Saturday, January 19, 2019

A Review of "The Room" (1/3)


You know. I've always wanted to blow open this turkey. The often-proclaimed "worst movie of all time" has stayed off my radar for quite some time, and with good reason; it's entertaining as hell. But what makes it "The worst movie of all time"? Well, if you've never seen it, you're about to receive one hell of an awakening. You see, there exists a man of indeterminable origin, or at the very least it was indeterminable for the longest time until very recently. A man hailing from Europe, then New Orleans, and then LA. A man who had a dream just to make a movie and to entertain, to be an actor and to be a superstar; that man's name is Tommy Wiseau, and thanks to his magnum opus The Room, Tommy Wiseau is now more well-known than ever. He's an internet celebrity, a minor Hollywood celebrity, a TV show creator, a film director, writer, entrepreneur and most of all, actor. Tommy Wiseau is the living proof that your dreams can come true, yes, but he's also living proof that it may not always be how you want it to be.

Juliette Danielle, "Lisa"
As far as The Room goes, the story is pretty generic but the 'badness' comes from how poorly executed and written it is. Wiseau plays "Johnny", a banker who has it all going for him. When Johnny's fiancee Lisa cheats on him with his best friend Mark, Johnny realizes that even if you can have everything, you can have it all taken away from under you... and that's about it. The rest of the movie is riddled with ridiculous, unnecessary scenes and filler dialogue that goes nowhere and does nothing. So many subplots don't go anywhere, are often mentioned once and then dropped, and much of the dialogue and lingo used by the characters is quite laughable in all honesty. Many of the actors, no, all of the actors are either DOA or try way too hard for such meaningless and small roles. It's just one of those movies that must be seen to be believed. Even only recently, a lot of the turmoil and inappropriate and often uncomfortable levels of hilarity behind-the-scenes were guarded secrets until the book The Disaster Artist was written by the film's co-star, Greg Sestero, who plays Johnny's friend "Mark" and also a real-life close friend of Wiseau's and fellow beneficiary of The Room's cult status as a really good awful movie. Sestero was also Tommy Wiseau's roommate in LA when both were looking to break into the film industry and when neither were having much luck, they both opted to work together on their own film, and that planted the seeds for what would become The Room.

Philip Haldiman, "Denny"
Much of the hilarity was unintentional. Tommy Wiseau argued for many years that the film was intended to be a farce of a love story but a lot of crew members and cast members debate this, especially Sestero. The Room was originally intended to be a true love story and a dramatic piece of cinema, but a lot of it did not come across this way and the film was received humorously by those who viewed it. As displayed in The Disaster Artist film adaptation by James Franco, Tommy Wiseau was visibly annoyed or upset in the film's premiere at the laughter and humorous response the movie's dramatic elements were getting. Many film critics and viewers attribute this to Wiseau's accent and his poor acting chops. Many of the crew members had to conceal their laughter about what they were witnessing as during shooting live scenes, the cameraman began to laugh so hard the camera would shake during takes. Some of the lines Wiseau's character Johnny gives are ridiculous, cheesy, over-the-top, they make no sense or are just completely unnecessary. In fact, Wiseau was so bad at reciting his dialogue on camera that, according to Greg Sestero, Wiseau required thirty-two takes for the infamous "I did not hit her" scene. Thirty-one takes were unusable as Tommy either couldn't remember his lines, flubbed them, tripped over objects, looked directly into the camera or anything in between. According to Juliette Danielle, the actress who plays Tommy's on-screen cheating fiance Lisa, when Tommy Wiseau said the line, "In a few minutes, bitch," everyone on the set began laughing at him. Wiseau then emerged from the bathroom and demanded to know what was so funny, leaving an awkward situation made worse by Tommy's demands to take everything's seriously.

