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High Come Down: The Colossal Disappointment of Rogen & Gondry’s ‘The Green Hornet’

High Come Down: The Colossal Disappointment of Rogen & Gondry’s ‘The Green Hornet’

High Come Down – The Colossal Disappointment of “The Green Hornet”

Have you ever been excited about the idea of something so much that when you eventually got to experience that it ultimately let you down in unimaginable ways? Of course you have. It happens to all of us. We’re movie fans because the good ones elicit a certain joy and giddiness in us that we strive for. It makes us feel a high different from other types of excitement and we’re on a continuous search to find a new way to feel the same thing. Some choose drugs. Some choose movies. Some combine them and watch “Trainspotting.”

The goal of this series is to highlight movies that carried high expectations not necessarily by the movie-going public at-large, but by me, that for any number of reasons, I felt were colossal disappointments. Since you’re undoubtedly wondering, the title of the series refers to a Chico & Coolwadda song featuring Nate Dogg (listen here). It’s about the times our dreams are dashed, placed on the street and given the “American History X” treatment. There are many reasons why I can be excited about an upcoming project. It could be the director, the stars, the concept or any other myriad of possibilities. I’ll highlight what excited me about the film in the lead-up to seeing it and then accompany it with why it so went so horribly wrong that I felt I needed to write a piece about it.

I’ve struggled when deciding if I wanted to go forth with this series (even though this if the first installment). Being negative is easy. And being negative on the Internet seems like its sole purpose. It’s so rampant that I can’t bring myself to read comments. Not just on my stuff, but anyone’s. Every idiot is allowed to have a voice and ten times to one (if not more), that voice is one of criticism. My goal is not to add to that. However, I realize a series about “Colossal Disappointments” isn’t particularly an exercise in positivity. However, my intent isn’t to rip or tear down. The reason these films disappointed me is because I wanted to like them.  Not only wanted, but expected to like. And because my expectations weren’t met, I was disappointed. I like the filmmakers involved. They’ve already won me over and I root for them to continue to do so. In these instances, however, my excitement came to a standstill.

“The Green Hornet,” you made my high come down.

Why I was excited:

At the height of this site posting movie news, “The Green Hornet” information had just been breaking. I was all over it. I wanted to cover every tidbit and angle, purely due to the very first morsel to come down the pike: Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg were writing a “Green Hornet” movie and Rogen was slated to star.

I might have expressed ambivalence about the news, initially. I remember “The Green Hornet” having a campy ‘60s show in the vein of the Adam West-starring “Batman,” and that Bruce Lee played the title character’s sidekick, Kato. But I had no special connection to the series. The casting of Rogen as a “superhero,” was odd, but so was Heath Ledger as the Joker and Robert Downey Jr. in “Iron Man.” Out of the box casting decisions had been knocked out of the park before.

However, the casting (to this point) was inconsequential to my excitement. I was excited for the script. Ever since “Knocked Up,” I’d been a huge Rogen fan (yes, I’m fully aware he didn’t write it). He was about my age and had a writing career I envied, starting with writing for “Undeclared” at 20 years old, in addition to “Da Ali G Show” (which I think is one of the weirdest and coolest credits to have). He and Goldberg had written “Superbad,” which I fully enjoyed and “Pineapple Express,” which I thought had some moments (the trailer alone was one of the best two minutes of the past several years) and thus I was happy to welcome another project from the duo with open arms, figuring I was in for another laugh-fest.

The Green Hornet Rogen pic

Then, there were discussions about who should direct the movie. I remember Harry Knowles voting for James McTeigue (“V for Vendetta”) and when Stephen Chow (“Kung Fu Hustle”) was considering starring as Kato, he was also in line to direct. Neither choice would’ve moved me, but it also wouldn’t have negatively influenced me purely because of my thoughts on the potential script. Then, they made such a radically brilliant choice, I could hardly contain myself (just look at the exclamation points on this headline).  I think Michel Gondry is a bit of a genius. His in-camera creativity is so much more special than any CGI effects. One of the most frequently popped-in DVDs I own is the disc of his music videos that was released. $100 couldn’t get me to part with it (unless it could be used to buy a new one).  I’d also seen “Human Nature,” “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind,” “Science of Sleep” and “Be Kind Rewind.” “Eternal Sunshine” is undoubtedly great, but I’d only seen it once. For me, my excitement was almost completely based on those music videos.

