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Review: Showtime 150

Do they think we're so stupid that we are going to take media/celebrity ethics lectures from a movie made and owned by AOL/Time-Warner? (Of course they do.) Add Showtime to that long list of movies that could have so easily been better. This film is confused: On the one hand, it wants to be a movie about media obsession with celebrity and violence, and also a spoof of vigilante and cop movies and a dis on reality shows. It also wants to rag on its two stars, Robert DeNiro and Eddie Murphy. And then, inexplicably, it wants to be a cop movie, crammed with chases, fistfights, machine-gun blasts, car crack-ups, spent shells, fires and explosions. You can't have it every which way, guys. The end result is a mish-mash film that is sometimes funny -- especially when Murphy and DeNiro are going at one another -- but is mostly boring and lame. It always comes down to the writing, doesn't it?

The best way to describe this movie is good-natured. Murpy, DeNiro, Rene Russo, William Shatner and Mos Def all know what they're doing, but the script doesn't really give them much worth doing. The rather tired premise is the pairing of a tough-guy detective (DeNiro, obviously) with the wise-ass, media savvy urban black cop (Murphy), both enthusiastically manipulated by the stop-at-nothing, no-holds barred and exploitive producer (Russo). The LAPD, seeking better publicity than it's been getting the last couple of years, orders the two to participate in a cop-reality-show called Showtime. Murphy's character, who is dying to be in the movies, is thrilled, hamming it up for the cameras. He essentially plays his character in Beverly Hills Cop, which is funny enough, but a bit tired. DeNiro, a hard-ass from the old school, is ethical, horrified and reluctant to participate. While Murphy's character sees him as a dinosaur, DeNiro's sees his young partner as an incompetent hotdog.

In fact, DeNiro seems to have made a career (Analyze This, and most recently Meet the Parents), out of laughing at his own tough-guy persona, which is really a shame. He hasn't had a serious role in a few years, and this spoofing of spoofs of spoofs is getting old. In the movie, the two don't like one another, at least at first, but -- shock of shocks -- learn to deal with it, as the bad guys (a drug dealer and his gang) get their hands on shockingly lethal hand-tooled shotguns with uranium-tipped shells that can level whole buildings in just a few seconds. The movie is meant to be a satire -- Johnnie Cochran's appearance is a hoot, and so are the Jackie-Chan style outtakes at the end -- but for a satire to work, the story has to be funny and/or biting. This movie, on the whole, is neither. The plot is too stupid to carry any freight, even these talented actors. And the film says nothing about our media or celebrity culture that hasn't been said a zillion times, usually better.

The movie does have its entertaining moments, most of them clustered at the beginning and end, around all of the car chases and explosions, but you may leave Showtime thinking it's time for Eddie Murphy to find a role where he can be funnier, and for DeNiro to stop laughing at himself and start being himself again. And enough media/celebrity narcissism. We get it.

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Review: Showtime

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday March 17, 2002 @11:32AM (#3176753)
    Sometimes I think Katz enjoys the ragging... bringing up the topic of boring/lame writing is just asking for it...
    • by billybob ( 18401 )
      Good one. :)
    • Do they think we're so stupid that we are going to take open source ethics lectures from a website run and owned by VA Software? (Of course they do.) Add Slashdot to that long list of websites that could have so easily been better. This site is confused: On the one hand, it wants to be a site about media promotion of free and open software, and also a bastion of free speech and anti-censorship and a dis on corporate policies. It also wants to rag on its two stars, Rob 'CmdrTaco' Malda and Whatever 'Cowboy' Neal. And then, inexplicably, it wants to be a subscription site, spoiled by trolls, mod wars, page widening, first posting, crap +5 jokes, losers and whiners. You can't have it every which way, guys. The end result is a mish-mash site that is sometimes funny -- especially when Jamie and Sllort are going at one another -- but is mostly boring and lame. It always comes down to the writing, doesn't it?
  • Movies. (Score:1, Redundant)

    by ralian ( 127441 )
    This is "News for Nerds"?

    Le sigh.

  • films (Score:2, Insightful)

    by 56ker ( 566853 )
    Well if this is the best Hollywood can come up with I'll stay at home. Mind you it's been months since any new film seemed good enough to actually go and see. I suppose these are the sorts of films we get outside of the holiday season - when most people have other things to do with their time.
  • Yeah... (Score:5, Funny)

    by Cyph ( 240321 ) <yoonix@speaDALIkeasy.net minus painter> on Sunday March 17, 2002 @11:37AM (#3176770)
    "It always comes down to the writing, doesn't it?"

