Transformers 2 gave me a headache

I was actually entertained by the first Transformers movie a couple of years ago. But the new sequel was not only the most boring movie Michael Bay has ever done, it had an incoherent storyline that felt as if the writers had pulled it from a hat, and there was a lot of unnecessarily crude humor, mainly from the robots. I watched the movie this afternoon in a packed theater, and my head started hurting before I even made it back to my car. I took a Tylenol when I got back to the apartment because I’d gotten a headache.

Ever since King Kong — and to a lesser extent, the last 2 cinematic installments in the Lord of the Rings trilogy — I’ve had a less than enthusiastic reaction to movies where the CGI tends to overwhelm whatever story is present. I had a hard time being emotionally involved in the title character in King Kong, especially during his fight with the 2 dinosaurs, because I was at all moments keenly aware that I was watching a computer-generated giant gorilla fighting against a computer-generated dinosaur. I was skeptical going into the first Transformers movie that I would care about one computer-generated giant robot fighting against another, but I was entertained overall by it. In the sequel, it wasn’t so much that I didn’t care, it’s just that the fights were shown from such extreme close-up angles that I could scarcely tell which robot was which. And most of the human characters were so annoying I wished a decepticon would land on them.

It followed a pattern similar to that of the Pirates of the Caribbean sequels: keep the same characters that people liked before, but remove all the interesting elements, write the action sequences before you’ve written the story, and make the plot up as you go along without concern for it being the least bit comprehensible. After Dead Man’s Chest, however, I was still ready to go back for the third Pirates movie to see how it would all end up. If a third Transformers movie ever hits the screen, my money and my person will be staying far away from it.

For a funnier look at the film and its legion of problems, read Roger Ebert’s print review.

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funniest movie edits for network TV

I was going to make this a Top 5 Tuesday entry but had trouble coming up with 5 examples I could find video for. While I was at work today I started thinking about my favorite content edits made to movies so they can air on network TV stations. I found a few of the best ones I could think of on youtube, but not enough for a real Top 5 Tuesday, so I’ll have to delay that category’s resurrection another week.

I’ll begin with arguably the two most legendarily awful edits, the ones most frequently brought up in discussions on this topic.

The Big Lebowski: John Goodman takes a crowbar and breaks all of the windows on a nice sports car, yelling at its supposed owner, “You see what happens when you f*** a stranger in the a**?” But in TV edits, the line is heard as “You see what happens when you find a stranger in the Alps?”

Die Hard 2: Bruce Willis has just had a fight with a terrorist on the wing of a passenger jet about to take off, and the fight ended with Willis getting kicked off the wing and falling to the ground, but in the process he manages to open the fuel door/hatch thing (do planes really have those right there?) and as the plane escapes it leaves a trail of fuel behind it. Willis takes out his lighter, says his trademark “Yippie ki yay, motherf*****!” line and throws the lighter onto the line of fuel, which eventually gets to the plane just as its taking off and blows it up. But in the TV version, Bruce Willis says, “Yippie ki yay, Mr. Falcon”, and in a voice that is obviously not that of Willis.” High comedy.

The Usual Suspects: Career criminals (played by Kevin Pollack, Stephen Baldwin, Benicio Del Toro, Gabriel Byrne, and Kevin Spacey) are put together for a police lineup of suspects. They are told to read the line on the card they are passed. They all take their turns reading the line, “Hand me the keys, you f****** c*********!” In the TV version, however, they all say “Hand me the keys, you fairy godmother.” That’s one of the more inspired ones I’ve ever seen.

Pulp Fiction, as you can imagine, is nearly unrecognizable when it appears on edited TV stations. There’s not really one good clip, but there is a pretty good video compiling some of the more obvious edits.

One of my other favorites was a number of Samuel L. Jackson’s lines in Jackie Brown, such as “motherf*****” becoming “my friend”, or “motherfu**ing” becoming “mutual-funded”, but I haven’t found any videos of that. And it’s late and I need sleep. If anyone can think of other good ones, feel free to mention them, or post video links.

