JusWondering… Can Music Stalk You?

He doesn't look at all like the stalking type...

Can music stalk you?

This was a question brought up by my friend Chris.  You see, within one week (six days actually), he encountered not one, not two, not three but three songs by Roger Miller.  I was not aware I was aware of him and his music, and neither was Chris, but for some reason, he decided to investigate.

On Tuesday, during an episode of the excellent Raising Hope (which was originally called Keep Hope Alive – a much funnier name),  there was a song featured as a recurring joke.  It was called, Do Wacka Do and it went a little something like this:

Then on Friday, while he was oot n’ aboot (that’s Canadian for “out on the town”), he heard King of the Road, a tune we were each already familiar with, but did not know the performer:

Then on Sunday, while watching the excellent Jackass 3D (which should have been called Keep Johnny Knoxville Alive), a bit was built around this ditty called You Can’t Roller Skate in a Buffalo Herd:

So can music (or in this case, musicians) stalk you?  All I know is it’s happened to me before.

Just Sh–ty To The Sh–… Michelle Pfeiffer, Amazingly

Before

For whatever reasons between then and now, I was never a huge Michelle Pfeiffer fan.  Audiences saw pretty and pensive Actor!; I saw someone that reminded me of someone in my life I couldn’t quite stand.

So that catches us up to now.  Having recently gotten into Netflix (as opposed to buying everything on DVD that I planned on seeing), I’ve found myself on strange viewing tangents.

Recently, I’ve gone from a documentary on Ozploition (Not Quite Hollywood) to a film featured in that doc (Dead End Drive-In) to a poster featured in that flick (Into the Night) to becoming a fan of its star and ingenue, Michelle Pfeiffer.

With that film, I was finally able to see what the American public (and People Magazine) always saw in her, and I decided to see all the early works in her filmography.  So I started with Grease 2, and that means I bore witness… to this:

Song-writing aside – and believe me, the music was completely Crisco bacon-fat in a coffee can to Grease – I’m amazed she had a career at all after, ugh, Cool Rider.

And that’s speaks volumes to her skills as an Actor! I may even be so kind as to eliminate the sarcastic italics and !

After

SIDENOTE: The only song worse than anything from Grease 2 is Everything is Food from Popeye (only watch if you hate yourself):

Happy Find… Famous Last Words Mashup

There have been a lot of these made over the [choose your own increment of time passed]*, and I only present this one to you because of the awesome [choose your own segment of the following video]**.

(via Screen Junkies)

*I chose “months.”

**I chose “ending.”  I mean, c’mon…  Troll 2 and The Room?!  It gives me a [choose your own physical reaction].

So, Duh! Pop Quiz… Name That Car!

Using puns is a way I get by.  Sure, crack cocaine might be more forgivable and less annoying, but whatevs.  Speaking of annoying, isn’t it annoying when people say “whatevs“?

Anyhonda, in today’s So, Duh! Pop Quiz, I’m interjecting (American!) car company logos over scenes from movies and other random things.  You need to figure out the make of the car.

Is it easy?  Ever try getting a girl into the backseat of your Smart Car?

1)

2)

3)

4) 

5)

(Answers after the jump) Read More

A Handful Of… Decent Songs Performed In Non-Musicals

I’m sorry, but I am not going to apologize for having any of these songs on the list.  Wait.  Does that work?

Anyhoosiersshouldneverbemadeintoamusical, here are A Handful Of songs I enjoyed that were sung by characters in movies that were not musicals.  Agree or disagree in the comments (Jeremy!)…

  • Sex Bob-Omb’s Garbage Truck from Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World

This song was actually written by Beck (I’m not sure if the actors performed it), so there’s that.  And the movie is kick-ass (not to be confused with Kick-Ass), so double win.

  • Eddie and the Cruisers’ On the Dark Side from Eddie and the Cruisers

This movie originally came out in 1984, and I guarantee more people know John Cafferty & The Beaver Brown Band’s song than the flick itself.  Actor! Michael Paré would go on to make tons more B-movies.  He would also co-star in TV’s The Greatest American Hero, believe it or not.

