Predator 2 is for you!

I’m about to take a very controversial position here that you’re going to be the witness of. I think that the movie Predator 2 starring Danny Glover is the best sci-fi action movie of the 1990s. It’s got everything from the Predator battling it out on the sweltering streets of LA with gangs, a heavily-armed government spook force and detective Mike Harrington (Glover).

Did I say, “best sci-fi action movie of the 1990s?” Make that “best sci-fi action movie” ever!

Predator
Predator

Okay, okay, okay, you’ve got me. I don’t really think that Predator 2 is the best sci-fi action movie ever, or even the best of the 1990s — maybe it is the best sci-fi action movie released on November 21, 1990, though. But I still think it’s a great b-grade movie that’s one of those flicks where whenever it comes on I’ll watch, own it on VHS, DVD and hi-def and have seen it probably a dozen times or so.

The sequel to the uber-successful Preadtor (1987), Predator 2 takes place a few years into the then future of 1997 and transplants the action from the war-torn jungles of Central America to the equally war-torn mean-streets of L.A. Here, Jamaican and Colombian gangs battle it out with each other over the illegal drug market killing anyone who gets in their way. Cops of the L.A. police department are outmanned and outgunned in these shootouts and it’s only because of people like Harrington who’s willing to do (read the following in that movie trailer announcer guy voice) “whatever it takes to take the bad guys down that these gangs are kept in check whatsoever.

Glover as Harrington is probably the most interesting piece of casting in the movie — and Predator 2 co-stars Bill Paxton who’d already had a bit-part in the original Terminator and co-starred in Aliens in one of the most memorable roles in sci-fi movie history as Hudson. Glover as Harrington is so interesting because he’s replacing toned and buff Arnold Schwarzenegger as the lead Predator-basher. And just a few years prior to this Glover had made a name for himself playing the, “I’m too old for this !@#$” on the verge of retirement Roger Murtaugh in Lethal Weapon. So for him to jump from that to Mr. Alien-Butt-Kicker Mike Harrington in Predator 2 is some inspired casting.

And luckily it all works. Watching the movie Glover comes off as a man of action even if he doesn’t have the toned bod of Arnold.

Because there’s so much fighting in L.A. and because the fictional summer of 1997 was extremely hot, a Predator has set up shop in the city and has begun hunting members of the gangs and taking their skulls as trophies. Which isn’t too bad, he is cleaning up the streets after all, except that this alien is also killing subway passengers and police officers too so Harrington has to take him down like a good action hero should.

The cast of Predator 2
The cast of Predator 2

Did I mention that Predator 2 also co-stars Gary Busey? Yes, that Gary Busey, in the role of a government agent who’s not trying to kill the Predator, he’s trying to catch it. And, if online reports can be believed, the role Busey plays was originally written for Schwarzenegger to return to the role of Dutch from the original Predator.

What’s that, you didn’t quite get that? Yes, Gary Busey plays a role originally written for Schwarzenegger in Predator 2.

And the end of Predator 2 has to be seen to be believed. It includes the Predator climbing and falling off buildings in downtown L.A., followed closely by Harrington, and ends up crashing into an older lady’s apartment where, when Harrington arrives soon after the alien telling the woman he’s a cop, she utters the line, “I don’t think he gives a !@#$.”

If you’re looking for b-grade movie fun then look no further than Predator 2. I can only hope that the latest The Predator movie, that’s due in theaters September 14, is as good, or as long-lasting, as Predator 2 has been the last few decades.

Predator 2 poster

Direct Beam Comms #140

TV

Better Call Saul season 4

The crux of the AMC TV series Better Call Saul is that its lead character Jimmy McGill (Bob Odenkirk) will one day become the titular Saul Goodman — a lawyer for drug dealers and other bad elements in the Albuquerque, New Mexico of Breaking Bad. Ever since the first season the creators of Better Call Saul have teased that one day chipper Jimmy McGill will cease to exist and be replaced by not so good Saul Goodman, and every season too there’s been more teases about characters from Breaking Bad also crossing over to Better Call Saul, in which a handful have. Now I can’t imagine we’ll ever see Aaron Paul or Bryan Cranston sharing the screen again with Odenkirk, though stranger things have happened, but that seems to be the focus of all the online chatter before each new season of the show.