Context makes all the difference

Back in my high school and early college years, if there was a movie I was thinking of seeing but wasn’t sure about the appropriateness of its content, I would pay a visit to either Kids-In-Mind.com or Screenit.com, two sites that provided objective analysis of content in movies, particularly the kind that parents or morally discerning types might be concerned about. Kids-In-Mind rates the amount of sex/nudity, violence/gore, and profanity each on a 0-10 scale, and gives somewhat detailed explanations of how much of each is shown on screen, usually without giving away key plot points that be involved in those scenes.

Today they break up their analysis in bullet points, one for each individual scene being described. For instance, here’s how the Kids-In-Mind page for the new movie Twilight described two scenes that earned mention in the sex/nudity category:
► A vampire teen boy and a teen girl kiss tenderly, then passionately, she leans back on her bed (she is wearing a T-shirt and panties) pulling him on top of her, they continue to kiss, and he jumps off and tells her to stop.
► A teen girl and a boy vampire dance close together at a dance, they kiss, she asks him to bite her neck, and he dips her and kisses her neck instead.

It describes exactly what you hear and/or see on the screen, giving little-to-no context for it, but making it clear that the instances described there are in different scenes. Unfortunately, in years past that site didn’t split up their descriptions into their respective scenes and instead just mentioned all the content in the movie that fell into their respective categories, which sometimes lead to some hilarious confusion.

The 2001 movie Enemy at the Gates, which takes place during the drawn-out World War II battle of Stalingrad in Russia, doesn’t have much sexual content to speak of, but it does have one (quite unnecessary) scene where two characters have sex in the middle of a large room full of people who are sleeping. I saw the movie with my dad when it was first released because he’s a history teacher and he wanted to watch it for its historical aspects. I read over the movie’s Kids-In-Mind page before watching the movie, and it left me a little bewildered. Here’s the entire paragraph the site dedicated to describing the movie’s sex/nudity content:

“A few kisses and a couple of kissing scenes (with a few kisses in each scene, but not any “making out” scenes). An extended sex scene takes place in barracks while people are sleeping around the couple; the couple kiss and put their hands down each other’s pants, then the man thrusts on top of the woman (the woman’s bare buttocks are shown briefly). We see the side of a man’s bare buttocks (he passes gas to blow out a candle).”

The described sex scene and the incident at the end of the paragraph take place in completely different scenes probably an hour apart, but when I first read that paragraph I got the impression that they took place in the same scene, since the writer made no effort to put them in different scenes or explain the context of the latter one. The mental image that the paragraph gave me was one where Jude Law and Rachel Weisz (the two actors in the movie’s sex scene) are in bed kissing and either having sex or about to begin, and in the middle of it, Jude Law rolls over and passes gas toward a candle to blow it out and make the room go dark. Of course that’s not how the scene played out but it was the idea I got from Kids-In-Mind. This week I randomly remembered the confusion I had about that, and laughed hysterically for a long time. I asked a co-worker if he’d seen the movie, and then described the false impression Kids-In-Mind had given me about its sex scene. We had a lot of fun discussing what the dialogue would have sounded like had the scene actually taken place the way I’d first imagined it. (Example: “There’s too much light in the room, honey. Here, watch this trick!”)

Truly, had they staged the scene like that, it would have been the funniest (and probably least romantic) moment in any movie I’ve ever seen, by far. If only they’d explained the content by scene and not lumped it all together back then, misunderstandings like that wouldn’t have happened. Context truly makes all the difference.

That’s the funniest memory that has randomly come back to me in a long time.

give Roger Moore a bailout

The past couple weeks at work have been pretty slow for the most part. I’ve had some books to deliver but I’ve had several days where I’ve either gotten all of my work done pretty early or I’ve come into work in the morning with nothing there for me to do. Scott, the guy I share an office with, has had a similarly tedious time with his job during that time. Predictably, this has lead to even more extended pop culture conversations than we usually have in a given week, and several visits to wikipedia whenever we’ve brought up an obscure movie one of us barely remembers, or a random actor who came up in a conversation. Yesterday I mentioned Ryan O’Neal after a story Scott told me – which involved him buying lunch from Quizno’s and then absent-mindedly walking out with chips and a drink when he’d only ordered a sandwich – reminded me of a scene in What’s Up Doc?, a 1972 movie that starred O’Neal and a very young Barbara Streisand. Scott couldn’t remember who O’Neal was, so he read a bit from his wikipedia page, which detailed the various domestic disputes he and his sons have gotten into. This was quite hilarious in a most unintentional way.

