Sunday, February 24, 2013

Bearly Plausible - The End of an Icon



Unfortunately one of the most terrifying movie monsters of all time has been bled dry of what made it what it was. Werewolves used to be a symbol of pure animality and destruction on film. They were beasts that could not be negotiated with. That made them a great antagonist because you knew that they would be unrelenting and single minded in their goal of causing as much bloodshed as possible.  But now we are left with a sad pathetic shell of that monster and you can blame two things. One is Twilight. In fact you can probably blame Twilight for The Great Depression and Hurricane Katrina too. Second is a television show that I actually love but for all it does right it just totally screwed over werewolves, and that show is True Blood.  Just take a look at what a real werewolf looks like. For your viewing pleasure the werewolf from Bad Moon (top) and Dog Soldiers (bottom):

\
Now these are werewolves.

And now let me show you what True Blood (top) and Twilight (bottom) think a werewolf is:

These are just big dogs.



Just as a sidebar what advantage would you get as a giant dog? They don't even have opposable thumbs! End sidebar. So maybe you're wondering to yourself, "Why should I care?" Well if you enjoy the art of cinema then you have to appreciate the low budget film. And the low budget straight to DVD film industry thrives on horror movies because they are easy and cheap to churn out. No big budget explosions, no crazy effects, no green screen just costumes and no CGI. Admittedly for every one good straight to DVD film that is made there are 1459.5 bad ones but you appreciate those good ones more because of that.

Sure you can blame a whole bunch of other movies along with Twilight and True Blood for this problem but the sheer popularity of those two franchises far outweighs all of those other problems combined! So it's the end of the werewolf icon; at least for this generation. Maybe they'll get it right 20 years from now. Considering the subject I thought it would be nice for the Moon Bear to leave you with his recommendations for great werewolf movies.


Saturday, February 16, 2013

Angrrrr! How the Military Ruined A Genre Part 2


This is it. It's the grand finale! The military has either enhanced my visual acuity and elevated my perception to the illusions that the film industry has created or it has taken away my ability to watch a movie that features the military in it in any shape or form. Or maybe I'm just very picky about what I expect in a film since I know and lived the military. So here it is, the top three reasons that the military has ruined any film that it is featured in.

3. That Doesn't Look Right At All 2: Shazbot! They're At It Again!

Top Offenders: Behind Enemy Lines, Iron Eagle

This problem is so prevalent in films that it demands two spots on the list! It's the most common problem that plagues films. Typically this problem can be boiled down to two different scenarios. First off the visual is incorrect which become an eyesore. And secondly you'll hear characters say something incorrect.

Let's look at Behind Enemy Lines real quick. This movie is a prime example of the two aforementioned problems that military movies have. The biggest problem is the aerial battle scene which has Owen Wilson's nose claiming that they are "being painted" by some Surface to Air Missiles (SAM) that the Bosnian rebels probably bought from us. Being painted is incorrect because the SAM launcher would use either heat seeking or radar to lock on to the target. Painting is done when a laser is pinpointing the target. If they were being painted someone would have had to be following the jet the entire time in order to keep the missile on track.
"That nose is out of regs Lieutenant!"
Which brings me to the problem of the missile itself. It performs several miracles. First the missiles chase the pilots who are at full throttle for at least four minutes or so. That's a lot of mileage to cover, especially considering that an fighter jet can go about mach 2.5 or around 950 MPH! Missiles have have a nice advantage of going faster then jets but there is one problem. They have limited fuel. And if a missile senses that the acquired target is pulling away from it or it runs out of fuel they just blow themselves up out of shame of failure. One missile even makes a 180 degree turn. Those missiles should not have tailed them for so long.

And why does the pilot pop chaff? Chaff is for radar weapons but they make it clear that these missiles are heat seeking by dropping fuel tanks to create an explosion. You could argue that they dropped the tank to lose some weight but that still doesn't explain the problem of the magic missiles making several turns to catch the jet. You can check out the entire scene here.


