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How To Watch The Cartoonist: Jeff Smith, BONE and the Changing Face of Comics Movie On iPod, iPad, Xbox 360, wii, or Cel Phone

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010

DVDThe Cartoonist: Jeff Smith, BONE and the Changing Face of Comics

How To Watch The Cartoonist: Jeff Smith, BONE and the Changing Face of Comics Movie On iPod, iPad, Xbox 360, wii, or Cel Phone

Studio: Victor Multimedia-05 Release Date: 12/01/2009 Run time: 76 minutes

How To Watch The Cartoonist: Jeff Smith, BONE and the Changing Face of Comics Movie On iPod, iPad, Xbox 360, wii, or Cel Phone

Customer Reviews:

I learned a lot5
I loved The Cartoonist! It was extremely entertaining and educational. I learned a lot about an industry I find fascinating. This is an incredible look inside Jeff Smith and his global “Bone” phenomenon as well the world of comic books and self-publishing. I highly recommend this DVD for anyone… but especially those interested in comic books, the comic arts and graphic novels. It’s also a must-have for aspiring cartoonists as there is a wealth of information packed inside. This DVD is great!!

Must watch for any indy comic fan or jeff smith fan5
This took me back. I was a comic dealer in 1992 an bought a lot of the books that Jeff was talking about. I remember my first prints 1 – 6 and how cool I thought they were. My wife even read the things and that was a first for me. Made a lot of money off the things too. Anyway, tells the story of the indy artist while focusing on jeff smith and bone. Tells how he came up with the story and how he got through writing the comic and what he plans to do later on somewhat. I met Jeff a long time ago and thought it was neat then. After seeing the dvd I am even more impressed with him and his story. Anyway, if you want to know about a cool story inside of a cool story either buy it or rent it. Anyway, just see it. On a side note, if the person you are seeing it with has no clue who Jeff Smith or bone is they will hate it.

Perfect for Comics and Animation Enthusiasts5
This video is a 76 min. documentary about Jeff Smith and his life before, during, and after the creation of the Bone graphic novel epic. It’s exceptionally well produced and includes many interview segments with Jeff, Scott McCloud, and Jeff’s friends/co-conspirators who worked with him for decades.

In the documentary you’ll discover the origins of all the Bone characters and the lengthy process Smith went through to achieve the completion of his graphic novel.

One of the most interesting segments of this video is that it reveals Jeff’s seven year stint as a part-owner of a small animation studio doing corporate/commercial work. Smith and McCloud describe how that experience helped translate and realize the vision behind Bone. It’s especially pertinent for new comics artists and cartoonists. For me, it was the missing link to understanding WHY the art within Bone is so good, aside from technical expertise.

One bonus feature included on this DVD is an 82 min. discussion between Scott McCloud and Jeff Smith that took place at Ohio State University in front of a live audience. Combined with the primary video on the DVD, that totals over 2.5 hours of quality content.

Also included is a brief introduction by Jeff Smith to his latest project, RASL.

Overall, this DVD is a must-have for anyone looking to create their own graphic novels. It serves as inspiration and a guide, revealing insights to the process and what it takes to succeed. Highly Recommended!

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Review
My son and I bundled under some blankets this rainy weekend to watch the documentary on Jeff Smith, creator of the very popular BONE comics/graphic novel. The documentary is called “The Cartoonist: Jeff Smith, BONE and the Changing Face of Comics” and it is a treat. The video features extensive interviews with Jeff Smith and friends and admirers, and tracks the evolution of BONE in Jeff Smith’s fertile mind.

Here are a few things that really jumped out at me:

–Smith notes that he remembers making some of the characters that are in BONE back when he was five or six years old. He says he drew all the time, everywhere, and talks about the evolution of the Bone characters over time. He uses three main characters, who are archetypes for Smith himself, and notes that he got one of the names for Fone-Bone from Mad Magazine via Don Martin s site gag comics. I chuckled over that one.

–Smith was interested in using the comic concept to create a long-form story (a 1,000 page book, as he put it) in the vein of The Odyssey or Moby Dick. From the start, he knew the story arc that would take place over time — in this case, more than 10 years of comics that told one big story. If you have ever held the collected BONE book in your hand, you ll see that he has succeeded. It s huge and hefty and rich with story.

–Smith got his start in commercial animation — there are some scenes of he and his partners making “cells” of animation, which are overlays — and the documentary notes how his experience in moving pictures seeps into his comics, through the use of movement across frames and consistency of characters.

