Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Top 5 Things to Watch on Halloween

By Josh Darby

Let’s start out with this; Halloween is not my favorite holiday. I’m not the biggest fan of horror films. I work in theatre and get to play in costume most days, so Oct 31st isn’t that special to me. No “scary” film has excited me in many years and people can take the day far too seriously. That being said, it’s a fun day. The themes and motifs that get explored in Halloween entertainment are very strong. Usually dealing in people fears or misunderstandings, and in the resulting desire to survive or overcome them.
When compiling my list, I had a common theme. Zombies. Now only one zombie film made my list, however, there were several of them that were under consideration. They include: the “Epidemiology” episode of Community, Zombieland, Dawn of the Dead, Cabin in the Woods and 28 Days Later. What do I look for in a good Halloween film? Suspense, good story, characters that I care about, and horror elements that comment on the characters, themes, situation, or aspects of society. Now I can’t say all the picks on my list cover all these topics, but they hit most of them.

The Guidelines: Simple guidelines for this top 5, something that is a good watch on Halloween night. Whether you are stuck at home handing out the candy, or just getting back from a night out, whatever you put on has to fit the Halloween mood.

Josh’s Honorable Mentions: The Legend of Sleepy Hollow (this 1949 animated Disney classic is great for families because it’s visually beautiful and just scary enough to be a great Halloween watch.), The Nightmare Before Christmas (the only reason this great film not on the official list is due to the fact that I don’t consider it a true Halloween movie), Cabin in the Woods (I’m not saying a word about this 2012 film, except that it’s great and its by David Goddard and Joss Whedon. The less you know about it the better, just watch it.) “Halloweenie” – The Adventures of Pete and Pete (one of the best episodes of this classic Nickelodeon show, it’s smarter than almost any show in TV history. If you’re not familiar, be sure you find this show) Mr. Yin Present… -- Psych (an homage to Alfred Hitchcock, and one of the best episodes of the show)

Josh’s List:

5. North by Northwest (1959) Directed by Alfred Hitchcock Witten by Ernest Lehman

Okay you can’t make a list of best things to watch on Halloween without the master of suspense himself Alfred Hitchcock. You really can’t go wrong with any of his well-known (Psycho, Rope, Rear Window, Rebecca, Vertigo) films, but for my money the best Hitchcock film is North by Northwest. A classic chase film follows Cary Grant and Eva Marie Saint as they are followed around the country by a group of foreign spies. This film is beautifully shot, full of moments of shock, surprise, and suspense. On top of that it holds up. Released in 1959 North by Northwest is just as watchable today as it was back then. If you are not familiar with Alfred Hitchcock’s work (shame on you) pick up this film and Psycho, and enjoy a great evening of classic cinema.

4. “Halloween”/“Fear Itself” Buffy the Vampire Slayer (1997/1999) Directed Bruce Seth Green/Tucker Gates written by Joss Whedon/David Fury

This is first of many times throughout this blog that I will talk about Buffy the Vampire Slayer. For me no list of Halloween entertainment would be complete without a trip to Sunnydale, CA. These two episodes are both Halloween themed (to be fair the show is about hunting vampires and demons… so… what week isn’t Halloween themed?) Both episodes deal with the fears of our main characters, and how they are addressing them. These episodes both have classic Buffy/Whedon moments in them and give you a great vibe about what makes the show fantastic. “Halloween” is a season 2 episode where the citizens of Sunnydale start turning into their Halloween costumes. We also get a first glimpse into the relationship between Oz and Willow. “Fear Itself” is a really great episode in season 4, but this one stands out as fantastic character study of all of our main characters. During this episode the ‘Scoobies’ find themselves trapped in a haunted frat house, with their greatest fears coming to life. The defeat of the villain in this episode is a great moment. Sit back and enjoy a great night with Buffy the Vampire Slayer.

3. Shaun of the Dead (2004) Directed and Written by Edgar Wright

This is my kind of “horror” film. Yes, there is a reason that I put it in quotes, and that is because it’s not really a horror film. Sure it’s a zombie film, but it’s a zombie that’s wrapped up in a romantic comedy. What Shaun of the Dead does right is that it cares about its characters. It has a story that needs to be told, and needs zombies to tell it. Yes, it makes fun of other ‘zed-word’ films, but it is also a very good zombie film. Shaun gives you laughs, scares, and an all-around good time.