2. First We War, Then We Party

Top Offenders: All of them

War is generally depicted in films as being very, uh, active. And dangerous to the point where people are killed during the most random moments. This might have been true pre Gulf War but for the most part when we deploy to a battle theater there is a lot of this going on:
"Dude, I think I left the stove on."
You pretty much are just sitting around until there is something to do. Sometimes that something is dangerous and intense but a lot of time it's quite and non-eventful. I don't want to downplay the seriousness of what can and does in combat but films make it seem like we are constantly bombarded with all manner of destruction. Sometimes this is true... For the first 48 hours. After that base is getting set up, Red Horse is plowing a runway, and if your in the Air Force a luxury hotel is being built to house the Airmen.
"This is considered low end accommodations for Air Force personnel."

As for the partying in Jarhead our protagonists spend the whole movie wanting to shoot someone (that's cuckoo) with little results. That seems about right. But then at the end we are treated to an insane display of a huge bonfire with soldiers tossing in their uniforms and all other manner of deployment gear. That stuff costs a lot of money you know. Then to top it off everyone starts firing their weapons off straight into the air! If you don't remember or were fortunate enough to not see this film check out the scene here.
"Quick shoot them! I'm allergic to bees!"
I hope that these guys are aware that bullets do eventually come back down and shooting straight into the air (which some of them do) is not really in the best interests of the living that wish to remain so. And I also hope that they are aware that the military keeps very good track of it's munitions stockpile. Heck the army go so far as to weight their empty shells. That means that after they shoot they pick every shell casing up. The Air Force keeps track by making someone accountable for it by having them sign off on actually shooting the rounds. I wonder where all the people in charge went.


1.No Need to Reload We Used the Infinite Ammo Code

Top Offenders: Transformers, Commando, Rambo: First Blood 2, Predator, Predators, Under Siege, Battlefield: Los Angeles

The number one problem is also the most glaring and ridiculous. On average a soldier carries a couple hundred rounds when they are toting the M-4 Carbine. Now if you have a belt fed weapon you might have a little more. Weapons on full automatic empty pretty fast. Were talking a few seconds fast. Most magazine fed weapons have 20 or 30 round capacity. That means you have to reload a lot if you are say, planning on mowing down a rainforest because a Predator killed Jesse Ventura. You watch this and tell me how many times you see them reload. Another Arnold movie Commando has the same problem.
"My machine gun has a +5 damage modifier, a flame enchantment, and is vorpal... Oh yeah infinite ammo too."
In fact all of Arnold's movies have this problem. You can also add to that every single 80's action film that was ever made. Even films made this century suffer from the same problem. In Battlefield: Los Angeles they reload but they have a never ending supply of magazines. I don't know what's worse, not reloading or having a magical vest that keeps producing full magazines.
"What is that thing flying away from me? Oh no! It's my credibility!"
If a real soldier were to have as many rounds on them as films portray them having we'd be so weighed down that he'd get as much done as a politician. Zing! Sure it would take away from the action to have a unit return from the field to reload or have one of the soldiers just walking around with the unit not doing anything because he ran out of ammunition at the beginning of the movie.

So there you have it. A boys dream shattered. Wait strike that. A mans dream shattered. The military has effectively crushed my ability to watch a film without noticing these errors. I've even ruined movie experiences for my family by having an outburst by pausing the film and letting everyone know the way it should have been. That may explain why everyone seems to have a doctors appointment anytime I invite them over for a movie. Keep in mind that I only mentioned military movies here because if I had included every other action film, not to mention every John Woo movie I'd be writing a book and not a blog.

THE END




Saturday, February 9, 2013

Angrrrr! How the Military Ruined A Genre Part 1


I spent 8 years in the military working in the munitions department and in all those years I learned a lot things. There were horrible things I picked up that I wish I could unlearn and then there are things that I learned that have always served me well. But of the horrible things I learned none was more damning to me than the ruination of just about any military related film out there. I see films now that involve the military and I'm reminded of the inaccuracies they portray. So here it is the top 6 reasons that the military has ruined the films that feature them to me.

6. There Are No Rules

Top Offenders: Full Metal Jacket, In the Army Now, Iron Eagle, Jarhead

In these films there are apparently no consequences to any actions at all. Take Full Metal Jacket for example which has R. Lee Ermey's  drill sergeant character out right torturing his trainees. In the real world we call this assault and it is very punishable.
"I love you Private Joker!"
Iron Eagle is another offender which sees an F-16 pilots high school kid zipping around in a multimillion dollar tax funded war machine. Oh yeah he also listens to generic 80's music as he does it. Don't believe me check it out here.

