Fantastic Fest 2013 Day Four Preview

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Fantastic Fest, the largest genre film festival in the U.S., specializing in horror, fantasy, sci-fi, action and just plain fantastic movies from all around the world, starts here in Austin in just four days! Over the next several days, I’m previewing the movies I plan on seeing and blogging about over the course of the week long festival.

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Mirage Men

In the 1980s, a scientist and entrepreneur named Paul Bennewitz made what was—at least to him—a shocking discovery. Using powerful testing equipment, he learned that the U.S. government was conducting secret UFO research at Kirtland Air Force Base in Albuquerque, New Mexico. After reaching out to the Air Force, Bennewitz was contacted by special agent Richard C. Doty. The Air Force determined that Bennewitz uncovered classified—and purely terrestrial—projects. Doty’s job was to put an end to the snooping. He convinced Bennewitz that his discoveries were related to secret government UFO research. Doty’s disinfo campaign literally drove Bennewitz crazy and planted the seeds of several UFO myths that still persist in popular culture.

MIRAGE MEN, which is based on a book of the same name by Mark Pilkington, explores the government’s UFO disinformation. Numerous people are interviewed, including Bennewitz’s associates, former government officials like Doty, various figures in the UFO movement (e.g. William Moore, Linda Moulton Howe), UFO enthusiasts, and eyewitnesses. MIRAGE MEN isn’t a standard talking heads documentary. All voices are given equal weight. Seemingly reasonable assertions are presented side-by-side with bizarre statements that defy credulity. The interviews are expertly woven together with a judicious smattering of public domain footage to create a mind-bending narrative that seems designed to both confound and provoke. Who is telling the truth? Who is lying? Who knows? Interviewee Linda Moulton Howe calls the quest to unravel the truth behind government involvement in UFOs is like a “fractured hall of mirrors with a quicksand floor.” The same can be said of MIRAGE MEN. (Rodney Perkins)

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Fantastic Fest 2013 Day Three Preview

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Fantastic Fest, the largest genre film festival in the U.S., specializing in horror, fantasy, sci-fi, action and just plain fantastic movies from all around the world, starts here in Austin in just five days! Over the next several days, I’m previewing the movies I plan on seeing and blogging about over the course of the week long festival.

DAY THREE

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Vic+Flow Saw a Bear

Vic (Pierrette Robitaille) is a parolee who retreats to her ailing uncle’s sugar shack in Quebec. She is joined by current love interest and fellow ex-con Flo (Romane Bohringer). Vic and Flo’s attempts to live a peaceful life in the woods are constantly interrupted by various people, including a parole officer named Guillaume (Marc-André Grondin) and an intrusive neighbor (Marie Brassard). Eventually, these pesky people create major problems for the couple.

VIC + FLO SAW A BEAR, which played in competition at the 2013 Berlin International Film Festival, is Denis Côté’s follow-up to the documentary BESTIAIRE. The film’s mix of drama, noir, and dark humor defies easy categorization. VIC + FLO SAW A BEAR takes place in a small town inhabited by weird quirky characters that weave in and out of the story. At first, everyone’s motives are obscure. As the plot unfolds, a nasty underlying truth emerges. Robitaille’s and Bohringer’s excellent performances as the titular characters are at the core of the film’s power. Viewers will root for these flawed yet sympathetic characters. When the pair meets their fate, the impact is simply devastating. (Rodney Perkins)
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Fantastic Fest 2013 Day One & Two Preview

fantastic-fest-2013-poster

Fantastic Fest, the largest genre film festival in the U.S., specializing in horror, fantasy, sci-fi, action and just plain fantastic movies from all around the world, starts here in Austin in just six days! Over the next several days, I’m previewing the movies I plan on seeing and blogging about over the course of the week long festival.

DAY ONE

 

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Greatful Dead

Nami (Kumi Takiuchi) is a young woman with numerous hangups sprouting from a dysfunctional childhood.  She inherits a small fortune that allows her to pursue various interests, many of which are highly abnormal. For example, Nami loves to spy on people who, not unlike herself, have gone crazy from loneliness. She calls these people “solitarians.” Perhaps due to a father fixation, her favorite spying targets are old men with stiff boners. One fateful day, Nami spies on an elderly gentleman (Takashi Sasano) watching porn DVDs at home. She soon transitions from a peeping tom into a full-fledged stalker.

