Tuesday, February 26, 2013

February 25, 2013

Greg's Top Ten Worst Oscar Snubs of All Time:

1. Val Kilmer, Best Supporting Actor, Tombstone (1993) - Ask anyone of my generation what Val Kilmer's best performance was and I guarantee you the majority will say his extremely memorable and scene-stealing portrayal of gunfighter Doc Holliday takes the cake. I do think that Tommy Lee Jones' win in this category of the 1993 Oscars was accurate. He was incredible in The Fugitive, but how Kilmer failed to even get mentioned for Best Supporting Actor is beyond me, even though the other four nominees in the category were strong that year (Leonardo DiCaprio for What's Eating Gilbert Grape was among them).

2. The Shining, Best Picture (1980) - Seriously, how do you snub The Shining? When the Stanley Kubrick classic was released in 1980, it wasn't well received by critics. In fact, Kubrick was nominated for a Razzie Award for worst director. Yeah, those Razzie Awards. Shocking, right? Best Picture ended up going to Ordinary People, which is really fine by me. The Robert Redford directed movie was a tour de force with an all-star cast led by Donald Sutherland and Mary Tyler Moore, but to not see The Shining among the nominees is a crime.

3. Anthony Perkins, Best Actor, Psycho (1960) - Yeah, I guess the Academy doesn't have the luxury of hindsight. Perkins' performance as the deranged Norman Bates is considered one of the greatest and most revered performances of the decade. Yet, at the time, he wasn't given a tremendous amount of praise for his role in the Alfred Hitchcock classic. Though Hitchcock films were notoriously given little recognition by the Academy, it's hard to believe Perkins wasn't given his due.

4. Do the Right Thing, Best Picture (1989) - For this reason alone, I hate the Oscar winning film Driving Miss Daisy. It's so fitting. A movie that highlights racial violence loses out to a film that features racial segregation and a little old lady with an African American servant. Other nominees that year were Born on the Fourth of July, Field of Dreams, Dead Poets Society and My Left Foot. Personally, I think the winner of the bunch (Miss Daisy) shouldn't have even garnered a nomination. Fight the Power!!!

5. Best Director, Steven Spielberg, Jaws (1975) - Horror films are rarely given their due recognition, especially when the director is a wet behind the ears rookie. Although Spielberg had directed many films before this shark tale, it was the first that gained him worldwide recognition. Today, he's considered one of the finest filmmakers of all time and I still find it a bit shocking he didn't get a nomination for Jaws. At least he was able to win a pair of Oscars for Best Director when he took home top prize in 1994 (Schindler's List) and 1999 (Saving Private Ryan).

6. Best Supporting Actor, Dennis Hopper, Blue Velvet (1986) - Hopper was always known for being different but there's little doubt in my mind he's at his craziest and most bizarre in David Lynch's masterpiece, Blue Velvet. At least Hopper was given a nomination the same year for his performance in the Indiana basketball classic Hoosiers. Still, I think his performance in Blue Velvet was more deserving.

7. Best Picture, The Dark Knight (2008) - 2008 was the year of The Dark Knight. It seemed everywhere you turned the Batman sequel was the talk of Tinseltown and it wasn't all because of the late Heath Ledger's incredible performance as The Joker. The entire movie was a massive achievement in storytelling and suspense. Slumdog Millionaire ended up taking home the award for Best Picture and I completely understand why, but how The Dark Knight did not get nominated is a head-scratcher, IMO.

8. Best Actor, Malcolm McDowell, A Clockwork Orange (1971) - Maybe it's just me, but I think McDowell might be one of the most underrated actors of our time. I guess the Academy really doesn't like to honor Stanley Kubrick movies or the actors featured in them. McDowell might be the most memorable of Kubrick's leading men and that's saying a lot considering some of the main men he's used over the years (Jack Nicholson in The Shining for example).

9. Best Actor, Gary Oldman, Sid and Nancy (1986) - I only recently saw this movie for the first time and I have to admit it's one of those movies I cannot believe I never saw earlier in my life. Oldman is the total personification of Sex Pistols guitarist Sid Vicious in one of Oldman's greatest performances to date.

10. Best Supporting Actor, Alec Baldwin, Glengarry Glen Ross (1992) - He's only in the movie for seven minutes, but he makes every second count. IMO, Baldwin's speech about real estate sales is the single greatest speech in the history of film. And, before you say, "He wasn't on screen long enough for a nomination" let me point out that Dame Judi Dench won an Oscar in 1998 for her eight minutes of screen time in Shakespeare in Love. I say bump David Paymer's nominated performance in the forgettable Billy Crystal movie Mr. Saturday Night and give Baldwin his due.