    I guess that's why you're not working for Wired anymore, Jon. *grin*
    • Re:Yeah... (Score:4, Interesting)

      by ralian ( 127441 ) on Sunday March 17, 2002 @11:44AM (#3176786) Homepage
      Funny how all these people that hate Katz so much still keep coming back to his columns anyway. A true nerd loves a flame war, I guess.
      • Actually, I don't hate Katz, I just find most of his
        "reviews" to be stupid, but I gotta admit, he writes some good stuff from time to time. Unfortunately, this is not one of those times.
      • by satch89450 ( 186046 ) on Sunday March 17, 2002 @12:38PM (#3176917) Homepage

        Funny how all these people that hate Katz so much still keep coming back to his columns anyway. A true nerd loves a flame war, I guess.

        Columnists. You see them everywhere, and the quality of the writing goes from absolutely fabulous to completely clueless. Some of the columnists writing today (with upgrades in IQ) could well have been the source of the idea for the lead character in the movie Legally Blonde. (I lump movie and restaurant reviewers in with columnists, because most of them are written in the first person and therefore qualify as columns.)

        Frankly, a columnist is doing his/her job when there is a lot of reaction by the readership to what they write. It can be right or wrong, insightful or flamebait, intelligent or dumb as dishwater -- as long as the readers react, the editor feels the columnist earns the pay.

        And YOU help make Katz successful in the eyes of the OSDN bosses.

        Tough and stupid as it may sound, we need columnists. Clueful people [you may disagree] like Katz and Dvorak and Cringley. (And Noonan and Buckley and Safire.) Clueless people like the ones gracing the magazine pages of many national and international IT publications and big-name IT-oriented Web sites. (And non-IT sources, too.)

        Their purpose is to make you, the reader, THINK, and more importantly to express your thoughts out where others can hear. This is the basic exercise of Speech. Further, the cure (in other countries, not just the United States) for bad speech, insipid speech, just-plain-wrong-facts speech is... more speech. Speech from the clueful. Speech from people who are rarely heard.

        One way to get you, the reader, to do that is to goad you into telling people like Katz what a knothead they are.

        (I don't work for OSDN or SlashDot in any way. Opinion not necessarily that of the owner of this website, its editors, or its moderators. Or Katz, for that matter.)

        • by Accipiter ( 8228 ) on Sunday March 17, 2002 @01:10PM (#3177016)
          Their purpose is to make you, the reader, THINK

          I can agree with that, to a point. However, the argument doesn't apply to Katz articles.

          The problem with Katz, is that his writing is middle-school quality. Actually, I've written better quality work during my years in middle-school than Katz has produced during his entire tenure with Slashdot.

          Katz was quiet until around the point of Columbine. That's when he write his Hellmouth series, which was the first (and last) thought-provoking Katz article. Since then, he figures "Hey, I'm going to ride the coattails of the Columbine articles, and work the same edge on everything that I write." Hence, he looks for deep, meaningful issues in movies like Showtime and Tomb Raider.

          It doesn't work.

          Plus, people who read Katz's writing are constantly tripping over sophomoric writing, bad grammar, and worse spelling. There is no excuse for a (supposed) professional writer to consistantly make glaring mistakes in his or her writing the way Katz does in his articles. Simple mistakes that would be caught by a goddamned spell checker go uncorrected, and submitted to Slashdot's front page.

          And now Slashdot is asking for money? For what? The same badly-written slop, just without the ads?

          Sorry. Sure, editorials are supposed to make you THINK, but that kind of thing usually has to appeal to your level of intelligence.

          So why am I reading this article? I wanted to see Showtime. However, I don't rely on Katz to determine the movie's worth, because he's a damaged scale. I quickly skim through his writing to get a grip on the movie's base, then I read the comments to see how my peers (other Slashdot readers) liked it.

          If I relied on Katz to tell me what movies to see, I'd be staying home a lot.
        • I don't always like what Katz has to say, it's the things he gets others to say that I enjoy. His reviews make for some very interesting discussion that I like to read.
      • Re:Yeah... (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Accipiter ( 8228 )
        It's like someone once said:

        Reading Katz is like passing a really bad auto accident. You know you're going to be horrified if you look, but you look anyway.

        I think that says it all.
      • Sometimes its fun to watch someone make an ass of himself. I used to watch Rush Limbaugh once in a while even though I never agreed with anything he said and thought he was a huge fat jackass.
      • Well, life has been better for me since I blocked Katz's articles... I suggest all those who dislike his writings do the same....
    • Wired has actual articles?
    • Murpy ?

