All posts by David DeMoss
The Traumatic Cinematic Show, Ep. 59: Fearlessly Drinking Sassafras
This is our 2nd installment in our March-ial Arts month spectacular and we bring you Jet Li’s “last martial arts movie” Fearless. We invited a special guest on the show from the Movies, Cigars, and Beer podcast Keith Hughes and we give him the Traumatic Cinematic royal treatment. Tune in to find out if Mike drinks himself into a Sassafras blackout, find out if Keith gives up podcasting forever after being soiled by the trio, and if DeMoss hogs all the airtime.
Find our guest Keith Hughes at http://mcbwka.podomatic.com and on Twitter @MovieCigarBeer
Send hate mail to TrauamticCinematic@gmail.com
Find us on Twitter at @GenXnerd, @Greymattersplat, ,@AYTIWS, and the whole cult @TCPodcastCrew
Check out our site http://traumaticcinematic.com
Check out Tom Jenner (creator of our theme songs) and his many project at the following links-
https://www.facebook.com/imageblownout
http://www.youtube.com/user/imageblownout
Twitter: @imageblownout
An Announcement: Crash Re-course
First, the sad news: no new video this week. But in much happier news, there’s no new video (a) because Emerald City Comic Con was last weekend and (b) – we got ourselves a whole stack of new A/V equipment Monday morning – not in time for Emerald City, but in plenty of time for my return. Because of this, we’re in the middle of learning all our new equipment’s ends and outs and changing our entire lighting scheme to combat our presenter’s hideousness. New stuff is in the works, including the requested Upcoming Review Schedule and various ideas kicking around the old brain pan. Again, thank you for your patience in advance: it’s very much appreciated. If all goes well, we’ll be back in a flash.
The Traumatic Cinematic Show Ep. 58: Enter March-ial Arts
Around these parts March is traditionally martial arts month (yes we made that up) and to kick it all off we viewed and discussed Bruce Lee’s masterpiece Enter the Dragon. Tune in to see if this film is old hat to the trio or who popped their cherry. Find out if DeMoss can find a handful of things to hate about this title, see if Wickliff roots for the one handed bad guy, and if MuGumBo uploaded the correct show this week.
Send hate mail to TrauamticCinematic@gmail.com
Find us on Twitter at @GenXnerd, @Greymattersplat, ,@AYTIWS, and the whole cult @TCPodcastCrew
Check out our site http://traumaticcinematic.com
Check out Tom Jenner (creator of our theme songs) and his many project at the following links-
https://www.facebook.com/imageblownout
http://www.youtube.com/user/imageblownout
Twitter: @imageblownout
Batman: The Dark Knight Returns, Part 2 (2013)
Part 4: More Comic Book History You Don’t Care About But Need to Know in Order to Understand What the Hell’s Going On in This Review:
Since Warner Brothers insisted on adapting this story into two, one hour and twelve minute movies, I made a point of not revisiting The Dark Knight Returns, Part 1 in preparation for this review of Part Deux. If it’d been up to me, I would’ve adapting Frank Miller’s four-issue story arc into one movie, and I might just edit these two together at some point, when I get some spare time. Even with everything here, it’d still be at least an hour shorter than the last two live action Bat-films. And make no mistake – the WB’s straight-to-video animation department threw in a lot.