  • The Soggy Bottom Boys’ Man of Constant Sorrow from O’ Brother, Where Art Thou?

Okay… this wasn’t a song originally made for the Coen Brothers’ film, but I still have to include the remake of Dick Burnett’s classic.

  • Josie and the Pussycat’s 3 Small Words from Josie and the Pussycats

Letters to Cleo front woman, Kay Hanley, performed all the eponymous rock group’s songs, and you have to admit the song’s as catchy as chlamydia herpes syphilis a smile.  Also, take notice of the clever countdown in the chorus (6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1)…

  • The Wonders’ That Thing You Do! from That Thing You Do!

The group might have almost been called The Oneders, but real-life rock group, Fountains of Wayne, did a great job at capturing the pop hit feeling of that era.  They proved their pop hit chops again a few years later with their own overplayed catchy hit – Stacy’s Mom.

  • Electric Dream Machine’s Dayman from It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia

Pure pop perfection.

Awful Battle… Films With “Surprise” Alien Endings

Before I begin, I feel I should mention (in a pirate’s accent) that thar be spoilers below, but none of these movies are particularly unspoiled by their terrible alien-infused endings.  It’s an Awful Battle to the fullest extent.  With these films, is the fate of the world at stake?  Nah.  Just your time.

  • Smilla’s Sense of Snow

The sequel was entitled, "Julia Ormond's Sense of Disappointment"...

Most people may not remember this film.  Scratch that.  Most people are unaware of its existence.  I remember watching this in a hotel on vacation, waiting for everyone I was with to get ready for the pool.  Up to that point, the film had been so engrossing, that I promised everyone that I’d catch up with them after it was over.  The problem was that the resolution/conclusion seemingly came out of nowhere.

How can I put this… For most of the viewing, it was a murder mystery.  In the end, it turned to, as Roger Ebert put it:

Prehistoric Radioactive Worms from Outer Space

  • Knowing

Bet you didn't know "Knowing" is almost an anagram of "Nick Cage"... Almost...

Australian writer/director Alex Proyas is a writer/director that I trust.  He might not have the largest filmography down under his belt (The Crow and Dark City carry most of the weight), but I’ve heard him in interviews, and he knows his stuff.  So speaking of knowing

I actually didn’t have a problem with this film’s ending.  The fact that aliens were involved was made known to me prior to seeing it, so I saw the small signs indicating where everything was going.  But I could see how others would get frustrated – it didn’t seem like it was going there.  The ambiguity amidst all the certainty of the numbers keeps you invested, your imagination swirling.  Then in scene after scene, shot after shot, all the answers are given, all the ambiguity… shot.  It quickly devolves into Showing.

If you’ve seen the film, I think it could have ended with him waking up on the rocks in the slight rain, and I would have been satisfied.  It would have fit in with the film’s themes perfectly.

  • X-Files: Fight the Future

This movie made me start the Why-Files.

I never consistently watched The X-Files television series.  I’d catch an occasional one if I knew it wasn’t a mythology episode, but even that hardly occurred.  When the announcement was made that the show would be getting the big screen treatment, I dove into whatever season it was on and caught up on the show’s history, probably courtesy of an Entertainment Weekly special “Catch Up On the Show’s History” edition.

All in all, the movie bit.  It bit hard.  It was like all those bees stung my every expectation.  The Black Oil made alien embryos in people?  Or whatever.  By the end, when the spaceship emerged from the ice and took off into the sky, I could have cared less.  I didn’t watch the show ever again.  Unless it was a standalone episode.

  • Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull

Fu. Ck. Th. Is. Mo. Vie.

I lack the energy to rip on this movie again.  You can see how I felt about it here and star Harrison Ford here.  Who am I kidding?  You probably felt the same.

  • Contact

As fulfilling as playing Marco Polo in quicksand, whatever that means...

This movie’s ending was used as a joke in South Park one time (I think).  Well whatever it’s from, it went something like this:

I waited the entire movie to see what the aliens would look like, and it was her fucking dad?!

Classic.

  • The Forgotten

I couldn't follow the plot because I never saw The Threegotten...

