Saturday, September 25, 2021

Happy National Comic Book Day


 September 25th is National Comic Book Day.  Movies based on comic books have become huge financial successes often filling many of the spots on the top grossing movie charts every year.  Those movies get plenty of attention so we celebrated with something a little more obscure, Cellar Dweller.  So break out the comics, start some shit, read the blog and then enjoy Cellar Dweller.


Trailer

CELLAR DWELLER TRAILER


Questions

Jon:  I don’t know what kind of pens those are but I hate them.  I always got covered in ink.  What are they?

Sandy:  It looked like a calligraphy pen. I love how the work comes out when someone uses them, it’s especially great for that type of comic, but I think the scratching against the paper would drive me insane. Would you use what was clearly some kind of satanic demon conjuring spell-book as direct “inspiration” for your graphic novel word bubbles?

Jon:  I wouldn’t because I couldn’t draw that shit but I think it’s a reasonable source.  How weirded out would you be if your art came to life?

Sandy:  That would make me very nervous. I’d be surrounded by by armless women with huge asses and thighs, or worm bodies, abnormally shaped and sized mouths and eyes, and tits with nipples that did the things their hands should be doing. I’d have an army of whimsical terror. Would the newly “born” artwork have to be evil, or could it be here to do good for the world? I like to imagine that I could tag buildings and underpasses with these ladies and that they’d come alive to help fight injustice. Not like Batman fighting small time criminals, but like infiltrating governments and enforcing universal healthcare and income, ending world hunger and poverty, maybe eating the rich.

Jon:  No they have to be evil.  That’s the rules.  If you find a dead body in your house and your explanation is that a demon you drew came to life and killed her, are you going to jail?  Would anyone believe you?

Sandy:  I think you’d likely end up in one of those prisons for the mentally insane and that once you were there you might be able to find people who believed your story. They’d be other inmates/patients, but I think that still counts. Why didn’t he help the chick who appeared in the basement with that demon thing he accidentally brought to life? He just ran away!!!??!!

Jon:  Every man or woman for themself.  You have to try to get away from the demon.  In what fashion would your artwork kill you?  Strangled by pendulous boobs?

Sandy:  I don’t think it would have to do anything, I think I’d drop dead of a heart attack on my own. BUT IF I DIDN’T, they would most likely use their prehensile nipples to stab or strangle me and maybe eat me with their giant oversized mouths. The first time you watched this movie, did you check to see if it had somehow skipped to the end right away? It escalated so quickly, I thought something was wrong with the streaming file and that it had begun at the end of the movie. 

Jon:  I was a little surprised by how briefly Jeffrey Combs was in it but it made sense since he was so low in the cast.  Should the cabbie have left the meter running?

Sandy:  That fucking guy. He probably would have made twice as much money if he had. I would have wanted to charge HIM for the extra time he took from my life that I’d never be getting back. Have you ever had a weird cabbie experience? If so, what happened?!  

Jon:  I’ve had a weird experience with a cabbie caused by one of the people with me.  On the way to my bachelor party, one of the guys got obliterated on pills and decided to be rude to the cabbie who was happily talking on his bluetooth.  Said fellow passenger demanded, sloppily, that the cabbie should talk to us so the cabbie turned almost 180 degrees in his seat and said “I’m talking to you now.”  Our man, who we’ll call Tad, responded with the meekest hello in response.  But Tad was not done making things awkward in that cab.  He then asked the cabbie where he could get some coke.  The cabbie, perhaps wishfully thinking, tried to clarify that he wanted Coca Cola but that wasn’t the kind of coke Tad wanted.  This led to an anti-drug lecture from the cabbie.  The cab driver wound up getting an amazing tip as we sheepishly exited the cab, dragging a largely non-functioning Tad behind us.  Will broads chew your ear off?

Sandy:  If you make us angry enough. Van Gogh was smart… he knew the way straight to a woman’s heart was to cut his own ear off and save us the work later on. Seriously though, I think I’d have started screaming and run out of the cab just to get away from his fucking endless babbling. Years of working retail and being forced to deal with that shit on a daily basis has eroded my patience. Have you ever experienced a talker that’ll just keep going and going with zero participation from you, to the point where you just stay quiet to see how long they’ll go for on their own?