The combination of Rogen and Gondry was I all needed for the film to be one of my most anticipated of 2010 (when it was originally slated to be released), alongside only “Inception,” “Toy Story 3” and “The Social Network” (semi-coincidentally, those three films landed as my three favorites of the year, “The Green Hornet” obviously did not), but they decided to throw in a bonus, as well. The film had originally cast Nickel Gage Cage as the villain, but due to “creative differences” (the rumor was Cage wanted to speak in a Jamaican accent), he exited the project. Stepping in was Christoph Waltz. He had just come off winning Best Supporting Actor for my favorite film of ’09 (“Inglourious Basterds”) and was absolutely one of the many brilliant parts of that movie.

With three things I knew I enjoyed, coming together as one, I was primed for brilliance.

What went wrong:

Let’s start with the script. Not the text itself. I don’t know what the original drafts looked like. I don’t know what the studio demanded. I didn’t hear the notes Rogen and Goldberg were given. What I know is that what was on screen didn’t give me what I expected. When you hear Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg are writing a superhero movie, you expect an action-comedy based on their past credentials. I believe an action-comedy is what this movie is supposed to be, but there are two issues I see in that description. I don’t believe the movie contains much action, nor do I find it to be very comedic. I think the film tries for these things. I also think it doesn’t succeed.

I laughed exactly once during the movie. And remember, I think Rogen is hilarious. It was at the end of the film when Britt Reid fakes taking a bullet from the Green Hornet to completely dispense of the Hornet as a “hero” to be clamored for. Everything else fell flat for me. Remember when James Franco tries kicking out the windshield of the police car in “Pineapple Express?” That was funny because it subverts expectations (kinda like this movie. Maybe the joke was on me for watching it and/or expecting to like it). Here, there was none of that (save for the scene I just described as making me laugh).

What constitutes “action” is completely up for argument. I can understand that. However, I would contest that there’s essentially only one action sequence in the film. And it’s about a fifteen-minute stretch toward the end that entails the Black Beauty being bifurcated by an elevator. That’s not a knock. That’s fine. What’s disheartening (the punny definition) is until that sequence, the film seems to be sorely lacking any pulse at all.

And that’s where Michel Gondry comes in. You’ll notice I didn’t touch upon his films outside of “Eternal Sunshine” as being reasons for optimism. And that’s because I don’t hold them in much esteem. “I’ve seen “Human Nature” once, and while not hated, think it’s completely forgettable. I actually hadn’t made it all the way through “Science of Sleep” and “Be Kind Rewind” was the worst movie of 2008 that I had seen, largely due to my disappointment in it failing to meet my expectations (though I’ll spare you the “High Come Down” piece about that film). Now, it could be argued that I should have known what I was in for. Or that I should’ve known it was at least a possibility. However, the conclusion I decided to draw from “Science of Sleep” and “Be Kind Rewind” is that Gondry shouldn’t be a writer. A great visual artist, but not the guy you want in control of your story and dialogue. Rogen and Goldberg’s script was supposed to alleviate that issue.

Waltz Green Hornet Pic

Unfortunately, what I got was a film that was decidedly un-Gondry-like. For the vast majority of the film, you’d be hard-pressed to think anybody other than Directing Bot 5000 was behind the camera. As an ardent fan, I’d say there were only five moments in which Gondry put his stamp on the movie. Sadly, all of them probably add up to about four minutes of screen time and three of them were “Kato Vision.”

