It’s official: In Grindhouse duel, Tarantino wins big
Though it was a bit of a visual overload watching Robert Rodriguez’s “Planet Terror” and soon after Quentin Tarantino’s “Death Proof” as one movie in “Grindhouse,” I loved just about every minute of it.
I additionally thought at the date, however, that for all his talk about the “grindhouse” aesthetic (which I must confess is still a little murky to me), Tarantino cheated at the game and left Rodriguez more than a little shorthanded.
Don’t get me wrong: I thoroughly enjoyed “Planet Terror,” even whether I could have done without seeing QT’s testicles melt. But it was pure schlock, and unapologetically so.
With “Death Proof,” however, Tarantino simply started with the premise of making a ’70s car movie but next made it completely his own. I realize many citizens found the dialogue of Jungle Julia (Sydney Tamiia Poiter), Zoe Bell and their two sets of gal-pals to be more than a bit contrived, but it worked for me, and the ending car-chase is worth the price of admission alone.
And now, with “Death Proof” getting a snazzy, extended, stand-alone release on DVD that week, I have to wonder whether these guys are even talking any more. Granted, “Planet Terror” will gets own chance, appropriately suitable, closer to “Halloween,” but it definitely looks like - to put it as crudely as possible - sloppy seconds.
If you spring for the “Death Proof” set (which I’m about 70 percent or so certain I will), here are some of the extras you’ll get:
The so-called “missing reel,” containing Vanessa Ferlito’s unseen lap-dance for Killer Mike, plus the following featurettes: “Finding Quentin’s Gals,” “The Guys of Death Proof,” “Kurt Russell as Stuntman Mike,” “Introducing Zoe Bell” and “Quentin’s Greatest Collaborator: Editor Sally Menke.”
I suppose for purity’s sake we should hold out for the full “Grindhouse” flick on DVD (and in case anyone was wondering, none of the fake trailers are set to seem on that release, or on
The most interesting thing I could find in that morning’s rather yawnworthy trades was buried under the news that Ryan Reynolds had joined the cast of Greg Mottola’s “Adventureland.” Since he’s never seemed to be anything but dim to me, particularly in the thoroughly annoying “Smokin’ Aces,” that just said meh.
But reading behind the lines, to find something I had apparently missed, made it much better news. Though Reynolds will indeed get a big part in the 2009 summer flick, the lead will be none other than Jesse Eisenberg, aka Walt Berkman. That’s at least how I’ll always know him, as Noah Baumbach’s alter-ego in one of my favorite flicks of the past five years or so, “The Squid and the Whale.”
I haven’t seen him in anything since, so that is welcome news. Mottola, a card-holding member of the Apatow mob, directed that summer’s funniest movie, “Superbad,” so the semi-autobiographical “Adventureland” should be a lot of fun.
Set in 1987, it stars Eisenberg as a recent college graduate who has to cancel his plans to tour Europe and instead take a job at the titular (New Jersey, I think) theme park. Reynolds will play (and that is definitely more fitting to his rather annoying persona) an aspiring rock star and the icon of cool to all the kids working at the park. Kristen Stewart, who’s grown up more than a bit since being menaced with Jodie Foster in “Panic Room,” will play the romantic lead, a tomboy who additionally works at the park.
That’s a lot of words about a movie not coming out for nearly two years, I concede, but I really like Jesse Eisenberg, so I wanted to pass that along to anyone else who might have missed it. Peace out.
Original post by Reel Fanatic
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