Showing posts with label cornetto trilogy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cornetto trilogy. Show all posts
September 28, 2013
I NEED YOUR HELP! Fund The Brattle and Send Me To The 2013 Watch-A-Thon!
Hey there friend-o!
Two weeks from today the Brattle is staging their Watch-A-Thon, a two day marathon of 24 cult and classic movies, as a fundraiser to keep this wonderful theater up and running and showing all kinds of totally awesome flicks well into the future. I really want to attend and watch as many movies as possible, but in order to do that, I'm gonna need your help.
As you're no doubt aware, I'm currently a little more than halfway through my year-long effort to watch a movie I've never seen each and every day. Suffice it to say that I've spent quite a bit of time (and money) at different theaters all over Boston in my daily cinematic quest and it's given me a great new appreciation for the Brattle specifically. They've given me the opportunity to not only catch some stellar indie and underground films like Cheap Thrills, I Declare War and A Band Called Death, but also to see some fantastic classics like Enter The Dragon, 12 Angry Men and Foxy Brown the way they were always meant to be seen. And let's not forget about all the cool events they've held like the Boston Underground Film Festival or the recent Cornetto Trilogy Triple Feature Pub Crawl with Edgar Wright, Simon Pegg and Nick Frost in attendance. I absolutely live for this stuff and I'm constantly grateful that I live in a place with a moviehouse that goes above and beyond to deliver the best cinematic experience possible.
The Brattle has been very kind to me these past seven months and I'd love to return the favor. In order to participate I need to raise $240, which really isn't a crazy amount. I'm hoping to surpass that goal, especially because there are prizes for the biggest fundraisers. But I don't have a lot of time left, so I'm trying to really get this thing into gear before it's too late. You can either donate flat amount or you can pledge per each film that I watch. (I can tell you that I plan to attend both days but probably won't watch every movie, just most of them.) And hey, the list of films screening is right here, so if any of them strike your fancy then there are individual tickets available. Come along and I'll save you a seat!
Please click here to donate to my campaign. Even if it's just a small amount, (I think the lowest possible donation is $10) it'll all add up in the end and every little bit helps. And pass it on!
PS - I'm planning on having a big final screening/birthday party at the end of February and I'm really hoping I'll be able to hold it at the Brattle. Raising them a bunch of money certainly can't hurt my chances. So for those of you in Boston, think of this as an investment in an awesome future party.
August 24, 2013
Cornetto Week: I'll Traverse The Golden Mile With THE WORLD'S END Any Day
"There comes a time where you have to go forward, not backwards."Well, we've arrived at our destination.
I still remember the first time I saw Shaun Of The Dead at the Kendall Square theater in Cambridge at the beginning of my senior year of college. Zombies had become fashionable after successes like 28 Days Later and Zack Snyder's remake of Dawn Of The Dead, so the time was perfect for someone to jump in give us a clever new riff on the genre. I think I expected Shaun to be more of an outright parody, but what I got instead was so much better, using the familiar zombie touchstones as a backdrop to tell a smart and clever story about taking responsibility and embracing adulthood. It helps that Shaun is also one of the funniest movies I've ever seen. I will never forget the moment when Shaun accidentally pushes the shopgirl onto the umbrella stand and she slowly pulls herself up to reveal a hole in her stomach...and Ed slowly winds his camera. I laughed so hard I literally fell off my chair.
I have an equally special place in my heart for Hot Fuzz. My younger brother was visiting me in L.A. and he got really sick that day, but he stuck it out like a trooper and went to the movie with us anyway. I grew up loving the sort of buddy cop action movies that Wright is playing on with Fuzz, so it's hard for me not to love Nick Frost's Danny Butterman and his obsession with the likes of Point Break and "firing two guns whilst jumping through the air." Plus Danny and Nicholas Angel have some of the greatest homoerotic chemistry I've ever seen on film. In a way, Edgar Wright's first two movies have always gone hand in hand for me; Shaun starts out as a play on zombie movies and slowly morphs into an actually great zombie movie, whereas Hot Fuzz actually plays things pretty straight for a while before its insanely great finale where Angel finally embraces all the action movie tropes he'd previously dismissed and, consequently, makes all of Danny's dreams come true.