      Katz, do you even read through your own stuff once ? ~jeff

  • Trademark problems? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by yerricde ( 125198 ) on Sunday March 17, 2002 @11:44AM (#3176787) Homepage Journal

    Showtime is the name of a premium movie channel [sho.com] owned by Viacom.

    Showtime is also a film directed by Tom Dey [imdb.com] produced by AOL Time Warner, who owns HBO [hbo.com], which competes with Showtime the channel.

    Wait till Showtime the movie hits cable. Watch the legal sparks fly.

    • Apple Computer - Apple Records

      You can have the same name for two commercial ventures if they operate in different businesses.

      Showtime - a movie
      Showtime - a softcore porn channel

      • You can have the same name for two commercial ventures if they operate in different businesses: Showtime - a movie vs. Showtime - a softcore porn channel

        Showtime also shows feature films. So we have Showtime - a movie from one studio vs. Showtime - a movie channel owned by another studio. Now they're both in the movie business; does this complicate your analysis?

        Apple Computer - Apple Records

        That was true for ten years, but in 1999, Apple Computer got sued and lost [mymac.com] after the company "entered the recording industry" by introducing high-end audio functionality into the Power Macintosh line.

        • Perhaps it was all done on purpose. One company makes a really bad movie called showtime, therefore creating a negative image in the minds of consumers, detracting from the services provided by another company.

          I wonder if they can sue them for slander???
  • De Niro's roles (Score:1, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Methinks that his part in The Score was no spoof. Or in that movie (I forget the title) in which he plays a homophobic guy felled by a stroke. They are both recent movies.

  • by RN ( 21554 ) on Sunday March 17, 2002 @11:48AM (#3176799) Journal
    Jon, not every movie is intended as message or a lecture about some issue. seems you like to think every movie contains one, but it's more like you're reading into something that's just not there.

    btw, please stop harping on ethics when you still haven't answered your "message from kabul" hoax.

  • by hyrdra ( 260687 ) on Sunday March 17, 2002 @11:54AM (#3176812) Homepage Journal
    It always comes down to the writing, doesn't it?
    Somehow this phrase is even more evident when reading a Jon Katz editorial, not always in the context of what he's reviewing.
  • DeNiro not serious? (Score:3, Informative)

    by Pope ( 17780 ) on Sunday March 17, 2002 @11:55AM (#3176816)
    Heat + Casino, 1995
    Ronin, 1998
    Men Of Honor, 2000
    15 Minutes + The Score, 2001

    I think he's trying to not be sterotyped by doing more comic roles. They may not always succeed, but at least he's not stuck playing "Mob Boss #2" for the rest of his life.
    • Jon Katz is a moron who couldn't be bothered to go to imdb.com before spouting off with his malformed biasies...
    • Heat, Ronin, etc are not serious movies.

      Action movies are action movies, ie you arn't meant to take them seriously.

      If you were to take either of the above movies seriously you'd keep wondering why the automatic firearms don't run out of bullets after 3 seconds.

      600 rounds per minute = 100 rounds per 10 seconds = magazine load of bullets last 3 seconds on average automatic with 30 round mag.

      So people blasting away with automatic firearms for heaven knows how long = equals movie that aint serious.
      • Haha

        our comment about firearms remembered be the best firearm scene I ever saw in the movies.

        It's from "saving private ryan". The dude is stuck up a tower and kept shooting soldiers coming at him with a scope-bolt-action rifle. That's shooting, not that never-end faggish automatics ;-)
    • Men of Honour was a serious movie?
  • by Scareduck ( 177470 ) on Sunday March 17, 2002 @11:56AM (#3176818) Homepage Journal
    go here [ocregister.com]. The problem with this movie is the usual story -- too many cooks in the kitchen. But that's not unusual; a friend who works for a major studio once told me that, on one feature he was working, the filming process looked something like
    • Film five minutes of material, six different ways.
    • Record test audience's reaction to all six sequences.
    • Discard lowest-rated pieces.
    • Lather, rinse, repeat until you have 120 minutes of material.
    There are a lot of people in the "industry", especially the non-acting union-represented trades, who are worried about production flight, and rightfully so. A lot of shooting has migrated to Canada over the last few years because of tax subsidies film and TV production receives in the Great White North. The real reason Hollywood is exporting jobs to Canada is that the producers can make big, expensive mistakes for far less. (However, this is changing, I'm to understand: in the first place, Canadians are sick of paying gazigabucks for film subsidy; and in the second place, California's state legislature has passed special tax cuts for film industry types so they can fuck up more cheaply in state. I love how everyone in Hollywood is a liberal until it comes time to pay the rent.) Nobody in Hollywood knows how to make a movie. Everybody wants to be seen having a part -- hence the proliferation of credited producer and assistant producer roles. The bureaucracy beggars the lexicon. As a result, only "safe" movies ever get made, "safe" being defined as "will a teen-age boy go see it?" The consistent exceptions, unsurprisingly, seem to be coming from Pixar, which is far away from Hollywood's stinking tarpits.
    • "When direction is taken by committee, art ceases to be art and instead it becomes propaganda."
    • Its funny how you say that Hollywood's direction towards safe, predictable formula films is a result of the flight of films from Hollywood to areas such as Vancouver, Toronto or Montreal.