Greg Sestero, "Mark"
Many of Wiseau's behind-the-scenes decisions were also heavily questioned by pretty much all those involved in production of the film. The just-as-infamous scene in which Johnny rises from his slumber and exposes his buttocks on camera was heavily, heavily argued against keeping in the final cut by everyone but Wiseau, who reportedly fought to keep it in because "either his ass is in this movie or it won't sell." Wiseau also reportedly held information about the characters away from the actors who played them. Wiseau once reported that the character of Denny, played by Philip Haldiman, had a mental disorder to explain his poor acting and weird line delivery and behaviors in the film. The only hangup was that Philip himself was not informed about this during casting, filming, or even for some time after the movie's release. Juliette Danielle also was incredibly uncomfortable with the amount of love scenes that were in the movie. After filming the first one, Wiseau demanded a second, but Danielle refused, so unused shots from the first were cobbled back together and put into the movie for a second one. To make matters worse, unlike most movies, where the sets are generally closed while filming nude sequences, Tommy Wiseau insisted that the set be open while filming the long love scene between Lisa and Johnny, upsetting both Danielle and Greg Sestero. Tommy Wiseau also reportedly actually made Juliette Danielle cry when he pointed out that she had pimples, and everyone heard it. According to Greg Sestero, Tommy Wiseau originally intended on providing a subplot in the movie to explain that Johnny was, in fact, a vampire. Yeah, you read that right. Sestero recounts how, at the outset of production, Wiseau tasked members of the crew with figuring out a way to execute a sequence in which Johnny's Mercedes-Benz would lift off from the roof of the townhouse and fly across the San Francisco skyline, revealing Johnny's vampiric nature. In fact, in the original script, the rooftop scene with Chris-R features Tommy as a vampire in a car hovering over the building. The one and only reason that the subplot wasn't included in shooting and release was that Wiseau decided to drop it after learning that there was no practical way to film the flying car scene on the production's budget.


Fan art referring to the vampire subplot
Speaking of the script, you'd think that since it was just a generic "love betrayed" story, it'd be a pretty simple script to read and act from. Far from it. Aside from the 'vampire story arc', there were also a ton of elements in the script that were cut and re-written because the crew found the script completely unusable in its current state. The original script was significantly longer than the one used during filming and featured a series of lengthy monologues. It was edited on-set by the cast and script supervisor, who found much of the dialogue incomprehensible. Speaking to Entertainment Weekly, one anonymous cast member claimed that the script contained "stuff that was just unsayable. I know it's hard to imagine there was stuff that was worse. But there was." To give you a better idea of how bad the script writing process was, while writing one scene with Lisa and her mother, Tommy Wiseau had Lisa talking on the phone with Claudette, and then the scene ended with Lisa walking her mother to the door because Wiseau had genuinely forgot they were on the phone. The story is also pretty loosely defined in and of itself. Despite Mark and Johnny's friendship being an integral part of the story they do not talk with each other until just about thirty-eight minutes into the movie. Which seems humorously ironic since in the final film, there are seven mentions of Johnny and Mark being best friends. Often at screenings of the film, attendees loudly count these mentions.


Tommy Wiseau, "Johnny" as well
as writer, producer & director
By the end of production, morale among the crew was so low and laughable that nobody tried anymore. This resulted in many of the "Damn you Todd Barron" chants you hear at the screenings as cinematographer Todd Barron removed his name from the clapperboard so as not to have anything to do with production any longer. Several shots of San Francisco are out of focus, simply because the crew didn't bother checking the lenses on the cameras prior to shooting. In fact, many shots that made it into the final movie had giggling crew members sneaking into the background simply because they didn't care if the camera was rolling or not. The actors were fed up with Wiseau and his sadistic behavior behind-the-scenes, ultimately resulting in a very poor, laughable movie that nobody wanted to be a part of. Sestero even wrote in The Disaster Artist that his venomous delivery of "Keep your stupid comments in your pocket," is due to him channeling all the frustrations of the shoot and imagining he was actually yelling "Why are you doing this to me?" to Tommy himself. 