Having now seen The World's End twice, both times as a full Cornetto Trilogy triple feature, I'm mostly struck by just how different it is from its predecessors. The film addresses many of the same issues as Shaun and Hot Fuzz, particularly life in a small town and letting go of childhood, but World's End moves along a much darker trajectory. Pegg's Gary King is an absolute dick, unlikable on almost every level and yet somehow still charming in a greasy sort of way. He's a man who is totally unable to let go of the past, desperately trying to relive the best night of his life when he and his high school friends tried and failed to complete an epic, twelve stop pub crawl in their hometown of Newton Haven. While his friends have all grown and matured, Gary is still stuck in that moment, wearing the same clothes and driving the same car with the same mix tape in the cassette player. For him, that night was the pinnacle; he was leaving high school, he had his best mates and a load of booze and drugs and the whole rest of his life ahead of him, full of potential glory. But that glory never materialized and Gary simply has no idea how to cope. That's a feeling with which I can keenly identify. I think back to my high school and college days and it felt as if the world was mine to conquer, with unlimited opportunities to make my mark on humanity and achieve greatness. But as time marches on those possibilities are slowly whittled away until I'm left with only the consequences of the choices I've made, some regrettable but most having worked out for the best. Still, as I commute back and forth each day to an uninspiring job with little potential for personal or professional growth, it's hard not to lust after the promise of youth and the strange mix of opportunity and invincibility that only comes when you're 18 years old. In that way, I feel a sort of kinship with Gary King, even if he is a complete twat.
World's End features a very different structure from Wright's previous films, but it's sort of a requirement of the story he wants to tell. Shaun and Fuzz both actively play with the audience's expectations, which is part of what makes them so sharply effective. While Shaun and Ed remain in the dark about the growing zombie infestation until the last possible moment, the viewers are picking up all sorts of hints and nods in the background of the action or in the irony of the dialogue because we're aware that we're watching a zombie movie and we therefore know what's coming. Fuzz does the same with the tenets of buddy cop movies, so that we're laughing even though the characters are being deathly serious. That element is distinctly absent from World's End simply because the characters have to actually get to the small town of Newton Haven and then spend a bit of time there before the film can make that sharp left turn into robot/body snatcher territory. In fact, it takes about 20 minutes before the gang makes it to The First Post and another 20 minutes before the "blanks" (their name for robots) actually assert themselves into the story. There's nothing wrong with this structural shift and in fact I was quite enjoying just watching the five friends bickering and giving each other shit in a way that's very reminiscent of my own high school buddies. But for the serious Shaun/Fuzz fans out there, it is a little bit jarring, as is the decreased use of one of Wright's signature visual flourishes, the quick-cutting series of closeups that Darren Aronofsky referred to as "hip-hop montages" in his own work.
Okay, now let me stop and make one thing very clear:
This movie is FUCKING HYSTERICAL.
This is by far one of the funniest releases of the year, neck and neck with, appropriately enough, Seth Rogen's This Is The End. But The World's End is funny in a completely different sense of the word. I saw the movie a month ago at the Brattle and I saw it again this week at the Boston Common and I laughed just as hard (if not harder) the second time as the first. Part of that comes from the astounding number of layers and running gags present throughout the script, which are so dense and which come at you so quickly that there are many bits I didn't fully appreciate the first time through. My favorite is probably the "selective memory" joke, although there's also a great joke about theoretical band names as well as a long running debate about what to call the robots, in which Nick Frost gets a single line that I don't even recall hearing the first time through but which absolutely DESTROYED me on the second viewing. Not only is the dialogue clever as shit, but there's also an astounding layer of physical comedy throughout the numerous fight scenes. It's easy to see why Simon Pegg suggested I watch Legend Of Drunken Master, since all of the combat was so masterfully choreographed by Brad Allen of the Jackie Chan stunt team. The first fight, a five on five brawl in the men's room, as well as a later fight in which Gary is desperately trying to drink a pint while beating up a swarm of blanks both display a keen mix of both laugh out loud hilarity and bone-crunching blue carnage. The actual design of the blanks creates some fantastic opportunities for not only amusing visuals when they get damaged, but also some great fight moments - characters are frequently beating up the blanks with a severed mechanical arm that will suddenly turn on them and start fighting back, and there's one blank who swaps some limbs around in a way that both looks silly and makes for a memorable battle.
