The Revenge of the
Duies The second
annual Duie awards.
By Bert Ehrmann
2005-03-07 — About this time last
year I introduced Fort Wayne to the Duie awards. The Duie, or better
known as the Duies, are an attempt to give out awards in lesser-known
categories of moviemaking. For example, last year Uma Thurman won
the “Best
use of a tracksuit in a non track and field movie,” while the award
for “Movie aided by Alan Alda in a starring role” once again went
unclaimed.
2004 gave us a wide array of movies, some of which were very good;
Collateral, Spartan and Garden State to name a few, while others
were very bad. (Let’s
just say that Dodgeball didn’t do much to further Ben Stiller’s career.)
But the glory of the Duie is that it makes no distinction between the good,
bad
and ugly movies. Any movie can win a Duie, even if that movie stars Lindsay
Lohan.
Movie title that literally played out on screen.
This award goes to Man on Fire starring Denzel Washington. The title of Man
on Fire is literally played out on screen when Washington ties a man to the
bumper of a car, pours gasoline on him and sets him on fire. And somehow
I thought that the title to Man on Fire was referring to an inner turmoil
going
on in the Washington character. How wrong I was!
After watching the movie I feel that a more descriptive title might have
been Sub-par action-thriller set in the criminal underworld of Mexico City.
But
would Sub-par thriller set in the criminal underworld of Mexico City bring
in the crowds? Then again, the title Man on Fire didn’t either.
The sequel which destroyed a good franchise. (Previous honorees include the
The Matrix sequels, Alien 3 and American Beauty II: Lester’s Back.)
Sequels are a tricky business that should never star or co-star Richard Pryor.
(See Superman III.) In 2004, one sequel killed a franchise that had potential
for better things into yet another Star Wars clone. This movie I’m talking
about is The Chronicles of Riddick, sequel to 1999’s moderate hit Pitch Black.
Pitch Black had everything that most sci-fi movies lack; a basis in reality.
After watching the movie I felt as if the future could conceivably be like
that depicted in Pitch Black where religion still played a central theme in
character’s motivations and just because these same characters are masters
of technology doesn’t mean that they’re able to fare any better in a barren
desert than our ancestors.
However, this realism was turned on its head in the follow-up, The Chronicles
of Riddick. Just about everything that was established prior movie was trashed
in The Chronicles of Riddick in attempt to create a fantasy. I was as disappointed
as I have ever been in a movie while watching The Chronicles of Riddick and
I went into the theater with so much hope.
The, “Movie that made Satan appealing” award.
When I was little, the devil was a really, really bad guy. The kind of guy
who was out to slowly take over the world one soul at a time. I’m sure no one
would have wanted to spend an afternoon playing darts with “The Lord of Darkness” in
the movie Legend (1985). But lately, the devil’s been getting the “Extreme
Makeover” treatment, being made into a not-so-bad kind of guy. Case in point,
Hellboy where the spawn of the devil is made out to be a muscular super-hero
out to rid the world of evil. (Evil fighting evil!? What are the odds?)
Coming in second for this award was the movie Mean Girls, starring Lindsay
Lohan. Because if Lohan isn’t proof positive that when Satan visits Earth he
does so in the form of a voluptuous barely legal teen I don’t know what is.
Now, where did I place my rosary? Where’s Paul Callan when you need him?
The vampires can’t do math award.
In last summer’s stinker Van Helsing, it is established that Dracula and his
three wives kill between one and two Transylvanian villagers a month for food.
(And why don’t these people move away?)
The whole plot of Van Helsing revolves around the vampire hunter Van Helsing
trying to stop Dracula from reanimating his tens of thousands of vampire
babies he’s had with his wives. (The whole dead vampire baby thing is convoluted,
confusing and not all that interesting.) When any sane person does the math,
figuring that these vampire babies would be killing several tens of thousands
of people per month, how long would it be until the vampires would be out of
food? Either vampires aren’t all that smart or they’re counting on finding
another source of nutrition when they force mankind down the path of extinction.
Maybe that was Van Helsing’s plan all along, to destroy Dracula by going after
his food. If so, he’s a genius!
Movie aided by Alan Alda in a starring role.
Last year, Alda co-starred in The Aviator garnering himself an Oscar nomination
while at the same time throwing off years of Hawkeye Pierce and being the
host of PBS’ Scientific American Frontiers baggage. In The Aviator, Alda
played conniving Senator Brewster bent on the destruction of Howard Hughes
and the
world domination of Pan American Airlines.
However, this award once again goes unclaimed, since Alda was in a co-starring
role and not a starring one.
Hopefully next year Alda will be able to step up and begin stealing roles
from the likes of Colin Farrell and Ryan Gosling. Good luck next year, Alan!