As production wrapped, most of the cast & crew were utterly convinced that the movie wasn't going to be seen by anyone. Some even took bets on it. According to SesteroWiseau submitted the film to Paramount Pictures, hoping to get them as the distributor. Usually, it takes about two weeks to get a reply. This movie however was rejected within 24 hours. Nevertheless, The Room in all its glory was released on June 27th, 2003 in LA. The premiere, as depicted in The Disaster Artist, was understandably embarrassing for all those involved. The film was promoted almost exclusively through a single billboard in Hollywood, located on Highland Avenue just north of Fountain, featuring an image Tommy Wiseau refers to as "Evil Man": an extreme close-up of his own face with one eye in mid-blink. Although more conventional artwork was created for the film, featuring the main characters' faces emblazoned over the Golden Gate Bridge, Wiseau chose the "Evil Man" for what he regarded as its provocative quality; around the time of the film's release, the image led many passers-by to believe that The Room was a horror film. Despite the film's failure to enjoy immediate success, Wiseau paid to keep the billboard up for over five years, at the cost of $5,000 a month. Its bizarre imagery and longevity led to it becoming a minor tourist attraction.

So what makes The Room itself such a turd and a bomb that it was ridiculed as being "The single worst movie ever made?" Check in Part Two and we'll give the movie a watch.

Tuesday, January 1, 2019

A Review of "The X-Files" (season 4)


Happy 2019 to all who continue to give me those pageviews. Your attention is most appreciated. Well, I was going to do reviews of all of the Harry Potter movies, but feedback I've gotten was less than stellar. So, in typical 'me' fashion, I'm canning that idea and rerouting to future ideas. I need something else to write about, but in the meantime, I forgot about the seasons of The X-Files I need to finish. So I'd better get resuming those. I have so many different shows I'm trying to watch that watching The X-Files, probably my favorite hour-long TV show of all time, had to be put on hold. No longer! I finished season four, and I'm ready to review it. Let's roll into 2019 with a bang!

When the evil government organization known as the Syndicate suspect that one of their members is passing information to FBI Special Agents Fox Mulder (David Duchovny) and Dana Scully (Gillian Anderson), they organize a canary trap to find the leak, using information about the safety of Mulder's mother as bait. X's (Steven Williams) role as an informant is discovered, and he is shot dead, although he is able to pass along the name of another informant who can be of use to Mulder—Marita Covarrubias (Laurie Holden), the Special Representative to the Secretary-General of the United Nations. This was one of Laurie Holden's earlier roles and she's not as aggressive as she is in The Walking Dead. In fact, compared to that, it's pretty laid back. As Andrea, she was brunt, attacking and demanding. As Marita, she's cold, calculating and intelligent. Covarrubias' aid is sought when Mulder attempts to reach Tunguska in Russia to investigate the source of a further black oil contamination. Whilst there, Mulder is held in a gulag and used as a successful test subject for a black oil vaccine. He escapes and is able to return to America, having found that his old buddy Alex Krycek (Nicholas Lea) is working with the Russians.

While all that is happening, after having been diagnosed with cancer, Scully is unsure of her future with the FBI. Mulder is convinced that her condition is a result of her earlier abduction (The TV Episode "Ascension"), and is prepared to make a deal with the Syndicate to find a cure. He is dissuaded by everybody's favorite side-character badass Walter Skinner (Mitch Pileggi), who secretly makes such a deal instead. Way to steal Mulder's thunder. While being pursued by an assassin responsible for a hoax alien corpse discovered on a mountaintop, Mulder fakes his own suicide, mutilating the assassin's face to provide a decoy body. He uses the distraction this offers to infiltrate The Pentagon to find a cure for Scully's cancer, while Scully is able to uncover and reveal a Syndicate connection within the FBI.