Jon:  Oh yeah that’s kind of a regular occurrence although sometimes I think people do it to me.  How long did it take you to figure out who played Mrs. Briggs?

Sandy:  I saw her name in the opening credits, so I knew who she was before she ever appeared on the screen. 

Jon:  Do you think anyone would be there if it were up to Mrs. Briggs?

Sandy:  Just that one twat Amanda maybe. She seemed pretty bitter, like maybe her artistic career hadn’t gone the way she had wanted and now she’s also older and feeling even less relevant. I think I’ve just talked myself into feeling badly for her. I know this breaks the sequential order of questions/movie events, but was Mrs. Briggs the demon the whole time? I was confused by that because it seemed that the demon was brought to life by someone giving it physical representation through artwork, but then Mrs. Briggs turned into the demon when she and Whitney were in her office and I started wondering if we were supposed to believe that Mrs. Briggs had been the demon the whole time and that maybe it was dormant in her until someone drew it to life again??? What are your thoughts on that?    

Jon:  Based on Mrs. Briggs’ fate, I don’t think she was a demon.  I think the scene in the office was a demon induced hallucination.  If the hallucinations start day one, should you stay?

Sandy:  That’s a big fuck no for me. Though I can understand some people being into it because it might prompt more interesting artwork potentially. Like the people who take drugs for creative inspiration? “I’m sorry, did I wake you?” Would you have been able to sleep through someone screaming at the absolute top of their lungs in the middle of the fucking night? If the hallucinations hadn’t sent me running for the hills, I think that shit would have done it.

Jon:  Given my numerous sleep issues, it may be a bit surprising to know that I probably would have.  Once I’m asleep, there’s very little that will wake me.  Did you know that Brian Robbins, who played Phillip, directed 2 of my least favorite Eddie Murphy movies, Meet Dave and fucking Norbit?

Sandy:  Ha! I did not know that. I don’t think I’ve seen either one of those movies though. Do you agree with Phillip’s sentiment that Mrs. Briggs doesn’t think much of him because he’s “brilliant”?

Jon:  God no.  Phillip’s artwork looked like the creation of a drunken 4 year old.  I think she didn’t like him because he was kind of a tool.  Does Phillip have any actual artistic ability?

Sandy:  Yes. Art is subjective. Each viewer will feel their own way about a piece of artwork, no matter how it’s executed. A hyper-realistic oil painting portrait takes an incredible amount of skill to create, but it’s unlikely to elicit the same reaction from me personally as seeing an original Dr. Seuss doodle. Did Norman really just act out a scene from his story using REAL BULLETS in his real gun, and shooting an actual sculpture inside the house???? How did Whitney know so much about that gun and whether or not there were any other bullets in it?

Jon:  Of course Norman did because he was such a wannabe author of hard-boiled crime noir detective novels.  Whitney is clearly a ballistics expert when not ripping off other people’s comics.  I think she testified in many high profile cases.  Does anyone like Whitney?

Sandy:  Didn’t Phillip and Lisa get along well with her? It seemed like everyone thought Amanda was a bit of a bitch though. Mrs. Briggs too. It seemed like Lisa could hear the same creature noises coming from the basement that Whitney heard, yet Lisa seemed completely unconcerned about it… would you be able to sleep and live in a house where unexplained ghoulish screeching and growling randomly came out of the basement like that??? On top of the explained screaming done by your housemate?!

Jon:  I’ve figured it out so far.  You should hear the noises that come from our crawl space at night made by Alison’s “Friends”.  Do you think this is an exclusive art school or just a really unpopular one?

Sandy:  It definitely did not seem like an art school to me. More of an artist residency. I did one of those in Vermont right after I graduated college. I loved it. Actually, I kind of wish I could live in that scenario permanently. Not the one from the movie, but the residency I actually went to. Do you think the artists who conjured the demon had any control over what it did, or do you think they drew the scenes they did because the demon had some power over them?

Jon:  I think they did initially but as time passed the demon got stronger and could create its own scenes.  Wait Whitney and Amanda are supposed to be approximately the same age?

