I’m hoping I don’t alienate you with this sudden turn toward crude and vulgar humor. According to most of the letters I’ve been receiving lately, a lot of you are responding positively to the relationship between my wife Cami and I. Today’s strip is about as far as you can get from that, but I really just wanted to use the name “Barfy McPukes-A-Lot” as a punch line.
Truthfully, I don’t think I’ve ever drawn projectile vomit quite so masterfully.
I’m just glad I’m not making another reference to Daredevil, Ben Affleck or My Big Fat Greek Wedding. For the last two weeks, it feels like it’s been the only thing I’ve been talking about.
As far as Old School is considered, I’m psyched to see it. I could use a good, stupid comedy right now. Just the remedy to chase off the winter doldrums.
Everyone I’ve talked to is pumped to see this flick and I think a lot of it has to do with Will Ferrell. A Night at the Roxbury not withstanding, Ferrell has always struck gold on the big screen. He practically walked away with Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back.
The fact that this movie was made by the guys who did Road Trip earns extra points in my book. I always felt that movie was one of the better in the teen gross-out bonanza of a few years ago. It kinda slips under the radar. But if your movie has a python biting Tom Green’s hand, how can you fail?!
I’ve read a few advanced reviews of the film and critics are taking their billy clubs to it. Typical. The further I go in life, one resounding lesson becomes clear: MOVIE CRITICS KNOW NOTHING ABOUT COMEDY!
And really, why should they? What’s funny is a concept infinitely open to interpretation. Take Cami, for example. She’s as smart as she is beautiful (aw, here comes the mushy stuff again!), but she’ll be incapacitated with laughter by a good fart joke. I’m serious. You could just walk up to her and say “poop” and get a giggle out of her. Sure, it may be juvenile and offensive to Bitchy McMovie-Reviewer, but don’t take the fun out of it for the rest of us.
And what is with me and all these fake names?
Generally, I find critics useless and only use a select few as a reverse litmus test. I.E. – “Reviewer X” hated this movie. I’m sure to love it! The only reason a read any reviews at all is to get different opinions on dramas. Really these are the only films from which rational discourse can be derived. If you’re sitting around analyzing the “eating beans around the campfire” scene from Blazing Saddles, you’re reading into things too much. Drama, on the other hand, lends itself to lively debate.
That being said, I’m seeing Old School tonight and Bitchy McMovie-Reviewer can eat my ass with a spoon.
:: SWITCHING GEARS ::
For those of you that are interested, I found this story at CNN.com about a woman who has filed a class action lawsuit against Lowe’s Theaters for the ads they place in front of movies.
For those of you too lazy to read the entire article, the gist of it is that a Chicago-area English teacher thinks theaters are putting out false advertising by saying a movie starts at 7:30, when really it doesn’t start until after you’ve sat through 10 minutes of commercials. Part of the complaint stems from resenting to pay money to watch commercials when you can do it for free at home. She is seeking lost time damages of $75 per plaintiff in the suit.
I’m not a big fan of these ads, but I think this lady is barking up the wrong tree. She’ll never win.
For one, this practice of putting ads before movies brings in over $200 million dollars annually for distributors. They expect that figure to jump another million dollars in the next year alone. And as we all know, anything that makes money in the movie industry ALWAYS trumps consumer comfort or complaints.
You also have to think about what this money allows theaters to afford. Everyone would love to sit in a theater with stadium seats with little cup holders. But that’s not going to happen without ad money coming in. That is, unless you want to pay for a small Coke that costs $15.
On the other hand, you have to ask “How much is enough?” Box office receipts have been increasing every year for the last decade. More people are going to more movies at twice the cost it was even 5 years ago. Despite some of the bigger chains having to close a few locations, these guys are raking it in.
But ultimately, the logic is flawed. What are movie previews if not commercials for the next “product” being sent into theaters by the studios? One could even argue that the movies themselves are commercials — prompting you to buy soundtracks, action figures, t-shirts or other assorted merchandise. Let’s not forget about product placement in movies, either. Should I pay good money to know that Martin Lawrence is a security guard at a Coca-Cola distribution center? Probably not, but I didn’t make the movie.
This whole debate is a question of taste. Which, by now, this woman should have learned that the movie industry has none. One pithy lawsuit isn’t going to make Hollywood snap to attention and realize that their customers don’t like being annoyed. Like all of life’s other inconveniences, ads in front of movies will becomes just another gimmick we teach ourselves to filter out and ignore.
:: END RANT ::
One last bit of business. Today’s college-themed strip is appropriate because lately I’ve been getting e-mails from friends I used to go to school with. They’re all scattered around the country right now, so I think it’s a real trip that they’ve found the site and the time to write me.
So thanks to Jenny, Dan and Eric. Your support means a lot.
Oh, and you reading this. I think you’re pretty cool, too. 🙂
I don’t know that I’m as resistant to the idea of seeing College as I’ve portrayed myself in the comic, but I have my reservations. It doesn’t look particularly funny, it has an uncreative title and I don’t really think I’m the target market, but I would be willing to give it a try. It’ll most likely be a rental.
I have an odd relationship with "Let’s get laid!" comedies because the almost always center around high school students and their hair-brained ideas for hooking up with opposite sex. I had a really negative reaction to American Pie because it was nothing like my high school experience and, for some reason, I view College through that filter. This is a very superficial reason to be cautious of a movie sight-unseen and I am fully aware that "Let’s get laid!’ comedies are wish-fulfillment to some degree but… darn it, I guess I’m no fun.