Here's the other thing: twelve pints in the course of a few hours is a LOT of booze, especially for a group of middle age guys whose days of serious drinking are long behind them. That means that the further into the film we go, not only does the sci-fi insanity increase, but so does our heroes' blood alcohol level, until they're not only stumbling and mumbling about the town, but they're also forced to form and execute some form of coherent plan for dealing with a terrifying menace while getting completely hammered. The idea that the guys would continue the pub crawl after learning the truth about Newton Haven makes no sense to the sober audience, but for our blitzed heroes it seems like the only logical course of action. There's plenty of comedy to be had along these lines and Wright smartly mines all of it, until eventually Gary finds himself trying to logic to robots to death like some kind of shitfaced Captain Kirk. It's marvelous.
There are a few movies that I've made a point to watch more than once before writing about them, (notably Star Trek Into Darkness and Man Of Steel) but none have made me appreciate that decision so much as The World's End. Wright and Pegg are masters of creating films that reward second and third viewings, building jokes that can only be appreciated once you know how things will play out. In Shaun, characters are constantly saying things that describe the ultimate fate of whoever they're talking to. ("Next time I see you, you're dead." Or my personal favorite, "If you want to live like an animal why don't you go live in the shed?") In The World's End, the opening flashback that depicts that fateful night 23 years prior also perfectly mirrors everything that will happen when the boys return to Newton Haven. And the last ten minutes of the film, which are COMPLETELY bonkers, is so packed with visual gags I still feel like there's more for me to discover.
As a final note, let me just describe my full viewing experience for you. The wonderful Brattle theater hosted the Three Flavours Cornetto Triple Feature at the end of July. I found out about the event a few weeks in advance, so I made sure that when tickets went on sale at 3:00 PM, I had my tickets by 3:01. Good thing too, as they apparently sold the place out in under five minutes. It was only later, after I had returned from Mexico, that I learned that Wright, Pegg and Frost would actually be in attendance for a Q&A, so suffice it to say I was pretty giddy. The movies themselves were great, but the Brattle really went above and beyond to make the night into something memorable. I made sure to purchase a "Virtual Pub Crawl" ticket which entitled me to a specially selected beer for each film.
Shaun Of The Dead featured Zombie Killer Cherry Cyser, which I found to be far too sweet.
Hot Fuzz was paired with The Bollocks, mostly due to the constable on the label.
And The World's End came with a bottle of the appropriately titled La Fin Du Monde, which was my favorite of the three brews.
And while the Brattle tried in earnest to provide us all with Cornettos, it turns out that Cornetto is owned by Good Humor, who does not allow the sale and distribution of that particular brand here in the Colonies. So instead we got the Cornetto's American cousin the King Cone, or as the Brattle called them, "Faux-Nettos."
Wright, Pegg and Frost were in terrifically good spirits, especially considering that they had just flown in that morning from Austin, Texas where the Alamo Drafthouse had thrown a similar event. They gave us some great insights into the film, including how they chose to deal with ideas like the individual vs. the collective ("It's our basic human right to be fuck ups!") and living in perpetual adolescence ("It's actually easier to deal with aliens than the fact that you're old or the town is shit."). They also hilariously dispelled one fan's notion that Shaun was secretly full of Deer Hunter references, an idea that seemed to stem primarily from the fact that Shaun eventually wears a red headband. Pegg even told the story of how he and Frost first became friends: they were out to dinner with a group of people and Frost was at the opposite end of the table, playing with the salt shaker and imitating the beeping noises of the little black wheeled droid on the Death Star that Chewie sends skittering down the hallway. Nobody else knew what he was doing except for Pegg, who described the feeling by singing, "Take My Breath Away."
So my hat is off to the Brattle for putting in the extra hard work to make it a stellar night, and thankfully The World's End is more than deserving of their efforts. This is easily one of my favorite movies of the summer and something that I simply cannot wait to own and watch again and again and again.