Maybe it’s because I was never a fan of Breaking Bad but I’m perfectly okay with this. In fact, I think Better Call Saul is a better show because of this.

While there are some ties with Breaking Bad, for the most part Better Call Saul is its own show. Sure, there’s Jimmy and Mike Ehrmantraut (Jonathan Banks) who are the leads of Better Caul Saul and who were players in Breaking Bad, but I don’t think you need to have watched a single minute of that show to understand Better Call Saul. The characters are different here, less set in their criminal ways if at all.

But some of this is changing, it does seem as if both Jimmy and Mike are becoming more in-line with the criminal element than they have in the past with this latest fourth season of the show.

In fact, I’d go as far as saying that Mike’s “crossed over to the dark side.” Whereas Jimmy does have some criminal elements to him, Mike’s now taking a paycheck from bad people to do bad things. And if Mike’s “broke bad,” then how long will it be until Jimmy fully becomes Saul Goodman?

The first episode of the fourth season of Breaking Bad was a little slow, but I find that first episodes of established shows usually are. Much of the episode deals with a very big ramification from something that happened in the final episode of the third season which has left Jimmy a distraught, and nearly destroyed man.

That is until he isn’t distraught or destroyed anymore. There’s a scene at the end of this episode that left me wondering, was this the real debut of Saul Goodman, a man only interested in his self willing to do whatever’s necessary, to hurt anyone for his own gain?

Only time will tell.

Lodge 49
Lodge 49

Lodge 49

Another AMC series premiered last week, this time the brand new Lodge 49 — NOT another zombie show, shock! Starring Wyatt Russell (Black Mirror), AMC has been promoting this series as the TV version of The Big Lebowski. Heck, Russell’s character even goes by “Dud” which is a lot like the “Dude” from The Big Lebowski. Yet to me Lodge 49 was a lot more like the working-class movies and TV shows of the 1970s and 1980s than The Big Lebowski, though there was a little of that for flavor.

Here, Dud is twenty-something that’s drifting after his life came crashing down before him. He got bitten by a snake and the wound hasn’t yet healed, his dad drown while surfing and he and his sister Liz lost everything from their family home to their family business afterwards. Now, Dud metal detects on the beach for what he can and borrows what he must at high rates from a pawn shop. Until one day he finds a ring on the beach and finds that it’s from a fraternal lodge, of which he’s interested in joining if only to find a way out of his spiraling life.

Lodge 49 really isn’t what I thought it was going to be. It’s a lot more quirky and funny than I was expecting, though there is a dash of darkness to it too. I was intrigued by this show and really liked the characters within it.

The one thing that concerns me about Lodge 49 from promos I’ve seen online is that it seems like there’s quite a bit of mysticism in the series. There is a bit of that in the first episode, but what could be mystical could easily be something else. I could be totally wrong or this might make the show stronger than I think it is, but I hope Lodge 49 stays on the level and doesn’t go all John from Cincinnati or anything.

Disenchantment
Disenchantment

What To Watch This Week

Avengers: Infinity War – Tuesday
The biggest hit of the summer, and one of the biggest movies of all-time, Avengers: Infinity War is available on DVD and Blu-ray this week.

Patient Zero – Tuesday
This movie about a world overrun with zombies and the one guy who can speak zombie (Matt Smith) was originally due out two years ago but was shelved until now and is getting an on-demand release this week.

Disenchantment – Friday
The first season of the Matt Groening created animated fantasy series Disenchantment debuts this Friday on Netflix.

Red Dawn – Saturday
The commies invade Calumet, Colorado in this classic red-scare World War III movie that I’ve seen waaaaay too many times to count on HDNET MOVIES.

The Reading & Watch List

Cool TV Poster of the Week

Project Blue Book poster