Later in the day, Scott ended up on the wikipedia page of British actor Roger Moore, or rather Sir Roger Moore, I should say (he was knighted 5 years ago). One of the pictures on that page seemed to tell us more about his altruism (or possible lack thereof) than he might want people to know. In the picture, which was taken on his 80th birthday just over a year ago, Moore is wearing a very nice grey suit and is holding something in each hand. If you zoom in on the photo (see below) you can see a $1 bill in his left hand, which was presumably drawn from the huge roll of money in his right hand, which he seems to be putting back in his pocket.

The photo is cropped a bit and even in the full picture you can’t see the entire context of the photo, but in looking at it Scott and I guessed that he had the bill out as a tip for someone. I mean, what else would he possibly be doing with a $1 bill? Getting a Cherry Coke or a Snickers from a machine perhaps? If he was intending to give that as a tip, then he’s either a lousy tipper or he’s fallen on hard times. It’s an amusing photo to see; a wealthy movie star who has been a Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire for five years wearing an expensive three-piece suit and holding a large roll of cash in one hand and a solitary Washington in the other. Is our economy that bad? Is Sir Roger Moore reaching the point where he can only afford to give $1 tips to valets or bellhops?

If the U.S. government is going to designate tens of billions of dollars for bailouts of large corporations like A.I.G., Bear Stearns, and General Motors (that last one hasn’t happened yet, but the liberal union-friendly Democrats in Congress want it to) because those are institutions which are – we are told – vital and “too big to fail”, then surely a bailout for Sir Roger Moore should be in order. Sure he’s British and is most famous for playing two iconic British characters (James Bond and Simon Templar), but the James Bond series of movies have been vital to the long-term financial success of landmark American film studio United Artists (started in 1919) and its parent company MGM Studios (founded in 1924), and Roger Moore, having played Bond in seven movies, is a man inextricably linked to that character and that series. We can’t have him in such a state, as it’s not just him who could be hurt, but also the James Bond image and the studios who produce his celluloid exploits. Stated plainly: he is just too big to fail (and if you saw Moore’s last turn as James Bond in A View To A Kill, then you know that sentence could have multiple meanings). We need to get the Senate Appropriations Committee working on this right away.

——

Speaking of Bond, the 22nd James Bond film, Quantum of Solace, will be released tomorrow and I’ve already bought my ticket. I’m going with a small group from church, and the ringleader who sent out the email asked that all the men going wear a suit and tie. I don’t have a proper suit coat at my apartment so I may have to settle for my dark jacket. The previous Bond film, 2006’s Casino Royale, was the first one of the series that I watched in the theater, and only the second one that I’d seen period (the first was Moore’s first Bond film, Live and Let Die). So needless to say, I’m not a huge aficionado of the series, but I really enjoyed Casino Royale, which was light years above anything Roger Moore did with the series.

I’m hoping the new movie will be just as good, though my expectations have been somewhat muted after I read a review in this week’s Dallas Observer in which the writer (Robert Wilonsky) praised Casino Royale before calling Quantum of Solace “easily one of the worst” films in the series. For much of his stated criticism of the movie and its supposed failures, he blames director Marc Forster, who he thinks was in over his head helming a James Bond movie when his “biggest action sequence to date involved Halle Berry and Billy Bob Thornton getting it on” in 2001’s Monster’s Ball (which is a terrible choice for a first movie to watch with a girl, I might add). It’s a clever line, though only if you forget the more visually rich sequences in such Forster-directed movies as Finding Neverland and Stranger Than Fiction, or last year’s adaptation of The Kite Runner for that matter. Mocking Forster’s filmography is a low blow when other directors who worked with the Bond franchise had similarly thin résumés in the area of action filmmaking. Before John Glen directed 1981’s For Your Eyes Only (the first of five Bond movies he would direct), his sole directorial credit was one episode of the TV series “Man in a Suitcase” (which aired 30 episodes in its only season, which ran from 1967 to 1968). 1969’s On Her Majesty’s Secret Service (which is widely regarded as one of the best entries in the franchise) was Peter Hunt’s directorial debut, though in his case he had worked as a film editor for several years (and four previous Bond films) before his first turn in the director’s chair.

