Tag Archives: Mary Elizabeth Winstead

Not Fuzz

Scott Pilgrim vs The World
8-Bit More Than It Can Chew
Official Website | Trailers & Mo

Remember this lil maddening Nintendo send-up/mash-up/cracks-we-up?  What a wonderful, colorful and inventive way to spend 8.5 minutes!!!!!  Same could be said of the similar pixelated terrain of Edgar Wright‘s screen version of the Scott Pilgrim graphic novels.  But what of the remaining 1 hour and 45 minutes? Tedious, repetitive, uninteresting.   Waiting for our titular hero (Michael Cera) to fight and (of course) beat level boss/evil ex-boyfriend after level boss/evil ex-boyfriend (Chris Evans, Brandon Routh, Jason Schwartzman, etc + one ex-girlfriend, Mae Whitman) had us screaming internally for ‘game over’ to flash on the screen as soon as Atarily possible.  No matter how many 1-ups Pilgrim gets on his quest, the film never 1-ups itself into new territory, even if that singular territory is inspired, fun and a place we’d like to play in… for 8.5 minutes!!!!!

Urgggggh!!!!!!!!!!!!  Maybe there needed to be more real-worldedness ala The Wizard!  Maybe there should have been more things for the supporting cast (Kieran Culkin, Mark Webber, Alison Pill, Anna Kendrick, et al) to do besides make ironic smirks and be all malaise-y (esp Aubrey Plaza, who’s a pro at malaise-y.  so much so that she may end up with a career more one-noted than Cera’s).  Maybe Scottie P spent too much time slayin’ dragons, chasin’ waterfalls and tiltin’ at windmills, and not nearly enuff time building up the actual relationship he so desires with his beloved Ramona Flowers (our once and future wife Mary Elizabeth Winstead, with anime eyes that won’t and we hope, will never quit!!!).  There’s more time devoted to destroying his relationship with Knives Chau (Ellen Wong) AND forgetting his one with Envy Adams (Brie Larson) than anything resembling quality time with Flowers (smiles and heart kisses don’t suffice!).  Their love grows with artificial sweetness, but sometimes substitutes aren’t better than the real thing!!!  Pilgrim, leave Plymouth and do not collect 200 bonus points!!!!

Out With The Old & Always In With The MEW: Mary Elizabeth Winstead may be new to you, but she’s MEW to us, and with this pic from the flick, MEOOOOOOW for one and all!!!

Verdictgo: Sum Merit But No Stinkin Badges

Pilgrim is currently may deflowering at a theater near jews

and until next thyme the balcony is clothed…

5 Comments

2 Winsteadfast 2 Furious

someone needs to make a US release happen for Mary Elizabeth Winstead‘s dance movie poop-a-thon Make It Happen [trailer]


more snaps over @ JB’s Movie Hotties

beatoffisly on TWS:

A Win-Winstead Situation

A Side Order of Reunion Rings

Diet McClane

0 Comments

Five For Flighting

The Babysitters
Don’t Tell Mom The Babysitter’s Banging Dad
Trailers & Mo


The central idea behind The Babysitters, where high school girls earn extra cash by sleeping with the lonely midlife crisised fathers of the kids they’re sitting, has ‘hottest porno ever’ written all over it. Alas and molasses, this is no wet dream come true, but a nightmarish, and sometimes a bit amateurish, drama that deals with the truths and consequences of such dangerous liaisons between the jailbaiters and sleazy old men (anytime you see John Leguizamo in a film, you juss know bad stuff is going to happen). It’s tough to tell who had a more uncomfortable time watching this film, us, who needed to take 3,231,455,209 showers afterwardszz to rid ourselves of the dirty feeling it soaked into our skin, or Sam Waterston, whose adorable daughter Katherine leads this quasi-prostitution racket and bares the word found in between ‘pros’ and ‘ution’. The film is tough to recommend, and probably is a leading candidate for wurst date movie of 2008, but it’s still worth a look. Although, as our screening guest Jewanicur perfectly suggested, this woulda worked a lot better had it been a series on HBO. We see Mary Elizabeth Winstead as the teenage madame, and yours drooly as her first customer

