The long-awaited Criterion Collection DVD edition of Wes Anderson's debut feature "Bottle Rocket" which came out last Tuesday (November 25).
We watched it last weekend and took massive and stupidly long notes, which we've already covered in five other pieces. Be forewarned, this post is painfully long.
To be quick, it's really nice to see the film in real widescreen and not in the original pan and scan of the one-disc Sony version. It really is a revelation to see this "new" version. It looks and sounds immaculately confirming that the old version was like watching crud.
Like all Criterion Collection discs, this one is tastefully and lovingly curated with lots of bit for the Wes Anderson or Bottle Rocket obsessive (it's his second best film after "Rushmore," don't try to argue that point). It's also nice to see the colors pop in such a nice way and this new transfer and especially the deleted scenes make you realize that Anderson's style was much more developed than some might have initially thought. Also note: the Marty Scorsese liner notes? Their not new, just the reprinted ones from the original Esquire article he wrote back in the day, but producer James L. Brooks' liner notes are long and extensive.
Deleted Scenes
- We already wrote two pieces on two deleted scenes from the DVD, however...
- "There was this whole scene that we filmed about being chase through the yard by the cops and several scenes that followed that ended up being cut from the film," notes cinematographer Robert Yeomen.
- Let's note there's still other deleted scenes that didn't make it into this Criterion Collection edition. Judd Apatow's wife Leslie Mann said she was originally in "Bottle Rocket" and she's nowhere to be seen on this disc. Also, in the commentary track, Owen and Wes discuss a a scene that involved Dignan attempting to become romantic with one of the other Spanish housekeepers that was cut.
- Another deleted scene not in the Criterion disc, but briefly viewed in the making-of-documentary - Kumar entertaining guests at Mr. Henry's party by spinning multiple plates at once on a table; an old parlor trick.
Reshoots
-The opening scene of Anthony's release from the mental institute in Arizona up to their bus ride home was shot after principal photography ended. It was a reshoot at the behest of the film's producers. "Additional photography we called it," Owen joked.
- "Bob Mapplethorpe: potential getaway driver, go!" was also another reshoot scene. Owen explains, "You [Wes] were depressed and a little bit in a funk where it was hard to get you to focus on directing and writing the rewrites." Wilson was working and came upstairs to find a down Anderson with his, "Head down like in study hall" and Wilson asked if he had come up with anything. Wes didn't answer and instead just pushed a piece of paper towards him that said, "Bob Mapplethorpe, potential getaway driver, go."
Opening Scene And Opening Notes
- The film was shot in 1994 and was in post-production for two years and came out in 1996.
- Antonia Bogdanovich is one of the girls on the lawn that Anthony says goodbye to him in Arizona. Polly Plat, the producer of "Bottle Rocket" was Peter Bogdanovich's wife who worked on many of his films as a set designer (she was famously dumped for Cybil Shepard during the making of Bogdanovich's "The Last Picture Show."
- Owen Wilson didn't want to act in the feature initially, he thought it wouldn't seem like a "real" movie and would be unprofessional if he and his brother actually starred in it.
- On the bus back from the "nuthouse," Wes Anderson is sitting right behind Owen and Luke Wilson watching the monitor; you can see his hair and glasses.
- Before Brooks insisted on the mental house scene the film opened up with Anthony and Dignan in the alley walking and talking about fitness on the way to their first robbery.
- Dr. Nichols, Anthony's doctor at the mental health institute in Arizona was played by Ned Dowd, former first assistant director turned producer. He was also a former hockey player, and his sister wrote the Paul Newman hockey comedy, "Slapshot" based on his experiences (the film's main villain was based on him).
Anamorphic Test
- There were anamorphic tests shot for the film, but they ultimately decided to shoot in another aspect ratio (the anamorphic format is generally how Anderson has shot the rest of his films).
-- Owen talks about the Dignan haircut that he sported for years and thought it was cool at the time. And then he grew his hair long (which can be seen in the anamorphic tests) in Los Angeles and James L.Brooks maybe thought it might be good, but Wes was adamant that he go back to the original haircut.
The Now-Legendary and Disastrous Test Screening
The film was one of the most poorly tested films in the history of Sony and this is mentioned over and over again, both in the making-of-documentary and the commentary track. By all accounts this scarred the group, depressed them and took the wind out of their sails. It also was part of the reason, the film was in reshoots and in post-production for so long.
"It was a horrendous preview, it was really depressing." - James L. Brooks, executive producer.
"It was in the lore that we had the worst scores ever." - Polly Play, producer
- "A shocking number of people walked out."- Luke Wilson, Anthony Adams.
- Composer Mark Mothersbaugh was present at the screening and was one of the few people who really enthusiastic about the film. Subsequently, he was brought on to write the film's score.
Their confidence on the film totally fell apart. "We got such whipsawed emotionally about how we felt about the movie, or at least i did," Owen said. "We felt great when we were doing it and then it test screened and it went so badly and it went through such a long post-production process and then you thought ,'Would it get [even] released?' " Their thoughts about the film totally crumbled, at one point asking themselves, 'What were we thinking? How did we think people would enjoy this or think it was funny?" And then their feelings changed. "Then it finally came out and then some people really embraced it."
- "You'd like to not be affected by what other people think, but it's really difficult, maybe it was cause I never acted before. It almost feels like a personal rejection," Wilson said.
- "I couldn't stay in the room. I'd never been so humiliated before," Wes said of the screening. Apparently there were 85 walkouts. "People were walking out one after another, and everything was just collapsing right there. It was everything for us."
The Film Was Turned Down At Sundance, Despite the Short Being Accepted/The Retweak Period
"Wes was devastated and pissed off" - Richard Sakai, executive producer
"It was an uncomfortable time" - Luke Wilson.
"It was so painful trying to cut that down to a good running time and it was like we were tearing Wes' guts out." - Polly Platt.
