But bigger for me, were all the movies. Pretty much every star that I liked had made a film or two (except River Phoenix and John Candy, for some reason), and I didn't know which ones were good (SPEED, MAVERICK, FORREST GUMP?) and which were bad (ACE VENTURA, ROBIN HOOD: MEN IN TIGHTS, Disney's THREE MOUSKETEERS?). It was a wondrous time to go to the cinema and the video store, and due to my time sweeping the machine shop and chortling prison guards, I had enough money to check everything out.
That sort of thing hasn't been repeated (since I now have diplomatic immunity), and I didn't think that it could be. Until I walked into Target the other day, and saw a big display of new movies. They were on sale cheap, just in time for Father's Day, July 4th, or Manatee Eve.
I did a double-take.
It wasn't a bevy of recognizable new releases, installments of PACIFIC RIM, TOMB RAIDER,
or BLACK PANTHER. These were right there, next to the New Releases, in a prominent display. And they were all mysteries to me.
I didn't recognize a single one of these movies.
Furthermore, all the actor names that were being promoted as selling points ("Marquee Names," as they used to call them, or "Above The Title" names, as they call them now) were mysteries to me too.
They certainly *looked* like real movies, but the titles . . . I dunno.
Take this one, for example, THE SWEDISH COMPROMISE. Not exactly a riveting title, but still better than HURRICANE HEIST, or SOURCE CODE, or THE ECHELON CONSPIRACY. And the word "Swedish" gives it a bit of exotic international flavor and/or makes you hungry for candy fish.
But then I looked at the tagline. "Sometimes, the only option is compromise."
Wait a minute, is this a joke? While I agree that sometimes the only option is compromise, when used as a tagline, it's awfully similar to, "Sometimes, the only way to win a fight is to give up." It just doesn't fill me with the image of characters who never stop fighting, and who go through all sorts of intrigue. Excitement, who needs it?
RED FEAR 2, starring Brock Chavez. SNAIL'S PACE starring Ronald Piedmont?
Natalia Rodriguez? Stone Jones? Gene Manchester? Jack Russell? Vanessa Fairmont? Gustav Doberman? Not only do they not sound like real movie stars . . . that last one doesn't even sound like a real name.
THE EVIDENCE ("They wined him . . . they dined him . . . they framed him") has three names above the faces of three vaguely-celebrity-looking actors. The three names? Evans, Cooper, and Jones. No first names, because these guys are either so famous that last name says it all . . . or they're deliberately trying to sucker people into thinking this movie stars Chris Evans, Bradley Cooper, and Shirley Jones from "The Partridge Family."
That's more than a bit evil, isn't it?
If you look closely, you'll see THE EVIDENCE has a Rolling Stone review quote: "It sets the bar for legal thrillers," with "bar" in italics. Low blow, Rolling Stone, not cool.
Here's another one. Pretty girl, if you can get past the flames and red eyes. Damned if I've ever seen her before, though.
It's called BREAK POINT DAWN INFINITY. Dynamic words, sure, action-oriented words. But a movie title? These didn't sound so much like a title so much as the trigger words to brainwash the Winter Soldier. Were they just randomly generated by a machine?*
This film is the sequel to OCEAN MISSION, OCEAN MISSION: DARK TIDE.
How deep is too deep? I don't know, actually. But I know this cover reminds me of both CRIMSON TIDE and THE HUNT FOR RED OCTOB--
Just a second, does this film star Donald Trump? Is that a picture of him with a submarine captain's hat Photoshopped on?
Are these real movies?
This one is TIME GAMES starring . . . Matt Baba? I don't know who he is, but the cover reminds me of TOTAL RECALL. Baba' name is much larger than the title (like Schwarzenegger's was in 1990), so that should tip me off to just how big a deal Matt Baba is in Laos or Malta or Wisconsin or some far-away foreign locale.
Oh, and Red Fear 2 (or is it 3?) has the subtitle, MASSIVE HEAT. Does that work? Maybe it had to be put that way, to make the awesome tagline work.
"If you can't stand the Heat . . . time to die."
"The future of the past is now."
Digest that, kids.
It had a really decent tagline: "His country is gone . . . but his oath is eternal." So, yeah. Nothing wrong here--
--Except that REMEMBRANCE is spelled wrong.
And worse, there's a line through the O in "Oath." That gives me the fudgin' heebie jeebies.
Oh, but it gets so much worse. BLUD OATS: REMEMBERENCING stars Hom Tanks.
Hom H. Tanks.
Come on, kids, that's the kind of joke I regularly made in seventh grade, when I started calling Jennifer Kirk "Kennifer Jerk" and actually thought I was funny.
Not to kick a dead horse, but the craziness doesn't end there. I don't know if you can see it in the photo, but at the bottom of the DVD, it touts, "From the director of JOANIE LOVES CHACHI 4: DEFENESTRATION."
I couldn't help but marvel. Nobody would believe me if I just told them about this, so I got out my cellphone.
Finally, after I had taken these (admittedly shitty) pictures, a man stepped up to me and asked, "Can I help you, sir?" He did not seem to be a Target employee, but more of a security guard type.
"Yeah, I was just looking at these movies. Do you recognize any of these people?"
"I don't watch movies, sir," the guy said, as plenty of people have said to me (although, to be frank, I hear it a lot more about reading books, and people sure do love to brag about that), and I sighed, because someone who didn't know who Edward James Olmos is wouldn't understand if I said, "It sort of looks like Edward James Olmos in DARK TIDE 2, but only if you squint."
Finally, I said, "Well, these movies just seem weird to me. As if they come from another--"
I looked at his face.
The man only had one nostril, in the center of his nose.
"Another . . . ?" he asked, and if I've ever heard a loaded question, it was this one.
"Another country," I said instead. Then I pretended to notice something. "Oh, the Swedish Compromise. They must come from Sweden." I made a happy sound. Mystery solved.
"Sweden," he said quietly. He raised his sleeve to his lips and exhaled into it. I don't know if it was a word in another language or a sound or a code, but I know a signal when I hear one.
I started to walk away.
"Would you mind coming with me, sir?" he asked behind me.
I started to run.
Rish Outfield
*Actually, "Breaking Point" seems like a pretty good title, for a movie or series. But not "Break Point." Never "Break Point."
**Check out the poster for that Madonna-seduces-a-gay-guy movie sometime.
P.S. Months later, I was in a different Target, when I saw a familiar movie in the Toy aisle. It was our good friend OCEAN MISSION COLON DARK TIDE. It was on clearance for $1.80. I picked it up.
In fact, they were all there, all the greatest hits (of Earth-371). I remembered how much time I wasted on this blogpost, and that I never once thought to look up these titles or actors on the IMDB.
Worse yet, I never thought to look on the back of one of the DVDs. This is what I found:
Ah, so it was some kind of April Fools Day prank, only in June, That makes sen--
Wait, does it? Did they sell more Dad Packs of cards making them look like old movies than they would have making them look like cards?
Well, two things are for sure, they certainly got me (to waste my time) with this one. And second, I'm totally gonna blow $1.80 on the next one I see. The novelty alone should be worth that much.
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