12.30.2007

Your Hard Candy Quote Blog

Beginning Christmas morning, Google searches for quotes from Hard Candy started directing surfers to Rider's Block. It hasn't been a week yet, and the number of those visitors has reached a dozen.

Aside from not understanding why a movie about a girl confronting a pedophile is on people's minds on little Baby Jebus' birthday, I'm concerned about another matter. I feel like I short-changed the folks who read my original post and found just one quote.

Here are three more quotes from Hard Candy. But first, a fun (made up) fact about Ellen Page.

Didja know™ Ellen Page will only appear in a film, or help promote it, if she's allowed to wear Chuck Taylors? That's because she was born wearing them! It should be true!


"Well, four out of five doctors agree that I am actually insane."

"Honor student, remember? Nothing I can't do when I put my mind to it."

"Was I born a cute, vindictive, little bitch or...did society make me that way?"

12.28.2007

Writers Guild of America Solidarity Beard Update #4

Late Show with David Letterman will return on Wednesday with its writers. Even the one who is growing his own solidarity beard. (Be patient while the blog loads--some genius decided 100-plus images on a single page was a good idea.)

My TiVo's "Now Playing List" is getting bare-bones. I'm in denial about no new 30 Rocks or The Offices, and I'm down to the last two Colbert Reports from before the strike.


In the meantime, my own facial hair is changing color and getting longer.

12.26.2007

Don't Play Me, Bro

I'm a little bothered that an infamous quote involving a Taser has been declared the quote of 2007. This is more Broadcast News-like proof of the dumbing down of the media.

Memorable quotes should be meaningful enough for one to ponder and gain some personal insight from, or to help put cultural or political events into perspective.

There are allegations that the student involved in the "Tasing" incident was doing it as a prank--which I happen to believe. Joe Six-Pack generally tries not to call attention to himself in a crowd.


Any question about this kid's intent should have automatically excluded his quote from consideration. I expected better from the Yale University Press.*


My vote for quote of 2007 comes from Stephen Colbert on setting and enforcing arbitrary rules for children:
"If you look at a cat and it sneezes, no dessert for a week."

* Update: It's interesting to note that it took less than three hours from the time I published this for someone browsing from Yale's campus to find it. Welcome to The Block! I visited your campus once in '92. It was beautiful. No--wait...my mistake--it was Harvard. Sorry for my ignorance (I attended a state university).

12.21.2007

Writers Guild of America Solidarity Beard Update #3

Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert are going back to work in two weeks, and my beard has spread all over my body in happiness.


I'll be watching, of course, and not for the train wreck factor. Both those dudes can and will be funny as hell without writers. Come on, it's a stand-up comedian and a guy from Second City.

What I want to see are more television shows winging it without scripts. Viewers of Life According to Jim and 'Til Death would notice little or no difference. I'd watch Carson Daly's show if it went interactive and parts of his body and brain were wired to behavioral-modification-through-electrical-shock switches on the Interweb. That might give me a reason to tune in/participate. Repeatedly.

And, seriously, I'd pay to watch Jorge Garcia just drive around the island in his VW bus and screw up Lost continuity with shit he makes up while stoned on Maui Waui. The flash-forwards could show him in the 30th century fighting the lizard-aliens from V with a scantily-clad Libby at his side.

When the writer's strike is over, they can explain it all away by finding Hurley hallucinating in a field. Then for the remaining episodes he'll be in the background munching out on Dharma chips and cookies.

12.20.2007

Stop Strip Mining My Childhood


Not to turn this into a poor man's C'mon Hollywood post, but I'm getting sick of all the family-friendly "re-imaginings" of every cartoon I grew up loving.

That being said, the California man with the blue skin would be smurftastic as Papa.


Note: I'm sorry. I got nuthin' today.

12.17.2007

Legend on The Block

I'm a sucker for "end of humanity" stories. I don't care if you're talking about nuclear annihilation, natural catastrophe, zombies due to a mutated virus...I love 'em all. Any actor who has appeared in such a genre has instant cred with me. If you mention Don Johnson, I think A Boy and His Dog. Anthony Edwards? Screw ER and Top Gun, I think Miracle Mile. (Even Mare Winningham couldn't ruin that movie for me, and she taints everything she's done in front of a camera.)

The event that sparked my fascination was when my dad took me to see The Omega Man on the big screen. I remember thinking, Who is this Charlton Heston fellow, and why is he always gritting his teeth? I didn't know, but he spent that whole movie drunk and angry and shooting albino mutants wearing Ray-Bans. Does a movie need anything more?