      First, the prime reason Canada is atractive is that you can pay someone in Vancouver $40,000/yr Canadian, and they'll have a killer apartment downtown and live large on the town. Most likley a salary like that means you are into the realm of owning a condo.
      Thus, you are getting cheap, highly skilled labour at a fraction (63%) of the cost of the same american labour.

      But then what about the stars and higher paid folk? Well, up to last year, in British Columbia the top tax bracket (55%) started at $75,000/yr Canadian. (Thats around $40k us). Plus the numerous other taxes, 13% sales tax for example, in order to get the american talent to work up in canada, the government gives producers tax breaks and low interest loans.

      All in all it works out. At first all of the production came from US companys, but quite a few Canadian production company's are starting to produce content that is doing well in the US market. You have to ask yourself, why in this global economy does all prodcution of film/video have to be centered in one small area (LA)? Why is it 'bad' that other areas in the world are starting to produce?

      And as this pertains to the quality of entertainment. Alot of producers have used the lower cost to produce in Canada as an oppurtunity to try riskier more independant films. The more that something costs, the less likely people are going to take a risk.

      As far as Canadians getting sick of the gazigabucks tax subsidy. Given the outcry over XFiles leaving Vancouver, the fact that the Liberal party won all but 3 seats (over the labour party NDP) on a promise to lower taxes and bring in more business, I don't know for whom you are speaking.

      • Its funny how you say that Hollywood's direction towards safe, predictable formula films is a result of the flight of films from Hollywood to areas such as Vancouver, Toronto or Montreal.
        No, I never said that. What I did say is that Canadian film subsidy allows US producers to dither and make films by committee for less than it would cost in Hollywood. The fact is that the people greenlighting scripts, hiring stars, and doing all the other things involved with actually producing the movie all still act exactly the way they do when they're making a movie in Hollywood, but the costs are lower because of Canadian content subsidies. The real issue is that if these idiots knew what they were doing, they wouldn't need to have an army of assistant executive producers (read: Tom Cruise's agent, the guy who swung the financing deal from an Asian bank, the lawyer who weaseled the contracts to prevent any meaning to the words "profit participation") -- and they wouldn't shoot in Canada.
        • If I hadn't posted, I think I would have used my moderation points to rate this as a troll.

          What is inheriantly wrong about shooting in Canada? (I am canadian btw) I think many people would say Xfiles changed for the worse when it moved from Vancouver, and a lot of good films are made. I would put "The Sweet Hereafter" as one of the most powerful films made.

          Again, the 'subsidies' you mention are primarily the lower canadian dollar and the lower cost of living in Vancouver compared major american cities. And a government that encourages development by giving Movie Production a level tax field with the US, compared to the incredibly restrictive ones put on other industries.

          And at its core, I still think your basic logic is still flawed. The more money that is put on the line, the more likely that investors will demand some gaurantees as to their investment. These can be given by frequent test audiences to 'gaurantee' that the public will like the show.

    • Wow real writer type people! I'll bet with all the debate about tax breaks and job flow, it's horribly (big word) arduous to write up to one's true standards. What was it J. Joyce said of 'Finnegan's Wake' (sp) "It took me seventeen years to write it. It can take them seventeen years to read it." Whoa extreme d00d! But then he was just some crazy who didn't write for a pay check or work for some mega corporation and beef about others stealing their market share.

      cheers

      The movie business is an adventure in trade. It's a manufacturing concern and it produces what sells. To write for Hollywood you have to be a '...poor dumb son of a bitch.' Leave the art of crafting one phoneme to another out of the picture. Go grab a drink pool side at the Polo Club and bitch about how much money you didn't make and leave the writting to those in garrets (yea they still live in small bed sitting rooms) who go hungry and slightly mad to learn their craft.

