Tuesday, July 29, 2008

Comic-Con Diary 7: Saturday

Michelle and I let Anita sleep in on Saturday morning while we went over to sell swag. Sales were decent - they topped Wednesday, but Thursday and Friday had been significantly better. Foot traffic in the dealers' room was brisk, but it wasn't turning into sales. Generally, the weekend is spent by many of the guests in panels and pursuing celebrity appearances, so I wasn't surprised.

Since we got over to the convention center earlier, I took another crack at the toy exclusives. This time, things went swimmingly - the Mattel ticket table (in the autograph area) was almost completely deserted, so I snagged my allotment (the ticket lasts for two hours - mine went from 9-11AM) and headed downstairs. I think I was only in the line for a half hour or so. I happily discovered that once you were at the counter with your ticket, you could get all of the exclusives if you wanted them (rather than having to get a ticket for each toy). I snagged a Justice League Unlimited Giganta figure set and one of the Cars Lightning Storm McQueens.

Anita was able to savor a hotel waffle, joining us later on - I had my sandwich for lunch, and was preparing for another run through the dealers' room when who should appear but John Landis! I'd met him a few years ago at a San Francisco screening of An American Werewolf in London and invited him to visit the studio. He gave such a good talk that it set a new benchmark for visiting lecturers - he's still mentioned as one of the best!

He's a Comic-Con regular, but he had an extra-special reason to attend this time - his wife Deborah was presenting her new book, Dressed: A Century of Hollywood Costume Design. We exchanged hellos, and he 'berated' me for not having seen his latest film, Mr. Warmth: The Don Rickles Project. D'oh! He took his leave after a couple of geeky pictures, and I began another round of shopping and picture-taking. My camera was still battery-bereft, so I borrowed Anita's here and there. I did pick up some more toys, but the specifics have slipped my mind.

Anita went to watch Karen rehearse for Red Fraggle's Sunday appearance, and I wandered up to the Acme Archives Ltd. booth, promptly running into David Silverman and Mike Anderson, long-time buddies from my way-back stint on The Simpsons (season two)! Who needs celebrity panels?

Unfortunately, Mike had to bolt, so David and I caught each other up on our recent mischief. Acme's Lisa McLain and Chris Jackson had been chatting with David earlier - so we all began talking, and Chris mentioned he was a fan of my work, and would I be interested in contributing to Acme's line of custom, limited-edition Lucasfilm-inspired art? Well, yes!

Leaving David, I floated over to pick up Michelle and meet Anita over at McCormick & Schmick's for dinner. We were gathering there to celebrate Karen Prell's birthday, which we did in grand style! The Skellys joined us, as well as several more of Karen's puppetry friends. Mr. Silverman was going to join us, but sadly missed our group and wound up fêting elsewhere. The food was great and the conversation was lively - I was going a little hoarse from the week's relentless gab, but it was lots of fun!

I was so tired from the demands of the convention (and the previous late nights of blogging) that I collapsed without writing anything. More tomorrow about three days ago!

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Thursday, December 27, 2007

The Tradition Continues

You'll find the phrase See You Next Wednesday - a title to a fictional film - planted in some John Landis movies. It was the title for the first screenplay he wrote, and began as a line in 2001: A Space Odyssey. The above still is from The Blues Brothers.

The reference is starting to spread, as you can see here in the new Hellboy 2: The Golden Army trailer! I guess Guillermo del Toro is a bigger film geek than I thought...

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Friday, November 09, 2007

Don Rickles - Still Going Strong In 'Mr. Warmth'

LA TIMES: Don Rickles is still in your face
A new documentary captures the myriad sides of insult comic Don Rickles. - November 8, 2007
By Paul Brownfield, LA Times Staff Writer - Photo by Anne Cusack

THERE are various ways to gauge the longevity of Don Rickles. His longtime publicist, Paul Shefrin, is the son of Rickles' previous publicist, Gene Shefrin, just as Rickles' longtime business manager, Bill Braunstein, is the son of Rickles' previous business manager, Jerry Braunstein.