Saturday, February 23, 2013

February 23, 2013

Greg's Top Ten Favorite Duran Duran Non-80s Tracks:

1. Ordinary World from "The Wedding Album"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dDLiVwpv89s

2. Girl Panic! from "All You Need Is Now"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LZd8-aI9c7M

3. Perfect Day from "Thank You"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rf3C6rLwK0Y

4. Serious from "Liberty"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ihtEg_hWIM

5. Nice from "Astronaut"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=auinfQWZenc

6. All You Need Is Now from "All You Need Is Now"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VvqnJ8AGhFg

7. Come Undone from "The Wedding Album"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ICnlyNUt_0o

8. Electric Barbarella from "Medazzaland"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MK1g5dMYR3s

9. White Lines from "Thank You"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VmIN9ulmy-E

Now, I love the actual video for White Lines, but this Craig Ferguson intro might be my all time favorite...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fq-QaTO7a-4

10. My Antarctica from "Liberty"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kTNMvA1l5fw

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

February 19, 2013

Greg's Top Ten Favorite Ozzy Osbourne Solo Tracks

1. Over The Mountain
2. Mama I'm Coming Home
3. No More Tears
4. Shot in the Dark
5. Bark at the Moon
6. Mr. Crowley
7. I Don't Know
8. Flying High Again
9. Suicide Solution
10. Crazy Train
February 18, 2013

Greg's Top Ten Favorite Brat Pack Movies:

1. The Breakfast Club (Ringwald, Estevez, Hall, Sheedy, Nelson)
2. Pretty In Pink (Ringwald, Spader, McCarthy)
3. Weird Science (Hall, Downey Jr.)
4. One Crazy Summer (Cusack, Moore)
5. Sixteen Candles (Ringwald, Hall, Cusack, Gertz)
6. St. Elmo's Fire (Lowe, McCarthy, Moore, Estevez, Sheedy, Nelson)
7. Less Than Zero (Spader, McCarthy, Downey Jr., Gertz)
8. The Outsiders (Estevez, Lowe)
9. Mannequin (McCarthy, Spader)
10. Class (Lowe, McCarthy, Cusack)

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

February 12, 2013

Top Ten Random Facts About Top Gun:

10. The famous shadowy love scene between Tom Cruise and Kelly McGillis was filmed after initial test screenings were shown to select audiences. Moviegoers complained that there was no love scene in the movie. Several weeks after production had wrapped on the movie, Paramount decided a love scene was needed. McGillis, however, had already dyed her hair darker for her next film. The scene was therefore tinted blue to hide the fact that McGillis was no longer blonde.

9. Just like the love scene, the elevator sequence that takes place after Maverick returns from a workout, was filmed in post-production. Kelly McGillis's hair had already been colored for another movie role, that is why she is wearing a hat. Tom Cruise's hair is also longer because he was working on the Paul Newman movie "The Color of Money."

8. Most of the actors who played the F-14 fighter pilots did get to ride backseat in F-14s and several sequences in the film were actually shot with the actors in flight. The only actor who did not vomit during any of those flights was Anthony "Goose" Edwards.

7. After the car chase when Charlie tells Maverick that she didn't want anyone to find out she was falling for him, Maverick originally had a line to say. Tom Cruise forgot the line and "ad libbed" by kissing Kelly McGillis instead. Director Tony Scott liked the improvisation so much, he left the scene like that. 

6. Kenny Loggins was not the first choice to sing the track "Danger Zone" which was written by Giogio Moroder. REO Speedwagon and Toto were two of the groups in consideration ahead of Loggins. 

5. The scene where Maverick and Goose are telling the story of their encounter with a Mig where they flipped off the pilot is one of the more humorous moments in the film. When Val Kilmer's character Iceman coughs into his hand "bullshit" the laughter you hear in the background from all the actors in the scene in genuine because Kilmer ad-libbed the line. 

4. The song "Take My Breath Away" by Berlin was the biggest hit of Berlin's career, reaching #1 on the Billboard charts. It was also one of the biggest reasons the band broke up. Lead singer Terri Nunn thought it would be a great opportunity for the band to change their sound but other members of the band hated the song because it was not written by the band. 

3. Rick "Slider" Rossovich was kicked off of an aircraft carrier during pre-production because he mouthed off to an officer about his sleeping quarters. Rossovich's bunk was just a few feet away from a nuclear reactor so he decided to sleep in another bunk. When the officer who's bunk Rossovich was sleeping in had returned, the actor told him to find another bunk. 

2. Riding on the back of the film's success, the US Navy set up recruiting booths in the major cinemas to try and catch some of the adrenaline charged guys leaving the screenings. They had the highest applications rate for years as a result.

1. Before Tom Cruise was selected to play Maverick there were several other actors that Paramount was interested in selecting to play the lead role. Among those actors were Patrick Swayze, Emilio Estevez, Matthew Broderick, Sean Penn, Tom Hanks and Charlie Sheen. Sheen would later go on to spoof Top Gun in the comedy Hot Shots.