      Since I'll probably get modded down for this... Katz is just a fine fit for /. and spelling and grammar do not a writer make. I believe it was old man papa Hemmingway who said if he had to choose between the erudite writtings of T.S. Eliot and Conrad then he'd be on the way to England to grind Eliot to pepper flakes

      • Don't think anyone in "the industry" has any illusions about filmmaking as art. I was last night at the home of a fairly successful screenwriter, who told me how he was in story development for an animated feature for the Mouse. They spent several million (something like $15k/week per writer over a number of months, and this was a team of five or more) on the story, which bubbled up past several layers of junior executives. But the writing team all along was saying to themselves, "this is so not Disney" (A key scene in a bar with a hooker??? But, hey, these guys asked for it...) "This project is gonna die." And sure enough, once it got high enough -- poof. Did somebody lose a job over that? Well, all the writers, of course. But I imagine, given the bloodletting at Feature Animation, so did the exec who greenlighted the story in the first place.
      • Is Katz getting paid by Slashdot for these lousy articles?

        Point being: are Slashdot subscribers subsidizing this waste of electrons?
  • by Infonaut ( 96956 ) <infonaut@gmail.com> on Sunday March 17, 2002 @12:06PM (#3176830) Homepage Journal
    I just saw Showtime yesterday, and I enjoyed it for what it was: a matinee movie devoid of any real meaning. It took easy shots at reality TV and cop movies, but then slid back into standard Hollywood fare when there were no more shots to take.

    The screenplay followed the plan of the movie - at least, the plan as envisioned by the studio. Do you honestly think that the studio said, "Hmm.. we need to make a movie that will use satire and comedy to blow the doors on the wicked exploitation and stupidity of cop movies and reality TV?"

    Of course not - just like most comedy, they took some of the more ludicrous aspects of our society and poked fun at them, while advancing a story built around two likeable characters.

    That's it. No message. Jon, you went in with the expectation that the movie would be something deeper, but I have to scratch my head - what in the previews or in your previous experience with Hollywood movies made you think you'd be seeing a ringing expose of The Truth?

    • what in the previews or in your previous experience with Hollywood movies made you think you'd be seeing a ringing expose of The Truth?

      I think the same could be said for most media. In fact, you're last sentence reminded me of being suckered by The X-Files a couple of times with their "truth revealing" episodes. The second time reminded me of the following saying:
      Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me.

      If you plan to watch a movie or television show expecting something more than mindless entertainment, prepare to be disappointed. Then, you can be happily surprised when you get more. I think Hollywood looks much better through pessimistic lenses.
      • X-Files "truth" (Score:3, Interesting)

        by Infonaut ( 96956 )
        Your mention of the X-Files reminds me of an episode in which the intrepid FBI agents found a bunch of cloned humans floating in big fishtanks in some underground secret lab at DARPA - the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.

        Having formerly been a DARPA contractor, I thought their interpretation of DARPA was hilarious. Instead of the well-lit hallways populated with contractors jockeying for project funds and project manager doors festooned with Dilbert cartoons and spiffy project logos printed with color laser printers, the X-Files version of DARPA was dark and sinister, with M-16-toting security guards (rather than the more passive and more effective security measures DARPA actually uses) and humorless dark-suit types everywhere.

        It makes me think of that strange fuzzy line between pure fantasy, well-researched "believable" fiction, and mundane truth. So much of our entertainment these days is meticulously researched and realistically rendered on screen - witness "Saving Private Ryan" and "Blackhawk Down", but with most pseudo-realistic entertainment, it's very difficult to know whether the b.s. factor is small, medium, or large.

        No wonder so many people believe the Earth is flat, and there was no moon landing.

        • Having formerly been a DARPA contractor, I thought their interpretation of DARPA was hilarious.

          Oh, man! Are you telling me that was fake? How do I know that your post isn't part of a wider conspiracy to hide the Real Truth(tm) about cloning? Just to be sure, I'm gonna keep my tin-foil hat on for a bit longer.
          • heh heh..

            sorry, it's too late. The very fact that you responded to my post puts you in the secret RealTruth(tm) database. A representative from Area51/Microsoft will be ringing your doorbell shortly. If you want to live, you'll do as he tells you...

            • A representative from Area51/Microsoft will be ringing your doorbell shortly. If you want to live, you'll do as he tells you...

