If you are having difficulty growing flowers...
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If you are having difficulty growing flowers in your garden, my
suggestion is you purchase a copy of the movie “Freddy vs. Jason” and
bury it about a foot beneath what you are trying to grow. Based on
its content, this movie should make good fertilizer.
The premise of “Freddy vs. Jason” is a sort of cool idea that
sounds like something from a comic book. Both Freddy and Jason are
horror movie legends. You can’t really kill either of them. No matter
what happens, they just keep coming for you. So who would win if they
fought each other? Good luck trying to sit through this mess to find
the answer. The clear-cut loser is anyone who forked out nine bucks.
The Freddy Krueger “Nightmare on Elm Street” films were primarily
a showcase for Wes Craven’s spectacular special effects. In between
witty quips from Robert Englund (Freddy), we saw some movie magic
that was mind-blowing for its time. Craven’s surrealistic imagery
made these movies into irresistible mental junk food.
The Jason “Friday the 13th” movies were just variations on the
shower scene in “Psycho” without characters or a story. Topless women
are hacked to death by a killer wearing a hockey mask. Jason’s
trademark is his lumbering, yet relentless, pursuit of a horrified
victim. The idea was to create scenes that remind the viewer of a
nightmare where the dreamer is endlessly pursued by a faceless
attacker.
“Freddy vs. Jason” doesn’t deliver any of the appealing aspects of
the Freddy or Jason movies. Englund still has charisma, but the
conflict with the silent Jason doesn’t give Freddy much of a chance
to spout off any memorable zingers. Jason is never given the
opportunity stalk a person one on one. Craven’s twisted imagery is no
where to be seen. There’s no suspense. All we get is 60 minutes of
inane dialogue between talentless performers and a 20-minute fight
that never delivers what it should.
You know a movie is really bad when the characters keep repeating
the storyline to each other. It’s as though the writers decided that
we can’t figure out this simplistic garbage on our own and that we
need to be constantly reminded of the things the characters have
already said and done.
This begs an obvious question. Who’s the target audience for this
movie? What audience needs the characters to keep repeating the plot
out loud to make sure it is understood?
The answer is children. Despite its R rating, the target market
for “Freddy vs. Jason” is clearly pre-teen and early teen boys.
Theaters are making a token effort to exclude underage children from
seeing the movie unescorted, but we all know who wins the battle
between morals and economics.
The most interesting aspect of this movie was looking at the
audience. The decapitations and stabbings got virtually no response.
When a character had to perform mouth-to-mouth to try to save a
disfigured person, people moaned and shrieked. It’s funny how a kiss
can be more frightening than gallons of blood spurting everywhere.
It’s also funny how some parents cover their children’s eyes to
prevent them from seeing a naked female breast, but don’t care about
their kids seeing graphic murders.
If your son begs to see this movie, don’t waste your money. Take
him to see “Seabiscuit,” instead. He’ll thank you when he gets older.
If you decide you want to scare the pants off of him, rent Wes
Craven’s “The Serpent and the Rainbow.”
* JIM ERWIN, 40, is a technical writer and computer trainer.
‘Friday’ remake
is a delight
Jamie Lee Curtis makes the preposterous events entertaining in
“freaky Friday.”
She plays Tess, the mother trapped in her daughter’s body with the
delight of a prankster. Watching her change from wearing dull pant
suits to dressing like Stevie Nicks lets the audience see from the
look in her eyes that she has the perception of a teenager and is
completely oblivious to how she looks. And that’s part of the fun of
the film. That’s also how Curtis plays her part throughout the movie.
In two days, Tess will be getting married, again. While trying to
juggle career, family and wedding plans Tess asks for help from her
15-year-old daughter Anna (Lindsey Johan.) Using school work and band
rehearsals as an excuse, Anna refuses because she disapproves of her
mother remarrying so quickly.
While having dinner at their favorite Chinese restaurant Anna
tells her mom about an upcoming band audition. Unfortunately it’s at
the same time as the family wedding rehearsal party in 24 hours. The
mother and daughters heated exchange over the matter catches the
attention of the eavesdropping and meddlesome owner’s mother. The
woman decides that Tess and Anna have a life lesson to learn and
casts a spell on the unsuspecting mother and daughter that causes
them to switch places.
It is a remake of the 1976 film starring Jodie Foster and Barbara
Harris.
Supporting characters and storylines such as the younger brother
constantly getting his sister into trouble enhance the silly antics,
along with sticky romantic situations and the creative ways the
mother and daughter wiggle out of them makes “Freaky Friday” is good
family fun.
* PEGGY J. ROGERS, 40, produces commercial videos and
documentaries.
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