2. Jaws (1975) Directed by Stephen Spielberg Written by Peter Benchley & Carl Gottlieb

Jaws makes my list as the representation of a more traditional horror film; however it was also the first ever summer blockbuster showing that if you scare people the right way, you have a huge hit on your hands. Its villain is nothing more than a hungry shark, but what it does right is that you hardly see the shark. Spielberg is great at telling large stories that are small at their core and Jaws is no different. This is a story about people, a small town, and small town politics. With classic lines like “I think we’re going to need a bigger boat” and probably the most famous music cue in film history, what Jaws understands is that less is more. An audience’s imagination is far worse than anything you can actually put on the screen and this film makes you sit there stewing in your own thoughts before you find out what is actually happening. You feel empathy and sympathy for the characters, the story is strong and well plotted (if not a tiny bit formulaic), and in the end Jaws will have you on the edge of you seat. This is film that has generations of people to “not go into the water” and if you ever end up in Amity I would suggest following those great words of advice.

1. It’s The Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown (1966) Director Bill Melendez Written by Charles Schulz

This is a seminal piece of American television captures everything that’s great about Halloween from a child’s point of view. The story of Linus waiting for the Great Pumpkin gives the audience a sense of hope, joy and wonder that we’ve not had since we were a kid. Sally is a little piece of comedy gold, the World War I flying ace Snoopy tells a visually stunning story, and of course Charlie Brown gets a rock, every time, all the time. For me it’s just as much a part of Halloween as carving pumpkins, trick or treating and costumes. Whether you're watching it as a kid, as a parent with your own child, or somewhere in between, It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown is the kind of TV special that continues to appeal to all generations since its original 1966 airing.

Jeff’s List:

5. “HUSH” Buffy the Vampire Slayer (1999) Directed and Written by Joss Whedon

Josh already went over some stellar Buffy episodes, but I think this one takes the cake. ‘Hush’ is my favorite hour of Buffy by far, and the perfect one to celebrate Halloween. Joss Whedon has often been criticized of writing television that is far too dialogue heavy (which is hardly a criticism of this great filmmaker, but people have to find fault somewhere) so he answered that challenge and wrote an episode that was almost completely silent, to great success. ‘The Gentlemen’ are the best one-off villains that the show ever concocted and are the stuff of nightmares. Watch and enjoy.

4. Zombieland (2009) Directed Ruben Fleischer Written by Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick

Shaun of the Dead is an obvious choice for Halloween, but the equally obvious American answer to that film is Zombieland. Josh placed this in the Honorable Mention category, but I’d like to redeem it by offering it a space in my top five. Zombieland is bloody good fun, and is a great start to your Halloween festivities, if not the best finisher. Of all the post-apocalyptic wastelands, this is the one I want to live in. A universe where food and guns are plentiful and you can survive comfortably if you just follow the rules. Also, Emma Stone is a part of your everyday life, and no arguments here on that. Watch, enjoy, and then move on to the darker stuff, especially…

3. Let the Right One In (2008) Directed by Tomas Alfredson and Written by John Ajvide Lindqvist

Wow. I mean, WOW. This is the best vampire film I’ve ever seen or am ever likely to see. The fact that one of the main characters is a vampire seems almost coincidental to the love story between a reserved young Scandinavian boy and his mysterious young neighbor who talks to him on the playground at night. I hate the current trend toward vampires we’ve seen in the last five years. On the surface it’s saccharine, and on a deeper level it’s devoid of meaning and shies away from any of the real consequences of predatory half-life. I had an experience when I was 13 with a man who believed he was a vampire who tried to kill me. I fucking hate vampires, and have no stomach for romantic, Twilight style portrayals of them. But this film is truly honest with its characterization of love and death. Also, visually it is truly beautiful. They made an American version, Let Me In, which should burn in Hell. Watch Let the Right One In on Netflix. Now. Then keep reading.

2. Trick ‘r Treat (2007) Directed and Written by Michael Dougherty

This movie is just fun, and the perfect film to watch during this holiday season. It follows multiple stories over the course of one Halloween night, and each is full of humor and terror. I’m not going to ruin it for you. The cast is great, it’s wonderfully crafted, and since you can slip in and out of the narrative and still enjoy it, it’s exactly what should be playing in the background of your Halloween bash.