5. That Doesn't Look Right At All

Top Offenders: The Hurt Locker, Cloak & Dagger, Karate Kid II

Oh boy. The Hurt Locker as a whole is just all sorts of off. Here I'll just let this stripes.com picture point out all the uniform problems that the movie has going on.
He's also rocking a pair of tight jeans and Jordan's.
If you would like to read the full article you can find it here. I think I need not bash that movie anymore. At least not for awhile anyway.

A lot of 80's films also seem to be unable to get it right. In Cloak & Dagger (filmed in San Antonio) our protagonist is a 12 year old son of an Air Force Buck Sergeant whose job is pilot. Enlisted men do not fly planes and even if the Air Force was going to let enlisted people pilot planes they wouldn't let it happen at such a low rank. A final example would be in the Karate Kid II. Our heroes from the original take a trip to Okinawa Japan looking for Tomei Village, which has been swallowed up Kadena AB. When seeking directions they ask an Airman who is referred to as a Corporal by an off screen superior.

4. Weapons Not Acting As They Should

Top Offenders: Transformers, Hard Target

I know that Michael Bay's Transformers is set in a fantasy world but the military aspect of it is supposed to be grounded in reality. Here is a video of it for your amusement. And seeing as how I've worked on the gunships before I know a few things. There are several problems here but I'll just give you the most glaring problem.  The ground support is requesting 105mm shells be fired. Scorponok (the villain) is literally right next to them. Those soldiers would be thrown by shock waves, deafened by the impact of the shots, and killed by shrapnel if it were 105mm shells.
"Quick, run away from this awful movie!"
In Hard Target the villain uses a Thompson Center Arms Contender which is a single shot small caliber weapon. It's the hand gun located below. The movie for some odd reason the movie insists that these shells are explosive and everything that Lance Henrikson hits with it explodes into a blazing inferno.
"I was going to shoot him but ammo prices have gotten so out of hand that it's not in the budget."
So there you go. Three of the six reasons why the military has forever polluted the film industry. I know what you're thinking right now. "It's just a movie." While that may be true my Obsessive Compulsive Disorder dictates that no mistakes ever be made. Ever. Next week I'll run down the top three things that military movies can't seem to get right.

TO BE CONTINUED...


Sunday, February 3, 2013

The Bear Essentials - Puppet Monster Massacre

Food Equivalent: Cheese 

The Best Part: It's got puppets!

The Worst Part: Way too short

Genre: Black Comedy/Horror/Thriller

Rating: N/A (Adult Only)

Running Time: 70 min   

Bonus Points: Godzilla attack, mad scientist







The Puppet Monster Massacre is a homage to the great shlock horror films of the 80's and early 90's. It's a combination of humor and bad horror. The plot takes several queues from different films which causes it to become (oddly enough) an original film. The general synopsis is a group of strangers are invited to stay at a purportedly haunted mansion and if they can last the night they will win one million dollars. The Puppet Monster Massacre then takes a couple of genre twists and turns until it finally ends up becoming a giant monster crushing the city movie.

In the 80's Peter Jackson put out a film called Meet The Feebles. The Puppet Monster Massacre is the twenty-first centurys Meet The Feebles which means that it is definitely not for children. Don't let the fact that there are puppets in it fool you, this is an adult only feature. There are scenes depicting a lot of gore, scenes of sexuality and nudity, plus there is fluffy rabbit mutilation. On the plus side there is plenty of fun to be had here. Check out the official trailer if you are still not convinced.


The film can be purchased here and as a bonus it is a signed copy of the film. The DVD itself may be bare bones only having two commentary tracks, and not that great ones at that, but the quality of the film makes up for the lack of extras and this is a must see. If you enjoy comedies in the vain of Team America or horror movies with that 80's flare and panache then you owe it to yourself to check this film out. The Puppet Monster Massacre will only disappoint you by ending far too early.

THE FILM BEAR SAYS