"There was no voting, they were just given the jobs," Rickles said of the sons.

Rickles is 81 and enjoying a little bit of a renaissance, as it happens, with a memoir, "Rickles' Book," and now "Mr. Warmth: The Don Rickles Project," a feature-length documentary directed by John Landis, of "Animal House" and "The Blues Brothers" movie fame. The film screens at the AFI Film Festival Friday night and debuts on HBO Dec. 2.

The Rickles vault will always contain vintage "Tonight Show" clips and his appearances on Dean Martin celebrity roasts, Rickles brandishing his malice in a way that somewhere came back around to him as an ambassador of goodwill.

Today, when it comes to the art of the insult, the air is thicker but the skin is thinner (see Chris Rock versus Sean Penn at the Academy Awards in 2005). Maybe that's why Rickles holds up; he is, finally, still better than anyone at making ridicule seem cathartic. Despite this fact, no one had ever captured his live act on film, largely because Rickles himself never wanted to participate.

"Mr. Warmth" offers generous portions of Rickles performing last November at the Stardust in Las Vegas, before that hotel and casino was imploded. (Rickles said he just signed up for dates at the Orleans.)

According to Shefrin, Rickles does his act approximately 75 times a year. Occasionally, Rickles said, he can get the Indian casinos he plays to send him a private plane, but there's no mistaking his stunning endurance, and the mental acuity it takes to work a room, firing off insults at various customers who've paid for this very privilege.

Landis, who figures he's seen Rickles perform 50 times, says 65% to 70% of the act doesn't much change (ribbing the band; interludes of singing; assaulting the guy in the front row with: "That your wife?").

"But then there's always that 30 to 40% you've never heard before," Landis said. "The truth is he's a performance artist. I always thought so. He tells no jokes. There are no Don Rickles impersonators."

And yet "Mr. Warmth" is more than a concert film; it's a march through the history of Rickles' life, full of grace notes. Son of an Eastern European-Jewish immigrant father and a strong-willed mother, Rickles never went to college and served in the Philippines in World War II, later attending the American Academy of Dramatic Arts before moving to L.A., where, deep into his 20s, he continued to live with his mother Etta (in a high-rise then called Park Sunset, mother and son's living quarters separated by a curtain) while going onstage at a club called the Slate Brothers, where one night, as legend has it (though the venue changes according to the source), Rickles befriended Frank Sinatra by calling out: "Make yourself at home, Frank. Hit somebody."

Fraught silence, then a release of laughter. At L'Ermitage Hotel in Beverly Hills this week, munching on peanuts, Rickles told a similarly themed story from his days working the lounge at the Sahara, back when Vegas was run by the mob. Rickles performed on a stage over the bar ("There was a small stage and in between was a pit, where the bartenders walked, and the bar," he said). He did several shows nightly with Louis Prima -- midnight, 2 and then 5 a.m. for the breakfast crowd.

"I used to go out in the casino and go, 'Hold it! . . . hold it!' Really loudly. 'I'm performing in there, and the . . . noise is too much, I want it stopped! You understand that? Stopped!'

"They all stopped, froze," Rickles said, "then they laughed their asses off."

"MR. Warmth" begins with actor Harry Dean Stanton sitting in a booth at Dan Tana's in West Hollywood, blowing on a harmonica. For Landis, it's a self-referential prelude: The director met Rickles in the hillsides of Tito's Yugoslavia, where Landis was an 18-year-old gofer making 60 bucks a week on the set of "Kelly's Heroes," the 1970 movie starring Clint Eastwood, Telly Savalas, Stanton, Rickles and Donald Sutherland as soldiers who go behind German lines to seize $16 million in gold bullion. (Rickles likes to poor-mouth his film career, but Landis isn't buying it. "He was in 'Run Silent, Run Deep!' ")

In "Kelly's Heroes," Rickles played a character called Crapgame. At the end of the shoot, Rickles gave Landis a $50 tip, and a friendship was born.