Fingers crossed for a badass Cornetto Triogy box set on Blu-ray.
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Title: The World's End
Director: Edgar Wright
Starring: Simon Pegg, Nick Frost, Martin Freeman, Paddy Considine, Eddie Marsan, Rosamund Pike, Rafe Spall
Year Of Release: 2013
Viewing Method: Theatrical - Brattle Theater
As a final note, let me just describe my full viewing experience for you. The wonderful Brattle theater hosted the Three Flavours Cornetto Triple Feature at the end of July. I found out about the event a few weeks in advance, so I made sure that when tickets went on sale at 3:00 PM, I had my tickets by 3:01. Good thing too, as they apparently sold the place out in under five minutes. It was only later, after I had returned from Mexico, that I learned that Wright, Pegg and Frost would actually be in attendance for a Q&A, so suffice it to say I was pretty giddy. The movies themselves were great, but the Brattle really went above and beyond to make the night into something memorable. I made sure to purchase a "Virtual Pub Crawl" ticket which entitled me to a specially selected beer for each film.
Shaun Of The Dead featured Zombie Killer Cherry Cyser, which I found to be far too sweet.
Hot Fuzz was paired with The Bollocks, mostly due to the constable on the label.
And The World's End came with a bottle of the appropriately titled La Fin Du Monde, which was my favorite of the three brews.
And while the Brattle tried in earnest to provide us all with Cornettos, it turns out that Cornetto is owned by Good Humor, who does not allow the sale and distribution of that particular brand here in the Colonies. So instead we got the Cornetto's American cousin the King Cone, or as the Brattle called them, "Faux-Nettos."
Wright, Pegg and Frost were in terrifically good spirits, especially considering that they had just flown in that morning from Austin, Texas where the Alamo Drafthouse had thrown a similar event. They gave us some great insights into the film, including how they chose to deal with ideas like the individual vs. the collective ("It's our basic human right to be fuck ups!") and living in perpetual adolescence ("It's actually easier to deal with aliens than the fact that you're old or the town is shit."). They also hilariously dispelled one fan's notion that Shaun was secretly full of Deer Hunter references, an idea that seemed to stem primarily from the fact that Shaun eventually wears a red headband. Pegg even told the story of how he and Frost first became friends: they were out to dinner with a group of people and Frost was at the opposite end of the table, playing with the salt shaker and imitating the beeping noises of the little black wheeled droid on the Death Star that Chewie sends skittering down the hallway. Nobody else knew what he was doing except for Pegg, who described the feeling by singing, "Take My Breath Away."
So my hat is off to the Brattle for putting in the extra hard work to make it a stellar night, and thankfully The World's End is more than deserving of their efforts. This is easily one of my favorite movies of the summer and something that I simply cannot wait to own and watch again and again and again.
Fingers crossed for a badass Cornetto Triogy box set on Blu-ray.
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Title: The World's End
Director: Edgar Wright
Starring: Simon Pegg, Nick Frost, Martin Freeman, Paddy Considine, Eddie Marsan, Rosamund Pike, Rafe Spall
Year Of Release: 2013
Viewing Method: Theatrical - Brattle Theater
Cornetto Week: INVASION OF THE BODY SNATCHERS (1978) Headlines The "Alternate Universe Cornetto Trilogy"
"Well why not a space flower? Why do we always expect metal ships?"Alright, so this one is a bit of a cheat in that I watched it over a month ago, but it was part of the Brattle's Cornetto festivities so I'm counting it anyway. You see, not only did the Brattle program the Cornetto Trilogy triple feature, but they also took it upon themselves to select an "Alternate Universe Cornetto Trilogy" on the preceding day - three films that acted as spiritual companions to Edgar Wright's three part comedic genre opus. So yes, I spent back-to-back days at the Brattle watching a double triple feature.
