Film Review: White Boy Rick (dir by Yann Demange)


Last night, as a part of my attempt to get caught up with the films of 2018, I watched White Boy Rick.

As you might guess from the title, this film is about a white boy named Rick.  It’s based on the true story of Richard Wershe, Jr., who grew up on the streets of Detroit.  His father sold guns out of the trunk of his car and, by the time he turned 14, Rick was running with drug dealers and street gangs.  (The fact that he was white while all of his friends were black is what led to him getting his nickname.)  Rick became an informant for the FBI and, according to Wershe, the government helped him build up his reputation by supplying him with the drugs that he would then sell on the streets.  When the FBI eventually decided that Wershe was no longer a useful asset, he was arrested for dealing and sentenced to life in prison.

The story seems like one that has the potential to say a lot that needs to be said about not only the economic realities of life in a dying city but also about the role that race plays in America’s often misdirected “war on drugs.”  Unfortunately, the film falls flat because, with the exception of a few scenes, it never really convinces us that Rick was really worthy of being the subject of a film.  While the film surrounds him with interesting supporting characters, Rick himself remains something of a cipher.  Rick is played by a young actor named Richie Merritt.  Merritt’s has the right look for the character but you never get the feeling that there’s anything going on underneath the surface.  Rick comes across as just being a moron who got lucky and then, eventually, not so lucky.

The supporting cast fares a bit better.  For instance, Matthew McConaughey plays Rick’s father with just the right amount of manic energy and Bel Powley has a few harrowing scenes as Rick’s drug addicted sister.  Bruce Dern and Piper Laurie don’t get to do much as Rick’s grandparents but it doesn’t matter because they’re Bruce Dern and Piper Laurie.  (All Bruce Dern has to do to make a character interesting is look at the camera.)  Jennifer Jason Leigh plays one of Rick’s FBI handlers with the perfect hint of subversiveness.  You’re never quite sure whether she’s messing with Rick’s life because she’s incompetent or because she’s enjoying it.  Unfortunately, the supporting characters are often so interesting that Rick often gets overshadowed.  He’s a bystander in his own story, which may have been the film’s point but, from a storytelling point of view, it hardly makes for compelling viewing.

Admittedly, there are a few memorable scenes to be found in White Boy Rick.  At one point, Rick goes to a wedding at the mayor’s mansion and he’s a sight to behold in his blue tuxedo.  In another scene, it’s explained to Rick why, when it comes to being arrested, charged, and incarcerated, the stakes are very different when you’re black than when you’re white.  In scenes like that, you kind of get a hint of White Boy Rick could have been if it had been centered around a more compelling character.

As it is, though, White Boy Rick is well-made but kind of dull.  It’s definitely a missed opportunity.

 

A “Migraine” You’ll Actually Be Glad To Have


Ryan C. (fourcolorapocalypse)'s avatarRyan C.'s Four Color Apocalypse

Featuring one panel per page and a pocket-sized horizontal format, lianhuanhua have been a staple of Chinese popular culture for decades, providing an affordable, and eminently portable, “delivery system” for mass-appeal sequential art storytelling. Some of the more dominant genres to grace the pages of these easily-digestible miniature magazines over the years, according to Paradise Systems editor/publisher R. Orion Martin, have been “fables, kung fu epics, and unauthorized adaptations of foreign films,” but with his own imprint’s entry into the world of lianhuanhua Martin seeks to bring something of an “art comics”  ethos into a field that has been previously closed off to anything that fell outside a generally populist aesthetic sense. As always, he’s clearly not short on ambition.

My first exposure to lianhuanhua Paradise Systems-style comes by way of Shanghai-based cartoonist Woshibai’s recently-released Migraine, and to say I’m eager for Martin to get more of these…

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Wild Wyler West: Gary Cooper is THE WESTERNER (United Artists 1940)


gary loggins's avatarcracked rear viewer

It’s hard to believe that, except for two films in which he cameoed, I haven’t covered any movies starring my namesake, Gary Cooper . Nor have I written anything about any of major Hollywood director William Wyler’s works. So let’s kill two birds with one stone and take a look at 1940’s THE WESTERNER, one of the best Westerns ever. It’s a highly fictionalized account of the life and times of Judge Roy Bean (1825-1903), played by Walter Brennan in his third and final Oscar-winning role, with Cooper as a drifter at odds with “The Law West of the Pecos”.