GREATFUL DEAD—the latest film from director Eiji Uchida (LAST DAYS OF THE WORLD)—is a character-driven black comedy that uses dark humor to explore otherwise serious themes such as religious zealotry, aging, and mental illness. The plot takes numerous twists and turns, always leading the viewer to unexpected places. The result is a film that’s alternately touching and disturbing. (Rodney Perkins)

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Lost Review: We Are What We Are (Somos Lo Que Hay)

Beginning in December 2005 with my history of apes in film essay “Gorilla of Your Dreams” (the substantially update and revised version appears in The Apes of Wrath), I regularly contributed to Moving Pictures Magazine. First in the print incarnation and then for primarily the website. I contributed reviews and essays for the last three years of the publications existence. Following the June 2011 demise of both the print and website editions, all of the digital work for MPM disappeared into the ether. In the coming months (years?), I plan on reposting many of my reviews and articles.

With the impending Fantastic Fest 2013, complete with Jim Mickle’s remake of Jorge Michel Grau’s We Are What We Are (Somos Lo Que Hay), I’m offering up my take on the original film.

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Rayguns Over Texas Is a Reality!

Look what I just got!

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You can get your copy through FACT or better yet tomorrow.

6:30 PM – 8:00 PM Reception & Readings: Rayguns Over Texas
Offsite (Offsite)
Rick Klaw, Chris N. Brown, Jessica Reisman, Joe Lansdale, Josh Rountree, Lawrence Person, Stina Leicht, Mark Finn, Scott A. Cupp, Derek Johnson, Rhonda Eudaly, Sanford Allen, Matthew Bey and others.

This reception is the launch of Rayguns Over Texas, a new anthology edited by Rick Klaw and published by the Fan Association of Central Texas. Note: This event will be held at the central branch of San Antonio Public Library and is FREE to the public.

Axe Cop: The Animated Series

It’s my 20th review! And it only took me two years to get this far! (Yay! I’m lazy! :))

To celebrate this milestone, I thought I’d try something a bit different. The Axe Cop animated series premiered on Fox last month, and now that the show is on a mid-season break, I thought I’d discuss the six episodes that have aired so far. If you wish to see them yourself, all six episodes are available on FoxADHD.com and Hulu, or you can watch the reruns on Fox every Saturday at 11PM. If you need a refresher on the comic itself, here’s my original review.

For starters, I’d like to congratulate Fox for getting out of their comfort zone and escaping their same-y animated sitcoms. Frankly, their formula was growing stale and Fox needed some fresh blood and new ideas (god knows we need another MacFarlane rehash). Axe Cop was a brilliant pickup for them to kick off their new ADHD block, and they couldn’t have picked a better series to show that they were willing to go against the grain. The animation is great, the voice acting is top-notch, and the humor matches that of the comic. The humor was my biggest concern on the new series, like it would be watered down for Fox’s LCD typical animated fare standards. Thankfully, Fox managed to adapt it faithfully and kept the surrealism intact, so this series succeeds on all possible levels. Now, let’s talk about the episodes…

Episode 1 – Night Mission: Stealing Friends Back

This episode is a direct adaptation of Chapter 4. Axe Cop helps Bat Warthog Man to find his friends, who have all been kidnapped by the King of All Bad Guys. Due to each episode being 11 minutes long rather than the standard 22, they had to cut out some material from the chapter (which is why I’d recommend clicking that link and reading the chapter for the sake of comparison). Strangely, they also added a subplot featuring Flute Cop which wasn’t in the original, so it makes you wonder why they bothered adding things in when they could have used that time for whatever was removed. Thankfully, it doesn’t detract from the quality and it’s a good start for the series.

P.S. As a side note, unlike the comic, Dinosaur Soldier doesn’t appear in this series at all (or at least so far). I wonder why they would leave him out…?

Episode 2 – Zombie Island… In Space

This episode is an indirect, abridged, veeeeeeeeery loose adaptation of Chapter 3. Chemist M is captured by Adolf Hitler to create a zombie army on Zombie Island… In Space! When Axe Cop heads to the island, he discovers that the zombies have built a giant robot under the command of Dr. Doo Doo.