So that’s what’s on tap for tomorrow evening. Traffic can be bad around here so I’ll probably go to the theater straight from work. My brother called while I was writing this and told me he had tomorrow off from work and might drive up here to watch the movie with the rest of us. When I mentioned the suit and tie requirement, he seemed unfazed, which is odd because he’s rarely seen in something so formal as khaki pants, let alone a suit and tie. So we’ll see how that goes.

Hope everyone else has a great weekend.

Top 5 Tuesday: my top movies of 2002

Top 5 Tuesday took the week off last week, as I was ill and otherwise uninspired as far as list topics go. Since I’m gonna be posting a movie list or two later on in the week I’ll make this week’s list my top 5 movies of 2002, which was a very good year for movies overall, and one of my favorite movie years this decade so far.

1. 25th Hour
2. The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers
3. Adaptation
4. Punch-Drunk Love
5. Y Tu Mamá También

Top 5 Tuesday: movie dance scenes

This week’s category: 5 of my favorite movie dance scenes/sequences (non-musicals only). I’m sure I’ll remember one or two later on that I should have included. I’ll do top 5 musical dance sequences another week.

1. Jon Favreau and Heather Graham in Swingers
I love how they start off somewhat awkwardly and get into it more as they go along with the music, played by Big Bad Voodoo Daddy. This is probably the movie dance scene I most wish I could live out.

2. Keira Knightley and Matthew MacFadyen in the 2005 version of Pride & Prejudice
Mainly for the great cinematography and the tension between the two leads.

3. Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie in Mr. & Mrs. Smith
Highly entertaining movie, and this was one of its better scenes. I should also mention that it is one of two on this list from movies directed by Doug Liman.

4. A reluctant John Travolta and a cocaine-infused Uma Thurman dancing in the Jackrabbit Slim’s twist contest in Pulp Fiction

5. Heath Ledger faking his way through a country dance with Shannyn Sossamon in A Knight’s Tale
The David Bowie music and the sudden shift into modern dance style either makes it or breaks it for most people. For me, it makes it.

kid sports movie implausibilities

I was channel surfing yesterday afternoon and I tuned to one of the local channels and saw the last few minutes of the movie Rebound, which stars Martin Lawrence as a short-fused college basketball coach who gets fired and kicked out of coaching at the college level and ends up taking a job coaching a junior high school team. All I saw was the very end of the “big game” where Lawrence’s team is behind by one point and one of his players is fouled at the buzzer and has to make two free throws to win the game. The kid sets up and makes his first shot, but jumps and lands over the free throw line when he shoots. In the logic of the movie, the referee either isn’t watching as closely as the camera is or he doesn’t know that this is a violation and the shot shouldn’t count. I just stared in disbelief, and then laughed out loud when the kid made his second free throw to win the game… again while jumping over the line.

Thus it is with so many sports movies involving kids, they way too often make a big play or win a big game with an implausible play that would never stand up to a referee actually enforcing the rules of the game. In the realm of sports movie implausibilities, I guess a kid being allowed to step over the free throw line on two consecutive shots to win a big game doesn’t rate much higher on the Implausibility Scale than, say, the kid in Rookie of the Year getting a crucial out in a baseball game by using an illegal version of the “hidden ball trick”, or the American hockey team in D2: The Mighty Ducks being allowed to disguise a player in the goalie’s jersey and pads so he could get off a game-tying “knucklepuck” shot in the championship of the (fictional) Junior Goodwill Games. Just as implausible as any of those is the very idea that an international hockey game played with a bunch of kids not even old enough to drive could actually draw a crowd big enough to fill up a professional hockey arena in California, or that hundreds of people would actually turn out to watch a middle school basketball game.