That “law” is Bean, who sides with the open range cattlemen against the homesteaders who’ve moved into the area. Into the town of Vinagaroon rides Coop as Cole Harden on his way to California. Unfortunately for Cole, he rides in on a horse stolen from one of Bean’s cronies, and…

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Spider-Man: Far From Home Teaser and International Trailers


spider-man far from home

Spider-Man: Homecoming was the Spider-Man that fans have been waiting for. It was able to balance the character of Peter Parker and his alter-ego of Spider-Man. Where the Sam Raimi version was able to make the former stand-out at the cost of the Spider-Man alter, the Marc Webb version swapped the two dynamics. Webb’s version had a great Spider-Man but had a Peter Parker whose moral compass was a bit skewed.

Jon Watt’s Spider-Man and Peter Parker were a nice balance. It helped that the character was now free (to a degree) to play in the huge cinematic sandbox that is the Marvel Cinematic Universe.

Last we saw Spider-Man and Peter Parker, he was dusted just like half the living things in the universe following the Thanos Snap. The question that gets brought up whenever Spider-man: Far From Home, the sequel to Spider-Man: Homecoming, gets talked about is does this film take away from the emotional sucker punch that was Avengers: Infinity War and it’s upcoming sequel, Avengers: Endgame.

From this teaser trailer and it’s international version has shown, the question still remains as both teasers mention nothing about the Avengers and keeps the timeline of the film vague enough to make one wonder if this sequel happens before Avengers: Infinity War.

I guess fans will find out on July 5, 2019 when the film is released worldwide.

….and here’s the International Teaser trailer

Music Video of the Day: Oops! …. I Did It Again by Britney Spears (2000, dir by Nigel Dick)


Before The Martian, there was …. Oops! …. I Did It Again!

Oops! …. I Did It Again is one of Britney Spears’s best-known songs and it’s certainly one of the most fun to sing at the top of young lungs when you’re speeding down the interstate on the way to Lake Texoma.  (Just ask my sister.)  But I think that people forget just how weird this video is.

Basically, we’ve got an astronaut (Eli Swanson) exploring Mars when he comes across an image on a Martian stone, the cover of Britney’s second album, Oops! …. I Did It Again.  On Earth, the nerdy NASA guy is impressed while the astronaut wonders if it’s possible that Britney Spears has come all the way to Mars just to play with his heart….

And she has!  Suddenly, there’s a stage on the Martian surface and Britney and the backup dancers are performing while the astronaut watches.  Eventually, Britney approaches him and proceeds to …. TAKE OFF HIS HELMET!  (Britney will not only play with your heart but apparently, she’ll also try to kill you.)  For a few brief seconds, it appears that the astronaut’s head might explode but no, he survives.  He then hands her the Heart of the Ocean, the extremely tacky blue diamond that was at the center of the film, Titanic.  The astronaut explains that he went down to the bottom of the ocean to get it for her and then he took it to Mars for some reason.  (Remember, the video makes it pretty clear that the astronaut wasn’t expecting to run into Britney Spears during his Martian exploration.)  In one of the most badass moves of all time, Britney says, “Oh, you shouldn’t have” and then walks away.  As for the astronaut, he hopefully managed to get home.  I mean, if Matt Damon could do it, anyone could do it….

Yeah, yeah, we know….

This video was directed by Nigel Dick, who also directed the video for ….Baby One More Time.  During filming, Britney was actually struck in the head by a falling camera and had to get four stitches before she then went to finish the video.  Like all great artists, Britney suffered so that you may enjoy.

So, enjoy!

Artist Profile: George Erickson


Sometimes, when I’m doing these artist profiles, I can find a lot of information about an artist online and sometimes, I can’t.  In the case of George Erickson, most of the information that I found was about a retired dentist and world traveler who just happened to have the same name as the artist.  I also found plenty of information about an illustrator named George Ericson, who usually his signed his work, “Eugene Iverd.”  (A story in the Saturday Evening Post states that he spelled his last name Erickson while Wikipedia spells it without the K.)  Unfortunately, that George Ericson died in 1936 and the covers below were obviously painted in the 1950s.  I don’t know if our George Erickson was related to Ericson/Iverd or if the similarity of their names is just a coincidence.  Beyond his work, the only definite thing that I found out about our George Erickson is that he was born in 1924.