- "By the reshoot it was a more nervous thing. We were in California and the movie's in trouble and we all felt a different pressure," Luke Wilson said in the making-of doc.
The Last Test Screening After All The Reshoots and Tweaks
- Even though the scores didn't really go up, it played much better.
- Wes notes that Cameron Crowe was there and "really liked it." Dinner afterwards: and we were all celebrating and it got a 24 (out of 100). Owen: "I remember thinking during the screenings for 'Rushmore' that the film "really killed" but then the scores were about the same as they were for "Bottle Rocket."
- One feedback card out of 500 people was dear to them and they kept it. It described, "How much she loved the movie." Wes later met the girl and she approached him. "I was at that terrible screening years ago in Santa Monica" and Wes immediately said, "I know who you are, I know your card." Owen: "You knew her comments because we had mesmerized them. Wes, "I remember saying, This is our audience." they laugh. "One in 500," Wes said, dying laughing.
The Original Bottle Rocket Script Was Semi-Serious Crime Film
- Robert Musgrave really helped shape that character of Bob Mapplethorpe. The original script was a little "gritty" and there was a character of Hanson and it was like a James Dean type character. There was a scene where one of them was shot and dies and "one of them is saying, "NOOOOOOOO!!!," which doesn't really fit the tone of where we landed later," Wes recalled. "So that was good about Bob when he became that character," Owen said about Musgrave, "Because then we knew we were writing for Bob."
- The context: "There was a lot of crime movies at the time," Wes said. "I don't think we quite had it in us to deliver the goods on the shootouts and stuff."
- One scene in the original script had the guys getting into a car accident and then getting into a fist fight with random guys who never come back in the script.
- When they first see Deepak Pallana onscreen, Wes says, "Once we knew writing for our friends it became much easier." "It helped us to know what the movie would be," Owen remarked, "That's when it became obviously wasn't going to be like 'Resevoir Dogs'... it was going to be a comedy." The cast had to become people that fit with Owen and Luke better - "It became more personal."
- "When they first started writing 'Bottle Rocket,' I don't think we even knew what kind of characters we were drawn to," Wes recalled. "We knew what kind of movies we loved and we had written lots of short stories and we had a sense of those characters and the mood of those, but I think its only over the course of writing the script that we figured out even what kind of movie we wanted to do. I had more of a sense of what it would be like visually then what the feeling of the story was going to be like, because it was originally, vaguely serious and not consistently, so we had to choose the material that was more ours. Originally it was extremely derivative and the crime aspect of it, which had no connection to our personal lives or personal experiences... was what it was about. And ultimately it was about us and our friends and situations we imagined ourselves and our friends in."
The Original Script Reading
- The original script was 225 pages long (about 100 pages longer than usual).The first reading with James L. Brooks was terrible. Brooks came over and notes that even though they were all living together they had never read the script aloud to one another.
- "Night came, day broke, seasons changed - it was the longest reading ever," Brooks said.
- A different crucial table-reading with execs in L.A.: "We did a good job on that one. You were reading the stage directions and you were really spitting out the words and there was an excitement that you couldn't even keep out of your voice," Owen laughed.
Lines That James L. Brooks Inspired/Wrote
"Why you do it, man?" the line that Dignan says to Anthony about the "inexcusable" and excessive tip to the housekeepers sparks a conversation and recollection that the line came from James L.Brooks, something he said when he was upset at Anderson for not getting basic coverage during one scene and how he would get frustrated at needless, Scorsese-like close-ups: at one scene in the deleted sequence that follows in 3 Anderson-esque tight close shots Bob buying a cup of coffee from a coffee machine, Brooks remarked in frustration, "There better be poison in that cup," for the narrative reason they would bother shooting it like that.
- But the "Why'd you do it, man?" line came exactly from a reshoot in a diner where there was a cowboy-looking guy in the foreground and Luke in Owen in the background which sparked Brooks to say, "Why'd you do it, man?" "For Jim to see this master shot with this guy counting money the whole time seemed... insulting," Wes laughed. "I think I was sometimes so confidence in what I thought was the thing to do, I would sometimes miss a chance to hear what James had to offer, but there's so much that he brought to it that are in [the picture]."
- "Don't treat me like the jealous friend" - sounds like a James L. Brook line/sense of humor says Owen.
James Caan/Mr.Henry
His appearance legitimized the film for the Wilson and Anderson. "We were very lucky to get him. We had the same agent," Wes noted. They ate lunch with him in his trailer, "it was very exciting for us." He had a proper trailer and said to the boy, "This represents your career - they give you one of these."
- The character of Rowboat was James Caan's real-life karate sensei. Anderson had the idea of putting them in their briefs in a training session and Caan wondered how respectful that was to a man who was kind of a karate holy man. Anderson said, "But Jimmy, I think it would be really funny" and Caan responded, 'What you're going to start now?" they laughed.
- "Jimmy had no problem with this scene," Wes says of the scene where Mr. Henry embarrasses Futureman (Andrew Wilson) for trying to humiliate Bob in front of the crew at the tennis country club. The karate hold he puts Andrew Wilson in is real and Wilson notes in the making of the of film doc that it was "very painful."
- Wes and Owen note that Caan is actually very tough, "Jimmy is a hard person," says Wes. "He was a rodeo rider." "It's not an act, he's tough," Wilson adds."If Jimmy and Andrew got into a fight, you'd probably have to bet on Jimmy. He played football at Michigan state." Wes notes his old-fashioned and amazing football throwing style during some downtime.
- Before James Caan arrived it was just Anderson comfortably directing friends and then at his arrival, Owen notes that Wes became a little nervous. But Wilson stuck to his guns and about a scene where Caan goes jogging in Chuck Taylor converse and Caan responded, "You think this guy would wear shoes with no fucking support?" Owen: "That became a enduring theme with you, of putting people in wardrobe that they might not neccesarily pick for the character themselves. Didn't Ben Stiller say that? When you're working on a Wes film, put your vanity in a drawer?" Wes, laughing, "Check your ego at the door."
