By Jimmy Faux
Greetings,
salutations, hello, and whaddup! I was only arrested twice this past month for
harassing celebrities and trespassing, but I got a few tidbits on what’s
happening in the entertainment world.
Let’s not waste more time with a silly introductory paragr…
Novels,
plays, television shows, comic books, video games: They’ve all been source
material for movies, and it’s worked the other way, too, with books, shows, and
even plays based on movies. And it’s
worked sideways, with games based on shows, comics based on books, and porn
based on all of them. But what hasn’t
happened is a movie based on a candy product.
That is, until now.
Bazooka Joe
will star in his own feature-length epic based around the jaunty jokes of his
(typically) multi-panel comic as seen on Bazooka® bubble gum. We get to see the origins of Bazooka Joe, how
he met those other zany characters, and how he earned that eye patch. Not to be outdone, Mars, Inc. will be working
on a full-length M&M’s® movie.
It’ll have CGI, celebrity voices, nudity (“my peanut is showing!”), and
some of the most grizzly death scenes you can imagine a candy-coated, chocolate
treat experiencing. I can’t hardly wait.
Speaking of
video games (well, we kind of were a while ago), anyone who’s even the
slightest bit into Xbox™ or PlayStation® will have heard of a little
thing called Rock Band™, where you
can play a guitar controller (or two) and a digital drum setup, and rock some
karaoke action, all at the same time.
It’s like Guitar Hero™ plus
Drum Hero plus Sing Hero. And I’m not
the only one who’s excited about it.
Apparently, if you’re not satisfied with the songs offered in the game,
you can download more, and people have done that six million times. Apparently, the lonely, socially awkward geek
is a thing of the past. Now, geeks band
together into socially awkward bunches.
They’re sharing a drink we call loneliness, but it’s better than geeking
alone.
A brief
aside: Is it me, or does April seem empty when Easter comes in March? No Petey
Cottontail hoppin’ down the bunny trail.
We’ve already had our fill of chocolate bunnies. And now we’re getting ready for summer
omelets instead of hard-boiling and dyeing our eggs. And April has just begun! Weird, huh? But I digress…
Anyway, in
case you haven’t heard, Paul Giamatti actually did a pretty good job playing
John Adams on the HBO miniseries entitled, you guessed it, John Adams. As is often the case with a good thing, other
groups are jumping on the bandwagon.
Well, they do say imitation is the sincerest form of flattery. (Who the hell are the ubiquitous “they,”
anyway?)
There was
more than one hero of the revolution.
There’s already an independent movie about Samuel Adams, his brewing
prowess, and his use of recreational drugs.
But what about Max Lyesmith?
Max Lyesmith
was a stableboy for Paul Revere’s neighbor, Lance Potterson. When Paul Revere and two of his famous
midnight riders where detained by British troops on the night of April 18, 1775
between Lexington and Concord, it was Max that came to free them. Max snuck in and slit the throats of two of
the redcoats with a bit of straw before the rest knew he was there. He ninja’d one to death and shot lightning
bolts out of his rump at two more.
By then,
Revere’s companions, Prescott and Dawes, had escaped, but Paul himself had been
injured in the melee. Lyesmith carried
Revere the seven miles to Lexington so they could be there for the famous
battle at Lexington Green. All this when
Max Lyesmith was only 5-and-a-half years old.
And there’s been no movie about the tyke. Now that’s a crime.
Okay, I gotta
go back to Jessica Alba’s and Christina Aguilera’s pre-pregnancy underwear on
eBay®. Y’all have a good
Easter…er…I mean, April.
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April 04, 2008