In college, I discovered Richard Matheson's 1954 novel in a used bookstore. That's when I learned the title was actually I Am Legend.* I read it and appreciated the scientific explanation for how vampires could actually exist. The idea that monsters could be explained by science had a significant impact on my writing.

But not before I wrote some piss-poor fiction of my own about a similar subject.

Presented here, for your amusement, is an excerpt from an unfinished story I wrote called "Byrne's World." A 22-year-old kid is going about his daily activities as the last slacker on the planet.** His actions mirror the frustration a young Eric Rider must have been feeling about a recent breakup.
"I went over to [my ex-girlfriend's] house and blew out some of her walls with these M-80s that I found on my trip to Indiana. Then I built a ramp leading up to the picture window...and drove her prize '85 Thunderbird up it, a cinderblock holding the gas pedal at a steady 70. It went through the window just fine, but it veered to the left slightly and only took out two walls. The roof didn't even collapse. I had to introduce her father's Mercedes to the living room before the remaining walls gave out and the second floor said howdy-do to the first."
Will Smith is trying to synthesize a cure to save mankind. I'm trashing an ex's house. Nice.


* It's worth mentioning that before Will Smith's movie came out with the book's original title, it had been adapted twice. Vincent Price played the titular role in The Last Man on Earth, nine years before Heston.

**
I didn't have the patience for explanations--he just woke up and everyone was gone, OK?

12.15.2007

Excerpt from Powers: Cosmic

Brian Michael Bendis has written the best Powers story arc so far. "Cosmic," the tenth trade collection, features on-stage monologues as narrative framing devices between action scenes. This piece of dialogue has stuck with me for several days after reading it:
"My sister had a baby...and I was thinking, this niece of mine...she has nothing left to learn about human beings other than how horribly disappointing they can and will be. I'm saying: right now, all people in the eyes of a two year old are equally fine. All she has left to learn is they are not!"

12.14.2007

Writers Guild of America Solidarity Beard Update #2

As the number of unwatched Daily Shows and Colbert Reports that I stockpiled months ago dwindle in my TiVo queue, the reality of the strike is hitting home.

Here's a perfectly executed swipe at Viacom by Jon Stewart's writers. It's worth watching just to hear the phrase "herpes in their nasal passages."



Of course my lush facial hair continues to grow--at an uncoordinated snail's pace--much to the amusement (and aggravation) of my female readers. But it's the effort that counts here, gals.

12.13.2007

LEGO Reenactment Theatre™: Superbad

I'm halfway through Superbad, and I had too much time on my hands yesterday. I started playing with and taking pictures of LEGO® guys.

I had to find the right vest before I photographed Christopher Mintz-Plasse's character.

This Is Why I Don't Shake Hands

I caught a story virus from McGone, who was infected by "Patient Zero" Splotchy--who didn't sneeze into his sleeve before touching others.

I'm continuing the story, color-coded by each participant so far. I've challenged myself to find ways to include the names of each of the authors in my section. I pick it up after the purty sequential art that's too good for the blogosphere...

I woke up hungry. I pulled my bedroom curtain to the side and looked out on a hazy morning. I dragged myself into the kitchen, in search of something to eat. I reached for a jar of applesauce sitting next to the sink, and found it very cold to the touch. I opened the jar and realized it was frozen. (Splotchy)

I was used to the house being quite cold in the mornings, as the night log usually burns out around one AM when I am dreaming cozily under my covers, not normally waking to put a new one on until morning. I was surprised because on the rare occasions that it actually had reached sub-freezing temperatures in the house, I had awakened in the night to restart the fire. I would have been worried about the pipes before P-Day, but there hadn’t been running water in two years and that was one of the few advantages to being dependent on rainwater, no pipes. (Freida Bee)

I rummaged around in the kitchen and found one of the few things that hadn't frozen overnight to eat- an expired granola bar. "Better than nothing", I muttered to myself as I tore off the wrapper and took a bite, trying to not chip a tooth in the process.I thought I should go out to the shed and bring in more wood. The mind-numbing cold snap that had set in over the last few days seemed to be in no hurry to leave. Pulling on my heavy coat and wool hat, I considered for a moment what lay ahead for the day. Normally I would spend much of the day making any needed repairs to the house, cleaning, reading various newsletters, cooking, and just trying to keep busy in general. With no job to fill my time anymore I have found my new found "freedom" to be both a blessing and a curse. Ever since P-day, the only job most of us have is to sit in our homes and find something, anything, to pass the time.Well, that- and to stay alive. (Whiskeymarie)