- In the scene where Caan plays the piano at Bob's house and entertains the gang, Anderson originally wanted him to play John Lennon's "Imagine." but they couldn't get the rights to it. "God, that woulda been perfect." Wilson laments.
- "Now Wes is a big time director. He hasn't called me either that sonofabitch, you know what I mean? - James Caan.
- James Caan's theory on the title: Wes recounts what Caan told him, "They're this type of firework, they don't go very high and they don't make much of an explosion and there's not really to show there, but that's all they're really meant to be and you appreciate them for what they are: these sort of gentler, little fireworks. And he felt the theme of the movie had to do with aiming low, but getting there."
- On his overall experience: "C'mon, it was three days it was like being the left hand corner in Hollywood Squares," he says on the documentary.
Robert Musgrave
- Bob auditioned for the part in a film that's not in the film, in the deleted scenes, where he was washing his car. Wes,:"He did a bad job and then when of our other friends Tony Miller, he then auditioned, he read the scene and Bob watched it happen, and maybe thought in that moment [i've got to nail it] and then Bob did the scene again and he was basically the character in the movie."
Miami Vice, "Bottle Rocket" and "The Fantastic Mr. Fox"
- "It ain't no trip to Cleveland," is a line from Miami Vice. "It's what Crocket says when they have to go on a big adventure," they note.
- "In Fantastic Mr. Fox I have got a thing for 'Miami Vice': do you remember the one with Eban?" Wes asks. "There's a shot at the end and Crockett is holding Eban there friend who has gone to both sides of the law, and he's shot and Crockett is holding him from a low angle and then Tubbs steps into the frame high above and there's a freeze frame. Anyhow, we're going to try and recreate that with our foxes."
Technical, AV Elements, The DVD Transfer, Etc.
- "This movie has looping... we spent weeks on the ADR [Additional Dialogue Recording] stage," Wes notes. Evidently there's a lot of looping/adr in the scene where the trio drive in the car towards the motel (the one where Dignan gets the mack truck to honk its horn and Anthony is in the back (playing a video game its revealed in the deleted scenes, though not present in the final version). "In the first round [of editing] we let [the ADR] breathe too much" Wes laughed.
- The underwater pool scene "I've always struggled with underwater stuff," when they turn on the heat it turns cloudy.
- Bob Yeomen - the cinematographer who has worked on all of Wes' films - and Anderson did the DVD transfer. The sign "motel" at the motel was instated in the new transfer that Wes and Yeomen did for the Criterion edition, Wes says, but this is untrue and you can see it in the original DVD. He must be mistaken.
- Owen is even marveled by the new transfer. "The movie looks really great, I'm looking at these colors... ," he says of the scene where Anthony first sees Inez, "It's shot in the magic hour? Its a really golden light."
- Bob Yeoman and Anderson were location scouting and found the little scooter motorbike that Dignan rides. They offered the guy the money right there ($218 written on it in magic marker).
- Owen asks him where he puts Bottle Rocket in the pantheon of Wes' own work which leads him to thoughts on his cinematographer. "Well, I think Bob's work has just gotten better and better. You and I loved 'Drugstore Cowboy' so much [and this is why they wanted him]. Bob is so more sophisticated after each movie." "When we were doing [Bottle Rocket] I barely knew how to collaborate with him when it came to lighting and I had a sense of framing and lenses (they used one lens on 'Rocket'), but...[I didn't know know anything else]."
Nervousness/Confidence/Eventual Kudos
- Owen asks Wes if he was nervous directing the film: "I was never less nervous and directing a movie or showing it or anything than [on 'Bottle Rocket], until we finally got in front of an audience and it was not working." Wes said adamantly. "It didn't play." Owen laughed. Wes: "I was so confident about it, just wait, just wait, let the people decide."
- - They visited director Paul Schrader and he had nice things to say about the movie and he said he hadn't really seen this Dignan character before.He said it was a "unique" character.
- "Nobody went to see it, but it got some really great reviews and some people really loved it. And then i started to feel like, 'Maybe it is pretty good," said Anderson.
- The L.A. Times loved it and ripped into Sundance for not accepting the film.
- "Even Siskel and Ebert didn't recommend it," Wilson says, adding wryly, "But they would later recommend my next movie, 'Anaconda' and Ebert had Scorsese on for a special show and he gave his top 10 for the decade and he had 'Bottle Rocket' in there."
Production Designer David Waso And The Tarantino Connection
- Set designer David Wasco, Owen: "I'm not crazy about the word passionate, but that's how he seems."
- They went to visit the "Pulp Fiction" set and "We met Quentin Tarantino, and we had really enjoyed 'Resevoir Dogs', and David Wasco had seen our short and [Wasco] came and introduced himself and basically got involved with the movie right then. And that was basically a year before we shot the movie and he expressed such enthusiasm for it." - Owen, "You really remember the people who give you [confidence]. You need sustenance to keep you going."
Wardrobe/Uniforms/Costumes
- Owen was uncomfortable in the white Dignan outfit, but Wes said he was "Suddenly transformed. I remember suddenly the character was there. The way you walk, it was similar to something you would do in real life... somehow you really had locked in on it." Wilson: "It's kind of a uniform, i think it helped that it felt like a uniform. I wonder if I was nervous, and it's like when you're playing a sport and you try extra hard."
- The beige shirt that Luke wears in the motel sequences with Inez: "I wish that was his look in the whole movie," Wes said.
- The Mr. Henry party: "It's good that I'm wearing a blazer, says Wilson. "It looks collegiate." Anderson notes that there's a picture of Jacques Cousteau on the wall and says the strange ponytail that Mr. Henry wears for the party was Cann's idea.
- The Hinckley Cold Storage job: they note how funny it is to do a robbery in canary yellow jumpsuits. "It's not exactly camouflage," Wes chuckles. He also self-mocks their writing of the robbery. "We're building up the intensity," he says as they ride the elevator into the building. "There's no real obstacles to doing the job, but nevertheless the suspense is building." They began to use the steadicam for the first time in these sequences. "It's not like Riffifi or one of the great heist scenes, but maybe its character driven?" Wes asks.
