Dance and enjoy!
Dance and enjoy!
How do I know that 2019 is going to be a good year?
Because The Chemical Brothers have got a new album coming out! No Geography, their 9th studio album, is set to be released this spring. Today, they released a video for a new song called MAH. What does MAH stand for? Mad as Hell, of course! As for the video, it was shot at a recent show at London’s Alexandra Palace.
Enjoy!
We’re only seven days into 2019 and I think we already have a contender for creepiest video of the year.
Of course, when I say that, I’m not talking about the bad type of creepy, like that guy who works across the hall from you and who is always trying not to get caught staring whenever you walk by. No, I’m talking about good creepy, the type of creepy that sticks in your mind and makes you wonder what the point of it all is.
Are those spiders or are those ants exploding out of everyone’s head? Either way …. AGCK!
Enjoy!
Friends forever.
It’s a nice idea.
Enjoy!
(I recorded Seduced By Neighbor off of Lifetime on November 11th, 2018.)

Awwww, what a happy couple!
That picture above is of Mike (Trevor St. John) and Sarah (Andrea Bogart) relaxing in Sarah’s hot tub. Sarah’s a single mother who recently lost her husband in a traffic auto accident. Mike is the self-appointed head of the neighborhood watch and he also recently lost his spouse in a tragic accident. As soon as Sarah and her daughter, Allie (Sierra McCormick), moved into their new house, Mike introduced himself and made it a point to always drive by the house in his little golf cart and make sure that everything was safe. How couldn’t Sarah fall in love with such a great, considerate guy?
Or, at least, that’s the way that Mike likes to imagine it. See, that picture above is just Mike’s fantasy. That’s the future that he imagines awaits him and Sarah. What Mike doesn’t take into account is that, while Sarah appreciates his dedication to keeping the neighborhood safe, she’s not interested in being seduced by her neighbor. Instead, she’s far more interested in Chris (Rocky Myers), the superhot fireman who comes by the house after one of Allie’s friends sets the kitchen on fire.
Realizing that he’s running the risk of losing his fantasy, Mike decides to take action. He challenges Chris to a game of ping pong, one that quickly spirals out of control. Mike may win the game but he’s such an obnoxious player that it certainly doesn’t make him look any more attractive in the eyes of …. well, just about anyone.
Well, if ping pong didn’t work, how about murder?
Yes, it turns out that Mike is a psycho. That really shouldn’t come as a surprise to anyone who has ever watched a Lifetime film. In the wold of Lifetime, your neighbor is always likely to turn out to be an obsessive psychopath. The more friendly he is, the more likely it is that he’s filled your house with hidden cameras and that he’s spending all of his time watching you on his laptop. We all know how these things work.
So, Seduced By My Neighbor may sound like a typical Lifetime film but, in general, I like Lifetime films so that wasn’t a problem for me. Plus, Trevor St. John does a good job playing the psycho, making him friendly and creepy at the same time. From the minute that Mike shows up, it’s obvious that there’s something a little bit off about him but, at the same time, you can understand how someone still struggling to recover from losing her husband could be taken in by someone who says that he just wants to make sure that everyone in the neighborhood is safe and happy.
And, finally, there’s that ping pong game. Yes, I’m coming back to the ping pong game because it was definitely the highlight of the film. Strutting around and yelling every time he scores a point, Mike becomes every dudebro that you’ve ever seen playing pool in a frat house. Wisely, Chris just kind of smiles and lets Mike have his moment. That scene was just so over the top and fun that it pretty much epitomized everything that you could want from a Lifetime film.
I won’t spoil it but Seduced By My Neighbor had a good ending, one that revolved around an earlier plot point that, until the final few minutes of the film, I thought the movie had merely abandoned. It was a properly chilling moment, one that definitely felt appropriate for our paranoid age.
(I recorded Nightmare Best Friend off of Lifetime on December 29th.)

Everyone’s had that one best friend.
She was the one who gave you the courage to flirt with the hot ones and roll your eyes at the strange ones. She was the one who taught you how to shoplift without getting caught. She was there when you had your first drink and the first time you got high. She was the first one you went to for advice. She was the one that called when you needed to cry. She was your sister in almost every way and you swore that the two of you would be best friends forever.
