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Missing Real with Mike D'Arrigo
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Missing Real with Mike D'Arrigo

Author: Mike D'Arrigo

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Great movies take their place in history, but what about all the "turkeys" and disastrous flops littering the vast cinematic cesspool? If you really love movies, then what does it matter if a particular film won eight Oscars or eight Razzies? Sometimes over-the-top hammy acting, laughably choreographed fight sequences and rubber monster FX outdo even the most lavish productions in the Academy Awards echelon. So, whether it's an unsurpassed masterpiece or a piece of something else, every movie I talk about in this podcast is near and dear to my heart. Some you will know well, some you'd be well off never knowing at all, at least until hearing just how enjoyably awful they are, so plug in those earbuds or don your expensive blingy Beats, and let's take a trip to the movies! (Popcorn optional)
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By now we've gotten to see all our favorite "classic" Star Wars heroes return to the saga after a decades-long wait, and then they all got snuffed out.  Except for Lando, of course...the least "heroic" out of them all...he gets to live!  You remember he double-crossed the REAL heroes and was eyeing Princess Leia from the get-go.  Grrrrr...it's enough to make you wanna pull someone's arms out of their sockets (like the screenwriters?) but here we have a stand-alone movie about the coolest dude ever to zip through hyperspace: Han Solo!  Why, we'd be happy if EVERY Star Wars movie was a Han Solo adventure.  On the condition that he's played by Harrison Ford!  Which, sorry to say, he's not.  We've got a younger version of Han, and a totally new actor filling those boots.  Seems pretty iffy to say the least, but it turns out to be a decent movie after all, with some excitement and humor, familiar furry faces (Chewie, of course!  Not the effin' ewoks!) and just a slight touch of the Force.  Director Ron Howard did a great job with it, and I bet the making of this movie brought everyone involved some Happy Days.  Play this podcast and today can be one for you!  
In 1995, moviegoers and Godfather geeks were lining up to see Al Pacino and Robert De Niro share the screen for the first time ever in the crime epic Heat.   They might not have realized that in the 3 hour running time, they're together for maybe 3 minutes!  But OMG... those 3 minutes were riveting!   Even the other 2 hours and 57 minutes of it were pretty intense.  Crazy shootouts, double-crosses and heists, dysfunctional relationships, and a hopped-up live wire Al Pacino shouting at everyone he meets.  But when he finally gets face-to-face with De Niro, they chat over coffee.  Really.  That's the big hoo-ha: a quiet conversation.  What do they say?  "Say hello to my little friend!"  "You talkin' to me?" "You're out of order!" "Little bit...".  Well, thankfully it's a lot better than that!  This is probably Michael Mann's greatest work.  Crockett & Tubbs wish they were this cool.  Colorful clothing and Jan Hammer keytar solos ain't gonna cut it.  Get ready to feel some heat!   
When a stunningly gorgeous woman wants to have sex with you, for FREE,  the hour you meet her, that should raise a red flag.  Especially if she's really an H.R. Giger-designed alien creature masquerading as Natasha Henstridge.  Hey, it happens.  This 1995 movie delivers the blood and boobs (human and extraterrestrial, to be precise) and boasts a pretty impressive cast with a thankless assignment chasing this babe all over L.A. trying to stop her from getting pregnant and slaughtering her suitors.  Girl's got ISSUES!  But whatever species you might belong to, this is a really fun flick worth watching, even if it is a bit..."SIL-ly".  
You might be shocked that I'm actually covering a "new" movie on this podcast, since I'm usually going back to the 80s for my topics, but this one does have an "old" lead character and actor who's actually IN his 80s!  Harrison Ford, my all-time favorite star of the screen, returns one last time to play Indiana Jones, and the most nail-biting, cliff-hanging feeling about it is: will it suck as badly as Crystal Skull?  Here to share some insights, stories and personal connections to Harrison Ford is my very special guest Lisa Blake-Mitchell!  (Oh, sorry...were you expecting Ke Huy Quan or something?)  You won't need a map or worthless bronze medallion to find the treasures that await you in this audio adventure.  Let's talk Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny!  Nobody's ever rocked a whip with more panache.  Well, except maybe Devo.  