Wes Anderson Tries His Best William Friedkin Impression; Pisses Off Owen Wilson
- When Anthony calls Inez from the party, Wes notes that Dignan had a romantic scene with one of the Hispanic housekeepers at the motel, but that it was cut from the film (and not present in the deleted scene). "Oh yeah, she threw a drink in my face," Wilson recalled. Wes notes how she was instructed to do so onset without Owen's knowledge, thinking it would be a cool, "William Friedkin thing" to do and capture the reaction, but instead Wilson was shocked and upset. "It did not inspire you to come up with a great spontaneous comic reaction," Wes said. "You got a reaction, just not from Dignan, but Owen Wilson," Wilson laughed. Anderson then asked Bob Yeomen if that was a mean thing to do and Yeomen replied, "Oh Billy [Friedkin] would do much worse than that. That's nothing compared to Billy."
The "Bottle Rocket" Short
- The short was never intended as a short, it was "We wrote it as a the beginning of a feature, and by the time we wrote the short we had the script for our whole feature that we developed and changed significantly over the years, but we had the basic story," Wes said.
- The inspiration for Bob's gun going off prematurely in the final robbery: during the filming of the black and white short, Bob Musgrave accidentally shot off his gun during the sequence where they buy and test out guns and almost shot his toe off.
- James L. Brooks really responded to Luke and he thought he was like Montgomery Clift, he was blown away with the short.
- "Let gets lucky," Is a line of dialogue that came from Barry Braverman, the cinematographer of the short. He would say that before rolling on every shot.
Futureman/Andrew Wilson
- The tennis club luncheon where Futureman tries to humiliate Bob in front of the entire team: Wes notes that in the deleted scenes they explain where the name Futureman came from, "He's called that because he looks like he came from the Future, like he was designed by scientists for desert warfare. Kind of a Dolph Lundgren/Terminator look that Dignan and Bob find particularly intimidating, and also a look they probably wish they had themselves."
- Wes and Owen laugh hard over how genuine Andrew Wilson and Brian Tenebaum's laughter is during the making fun of Dignan's banana yellow jumpsuit scene.
- Owen, "I remember Brian thinking, some people shouldn't be onscreen, and he looks great and really natural, but it's like hearing your voice on an answering machine."
Random, Extra
- "They'll never catch me cause I'm fucking innocent" line: Owen says the line is in a Guns N' Roses song called, "Out To Get Me," but it's "used in a different way."
- Owen tries to get Wes to talk about the Futura bold font, but you can tell he's loathe and reluctant to do so and mumble something about he always seems to use it. (It's one of those pagentry things that Wes gets criticized for that makes him uncomfortable to talk about).
- Kit Carson, a family friend who got the script in the right hands says Luke reminded him of a young Robert Mitchum, "Luke has always inspired people to follow him." Owen said. "In fifth grade he thought that other people didn't like him and then he was then elected class president. Wes: "He's not really aware of the hero worship that he was inspiring of some people."
- The shot with Dignan sulking and lighting off firecrackers and Anthony and Inez, coming up to his, post-coital, holding hands - "This is probably my favorite shot in the movie, for some reason." Wes says.
11/29/2008
'Bottle Rocket' - The Playlist's Definitive Criterion Commentary Notes
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Labels: Bottle Rocket, Criterion Collection, James L. Brooks, Leslie Mann, Luke Wilson, Owen Wilson, Polly Platt, Robert Musgrave, Wes Anderson
11/26/2008
We're Thankful For: 'Bottle Rocket'
God, get over this shit already, right? We're out for the weekend and yes, we're all thankful that after some five-six years of waiting, the Criterion Collection has finally put out a special edition of Wes Anderson's "Bottle Rocket."
We took stupidly detailed notes (because we have no life) on this DVD and then didn't want the work to go to waste so that's why you're bombarded.
Let's us know if this is overkill because we seriously still have about 3-4 posts worth of extensive notes full of crazy quotes and trivia from the commentary track (yes, we went overboard, we know this, but again, we hate to see time and work go to waste...).
So this week we featured related posts on:
- The music of "Bottle Rocket" (plus, the old 2007 extensive music feature)
- The archival black-and-white photography of Owen and Luke Wilson's mom, Laura Wilson
- The deleted "Car wash" scene
- We delved into the film's biggest missing sequences, the "Cop-Chase" scenes
- A comparative "Bottle Rocket" short-to-feature length side by side feature
- Update: A very thorough and comprehensive feature on the making-of documentary and the commentary track by Wes Anderson and Owen Wilson.
Happy thanksgiving, we'll see you Monday, but maybe if we're so inclined, we'll post sometime between then and now. Ciao oscuro.
PS, all this excessive Wes Anderson talk reminds us we should re-up our If I Were Wes Anderson Playlist mix which we've just done. If you haven't heard it, we rather recommend it if we do say so ourselves.
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Labels: Bottle Rocket, Luke Wilson, Owen Wilson, Robert Musgrave, Wes Anderson
Your Film Going Options For Thanksgiving Weekend - Nov 26-30
Ok, we're going to keep this unusually quick, cause we'd like to get the fuck out of dodge.
Opening this weekend in wide release is Baz Luhrmann's "Australia." As we assumed, it's a polarizing film with critics and scribes are split almost evenly down the middle; it has a 51% rating at Rotten Tomatoes. We didn't love it per se, but we did greatly admire the pomp and circumstance and the lush spectacle of it all. Be assured this is the first and last time you will see Baz Luhrmann make a film as expansive and expensive as this. See it on the big screen or don't, but you're better off seeing that than "Transporter 3" which has a 42% RT rating and looks like its made for mentally challenged teenagers who smoke rock cocaine and guzzle energy drinks. We basically don't have time for nonsense like that.
