FMRL Blog

Exploring disruptive storytelling technology in theory and practice.

  • FMRL.com (Main Site)
  • FMRL: Pith, Marrow & Media, The True Story
  • Read DaedalusHowell.blog
    • 0
      2 Dec 2010

      Destroy All Movies (then buy the book)

      • Edit
      • Delete
      • Tags
      • Autopost
      Media_httpfmrlcomwpco_ebdfh
      Of all our cultural franchises on –philias, it’s the cinephiles, audiophiles and bibliophiles who foster perhaps the most socially-acceptable proclivities and yet, somehow, they’re still left out in the cold of mainstream culture. Fetishists par excellence, they are the true fans, the one’s that remind us that the etymological root of “fan” is “fanatic” and all the idolatry, zealotry and evangelism that might suggest. Some fanatics horde warehouses of ephemera related to their passions; others shoot rock stars. The more productive fanatics enshrine their beloveds in encyclopedic exegeses as is the case with Destroy all Movies: The Complete Guide to Punks on Film by Zack Carlson and Bryan Connolly, with a forward by punk frontman Richard Hell. Meticulously executed, the book is a near-500 page is as much a mash note to punks and film as it is to the notion obsessive-compulsive disorder has curatorial upside. Case in point: In the low-aiming high concept comedy Brewster’s Millions (inexplicably directed by The Warriors’ Walter Hill) there’s apparently a scene in which Richard Pryor leaves a hotel and in the extreme far right of the frame, a punk with a spiky mohawk is visible for second. Of course, he’s only visible in widescreen home video releases of the film, for, as the authors point out, he’s cropped in the others. Attention to detail such as this demands a redefinition of “completist.” It’s easier to find credible footage of Sasquatch than it is to track every punk who ever appeared in a commercially-released film and for mere seconds at that. Yet, these guys found them all and if on the off-chance that their neurosis failed them, they invite updates and corrections via their website, PunksOnFilm.com Those who weaned themselves from the teat of mainstream media in the 80s found quick refuge in such films as The Decline of Western Civilization and Suburbia (both directed by Penelope Spheeris who deservedly garners puddles of ink) but how many saw director Nick Zedd’s They Eat Scum, Geek Maggot Bingo or War is Menstrual Envy? Enough said. Destroy all Movies (or DAM, as the book refers to itself when in transcribed interviews with the likes of Exene Cervenka, Ian MacKaye and Repo Man director Alex Cox), is a browser’s delight. Not only will it confer punk cred to one’s coffee table, its brief, elliptical entries and occasional interviews with punk film luminaries will make for exquisite bathroom reading (other places in one’s home this book might complement include one’s bedroom end-table and any door in need of stopping – it’s about the size of a small town phonebook, remember those? Yeah, they went out of fashion like liberty spikes.)
      Media_httpfmrlcomwpco_ajncv
      Music on Film
      , which takes a more agnostic approach to the cultural connection between music and movies, is a pocket-sized, series of scholarly tomes on music-themed films ranging from chestnuts like West Side Story to the chests and nuts faux glam rock of This is Spinal Tap. In the latter release, author John Kenneth Muir draws a genealogical relationship between the lauded mockumentary and the “comic philosophy that arose in a specific context: America on the Watergate era of the late 1970s.” This is the same font that the most iconic iterations of Saturday Night Live, National Lampoon and a bevy of other comedy troupes would spring, alumnus of which comprise the core of Spinal Tap’s creative team – director-performer Rob Reiner and his cast of mock-rockers Christopher Guest, Michael McKean and Harry Shearer. Though slim, Muir’s book presents copious Tap trivia, most of which has yet to be warmed over on the Internet (score one point for print). Apparently, at one point the creators considered involving a subplot based on a “backstage Rosencrantz and Guildenstern angle” and some hapless roadies. Another point to ponder is the fact that Reiner had originally intended to portray a character in th eband but bowed out, instead taking a note from Martin Scorcese’s The Last Waltz and instead conducting candid if softball interviews with the musicians. Throughout both Music on Film: This is Spinal Tap and Destroy All Movies, the question as to whether such expeditions into the depths of cultural arcana are necessary. They are – in the very least the work of fanatics such as these allows the rest of us can just be fans.
      • views
      • Tweet
    • 0
      13 Sep 2010