Sandy:  I think so, though when I was in college there were students in my year who were older. I feel like Amanda kind of looked like a middle-aged mom and Whitney looked like someone who had been working for a newspaper in New York City. Whitney kind of reminded me of the women from 9 to 5 and now I want to see Cellar Dweller remade with the characters Jane Fonda, Dolly Parton, and Lily Tomlin played in that. HOW MUCH MONEY WOULD YOU PAY TO SEE THAT MOVIE??? They would own that demon.

Jon:  I would pay exactly $9.16 which is the average price of a movie ticket.  Why are the pages of Colin’s book stuck together?

Sandy:  … why are the pages of YOUR book stuck together, Jon?!

Jon:  I dip my fingers in strawberry jam before I read.  Doesn’t everyone?  Would you have dropped out of this shitty school?

Sandy:  I don’t consider this place a school officially. No one is “teaching” anything. Everyone just does their own thing and occasionally gathers to review each other’s works. It would be fun, and a learning experience in it’s own way, but if I had gone there expecting it to be a “school”, I’d definitely be surprised and possibly not stay? Also, demon in the basement. How did nobody hear what was going on with Amanda while she was being attacked? Wasn’t that house full of people?

Jon:  Comic book demons cause deafness when you’re in their presence.  Didn’t Whitney say she was creating her own cartoons?  Doesn’t her work strongly resemble Colin’s still?

Sandy:  I think she meant creating her own content. She admired Colin’s artistic style and emulated it, but wanted to create her own comics/graphic novel stories. Basically, she wanted to write with pictures I guess? 

Jon:  Did Amanda get what she deserved?

Sandy:  For sure. She was a fucking gross person. Who would be in the most trouble if you could conjure an art demon?

Jon:  I decline to answer on the grounds that it could cost me my job.  Ever actually slipped on a banana peel?

Sandy:  Surprisingly, no. I’m much more likely to trip over my own feet or shuffle my toe into the grout groove on a tiled floor and lose my balance that way. (Yes, I have actually done that.) What’s the most ridiculous way you have injured yourself?

Jon:  Maybe the time I fell off a ladder at work while trying to climb onto a stockroom shelf to hide.  Or when I scratched my cornea with a box flap.  Broke my foot playing with middle schoolers.  Plantar fasciitis from playing video games.  Actually now that I think about it, most of my injuries have been the result of ridiculousness.  Have you always heard that grown women sleep in the nude?

Sandy:  Ask your mom. OHHHHH! Haha. Seriously though, I hate pajamas.

Jon:  Are any of these art students actually talented?

Sandy:  YES! Talent is also subjective! What’s your definition of talent?

Jon:  The ability to create a watercolor painting that a drunken 4 year old could paintWhat the fuck is going on with Lisa interpretative dance routine?  Is it just the Jane Fonda workout with dolls and knives?

Sandy:  “Death is sad.” What would you do as a performance art piece? It could be literally anything. THINK OF SOMETHING AND HAVE ALISON FILM YOU DOING IT PLEASE AND THANK YOU.

Jon:  I call it “Life Is Sad” and it’s basically just me curled into the fetal position crying about the state of things.  I’ve been practicing since 1985.  Why is Norman even in an art school?

Sandy:  Writing is an art! Wouldn’t you want to go somewhere to write without a care in the world, leaving regular life behind for a few weeks? I guess that’s not the best example of a place to go where you “won’t have a care in the world” though.

Jon:  I would do anything to leave the world behind for a few weeks so I don’t have to perform “Life Is Sad” anymore.  Was her dance “hard on” you too?

Sandy:  I went to school for art. I’ve seen (and probably done) things wayyyy more painful to watch than that dance. It was pretty bad though. 

Jon:  Why did Norman put gloves on to take Whiney’s comic strip?  Isn’t the suspect pool small enough that he’d be a suspect anyway?

Sandy:  The real question for me is why sneak into someone’s studio and then smoke while you’re in there? The smell of smoke lingers, so I don’t really get that if you’re trying to be subtle. Was there no blood left behind in Amanda’s room? How did Norman not see any evidence of the attack outside of the video he watched? The inside doorknob was still gone, so I can’t quite grasp on to the idea that things reset themselves after Amanda was eaten.