Unlike a lot of artists of the pulp era, it appears that George Erickson regularly signed his name to his work, so at least we can definitely identify which covers were done by him.  Below is a small sampling of his work.  My favorites are The American Dream Girl, The Crooked Man, Like Wild, I’ll Bury My Dead, and A Hero Of Our Time, even if the “hero” looks like he’s being more of a pest than a hero.

 

Music Video of the Day: Sometimes by Britney Spears (1999, dir by Nigel Dick)


So, this year, Britney Spear’s debut album, ….Baby One More Time, is 20 years old and good people everywhere are celebrating.  Myself, I’m going to be listening to Britney all week and I’m also going to be singing every single song out loud.  I’ll probably end up annoying a lot of people, as that seems to be what happens whenever I loudly sing Britney.  (My sisters claim that, when it comes to singing, I’m borderline tone deaf but I think that’s going a bit too far.  I will, however, admit that my accent probably never sounds more Texan then when I’m singing.)

Anyway, Val has already taken a look at the video for ….Baby One More Time and, yesterday, I featured the video for (You Drive Me) Crazy.  So, it only seems appropriate that today’s music video of the day should be the video for Sometimes, which was the 2nd single to be released off of ….Baby One More Time.

Sometimes finds Britney on the beach, watching as a male model named Chad Cole runs alongside a dog and then stands around tossing a football up in the air.  (Chad Cole is crazy hot in this video, though I have to admit that I’ve always preferred people who spend their time at the beach writing poems about dead trees and industrial pollution.)  Anyway, when Britney isn’t stalking Chad, she’s performing with her back-up dancers.  Everyone’s wearing white, which is not only designed to play up the video’s pure intentions but also makes it seem like everyone in the video came to the beach straight from a Backstreet Boys theme party.

With this video, you can tell that the main aim was to provide a contrast to the sexualized Britney of the ….Baby One More Time video.  In this one, Britney’s dressed in all white and, instead of asking to be “hit” one more time, she’s instead demurely watching the all-American boy from a proper and chaste distance.  This is the Britney who wouldn’t have been out-of-place in one of those sun-drenched, virginity-celebrating beach films from the early 60s.  “Fear not, moral guardians,” this video announces, “our Britney is a good girl!”

Interestingly enough, the video’s original concept was that Britney would be looking the beach and having flashbacks to a past relationship.  However, in the video that was actually shot, the idea is that Britney is looking to the future, thinking about the perfect relationship that she’ll someday have.

Enjoy!

Lisa’s Week In Review: 1/7/19 — 1/13/19


Last week, I spent a lot of time cleaning out my DVR.  This upcoming week, I’ll not only be getting caught up on the films of 2018, I’ll also finally be posting my picks for the best and the worst of the previous year! It should be fun!

Also, last week, I went through our blogroll for the first time in like two years.  I dropped some dead links and added some new living ones.  If you have an entertainment or culture-related site and you’d like to included in our blogroll, please let us know!  Thanks!

Movies I Watched:

  1. The Art of Murder (2018)
  2. Babysitter’s Nightmare (2018)
  3. The Climb (2002)
  4. Deadly Delusion (2018)
  5. Flashdance (1983)
  6. The Girl in the Bathtub (2018)
  7. The Girl in the Bunker (2018)
  8. He Knows Your Every Move (2018)
  9. He’s Watching (2018)
  10. Holmes & Watson (2018)
  11. Homecoming Revenge (2018)
  12. Lake Placid: Legacy (2018)
  13. Left for Dead (2018)
  14. Lizzie (2018)
  15. The Lover in the Attic: A True Story (2018)
  16. Mandy (2018)
  17. Mean Girls (2004)
  18. Overexposed (2018)
  19. The Perfect Mother (2018)
  20. School’s Out! (1992)
  21. Sorority Stalker (2018)
  22. Stalked By My Patient (2018)
  23. The Strange and Deadly Occurrence (1974)
  24. Tyler Perry’s Temptation: Confessions of a Marriage Counselor (2013)

Television Shows I Watched:

  1. The 24th Annual Critics Choice Awards
  2. 60 Days In
  3. 911
  4. The Bachelor 23
  5. Bar Rescue
  6. Brooklyn 99
  7. Degrassi Junior High
  8. Degrassi High
  9. Doctor Phil
  10. Entertainment Tonight
  11. Face the Truth
  12. Friends
  13. The Good Place
  14. Hell’s Kitchen
  15. King of the Hill
  16. Leah Remini: Scientology and the Aftermath
  17. Lindsay Lohan’s Beach Club
  18. The Love Boat
  19. Project Runway: All Stars
  20. Seinfeld
  21. Shipping Wars
  22. True Detective

Books I Read:

  1. The 103rd ballot: Democrats and the disaster in Madison Square Garden (1976) by Robert K. Murray
  2. Convention (1977) by Richard Reeves
  3. Degrassi Junior High: Exit Stage Left (1988) by William Pasnak
  4. James Bond in Win, Place, or Die (1985) by R.L. Stine

Music To Which I Listened:

  1. Above & Beyond
  2. Adam Rickfors
  3. Adi Ulmansky
  4. Alvin Risk
  5. Anat Moshovski
  6. Armin van Buuren
  7. Avicii
  8. Big Data
  9. Blanck Mass
  10. Bring Me The Horizon
  11. Britney Spears
  12. Cedric Gervais
  13. The Chemical Brothers
  14. Coldplay
  15. Dada Life
  16. Dillon Francis
  17. DJ Judaa
  18. DJ Snake
  19. Fiona Apple
  20. Glen Hansard and Marketa Irglova
  21. Gwen Stefani
  22. Jackal
  23. Jake Bugg
  24. Jennifer Lopez
  25. Joywave
  26. Lady Gaga
  27. Hardwell
  28. Kaskade
  29. Otto Knows
  30. Porter Robinson
  31. Saint Motel
  32. Skrillex
  33. Sleigh Bells
  34. Steve Aoki
  35. Swedish House Mafia
  36. Syrup
  37. Taking Back Sunday
  38. Tiesto

Links From Last Week

  1. On her photography site, Erin shared: Sun Drenched, Cars, One Missing Trash Bag, Litter, Never Forget, and Mushrooms!
  2. On my music site, I shared songs from Blanck Mass, Kaskade, The Chemical Brothers, Armin van Buuren, Skrillex and Alvin Risk, Jake Bugg, and Saint Motel!
  3. On SyFyDesigns, I wrote about my new year’s resolution!
  4. For Horror Critic, I reviewed The Strange and Deadly Occurrence!
  5. Six Spot: Best Supporting Actress 2017 (This is a really fun feature at Awards Circuit, where they speculate about who just missed receiving an Oscar nomination.)
  6. Tom Hiddleston Said To Be The Narrator Of The Upcoming Young Loki Series
  7. Britney Spears’s …Baby One More Time Is Weirder Than You Remember
  8. ‘Celebrity Big Brother’ Cast Is Revealed
  9. Whoopi Goldberg is game to host the Oscars
  10. Oscars will be hostless for the first time in forever!
  11. Will the Oscars go hostless?  Here’s what we know about the situation.
  12. Finally, my tweet about the whole Oscar hosting situation got picked up and used in a twitter moment so yay me!:

Links From The Site

  1. Erin shared the following artwork: Dressed to Kill, Scandal!, City Hotel, Appointment With Fear, Model for Murder, No Angles For Me, and The Case of the Violent Virgin!
  2. Gary reviewed Handsome Johnny, The Spanish Main, and The Ghost and Mr, Chicken!
  3. Ryan reviewed The New World : Comics From Mauretenia and Cry, along with sharing his weekly reading round-up!
  4. Arleigh shared music from Mamamoo and the trailers for Kingdom and Season 2 of The Punisher!
  5. I shared music videos from Bring Me The Horizon, The Chemical Brothers, Hardwell, The Chemical Brothers (again), Jennifer Lopez. Steve Aoki, and Britney Spears!  I also shared the DGA nominations and the trailer for Velvet Buzzsaw!  Finally, I reviewed Flashdance and Holmes & Watson!  I also shared the winners of the Critics’ Choice Awards and the teaser for the 8th season of Game of Thrones!

(Want to see what I accomplished last week?  Click here!)

Have a great week and stay supple!