1. Planet Terror (2007) Written and Directed by Robert Rodriguez

This film was Josh’s present to me for my 21st birthday, and continues to be one of my favorites. Zombie/epidemic horror mixed with raunchy action and B-movie charm. Stipper with a machine-gun leg? Awesome. How does she fire it? Who knows, who cares! This film was ‘thrown together’ in the best possible way. It is a pure pleasure to view, and the artificial aging, the fact that Bruce Willis was only on set for about an hour and a half, and the thumping bass line only add to the joy. Play this on Halloween with the DVD bonus “audience reaction track” on and get ready for a good time.

Happy Halloween dear readers, from Nerd 5!


Monday, October 8, 2012

Nerd 5 Presents: TV 101


Session #1 – Community

By nature, TV 101 Articles will contain small spoilers about each episode, if you wish to not be spoiled, only read episode names.


Meanwhile in the Nerd Cave….

Josh: I want to talk about TV

Jeff: …

Josh: I think they’re a ton of great shows on TV right now.

Jeff: …

Josh: You are right Jeff; we are in a new golden age of television. If you discount reality TV, but in reality there are so many really good shows on TV and the production value is really high.

Jeff: It’s kind of like…

Josh: They’re just short really well made movies. Yes. You are right Jeff. How can I make this into a new feature for the website?

Jeff: Well we could…

Josh: I remember when a friend of mine showed me Buffy the Vampire Slayer for the first time, he just showed a 5 episode highlight of the first season and I was hooked. He showed me that the show was good, and then when I went back to watch the entire first season I knew the good stuff was still to come, and it hooked me into the show. It was a really great way to introduce someone to a show, and it’s worked on several of my friends to get them hooked on TV shows. 5 episodes, to like or dislike a show. A solid idea.

Jeff:…

Josh: Now how to frame it? I got it! I’ll call it TV 101 and it’ll be like a class, and each episode is a new lesson.

Jeff: I don’t know Josh; it’s kind of weak…

Josh: I agree! Best idea I’ve ever had. Good conversation, Jeff. I’m off!

*This may or may not have been a real conversation, that Jeff Carpenter may or may not have been a part of. Just know that in my head it was very real*


The Guidelines: For this article I will be looking at the top 5 episodes to show someone to get them addicted to the TV show Community. Community is one of the best and most underrated shows on TV (my personal favorite show on TV, that’s why I started with it) and is returning to NBC this fall Friday’s at 8:30 (I’m plugging in hopes that it won’t get canceled, as most shows I love do.) I enjoy watching TV shows in chronological order, for this reason I will give you the season and episode number for episode. Even though I am ranking them from 5 to 1, I would always highly suggest that you watch each series chronologically (especially in the case of Community. Watch the show from front to back, as the comedy really builds upon itself and the show is very self-referential). ***Small spoilers to follow.


Cast Credits –
Joel McHale as Jeff Winger, Gillian Jacobs as Britta Perry, Danny Pudi as Abed Nadir, Yvette Nicole Brown as Shirley Bennett, Alison Brie as Annie Edison, Donald Glover as Troy Barnes, Chevy Chase as Pierce Hawthorne, Ken Jeong as Ben Chang, Jim Rash as Dean Pelton

Honorable Mention –

Contemporary American Poultry – S1 Ep21 – A great episode to show what Community does best, and a great parody of mafia films but especially of Casino, Goodfellas, and The Godfather.

Cooperative Calligraphy – S2 Ep8 – A new twist on a classic bottle episode, and a great character study for our seven main characters

Abed’s Uncontrollable Christmas – S2 & Ep8 AND Virtual Systems Analysis – S3 Ep16 – These two episodes delve deep in to the mind and psyche of my absolute favorite character in TV history, Abed. They work perfectly together to understand Abed.

The List:

5. Environmental Science – S1 Ep1

Season 1, and the series in general, kicks into high gear with this episode. This episode has Chang at his craziest, The Dean’s shell starting to crack, and all of our characters finally taking shape. Here is where we start to see the characters that the show will become famous for. I’ve said that Community rolls into becoming great and here is where the snowball picks up speed. The episode is about is framed around The Study Group needing to get out of a 20 page Spanish paper assigned by Chang; meanwhile Shirley and Pierce are working on a speech for their public speaking class, Troy and Abed are training a mouse named Fievel (yes there are plenty of An American Tail references along the way) and The Dean tires to help Greendale “go green.”