Jon:  The demon works very hard to cover his tracks and make it look like people are just out for the day.  Is Phillip’s life story interesting enough to get you to go for a walk with him?

Sandy:  I’m almost always interested in hearing people’s life stories. I also quite enjoy walks. 

Jon:  Wait, is this a colony or a school now?  Are they basically the same?

Sandy:  A colony and a school are not the same in my mind, but maybe that’s because I think of a school as being more institutionally structured and rigid. You go here at this time, there at that time, you eat in this room when we tell you to, etc etc. Like prison. 

Jon:  Was Whitney not making any sense?

Sandy:  Whitney definitely snapped her twig, but I can’t say for sure that I would have done any better in her shoes. Whitney figured out that she could bring everyone back by writing them all back into existence too, but then had to watch them all burn alive in front of her because she put their portraits into the fire with the demon artwork… why didn’t she just burn the images of the demon? And why did the demon come back after she’d burned the images? Was it just because she had imagined it again?

Jon:  I don’t think burning the pages did anything to rid her of the demon and the demon forced her to throw the other drawings into the fire too.  What does White Off look like?

Sandy:  It looks like White Out or Gesso, JON. You creep. Soooo, if the demon was still able to reappear after Whitney burned the images of it, wouldn’t it die again after killing Whitney, since there would be no one there any longer to give it life through their imagination? Isn’t that incentive for the demon to NOT kill the artist who revived it?

Jon:  I think the demon understood he had a limited lifecycle and that it was tied to how long Whitney lived.  Once all the residents were dead he had nothing further to do.  

Lessons

  1. Don’t try to ruin an artist’s career.  Or anyone’s for that matter even if you don’t appreciate what they do.

  2. If there are only 5 students, don’t go to that school.  It’s probably not a school but some weird place where you can summon a demon.

  3. Don’t become obsessed with cartoonists who conjured demons.  You will probably repeat the mistakes made by the cartoonist.

  4. Don’t steal people’s art.  Just don’t steal.  You never know what weird demon is going to come after you.

Tuesday, September 21, 2021

National New York Day


 September 21st is National New York Day.  It’s a day to celebrate the Big Apple in all its glory.  There are so many great options but we wanted one that fit a certain time period and feel, the grimy, dangerous New York of the late 1970s and early 1980s so we went with Maniac.  So hail to the concrete jungle, spread the news, read the blog and watch Maniac.


Trailer

Maniac (1980) Official Trailer [HD]


Questions

Jon:  Is there anything more fun than the person complaining about being cold?

Sandy:  Maybe a person complaining about being hot? I complain a lot about being hot. And also about being tired. Weeeee!!! What's your favorite thing to complain about?

Jon:  Work and the continued reality that I have to go to any job and that I can’t stay home and watch movies with cats all day.  How sexy is Joe Spinell waking up sweating and screaming?  The correct answer is very.

Sandy:  .....

Jon:  Boxers or briefs?  Can you imagine if Joe Spinell’s choice was briefs?

Sandy:  I was actually quite disappointed that he wore boxers. It didn't feel right. Briefs would have been way creepier and more fitting (no pun intended), but maybe it would also have been TOO obvious, if that makes sense. What would be your underwear style of choice for your own psychotic killing spree?

Jon:  The same as any other day.. NONE!  What is the Ultimate?

Sandy:  I can't even remember this reference clearly enough to give my opinion. I have a vague memory of it but can't get a full grip and I am not watching it again to try and figure it out. I'm throwing this question back to you, suckaaaa.

Jon:  I’m guessing it involves any and every sexual act known to man and beast OR they’re going to play frisbee.  Why would you pay extra for the TV in the No Tell Motel?

Sandy:  To distract yourself from the fact that you're in the No Tell Motel? To cover the sounds of your victim's screaming? Have you ever stayed at one of these types of motels? If so, did you allow your body to touch any surfaces or did you stand in the center of the room like a mummy on display at a history museum?

Jon:  In my first attempt at college, we got a room at a No Tell Motel to have a party.  I got super drunk and probably touched every surface in that room with every part of my body.  I had no long term side effects except the fluorescent stool.  If you were a prostitute, would you avoid Joe Spinell?