Titillating Title: Katherine can next been seen, with her equally adorable sister Elisabeth, in some Tom Arnold vehicle called Good Dick

John Grisham’s Jizzum (aka Verdict): Jeepers Worth A Peepers

The Fall
Autumn Leaves Blow
Trailers & Mo


The Fall is the most beautiful film you never need to see. It’s like The Princess Bride with all the grandeur and imagination, but without any of the fun or fluidity. Our Columbo/Kevin Arnold duo here is an injured movie stuntman (Lee Pace, the dreamy piemaker from Pushing Daisies), who passes his dreary bedridden days by cheering up a peculiar little Romanian girl (Catinca Untaru), also staying at the same hospital, with tall tales of high adventure around the globe (supposedly the film was shot in 20+ different countries, over four years). We have to give director Tarsem (who made one of the besesteststest music video mt EVERest: REM’s ‘Losing My Religion’) sum credit. He’s a true visionary who hands in an udderly breathtaking piece of work, but the whole thing is too darn overbloated and ultimately purty darn boring, which was the same diarrhea that muddled his debut, The Cell. If he can ever find a way to tell a story as well as he can paint a cinematic canvas, he’d easily be considered one of the top directors in the bidness. Until that time, he should hire himself out to others to help make their visions a surrealealtiy

Pushing Hotties: our heroine Justine Waddell looks a lot like the chick on Pushing Daisies, Anna Friel [here NSFWlicious]. she also resembles deceased sexpot Natalie Wood, whom she played in a telepic directed by Pete Bogdanovich


John Grisham’s Jizzum (aka Verdict): Sum Merit But No Stinkin Badges

The Tracey Fragments
& Noise
Boxed Out & Drowned In Sound
Tracey Trailers & Mo & Noise Trailer


Looking for a double feature that will assault both your eyes and ears, and not in a good way? Then look no further cause The Tracey Fragments and Noise have arrived to annoy the crap outta any audience watching either one of em. Tracey is a student film on Sparks about a teenage misfit (the role musta been a big stretch for Ellen Page, eh?) looking for her lost brother right before a big blizzard is about to hit Winnipeg or something. She’s solid as per usual, but the rest of the actors need a couple more months at theater camp. The film has a gimmick running throughout: more split screens than Mike Figgis’ Timecode and every season of 24 combined! After about 8 seconds, the split screens will start to give you a splitting headache, but watching all the goings on in the boxes does sorta-semi-kinda-quasi-hold your attention. Luckily the flick is only 77 minutes, so it’s bearable, but if it was 78 minutes, it would have been unbearable

Noise has a better plot to boot, but after about 15 minutes, the film has already exhausted its premise of Tim Robbins as the wurstest superhero of the summer, the Rectifier, who takes upon himself to rid New York City of car alarms with his own brand of street justice. The rest of the flick is filled with Robbins trying to enjoy the peace and quiet, and then suddenly, wouldn’t you juss know it, a car alarm goes off, and in turn sets him off. It goes on and on and on and on and on and on and on and on, and then William Hurt shows up and hams it up even more than he did in A History of Violence (we wouldn’t
be sirprized if they gave him an Oscar nom for this awful performance like they did for Violence). You’ll eventually start to sympathize with Robbins’s character cause you’ll want him to turn off the sound from this movie

Fenella Woolgar/Benedict Cumberbatch Bestest Name Future HOFamer: Tracey‘s emo beefcake Slim Twig

C’mon Bring The Noise: we wonder what’s more irritating, Noise or Timmy Robbins’ band Gob Roberts

John Grisham’s Jizzum (aka Verdict): Tracey gets a Sum Merit But No Stinkin Badges, while Noise gets our first Slit Your EARS Off Repoopulous

OSS 117: Cairo, Nest of Spies
(OSS 117: Le Caire – nid d’espions)

The Man With The Not So Golden Pun
Trailers & Mo


OSS 117 is a French spy comedy devoid of any humor. Maybe something got lost in the translation, cause to our ears (and eyes, since we were busy reading subtitles) there were no jokes or gags present, and therefore, there’s nothing much to laugh it. It doesn’t take itself serious enough to be considered a drama either, so picture is a bit of an enigma. At least the Goldfingeresque mise en scène is spot on our Bondian super agent Jean Dujardin is so darn endearing and having a good time onscreen that you’ll at least crack a smile. Hopefully they’ll work on the funny a bit more when the sequel drops next year (at least in France)

