Tropic Thunder wasn't about stroking Ben Stiller's ego? I can't see why both Milk and Tropic Thunder can't be enjoyed. This Harvey Milk picture has taken nearly two decades to hit the screen and went through many different actors and directors. That is why such films are appreciated - for the hardship and love of craft rather than mugging and cashing in. And trust me, most actors are narcissistic. It's the nature of the business. Also, Milk is a period picture that is especially relevant for this current climate. I can understand particular actors rubbing some people the wrong way. I have my own black list of irritating movie stars so I can understand you’re not pulling for Penn to win anything.
Well, I'm talking about it in a South Park putting pseudo-liberal celebrities in their places type deal. Again, I'm sure that Milk is a fine movie, but there is no doubt in my mind Sean Penn looked at the script and said "Easy Oscar." But the real thing I always think about is something that Indie film producer/ Founder of Troma Lloyd Kauffman said... Hollywood only tackles tough subjects when it's safe and marketable. Indie films hit the tough subjects when they first hit. Look at the Vietnam era. We had mainstream movies vaugley written as allegories about the Vietnam War, but none actually took place during. Even nowadays, the films about the Iraq War came out when the war's appeal was fading, and the president's approval rating was crashing and burning.
Plus, I have something against biopics anyway... forgot to mention that.
And I try to see as many as possible. I wonder what Speed Racer would have been like with a fraction of the budget, no name stars and just made for its fans rather than the film that actually hit theaters.
I dunno... maybe with the same crappy script but with telefilm production values?
I like the idea of appealing just to fans... but then we'd risk the danger of fan service, and inside jokes that only diehards would get. I watched this "Anniversary" video of an anime called "Time Bokan" (which was the only bit of the franchise the US ever got), and I sat their listening to references to characters I didn't understand, inside jokes I wasn't prithy to, and a celebration of people who grew up with a show I've never heard of until someone showed it to me.
But anything is better than shoving in Hip Hop talking stuff that's totally out of character. I can't say how much I hated the Gadget Mobile talking enough. Though, in the DTV, CGI film "Inspector Gadget's Biggest Case Ever" I thought Bernie Mac did a much, much better job than Hugley did.
I was surprised by Kung Fu Panda, but Wall-E was the better picture and hands-down should get the Best Animated Film nod. Still, it's nice to see DreamWorks stepping up to the plate in creating something beautiful and enduring that didn't depend on pop culture comedy. Who knew they'd ever do that?
I feel that Over the Hedge was close to that... I really wanted another film with that sort of tone to it. I mean, I did like Bee Movie to a certain extent, Shrek 3 was okay, but it really should have been the last one, Shark Tale had its moments, but was a loud, crass celeb voice actor fest and I have no idea why I like Madagascar... but when they put aside their old habits, they can make a good movie that can stand up. Plus, I have to give credit for them holding off on fart jokes for a three film stretch.
I do also think that Wall*E was better, and I loved it. I saw it twice in a week. It was a very daring move to make a fil that went for a Long time without any speech at all, and it was marketed towards children. Though I did enjoy the last part, with the people sliding along. Lol.
And the surprising thing was, earlier this year, I didn't think there would have been that much to it. It's hard to say what is my favorite Pixar film, since there are so many at the top... The Incredibles, Wall*E, Ratatoullie, Monsters INC. In fact the ones I like the least, Cars and Bugs Life, I still really love.
Plus Fred Willard was absolutely wonderful as the company and world president. Adding the live action portions to the CGI movie made it all the more believable and even frightening.