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Category 'Careful With That Blog Eugene'

LAMBcast #40: Summer 2010 Wrap-up

Kai, James, Nick, Dylan and long-ago LAMBcaster Paul put a bow on the films of the summer of 2010.  Highs, lows, and everything in between.  Also on tap:

* Listener Feedback
* LAMB of the Week: Japan Cinema
* Trailer Talk: The Fighter
* Last LAMB Standing (x2)

For the LAMB of the Week, we take a look at Japan Cinema:

If you’d like your site to be a future LAMB of the Week, hit me up via email and I’ll add you to the queue.

If you’re interested, you too can be a LAMBcaster - we love new blood! For more information on the LAMBcast, check out the topic at the LAMB Forums. Music provided royalty-free by Kevin MacLeod’s Incompetech website. Big thanks to Kevin for providing this service. The LAMBcast loves feedback, too. Either here in the comments section or to blogcabins@yahoo.com or to our Facebook page. Also, we’re on iTunes, and would still love a review, even if it’s a bad one.

Thanks for listening!

LAMBcast #2

You didn’t even know you were ready for the second edition of the LAMBcast, but guess what? You totally were.

In it, I was joined by four of your fellow LAMBs:

* Tom Clift of Plus Trailers,
* Mike Mendez of Big Mike’s Movie Blog,
* Paul Rodgers of Careful with that Blog, Eugene, and
* Nick Jobe of Random Ramblings of a Demented Doorknob.

With five people in on the podcast this time, it’s a bit longer than the premier episode, clocking in at around 50 minutes.

I hope you’ll join us, either as a listener or, if you’re interested, as a fellow podcaster. For more information on the LAMBcast, check out the topic at the LAMB Forums.

Here’s a sampling of what we learned this time out:

* I can’t say “Random Ramblings of a Demented Doorknob” without slipping up.

* Tom’s shiny new microphone works great, but now Paul needs one.

* Mike is the only one that can claim to be a true film buff…yet he’s not seen a single Nightmare on Elm Street.

* As usual, the music, as provided royalty-free by Kevin MacLeod’s Incompetech website, is the bomb. Big thanks to Kevin for providing this service.

Additional sites mentioned during the podcast:

* Kano’s Kogitation
* His Gal Friday
* Stale Popcorn
* Review in Haiku

You can listen by playing it in the widget in the left sidebar; if you’d like to add it to your site (you would), click the “Add to my page” link. Also, you can find us on iTunes; just go to the Podcasts section and search for “LAMBcast.”

If you have any questions, comments, or suggestions, we’d love to hear them.

The winner of the 2009 LAMMY for Best Blog Name is…

Coming at you twice a day until the winner of the Best Blog award is unveiled Tuesday, June 9th Wednesday, June 10th, it’s time for the 2009 LAMMY Awards gala!

To see the previous award winners, click here.

Best Blog Name
6 sites nominated. 56 votes. 41 votes to three of them. A tie for first place. It doesn’t get any closer than this:

3rd place: Reel Whore (13 votes)

And the winners, with 14 votes (25%) is…

Careful With That Blog, Eugene and
She Blogged By Night

Congratulations! LAMMY Banners will be emailed to the winners and runner-ups after all the awards have been presented.

For Your Consideration: Careful With That Blog, Eugene

Hey you! Send me an FYC image and I will put it up! I don’t care if I get one from 50 sites, I’ll find a way to get them all up, and as soon as possible (the nomination voting period only lasts until May 4th!). When you’re ready to vote, do it here: http://www.misterpoll.com/polls/430540

FYC #11 is from LAMB #116, Careful With That Blog, Eugene, who emailed me earlier and suggested that I move the deadline for nomination voting back, what with all the FYCs coming in and the relatively low voter turnout thus far. I poo-pooed it, but am now considering it. Thoughts?

The LAMB Devours the Oscars - Best Visual Effects

Editor’s note: Welcome to the twenty-second of a 24-part series dissecting the 81st Academy Awards, brought to you by the Large Association of Movie Blogs and its assorted members. Every day leading up to the Oscars, a new post written by a different LAMB will be published, each covering a different category of the Oscars. To read any other posts regarding this event, please click the tag following the post. Thank you, and enjoy!

By Paul of Careful With That Blog, Eugene.

The Academy Award for Visual Effects is not, as you may think, an award given to the movie that blows up the most stuff. If that were the case, the words “Academy Award” would be synonymous with movies like The Phantom Menace and Transformers.

A high volume of, frankly, awful movies are nominated every year because so many awful movies rely chiefly on visual effects as a crutch, a gimmick, and a lure for the people who watch movies chiefly for the purpose of watching giant CGI robots watch creepy ex-Disney stars make out with hot chicks on the hood of one of their compatriots.