We Want To Bond With These Fatale Femmes: meet the eye candy that be Aure Atika and Bérénice Bejo, both NSFWers. here’s a nic pic of BB


John Grisham’s Jizzum (aka Verdict): Sum Merit But No Stinkin Badges

all five films open in limited release today

Rental Round-Up Dawg:


We missed The Great Debaters on its theatrical run, but it played juss fine in a home viewing environment. It runs a little too long, and is overly sentimental, but you can’t help but get swept up by this true story of a historically Black college that broke the racial barrier with their minds and mouths. Be sure to czech out the bonus feature where director Denzel interviews the actual living members of the Wiley College team

As for I’m Not There [TWS review], it’s probably the most overlooked and underloved film of 2008 (well, besides Before The Devil Knows Your Dead [TWS review]). Unlike our buddy Tarsem (and heck, a lotta damn directors), Todd Haynes knows how to blend style and substance seamlessly. The guy’s got a huge hard on for movies and music and he’ll turn you on too with this picture about the personas and myths of Bob Dylan. Watching the movie, you won’t learn a thing about Dylan, but if you pop on the muss muss listen to commentary by Haynes, you’ll discover how much of a genius he and this film truly are. It was recorded post-Ledger’s death, and when Heath’s first scene comes on, it’s hard for even him to watch

until next thyme the balcony is clothed…

1 Comment

Diet McClane

Live Free or Die Hard
Fourth & Long (get it?)
Trailer & Mo!

On the poster for the orig Die Hard, the Nakatomi Plaza was on fire. For it’s sequel, Die Harder, it was an airport that was ablaze. And on Vengeance‘s, it was NYC that was going down in flames. So takin a quick peek at LFoDH‘s poster, and seeins that there’s not much of a conflagration tat all, you knew one way or an udder that this wasn’t going to be the usual John McClane (mis)adventure. Hell, without Bruce Willis and the plot unfolding around a holiday, there’s not much here to resemble anything that came before. Sew, for those itchin for some Bonnie Bedelia, William Atherton, Reginald VelJohnson or De’voreaux White (that’s the dude who played Argyle the limo driver) action, yer better off creating your own Die Hard fan fiction, cause the only thing yer gonna get here is a 24-type cyberterrorism jamboree. And that’s not necessarily a bad thang. Despite all the Chloe O’Brianing, there’s still plenty of explosions, one-liners, and one-liners that follow explosions to satisfy all the die hard Die Hard fans. And it’s this balance of the same old with the new & improved that makes LFoDH work. And since baddie Timothy Olyphant was mo menacing in the Cuthbest klassic, The Girl Next Door, all the newness is kept fresh by the Mac guy, Justin Long. I never thought I would say this, but had they not cast Long as the comic reliefin’ computer geek (what a stretch for him, eh?), this film coulda died, hard

Netflux Capacitor: were you wondering where you could see sum more of dat French dude, whose moves are slicker than Jackie Chan’s? Den rent, don’t run to see B13 [trailer|TWS.org review]

Will The Real Lucy McClane Please Stand Up?: the only person who probably has an issue with the hiring of hottie McGee Mary Elizabeth Winstead as Bruce’s daughter Lucy was Taylor Fry, who played her in the original

RIF (Reading if FUNDamental) On Dis: read John Carlin’s ’97 article ‘A Farewell To Arms’, upon which Live Free‘s story is based!

Twats In A Name: ‘Live Free or Die’ is the official state motto of New Hampshire. Dem words were created by American Continental Army General John Stark (no, not that Knick grocery bagger)

It’s Stiller Time: I love me sum great parodiesez, but flying nun tops the bestness that is The Ben Stiller Show‘s Die Hard 12: Die Hungry, co-starring the one, the only, Taylor Negron (dood, u have to czech out his scrapbook!


John Grisham’s Jizzum (aka Verdict): Jeepers Worth A Peepers•, and not juss cause JLong was in Jeepers Creepers

until next thyme the balcony is clothed…

0 Comments
eXTReMe Tracker