Eric D. Snider

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Archive for February, 2012

Weekly link roundup – Feb. 18-24

Sunday, February 26th, 2012

NEW MOVIE REVIEWS:

“Wanderlust” (B+)
“Act of Valor” (D+)
“Gone” (D-)

* * * * *

MOVIE COLUMNS:

Eric’s Bad Movies: “Bulletproof” (1996), starring Adam Sandler and one of the Wayanseses. [Film.com]

What’s the Big Deal?: “American Graffiti” (1973), the movie that George Lucas made before he got involved with all that space stuff. [Film.com]

Re-Views: “Any Given Sunday” (1999), a movie I once called “the ‘Saving Private Ryan’ of sports movies,” which I now regret. [Film.com]

* * * * *

MY OTHER STUFF:

Snide Remarks: “A Novel Approach” — Books that are being made into films

Movie B.S. with Bayer and Snider: Our 99th episode has reviews of “Gone,” “Wanderlust,” and “Act of Valor,” plus a rousing and particularly Nazi-centric game of Interquel. [MovieBS] or [iTunes]

In the Dark: Subscribe to this weekly e-mail and get all the latest movie reviews, DVD releases, and other pertinent info delivered to your electronic mailbox. [Eric D. Snider's In the Dark]

Twitter: @EricDSnider

Please help send Movie B.S. to Cannes!

Monday, February 20th, 2012

As you may know, I am the cohost of a weekly podcast called “Movie B.S. with Bayer and Snider.” I’m the Snider part; my friend and colleague Jeff Bayer is the Bayer part. (It took a while to settle on those roles, but we’re happy with the way it turned out.) We thought it would be fun to take our show to the Cannes Film Festival and do daily podcasts reporting on the movies we’ve seen, the snootiness we’ve encountered, and the French people who have made us uncomfortable. This does sound like fun, no?

But it’s an expensive festival to travel to, and Jeff and I aren’t exactly loaded, even though his wife is a doctor and I am an Internet sensation. We have therefore launched a Kickstarter campaign to send “Movie B.S.” to Cannes! We need $5,000 to cover air fare, hotel accommodations, and daily baguettes. If we can raise the money, we’ll do at least six podcasts of at least 45 minutes each during the week we’re there. Like our regular weekly shows, these podcasts will be available free of charge to anyone who wants to listen.

We have until March 8 to get $5,000 in pledges. The way Kickstarter works is that nobody pays anything until March 8 — and even then, only if we’ve reached the $5,000 threshold. If we fall short, nobody pays nothin’, and we forget the whole thing. And it doesn’t matter how much you pledge. Minimum is a dollar. Wanna pledge a dollar? Be our guest! Thank you!

There are rewards for more significant contributions. For $100, we’ll let you be a guest on one of our regular weekly shows for five minutes, to talk about whatever you want (within reason). For $250, you get that prize, plus a T-shirt with the fabulous Movie B.S. Cannes graphic image seen above. For $500, you get the guest spot, plus the T-shirt, plus Jeff and I will record an audio commentary for the movie of your choosing! This will be great.

Like I said, any contribution of $1 or more is welcome and appreciated. And if you’re not already listening to “Movie B.S. with Bayer and Snider” on a regular basis, this would be a fine time to start!

(P.S. In a few months there will be another Kickstarter campaign for another year of Snide Remarks, so if you have a finite Kickstarter budget for all of 2012, feel free to split it between this one and that one. Oh, and thanks again.)

Weekly link roundup – Feb. 11-17

Sunday, February 19th, 2012

NEW MOVIE REVIEWS:

“Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance” (C-)
“This Means War” (D+)

* * * * *

MOVIE COLUMNS:

What’s the Big Deal?: “Ben-Hur” (1959), full of chariots, slave ships, Christian allegories, and Charlton Heston. [Film.com]

Re-Views: “Spirited Away” (2002), the enchanting Japanese cartoon that feels less enchanting on second viewing. [Film.com]

The Oxford Film Festival: and what it says about other small fests. [Film.com]

* * * * *

MY OTHER STUFF:

Snide Remarks: “Man Vs. Animal” — It’s not clear which of us is smarter.

