.”

More info: http://www.tjbooks.com

Business web site: http://www.bookfindhelp.com (IWS wealth-success books and kits and business newsletters / TopFlight flagpoles)

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