Then you graduated high school and you two drifted apart. Sure, you’re Facebook friends and you follow each other on twitter and occasionally, you might exchange greetings and an inside joke but it’s not the same. Usually, it’s a case that one of you has grown up while the other hasn’t. One of you is busy adulting while the other is still living for the moment. Though neither one of you admit it, your friendship has now become consumed with a mix of jealousy and barely concealed malice. You want her life. She wants your life. It’s perhaps best that you live in separate states now.
And then one day, your former best friend shows up on your doorstep and all Hell breaks loose….
That’s the situation in which Katy (Rosslyn Luke) finds herself in Nightmare Best Friend. Katy has a nice house, a nice life, and a nice family. She’s living the ideal suburban lifestyle. And then, one day, her old friend Gina (Jackie Moore) shows up.
At first, Katy is excited to see Gina. They go back to their old high school and run through the hallways, screaming. They talk about how wild they used to be. Gina even tries to convince Katy to take part in a little shoplifting. It’s all wonderful, until Gina’s boyfriend, Ray (Brandon Howell) shows up. Katy takes an instant dislike to Ray. (It probably has something to do with the knife that he’s always waving around.) For his part, Ray doesn’t seem to care much for Katy either. However, he needs Katy. It turns out that Ray is a criminal and to pull off his latest scam, he’s going to require Katy to help him whether Katy wants to or not.
Nightmare Best Friend features two excellent lead performances from Rosslyn Luke and Jackie Moore and a convincingly menacing one from Brandon Howell. Howell played Ray with just the right combination of bad boy charm and psychotic posturing. You could understand why Gina fell for him, while at the same time also understanding why Gina would be too scared to defy him. Even more importantly, the friendship between Gina and Katy felt real. You could imagine that two of them actually being friends in high school but you could just as easily understand why they had eventually drifted apart. Elevated by a trio of strong performances, Nightmare Best Friend is an enjoyable Lifetime melodrama.
On Thursday, I watched the first Lifetime film of 2019, My Daughter’s Ransom!

(a.k.a. My Daughter’s Ransom)
Why Was I Watching It?
New year, new lifetime movies! Every year brings changes but one thing that will never change will be my love for these films and the enjoyment I get from reviewing them.
What Was It About?
Rachel (Scottie Thompson) has a good life. Her husband, Tony (Matthew Pohlkamp), is a successful businessman who is on the verge of finalizing a big deal. Her daughter, Lindsey (McKinley Blehm), is intelligent enough to know all about the theories of Charles Darwin.
Unfortunately, Rachel also has an ex-boyfriend named Carter (Lucas Kerr). Carter’s just been released from prison and, as quickly becomes apparent, his incarceration did not lead to rehabilitation. After spending months stalking Rachel and her family, Carter kidnaps Lindsey at the zoo. If Rachel doesn’t do everything that Carter orders her to do, he’ll kill her daughter.
As Rachel tries to figure out a way to save her daughter, she also has to keep following Carter’s orders, which are not only increasingly outlandish but also increasingly dangerous for both Rachel and everyone that she loves….
What Worked?
As anyone who has spent any time watching the channel can tell you, the theme of abduction is a popular one when it comes to Lifetime movies. That’s because these films deal with the fears that every parent has, not only that your child will be abducted but that you’ll be powerless to rescue them. My Daughter’s Ransom did a good job of making that fear feel real, especially in the early moments when Rachel was desperately running around the zoo, looking for her daughter. (The camera holds Rachel in a tight close-up while she searches for her daughter, emphasizing Rachel’s desperation to find her.)
For a film like this to work, you need a good villain and Lucas Kerr did a great job making Carter into the type of creepy, hissable bad guy who you just couldn’t wait to see get his comeuppance. In the role of Rachel, Scottie Thompson also did great work and it was impossible not to sympathize with her as she tried to get someone to notice that she was in trouble without Carter figuring out what she was doing.
In fact, the entire cast did a great job. My two favorite supporting characters were Gina (Davida Williams), the wife of Tony’s business partner, and Skates (Erika Fong), Tony’s secretary. Neither one of them was willing to put up with any nonsense. Personally, I think we need a sequel where Gina and Skates team up and solve crimes.