Movie B.S. with Bayer and Snider: We talked about “This Means War,” “Ghost Rider,” “Bullhead,” and “Kill List.” [MovieBS] or [iTunes]

In the Dark: Subscribe to this weekly e-mail and get all the latest movie reviews, DVD releases, and other pertinent info delivered to your electronic mailbox. [Eric D. Snider's In the Dark]

Twitter: @EricDSnider

* * * * *

MISCELLANEOUS MERRIMENT:

What men’s interest magazines are really about. [Modern Primate]

My pal MaryAnn Johanson jumps on a recent meme bandwagon with this explanation of what film critics do. [Flick Filosopher]

Someone added audience “Wooooo!” responses to inappropriate moments of “Saved by the Bell.” [Viraltoob]

Everyone who has been to Austin’s Alamo Drafthouse knows it’s the best movie theater ever conceived by man. Now residents of San Francisco will get to enjoy that same awesomeness! [Alamo Blog]

Almost certainly the world’s best commercial for a technical college. [Gizmodo]

Weekly link roundup – Feb. 4-10

Saturday, February 11th, 2012

NEW MOVIE REVIEWS:

“Safe House” (C)
“The Vow” (C)
“Journey 2: The Mysterious Island” (C+)

* * * * *

MOVIE COLUMNS:

Eric’s Bad Movies: “The Dungeonmaster” (1984), featuring neither dungeons nor masters. [Film.com]

Re-Views: “Masked and Anonymous” (2003), Bob Dylan’s enigmatic vanity project that bored a lot of people. [Film.com]

The Pros and Cons of Seeing “The Phantom Menace” in 3D: A thoughtful essay on this weighty issue. [Film.com]

* * * * *

MY OTHER STUFF:

Snide Remarks: No new column this week, but please check out this blog entry, “The state of Snide Remarks address.”

Movie B.S. with Bayer and Snider: We launched our Kickstarter campaign to send us to Cannes, reviewed “The Vow,” “Safe House,” and “Journey 2: The Mysterious Island,” and played a game. What more do you want?? [MovieBS] or [iTunes]

In the Dark: Subscribe to this weekly e-mail and get all the latest movie reviews, DVD releases, and other pertinent info delivered to your electronic mailbox. [Eric D. Snider's In the Dark]

Twitter: @EricDSnider

* * * * *

MISCELLANEOUS MERRIMENT:

A smart young critic named Sam Fragoso interviewed me about my “life” and “work” and “career.” You can listen to it on his website. [Duke & the Movies]

My pal Brian Salisbury made me laugh with his discussion of “Scream Blacula Scream” for his ongoing Junkfood Cinema column. [Film School Rejects]

My other pal William Goss wrote this thoughtful essay about depression, “The Grey,” and “Oslo, August 31st.” [The Hitlist]

My third pal Drew McWeeny wrote an angry and funny column with this title: “An open letter to the worst human being ever to sit in a theater.” [HitFix]

If you love “Breaking Bad” AND you have a valentine, you can’t go wrong with these cards. [The Curious Brain]

The state of Snide Remarks address

Tuesday, February 7th, 2012

My fellow Internet users, I am pleased to stand before you this evening to present the annual state of Snide Remarks address, which has never happened before and isn’t even really a “thing.”

It has been 11 months since the new batch of Kickstarter-funded Snide Remarks columns began its run. We have made great strides forward. Of the 50 columns promised, 38 have been delivered, and only five or six were about PETA. Very few of the columns caused the death of anyone directly. One of them described Arianna Huffington as some kind of mythical beast. That was fun. (Here are the archives, in case you missed one.)

I wanted to update you on some of the behind-the-scenes particulars. The idea of crowd-sourcing my freelance employment through Kickstarter was new to me — I think it was fairly new in general — and so there has been some trial and error. Here’s where we stand.

- I promised to deliver 50 columns in one year, starting March 7, 2011, and allowing myself two weeks off. In hindsight, this was hilarious. I burned up my two free weeks almost immediately, then had to throw myself on the mercy of the readers in a blog post aptly entitled “I’m dumb.” The consensus among commenters was that it was OK if it takes more than a year, as long as they get their 50 columns. I appreciate your understanding.

There were stretches in the past when I wrote Snide Remarks every single week for more than a year at a time, and I assumed I could do it again. What I neglected to consider was that pretty much all the circumstances are different now. For example, there was a time when Snide Remarks was available by subscription only, which meant that if I missed a week I would have to credit people’s accounts. The thought of manually adjusting all those accounts one by one was so nightmarish that I never missed a week. Also helping: for a big chunk of that time, I didn’t have much employment other than Snide Remarks.

When I was at the Daily Herald — that was what we called a “newspaper,” in a state known as “Utah” — I had a few impressive streaks of never missing a week. Heck, I was writing Snide Remarks TWICE weekly during some of that! But those columns were also much shorter than we are now accustomed to; it was fairly easy to take nothing more than a germ of an idea and lather it up to column length. I also wrote about a lot of local things. I also frequently had the luxury of being able to spend an entire day writing Snide Remarks without having to write anything else.