The message of these movies: it’s okay if you break the rules in order to win, and hundreds of people will be there to cheer when you do.

I hope there weren’t too many kids who watched those and other sports movies and got unrealistic expectations that they’d one day be playing the little league baseball or pee wee football city championship in front of a stadium full of fans, let alone their whole town’s population (see: Little Giants). Those movies appeal to a certain age group, and as you get older the movies you liked as a kid will seem sillier, and few will still be seen as classics a decade later (among kid sports movies, The Sandlot probably holds up the best). For all its goofiness, I still have a nostalgic attachment to Rookie of the Year, and not just because of the pure comedy of seeing a pre-steroids Barry Bonds in one brief cameo. One of these days I’ll have to get the DVD and write a running diary while I watch it.

The Implausibility Scale

I’ve had the idea for this list for a few months now, and over that time I’ve thought of new examples, added to the list, and rearranged the order. Hollywood and the entertainment industry in general has produced decades worth of far-fetched plot twists, action scenes, and character changes, but the past few years have seen some exceptional examples, and a few films and TV series have practically turned implausibility into an art form.

I’ll admit a certain amount of inspiration for the concept came from sportswriter Bill Simmons’ Unintentional Comedy Scale. This isn’t supposed to be a conclusive or exclusive list; it’s more of a guideline about where I would rate certain scenes or sequences. The scale rates as high as 100, with the list getting steadily more implausible as it goes, and the tip top most implausible example or examples rating a 100. Ideally, such a list would work so that you would read #65 and say, “now that’s implausible, but I’d believe it before I’d believe #66″ and so on, though a lot of it is just for fun and the list doesn’t strictly follow that formula. Hope you’re entertained, and feel free to add your own examples and where you think they should rate.

I should also note that I’m picking and choosing my implausibilities here, as I’m including, for the most part, only examples that I’ve actually seen, and examples of scenes or sequences that defied logic and/or reason. Because of this I don’t include scenes from sci-fi or fantasy type movies like The Matrix, which has some far-out action scenes, but which take place in a reality not governed by normal laws of physics, and thus they make sense within the movie’s own internal logic (until the whole plot jumped the shark in the 3rd film, but that’s another topic).

I’m beginning the list at #60 and moving on from there. Fair warning: a few of the examples cited here may be plot spoilers to those who haven’t seen those films or TV shows.

——–

60: TV personality Katherine Heigl sleeping with, getting pregnant by, and ultimately deciding to have the baby of immature and unemployed pothead slob Seth Rogen in Knocked Up. Two of those three might happen, all three happening would be very unlikely.

61: Rachael Leigh Cook as the average, un-pretty girl in She’s All That.

62: Kenan Thompson scoring a goal on a lengh-of-the-ice “knucklepuck” shot at the end of the Junior Goodwill Games championship hockey game to tie the score and force overtime in D2: The Mighty Ducks. No way the shot would have flown that straight or that far, or that they could have gotten away with having him secretly change into another player’s jersey. And the Icelandic coach’s reaction is priceless (“The goalie! Nooooo!”)

63: Joshua Jackson’s character arc in the Mighty Ducks movies. In D2, he’s team-oriented and unselfish to the point of giving up his spot on the team right before the championship game to make room on the roster for a teammate who has just recovered from an injury. In D3, he’s selfish and arrogant, only wants to play as a scorer and yells at his coach who wants him to play defense.

64: Anakin Skywalker’s character arc in Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith. I didn’t believe it for one second.

65: The dialogue in any radio ad for Just Brakes.

female caller – “Wow, you repair disc pads and brake shoes and inspect and rotate the balance on all four wheels?! That’s an even better deal than when I bought my car new!! Why do you do it, Just Brakes?

Just Brakes repair guy – “Because at Just Brakes, we really do care.”

66: The dialogue in any radio ad for Ovaltine. (“MORE OVALTINE, PLEASE!!”)