What Did Not Work?
It all worked! My Daughter’s Ransom got the year off to a good start.
“Oh my God! Just like me!” Moments
Much like Rachel, I once had a weakness for bad boys. Actually, now that I think about it, I still do. That said, the character I most admired was Skates because it didn’t matter how much Carter ordered Rachel to yell at her and threaten to fire her, Skates wasn’t going to let anyone stop her from doing her job.
Lessons Learned
Bad boys never change.
(I recorded Killer Body off of Lifetime on December 30th.)

Oh my God, this was a great movie!
Okay, so check this out. Once upon a time, there was a medical student named Elizabeth (Lindsay Maxwell) who felt like she was being shunned and ignored by her classmates. She had a crush on a doctor named Chris (Peter Benson) but Chris was in love with Katie Jones (Sunny Mabrey), Eventually, Elizabeth ended up having a total melt down and was forced to drop out of medical school. Elizabeth become obsessed with plastic surgery, hoping to make herself look perfect (which, in this case, meant looking more and more like Katie). Now going by the name Liz Oakley, she goes from doctor to doctor, getting work done and then suing them for malpractice. And if she can’t get your medical license taken away, she’ll just spray you with poison perfume. Seriously, this film features 4 separate attacks by toxic perfume.
One day, Liz shows up at Katie’s office and, until Liz introduced herself, Katie doesn’t even recognize her. Liz wants some minor work done and she claims that she’s been referred by one of Katie’s colleagues. Of course, Liz soon proves herself to be just as unstable as you might expect someone who regularly murders people to be. Soon, all Katie’s like, “I don’t want you as my patient anymore,” and Liz is like, “Fine, I’ll just destroy your life.”
Soon, Liz is showing up on a college campus and making a seriously awkward attempt to befriend Liz’s daughter. Katie and Chris (whose brilliant medical career has been brought to an end by a stroke) take out a restraining order but there’s nothing in that order that can stop Liz from going to another, less ethical plastic surgeon and having more work done in her quest to be perfect and to look more like Katie. Of course, when the surgery results in Liz having a barely noticeable scar on her chin, it’s not a good thing…
Obviously, the success of a film like this pretty much hinges on the actress who is cast as the stalker/psycho character and fortunately, Liz is played by Lindsay Maxwell. Maxwell turns Liz into a force of uncontrollable, narcissistic nature and one of the more entertaining aspects of the film is watching as Liz goes from smiling to screaming in just a matter of seconds. On the one hand, Liz is a complete psycho but, on the other hand, who hasn’t wanted to be perfect and who hasn’t, at least once, thought about they would do to achieve that perfection? Maxwell wisely adds just a bit of vulnerability to the character, making Liz a psycho to whom you can relate. Sunny Mabrey and Peter Benson also contribute good performance but ultimately, the film is dominated by Lindsay Maxwell and her bottle of killer perfume.
Killer Body was a killer melodrama, exactly the type of movie that we watch Lifetime to see. Between the murders and the intrigue and the attempts to fool Chris into committing adultery, this was a wonderfully entertaining look at just how far people will go to achieve perfection.

“New Year’s Eve is the worst, people who don’t drink or party all year suddenly going all Kanye on you.”
That line was delivered by Ashton Kutcher in the 2011 film, New Year’s Eve. Seven years ago, when the film was first released, I thought it was an awkward line, partially because Ashton Kutcher sounded like he was drowning in self-loathing when he said it and partially because the sudden reference to Kanye West felt like something that would be considered clever by 60-something screenwriter who had just spent a few hours scanning twitter to see “what the kids are into nowadays.”
(Of course, hearing the line in 2018 was an even stranger experience. People who don’t drink or party all year suddenly going all Kanye on you? So, they’re putting on red MAGA caps and spending New Year’s Eve tweeting about prison reform? True, that’s the way a lot of people celebrated in my part of the world but I’m not sure how exactly that would play out in Times Square.)
In New Year’s Eve, Kutcher plays a character named Randy. Randy is a comic book artist, which means that he’s snarky and cynical and doesn’t really see the point of celebrating anything. Fortunately, he gets trapped in an elevator with Elise (Lea Michele) and, with her help, he comes to learn that New Year’s Eve is not the worst. Instead, it’s the most important holiday ever created and, if you don’t think so, you’re worse than the devil.