              Rats. I should have realized when you mentioned DARPA that they'd have a way to track me down, it being, originally, their network. Hang on, got to answer the door. BRB ...

              NO CARRIER

  • by 0xA ( 71424 ) on Sunday March 17, 2002 @12:07PM (#3176832)
    Okay guys this is my very first bash Katz post so forgive me if I'm not quite as polished as I could be.

    In fact, DeNiro seems to have made a career (Analyze This, and most recently Meet the Parents), out of laughing at his own tough-guy persona, which is really a shame. He hasn't had a serious role in a few years, and this spoofing of spoofs of spoofs is getting old.

    Katz you Jackass. You do realize that after Meet the Parents De Niro made two not funny films, 15 Minutes (not so good) and The Score (excellent). Just before Analyze This he was in Ronin, Great Expectations and Jackie Brown.

    Every time he was playing a variant of the tough guy he's famous for. He hasn't had a serious role in a while? Go rent The Score you idiot. Yeah the spoofing is a little silly and predictable, but it isn't all the man is doing with his career.

    I like most of your articles, I think you contribute to this site in many ways and are an important part of it. Your tendency to make sweeping asinine statements with no factual basis is starting to annoying. It is devaluing your contribution by undermining your credibility. Try researching things occasionally.

    • I think you make contribute to this site in many ways and are an important part of it.

      I must strongly disagree. I think the only role Katz plays at Slashdot is in being the cash cow per se. Especially with the recent explosion of Salon.com style advertising on Slashdot, I think Katz articles are only there to generate massive hits. Genuine interest and genuine hatred results in numerous messages, flames or otherwise, all which generate quite a bit of money.

      As far as Katz' writing style goes, I think it is absolutely horrible. It must be a massive ego trip for Katz being the only editor on Slashdot who can write a semi-coherent paragraph without major spelling and grammar mistakes. The problem there is Katz thinks he's extremely smart or something, searching for deep meanings in the most meaningless movies, and attempting to write eloquently but always coming up short.

      I really don't know what it is about Katz' writing that really makes me think he tries to pretend to be well educated, but next time I see something, I'll point it out.
  • by swillden ( 191260 ) <shawn-ds@willden.org> on Sunday March 17, 2002 @12:15PM (#3176848) Journal

    My wife and I went to Showtime on Friday and walked out giggling.

    On the one hand, it wants to be a movie about [blah, blah, blah] and also a [blah, blah, blah]. It also wants to [blah, blah, blah]. And then, inexplicably, it wants to [blah, blah, blah]. [...] And the film says nothing about our media or celebrity culture that [blah, blah, blah].

    Who cares what the movie "wants" to be or say? I didn't go expecting an insightful deconstruction of the Hollywood ethos, I went for a couple of hours of chuckles, a few serious belly laughs and, overall, a bit of light-hearted entertainment. While I never had to worry about spewing Coke on the woman in front of me, I was quite satisfied with the experience and counted it as an evening and $14 well spent.

    • On the one hand, Katz wants to be a writer that appeals to the masses and also a deep philosopher. He also wants to save his dying career. And then, inexplicably, he wants to write about technology. [...] And Katz says nothing about our media or celebrity culture that hasn't been said a million times before.
  • First, let me just say... where all da white people at? 90% of the audience was black, and this was in Hollywood, a half block from the Chinese Theatre, which seemed odd -- not that I'm complaining, mind you (I'm white) but I thought Murphy and De Niro were bigger draws among whites. Or maybe the distributor just handed out lots of screening passes in black neighborhoods?

    [ Warning: Minor spoilers ahead ]

    Anyway, this movie is strange. It's about two cops who end up working on a reality TV cop show together -- one a serious, real cop who's forced into it, and the other a lousy cop who really wants to be an actor. In the context of their TV show, they mock all the buddy-cop TV show/movie clichés... but then the movie's framework (about some illegal gunrunning) is ITSELF full of all the SAME clichés, done in such a way that you can't possibly believe they did it on purpose. It was very bizarre.

    William Shatner kicks ass, though.
    • It is possible to make a movie that is a parody of its own genre. Just look at Scream. It's one of the best horror movies of the last 20 years (I know that's not saying much, but it is a very good movie from an absolute standpoint as well as a relative standpoint), yet it is also a biting (and unsubtle) satire of the horror movie cliches.

      That's not to say that Showtime is either a good cop movie or a good satire. But it could feasibly have been done right with the proper resources.
    • William Shatner kicks ass, though.