Coming out in limited release is Gus Van Sant's widely (and aptly) praised Harvey Milk biopic, "Milk" starring Sean Penn in a role that's a lock for an Academy Award nomination. While perhaps not a spectacular film, it is a great one that is rock-solid in every aspect. Look for it to garner multiple-Oscar nominations. We liked some of the understated artistic touches that reminded us of Van Sant's "My Private Idaho" days. "Milk" has an insanely good, 92% approval rating.
Like we said, Seth Gordon following up the awe-inspiring, "King of Kong" with a very studio-family friendly looking "Four Christmases" looked like a baaad idea and that seems to be the case. The film has a terrible 19%RT rating, but ham n' eggers will probably see it in droves this weekend.
If none of these appeal to you, go see "Slumdog Millionaire" which is continues to spread in wider-release this week. It's fabulous and it too has a super-solid 92% RT rating. Everything else coming out this week isn't really worth talking about, but if you're curious, RT has more. Gobble, Gobble, Gobble.
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Labels: Australia, Baz Luhrmann, Four Christmases, Gus Van Sant, Harvey Milk, Milk, Seth Gordon, Transporter 3
Criterion Edition: The Music Of 'Bottle Rocket'
"Get back in positions, assholes!"
Back when Wes Anderson's "The Darjeeling Limited" was about to come out, we did a many features on the music of the director's films including "Bottle Rocket," though mostly on the music featured in his movies and missing from the soundtrack CDs. Especially during the Wes' early days, he really couldn't get that many CD song licensing, which meant no Rolling Stones, no Love, no Oliver Onions (they're track rules, btw, more in a sec).
We don't want to reshash that territory completely (it's all in depth here), but we thought we'd post some music from both the 11-minute black-and-white short featured on the new Criterion Collection edition DVD and the feature itself.
Plus, we wanted to provide some A/V context, so we posted our favorite musical moment from the short which uses Vince Guaraldi's wonderful "Skating" from his famous Peanuts Christmas record to the a montage of the "Bottle Rocket" trio buying and trying out guns to use for their robbery. It illustrates Wes' proclivities perfectly, including his good taste in music, his affinity for musical montages and how he's loved Guaraldi for some time now. His films have plenty of references to Charlie Brown and "Peanuts" too - just like "Rushmore's" Max Fisher, Charlie Brown's dad was a barber and "The Royal Tenebaums" uses some Peanuts Xmas music too. In fact, "Bottle Rocket" the short uses two Guaraldi pieces, "Skating" and "Happiness Is"
Love and The Rolling Stones are great and everyone loves them, but it's the lesser-known tracks that are so splendidly used in the film, like Abelardo Vásquez - "Préndeme La Vela" that pops up when we're first introduced to Inez's character (Lumi Cavazos) and Anthony (Luke Wilson) is immediately ga-ga for her. Another fantastic and under-appreciated song is "Zorro is Back" by Oliver Onions used in the fireworks/on-the-lam montage. Wes jacked the song from the 1975 film "Zorro," starring the great Alain Delon and admitted so in the Criterion commentary (here's the awesome trailer with the song in question).
Some notes from The Criterion Commentary track
- Wes had planned the music in Dignan's hot-wiring/car stealing scene - The Proclaimers' "It's Over and Done With" - out for years. "We rehearsed it for years," he said.
- Producer James L. Brooks really helped us them with the script. "We did a re-write for over a year, "Wilson said. "Ever since then, when we're writing, I hear Jim's voice asking those basic questions. Owen Wilson: "I think if Jim was a musical group, you'd have all his albums."
The use of The Rolling Stones' "2000 Man": "I had it in mind and had it set aside for a longtime," Anderson notes. Marty Scorsese says of that moment: "And I also love the scene in 'Bottle Rocket' when Owen Wilson’s character, Dignan, says, “They’ll never catch me, man, ’cause I’m fuckin’ innocent.” Then he runs off to save one of his partners in crime and gets captured by the police, over “2000 Man” by the Rolling Stones. "
- "The music is thrilling," Owen Wilson says of the exquisite use of the Love song, "Alone Or Again," that soundtracks the remarkable making-love scene between Anthony and Inez (it is admittedly wonderful and excerpted below). This leads them to talk about the composer Mark Mothersbaugh, "He came to the [terrible test] screening and he was the only other person in the audience that liked it."
- It's interesting to note that Anderson said in "The Royal Tenenbaums" commentary track that he wanted to end "Bottle Rocket" with the melancholy Bob Dylan's song, "Billy - Main Title" (from Dylan's score to the Peckinpah 1968 movie, "Billy The Kid,"), but couldn't afford the rights to it back then (instead that song is used in Tenenbaums when Royal''s fake-cancer schema is revealed and he's kicked out of the house).
Below, a ton of related music and musical context. Two songs that we failed to note in our original "Bottle Rocket" music piece: Artie Shaw's Looney Tunes-like jazz tune, "The Chant," opens up the 13-minute short, and in yet another display of affinity for drum solos pre-Mark Mothersbaugh, Art Blakey's "Nothing But Soul" is also featured in the film. Both songs are included below.
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Labels: Bottle Rocket, Owen Wilson, Wes Anderson
What If The 'Shawshank Redemption' Came Out In The '80s?
Normally, we don't post funny viral videos cause 90% of the time, they're just not that funny, but this one is great and speaks for itself. The music in this "Shawshank Redemption" spoof - very '80s - is awesome and makes us LOL (it's "Push It To The Limit" by Paul Engemann from the "Scarface" soundtrack). This one's a few days old, but naturally, we ignored it at first, our bad!
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Rodrigo
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12:56 PM
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Labels: Paul Engemann, Scarface, The Shawshank Redemption
Tony Gilroy's 'Duplicity' Trailer Released Online
Next year's spy-thriller film "Duplicity," which was written and directed by Tony Gilroy, who was the creative mind behind last year's captivating thriller "Michael Clayton" which is slated for a 2009 release finally has its trailer released online. It has an all-star cast consisting of Julia Roberts, Clive Owen, Paul Giamatti and Tom Wilkinson.