Sandy:  I don't think I'd be a very good street prostitute precisely because I'd be avoiding all the dudes I deemed creepy, which would effectively leave me with zero men to choose from as paying customers. I MIGHT be able to deal with more of a call girl situation, where people can be sort of vetted first. Would you consider prostitution as a career choice if things got rough?   

Jon:  I would consider it even if times weren’t tough though I suspect times would be a lot tougher if I were relying on people paying me for sex.  How bold do you have to be to lug a dead body around New York City in a garbage bag?

Sandy:  I thought it was a dead body at first too, but when he got back to his apartment and opened up the bag, it was a fresh mannequin. Before that scene though, I could be heard loudly exclaiming to the air in my living room "look at this motherfucker carrying a dead bitch around the city with him like it's no big deal!? How come no one has stopped him or called the cops about it??" I guess that's the way to do it though, just act natural like you aren't doing anything wrong and likely no one will pay attention. How would you transport a dead body somewhere if you didn't have access to a car?

Jon:  I would use one of those little red wagons or maybe a stagecoach.  You know, anything inconspicuous.  How creepy is it when Frank is talking to his mannequins?

Sandy:  It's pretty creepy, Jon... pretty effing creepy. Though I can be heard cursing at random things when they fall or won't open or whatevvs. What inanimate objects do you talk to?  And why?

Jon:  I talk to the TV a lot but I think everyone does that.  Do you immediately assume that there’s a gun in the violin/guitar case when you see someone carrying one?

Sandy:  Never assume. It makes an ASS out of U and ME. They taught me that in Defensive Driving class. It's one of the only things I remember. I think because I used to be in orchestra and will forever be a dork at heart in general, I always just wonder what type of instrument they play and if they're in a band. Have you ever played an instrument or carried a weapon in a violin/guitar case?

Jon:  I have played many instruments including the piano and tuba.  I was actually kinda good.  I’m not allowed to have a gun but I want to have one in a guitar case just once.  I think it would be pretty cool.  Is this the best reason to not have sex in a car?

Sandy:  It's within the top ten reasons. The best reason not to have sex in a car though is that there's no way for it to be comfortable. Ever. MAYYYYBE if you have some kind of huge car with a bed in it. (I'm not counting campers or converted vans.) HAVE YOU AND ALISON EVER GOTTEN BUSY IN A CAR???

Jon:  Alison and I have not but I did with someone else.  It was not comfortable nor overly enjoyable.  Does sex under the Verrazano Bridge sound like fun or super gross?

Sandy:  Yeah, that's just super gross for me. I don't even like driving near the Verrazano bridge. Have you ever been to Staten Island? Why? WHY JON??? WHY GO THERE EVER??

Jon:  Never been probably never will.  Do you hate subways as much as I do?

Sandy:  I hate subways SO MUCH. I once walked from Grand Central to the end of Manhattan to avoid the fucking subway. 

Jon:  Where did all the people on the subway platform go?  When the nurse was on the platform as the subway left there were a bunch of people in the reflection but when the camera went back to her, they were all gone.

Sandy:  That sounds like one for the bloopers reel! I didn't notice that reflection part. Good catch!

Jon:  Is hiding in the bathroom ever a good idea?

Sandy:  Not unless the bathroom is where you keep your weapons stash. Where would your ideal hiding spot be in a similar situation?

Jon:  I think in this situation hiding is actually the absolute worst decision.  I’d keep running.  It’s New York City.  Eventually you’ll run into a crowd of people and Frank won’t kill you in front of witnesses.   How many different ways can Frank kill you?

Sandy:  We're all only truly as limited as our own imaginations, Jon. Frank is only as limited as his own imagination and how much control he has over himself, which is nothing. So... I don't know actually. At least as many different ways as he killed the people in this movie. Do you think Frank had been killing people since his mother died, or do you think his psychotic break was more recent?

Jon:  I think Frank was killing people before that since I think he killed his mom too.  Is it just a little blood?  Will it wash out?

Sandy:  No and no.