The purpose of the award is not to acknowledge superb special effects of a common nature. It’s one thing to create a digital Empire State Building. It’s quite another to render a giant ape crawling up the side of the Empire State Building as 1930’s Manhattan panics below. So Transformers is not an Oscar nominated film for its gratuitous amount of TNT. Those creepy robots took time, effort, skill, and artistry to create, and it’s nice to acknowledge the highest grossing films of the year somehow, even if said movie sucks.

So we have the 2009 Summer Blockbuster class, and it was one hell of a summer. The movies nominated for Best Visual Effects this year are good by anybody’s standards. The Curious Case of Benjamin Button is up for Best Picture. The Dark Knight is widely regarded as having been snubbed, even with its 8 nominations. Iron Man was the best pure action movie of 2008. But, as they say in professional wrestling, THERE MUST BE A WINNER!

The Dark Knight
My guess is that The Dark Knight has been nominated for two words: Harvey Dent. Dent’s transformation into Two Face, rushed as you may or may not have been depending on how you like your epic movies, resulted in the creation of one of the most grotesque human disfigurements in recent cinema history. Compare and contrast The Dark Knight with Batman Forever and the comic book version:

While Tommy Lee Jones looks like he’s been dipped Mrs. Field’s style into some Willy Wonka experiment gone wrong, Aaron Eckhart not only looks plausible, he often looks real. The people behind Two Face’s design went all the way. Pay close attention when Dent is in the hospital and you can see blood on the pillow. Watch him at the bar and see the little dribble of alcohol dribbling down the lipless side of his face. It’s masterful, incredible, and it subtly adds to the movie. Considering how much went into this movie, that’s saying a lot.

Iron Man
More things blow up per-second in Iron Man than in all but maybe the other Robert Downey Jr. movie that’s been nominated for something, but for good reason: Tony Stark flies around in a tin can with rockets strapped to it.

It is not the Iron Man suit itself that will win Iron Man a statue, if that is indeed its fate. It’s all the little things besides the suit, and maybe that the suits were done in such a way that those watching the film still had a sort of emotional response to the people flying the really expensive WMDs.

Tony Stark’s mansion is a marvel of technology, from the robots that assemble the armor around him to the glowing chest piece that’s keeping him alive. Here is Tony Stark, suiting up to some incredible music:

Some of the robots in Stark’s house have personalities, like Wall-E, but without a soul. The movie moves on to where Tony Stark must face a man in a much bigger robotic suit of armor. The summer’s other Marvel Comics film, The Incredible Hulk, featured a similar match-up between original and bigger newcomer. One looks like it was done on a computer, totally void of actors (extras notwithstanding). The other manages to turn The Dude into an evil, megalomaniacal, first rate corporate executive asshole. It doesn’t quite reach the heights of Spider-Man 2, but this won’t be taking home an Oscar.

The Curious Case of Benjamin Button
I wonder if, upon hearing the premise of the movie, the people in charge of nominations screamed “EURKA!” and penciled this in under every category. Benjamin Button is a movie tailor made to win this sort of award, if only because a crew of folks slaving at a computer have succeeded in taking one of Hollywood’s young and beautiful and turning him into an old, decrepit man.

Benjamin looks rather ripped for an old man, but that’s beyond the point. This movie would have been impossible without its visual effects team. There’s a wrinkly old baby, a WWII naval battle, and a long, drawn out procession of Brad Pitt as the stages of aging. Some of the credit for Pitt certainly goes to the make-up department, but this movie features a seamless blend of the two arts: You can’t tell where one ends and the other begins.

The Winner
Benjamin Button, but the prediction comes with a story. A friend of mine and I always argue about the nature of “special” effects in movies, both of us being big Star Wars nerds. The biggest compliment handed out to any of the prequels was that it “had really nice special effects,” which was a nice way of saying that it was a bad movie that looked good.

I was with the it-sucked-but-was-aesthetically-pleasing crowd. My friend said that the whole movie was basically one effect, rendering none of the effects special. The effects, he argued, acted as a crutch for George Lucas and hampered the actors. I eventually agreed with him. If you watch any of the scenes where Anakin and Padme are discussing serious business amongst so much computer generated opulence, the acting is so heavy that you can almost see the green screen.

It’s almost the same way with Benjamin Button. There isn’t a single “special” effect within the movie because there is no one stand-out scene where the effects break new ground or go away so as to be unnoticed for five minutes, and some really good actors and actresses struggled with that aspect of the movie.

But the winner of this award will be the film judged to have the visual effects that had the most impact on their film, and with the best possible quality. The Dark Knight wins quality points, but effects weren’t necessary. Effects were necessary in Iron Man, but they look better and mean more in Benjamin Button. It may not seem fair, considering that Benjamin Button is one long graphics showcase, but there ain’t nothing special about Best Visual Effects – its just a practical award presiding over an impractical field.