      Oh give me a break! In this film he couldn't even play himself well. Shatner sucked balls.

      And, BTW, Katz is right. This movie was lame. If Murphey and De Niro want to keep their stardom, they need to figure out that the first step is to make sure they (or their agents) read the script before accepting the part.

  • What a cooohooool movie. How soon till CGI animation makes real life actors redundant, and voice over crew become celebs. It's interesting to watch the convergence between 3d gaming, CGI animation and computer modelling.

    ~mark
    • ...or until all the celebs simply become voice-over crews. Ice Age had quite a number of big names in it, IIRC.
    • If the results are anything "Final Fantasy" I will personally go destroy every CGI house on the planet.

      CGI will NEVER make actors redundant, in the same sense that cel animation didn't make actors redundant. There's a time and place for each.
    • Ice Age, bleh. Same campy prehistoric cartoon plot. Animated animals find human baby and either a) raise it or b) try and return it to humans. It amazes we'll bitch until we're blue in the face about the need for story line in our games, but are willing to look past horrible plots in CG movies simply because they're CG. I'm no exception, I love to see the well done computer animation, but for christ's sake, how about adding a real plot as well.
    • "Hollywood is scared shitless of believing in anything. That's why they spend so
      much fucking money asking test audiences to write their endings for
      them. So, what we get are technologically perfect movies with no soul.
      That's Ice Age: millions of dollars of computers thrown at a
      bland script full of pooping and animals getting bonked on the head.
      It looks great, but where its heart should be is a hack screenwriter
      doing exactly what a bunch of play-it-safe executives and focus groups
      ask for. It's like having a CD of a shitty album when it's way better
      to have a vinyl copy of a great one."

      ...and for an even more accurate look at "Ice Age", go to http://bigempire.com/filthy/ [bigempire.com]
  • I'd have to disagree that you can't have it all. I think the problem with mixing ideas and genres of film is that the majority of times the execution is just horrible. I have seen a few multi-genre films that pull this off quite well, the most recent was 'Brotherhood of the Wolf' which I heard referred to as the 'best kung fu, horror, fantasy, western, mystery, romance, period peice out of France' ever. (believe it or not that wasn't someone being an ass, the rest of the review was gushing about the movie). Point is I think you can cross multiple genres of film if the underlying premise of the film will hold together throughout. If the writing, or characters are weak then it will show through somewhere in the genre hopping. On the other hand if the characters are strong and well written then as the movie transitions then the characters will also and you'll end up having a good fluid experience.
  • Wow.. (Score:4, Funny)

    by ApheX ( 6133 ) on Sunday March 17, 2002 @12:40PM (#3176922) Homepage Journal
    Jon,

    This is a movie, not a prostate exam. You look WAY too deeply into a simple slapstick comedy. Take some valium and write an auto-biography .. on second thoughts, Don't.

    Jon Katz: Still on Slashdot because we love to hate him.
  • by Thagg ( 9904 ) <thadbeier@gmail.com> on Sunday March 17, 2002 @01:07PM (#3177008) Journal
    This post will try to make Showtime qualify for the 'News for Nerds' motto of Slashdot.

    You might not think of this as a big FX movie, after all, it's just a cop buddy movie, right? Well, it turns out that my little company did over 140 digital FX shots for this film. This demonstrates among other things that computer graphics effects are a big part of almost any film these days -- it gives the director and writers freedom to shoot things more effectively, and allows the director and writer the freedom to improve the film in the post-production phase.

    I'll try not to reveal too many plot points to those of you who haven't seen the film -- but if you don't want to know anything about the film you can stop reading right here.

    Ok. The biggest thing that we did was build the environment outside the penthouse -- buildings, reflections, and helicopters. The challenge was to keep that environment alive (without the cliche flocks of pigeons.) We did this mostly by observing that windows in skyscrapers flex somewhat in the wind, so that the distortions of the reflections in the windows are always changing. There are a few places that you can see near the ground, and we added little sparkles of light from car windshields, things like that.

    We also added a bunch of lasers to the guns, and a bunch of sparks in the gun show sequence. Finally, we did all the 'videoization' and changed the license plate of Eddie Murphy's car for some shots. There were a few dozen other little things here and there, but that's the majority of the shots. By the way, in reality there is a heliport on the roof of the Westin Bonaventure in downtown
    Los Angeles.

