Archive for November, 2007

Southland Tales Crashes and Burns

Friday, November 30th, 2007

I think it’s official: Southland Tales has crashed and burned and already vanished from theaters. It wasn’t playing locally and I’d thought about going to Boston for a day to see it, but it had already been pared down to a single theater showing only a 1:30PM show… and now it’s gone, not even showing at the second run movie theaters.

Perhaps it will have some sort of after-live on DVD or Showtime.

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666 Watch: Google

Thursday, November 29th, 2007

Google666

Google hit a new milestone a couple of days ago - its stock didn’t hit a new high, that’s come and gone - but it did close at exactly $666 on November 26th.

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Jericho Speculation

Friday, November 16th, 2007

I imagine that at this point you’re aware of the writer’s strike which is affecting television and eventually movie production. The first impact from the strike has been late night television and soap operas, but prime time TV will also be feeling it soon as shows run out of new episodes to air.

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“Dioramageddon”

Wednesday, November 14th, 2007

Not really a diorama

The Apocalypse Blog welcomes a new word into the world: “Dioramageddon”, meaning “A scale model representation of the end of the world.”

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Southland Tales Bucket-of-Updates

Tuesday, November 13th, 2007

Sarah Michelle Gellar as Krysta Now in Southland Tales

I’ve been hanging on to these for much too long… now I’m going to post an article with so many links out that Google will probably decide that the blog is a link farm and stop indexing it…

Today is the day before Richard Kelly’s “Southland Tales” goes into limited release in the US (on Wednesday, November 14th), and wide release this Friday, November 16th.

Richard Kelly, you may recall, wrote and directed “Donnie Darko”, the (dare I say) dark, funny, somewhat-science fiction film that I want to say launched Jake Gyllenhaal on the world, except that it wasn’t his first film and not many people saw it. The film involved time travel, possible hallucinations, a man in a rabbit suit talking about the end of the world, and disenfranchisement, and suffered from being released soon after September 11th, 2001 - a major plot point in the film involves falling aircraft pieces.

This is all very timely for me as I had the good fortune to see a stage adaptation of “Donnie Darko” by the American Repertory Theatre this weekend (held at the wonderfully named “Zero Arrow Theatre” - it’s at 0 Arrow St.). The production was surprisingly good.

Kelly’s new film - “Southland Tales” seems to follow on similar themes. Sarah Michelle Gellar is cast as a porn star trying to break into mainstream film (”Scientists are saying the future is going to be far more futuristic than they originally predicted”), pitching her script through an amnesiac action star played by “The Rock”, Dwayne Johnson. The film takes place in a Los Angeles in the near future, after nuclear attacks in Texas have propelled the USA into becoming more of an in-denial-police-state.

The film famously was booed at its premiere at Cannes in 2006. Sony Entertainment picked it up and Richard Kelly cut the film by 25 minutes.

Three graphic novels are available as a prequel to the film: “Southland Tales Book 1: Two Roads Diverge”, “Southland Tales Book 2: Fingerprints” and “Southland Tales Book 3: The Mechanicals”. The three are also collected together in a single volume: “Southland Tales: The Prequel Saga”. They follow the main characters and explore the setting, presumably leading up to the events of the film.
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I Know the Fruit From Old

Monday, November 12th, 2007

Canned Peaches in Syrup post-apocalyptic play in Los Angeles

There’s no shortage of apocalyptic and post-apocalyptic media - comics, movies, TV, books… though post-apocalyptic music or plays are fairly rare. One such play - “Canned Peaches in Syrup” - ran in Los Angeles a few weekends ago.

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The Zen of Zombie: The Yoga Trailer

Friday, November 9th, 2007

Who says YouTube is only for pirated video?

Harkening back to an entire 9 days or so ago, the completed video of zombies doing yoga is now live. You can find it here on YouTube or watch it embedded after the cut.

The video is a trailer for the new book: “The Zen of Zombie: Better Living Through the Undead”

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Great Price on Millennium DVDs

Wednesday, November 7th, 2007

Images
Millennium was one of my favorite TV shows. Ever.

Dealing in apocalyptic themes, secular and religious, the show follows the life of Frank Black (played perfectly by Lance Henriksen), a former FBI agent who left the Bureau after a breakdown. Frank Black sees flashes through the killer’s eyes. He’s now working for the secretive Millennium Group, which employs several former FBI agents, and living in Seattle with his wife and daughter.

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Lord Death’s Counting Song

Wednesday, November 7th, 2007

Shoko Asahara, leader of Aum Shinrikyo

Most people probably hadn’t heard of sarin gas before the 1994 and 1995 attacks in Japan by the Aum Shinrikyo cult.

Sarin is an odorless, colorless gas which damages your nervous system if you inhale it or get it on your skin. It inhibits the mechanism by which your body allows its muscles to relax, leading to convulsions and a loss of bodily control, inability to breath and likely death.

The only good thing about sarin is that it doesn’t store well, which makes it difficult to stockpile for use as a weapon.

“Aum Shinrikyo” used sarin in two terrorist attacks in Japan, in 1994 and 1995, killing a total of 19 people.

WFMU describes Aum Shinrikyo’s beliefs as “a wild mixture of Buddhism, Hinduism, Nostradamus, and the Book of Revelations” - something which I normally would respond to as “you can’t get there from here” - but apparently you can.

Informed by everything from buddhism and anime to Isaac Asimov’s Foundation Trilogy, they started out studying yogic meditation (the Wikipedia article on them uses another unlikely combination of words, “elite meditation boutique”), they became more militant over time, driving around in an armored Mercedes, until finally they involved themselves in terrorist attacks, kidnapping and microwave incineration.

In a Buckaroo Banzai-like twist, their mostly blind leader, Shoko Asahara, not only masterminded their transformation from meditators to terrorists, but also recorded music.

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Update on the Film Version of “The Road”

Thursday, November 1st, 2007

Dark Horizons reports that Guy Pearce (of “The Adventures of Priscilla Queen of the Desert”, “L.A. Confidential”, “Memento”, “The Time Machine”, and one of my all-time favorite horror films, “Ravenous”) has joined the cast of the film adaptation of Cormac McCarthy’s “The Road”.

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