The plot centers around two spies (Owen and Roberts) working for competing pharmaceutical companies who team up to manipulate a corporate race between to sociopathic CEO's (Giamatti and Wilkinson) in an attempt corner the market on a certain medical innovation. Judging from the plot and trailer, this could easily turn into a been-there-done-that spy thriller, but with Gilroy's success in creating the fresh and moving "Michael Clayton," it seems logical to think he will bring the same to "Duplicity." "Duplicity" is currently set for a March 20th release date.
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Spencer Martin
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12:25 PM
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Labels: Clive Owen, Duplicity, Julia Roberts, Paul Giamatti, Tom Wilkinson, Tony Gilroy
First Listen: M.I.A. Song 'O...Saya' From 'Slumdog Millionaire' Plus Bollywood Number
As we've probably mentioned a dozen times now, M.I.A. and Indian composer A.R. Rahman wrote a new tune for Danny Boyle's "Slumdog Millionaire" called "O...Saya." Its a propulsive, quasi-electronic track that races like the pulsing heart of Boyle's wonderful India-set drama.
M.I.A. recently told MTV she was about to retire and then got the call from Danny Boyle asking if she'd be interested in working with Rahman on a track. She couldn't say no. Two versions of Maya's "Paper Planes" are on the soundtrack, both the original and the DFA remix. And yes, in case you were wondering, Boyle had "Paper Planes" before "Pineapple Express" did, but public release dates are everything aren't they.
We have it hear below for a listen as well as "Jai Ho" the thrilling Bollywood number that ends the film so joyously and triumphantly. Hopefully one of these tracks gets nominated for an Oscar and livens up the typically-boring musical performance. The soundtrack comes out physically on 12/23 and is out digitally right now.
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Rodrigo
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11:56 AM
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Labels: A.R. Rahman, M.I.A., Slumdog Millionaire
Seth Gordon Goes From 'King of Kong' To Awful Studio Feature In Less Than A Year
Documentary-film director, Seth Gordon, who shot last year's superb documentary, "The King of Kong: A Fistful of Quarters," gets his first taste of the big-time today when his studio feature comes out today, "Four Christmases," which stars Vince Vaughn and Reese Witherspoon as a couple forced to stomached four separate Christmases with their estranged families. As soon as it was announced the filmmaker would be transitioning directly from "The King of Kong" to a romantic comedy starring two incompatible stars, we thought it sounded like an awful idea. Which is now a belief that has been justified as the movie is holding a dismal 24% fresh rating over at rottentomatoes.com.
The director sat down with THR and discusses the transformation from making critically acclaimed indie-documentaries to a big-budgeted comedy, that the studio assumed would be an easy way to cash in on all those frustrated family members over the thanks-giving weekend.
"The hardest part of the transition was the sheer volume of opinions and interested parties and the huge amount of pressure as a result of the budget. When you're making a film all by yourself, that requires you to have quite a bit of a point of view in order for anything to get done. The hard part (with "Christmases") was never the filmmaking; the hard part was the politics and fielding and understanding all of the different opinions."
Gordon continued to trudge forward and pretend that "Four Christmases" didn't make him feel like blowing his brains out and compared it to the year in spent in Kenya documenting the re-building of a local school and his work on "King of Kong." "I'm really interested in stories about identity -- who I am now versus who I used to be," Gordon said. "I think that's really what 'Kong' was about. That's what 'Four Christmases' is about, too. That's a real thoughtline for me."
"Four Christmases" releases wide beginning today, and despite its awful reviews, will most likely capture plenty who will be looking for any excuse to leave their homes this weekend, even if it means watching Reese Witherspoon and Vince Vaughn sleepwalk through a movie.
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Spencer Martin
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11:07 AM
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Labels: Four Christmases, King of Kong: A Fistful Of Quarters, Reese Witherspoon, Seth Gordon, Vince Vaughn
Potential Sundance '09 Film Line-Up?
At the tail end of this Michael Cera/Sundance article, THR notes some films that might appear at the Sundance Film Festival in 2009.
They include: a raunchy Ashton Kutcher's comedy called, "Spread," (Anne Heche appears to be the female love interest) a '60s coming-of-age story titled "An Education" starring Emma Thompson, Rosamund Pike and Peter Sarsgaard, Shana Feste's lost-child drama "The Greatest" (Pierce Brosnan with Susan Sarandon) and Antoine Fuqua's cop drama "Brooklyn's Finest" that stars Jesse Williams, Don Cheadle, Wesley Snipes, Ethan Hawke and Lili Taylor
The documentary side will likely showcase Nicholas Kristof 's "Reporter," R.J. Cutler's doc on Vogue editor Anna Wintour and a youth politics flick called, "The Youngest Candidate."
Also expected to appear is the Jim Carrey/Ewan McGregor gay comedy "I Love You Phillip Morris" (remember when McGregor was great and had a career? Sigh, those were the days..., now he's reduced to this.)And now you know why we'll be staying at home...then again, last year's initial line-up was underwhelming [ed.then again, last year's full line-up was underwhelming and you get people saying ok films like "American Teen" and "Choke" are one of their favorite films of the year. Really?]. Sundance runs January 15-25 in gay-loathing Mormon country, Utah. Some animated film that doesn't interest us is opening up the fest.
Every film we saw at the Woodstock film festival from Sundance was terrible.
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Rodrigo
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10:42 AM
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Labels: An Education, Anna Wintour, Brooklyn's Finest, I Love You Phillip Morris, Paper Hearts, Reporter, Spread, Sundance 2009, The Greatest, The Youngest Candidate, Vogue
Is Michael Cera's Upcoming "Semi-Secret" Film Project, 'Paper Hearts' Going To Be The Belle Of The Sundance '09 Ball?