67: 5’7” Tom Cruise as a star defensive back on his high school football team, and getting recruited by several major colleges in All The Right Moves.

68: 5’9” Jamie Foxx as an NFL quarterback in Any Given Sunday. That’s a good 3-5 inches shorter than any pro team would want their quarterback to be.

69: Sarah Jessica Parker falling for Dennis Quaid in Smart People; Amidala falling for Anakin in the Star Wars prequels; and Maggie Gyllenhaal falling for Will Ferrell in Stranger Than Fiction.

70: Luke Wilson actually being a bestselling author in Alex & Emma. In real life, the story he and Kate Hudson come up with in the movie wouldn’t have gotten a passing grade in a junior college writing course, let alone a six-figure advance.

71: “Tool Time” actually being a popular show on Home Improvement. In real life it probably would have been cancelled in under a month.

72: The impossible aerial maneuver James Franco pulls with his World War I-era fighter plane to slip behind and shoot down the plane of his ace German archenemy in Flyboys, a maneuver right out of Top Gun, I might add.

73: The Middle Eastern villains in season four of 24 conveniently speaking English when counter-terrorist agents manage to listen in on their cell phone conversations. That series could fill a list like this on its own, but I’ll be nice and only include this one example.

74: The end of the $500,000 poker tournament in the movie Maverick, where on the final hand, with the three remaining players betting all their chips, they show hands with four 8’s, a straight flush, and a royal flush, respectively. There’s no way all three of those happen at the same time, the odds are too astronomical. But I’d believe that before I’d believe…

75: Estella Warren’s improbably nice skin, hair, and makeup in the 2001 Planet of the Apes remake. Humans have been enslaved for hundreds of years and the women still have a hidden supply of lipstick? Sure…

I might also add the three-day stubble Martin Henderson sports for all of his scenes throughout the length of Flyboys. He has one of those razors that only exist in the movies, one that allows characters to always look like they haven’t shaved in a few days.

76: President Andrew Shepard’s (Michael Douglas) speech during a press conference at the end of The American President, which is full of combative and hokey dialogue no President would ever say, and even has Shepard utter the line: “You cannot address crime prevention without getting rid of assault weapons and handguns. I consider them a threat to national security, and I will go door to door if I have to, but I’m gonna convince Americans that I’m right, and I’m gonna get the guns.”

No President in his right mind would make such a statement publicly, and any who did would have next to no chance of being re-elected (at least one would hope). Also, I think the movie’s screenwriter (Aaron Sorkin) missed the irony in the President promising to “go door to door if I have to” in order to “get the guns” just minutes after praising the ACLU and calling it “an organization whose sole purpose is to defend the Bill of Rights”, because apparently his copy of the Bill of Rights doesn’t include the 2nd Amendment. (Note: The scene is hokey, self-congratulatory, and emotionally exploitative enough on its own, but when you add the music in the background and the serious, uncritical looks on the faces of the reporters as he’s talking, it’s almost comedic).

77: Orlando Bloom’s “Who has claim? No one has claim” speech before the siege of Jerusalem in Kingdom of Heaven, which is only slightly more historically improbable than Leonidas’ “an age of freedom” speech in 300, or Joely Richardson’s “It’s a free country. Or at least it will be” line in The Patriot.

78: The boxing arena spectators in Cold War-era Moscow chanting American Rocky Balboa’s name as he fights against the Russian giant Ivan Drago in Rocky IV. A rough equivalent might be a baseball movie set in Boston where Red Sox fans chant Derek Jeter’s name.

79: Pretty much any episode of CSI (including both spin-off series).

80: Any movie where a character gets a few simple lessons or pointers on fencing or swordplay, and then becomes a near master swordsman in about 5 minutes of screen time (see: The Mask of Zorro, Kingdom of Heaven, The Last Samurai, The Count of Monte Cristo, and the hobbits in The Fellowship of the Ring.)

81: The end of Alien vs. Predator where the Predator saves Sanaa Lathan’s life and essentially joins forces with her for a short while, which goes against everything previously known about the Predators.

82: The endings of The Fast and the Furious and the 2007 version of 3:10 To Yuma.