I reached the woodshed I’d built from the remains of our fence, and heard a rustling. Fearing one of the wild dogs that now roamed the neighborhood, I crept back to the house for the gun my husband left with me before he volunteered to join the fighting. My hand was shaking so badly, I didn’t think I could pull a trigger, so I also grabbed an old broomstick to use as a club. My son tried to follow me, and I ordered him back inside; he obeyed, frightened by the harshness of my tone. He seemed not to sense how terrified I was and I was glad. Inching toward the shed, glancing backward every few steps to be sure the children were staying inside, I heard the rustle again, accompanied by a very human cough.

“Who is it?” I shouted, in as angry and menacing a voice as I could muster. No response.

“Damn it, I know you’re in there! I have a gun! Come out with your hands up, or I’ll just start shooting!”

“Don’t shoot!” said the voice, and...
(CDP)


I woke up hungry. The room was white, small and seemed to not have any doors. That is when I realized I was naked. I had a thin sheet of plastic over me and some machine making beeping noises to my left.

I started to rise up that is when I noticed the cuffs holding me to the bed. I started to scream.

A large booming voice came over a loud speaker, "Calm down, calm down Mrs. Peabody."

I bellowed out, "Who are you?! Why am I chained down?! Where are my children?! "

The voice replied, " There has been an accident, everything will be fine. There will be someone to assist and answer your questions shortly."

Then there was silence. I yelled some more but nothing. No response. Then suddenly, a creaking sound. To the right there was a door opening, it was......
(Wyldth1ng)


A cat. A small black cat padded gently in and hopped on the bed. It paused to look at me and let out a sorrowful moan. As it crept toward my face I looked into its strangely unsettling eyes.

"Down, Scheiser," a man's voice spoke.

A sullen, shambling figure entered the room. His right hand was bandaged, part of it soaked through with blood.

"Hello, Mrs. Peabody." He pulled up a chair. "Sit, Scheiser."

The cat curled up on the man's feet. The man stared past me, resigned, distracted.

"Where is my family?!!" I moved my leg to kick at the man, only inches from me, but restraints dug into my ankles.

Without turning to address me, the man spoke, in words that seemed memorized and repeated a hundred times before -- "Your family is safe. As safe as any of us can be. I would let you go see them right now if I could, Mrs. Peabody. But you and I are linked."

"I don't know what you're talking about!"

"Applesauce. Cold. What do you really know about what your people call, P-Day, Mrs. Peabody? It is starting again."
(Splotchy)



"We extracted spunk from Applesauce," I said, "in an effort to create an ape/human hybrid capable of withstanding the effects of P-Day, and to lead humanity into the future by its overly long forearms."

Colonel Sanders stroked his pussy with his bandaged hand. Scheiser purred and arched her back. He shambled over to a locked cabinet, fumbling through a keychain.

"I recruited a geneticist named McManus from a California think-tank." I laughed, remembering. "The kid was a genius. He had an annoying habit of adding the first part of his name to words while he spoke. 'The application is up and mcrunning.' But it was McManus who made the breakthrough discovery..."

Sanders produced a bottle and two glasses from the cabinet. "Whiskey, Marie?"

I shook my head. "I gave it up after I left the CDP." I sighed and continued. "Most people know we share 98% of our genetic code with chimps. But finding a way to fuse the two would take years. We found one test subject that shared a phenomenal 99.99% of his DNA with our smoking orangutan. That meant we could hammer out a viable hybrid by Thursday."

"Yes, you're talking about the Republican presidential candidate," he interrupted. He reached over to an intercom on the wall and thumbed the button. "Freida, be a dear and bring me the sodium pentathol."

"But I'm telling you the truth!" I said, struggling against the restraints. "McManus hit the jackpot! It was like Googling your ex's name and finding their gay porn site! So we proceeded with the project, envisioning a future where super-strong, red-haired citizens swung from streetlights and regarded Clint Eastwood as a deity. Who wouldn't want to pray to Dirty Harry every night?"

A mousy woman in horn-rimmed glasses entered, holding a syringe. She handed it to Sanders, taking care to avoid eye contact with me. I noticed she had a mustard stain on the collar of her lab coat.