Fortunately, Hillary Swank is present to make sure that we all get the point. Swank plays Claire Morgan, who is in charge of making sure that the ball drops at exactly the right moment at Times Square and who gets a monologue where she explains that the purpose of the ball is to make you think about both the past and the future. As she explains it, the world comes together one night a year, all so everyone can watch that ball drop. Apparently, if the ball doesn’t drop, the new year doesn’t actually start and everyone is trapped in a timeless limbo, kind of like Iron Man at the end of Avengers: Infinity War.
Of course, there’s more going on in New Year’s Eve than just Randy taking Kanye’s name in vain and Claire refusing the accept that Times Square is not the center of the universe. There’s also an old man (Robert De Niro) who wants to time his death so he passes right at the start of the new year. Sarah Jessica Parker plays the mother of frustrated teenager Abigail Breslin and gets to make a “girls gone wild” joke. (A Kanye reference and a girls gone wild joke in the same film? It’s like a pop culture tsunami!) Michelle Pfeiffer tries to accomplish all of her new year’s resolutions with the help of Zac Efron. Halle Berry worries about her husband (Common) , who is serving overseas. Josh Duhamel searches for a woman who once told him that his heart was more important than his business. Seth Meyers and Jessica Biel compete with Til Schweiger and Sarah Paulson to see who can be the family of the first child born in the new year. Jon Bon Jovi thinks about the woman that he nearly married and Katherine Heigl wonders if she’s ever going to have a career again. In other words, New Year’s Eve is an ensemble piece, one in which a bunch of slumming Oscar winners and overachieving TV actors step into small roles. It leads to some odd pairings. De Niro, for instance, shares scenes with Alyssa Milano while Sofia Vergara and Ludacris are both relegated to playing sidekicks. Michael Bloomberg, New York’s then-mayor and general threat to civil liberties everywhere, also shows up, playing himself with the type of smarminess that already has many people dreading the prospect of his 2020 presidential campaign. This is one of those films where everyone has a familiar face but no one makes much of an impression.
New Year’s Eve was directed by the late Garry Marshall and it’s the second film in his so-called holiday trilogy, sitting right between Valentine’s Day and Mother’s Day. By most accounts, Garry Marshall was a nice guy and popular in the industry, which perhaps explains why so many familiar faces were willing to sign up to appear in New Year’s Eve. Though the film is ruthlessly mediocre, it’s actually the best of the holiday trilogy. For all the schmaltz and forced sentiment, one gets the feeling that the film actually is sincere in its belief in the importance of that ball dropping in Times Square.
I remember that, when New Year’s Eve was first released, a lot of people joked that Marshall was going to make an ensemble romantic comedy about every single holiday, all with the hope that at least one of them would eventually become a television perennial in the style of It’s A Wonderful Life or The Ten Commandments. Interestingly, that’s exactly what happened with New Year’s Eve. Yesterday, E! aired New Year’s Eve three times, back-to-back! For better or worse, this film is probably going to outlive us all, ensuring that, in the far future, viewers will spend New Year’s Eve asking themselves, “What’s a kanye?”
I picked this video because it reminded me of middle school, high school, and St. Monica’s Catholic School, as well. Actually, it also reminded me of my first two years of college. And my last two years of college, as well. It also reminded me of my old apartment complex in Garland. Also, it made me think of a New Year’s Eve Party that I attended in 2010. And 2013, as well. The 2016 and 2017 New Year’s Parties weren’t anywhere near as fun as the ones in the past, largely because everyone got political. But, from 2001 to 2015, I attended some interesting parties.
So yeah, chalk this one up to nostalgia.
Parties are always a lot more fun in music videos. Have you noticed that? I think that’s because only really attractive, really cool people ever show up for music video parties. Whereas, in real life, there’s always like that one rando who shows up and kinda brings everyone down with their presence. It’s like that one dude who shows up at the party and no one knows who he is but he keeps standing by the fireplace and pointing at you and nodding whenever you acknowledge his stare.
Anyway, am I rambling? Well, then you better just ignore me and….
….Enjoy!