None of those things are true anymore. Now I am blessed with enough paid gigs to make a living, and while Snide Remarks is a key component, it’s not the only component. Those other paid gigs, though rewarding and enjoyable, are time-consuming, and everything — including Snide Remarks — is probably harder to write than it looks. (Unless it looks really, really, REALLY hard, in which case it is not as hard as it looks.) I’m writing for a general audience, not the readers of a dumb paper in Utah. And where I had plenty of administrative work to do at the newspaper, giving my fevered brain much-needed breaks, now pretty much everything I do requires some level of creativity. Even if I’m physically capable of standing here for 10 hours a day writing, it turns out I am not mentally capable. This has been a frustrating thing for me to accept.

- So far I’ve published 38 columns, with 12 still to come. I did that math myself, but it checks out. They’re still comin’, don’t worry. Obviously, it’s not going to happen within a year of the start date. That ship sailed long ago, and I was not on it.

- Once these 50 columns have been delivered, I’ll do another Kickstarter campaign to fund another 50. I’m not going to promise to do the next 50 in 52 weeks, though, because I am capable of learning from my mistakes. (This is a recent development.) I have a plan in mind that will work better. I’ll tell you about it when the time comes. The point is, there will be more Snide Remarks after this batch of 50 is done.

- A few words on the sponsored columns. The Kickstarter deal was that if you contributed at least $100, you got to choose the topic for one of the columns and put an ad at the bottom of it. Of the 19 people who did this — heroes, all of them — four chose to just give me the money and not claim their prize. (Or at least they never responded to the multiple emails I sent asking if they wanted to claim their prize.) Several others had an advertisement they wanted to include but left it up to me to choose the topic of the column. In other words, just because a column has a sponsor doesn’t necessarily mean that the sponsor chose the subject matter. Some did, some didn’t. Anyway, seven of the 12 columns yet to be delivered will be of the sponsored variety. So if you’re one of those seven sponsors, don’t worry.

Thank you, one and all, for supporting Snide Remarks. Whether you contributed to the Kickstarter campaign or are “just” a reader, I appreciate your enthusiasm, comments, feedback, and baked goods. I hope your investment, whether of money or of five minutes of your time per week, has been worth it. (Because there are no refunds.) Onward and upward!

P.S. No column this week. Suckers!

Link roundup for the last couple weeks

Saturday, February 4th, 2012

Excuse me, waiter, you brought out the February too early. I wasn’t finished with my January yet! No, it’s OK, not a big deal. I’m just saying. Anyway, here’s everything that’s happened in the last couple weeks, linkwise.

SUNDANCE:

At Film School Rejects, my pint-sized platonic lady friend Allison Loring did a Q-and-A with me about my Sundance experiences. Click for the article; stay for the picture of me, which is probably the best picture of me ever taken. [Film School Rejects]

I also showed up for part of the Operation Kino podcast to talk about Sundance with fellow festival-goers Katey Rich and Matt “Patches” Patches. [Cinema Blend]

A dispatch about my first day at Sundance 2012, with movies about sad artists. [Movies.com]

How to be a thoughtless jerk at a film festival screening. [Movies.com]

And here are the Sundance reviews I excreted for Film.com, listed in order from best to least-best:

“Beasts of the Southern Wild” (A-)
“The Raid” (B+)
“Oslo, August 31st” (B+)
“Wrong” (B)
“V/H/S” (B)
“I Am Not a Hipster” (B)
“Red Hook Summer” (B-)
“This Must Be the Place” (D)

* * * * *

NEW MOVIE REVIEWS:

“Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close” (C+)
“Red Tails” (C)
“Haywire” (A-)
“Man on a Ledge” (C+)
“The Grey” (B+)
“The Artist” (B+)
“Chronicle” (B-)
“The Woman in Black” (C+)
“The Innkeepers” (B)

* * * * *

MOVIE COLUMNS:

Eric’s Bad Movies: “Hard Target” (1993), starring Jean-Claude Van Damme, who stars in most of the movies we talk about at Eric’s Bad Movies. [Film.com]

Re-Views: “Anatomy of Hell” (2004), an excruciating movie that is still kind of excruciating. [Film.com]

* * * * *

MY OTHER STUFF:

Snide Remarks: “The Hood Life” (discovering the benefits of hoodies) and “A Game of Quarters” (those sad, weird vending machines).

Movie B.S. with Bayer and Snider: Episode 95, postponed by technical difficulties, was extremely loopy and incredibly dumb. Episode 96 was more normal, although that’s relative. [MovieBS] or [iTunes]

In the Dark: Subscribe to this weekly e-mail and get all the latest movie reviews, DVD releases, and other pertinent info delivered to your electronic mailbox. [Eric D. Snider's In the Dark]

Twitter: @EricDSnider


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