"Hey, Wild Thing," I said. "You've got a splotch--"

"Ee," she squeaked, scurrying out of the room.

"Droll," Sanders said, tapping the syringe. "Please, continue."

"We produced a flawless cloned cell within days. And then we realized two things. McManus found that Applesauce's mental capacities left something to be desired. His intelligence level was sub-standard for an orangutan of his age."

Sanders paused. "So you're telling me Republican candidate Fred Thompson's DNA is comparable to that of a retarded ape?"

"Precisely," I said. "And then the frozen sample of Applesauce Junior was stolen from the lab. One minute I was working in my office, the next I hear McManus shrieking, 'It's mcgone! It's mcgone!'"

***

That was a little longer than I thought it would be (that's what she said). So who should catch the virus from here? I cough in the general direction of:

Team Slinger, 'cuz he needs something to blog about other than his job.
Valerie, 'cuz she's been coasting on Vegas stories for over a week.
The Ex, just 'cuz.

12.12.2007

Rider's 6-Ounce Reviews™ - December 2007

For a guy with too much time on my hands, I don't have much to spare for barely-above-average pop culture offerings. I can wrap these up in the time it takes you to slam half of your Miller Lite (unless you're drinking a tall boy).

Grounded (Image Comics)

Imagine you go to a high school where everyone's special except you. Sounds like 9th-12th grade for me, but Jonathan in Grounded is the only normal kid in a school full of super-powered teens. The creators mix in equal amounts of humor and pathos as they introduce this lonely but determined young boy. Jon's belief in himself at the expense of a social life reminded me of Corey Haim in Lucas--and I don't mean that as a punchline. This is a story about a kid overcoming extreme odds and trying to gain respect through sheer force of will. It had a few flaws (which knocked this down from earning a full review), but it pays off for fans of the superhero genre looking for something original and heartwarming.

Behind the Mask: The Rise of Leslie Vernon (Anchor Bay)

Most horror films ask you to suspend your disbelief the way a bum wants you to think your donation is going towards food. This movie knees your disbelief in the balls and offers you an ice pack only after you've suffered for an hour. Behind the Mask isn't bad, mind you, but it asks an awful lot. Are you OK with a mockumentary selling the premise of a slasher that lets a camera crew film his wacky exploits as he plans a night of premeditated murder on a group of teenagers? And that the interviewer would treat him like an all-star quarterback training for the Superbowl? To be honest, I was. I wanted to like it based on this blogger's review. It's clear the creators love the genre they're satirizing, but maybe I'm too much of a fan: I saw plot twists coming from the first ten minutes and got hung up on all the questions they didn't answer that would've made it stronger. Saving them for the sequel, perhaps. Heck, I'll rent it. I give change to hobos, too.

52 volumes 1-4 (DC Comics)

I'm more of a Marvel fan than anything, but I cut my reading teeth on old school DC titles, and the premise of telling a year's worth of stories in real-time (a comic a week for 52 weeks) appealed to me. But not enough to buy them as they came out. Hell, no. I waited for the four collected volumes before delving into a universe without its Three Big Guns on active duty. Supes, Bats, and the Amazon take a back seat to a handful of minor and/or supporting characters and give them their moments in the spotlight. Who'da thought a Marvel zombie would actually care about The Question or Animal Man? Or that I would get goose pimples during an especially creepy moment when a burning wicker effigy with a woman's face tugs at Elongated Man's robe and whispers, "Ralph...?" Jebus, I'm still creeped out, and that was in the first volume! Many of the finer points were surely lost on me, but I came away with a deeper appreciation of DC's rich history.

12.07.2007

Writers Guild of America Solidarity Beard Update #1

OK, I'm not actually a member of the WGA. And, yeah, I didn't stop using my razor until ten days after the protest actually began. (It's also true I let it grow for reasons that had nothing to do with the strike.)

The fact remains: I'm an aspiring writer and I'm out of work at the same time as my professional brethren.

This is my beard at three weeks and counting.


The next time you sit down in front of your TiVo and feel utterly disgusted that a show like Crowned gets air time, think about the folks who actually create content for the comedies and dramas you love the most.

'Cuz right now they're out there carrying signs and sporting beards at least ten days longer than mine.

12.06.2007

Paleontologists At War

Bone Sharps, Cowboys, and Thunder Lizards from G.T. Labs. Written by Jim Ottaviani, art by Big Time Attic.