      Mock Doc Meets Horror

      • Edit
      • Delete
      • Tags
      • Autopost
      Media_httpdhowellcomw_jdskh
      The cross pitch for The Last Exorcism must have gone something like this: The Exorcist meets Rosemary's Baby in the style of, what the hell, This Is Spinal Tap. (Insert record scratch sound here.) How writers Huck Botko and Andrew Gurland managed to get a feature film deal rather than a tongue-lashing by development executives is likely the result of a trend that's risen in the industry of late: the mixing of two genres into a profitable subgenre, the horror mockumentary. The mockumentary form—that is, a narrative film in the trappings of a nonfictional documentary—traces its roots to the "Swiss Spaghetti Harvest," an April Fool's Day hoax perpetrated by BBC news producers in 1957, which depicted pasta farmers plucking spaghetti noodles from trees. Later, Christopher Guest and company would perfect the genre, most famously with the Rob Reiner–directed mock-rockumentary This Is Spinal Tap, followed by the Guest-directed Waiting for Guffman, Best in Show and A Mighty Wind. Meanwhile, television hybridized the genre with reality shows and birthed franchises such as The Office and newer iterations like Parks and Rec. Clearly, the mock-genre works for comedy, but does it work for horror? Yes. The forerunner to the recent spate of horror mock-docs is, of course, 1999's Blair Witch Project, which elevated shaky, camcorder cinematography to an art, or at least an acceptable idiom, and proved that fake horror flicks can be real earners. To date, the indie flick has made $240 million—4,000 times its $60,000 budget. It also spawned a franchise of less successful sequels as well as innumerable knock-offs and parodies such as the Tony Blair Witch Project and The Blair Witch Project with Linda Blair, the star of the proto-exorcism film The Exorcist. A more recent winner in the subgenre, Paranormal Activity, improved the earnings ratio. Released last year, the film has earned $108 million thus far, which is nearly 10,000 times its budget of $11,000. Of course, high box office receipts doesn't necessarily equate into high art; however, it does account for the slew of mock-horror-docs coming to a multiplex near you, including The Last Exorcism, in which a charlatan exorcist attempts personal redemption by ridding a Southern school girl of a demon named Abalam. "I was so surprised when I saw The Last Exorcism, because I've been watching horror films all my life," says the film's star, Ashley Bell, 24, who plays 16-year-old Nell, a Louisiana girl who may or may not be possessed. She first saw her film's antecedent, The Exorcist, when she was 10; at director Daniel Stamm's behest, she watched its less popular sequels and then heeded his instruction: "Don't do that." "Daniel would hint as to where to look at the camera and for how long, what to tell, what to lie about, what not to tell," says Bell, whose performance as a wide-eyed innocent is the film's greatest asset. "The camera was really another character, and it was fun to kind of use it to manipulate the audience and play with it and against it." Bell's sensitivity to the form added to her character's on-camera verisimilitude. When "Nell" appears nervous during an on-camera interview, she easily endears herself to the audience, which makes it all the more creepy when she's in a satanic trance. "As you're watching it, it's as if you're in a 360 degree arena and don't know where the next attack is going to come from," Bell observes. "You always feel so vulnerable and so exposed, and I really like that." Audiences apparently like it, too. The film, which offers little in the way of special effects, rudimentary costumes and only a handful of locations occupied by relatively new (read: cheap) faces onscreen, has made its $1.8 million budget back ten times over, earning $20 million in its first week of release. Though some critics have grumbled that the film isn't scary enough, it's likely scaring the shit out of Hollywood, which is used to padding salaries with outsized film budgets. Mock-doc or not, no one can mock the math, which will likely lead to the rolling of executive heads. For Hollywood, the real horror show is just beginning.
      • views
      • Tweet
    • Search

    • Sites I Like

      • Future Journalism Project
    • Tags

      • Lab Blog
      • Boho
      • Cinemania
      • Publish or Perish
      • FAIL File
      • Gadgets & Gadflies
      • Daedalus Howell
      • Film Lab
      • Crowd-Cloud
      • google
      • ipad
      • (Un)Sung Music
      • Brand Camp
      • Killer Apps
      • amazon
      • ebook
      • Social Media Butterfly
      • apple
      • facebook
      • Broadcastrati
      • Docs
      • Shall we play a Game?
      • Video Killed the Radio Star
      • fail
      • Search Party
      • branded entertainment
      • kindle fire
      • music video
      • transmedia
      • twitter
      • Ben Huh
      • Dmitra Smith
      • Manifestos
      • New York Times
      • R&D
      • Rupert Murdoch
      • Siri
      • Unsolicted Advice
      • With Your Host
      • adaptation
      • anonymous
      • comcast
      • ebooks
      • filmmaking
      • hal
      • iphone 4s
      • kindle
      • netflix
      • newspapers
      • online journalism
      • sonoma
      • star wars
      • static people
      • zombies
      • /b/
      • 1350 AM
      • 1950s
      • 1977
      • 2001
      • 4-koma
      • 4chan
      • AT&T
      • Alex Komarov
      • Andrew Gurland
      • Andy Cohen
      • Andy Warhol
      • Angels & Angles
      • Animation Station
      • Anthony WeinerAnthony Weiner
      • Apollo 18
      • Artists include Anthony Discenza
      • Ashley Bell
      • Battle Ship
      • Berkeley Books
      • Best Worst Movie
      • Birdemic
      • Black Eyed Peas
      • Blackwater
      • Blair Witch Project
      • Blog
      • Brian Goldner
      • Brian Miller
      • Buzzy Martin
      • CYC
      • Candy Land
      • Chase
      • Christian Right
      • Christopher Guest
      • Clear Channel
      • Comix
      • Computational Knowledge Summit
      • CreateSpace
      • Creative Commons
      • Culture Jammers
      • Cut the cord
      • Czech Replublic
      • DIY
      • Daniel Walker
      • Dave Watson
    • Archive

      • 2012 (2)
        • March (1)
        • February (1)
      • 2011 (25)
        • December (18)
        • November (3)
        • October (2)
        • June (2)
    • Obox Design
  • FMRL Blog

    Writer and producer at FMRL where we explore new ways of making media for fans and brands.

    Columns: Bohemian.com | SonomaNews.com

    My latest:
    "I Heart Sonoma: How to Live & Drink in Wine Country" available now at an eBookstore near you.

    1278 Views
  • Get Updates

    Subscribe via RSS
    TwitterLinkedIn