"Mr. Warmth" has four producers, including Rickles' son, Larry, and Mike Richardson, publisher of Darkhorse Comics and producer of the "Hellboy" movies, who gave Landis the initial money to shoot Rickles at the Stardust.

Like many documentaries about comedians, "Mr. Warmth" gingerly attempts to explain Rickles' appeal without spoiling the joy that his slurs paradoxically bring (Robert De Niro is interviewed, as is Rock, Martin Scorsese, Bob Newhart, Sarah Silverman and Sidney Poitier, though you mostly keep wanting the film to return to Rickles onstage at the Stardust).

At first, you see him backstage, sipping coffee in a robe, putting on his tux and shambling to his position backstage, accompanied by his longtime tour manager, Anthony "Tony O" Oppedisano.

Watching Rickles before he goes out, it's hard to conjure what happens next. Which is why Landis wanted to show the transformation. "Don's an 81-year-old man who has an 81-year-old man's body," he said. But then the horn sounds and the spotlight hits, and it's Rickles. All over again.

"You like that, huh, you Nazi . . . ?" he barks at a customer in the front row, after dangling the microphone to imitate old Jewish men in the steam in Florida.

These jokes are impossibly vintage. And yet what is contemporary about Rickles is his command, the way in which he can make himself seem dangerous again, even now -- or maybe especially now. Things at the Stardust, for instance, get momentarily iffy when Rickles starts working a Japanese customer in the house and mis-hears the guy's last name ("No need to get [upset], Joe. Just asking your name").

There is a scene in "Mr. Warmth" where Rickles, sitting at home surrounded by photos of his show business pals, goes down one wall and says: "Dead. Dead. Cancer. Dead. Hanging on the ropes. Very bad. Very sick. Almost dead. And dying."

Rickles toured with Sinatra when the singer was having to read lyrics off a teleprompter.

"He was really struggling too," Rickles said. "I remember. . . . If I lose that, it won't be Don Rickles anymore."

Joey Bishop, the last Rat Pack member, died last month. Red Buttons died a day before Landis was to interview him for "Mr. Warmth," the director said. Rickles has diabetes and is more hunched over these days; he says he gave up tennis and golf because of back issues, and a few weeks ago, in New York for the screening of "Mr. Warmth" at the New York Film Festival, he cracked a rib riding his exercise bike.

He's better now, though the rib injury has prevented him from performing until after Thanksgiving.

"The audience won't know," he said of his return, "but maybe my trigger will be slightly slower. Slightly. Until it gets going, anyway."

paul.brownfield@latimes.com

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Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Movie Trailers...With Commentary?

Necessary? Not at all. Nerdy fun? You bet! Check out the trailer for Psycho (one of my favorites), and afterwards, watch it again with commentary by John Landis! But don't stop there - not with tons of others to choose from!

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Sunday, September 09, 2007

Debbie, Get Me Troopers Daniel And Mount

I don't know why this makes me happy. It just does.
Does anyone know what the pig actually is? Is it a figure? A cookie jar? A bank? What?

Thanks to Dave Hogan for being able to nail the location of this shot in the movie in one try!

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Saturday, August 25, 2007

Toy OTD: Mezco Animal House Figure: Kent 'Flounder' Dorfman (2003)

This figure is one one of my favorite examples of Mezco's caricatured sculpts. The likeness is good, and it's an appealing, funny sculpt using simpler shapes. The paint work is great, though there's not a lot of articulation (seldom a problem with me). Maybe his chubbiness could've been pushed more, but otherwise very cool.

I saw these figures in stores for quite a while, so I'm assuming they didn't sell all that well - that might explain why I'm not seeing more toys in this caricatured direction from Mezco. I was hoping that the Goonies figures would be made this way, but their designs and sculpts are noticeably more restrained, so I'm assuming consumers didn't generally embrace this approach. It's a shame, because there aren't many other toy lines doing it.

You should be able to get this toy for a good price - there's one for sale at figurerealm.com for $14.95 + shipping, and I'll bet you can find an even better deal if you dig about a bit, or set up a search on eBay.

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