Category: Movies
Direct Beam Comms #34
TV
Stranger Things
It’s hard to see Private Joker from Full Metal Jacket aka Matthew Modine as the lead bad guy on Stranger Things! 😉
First World Problems
I always think of this time of year as the sort of doldrums of movies and TV and this summer’s no different. This year there’s a lot of interesting TV series on like The Night Of, Stranger Things and The Tunnel, and there are a few summer movies left that look worthwhile like Suicide Squad, but for the most part the summer TV/movie season has now reached its apex. Soon, summer TV finales will head into fall TV premiers that are set to begin in a few months and the same for films where movies switch from action to films geared towards the awards season start premiering. In fact, I believe the only TV series left to premiere this summer that I’m interested in, and I’d categorize it as barely being a summer premiere, is Halt and Catch Fire that starts at the end of August.
What I want to do in these Direct Beam Comms updates is, among other things, just review the first episode of a given TV series each season and then the season as a whole after the last episode airs. But since most of what I’m watching right now is in the middle of their runs, and since I really want to avoid talking about each and every episode of TV I watch since a) this isn’t my paying job and b), that stuff’s boring, I don’t have much to write about TV now either.
What sucks too is that movie releases on home media are no better. Right now the movies that are being released are ones that debuted just before the summer movie season which is another doldrum. Or, they’re movies that were released at the start of the summer season but didn’t do as well as expected, which area also movies I’m happy waiting to see when they pop up on cable in a year or so.
Some movies I would like to checkout once they’re out are things like The Nice Guys and X-Men: Apocalypse but those aren’t available for a few weeks. I suppose what I should do in situations where I don’t have anything to talk about is to just rent a recent release on iTunes and then talk about that, even if it’s not something I’d generally see. The only problem with that is that I really don’t enjoy posting negative things about movies and TV series I review, though I sometimes do, so I try and avoid that. And if it’s something that I wouldn’t generally see it makes it more likely than not that I wouldn’t enjoy the movie and would have to write a negative review.
I do find it amazing that almost every week this summer I’ve been able to review new TV series all debuting throughout the summer. When, even just a few years ago, summer was a dumping ground for reality TV or, even farther back, strictly a place for TV reruns. And most of what debuted this summer was good with a few outstanding shows like Stranger Things and The Night Of too.
The Reading/Watching List
- The Making of Prince’s Symbol
- The Typography of ‘Stranger Things’
- References to 70–80’s movies in Stranger Things
- Farewell – ETAOIN SHRDLU – 1978
On the Horizon
I have longer articles planned out all the way until next February. In the near-term, I’ve got columns written, or at least first drafts of, Suicide Squad, Star Trek’s 50th anniversary, new and returning TV series this fall, one about sci-fi and one about my experiences going to the drive-in as a teenager. I also have articles planned out for the movie What We Do in the Shadows for Halloween, Doctor Strange and The Man in the High Castle too.
This week in pop-culture history
Batman (1966) was released 50 years ago today
Bourne Again and Again
This is a repost of an article I originally wrote back in 2007.
Though I’ve been interested in movies as far back as I can remember, it wasn’t until the late 1990s that I seriously began following films. And though I’d consider the Summer of 1998 as a benchmark of my movie-mania, I didn’t really start going to movie theaters on an (almost) weekly basis until 2002.
That year was an almost “perfect storm” of quality films released to cinemas. Movies like Spider-Man, The Mothman Prophecies, The Sum of All Fears, Minority Report, Solaris and The Bourne Identity all debuted in 2002. And though Spider-Man did go on to become one of the highest grossing franchises in modern movie history, the only other film in this list that would become a “franchise” in the strictest sense of the term would be The Bourne Identity.
Starring Matt Damon, Franka Potente (Run, Lola, Run), Brian Cox (Zodiac) and featuring Clive Owen (Children of Men) in an early non-UK role, The Bourne Identity follows CIA assassin Jason Bourne (Damon) who’s shot during a botched mission, nearly drowns and loses his memory in the process. Wandering Europe looking for clues to his past, Bourne doesn’t realize that the agency within the CIA responsible for his creation is out to eliminate him and any chance he might start remembering a bevy of agency secrets hidden away in Bourne’s head. It’s only because of Bourne’s embedded training, his sheer will to prevail and robotic-like fighting skills that he manages to stay one step ahead of the bad-guys.
Directed by Doug Liman, then known mostly for Indie flicks like Swingers (1996) and Go (1999), I seem to remember that although The Bourne Identity did well enough in theaters (opening to $27 and grossing $121 million according to IMDB) that it was the outstanding DVD sales and positive word of mouth that would guarantee a sequel, The Bourne Supremacy, in 2004.
Though Liman would remain with the Bourne franchise as producer, Brit director Paul Greengrass stepped in as director of The Bourne Supremacy. This time, Bourne is haunted by nightmarish visions of his past where he did a lot of bad things to a good people. When his girlfriend is murdered and Bourne is framed for killing two CIA assets, Bourne’s out to destroy whomever pulled the trigger no matter if it’s a Russian agent out to kill him or the CIA looking to avenge the death of their assets. Though some of the story of The Bourne Supremacy is a bit confusing, the car chase scene at the end of the film is worth the price of admission alone.
The Bourne Supremacy would act as director Greengrass’ first real introduction to American audiences, but the first time I took note of the director was when I caught his film Bloody Sunday (2002) on TV late one Saturday night. This film follows the lead-up and eventual massacre of a group of Irish civil rights protesters in what would become known as “Bloody Sunday.” Shot from within the action in a fauxcumentary style (aka shaky camera and grainy film), Greengrass would go on to use these same docu-techniques he used to great effect in Bloody Sunday in both The Bourne Supremacy and his next film United 93 (2006).
But even after two films, dozens of wrecked cars, bruised egos and numerous corpses in his wake, the CIA isn’t finished chasing Jason Bourne yet – don’t they ever learn!? Due out later this Summer, and billed as the final movie of the series, is The Bourne Ultimatum. In this film, Jason Bourne must deal with a bevy of assassins and government agencies all out to stop Bourne from learning of his true origin. Somehow I doubt Bourne’s “true origin” is that of a celebrity chef missing from Food Network.
Actually, though, the very first version of The Bourne Identity appeared as a television movie back in 1988 and starred Richard Chamberlain, then 54, as Jason Bourne. Which is interesting since Damon was 32 when his version of The Bourne Identity hit theaters. I can only imagine that the definition of “heartthrob” in the 1988 was different than “heartthrob” in 2002.