I had read about “Kato Vision” before I ever witnessed it. Rogen was interviewed about the choice of Gondry as director and he talked about Gondry developing a technique using different shutter speeds. This comes into play when Kato focuses on a weapon, it’s highlighted on screen, and he works to dislodge the item from the soon-to-be victim. It’s pretty similar to the technique used by Guy Ritchie to show off Sherlock Holmes’ intuitive brilliance in those films. As I said, it’s used three times and not for particularly long stretches.

One of the other two distinct Gondry moments came in the form of a killing-spree montage of Christoph Waltz’ re-dubbed Bloodnofsky, creating terror in the streets in order to grab the headline-attention away from The Green Hornet.

Speaking of Waltz, I don’t think he’s very good in this. To be honest, it kind of made me question if Colonel Hans Landa was just a lightning-in-a-bottle performance. Luckily, I was fully dsimissed of that notion in “Django Unchained,” for which he deservedly won a second Best Supporting Actor Oscar. Though that role was essentially written for him, he blew me away in his first minute on screen, completely making me forget his “Green Hornet” role ever existed. But why didn’t it work? He’s obviously a fantastic actor.

The character of Chud-/Blood-nofsky means nothing to anyone watching this movie. He has little screen time. I guess his sole motivation as a gangster is he feels disrespected by others in the crime business. He wants to feel intimidating and strike fear in people, but isn’t viewed that way by anyone. It’s what should be a somewhat comedic premise, but like so much of the film, the character is devoid of laughter. Quentin Tarantino can wring guffaws from a Nazi, Jew-hunting detective, but here, it’s nil. You have to blame the writing. I don’t think there’s any other excuse. I still don’t find Waltz compelling with what he’s given, so I can’t point fingers at any party in particular, but this is just a shame.

For something that didn’t disappointment me from an expectations standpoint, but certainly contributed to the poor final product, was Kato actor, Jay Chou. He’s not good. I don’t know if Bruce Lee was a brutal actor during “The Green Hornet” TV show, and maybe he was, but Chou is just distracting. It’s not just that he doesn’t speak English good (that’s the joke), but his emoting is so rigid and stiff. He was chosen mainly for whatever martial arts prowess he has and I’m sure he’s accomplished in that area, but he rarely gets a chance to show it off. That’s more of a fault of the filmmaking than it is Chou, but if they were going to rein that aspect in so much, they might as well have sprung for someone with better acting chops.

As much as I was let down by individuals, I have an aching feeling the movie could have been much different had it not been funded by an overbearing studio. This affects so many elements, almost no one probably made the movie they would’ve wanted to make. As Larry David says, “a compromise is when (all) parties are equally dissatisfied.” I’m positive delivering a PG-13-ready script was in Rogen and Goldberg’s contract. Obviously PG-13 films can be good and well-made, but past precedence shows their brand of comedy works best in an R-rated setting. It’s almost as if knowing they’d need to water down their style drained some life from them and they delivered a tepid mess.

Studio politics undoubtedly kept Gondry from being Gondry, too. Guy Ritchie is someone with a distinct visual style who’s been able to maintain a portion of his inventiveness working within the studio system. However, like Gondry, there’s at least an equal amount of directors who aren’t able to deliver their brand of goods when kept at arms-length from doing so.

The studio certainly appeared to want to swing for the fences in making big out-of-the-box choices, but I have a feeling they shoulder a large part of the blame for only willing to take so many chances. As a result, “The Green Hornet” is the movie that inspired this series. The epitome of filmic disappointment. However, as you’ll see, it’s far from the only movie to let me down. 

What to watch instead:

Now that I’ve relived the film breaking my spirit of expectations, I need to remind you and myself why there’s reason for hope with everybody involved again, just as there was going in. Instead of taking your time to rent and watch “The Green Hornet” or god forbid plunk down any hard-earned money on a DVD or Blu-ray, watch these instead:

The Michel Gondry music video DVD. Buy it here. Every White Stripes video is a piece of utter brilliance, but the unsung hero of the disc (although not all the interesting a song) is for Cibo Matta’s “Sugar Water.” It’s mind-boggling in its execution. You’ll become an instant fan and start anticipating Gondry’s next feature. Hopefully it won’t let you down.