–Smith explains how he uses symbolism, imagery and allusions in his BONE stories and one interesting scene shows Smith hiking through a forest area with waterfalls and streams that are depicted in his BONE book as the epicenter of the story. My son said, “That s just like in the book!” Smith also notes how important the symbol of water is to storytellers and how he uses it himself in his book.

–At one point, Smith notes how much the audience for comics and graphic novels have changed. It is no longer 30-year-old men in comic shops. Now, there are kids (again) interested in comics and graphic novels, and he notes that librarians understand this shift. While book lending is mostly down in libraries, the one stack that shows constant growth is the graphic novel/comic stack. And the film notes that librarians and teachers see the use of graphic novels for engagement of young readers in text and can be a “bridge” to novels and other forms of reading.

All in all, “The Cartoonist” is a wonderful look at the man behind BONE, and the life of a comic book artist. Smith is engaging and open and excited to be where he is, and when you see the lines and lines of people of all ages waiting at conventions and book signing just to shake his hand or get an autograph, you realize just how much effect Smith and others are having on our views of literature when it comes to Sequential Art.

What I wonder is: what impact will these graphic novels have on young writers and what will the results of that influence be when we look at the field in 10 years? I can t wait.

If you are a teacher searching for a movie that explains the creative writing and art process of comics and graphic novels, I suggest you consider “The Cartoonist” for your collection. –Kevin Hodgson (dogtrax.edublogs.org)

Review
Last week, I had the opportunity to see the new documentary, “The Cartoonist: Jeff Smith, BONE and the Changing Face of Comics.” I believe it debuted just before Comic Con International this year. My friend and fellow cartoonist Grant Sutherland ordered it off the Internet and we watched it over beers and cigars. I can’t recommend this film highly enough. It was such an inspiration to see all the details behind the creation of BONE, Smith’s amazing graphic novel. The film itself is well made and interesting and has lot’s of great interviews, convention footage and information on Smith’s early career. As soon as it was over I just wanted to get back to my desk and keep drawing. –Nate Bramble (hermithillcomic.com)

Review
“The Cartoonist” simultaneously illustrates the power of comics and the genius of Jeff Smith. This is essential viewing for comics fans, as it provides a well-rounded picture of what it takes to create an enduring classic. For teachers of BONE, it may spark supplemental lesson plan ideas such as research into Smith’s influences, as well as provide insight to the symbols present this masterful work. Highly recommended. –Out from the Comic Shop (outfromthecomicshop.com)

The Cartoonist: Jeff Smith, BONE and the Changing Face of Comics Description:

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #31240 in DVD
  • Brand: Victor
  • Released on: 2009-07-21
  • Rating: NR (Not Rated)
  • Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
  • Formats: Color, Dolby, DVD, NTSC, Widescreen
  • Original language: English
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Running time: 76 minutes

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The Cartoonist: Jeff Smith, BONE and the Changing Face of Comics

How To Watch The Cartoonist: Jeff Smith, BONE and the Changing Face of Comics Movie On iPod, iPad, Xbox 360, wii, or Cel Phone

How To Watch Major Payne Movie On iPod, iPad, Xbox 360, wii, or Cel Phone

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010

Major Payne

How To Watch Major Payne Movie On iPod, iPad, Xbox 360, wii, or Cel Phone

BONUS FEATURES: PRODUCTION NOTES, TALENT BIOS, FILM HIGHLIGHTS, THEATRICAL TRAILER AND WEB LINK. THE MILITARY WAS NEVER THISMUCH FUN OR THIS WILD. WAYANS IS HILARIOUS AS A RETIRED MARINEOFFICER DETERMINED TO WHIP A RAMBUNCTIOUS GROUP OF CADETS INTO AWINNING TROOP.

How To Watch Major Payne Movie On iPod, iPad, Xbox 360, wii, or Cel Phone

Reviews:

A laugh-riot!5
When Major Benson Payne (played by Damon Wayans), a one-man-army in a Marine uniform, is discharged, he needs to find a new life. Given command of the Madison Academy Junior ROTC, he sets out to whip the gang of misfit youths into shape. Used to the toughest discipline and the hardest life, Payne is the children’s worst nightmare, and there is nothing they won’t do to get rid of him. Along the way, though, Payne and his command all learn a few lessons.

This movie is a laugh-riot! Wayans’ Payne is hilarious, being just the right mixture of homicidal maniac and tender father figure, while the ROTC cadets make a perfect foil for the Major. My family have never laughed so hard at a movie as we did at this one, with my son being quite pleased with how the Major deals with a “monster” in a young lad’s closet – “If he’s still in there, he’s not happy!”

This is a great movie, the one caveat being that there are quite a few colorful words tossed around by the Major and the cadets. That said, though, this was a hilarious movie that you and your family will like watching again and again!