How can the guy who wrote The Empire Strikes Back go on to direct this unmitigated disaster of a cinematic abortion??  I'm still in denial.  Blame it on drugs, maybe?  The drugs that Stephen King was on while recovering from multiple surgeries after being hit by a distracted motorist while he was out for a walk.  The novel he eventually churned out, Dreamcatcher, should have credited Oxycontin as co-author.  It was sort of kooky, but in a King style.  The movie version, courtesy of Lawrence Kasdan, is a whole different kind of horrible.  Sitting through it is only marginally preferable to being eaten by a Wampa.  Dreamcatcher is such a nightmare even Freddy Krueger can't stand it.  But please....by all means, give it a look!  Listen to my podcast as I lavish everything but praise upon it.  It's almost too bad to resist.  
In-between The Force Awakens and The Last Jedi, we Star Wars fans were given a cinematic "snack" in 2016 in the form of Rogue One, the first stand-alone/non-episode Roman numeral movie set in that galaxy far, far away.  You could call it a "solo" movie, but that's actually something else that came along a couple years later!  This one here deals with a bunch of characters you've never heard of before who managed to acquire and steal those plans for the Death Star, even though they never got any credit for it.  Until NOW!  There might not be too many familiar faces here, but the good news is there's no Jar Jar Binks and not a single Ewok anywhere to be found!  This actually turned out to be a pretty excellent film, praised by most of the fans and fairly immune to the typical haters out there.  It makes an excellent prelude to A New Hope, and features a brief but thrilling appearance by Darth Vader.  Almost as thrilling: my special guest on the podcast is none other than Ed Marcus, who can bullseye a womp rat with his T16 (I've seen him do it) so he's qualified to share the cockpit on this hyperspace debate!  Join the rebellion and listen now!  Don't make me Force ya.  
Another blockbuster action flick from Michael Bay, and probably his most excellent movie!  A disgruntled General and some Marines hold a bunch of tourists hostage on Alcatraz island (conveniently, the place is full of rusty but working jail cells!) and it's up to "chemical superfreak" Nicolas Cage and former "British Sheecret Shervish" agent Sean Connery to bust them loose and stop Ed Harris and his brigade from launching these deadly green balls of toxic chemical gas at the innocent citizens of San Francisco!  Those poor people have it bad enough having to go up and down 45-degree angle tilted streets every day, don't they?  We've got car chases, demolition, hand-to-hand combat, lots of things blowing up, and even some excellent performances (I was gonna say "acting", but you know...Cage is doing his over-the-top Cagey stuff...not sure if there's an Oscar category for Best Batshit Rant from a Lead Actor...).  Plain and simple, action and entertainment up the wazoo!  Welcome to The Rock!  You're in, mate!  
If I ever got to meet Christopher Walken, I'd certainly tell him how much I love his films and erratic speech patterns.  But, I'd be a little hesitant to shake his hand...'cause what if there was a sudden JOLT and he saw some terrifying future for me?  Or envisioned a total breakdown of civilization all because of my stupid Missing Real podcast?  I'm overreaching here, of course...we really just wanna focus on this fantastic David Cronenberg/Stephen King classic, The Dead Zone.  Walken plays the boringly named John Smith, who can see the future or past secrets of people just by taking their hand.  He's got a POW-wuh.  But will it be a curse?  Also in the movie is a live-wire Martin Sheen, as a political candidate you definitely do NOT want in the West Wing.  Also in this podcast is my good buddy Dave Chan.  And a couple of cats you won't hear much from.  Actual CATS, not jazz musicians.  But when you're talkin' like Walken, everything is improvised!    
Considering this movie came out in 2001 (and was originally going to be made by the director of 2001!), the concept of Artificial Intelligence is now about as common as coffee in our everyday lives.  Real intelligence, on the other hand, is still more of a science fiction fantasy than ever, and you won't find much of it in this podcast but don't let that stop you!  This is a somewhat disjointed film, kind of what you'd expect when you try to mix Kubrick and Spielberg, but it's a dazzling and emotional odyssey (not a space one!) which I've got a lot to say about.  A robot boy who wants to be "real" and be loved goes on a lonely adventure, with plenty of mushy drama courtesy of Spielberg.  Hey, if Kubrick made it the kid would probably just talk to his finger and write "Redrum" on the wall.  Join me for a podcastic voyage!  It's better than going to the Flesh Fair!  Trust me, that's not as thrilling as it sounds.