This episode is easily the weakest so far due to its lack of focus. We never find out what happens to Adolf Hitler after his initial introduction; he is neither seen nor mentioned again (he’s also not in the comic, so putting him in the pre-intro sequence seems pointless) and the sudden switch of antagonists is utterly jarring. What I find interesting, though, is that they actually gave Dr. Doo Doo a plan–and even an origin, albeit vaguely explained–rather than just some random villain who shows up and is quickly killed off in the comic (he only lasted 7 pages). His death is also different. I’d recommend giving this episode a skip.

Episode 3 – An American Story

This episode is a direct adaptation of Ask Axe Cop #39 and #40. Axe Cop tells a story about his ancestor Book Cop and his participation in the American War for Independence. He single handedly destroyed the entire British Army and killed the King of England. This episode expands on the original story by justifying the antagonism between Book Cop and the King–they’re both fighting for the Secret Attack Almanac, a book which would turn the tide of the war. They also changed Book Cop’s parents’ death and showed more of the war and the epic battle with the King. This episode is my favorite in the series so far. If you thought Axe Cop was hilarious, Book Cop is even funnier. This one is definitely worth seeing.

Episode 4 – Babysitting Uni-Baby

This episode is a direct adaptation of Chapter 5. Axe Cop is hired by Flute Cop (although in the comic it’s Uni-Man) to babysit Uni-Baby while Flute Cop and his fiancé (or Uni-Man’s family) are on vacation. Axe Cop can’t stand babysitting her because she poops too much, so he invites his friend Sockarang (Dinosaur Soldier in the comic [seriously, what’s up with the show purposefully avoiding using him?]) to have fun in Magic World while cyborg versions of themselves babysit in their place. Unfortunately, the cyborgs have turned evil and they must be stopped.

Not much to say on this one. Save for the minor changes and the shortened ending, this episode remained mostly intact from the comic version. Still, though, why are they keeping Dinosaur Soldier out of the show?

Episode 5 – Birthday Month

This episode is surprisingly not an adaptation of the comic, although it does combine minor elements from Episode 0, Chapter 6, Ask Axe Cop #50, and the 2010 Christmas special The Power of Christmas. It also features a one-off character from Episode 5 as the antagonist. On his birthday, Axe Cop learns that his parents were killed by Santa Claus (or rather, an evil version of him). Axe Cop travels to South Pole World to exact his revenge before Bad Santa enacts his plan to kill God and become Jesus (yes, seriously).

This episode is tons of fun. Bad Santa is way cooler in this version, both in terms of character design and character development (in the comic, he’s overweight and devoid of personality). In fact, I’d say he’s the best antagonist so far in this series. Out of all the changes that were made in the adaptation, this was certainly a good one. It’s certainly one of the most awesome Christmas specials you’ll ever see and I hope it becomes a staple for years to come.

Episode 6 – The Rabbit Who Broke All the Rules

This episode is an expanded adaptation of Ask Axe Cop #43 as well as Ask Axe Cop #18 and #46. It also contains minor elements from Chapter 7. Axe Cop’s first kill as a young child was a rabbit that didn’t eat carrots and walked on two legs rather than all fours. That’s where the original comic ends. This episode continues decades later, where the rabbit’s ghost returns and possesses a young boy, ready to take revenge on Axe Cop. Another fun episode, although I wouldn’t say this one is for the faint of heart. The ending is heart wrenching.

In summation, WATCH THIS SHOW! This is the best animated series–no, make that BEST SERIES–to air on Fox in years. This show has definitely gone on my list of personal favorites and I can’t wait for the second half.

Complete Rayguns Over Texas preview

 

Cover by Rocky Kelley

Cover by Rocky Kelley

After months of rumors and innuendo, Rayguns Over Texas, the new anthology of science fiction by Texas authors, will finally premiere in just 2 days on August 29 at LoneStarCon 3 (aka the 71st Annual World Science Fiction Convention) in San Antonio.

Over the past 21 days, I shared previews of every story in the book. In case you missed any of these fine excerpts, below is a list of the stories, complete with links to every preview.

Unable to make it the convention? Books can be ordered from FACT.