The Tarantino/Christoph Waltz films (“Inglourious Basterds” and “Django Unchained”). Don’t waste time with sub-par Waltz. See him at his completely deserving, awards-worthy best. He’ll make you respect a Nazi, Jew-hunting detective and redeem himself completely by setting a slave free to seek vengeance on abhorrent slave owners.

Any Seth Rogen-scripted IMDb entry prior to this. You can also probably skip “Drillbit Taylor.” Let’s say this one marked a semi-fall from grace. Just remember this guy is capable of bringing huge laughs. He’ll do it once again. We just need to wait for the right moment.

There are several recommendations amongst those three paragraphs. Spend some of your life enjoying yourself by watching any or all of them. If you ever you get too high, “The Green Hornet” is your mental Visine.

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Movies From the Last Few Years I Wanted To Like But Didn’t (Or They Fell Short of Expectations) Part 2 of 3

Movies From the Last Few Years I Wanted To Like But Didn’t (Or They Fell Short of Expectations) Part 2 of 3

Movies From the Last Few Years I Wanted To Like But Didn’t (Or They Fell Short of Expectations) Part 2 of 3

I left one movie off my previous post from 2007, which was my Part One list of Twelve Movies From The Last Few Years That I Wanted To Like But Didn’t.  Remaining are the movies from 2008 and 2009 that made (or didn’t make, if you look at it that way) the cut.

2007

American Gangster

This one hurts some. This movie was built up to be pretty big in the minds of those that love a gangster film. I fit that role.  You have Denzel, Russell Crowe, Ridley Scott directing, a Jay-Z-laden soundtrack, and comparisons to the classic film Scarface, then…ehhh.  The movie was just okay. It wasn’t along the same lines of the Pacino/DePalma classic, it didn’t really move me, nothing about it was very memorable, even though it was a solid film.  It was just another movie and that was disappointing. I still haven’t seen it since. I suppose this is due for a re-look, but at the time, in the theater, I left scratching my head a bit.

American Gangsters movie pic

"Who do I trust? Me!" Who put this together? Ridley Scott. Who speaks in this? Not Common.

2008

Be Kind, Rewind & Blindness

Be Kind featured Mos Def and Jack Black, an odd and intriguing pairing, mixed with the directing talents of Michel Gondry, and the result was one of the weakest movies of the year.  Mos was almost impossible to watch (in particular, to listen to him), the lo-fi film recreation storyline should have been a lot more fun, and it really amounted to a schlocky, underwhelming piece, that made me further question the talents of those involved, and have highly soured me on Gondry as a director. He has to earn back the good will that he built with Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, and I don’t know that he is up to the task. from what I gather, his Green Hornet effort was a disaster, so that is not promising at all.

Blindness turned out to be the biggest rip-off ending in a film that I have seen in years.  With Fernando Meirelles helming one of my favorite films of the past decade and a high-ranking personal favorite of all-time, in the amazing City of God, this was an opportunity to see him take the next huge step as a director and reap the rewards that fans of City (go Manchester!) wanted for him. Instead, he didn’t take advantage.  The movie kept your attention (though not easily) for the duration and then yanked the rug out from beneath your feet in a horrendous ending.  I don’t know that I will ever forgive him.  BTW, Fernando, call me – because in truth I don’t remember the ending, I just know I absolutely hated it. I won’t put this all on him, since he didn’t write it, and his latest 360 gives me renewed hope that Fernando is still worth watching. We’ll see.

2009

Bronson, Watchmen, The Hangover & Public Enemies

Bronson was a film built up as A Clockwork Orange type of film, but was nothing more than a weird, sordid tale about a guy, told in an odd, and rather uninspiring way.  I was very high for the film before I saw it only to be incredibly let down. It was actually hard to make it through. I know it was based on a true story, but it didn’t redeem it at all for me. I hoped for a lot more. Then, the director – Nick Winding Refn – goes and makes Drive and you wonder even more about why Bronson was lame. Tom Hardy is legit, but this one just missed.