Plugs 11/12

I know I normally have some picture of an electrical outlet or something like that to accompany the Plugs post, but when I spotted this one, I couldn’t resist using it. Please ignore the left-leaning overtone (especially if you’re right-leaning) and focus on how great it is that a lamb is telling you to vote, which coincides perfectly with the first few Plugs…

* Voter turnout for Who are LAMB? (our quick demographics survey) is currently about 30%. Please, if you haven’t yet, take two little minutes (if that) to participate. I’d really appreciate it. Last day to vote is 11/18. Here’s the link: http://www.misterpoll.com/polls/362905

* While you’re over there at Mister Poll, we’ve also got another in our continuing Top 10s series going on, but instead of picking just action or comedy, I’ve asked you for your overall ten favorites. An impossible task? Naaah. Last day to vote for this one is 11/16. http://www.misterpoll.com/polls/364700

* One final LAMB-centric Plug - our first-ever LAMBlog-a-Thon hits the tubes starting 11/15. Joe C. from Cinema Fist will be handling the hosting duties, and the first round asks, in the spirit of Turkey Day, who in Hollywood are you thankful for? The catch is that you can’t pick an actor or director (too easy and they get enough love as it is). The details are here.

* Our first (and I believe only) French-language LAMB (Acheter et Entretenir sa Tronçonneuse) has some big news. I’ll let JP tell it:

“I’m not sure exactly why, but almost half of my readership is made up of Anglophones (yes, that’s you). To read me you need to use the “English” link above and, automagically, it turned the blog into some kind of weird English-like language that may - or may not - help you understand what the hell I’m talking about. That’s nice, but far from perfect.

So, I will (slightly) reduce my posting frequency, but that means that I can put a little more time on each post so the decision that I took is to make Acheter et Entretenir sa Tronçonneuse a bilingual blog.

From now on, no more Google translation gibberish, you will have instead Ghidorah’s poor English skills gibberish.”

* Dark City Dame of Noirish City is having another contest, and it’s even focused directly on you LAMBs. Here’s the deets:

“In honor of film critic Dean Treadway, joining me for 30 days in November to discuss 30 of his favorite films from 2000-present, I am having another contest for the month of November.

BTW, if you miss the first question just email me and I will email the answer to you. Instead of, answering 30 questions (1 per day for the entire month) I decided that the contest will only consist of 4 questions asked (1 per week until the end of the month). And, the contest is only “open” to members of the LAMB.”

* Finally, it’s nearly done (but not quite), but Paul from Careful with That Blog, Eugene is hosting a blog-a-thon as well. It’s titled Horrors: The Universal Horror Blog-A-Thon. Here’s some info:

“So, have you seen a Universal Horror movie? Are you convinced that Van Helsing was a spectacular film? Want to convince the world that The Raven sucked? Pissed that Frankenstein had more elements from a Nathaniel Hawthorne short story than Mary Shelly’s novel?

Hands off, that one’s mine.

If you have something to say, anything to say at all about the Universal cannon, from Phantom of the Opera to the Werewolf of London, please, drop by.”

And here’s the awesome artwork he’s got for it:

Got a plug of your own? An upcoming blog-a-thon, contest, or other event? Email me or post the details at the LAMB Forum (there’s a thread in the LAMB Bidness section).

LAMB #116 - Careful With That Blog, Eugene

URL: http://carefuleugene.blogspot.com/

Site Name: Careful With That Blog, Eugene

Categories: Reviews, Humor, General

Rating: R

What is the main focus of your site (reviews, editorials, news, lists, etc.)?
Reviews and nostalgia. I talk about Star Wars a lot, including the expanded universe, but there’s a bit of everything, really.

What are your blogging goals, personally and/or professionally? In other words, what, if anything, are you trying to get out your blog?
I’d like to be noticed, I guess. Being noticed is nice. Eventually, I’d like to have more than just friends comment on posts, and then, in an absolute dream world, I’d like to be semi-professional about it.

Do you prefer an interactive ‘community’ for your blog or are you the teacher and your readers are the students?
Interactive. I hate looking at posts without comments, and I likely will add my own comments to others. I like running discussion, not running lectures.

How long have you been movie blogging for, and how frequent do you post updates to your site?
Careful With That Blog, Eugene, was mostly a blog for whatever I wanted to post for about two years, but the posts I’ve liked the best were related somehow to movies, so in the last month or so, I’ve decided to dedicate the blog to that. I’ve been reviewing movies off and on since November, but will likely maintain a schedule of three reviews a week with posts in between.

Name up to three of your favorite movies (and no more).
Empire Strikes Back, Dolemite, Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind.

How did you hear about the LAMB?
Likely Final Girl.

Any additional comments, or give yourself an interview question that’s not listed above.
None.

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