Hi, everyone. "Moriarty" here with some Rumblings From The Lab...
I’m rusty.
I mean, the last thing I wrote for the site was my RETURN OF THE KING review. And I’m sorry about that. I’m hoping I’ll finally be able to reveal what I’ve been working on, maybe some time in the next few weeks. It’s been the focus of pretty much all my waking hours for six months now, and I’m excited to see how the year ahead plays out as a result.
In the meantime, I get to focus on AICN again for a while, which pleases me enormously. I’ve missed seeing so many films recently, and there have been so many things I’ve wanted to write about. Hell, if I manage my time right, I’ll be able to write everything I want, and even see my friends again. Bliss!
Right now, though, I’m rusty. Not just as a reviewer, but also as a viewer. I’ve been watching so much on DVD that I’ve become theater-intolerant. A crappy LA audience pulls me right out of whatever I’m looking at, and the unpredictable nature of my schedule has kept me from being able to RSVP for any press screenings.
So I’m getting back into the habit. Realistically, I plan to write two weekly columns for AICN this year. I was out of my freakin’ mind when I announced my DVD column as daily. No way. Never gonna happen. My regular RUMBLINGS column will be reviews, script previews, and commentary, the sort of thing I’ve always done. The second column will be the return of my DVD SHELF. I’ve got an astounding backlog of stuff to write about.
For today, I’m going to review COMIC BOOK: THE MOVIE, Mark Hamill’s mockumentary about fandom, I’m going to discuss my New Year’s resolutions for AICN, and I’ll start my countdown to my top ten list for 2003 with my Runners-Up. Lots to do, so let’s get started...
COMIC BOOK: THE MOVIE
Mark Hamill is a nerd.
Oh, sure, he wields a lightsaber with the best of them, and his Joker is genuinely scary. Despite that, I maintain that Mark Hamill is a big, giant nerd.
See, last year I got a call from the guys at Creative Light, asking me if I wanted to come in to see a very rough cut of COMIC BOOK: THE MOVIE. They put the right worm on the hook, too, offering a lunch with Luke Skywalker after the screening.
I mean, they didn’t call him Luke Skywalker, obviously, but that’s what I heard. Anyone around my age understands. For six years, Mark Hamill was one of the biggest names in movies as far as I was concerned. Luke Skywalker was as iconic as any heroic figure from my childhood.
The notion of lunch with Hamill would have gotten me to sit through pretty much anything, so walking into the editing room to see the film on an AVID, I didn’t have any expectations for it one way or another. I didn’t know much about it aside from the fact that Hamill starred in it and directed it, and before the screening, the guys from Creative Light gave us the background on the film.
First and foremost, they explained, Mark Hamill is a nerd. Card carrying. Lifetime membership. He was a comic-book fan as a child, and when he was cast in STAR WARS, it was practically preordained. This goes right to the heart of why I still think his performances in the STAR WARS film are among the finest of the genre: he believes in this stuff, heart and soul. It’s not corny or campy or silly to him, and his performances made you believe that the details of the world felt lived in, real. Watch him in EMPIRE when he’s inside Yoda’s house on Dagobah, or when he first slips into the gunner’s seat on the FALCON in ANH. He’s so comfortable, so natural in the way he uses the props or interacts with the FX that he sells the larger world of STAR WARS. Same thing with his voice work as The Joker. Forget Jack Nicholson or Caesar Romero. Both of them did their best with the role, but neither of them even came close to capturing the cruel and brutal heart of Gotham’s Clown Prince of Crime. Hamill was a BATMAN fan from his childhood, and no doubt, he’d been playing The Joker’s voice in his head for years. Finally, thanks to him and the amazing creative team behind BATMAN: THE ANIMATED SERIES, The Joker was played as a psychopath, more pathetic and freaky than funny.
One of the best things about COMIC BOOK: THE MOVIE is the way it finally gives all the great voice actors Hamill has worked with over the years a chance to act together in front of a camera, and not just a microphone. I’m a big Billy West fan thanks to FUTURAMA and his time on the Howard Stern show and, of course, REN & STIMPY. For over a decade, West’s been one of my favorite funny people, but I didn’t even know what he looked like until this film, where he shows up at Leo Matuzik, the heir to the creator of COMMANDER COURAGE. Even thought CB:TM is Mark Hamill’s show as star and director, it was Billy West that really made it work for me. I also really love the work of Tom Kenny as Donald Swan’s partner in the comic book store. Kenny’s known to many as the voice of Spongebob Squarepants, but I’ve always been smitten with his work as Binky in Bobcat Goldthwait’s sadly underrated SHAKES THE CLOWN. He appears here with real-life wife Jill Talley, a treat for anyone who enjoyed their work on MR. SHOW. There’s something real and wonderful about their appearance with their son, a side of Kenny I’ve never seen before.
Hamill is the center of the film, and his portrayal of ubernerd Donald Swan is pretty much pure affection, permission for him to finally give voice to his geekiest side. Hamill lets the freak flag fly, and the result is often very funny. Like Larry David’s CURB YOUR ENTHUSIASM, much of this film is improvised, unscripted, and the cast was required to think on its feet.
Any time you take a chance like that, results can be a mixed affair. CB:TM was still long when I saw it, and uneven. Much of it was ontarget, a pitch perfect evocation of the mania that plays out in fandom each time some new screen adaptation of a beloved comic book property gets announced. I assume they’ve tightened it up since then, and I look forward to the January 27th release date on DVD. If you live in LA, you can see the film in the theater on January 21st at the Sunset 5 on Crescent Heights and Sunset. They’re showing it twice that night, and if I were a betting man, I’d expect to see Hamill there. It’d be the perfect place to see it, too, surrounded by other geeks, everybody tuned in to the often-very-inside jokes that fill the film. Keep your eyes peeled for cameos from all sorts of names in the comic and SF world.
Part of what makes the film work is the backdrop of the San Diego Comic Con, where much of it was filmed. If you’ve never been to Nerd Nirvana, this annual event might just be it, and Hamill’s fame enabled him to take full advantage of the convention’s attendees. There are tons of cameos in the film, and many of them appear to have been random, on the spot. It’s impressive how quickly people seem to have gotten the joke and how eager they are to jump in and play along. It’s infectious fun. Hamill’s not so much the star or the director here as he is the ringleader, riding herd over the more outrageous Billy West or Jess Harnell as the perpetually bemused and probably stoned cameraman shooting the documentary on Donald Swan that serves as the framework for the whole thing.
If you want to see the trailer for the film, it just went online RIGHT HERE. If you want to read a review of the finished film from an even bigger STAR WARS fan than me, CLICK HERE.
In the meantime, you can read an AICN script review by “Donald Swan” RIGHT HERE. I look forward to seeing the final release version of the film in the next couple of weeks, and I’m sure you guys will enjoy it. After all, you’re geeks. And Bruce Campbell’s in it. That means you’re required to like it, no questions asked. I think that’s federal law.
And, yeah... lunch was great. I took along my co-writer, Scott Swan (whose father is named Donald in a bizarre coincidence), who was almost as happy as I was. Check out my ridiculous smile in the attached photo. That’s a very happy seven-year-old you’re looking at.
Because I’m a nerd, too.
And COMIC BOOK: THE MOVIE was definitely made for us.