Ladies of the world who love Michael Cera: where were you when we were in high school? Oh yeah, you thought we were a total shy, but funny dork...uhhh, and scene! We digress.
Is Michael Cera and his girlfriend, comedienne Charlyne Yi's new film "Paper Hearts" poised to be the next-big-thing at the upcoming Sundance Film Festival in Utah, come 2009?
According to the Hollywood Reporter, the film has gone, "under the radar," which is fair enough to say considering we just heard about it now. Films that are still in development are listed on his IMDB page, but 'Hearts' is not and that's because it's a "semi-secret project." Either way, expectations are already running high for the film.
Apparently there's a small buzz happening with "indie insiders." "It's pretty much 'the one,' at least as far as festival programmers are concerned," one anonymous source said. Sources close to the project describe it as "part-documentary, part-scripted comedy about the real-life relationship between Cera and his girlfriend," Yi, who had a role as one of the housemates in Judd Apatow's "Knocked Up," and apparently is developing another film project for Apatow (unless 'Hearts' is the same one; either way,the super comedy producer seems to be a big fan of hers).
Apparently like Cera's recent "Nick & Nora's Infinite Playlist," music will be a key element of the film which is fine and all, but let's hope its not the bland, Now That's What I Call Indie Rock, reductiveness of that movie.
Relative unknown Nicholas Jasenovec, who had a small part in "Superbad" is directing (he also directed this Funny or Die skit featuring many of the regular Apatow-players, plus Sam Rockwell).
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Rodrigo
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10:23 AM
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Labels: Charlyne Yi, Michael Cera, Paper Hearts, Sundance 2009, Sundance Film Festival
Is David Fincher Directing Keanu Reeves In A Cooking Movie?
So is Keanu Reeves really going to make a cooking movie where he'll play a chef with David Fincher? Seems pretty improbable, huh? Well, that's the word according to Production Weekly via /film.
Production Weekly reports that the 'Benjamin Button' director has signed for the Sony-backed project, but no details about the film are currently known.
If it does happen to actually get made, Let's just hope it's about it's a) not about a "rock n' roll" chef who's all bad ass, taking drugs and cooking masterpieces in his spare time (*groan*) and b) not anything like that godawful Aaron Eckhart/ Catherine Zeta Jones cooking disaster, "No Reservations."
The movie was bad enough on its own, but it was even worse for the fact that all the chefs were wearing crocks the whole time and were essentially fashion-challenged. Whoever did wardrobe for that thing might want to consider a new career.
Either way, cooking films that appeal to the anti-hero foodie in you just seem like a terrible idea.
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Rodrigo
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10:04 AM
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Labels: Aaron Eckhart, Catherine Zeta Jones, David Fincher, Keanu Reeves, No Reservations
Embargo Busting? Variety's 'Cadillac Records' Review Hits Early
Are the rules different for Variety? Is that how it works? Yes, we realize they have about 10 trillion times more juice than us and most of the rest of bloggers out there, but an embargo is an embargo, no? Doesn't make sense if people don't play by the rules does it?
"Cadillac Records" reviews aren't supposed to hit until the week of release (next week), but Variety has already posted theirs, penned by John Anderson. They basically give it the thumbs up.
"Approaching the blues with the enthusiasm of an overcaffeinated brass band, helmer Darnell Martin nonetheless makes some kind of music with the percolating '50s biopic "Cadillac Records" -- mostly because she mines a righteous, mythic sensibility out of the story of Leonard Chess, Muddy Waters and the birth of the Chicago blues. Jeffrey Wright's Waters is unforgettable, Eamonn Walker gives an unnerving performance as rival bluesman Howlin' Wolf, and Beyonce Knowles' Etta James should put bottoms in seats."
Our take? Variety is either has no taste for music films or they're being extremely generous. Aside from a disarmingly good performance from Beyonce (both musically and otherwise) and solid ones from Wright the film is... oh wait, we're not supposed to say. You can guess... Ps, you can hear snippets of the soundtrack over at the Columbia site. "Cadillac Records" hits theaters on December 5.
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Rodrigo
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9:52 AM
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Labels: Beyonce, Cadillac Records, Darnell Martin, Eamonn Walker, Jeffrey Wright, Mos Def
"Sad" Ending Of 'Australia' Will Eventually See The Light Of Day: On The DVD Release
Remember the mini-controversy that swirled around Baz Luhrmann's "Australia" for a few days when it seemed like 20th Century Fox had forced him to change the ending of his film to a happier one? (it turned out Luhrmann changed it himself)
Well, at one point during the whole brouhaha, Hollywood Elsewhere had a clever suggestion: release both the sad and happy endings in theaters, the former in limited release so nerds like him (and us) could experience both versions.
OK, so that's not happening, but the "sad" (negative) ending will see the light of day (no one's counting, but there's actually three versions of the ending). According to an Anne Thompson interview with Hugh Jackman, "Luhrmann, seeing that the world had changed to a darker place since he made the movie, came up with a third more hopeful ending. He'll put the sad one on the DVD."
All's well that ends well, yeah? Frankly,we thought the "happy" ending of the film worked, but it's such an epic, we kind of feel either ending would have gone over well. "Australia" hits theaters today, Wednesday, November 26. Here's our "review."
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Rodrigo
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9:31 AM
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Labels: Australia, Baz Luhrmann, Hugh Jackman, Nicole Kidman
Could Will.I.Am Appear On Every Marvel Film From Here On Out?
Dear Comic book geeks,
Are you ready for the smoove R&B pop/hip flop sounds of Will. I. Am gracing your favorite Marvel comic films, from "Iron Man 2," and "The Avengers" through "Thor"?
It is possible, though maybe stylistically improbable.
Remember them silly music deals movie studios make with record labels we complain about? Well, here's another this time it's with a music publishing company, Cherry Lane (the people who represent performers and make sure they get paid for their songs).
According to Variety last night, Cherry Lane and Marvel have made a long-term worldwide music administration deal.