83: Angelina Jolie as Colin Farrell’s mother in Alexander (she’s just under a year older than him).

84: Any McDonald’s TV ad that portrays the employees as young, clean cut, good-looking, always smiling, and nearly always white or black. Have the producers of those commercials ever been inside a McDonald’s?

85: Nicholas Cage and John Travolta being able to shoot and hit people or airborne objects from long distances, but frequently being unable to shoot each other even when they’re 5 feet apart in Face/Off.

86: The plot of National Treasure.

87: The plot of National Treasure: Book of Secrets.

88: Jack Sparrow and the crew of the Black Pearl turning the ship completely upside down by running back and forth across the deck in Pirates of the Caribbean: At World’s End. (There’s also the para-sailing bit near the end of the movie, which might rate slightly lower).

89: The action sequence in Live Free or Die Hard that immediately precedes this line: “You just killed a helicopter with a car!

90: The long jungle sequence in Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull that includes: A. Mutt (Shia Lebouf) swinging on vines through the trees following a pack of monkeys, B. Marion Ravenwood driving a Jeep off the edge of a cliff and onto the branches of a tree, which gently lowers the vehicle onto the river below before swinging back and swatting some Russians who are climbing down the cliff, C. the Jeep (and its 5 passengers) going over 3 large waterfalls in succession without anyone falling out of the car or getting any scrapes, bruises, or concussions, and D. Indiana Jones never once losing his hat the whole time. The quantity of implausibilities in those 10 minutes piles up high enough to make it among the most implausible things ever put on film, but to save room I’ll mention them all together and take the rough average of their implausibility scale rating.

91: The Tom Cruise-Dougray Scott motorcycle joust/beach fight sequence in Mission: Impossible II. Neither character should have been able to walk (if they were even still alive) after a collision like that, which you can see at the end of this video clip.

92: In Transporter 2, Jason Statham driving up the levels of a parking garage, crashing his car through a short concrete wall at the edge of the roof, then still having the inertia to fly well over 100 feet forward through the air and land on an upper floor of a nearby building under construction. You can see it at the 4:40 mark of this video clip.

93: The scene in the 2005 King Kong remake just before Kong goes unconscious after having bottles of chloroform thrown at him. Just before this, there’s a shot of lots of men throwing ropes and a net over Kong and actually holding him down, which would seem more than a little unlikely since earlier in the film Kong had picked up and thrown a Tyrannosaurus, a dinosaur that weighed between 7 and 8 tons.

94: The bus in Speed hopping and flying over a long gap on an unfinished highway overpass and landing safely on the other side, with the speedometer somehow staying above 50 mph the whole time. The jump occurs just before the 4:00 mark in this video (warning: contains some R-rated language).

95: The entire plot of Flightplan. The villains would have needed psychic powers or a crystal ball for their plan to have worked the way it did. I’ve never seen any other movie be so interesting and then completely fall apart in the third act the way that movie did when the plot was revealed.

96: Jeff Goldblum hacking and sending a computer virus to an alien computer system from an earth-based computer system in Independence Day. Apparently, those aliens can manufacture fighter ships armed with laser guns and deflector shields and can communicate telepathically, but they can’t be bothered to update their anti-virus software.

97: Bill Paxton and Helen Hunt surviving an F5 tornado without a scratch by tying themselves to the pipes of a water well just before it passes right over them at the end of Twister.

98: In Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, the title character surviving a nuclear bomb blast by shutting himself inside a 1950s-era refrigerator, feeling no ill effects from the fridge being blown hundreds of feet away by the force of the blast, and not getting radiation poisoning when he climbs out of it and stands directly under a mushroom cloud and breathes the air. Who does he think he is, Chuck Norris?

99: In Wanted, the scene where James McAvoy is supposed to kill a guy in a limousine as he drives along the side of it, but finds the limo has bulletproof windows. So Angelina Jolie, working with him, drives her sports car toward McAvoy’s, then hits the brakes just as they’re about to meet, and an invisible ramp allows McAvoy’s car to shoot up off her car’s hood, fly up into the air, and flip over the limousine where an open sunroof gives McAvoy a clear shot at the guy (which he takes) before his car harmlessly lands back onto the street and he drives away. In real life, this would result in a fiery crash and the guy in the limo would speed away from the scene laughing. You can see an edited part of this scene at about the 2:00 mark of the movie’s third trailer.

