Main Menu

RECENT VIEWINGS (Bad Movie Thread!)

Started by M.10rda, November 23, 2023, 07:31:52 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

M.10rda

#975
THE WEDDING DATE (2005):
Another romcom I agreed to watch w/ my wife - okay, mostly watch, I dipped out for a while in the middle to do chores. I've endured worse. There are several cute lines/moments that were obviously calculated in a lab and tested on human captives to elicit sappy reactions. The direction is generally glib but it does move along fairly briskly. There is some nice UK location work. Amy Adams is third-billed, either right before or right after her breakout Oscar nomination for JUNEBUG (in other words before she didn't have to accept roles in disposable romcoms). She's a blonde here though, meh.

Star Debra Messing is a redhead  :smile: and gives a performance that helps one understand how she could have a hit TV show though also how she never had much of a career in movies. The hunky gigolo she hires to be her wedding date  :lookingup: is played by Dermot Mulroney, who gives a performance that reminds me how he could keep getting work in movies but also reminds me of why (after 30-35 years) I still can't distinguish him from Dylan McDermott. Of course the major flaw in this movie is the premise: Why does a successful career woman who is also a beautiful fun redhead need to pay Dermot Mulroney thousands of dollars to go to a wedding with her? He's a very generic hunky guy, of which there are plenty in both the US and UK. To her credit, :teddyr:  Madame 10rda says Mulroney is unattractive because he has a hairlip. She has better eyesight than I do but I see no hairlip - I mean, young Joaquin Phoenix, now he had a hairlip (which I guess he's had fixed). But then again, if you were a wealthy hot woman who felt like she needed to throw her money away on a gigiolo, Joaquin Phoenix would probably be more fun to take to a wedding...    2.5/5

M.10rda

THE FEATHERED SERPENT (1948):
There is no feathered serpent in this movie.  :thumbdown: But I digress. This is the only Charlie Chan movie I can remember actually watching - I figured I owed it to my man Mantan Moreland to see one of his storied performances as "Birmingham", the long-suffering valet and sidekick to the legendary sleuth, who is played of course by a white man in yellowface.   :bluesad:  Chan is Roland Winters this time - the O.G. (I think) Chan was Warner Oland, a British-German guy who died midway through the franchise. Oland was a decent actor (in other, ethnically appropriate roles) - Winters is pretty lame. On the upside, Chan's Number One and Number Two Sons are played by actual Asians Keye Luke (from GREMLINS!) and Victor Sen Yung, who do a good job - and speak perfect English w/o an accent - but really must've felt amply compensated to put up w/ Winters' yellowface and ridiculous pigeon "Ingrish"...  :hatred:

Anyway, the four detectives are literally driving through Mexico randomly, Jessica Fletcher-style, when they get sucked into a (large) murderous conspiracy involving Aztec treasure or - something. Mantan is likeable and amusing as always, though Birmingham's dialogue is less funny than "Jeff's" in the ...ZOMBIES duology. Actually Birmingham is essentially a sober voice of reason, generally merely pointing out that Chan's actions are extremely unsafe and unwise, though not actually acting "cowardly" or anything and even behaving w/ valor once or twice. Nevertheless nearly 100% of Chan's interactions with Birmingham are to tell him he's a useless fool. The same is true for much of his dialogue w/ his sons - they make reasonable observations or suggestions and he grins at them and tells them they're idiots. On the other hand, Chan is always deferential to the (many) white characters, even the inevitable villains.  :lookingup: From a historical/critical/sociological perspective, the entire movie comes off as hyper-racist (fake minority putting real minorities in their place in the service of the majority) but even in 1948 it's hard to see how anyone could watch this movie and not walk away thinking Charlie Chan was an enormous insufferable @$$#0l3.

Directed by William Beaudine, who made many infamously cheap and subpar movies.    2/5    An appearance by the Quetzlcoatl from Larry Cohen's 1984 flick would've livened things up significantly!