Really the only comedy of this variety that has ever actually impressed me was Superbad. But that movie wasn’t so much about the pursuit of, welll… happiness, I suppose It was more about the relationship between Michael Cera and Jonah Hill’s characters. So I guess I regard it as more of a buddy comedy?
I know. I’m weird.
At any rate, I got to throw in a Caddyshack reference, so I’m good.
Special note about today’s comic – This strip is the first in a series of “Insert Fan Here” comics brought about by the donation drive I’ve got going on. It’s really simple. If you donate a certain amount of money, you get to be in the comic! If you want to learn more, you can click here and read all about it.
The fan in question is Jesse and he also helped point me toward this joke. Said Jesse, I would never go see College yet I think it would be… hilarious if I were made fun of for going to it in the strip. Maybe make me an aging guy (well, I am 26 which is not THAT old) who is having a sort of mid-20s crisis and is a little too gung-ho about reliving his own college experience.”
I probably could have made comic-Jesse a little more zany, but it’s like a tightrope walk, y’know? I don’t want to draw him acting like a complete animal. He’d never show the comic to his kids!
By the way, did you know that I’ll send you an 11 x 17″ print of the comic you appear in? That’s right. I’ll do that because I care.
I also want to re-enforce that I am open to suggestions for these walk-on roles. If you’re donating and helping me out, I want you to be happy with what you get. Jesse went about it the exact right way. He gave me a nugget of an idea an let me run it across the line. I can only hope he enjoys it!
At any rate, that will do it for me. I’m looking forward to the long weekend. Cami’s birthday is on Monday, so we’ll be celebrating all weekend long. Don’t worry. There will still be a new comic here on Monday.
See you then!
First things first. I know the comic is late, but if you could click on the little image to the left and vote for Theater Hopper at Top Web Comics, I’d appreciate it. We’ve been hovering around the Top 100 all week and I want to break through. I think if we can get everyone into the habit, we can find permanent placement on the list next month when the vote tally resets.
C’mon. Click the link. You want to see Cami’s Yoshi tramp stamp, right?
My apologies for the lateness of this comic. It’s late. Like, really late. Wanna hear my excuses? No? Here it goes, anyway.
As you might recall, Sunday was Christmas. Sunday’s are usually the nights I work on Theater Hopper. Since I foolishly work without a buffer: no comic.
I had planned to work on this week’s strip Monday night, but our Christmas celebration was unexpectedly extended with a dinner invitation to my in-laws: no comic.
On Tuesday night, a good friend who had moved to New York City came back for the holidays and wanted to get together: no comic.
Wednesday night was the first night this week that I didn’t have some kind of external committment. So that was my opportunity to put together this week’s comic. And here we are.
I feel a guilty that the comic is late because I’ve basically hard-wired that deadline guilt into my DNA. But at the same time, I feel like I shouldn’t have to apologize for it. Spending time with family and friends? Dude, that comes first. I love my readers, don’t get me wrong – and I hate making excuses. I’m just explaining that I wouldn’t exactly give the time back, if you know what I mean.
Anyway, let’s talk about the comic.
There was actually a little debate about whether or not Yoshi was a dragon or a dinosaur that I instigated on Twitter. For the most part, people identify him as a dinosaur. Although some people told me that he has a power-up in Super Smash Bros. where he turns into a dragon. So I guess it’s in dispute.
I was primarily concerned that I might have shot my punchline in the foot. But then I realized it’s kind of funnier if Yoshi wasn’t a dragon, but Cami was convinced he was.
I think about these kind of things way more than I should.
I’m very eager to see The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo. I haven’t read the books. I haven’t seen the original Dutch films. But I’m a big fan of David Fincher and that’s my primary reason for going.
It doesn’t hurt that the Academy award winning duo behind the soundtrack to Fincher’s The Social Network are back for The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo. I already own Trent Reznor’s and Atticus Ross’s soundtrack and have been listening to it for the past week. It’s creeping me the hell out and I love it.
I was thinking about how badly I want to see The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo and I realized that there are very few films at the end of the year that I feel I have to rush out to see.
Typically, I feel very overwhelmed at the end of the year. Studios pump out their awards contenders and fight for their piece of the critical pie. I don’t get the sense that is happening this year, do you? I can’t tell if my enthusiasm for movies in general has waned or if there simply aren’t that many thoughtful, reliable films for adults out there.
I mean, sure, dig deep enough and you’ll find one. But where’s the buzz? Where are the early contenders for next year’s Oscars? The Top 10 lists I’ve been reading over the last few weeks rarely seems to demonstrate and consensus. It’s interesting.
This is my last comic of 2011 which completes the first full year of my shift to a once-a-week schedule. I’ve actually been doing comics once-a-week since last May of last year. So I guess it’s been a little more than a year.
I’ve lost some traffic after going from 3 updates a week to 1. That’s to be expected. But I really didn’t expect so many of you to hang on and to become more resolved in your support of the comic. I wanted to take a moment to thank you guys for that. If you’re reading this, you’re one of the tried and true fans and I appreciate it.
I have some big plans for Theater Hopper in 2012. Things are going to change dramatically. I won’t keep you in suspense very long, though. With next week’s update, I’m going to tell you exactly what 2012 looks like. It’s going to be interesting, for sure. I’m anxious about it, but I think it’s the right decision to make.
Thanks again for your support in 2011 and for putting up with the late comics. May 2012 greet you warmly.
See you next year.