Pop quiz: a giant asteroid is hurtling towards Earth and will spell certain doom when it hits!  Ignoring the fact that asteroids can't spell, name that movie!  Um, is this multiple choice?  Kind of...ya see, there were two movies out in 1998 about this imminent threat from some distant space quarry, but I'm going with the bigger, badder, dumber one: Armageddon!  Directed (can you call it that?) by Michael Bay!  Action and adrenaline aplenty here, along with a hit soundtrack album that I dare say is even better than Dirty Dancing!  But, never mind the music...who's gonna save the Earth?!?  Destroying this asteroid will take a lot more than just dropping some quarters at the old video arcade!  It takes Bruce Willis!  Yippee-ki-yay, Meteor Fragment!  (sorry...I had to)  Now, while there's still time...listen to this podcast!  It ROCKS!  
Pop quiz: a giant asteroid is hurtling towards Earth and will spell certain doom when it hits!  Ignoring the fact that asteroids can't spell, name that movie!  Um, is this multiple choice?  Kind of...ya see, there were two movies out in 1998 about this imminent threat from some distant space quarry, but I'm going with the bigger, badder, dumber one: Armageddon!  Directed (can you call it that?) by Michael Bay!  Action and adrenaline aplenty here, along with a hit soundtrack album that I dare say is even better than Dirty Dancing!  But, never mind the music...who's gonna save the Earth?!?  Destroying this asteroid will take a lot more than just dropping some quarters at the old video arcade!  It takes Bruce Willis!  Yippee-ki-yay, Meteor Fragment!  (sorry...I had to)  Now, while there's still time...listen to this podcast!  It ROCKS!  
The third major theatrical Stephen King adaption by Frank Darabont (who did pretty well with Shawshank and Green Mile) doesn't take place in a prison, but it's still about a bunch of people who are trapped and any attempt to escape could be fatal!  A strange mist rolls into town, and lurking within it are all sorts of icky monsters!  Ordinary folks hiding in a supermarket can't deal with the horror (or each other) for very long and soon many of them are on their way to express check-out!  King's short story was really scary, despite its piss-poor ending.  Darabont fixes that here, and drops a whopper of a conclusion on us.  Any first-time viewers are in for a shock, so if you "mist" this movie, watch it now!  And by the way, it's not the same as The Fog.  That's harder to see through.  But awesome to watch!  
Contrary to legend, this movie is not about Metallica.  And the Metallica song is not about this movie, unless they stole the script, 'cuz the song came out first!  Now don't you believe all that horse pucky.  This here's a darn good western.  Take it from me, even if all I really know about westerns is they got Sam Elliott or Clint Eastwood in 'em.  Oh, and lotsa guns, horses and whores.  It must be a winning formula, as there are hundreds of movies in the genre.  I haven't got time for all that, so let's just pick a really famous one and talk about it with my sidekick Dave Chan.  It's one of his favorites, and quite appropriate because after all the junk I've dragged him into discussing on the podcast I'm the one who should be Unforgiven.  Saddle up, buckaroos!  Don't forget the moonshine.  You'll need it! 
James Cameron has spent so many years making movies underwater it's shocking that he hasn't grown gills by now.  This long-awaited sequel to his blockbuster Avatar (over a decade, so it better be good!) finally surfaced in 2022.  Can't really say it's better than the original, but it's definitely "wetter"!  We have those big blue digital cat people living in their psychedelic jungle for a while, and then they migrate to these nifty coastal villages and make friends with whales and stuff.  There's enough crazy creatures under the sea to give Jacques Cousteau a boner.  If he wasn't dead.  If you even know who the heck Jacques Cousteau was.  Doesn't matter.  But, you will definitely learn a whole lotta science stuff, marine biology and human evolution from my highly intelligent guest, David Franklin.  I'll make some jokes, he'll make some sense, and at some point we might even mention the Avatar movie.  Ready to take a deep dive?  