Jon:  Is a guy telling you that you're the most beautiful girl he’s ever seen since his mother flattering or weird?

Sandy:  Yuck. 100% no thank you. I'd say "thank you" if someone said it to me and then I'd find an excuse to get as far away as possible as quickly as possible. There are all sorts of red flags in that compliment. Unless he means personality-wise I guess. Even then it might give me the willies. What would go through your mind if a woman told you you were the most handsome man she'd ever seen since her father?

Jon:  I would think it was a little weird but it feels less weird from that perspective.  I think society has made it more acceptable for a woman to view her dad that way but guys talking about how good their mother looks is always creepy but then again the way guys talk about women often borders on creepy.  When Frank killed Rita did he lie to her?  She asked him not to kill her and he said he’d only make it so she could never leave.  Does he believe that’s what he did?

Sandy:  He for sure believes that's what he did and because of that I don't think it qualifies as lying. Like, can it be a lie if the person telling it believes that it's true? It can be FALSE, but if they aren't mentally stable enough to understand that, then they aren't really lying. What's the dumbest or most obvious lie you've ever told and why did you tell it?

Jon:  I’m a terrible liar.  I have so many tells I can’t get away with it often but when I try it’s usually been to avoid trouble or embarrassment.  The dumbest one was that I claimed to have seen The Exorcist for like 15 years before I actually saw it.  Is it weird seeing the Twin Towers in a movie?

Sandy:  I was watching and waiting to see if they'd go back and erase them like I'm pretty sure they did with one of the spiderman movies not long after 9/11 happened. It is pretty surreal to see them there, knowing what their future would hold. Do you feel the same way when a person meets with a violent or untimely end? Like if you see SNL skits with Phil Hartman, do you immediately think about what his batshit wife did?

Jon:  I don’t do it with people as much.  Seeing Phil Hartman or someone who died like that doesn’t affect me as much as seeing OJ in a movie or watching a movie Harvey Weinstein produced does.    Do you think that telling Frank that his mother’s death was a long time ago actually helped him?

Sandy:  Ha! No. I'm not sure Frank has any concept of time to begin with anyway. At least not when he goes into full psycho killer mode. 

Jon:  Do you think Frank’s mother really died in a car crash?

Sandy:  Fuck no. He absolutely killed his dear mother during a psychotic break and then re-lived it over and over again through all of his lady victims. Do you think he might have killed his mother and her "John" while she was turning a trick? He definitely seems to want to kill the dudes some of these ladies are with just as much as he wants to kill the ladies.

Jon:  I think that’s likely.  Like I said, I think he definitely killed his mom.  I don’t think he necessarily enjoys killing the guys.  They’re more like collateral damage.  He doesn’t mind that they’re dead but it doesn’t excite him.  Sounds like Frank’s relationship with his mother was great doesn’t it?

Sandy:  Only slightly more fucked up than my relationship with my own mother. Ha! Sorry Mom, though I doubt you'll ever read this. Does this movie make you wish therapy was a requirement for all people beginning in childhood?

Jon:  Yes but I don’t think it would have helped Frank.  He seemed like the kind of guy who would lie to a therapist or at least leave things out.  Who stabbed Frank?

Sandy:  Frank totally stabbed himself during one of his delusional fits. Were those even cops that came in and saw him on the bed all covered in blood? They burst in there and didn't even check his fucking pulse. They were just like, "Yiiiiikes, I'm out."

Jon:  Yeah they wanted nothing to do with that mess.  I imagine that would be my reaction to walking into a room and finding a guy with a machete in his chest and scalps nailed to mannequins.

 

Lessons

  1. Don’t have sex in the car.  It’s terribly uncomfortable and you never know what kind of creep is lurking in the shadows watching and plotting.

  2. If mom says don’t leave the park, don’t leave the park.  It turned out ok in Maniac but it usually doesn’t.  Listen to mom she knows stuff.

  3. Don’t keep so many mannequins in your apartment  They take up a lot of space, it’s definitely creepy and you never know when they will experience brief sentience and murder you.

Merry Christmas Part 4!!

  As we prepare to ring in a new year, we have one final Christmas movie.  In Christmas Evil , Harry Stadling is obsessed with Christmas and...