They had no choice. These are adaptions of one of the best-loved Batman stories in history. Find me a Bat-writer and, with a little help from my friend Google, I’ll probably be able to find you a choice quote about how 1986’s Dark Knight Returns either got them into Batman in the first place, or brought them back after a period of apostasy. Current Batman/Superman writer Greg Pak just provided me a perfect example in this interview, dated February 27th, 2013:
I dropped out for a little bit, and I was still picking up indie comics like Cerebus and Usagi Yojimbo, but it was Batman that got me back into superhero comics when I was in college. Specifically it was Dark Knight Returns and Batman: Year One, which then led me to other stuff. It was basically Frank Miller who dragged me back in, and I was hooked. I was obsessed with Batman. Continue reading Batman: The Dark Knight Returns, Part 2 (2013)
Battleship (2012)
The Traumatic Cinematic Show: Ep. 57: Foxy Brown
To close out Black History month we at the TCPodcast studio decided since we’ve already tasted the modern throwback Blaxploitation film Black Dynamite we needed to also view one of the greatest and most copied films from the genre. Pam Grier plays the ever so sexy badass in this 1974 cult classic Foxy Brown and we get elbow deep in it. The trio invited 3 Black Geeks to join in and Chris Powell represents them and the East Coast verses MuGumBo’s Midwest style and DeMoss’s West Coast jingle. Tune in to find out where Wickliff was, see if DeMoss and Chris Powell start a coast to coast podcast war, and if Antonio Fargas is the Steve Buscemi of Blaxploitation films (spoiler alert: he totally is).
Please check out Chris Powell (3 Black Geeks) and all the links to their site and podcast.
http://3BlackGeeks.podOmatic.com
http://facebook.com/3BlackGeeks
Twitter @3BlackGeeks
Send hate mail to TrauamticCinematic@gmail.com
Find us on Twitter at @GenXnerd, @Greymattersplat, ,@AYTIWS, and the whole cult @TCPodcastCrew
Check out our site at traumaticcinematic.com
Check out Tom Jenner (creator of our theme songs) and his many project at facebook.com/imageblownout and youtube.com/user/imageblownout
Twitter: @imageblownout
Destroy All Monsters (1968)
For G-fans, this is the Big One, the culmination of all that came before. It’s easy to see why since Kaijû sôshingeki (“Charge” or “Invasion” or “Attack of the Monsters“; take your pick) hits the ground running with none of the drawn-out build-up we’ve come to expect from these flicks…especially those directed by Ishiro Honda. By the eleven minute-mark, Godzilla’s nuking the UN and his monstrous colleagues are reducing other major cities to scrap. By the end of the film, ten monsters engage the twice-defeated (yet inexplicably popular) King Ghidorah in a no-holds-barred brawl in the shadow of Mt. Fuji, which became legendary before the film’s premiere.
So the number one reason cited for out-and-out loving Destroy All Monsters is totally valid. Here, you really can get more monsters for your money and the scope of that Climactic Battle is mind-bending, both as a piece of cinema and as a technical landmark in film making history. Ten monsters, most of them actors in costumes, the rest puppets, all requiring some manner of off-screen puppeteers to keep up the illusion. It was a logistical nightmare of actors and wires and animatronics, all under hot lights, sixteen hours a day…but thanks to the magic of editing and shot composition, its made not only beautiful, but enduringly awesome.
For many G-fans, that fight alone ensures this film can do no wrong. For others, Destroy All Monsters can do no wrong because it was their introduction to Godzilla and his universe. A certain generation (the one right ahead of mine, in fact) grew up seeing this film on network TV, where it played with varying degrees of regularity until the 1980s. This was back in the days when there were only three networks and they bought up catalogs of cheap, old films to shore up their schedules. Continue reading Destroy All Monsters (1968)
John Carter (2012)
The Traumatic Cinematic Show, Ep 56: Black Dynamite
William Bruce West (@WilliamBWest) joins the crew as we celebrate Black History Month with the 2009 retro blaxploitation extravaganza, Black Dynamite.
Find William Bruce West on Twitter @WilliamBWest and check out his website williambrucewest.com/
Send hate mail to TrauamticCinematic@gmail.com
Find us on Twitter at @GenXnerd, @Greymattersplat, ,@AYTIWS, and the whole cult @TCPodcastCrew
Check out our site traumaticcinematic.com
Check out Tom Jenner (creator of our theme songs) and his many project at
facebook.com/imageblownout youtube.com/user/imageblownout and @imageblownout on Twitter.