Watchmen was a film that had a great trailer. Normally I wouldn’t have had much interest in a film like this, but it was built up to be perhaps one of the biggest movies ever, and landed with a rather resounding thud.  This wasn’t a horrible work, but if you counter it with a movie like The Dark Knight, which more than matched the hype, it only exaggerated the difference of what this film might have been.  I think Zack Snyder may be able to be an interesting director (Sucker Punch was visually damn cool), but he also might be the next Michael Bay. After this movie, the meter was swinging in the “Bay” direction. Not good.

Watchmen Malin Akerman movie pic

"If we have sex in this film, people will watch." "Worth a shot." #Fail

I don’t really like comedies that much, so The Hangover might have been up against it to start. Rarely, do they ever live up to my expectations, which are, I don’t know, how do I say this, to….laugh during the movie.  Is that too much to ask?  Absolutely, it is, and this film proved that. I chuckled two to three times during the film.  That does not a good movie make, nor is it worthy of being the biggest comedy of all-time.  This movie exemplifies how different the tastes of mainstream America and mine are.  I envy you, mainstream audiences.  To derive enjoyment from such average work must be nice. I wish I was as easily entertained, but alas, I am not. I’d rather be hung over, than watch The Hangover.  I’ve had hangovers/blackouts (my first script was based on this concept) that needed to be recreated and were more worthwhile that this. It was not believable, nor very fun. Zack Galifianakis earned his way onto my shit list for this one. He’s yet to work his way off of it, despite the remains of his father being drunk in Due Date. I have not seen the sequel to Hangover, nor do I plan on it at this point.

I have to include Public Enemies on the list – much to my dismay – because we did a dedication week to Michael Mann here on The Film Nest, and I (essentially) had breakfast with the man a few months ago. I was hoping for another movie along the lines of his previous actioners such as Heat and Collateral.  Those are two all-timers. This did not match that.  I don’t think that this is a bad movie by any means, it just wasn’t great, and I thought it had the potential to be that.

Casting Johnny Depp (a feminine man in a masculine role) was the starting point of this heading down the wrong path.  The action felt ordinary and you didn’t care enough about the characters to engage in the story.  It was a movie you simply watched but didn’t interact with. For that, it makes the disappointing list.  And Michael, next time we are at breakfast, easy with the staring at me brother, I’m just trying to eat and mind my own business.  Don’t use me for your script inspiration, unless of course, you really, really needed it. On a side note, I have just decided to re-visit this film, since I respect Mann so much, I am giving it another shot. My fingers are crossed.

There is one more part of this list forthcoming, the last segment of movies I wanted to like but didn’t. Stay tuned.

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Movies From The Last Few Years That I Wanted To Like But Didn’t – Part One of Three

Movies From The Last Few Years That I Wanted To Like But Didn’t – Part One of Three

Movies From The Last Few Years That I Wanted To Like But Didn’t – Part One of Three

Right off the bat, I don’t want the title of the article to be misleading.  In my eyes, it’s a given that you want to like every movie you see.  That’s the reason you pay money to go to the theater or take the time to rent and watch a movie.  Sure there are some movies that you have low expectations (or no expectations) for and end up being pleasantly surprised. But what I am concerned about here are movies that I was looking forward to seeing and came away disappointed.  These are, as the title states, movies that I wanted to like but ultimately didn’t (or I didn’t enjoy them nearly as much as I had hoped to).

This is an entirely subjective list.  I understand that.  I’ll say right off the top that these are not movies that I saw that were ruined by a particular experience taking place either – i.e., a bad movie-going experience where teens are talking all the time (one of the reasons I prefer to see films in an empty theater usually, and often by myself) or your dog just went to the vet and the bill was $1,000 and you tried to watch a movie to cheer up, unsuccessfully. These are simply movies that I wanted to be better.