    All of this work was done by a team of 10 or so people over about six months. We used a combination of SGI and Linux boxes to do the animation design, and our render garden (it's too small to be a proper render farm) of Linux boxes to do all of the batch rendering.

    thad
  • I remember reading a while ago, a comment from some sci-fi author saying that most of what was passed off as "sci-fi" these days was not, but rather fiction set in a familiar world pioneered by the sci-fi greats. Not any different then fiction set in the Wild West or whatever. The author singled out star wars as an example. No real science, but rather a story that drew on the readers understanding of the 'sci fi world'

    I do have a point

    If this movie can be made without the pretense of needing to explain how reality shows and the media are exploitive and cynical, it means that we as a people are 'familiar' with the thing. They don't need to be told it, they know it already.
  • The other day I submitted a link to an article about the long-term problems of Internet-based "distance learning". Needless to say, that was ignored, but the latest dreck from Hollywood is newsworthy? Anyone know any better forums about new technology and society?
  • What you've just written is one of the most insanely idiotic things I have ever read. At no point in your rambling, incoherent response were you even close to anything that could be considered a rational thought. Everyone on this site is now dumber for having read to it.
  • ...aren't we boycotting the Hollywood movie industry because jackasses like Valenti are trying to get the government to pass draconian anti-freedom laws?

    Fuck sakes, people, only one thing is going to shake up the industry, and that's you having the integrity to stand up for your beliefs and hit 'em where it hurts: their bottom line, by not purchasing their product.

  • by ahde ( 95143 )
    I don't think JonKatz wrote this review, or else there's a new JonKatz.
  • by GMontag ( 42283 ) <gmontag AT guymontag DOT com> on Sunday March 17, 2002 @02:48PM (#3177308) Homepage Journal
    Based on this review, I am definatly taking my so to see Showtime as soon as he gets to Northern VA for his spring break.

    I was undecided before, but we like real guy movies and if Jon hates it we will LOVE it!

    Thanks Jon!
  • Everytime I start to feel bad about downloading a movie over the web, I think of all of the terrible movies that I wasted money on and then I feel better.
  • Who needs legislation like the DMCA or the SSSCA when you have movies like this to kill piracy?
  • I don't know who Mr. Ruso or Mr. Deniro, or any other italian
    guy is -- I haven't seen the sun light for days.

    But I know the correct spelling of LAPD is LDAP.

  • I've never really played with the slash code or any of the filtering things, but is there a way to just filter out anything he writes?

    Or do you have to pay for the subscription to get rid of Katz?

    It's not that I don't care for people going deep into films, it's just painful when they are so off base and out of touch.

    What's next? A Katz review of 'SuperTroopers' where he thinks it's a serious examination of police corruption?
  • Why didn't Katz review Resident Evil?

    Showtime has very little pertaining to "News for Nerds. Stuff that matters." Resident Evil on the other hand is a movie adaptation of a video game. Whom decides what movie reviews by Katz are greenlighted?

    I say that CmdrTaco and the rest audition other folks for movie reviews. They can at least find someone as adept as Katz at reviewing movies and deciding to review movies that are closer to the /. mob.
    • I wrote a review of Resident Evil this morning, but I found out it was rejected. I don't know why, but it's their decision. I'll keep the review on hand, in case anyone wants to read it.
      • That's the kind of shit I'm talking about.

        Why do I bother reading /. anymore? Sound, technical articles (at least in my opinion) have been rejected and we get this Katz' crap instead?

        I thought RE was ok. Good start, decent finish, and a very mediocre middle. I like Mila as an actress but the movie slowed down when she showed up. I don't think it was her, I blame the writer/director (which I think are the same person in this movie).

        For it's genre I would give it a 7 out of 10 (no grade inflation in my world, 7's are decent movies, I think The Matrix would be around 9 or so, just to give you a feel for the scale :-)

        I agree with another's post that the sudden cut/big noise technique to get a jump out of the audience was over-used. Which of course was in the middle of the flick.

        I did like the flashback/memory recall technique though. Nice way to do some quick, visual exposition.

        Like I wrote, an enjoyable movie, not a horrible way to waste a few hours.
        • Okay. This'll teach me not to check my email. My review was accepted. There was an error, and I sent two of it by mistake. I was told it should be posted by tomorrow. Sorry about the confusion.
  • In fact, DeNiro seems to have made a career (Analyze This, and most recently Meet the Parents), out of laughing at his own tough-guy persona, which is really a shame.

    He actually has been doing this for years and did it best in Midnight Run [imdb.com]
  • Try The Score
  • come what was the movies the score, 15 min and men of honor like action hard nose roles

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