What pushes this episode over the top is the ending sequence that is funny, heartfelt, and clever blend of storytelling that mixes all of the characters and stories together. The episode also cements together the two things of the show that grounds it into reality. In this episode we see Tory and Abed truly come together as friends and for the first time Jeff shows that The Study Group can change him for the better. Community is nothing without its heart and in this episode we start see where that heart comes from.

4. Remedial Chaos Theory – S3 Ep3

Community hits a new gear with this episode while trying to avoid the darkest timeline. The simple plot of this episode is The Study Group is attending a house warming party for Tory and Abed’s new apartment. REMEDIAL CHAOS THEORY all takes place within the first 10 min of the party. How so? Because we see the same scene played 7 different ways. When the pizza arrives for the party Jeff has the idea to toss a dice, assigning each person a number and whichever side it lands on is the person that has to get the pizza. In Abed’s mind this creates 6 alternate timelines. That’s the jumping off point for the number 4 episode of the list.

I’m not going to go into too much detail here because the great thing about his episode is not known how each timeline will work out. But I’ll simply say that the episode works because it is silly, moving and revelatory all at the same time. We really get to know our characters and what makes them tick within this episode, as well as examining what their relationship is to the other around them.

3. Digital Estate Planning – S3 Ep20

One of the best things about Community is its ability to totally engulf you into a world. DIGITAL ESTATE PLANNING is a tribute to all things 8-bit and a love story to classic video games. 90% of this episode is animated in the style of a traditional 2D scroller.

What Community does well taking its characters to a brand new location, setting, or in this case world and still making the show feel consistent with other episodes, it’s characters feel natural in any setting, and it’s beyond clever at all times. Not wanting to give too much away this episode speaks for itself, just sit back and enjoy.

2. Modern Warfare – S1 Ep23

The second best episode on my list is probably the most well-known episode, here Community tackles post-apocalyptic action films, with references to The Warriors, Mad Max¸ Die Hard, 28 Days Later and many others all wrapped up in a paint-ball game gone way to far; MODERN WARFARE is not just one of the best episodes of Community but of television history.

So many classic Community lines, moments and events happen with in the episode that it would be far too long (and too cruel) too spoil them here. The episode is very cleverly written, and it uses it’s gimmick to move forward it’s characters. Instead of stopping the story they are telling to do a themed episode they use the theme to push everything forward, a feat that is very rare to television. However, where it really shines is in its direction. Justin Lin, a veteran action director, comes on the set and takes charge. Giving Community a whole new look and feel while driving the production level to an extreme; MODERN WARFARE looks like movie. The cinematography, visual design, and visual storytelling are so far above other TV shows it’s hard to believe that Lin was not even nominated for an Emmy for this episode. I’ll stop gushing about this episode, but needless to say I’ll continue gushing about the next one cause as great as this is, there’s still one better.
   
1. Advanced Dungeons and Dragons S2 Ep14
             
“Gather close that you might harken the story of Fat Neil” These are the words that being this episode of Community. Fat Neil is a blink and you’ll miss him recurring character that takes focus for this fantastic episode. ADVANCED DUNGEONS AND DRAGONS is a send up of The Lord of Rings based around Dungeons and Dragons. If you are not familiar with the game don’t worry the episode will tell you everything that you need to know.

This episode does shows off everything Community does right, using a theme to move the characters forward, emerging an audience within a world, and showing the heart and soul of the series. Placing Pierce in the roll of the villain the others must overcome all odds, and crazy D&D stories, to “save” Fat Neil.
                        
ADVANCED DUNGEONS AND DRAGONS is 21 min long epic, which plays on many different levels. A new fan to the show can enjoy on one level, a hardcore fan on another, and a fan of D&D could enjoy it on a whole other level. But though all of that what make this episode stand out is this simple fact. The episode is nothing except people talking to each other; nothing explodes, no CGI, just 8 fully formed characters talking to each other and moving the story forward. The simple brilliance of Community is that it’s characters are so strong, so well formed that the best and funniest moments come from the simplest of conversations.

Well if these 5 episodes can’t convince you to watch all of Commuinty from front to back then I’m not sure what can. Hopefully you’ve enjoy the article and soon enough you too will just another student of Greendale.