I attended one of the 366 Wizard World conventions this year* and as I walked through Artist's Alley--right between a merchant selling lethal Japanese weaponry to kids and the guy who was Count Dooku's alternate stunt double--I found the Big Time Attic table. I was drawn to the Mark Schultz cover of Bone Sharps, but I handed my money over for the rest of this wonderful book.

Jim Ottaviana crafts a based-on-true-events story about two pioneers of paleontology, Edward Cope and Othniel Marsh, whose intense, bitter rivalry was tabloid fodder during the Gilded Age. Yes, this is a comic where you'll learn things, like how there was something called the Gilded Age.

These two distinguished men of science couldn't stand each other, even though their theories on dinosaur evolution were identical. They did everything they could to mess with and discredit each other, including planting fake skulls. Cope and Marsh's excavation camps threw frickin' rocks at each other, fer corn's sake.**


Artistically, this book is a triumph. The overall design is just gorgeous. I told the artists that their stuff reminded me of Chris Ware's work on Jimmy Corrigan. (They seemed pleased and signed my copy with a dino sketch for free.) I always appreciate a project where it's obvious the writer and artist work together so perfectly.

It's worth a click on the G.T. Labs link above. Check out the other titles from this company. You wouldn't think "comics about scientists" would be a selling point, but based on this title alone it will be for me.***

* One for every day, with leap years thrown in as a bonus!

** I quote SpongeBob regularly.

*** At the next Wizard World, which begins in ten minutes.

12.04.2007

What Was on Katherine Heigl's iPod Before the Interview?


I don't do celebrity gossip here on the Block, but this is a pop culture blog. (Check my profile if'n ya don't believe me.) Today's post isn't rumor or hearsay, though, it's about an interview that Katherine Heigl did with Vanity Fair.

To save you a link-click, she talks about how Knocked Up was "sexist," and she had issues with the movie's portrayal of women.


I'm not here to agree or disagree with those points. I'm just here to share two facts and then make a little joke.

As a fellow blogger pointed out in an email earlier today, this is an actress who's posed for Maxim--which, granted, I've never read but am 99% sure is not a monthly collection of articles about female empowerment.

Secondly, Heigl's salary is now up $5,700,000 from the $300K she made for doing Judd Apatow's comedy in the first place. With his current track record, it's clear he's an A-list power player with a lot of pull.

So (and here comes the joke) it makes me wonder what possessed Heigl to rip a motion picture made by the man that launched her to stardom?

Perhaps it had something to do with the song playing on her iPod on her way to the interview.

I Slog Wearily Through Handler's Adverbs


A nephew lent me Adverbs. My review will be written in author Daniel Handler's style.
Terrance, a name reserved for male individuals but not in this case, punched her significant other as she slept. Terrance acted out in this fashion night after night, employing a right cross to Eric's left cheekbone. Her significant other, the aforementioned Eric, accepted his beatings because that's what it means to love your wife or domestic partner or girlfriend or any of the other myriad meanings of significant other. Love means unconditional forgiveness for intentional or unintentional actions.

A magpie drinks a Screaming Orgasm while a man named Tricia kisses a naked stranger in the forest. Then the magpie burps burps burps. This sounds like an odd sentence but it will come into play later. Or not.

One example of an intentional act that requires forgiveness might extend to a reader forgiving the author of a series of beloved children's novels for crafting a series of disparate essays and characters and placing them between bound covers and saying aloud, "This is a mature novel with a theme that says something about our current state." The author in question, whose last name sounds like a job title in the credits of a motion picture featuring serpents as a substitute for "wrangler," enjoys writing clever, stream-of-consciousness prose designed to lead the hapless reader into a quagmire the likes of which he might never escape.

If one were to ask Eric about his reading experience with the mature novel with a theme that says something about our current state, Eric would be careful of the words he chose so as not to offend the young man who lent him the book in the first place. The book, it's important to note, was recommended the same evening as a brand of bedtime tea called "Yogi Tea" by this young man, an aspiring musician who likes songs with titles like, "Bunk Trunk Skunk" and "Secret Knowledge Of Backroads." Eric would act the part of a diplomat, here meaning "the kind with immunity in a foreign land," and say the following sentence: "It worked better than the tea at putting me to sleep and keep in mind I didn't want to sleep because of Terrance punching me in my face and all."

The magpie next tried a Slippery Nipple before the volcano erupted erupted erupted, which is something else love is like.