Now that's what's happening in the show's mythology arc, but what about those stellar "Monster of the Week" episodes? The ones that make the show just as 'worth watching' as the standard episodes? Well, they're probably some of the best episodes the show has ever had since season one. Season's two and three were pretty weak, but season four brought the power of the MOTW episodes back at 100%, and it shows. There are quite a few classics int his season, and I'll lay out my favorites and the ones I recommend.

  • "Home": In a small, otherwise peaceful town, the agents investigate the death of an infant with disturbing birth defects, and the trail leads to a clan of inbred, genetic mutants. "Home" also just so happens to be my favorite episode of The X-Files, for how creepy it is. It's the only episode of the show to ever receive a 'viewer discretion is advised' warning prior to airing.
  • "Teliko": Mulder and Scully are called in to investigate the unexplained deaths of several African and African-American people whose skin color has turned white as the result of either a rare medical disorder or a bizarre curse. This episode contains one of the creepiest shots of the show, where Scully finds a cursed person staring at her in a viaduct with purple eyes. Spooky.
  • "Unruhe": Agents Mulder and Scully investigate a group of bizarre kidnappings in which the only clues are inexplicable photographs. But when Scully is the next intended victim, Mulder must get into the killer's head.
  • "Sanguinarium": Bizarre murders in a hospital's plastic surgery unit lead Mulder and Scully to suspect a supernatural force may be responsible.
  • "El Mundo Gira": Deadly rain in a migrant workers camp sends Agent Mulder and Scully on the trail of a mythical beast—El Chupacabra. Another real creepy one, especially in the last five minutes. Some of these episodes are just downright spooky.
  • "Never Again": On a solo assignment out of town, Scully meets a man whose tattoo does not want to share him—especially not with Scully. This one's not really creepy, but it's an interesting take on possession. Also, the tattoo is voiced by Jodie Foster. So you know... that's some merit right there.
  • "Small Potatoes": A small town is "blessed" by babies being born with tails. Mulder and Scully arrive only to encounter a suspect who proves nearly impossible to identify. This episode, while entertaining, dumbs down the 'creepy' factor and ups the 'humor' factor, something more MOTW episodes would do in the future. Still fun, though.
All in all, season four in my opinion is on par with the series' first season. Many of the critics who reviewed the show were very dismissive of it, stating that while it had its high moments it really didn't secure such a huge following as much as the first three seasons did. While it's true that season four really was the last season of the show that was all-go, no-quit good, I do believe it was just as good as the first season. Some of these episodes are really thought-provoking in terms of exposing government conspiracy OR downright terrifying for the "Monster of the Week" episodes. "Home", as I said is a show that aired once and was so controversial that it wouldn't re-air again without a 'viewer discretion is advised' tag preceding it. It, to my knowledge, is the only episode that does so. An episode regarding Mulder & Scully trying to stop a family of inbred, genetic mutants from terrorizing a small town. There's some genuinely creepy scenes in that, such as the scene where the car rides around with Johnny Mathis's song "Wonderful, Wonderful" blasting at ridiculous volumes.

Other episodes just have twisted imagery that lingers in your head. "Small Potatoes" has the infamous scene where the girl claims that the baby's father was Luke Skywalker, the character you might have heard of in Star Wars. To poke fun at the situation, she even hums the Star Wars theme tune just to hit the point home. Scully's reaction is priceless. "El Mundo Gira" is another one. It starts off relatively tame with a village in Mexico getting rained on by acid rain or some kind of weird yellow rain, but it mutates a man's genes and he slowly malforms into a twisted creature that grows fungus on everything he touches, or as his fellow townsfolk call him, "El Chupacabra".

I believe season four of The X-Files is the best since the first season. The Government conspiracy is spiraling out of control as the Syndicate moves to expose the leak they have in their group while the agents move to expose the Syndicate's influence on not only the FBI's offices but the United States Government as a whole. With Scully's skepticism and Mulder's mumbo-jumbo conspiracy talk, this season still boasts as one of the best. There's quite a few episodes here I would use as 'introductory' episodes to the show. Give it a watch.