I should also specify that these aren’t the worst movies I saw in a given year; these just didn’t live up to my expectations.  There is a reason I have learned to temper my expectations for movies throughout the years, and it is because of film viewing experiences such as these. Note: Movies are from 2006-now.

2006

Clerks II & The Fountain

Clerks II is kind of a given, considering the classic that Kevin Smith’s original Clerks is.  As far as I am concerned, his whole career has been a struggle to live up to the expectations he set with that film.  (That being said, while still a classic, even Clerks has its flaws upon repeated viewings).  Still, the sequel was ridiculous and over-the-top where the poor acting stood out more.  He should have went back to B&W film stock and shot that for $100,000 to force everyone to become more creative.  I know that’s a tall task, but still, adding Rosario Dawson didn’t help. This was one of the worst movies I saw that year.

 

Clerks 2 morons

This is the sort of garbage you saw in "Clerks 2." You can tell by pic alone it's feeble.

The Fountain suffers a similar fate for a different reason.  While not an awful movie, director Darren Aronofsky was coming off his incredible Requiem For A Dream (6 years earlier, but still), and you had two reasonably big stars (Hugh Jackman, Rachel Weisz) and a big budget.  I expected so much more from this bizarre fantasy film. It just didn’t do it for me (and I don’t think I am alone here). I actually started to rewatch this recently and just cut it off. It has a cool look, but its just weird and I don’t particularly care for Weisz so I just stopped it after about 45 minutes. Oh well. The Black Swan was at least a solid effort, if not a particular fit for my cup of tea.

2007

Death Proof, Transformers & The Darjeeling Limited

Noticing a theme here already? I am.  These are all movies from directors I like (or want to) and the movies failed to move me.  Quentin Tarantino made three of my favorite films in years past with the triumvirate of Jackie Brown, Pulp Fiction and Reservoir Dogs. Then he wasted his (and my) time making this schlock.  I know its supposed to look cheesy, and aside from the purposely edited film stock that made the film look like a true B-level movie, the acting and story were just weak.

This was a pointless exercise to me.  I know that this is not the most popular opinion among film (nerds) fans and Tarantino backers, but I call people out when they deserve it. He redeemed himself with Inglourious Basterds – so, there.

Transformers movie pic

More of this would have made "Transformers" better.

Transformers is just devastating for personal reasons. Making it a kid’s film (robots hiding behind the house from parents? Really?) was tantamount to heresy for me.  I need to see Megatron as a size defying Gun and not a plane.  All of the robots had the exact same voice save for Peter Heller’s Optimus Prime.  This made it hard to care about any of them much. Where was Starscreams’s high-pitched whine? I need it.

On the positive side, the effects were cool, but not enough to save the film for me.  I can live with the human element (though its not easy), with the love story and all, but while most of my friends enjoyed it (the last time I saw a movie in a rather large group), I was not down.  I have yet to see its sequel either. A robot crying? Are you fucking kidding me?!? Michael Bay should finally go darker with the last film (like Chris Nolan’s Batman/Dark Knight) and then we might have something to work with.

The Darjeeling Limited began to show Wes Anderson’s time in the spotlight was fading.  I still enjoyed his previous effort, 2004’s Life Aquatic, and Rushmore and Royal Tenenbaums are great movies, but Darjeeling did little for me.  You have the Wilson brothers and add in Jason Schwarztman, I expect so much more.  One particular moment, a JSchwartz ad-libbed hand lick was the only redeeming thing in this movie.  I was highly disappointed with the art-house hero on this one.

I was a little worried that the jury was out on Anderson, but he semi-redeemed himself with Fantastic Mr. Fox, and his latest effort Moonrise Kingdom, has seen him regain some prominence. Anderson needs to push himself a little more though to become a more interesting auteur.  Wish I could say the same thing for M.Night Shyamalan, but the jury is no longer out on him. He just sucks now.

Part Two with the other movies will come soon enough. Stay tuned and share your comments on this so far. Thanks.

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