Cherry Lane already has a deal with with DreamWorks Pictures, the Weinstein Co., Lakeshore Entertainment and Walden Media and now they will oversee the music for Marvel's 2010-2011 slate which includes the aforementioned films and "Captain America."
So expect Cherry Lane to topload these films with the performers and artists they represent, the worst of which could be Will. I. Am, the best being Hans Zimmer (wait, Dreamworks, Zimmer, Will.I.Am - now the "Madagascar 2" soundtrack makes sense; again not about a fun collaboration, about easy partnership deals). Cherry Lane also handles people like John Legend, the music of Elvis Presley, Ashford and Simpson, Quincy Jones, Mick Mars of Motley Crue, John Carpenter, John Denver, etc. etc., but don't worry, we're mostly being purposefully reductive to make you nerds feel uneasy. It's not like they just have to pick from their roster, but if you see one or two of them pop up in a Marvel movie, well don't be completely shocked or outraged.
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Rodrigo
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9:08 AM
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Labels: Billy Bob Thornton, Captain America, Cherry Lane Publishing, Iron Man 2, Marvel, Marvel Studios, The Avengers, Will.I.Am
11/25/2008
Will Jack White Ever Work With Danny Boyle? Maybe?
We (I) talked to Danny Boyle and M.I.A. about the "Slumdog Millionaire" soundtrack for MTV, the digital release of which comes out today (the physical disc hits December 23).
Nothing, super revelatory, but Boyle did tell us he'd work with Jack White of The Whites Stripes if given the chance. You'll recall he wanted to work with White originally for "Slumdog.' This is what Boyle told us in the MTV interview and why it didn't happen.“I wrote [White’s] people a letter a long time ago and I don’t even know if he received,” he said, claiming the musician was [probably] too busy to help out regardless. “It was naïve of me really, thinking he could come to India for a year and work on music. He’s got albums to work on!” he laughed. Could he want to work with him again in the future? “Oh yeah!” Boyle exclaimed. “I’m a huge fan of his work.”
The Playlist obsessives will remember that at TIFF, we spoke to Boyle and he briefly mentioned a semi-animated project. Apparently it's not happening. Quoting ourselves again:
"Boyle mentioned he was working on an adaptation of a [science-fiction writer] Terry Pratchett live-action/half-animated project with 'Millions' screenwriter Frank Cottrell Boyce, but noted that that concept had already fallen through."
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Rodrigo
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8:33 PM
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Labels: Danny Boyle, Jack White, M.I.A., Slumdog Millionaire, The White Stripes
Compare: 'Bottle Rocket' Feature To Short
We don't have a comparative excerpt from the "Bottle Rocket" feature, but presumably you've seen it by now and know it well. If you haven't seen the black-and-white 11-minute "Bottle Rocket" short that's featured on the Criterion Collection edition of the DVD that comes out today, note the similarities in the opening scenes, especially the robbery of Anthony's house, the post-mortem at lunch and the selecting gun sequences.
Wes Anderson sticks really closely to what he shot in the short and we thought we'd illustrate some side-by-side photos and then video of the short for you to compare to [ed. we went screencap crazy, what are we gonna do with all this stuff? We need someway to contextualize it all, no?]


Here's a clip from the "Bottle Rocket" short. The song, btw, is "The Chant" by Artie Shaw.
Posted by
Rodrigo
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7:49 PM
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Labels: Bottle Rocket, Luke Wilson, Owen Wilson, Robert Musgrave, Wes Anderson
Have we all noticed how Rivers Cuomo's (Weezer) new album of demos, Alone II, looks like it's straight out of "Dark Crystal" or "Labyrinth"?
The '80s were a horrible time and that's pretty much living proof.
Posted by
Rodrigo
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7:31 PM
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Labels: Dark Crystal, Labyrinth, Rivers Cuomo
The Pugilism Of 'Frost/Nixon'
In our best, Jeffrey-Wells-esque post we wanted to tap out a few thoughts on "Frost/Nixon" before we depart for the evening.
We had read the script just about a week ago and meant to bang out a review, but ran out of time. The Peter Morgan-penned script (he wrote "The Queen," "The Last King Of Scotland") is taut and moves like a shark throughout most its almost brief 101 pages. It's economical, a page-turner and fairly gripping (much more than we had expected; we figured it to be boring).
The film thankfully sticks to the script very closely and even when deviating from it, the moves are very much in spirit. The Ron Howard-directed film is mostly sleek and mostly lean (especially in its bookends) and is basically a subtle and not-so subtle boxing match between two contenders. It's Hollyfield/Tyson; a show-down and while the match has its lulls, the 12-rounds are (mostly) an engaging experience.
Frank Langella and Michael Sheen are both strong, but its some of the side players, Kevin Bacon and Sam Rockwell who made us turn our head and take notice. More tomorrow or next week, depending what the studio snipers are saying.
Posted by
Rodrigo
at
6:40 PM
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Labels: Frank Langella, Frost/Nixon, Michael Sheen, Ron Howard
Blaxploitation Spoof 'Black Dynamite' Apes Dolemite Without Paying Credit
You probably haven't heard of "Black Dynamite" (we didn't until today) but the film is a send up of 70's blaxploitation films like "Shaft," "Superfly," or "Foxy Brown." The trailer even references by name some of them too, but the film that gets visually referenced throughout the trailer alone is "Dolemite." Made on a low budget, "Dolemite" is a perfect example of a "so bad its good" movie. The film's unintentional hilarity makes it ripe for parody, which is what 'Dynamite' has done to "Dolemite." The trailer uses the same sort of rhyming scheme used in both the trailer for "Dolemite" and its over the top sequel, "The Human Tornado." At least one of the phrases from the 'Dynamite' trailer is taken verbatim from the "Dolemite" trailer.
Posted by
Mickey Pagels
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6:32 PM
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Labels: Black Dynamite, Blaxploitation, Dolemite, Michael Jai White, The Human Tornado