Two of the films I was already very familiar with, but I'd yet to see either of them in a theater. First up was the one I was most excited about, Peter Jackson's Dead Alive. If you're unfamiliar with this absurdly quotable New Zealand zombie gore-fest, man are you missing out. Dead Alive was a favorite of my high school A/V Crew, a movie that we had in our library of VHS tapes and played frequently after school or between classes. It's the tale of Lionel, a wimpy guy whose wealthy and overbearing mother gets bitten by a Sumatran rat monkey (rendered in grotesque stop-motion animation) and quickly morphs into a sort of zombified demon corpse. However, feeling guilty because she was attacked while he was on a date with the local shopkeeper, Lionel decides to hide her and an increasing number of victims in his basement while attempting to care for them so word doesn't get out around town. The film is equal parts disgusting and hysterical, utilizing buckets of blood and viscera splattered every which way until every inch of the frame is dripping red. The practical effects work is cartoonishly charming and by the time there's a demonic infant on the loose that is clearly a little person running around in baby pajamas and a rubber mask, I defy you not to have fallen in love with Dead Alive while simultaneously marveling that this is the same Oscar winning Peter Jackson who gave us the Lord Of The Rings trilogy.
In lieu of Hot Fuzz, we were treated to one of Danny Butterman's favorites, Michael Bay's Bad Boys II. It's hardly what I would call a "good movie" and I probably would have preferred Danny's other action classic Point Break (directed by fellow Oscar winner Katherine Bigelow) but I understand the choice. While the tale of an FBI agent undercover with a gang of surfing bank robbers in U.S. President masks is easily the better flick, it lacks that buddy cop dynamic that's such a crucial component of Hot Fuzz. Still, if you're a fan of utterly mindless shoot outs and vehicular destruction on a massive scale, it's hard to top Bad Boys II.
Finally, our World's End surrogate was the 1978 version of Invasion Of The Body Snatchers starring Donald Sutherland and Donald Sutherland's giant hair as a health inspector who discovers that people are becoming replaced with vacant, dead-eyed alien replicas. I remember reading Robert Heinlein's The Puppet Masters as a kid and hearing numerous comparisons between the two - there was even a film version of that book that also featured a much older Sutherland. In Puppet Masters the aliens are actually parasitic creatures that use humans as hosts, so I was somehow under the impression that Body Snatchers was the same, but the truth is far creepier. The film's fantastic opening depicts the alien organisms traveling through space "on solar winds," entering our atmosphere and blanketing the earth through condensation. The world's plant life is covered in alien tendrils that soon sprout flowers capable of duplicating sleeping humans through giant pods. The whole thing is actually played fairly subtle for a while, with omnipresent webs of wispy tendrils often visible in the background even before we start discovering the pod people. And the actual pods themselves are really fun to watch; at one point Sutherland falls asleep in a rooftop garden and we see a Sutherland-faced flower fetus taking shape next to him.
Jeff Goldblum is there doing Jeff Goldblum things, as is familiar "that lady" Veronica Cartwright, probably best known as "Not Sigourney Weaver" from Alien. But the one who really threw me for a loop was Leonard Fucking Nimoy as a famous psychiatrist. I have big love for Nimoy (a fellow Boston native) due to my many years as a Trekkie, but I'll admit that I'm largely unfamiliar with his work outside the context of the U.S.S. Enterprise. I know that after Star Trek went off the air in 1969 he had some trouble shaking off the image of Mr. Spock in the public consciousness, despite experiencing some moderate success with two seasons of Mission: Impossible. He even wrote a book called "I Am Not Spock", a title which helped foster the misconception that he actually hated Star Trek despite the fame it gave him. I understand that impulse as an actor, as success in Hollywood can often be a double edged sword. Once you gain notoriety for a role as iconic as Spock it becomes hard for audiences to accept you as anything else - they're just sitting there watching you in another movie thinking, "Hey look, that's Spock!" Within that in mind, Body Snatchers was kind of a brilliant move for Nimoy at the time. The heavy sci-fi subject matter and the fact that he's playing a largely cerebral psychoanalyst actually makes those Spock associations work in his favor, and when his character makes a dark turn late in the film it gets even better - now he's Evil Spock! Body Snatchers is the last film Nimoy made before returning to Starfleet in Star Trek: The Motion Picture and in a way that's kind of a shame. I'm curious where his career might have gone and what kind of movies Nimoy would have made without Star Trek to fall back on. He eventually got into directing (Three Men And A Baby!) but that stemmed largely from his success helming Star Trek III and IV, the latter of which was the most successful Star Trek movie of all time until J.J. Abrams showed up.