I didn’t see this movie, but I remember people being sucked into the sky in previews.  I always figured it’d be a trippy flick about a mother seeking out her missing child, kind of like Flightplan with special effects.  I didn’t expect it to have this resolution, though (via Wikipedia):

Eventually Telly [Julianne Moore] hunts down one of “them” [the aliens] at an abandoned airport and he tells her that she has been a part of an experiment into whether the bonds between mother and child can be broken.

Another mystery that turns into a sci-fi conspiracy theory?  No thanks.

  • Signs

Fu. Ck. M. Night.

M. Night Shyamalan should have never revealed the alien.  I maintain that if they had only shown the creature in the TV’s reflection, the creepiness factor would have went through the barn roof.

What’s funny is this film tries to challenge the relationship between science and faith and fails, whereas Knowing succeeds.  And knowing how to do that is half the battle…

InASense, Lost… Buffy, The Jedi Master?

This. Almost. Happened:

 

"There is no try, only do me."

 

Good old George Lucas originally wanted to name Yoda… well, I let io9 fill you in (from their list of “10 Things You Didn’t Know About The Empire Strikes Back):

Yoda was originally named Buffy. No, really. In George Lucas’ earliest outlines for the sequel, Luke meets a supernatural entity named Buffy, or Bunden Debannen. Here’s how Lucas described it:

Buffy very old — three or four thousand years. Kiber crystal in sword? Buffy shows Luke? Buffy the guardian. ‘Feel not think.'”

And Lucas concludes by saying Luke will become the chosen one, “the human Buffy.” In later drafts, he thought of Yoda as a kind of small frog, and Yoda had a full name: Minch Yoda. In the earliest script draft, Minch has the immortal line: “Skywalker. Skywalker. And why do you come to walk my sky, with the sword of a Jedi knight? … I remember another Skywalker.”

Yikes.  The guy that three years later would bring you this, could have preemptively brought you the above image.

I know, I know.  It wouldn’t have worked out like that, but a guy can daydream and pretend he’s a Jedi, right?

(SIDENOTE: While Photoshopping Sarah Michelle Gellar into Dagobah, I couldn’t help but realize I should Photoshop girls more often.  They’re more fun than Mike Rowe .)

In My Brain While Sleeping… Belligerent Smurfs

Wino Smurf, er, Champagno Smurf?

This one’s a quick one.  My friends and I were at a concert.  We were drinking a craaaazy amount.  Oh.  And we were all Smurfs.  We were in cartoon form, but we existed in the real world, à la Who Framed Roger Rabbit? Or the upcoming Smurfs movie.  But cel animated.  Not CGI*.  Thank you.

Barfly Smurf

*yes, you better Smurfing believe this is happening…

(SIDENOTE: But then again, CGI could look like cel animation.  Take a gander at this Roger Rabbit 2 screen test.  He’s 100% computer generated.)

Musical Musings… The Grateful Dead Muppets

Someone once told me I would know The Grateful Dead’s Touch of Grey when I’d hear it after saying one time I didn’t know it.  This happened a long time ago.

Well, I finally heard it.  That person was right.  I did know it.  I just thought the song was by Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers or the Travelling Wilburys or something else with Tom Petty in it.

But the funny thing I noticed was that it actually reminded me of something else.  Here’s a refresher for you in case you don’t know or forgot it:

Hear the ding-ding-ding in the background?  It sounds to me a lot like The Magic Store from The Muppet Movie:

At worst, it’s as similar as these two images:

I once made a joke at a Ben and Jerry's that their ice cream flavor shouldn't be Cherry Garcia, it should be Grateful Red. The girl behind the counter laughed. I didn't do anything else.

Talk about putting your foot in your mouth. No wait - scratch that.

So, Duh! Pop Quiz… License Plates Edition

I’m on the road a lot for my job, and I’ve seen more than my fair share of stupid personalized license plates.  There are even a few in the parking lot of my office that are idiotic!

So for today’s So, Duh! Pop Quiz, I figured I’d look up a couple celebrities’ personalized license plates, and see if you could figure out whom they belonged to.  Good luck!

(answers after the jump) Read More