100: The sequence in Transporter 2 described here by Roger Ebert:

“Seeing the reflection of a bomb in a pool of liquid under his car, and knowing that the bad guys will not explode it while they’re standing right next to it, the hero races the car out of a garage and up an incline, spinning the car neatly through the air, so that it makes one complete rotation and the bomb is pulled off by a hook on a crane, exploding harmlessly as the car lands safely. Uh, huh.
I could observe that this is preposterous, but the fact is, I laughed aloud.”

So did I, as I’d never seen anything so outlandish before. The scene is so ridiculous (and also fun in its own way) that not even comic books or video games would try something like it. On the Implausibility Scale, I don’t think it will ever be topped by any movie that takes itself the least bit seriously.

*101: I’m adding one extra example to the list, a clip from the 1985 Indian movie Adavi Donga, starring Indian movie icon Chiranjeevi. I’m putting an asterisk on it and not putting it with the others because it was probably designed as a parody, though without seeing it in its full context it’s hard to know. I saw this clip over the weekend (and posted it in a previous blog) and decided that parody or not, it completely shattered the Implausibility Scale. The brief clip involves a horse skidding underneath a large trailer (with its rider still on it) and a pursuing Jeep leaping over that same trailer at its driver’s command (apparently, vehicles in India can jump when their driver stands up slightly in the driver’s seat). It truly has to be seen to be (dis)believed.

Comments and additions are encouraged.

It’s getting hot in here

The weather services are forecasting a high temperature of somewhere between 104 and 106 today for my area. Last week some guys at church had talked about getting together and playing softball on some Sunday afternoon. It will not be happening this afternoon, needless to say. Record high temps are projected for today and tomorrow. A lot of people’s electricity bills are going to go up a tick after this week, not to mention last week.

My most recent Facebook status: “Jonathan is a hunk of burning love… minus the hunk and the love.”
I think my next one will be “Jonathan does NOT like it hot, unlike some.”

I keep putting off writing my Implausibility Scale. I have all the entries I want listed out, it’s just a matter of sitting down and writing the thing. I was pretty well set on which movie scene rated a 100 on the scale, but yesterday I saw the following video posted on a message board, and it completely shattered the Implausibility Scale. I laughed out loud for several minutes watching it multiple times.

ABA Journal’s 25 Greatest Legal Movies

The ABA Journal asked a jury of 12 lawyers, law professors, writers, and a judge to come up with the 25 best movies about lawyers and the law. I read the results in the most recent issue, which was in the mail at work today. I’ve seen very few of those listed, but have wanted to see several of them, most notably #1. Here is the list in full.

1. To Kill A Mockingbird
2. 12 Angry Men
3. My Cousin Vinny
4. Anatomy of a Murder
5. Inherit The Wind
6. Witness For The Prosecution
7. Breaker Morant
8. Philadelphia
9. Erin Brockovich
10. The Verdict
11. Presumed Innocent
12. Judgment At Nuremberg
13. A Man For All Seasons
14. A Few Good Men
15. Chicago
16. Kramer vs. Kramer
17. The Paper Chase
18. Reversal of Fortune
19. Compulsion
20. And Justice For All
21. In The Name Of The Father
22. A Civil Action
23. Young Mr. Lincoln
24. Amistad
25. Miracle On 34th Street (1947 version)

Out of those 25, I’m embarrased to say I’ve seen all of 2 (12 Angry Men and Amistad). I’ve seen about half of Philadelphia and the last 30-40 minutes of Anatomy of a Murder, but nothing of the others. I’ve somehow lived 25 years and never read or watched To Kill A Mockingbird, and I really want to see The Verdict, A Few Good Men, A Man For All Seasons, Reversal of Fortune, and In The Name of the Father.

Thoughts? Comments?