Body Snatchers obviously had a huge influence on The World's End. The idea of aliens who show up and replace/imitate humans is hardly special to Philip Kaufman's 1978 film, which is itself a remake of a 1956 film starring the great Kevin McCarthy, who also appears in this version. But the specific imagery of Kaufman's iteration is unmistakable in the third Cornetto film. The last shot of Body Snatchers is probably the single most memorable image of the whole film (I won't spoil it for you if you haven't seen it, because it really is pretty great) and it's something that Wright utilizes throughout the film as the robots' signature attack move.
The Alternate Universe Cornetto Trilogy was a perfect warm up act to the main attraction, and part of what inspired me to ask Wright, Pegg and Frost for more viewing suggestions at their Q&A the following day. Looking back, I'm really glad that I did, as a week of movies that so clearly helped shape the minds of those three talented Brits really gave me a whole new appreciation for The World's End on my second viewing. None of these movies are requirements in order to enjoy the final flavor of Cornetto, but if you have the time and the opportunity to give some of them a look, I promise it will only enhance your experience.
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Title: Invasion Of The Body Snatchers
Director: Philip Kaufman
Starring: Donald Sutherland, Brooke Adams, Jeff Goldblum, Veronica Cartwright, Leonard Nimoy, Kevin McCarthy
Year Of Release: 1978
Viewing Method: Theatrical - Brattle Theater
August 20, 2013
Cornetto Week: Boozing With THE LEGEND OF DRUNKEN MASTER
"A boat can float on water, but it can also sink in it."About a month ago I went to the Brattle theater for Edgar Wright's Cornetto Trilogy, a.k.a. The Blood And Ice Cream Trilogy. If you're unfamiliar, I'm talking about Shaun Of The Dead, Hot Fuzz and the upcoming The World's End, all of which were written and directed by Wright and star Simon Pegg, Nick Frost and a delicious frozen ice cream treat. As an added bonus, the triple feature was followed by a Q&A with Wright, Frost and Pegg, who had all flown in from a similar event at the Alamo Drafthouse in Austin, Texas the previous night. I'll have more on that experience in my write up for The World's End, (it was a goddamn blast) but during the Q&A I took the opportunity to ask the three comedy geniuses if they would each recommend a movie for me to watch and thankfully they were totally game. Well, except for Frost, who told me I should watch Andre, "the one about the seal." For the record, if I hadn't seen it multiple times growing up (it was one of my sister's favorites) I would have totally watched it.
I'll therefore be spending this week watching the films suggested by those lovable and hilarious Brits in the lead up to this Friday's release* of their comedic love letter to British pubs, The World's End.
This is Cornetto Week!
I had originally planned on watching Wright's first suggestion, Riki-Oh: The Story Of Ricky, but quite frankly I stopped watching after ten minutes because I was alone on the couch and I realized that this was a movie that begged to be seen with other people. So instead I switched to Simon Pegg's recommendation: The Legend Of Drunken Master, starring Jackie Chan as a headstrong student in the art of drunken boxing. Released in 1994, it's actually the sequel to 1978's Drunken Master, which bills itself as "the original kung fu comedy." I've never seen that movie either, but Pegg was adamant that I should watch the sequel, so I took him at his word.
Much like my recent lament of Eddie Murphy's downward career spiral, it can also be easy for us to forget why we all first fell in love with Jackie Chan. I still remember seeing Rumble In The Bronx with some friends in middle school and being absolutely astounded at some of the feats Chan pulled off. It's kind of like the first time I saw someone doing parkour: I had no idea that human beings really could do that! However, after the mainstream success of Rush Hour, Chan soon began starring in a plethora of super lame, uninspired Hollywood movies that seemed to neglect any kind of interesting storytelling in favor of "Jackie Chan doing Jackie Chan things." His jaw-dropping physical abilities continued to impress, but movies like The Medallion, The Tuxedo, The Accidental Spy and The Spy Next Door left a cloud of cynicism hanging over his career. Chan seemed willing to appear in anything so long as there was a paycheck attached, and even the promise of his top-notch martial arts skills and insistence on doing all of his own stunts couldn't outweigh the chore of sitting through these awful piles of crap. It was easier to just go back to his earlier films.
