Archive for April, 2012

Things That Sounded Like a Really Bad Idea Right Off The Bat

Monday, April 2nd, 2012

Here’s a film I’ve never heard of, that never got a U.S. theatrical release, that cost some €25 million to make, that sounds not just like a train wreck, but like horrifying, misconceived, epic train wreck.

The premise, from IMDB:

Cheyenne, a wealthy former rock star, now bored and jaded in his retirement embarks on a quest to find his father’s persecutor, an ex-Nazi war criminal now hiding out in the U.S.

Well, they doesn’t sound very promising right off the bat. But then you see who’s playing the lead role:

That’s right: Sean Penn, 50-something EMO rocker. That moves it from merely bad to legendarily bad. You look at the IMDB listing and think: “Well, it has David Byrne playing himself. That might be the only thing about this film that doesn’t suck.” And then you watch the trailer:

And think: “Well, it has David Byrne playing himself. That might be the only thing about this film that doesn’t suck.”

This may be the most ill-conceived film involving Auschwitz since Jerry Lewis’ The Day the Clown Cried.

But unlike The Day the Clown Cried, This Must be The Place was actually released. And I’d be willing to watch either of them once.

Once.

Edited to add: Though it’s played in Europe and Sundance, it doesn’t seem to have had a general U.S. release, so it might still pop up at art houses across the country this year.

It does seem to have gotten mostly good reviews from the kind of people who give films like this good reviews…

My April 1st Piece for 2012 is Up at Locus Online

Sunday, April 1st, 2012

My April 1st piece, detailing Margaret Atwood’s new science fiction magazine, is up over at Locus Online.

My many previous April 1 offerings include:

  • Neil Gaiman One Step Closer to Sainthood
  • Doctorow and Stross to write authorized sequel to Atlas Shrugged
  • Peter Watts and Paolo Bacigalupi collaborate of a depressing dystopian shared-world anthology.
  • Greg Egan, Kelly Link Collaborate on Novel
  • 12 Killed in SFWA Flamewar
  • Lucasfilms announces “Adult” Star Wars Novel Line
  • Shogazer Sunday: Alison’s Halo’s “Leech”

    Sunday, April 1st, 2012

    Alsion’s Halo was evidently among the first American band to respond to the first wave of Manchester-base Shoegazer, forming in Arizona in 1992.

    Evidently the stopped recording for a while, then reformed as a band called Lochheed (sic), which sounds more ambient.