As a seasoned horror fan who grew up reading Stephen King books, I've always tried to watch every single film adaptation ever made from his stories.  Over the years the violence and gore quotient of the average horror movie increases relative to the tolerance of the viewer's stomach.  Before this turns into a math and biology lesson, I just mean to say it takes a lot to scare or shock us these days, right?  After all, once you run out of vampires, vengeful prom queens and rabid dogs, even the imagination of King gets stretched a little thin coming up with new frights to unleash upon us.  The terrors in the two stories I talk about here are a bit far-out, leaning more toward science fiction than horror, and it doesn't help that they were both made for television in the early  1990s, where visual effects were barely learning to crawl and the screen was still a square!  Now I'm getting into geometry, and that's not the topic here!  The Tommyknockers and the Langoliers, whatever the heck those are, were not Stephen King's finest hour.  They were, in fact,  8 hours of sitting in front of the idiot box (remember, television = commercial breaks every 15 minutes, get your calculators out...).  You'd have to be a fairly hardcore King fanatic to have sat through these two miniseries, so let me dilute them down for everyone else.  And, for those of you who don't like horror, don't worry.  The only reason you should be afraid to watch these movies is because they kinda suck.  
So, here's the Thing.  Again!  Why?  Well, not only is it still my all-time favorite scary movie, it's also a favorite of my frequent guest Quan Ngo (who just might be my all-time favorite scary dude!)  I barely skimmed over this 1982 John Carpenter classic in one of my early episodes, along with its really-not-bad 2011 prequel, so here we take a deep dive into both movies, explore some interesting theories, crack a bunch of jokes, and who knows what else!  Now that we've broken the ice, time to dig up some fun while the fate of humanity hangs in the balance.  Listen carefully, 'cause this podcast is a monster! 
If you believe there's such a thing as truth in advertising, this movie will put an end to any such delusions.  First of all, he's not from the future.  He's a caveman in a loincloth.  There's no time travel other than the time it takes for this crappy movie to be over.  AND...on the poster we see our hero Yor shouting up at these bright, shiny UFOs in the sky, like he's at some outdoor E.L.O. concert produced by Steven Spielberg.  Do we actually see these spaceships in the movie?  Of course not.  I bet the poster had a bigger budget than the film itself.  Oh, and I didn't even mention the theme song...an affront to the art of music and yet pretty darn catchy...what's the deal with this flick?  And a better question: why do I watch it so often and own it on blu-ray?  Maybe there are answers to be found within this podcast.  Even if there aren't, it's pretty hilarious and I even suckered my buddy Professor Dave Chan into watching it and engaging in conversation about it, knowing full well he's got much better things to do.  What a sport!  One thing's for sure: YOR gonna laugh when you hear this!
Here's the blockbuster movie that made James Cameron "King of the World!", even if these days the only world he seems to bother with is Pandora.  Winning 11 Oscars just does that to ya, I guess.  Admittedly, this is a pretty great film, although its biggest flaw is that everyone already knows the ending.  Boat sinks, Celine sings, it's terror across the board.  And speaking of boards, there was probably enough room on that slab of wood for Jack if only Rose would've scooted her butt over a little.  Ah, but the sweeping romance and spectacle can't be denied.  This is one of Cameron's finest works, even if there's not a Terminator or Alien Queen in sight.  At least there's Bill Paxton and some other fun folks in the cast.  I'm really excited to have a special guest to chat/debate with: Lisa Blake-Mitchell is on board for this voyage, so everyone grab your headphones and life jackets 'cause this Titanic podcast is about to set sail!  The dining room is proudly serving iceberg lettuce!  
Things get pretty hairy for David Naughton in this howlingly awesome 1981 werewolf movie.  Plenty of gore and dark humour (see how I spelt that so Englishly?) make this a true classic about a lycanthrope just tryin' to cope!  Now, come along and have a pint at The Slaughtered Lamb with me and this rather dodgy bloke Evan Lam ('es a good lad, actually) as we gnash our teeth and tear into this excellent horror/comedy.  It also happens to have no less than TWO Star Wars connections!  Just don't forget what happens when the moon is full.  What I wanna know is...what happens when the moon is empty???
For once, I'll present a movie that's actually got style and substance: a 1998 masterpiece of visionary science fiction called Dark City.  It was only the second feature by director Alex Proyas, and it's so good Roger Ebert hoisted his fussy thumb way up for it.  Considering that this legendary film critic basically crapped all over nearly every other movie I've featured on Missing Real, we must have ourselves a pretty respectable flick here!  Haven't seen it?  Well, maybe you have and your memories were just replaced by an injection while you were unconscious!  But this is truly an unforgettable movie that always feels fresh and intriguing with each repeat viewing.  There's so much going on, visually stunning and imaginative spirals of storyline in a Burton's Batman meets Matrix metropolis...aw, just trust Ebert's thumb!  If you don't agree this movie is incredible, there are other fingers we could offer up...  
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