The Legend Of Drunken Master is a pretty perfect vehicle for Chan's particular blend of talents. The story is a little sprawling, starting with a simple accidental package swap and eventually turning into a revenge mission and a quest to protect striking workers while taking down a corrupt Western politician who's trying to steal historical artifacts. But at the heart of the movie is Wong Fei, a headstrong young man who has a penchant for fighting despite the wishes of his pacifist father. His preferred style is that of drunken boxing, in which the combatant always seems to be standing off balance and often looks as if he might fall over at any moment. Wong Fei is almost constantly fighting, whether for honor or for his life, and he utilizes a number of intricate moves with silly names like "drunk plays the flute" or "uncle stirs the wine barrel." Wong Fei calls out the moves in the midst of fisticuffs, but this narrated fighting actually pays dividends in the finale, as you watch Chan use those maneuvers and think to yourself, "Oh, that's the flute move!" But there's another level to drunken boxing. When Wong Fei is actually drunk, he essentially acquires superpowers, including increased strength and a higher tolerance for pain. This allows him to take on crowds of fighters in situations where he's hopeless outmatched and still emerge victorious. But there's also a tipping point: if he gets too drunk he loses coordination and can barely stand up, presenting some serious consequences to his incessant pugilism and a nice element of gravitas to his character arc.
All of the combat is excellent, especially a scene where Chan and director Chia-Liang Liu take on about a hundred black-clad members of The Axe Gang, but it's the drunk scenes that really shine through. After guzzling down multiple bottles of liquor (or in the case of the final showdown, some kind of lighter fluid) Chan's face turns bright red and he beats the snot out of his attackers while juggling bottles and grinning like a buffoon. And despite all the inherent comedy, (and there is a lot of it) it still feels like Chan is trying to push the boundaries of fully-staged, onscreen combat. There are inventive scenes, like a fight with a long spear that happens underneath a train car, so that Chan and Liu are both hunched over the entire time. At one point Chan fights off a crowd of ninjas with a giant bamboo pole that gets shredded on one side and then tied off with a shirt, thus becoming a wire-wisk-like trap for any encroaching enemy limbs. The final fight takes place in a steel factory and Chan is not only set on fire multiple times, but he also literally crab-walks over a bed of flaming coals. And thanks to Chan's penchant for showing outtakes during the credits, we know that Chan actually did the damn thing and was then promptly doused by fire extinguishers.
It's easy to see the connection between Drunken Master and The World's End. Both movies feature a lot of fighting while drinking, with the heroes flipping bottles and punching bad guys while desperately trying not to spill their tasty beverages. In fact, at one point in World's End Nick Frost's character fights off a crowd of robots by using a small barstool as a kind of gauntlet on each arm, a move lifted directly out of the Axe Gang fight from Drunken Master. This is clearly a movie that Pegg, Wright and Frost have not only watched multiple times, but have totally internalized over the years, and it's easy to see why it would be floating right on the forefront of Pegg's thoughts when I asked for a recommendation.
I feel like there are probably more subtle nods and homages throughout the combat of World's End. I'll admit that I was probably paying a bit more attention to the sci-fi and comedy aspects of the film than some of the larger mayhem. But that's the great thing about movies: each one informs the next in new an interesting ways. I now can't wait to see the movie again with a closer eye on the fight scenes to see what else there is to discover.
*FYI, a number of theaters nationwide are also showing the full Cornetto Trilogy this coming Thursday, including the AMC and Regal Entertainment chains. If you're in Boston, it'll be playing at the Boston Common AMC (where I'll be for my second helping) as well as the Regal Fenway. Amazingly enough, tickets are currently still available for both theaters.
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Title: The Legend Of Drunken Master
Director: Chia-Liang Liu
Starring: Jackie Chan, Lung Ti, Anita Mui, Felix Wong, Chia Liang Liu, Andy Lau
Year Of Release: 1994
Viewing Method: Netflix DVD
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