The Total Remake of “The Private War of Major Benson”4
Dear Reader,

It is true I was in training to be a film-maker of some portent…Yes, I was properly versed in the International Film Art scene, Avante-Garde and Film- Noir…I have been exposed to “Potemkin”, “400 Hundred Blows”, “The Bicycle Thief”, “Day for Night”, etc… but…….

Again let me indulge you in another one of my film “guilty pleasures”….”Major Payne”…

Yes, it is a remake of 1955, “The Private War Of Major Benson” but it’s as opposite as the two Kirks in TOS, “Mirror, Mirror”…..

The 1955 movie definetely has a feel of “gosh, golly, and swell”…..Although “good” for it’s time it generally has the “sickly sweet” feeling thoughout.

“Major Payne” takes a completely 180 degree turn….

That’s right, the 1995 Major (Damon Wayans) is not a boisterous, chauvanistic, drunk….

No Siree, Bob! Major Winifred Benson Payne is a 100% killing machine…Out of his own platoon he not only captures the head “bad guy” but the bad guy’s entire army! When one of his platoon mates is shot in the leg, the Major has a very “sick” solution to “Getting your mind off a that pain?” This Major is a “human terminator”; Great example is his story telling version of “The Little Train that Could”…I would go into detail but I won’t as the children reading this may acquire horribly scarred pysche’s…

The children in the movie are not the cute, innocent, gum chewers of 1955 but can be equally venomous and dangerous as the Major as seen in their exploits of getting rid of the Major….C’mon what kinda of kid tries to photograph a boy dressed up as a girl pretending to be sleeping with their ROTC instructor….

PRETTY DEMENTED KIDS!!!!

Yes, this movie goes way overboard on the Major’s character (live ammo on the training grounds) and the children’s character (payola to the local town motorcycle gang leader) but at least it has the guts to come forth and tell us just how hard it is to teach today’s kids!!!!!

But, seriously folks, let your hair down and have a good hard laugh….Check out “Major Payne”….

P.S. Seeing the partial parody of “Apocolypse Now” at the beginning well worth seeing this movie!

Vulcan8630

Major Payne has hurt my sides with laughter.4
“Major Payne” is one of the funniest movies that I enjoy to watch over and over again. I thought that Damon Wayans delivered a knockout performance as the loud-mouthed, gold-toothed, trash talking, squeaky voiced Major Benson Winifred Payne. He was so funny that I nearly had a heart attack while laughing at the same time.

After a major drug bust goes extremely well in South America, Major Payne (Damon Wayans) returns to Parris Island, South Carolina and finds out that the U.S. Marine Corps is throwing him out of the military back into civilian life. After two weeks of civilian life, Payne is let back into the military under one condition: go to Virginia and train a group of delinquents for an ROTC program at Madison Academy. Payne regretfully accepts the job and puts each of the boys into 8 weeks of living hell! It becomes a fight because the boys do what they can to put Major Payne out of their lives!

I have so many favorites scene through out this movie but the one that shines the brightest is when Wayans had a dance sequence at a club where he performs a series of moves (including a very nice “robot”), and with the help of music from 2 Live Crew. Many of the gags are side-splitting funny, and the vocal tones and mannerisms of Major Payne are just spot-on hilarious. And the kids in the film do a remarkable job in their supporting roles. The kids in fact steal the show (especially the younger ones). Lots of absurdity in the movie, but still here and there peeks through a poignant maturity on the deeper symbolism of what boot camp is all about

Of course, it is a feel good movie so you know everything will work out in the end. Base on some of the lower reviews you can see that this movie is not for everyone, but at the same time is worth seeing. If you don’t like it by the time Payne does his “Failure to communicate!” line then maybe it isn’t for you. As for me it’s utterly brilliant.

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Amazon.com
Let’s face facts here: You don’t watch a movie like Major Payne for its artistic merit any more than you’d watch Schindler’s List for its comedy. If you go in thinking otherwise, you’re bucking for a disappointment. So it’s a pleasant surprise to discover that Major Payne is more entertaining than a barrel full of bad reviews would lead you to believe. It’s a totally formulaic comedy about a bunch of misfit kids who turn into a crack squad of skillfully disciplined ROTC cadets, but Damon Wayans is spot-on hilarious in the title role as the hardened military bulldog who whips the little slackers into shape. Wayans plays the role as if killing and warfare were the only joys in life, and when he finds himself cast adrift without a military commission, a scene that directly parodies Apocalypse Now lets you know that Wayans (who cowrote the script) is going to bring something new to this routine scenario. Major Payne’s idea of a good bedtime story is to recall his worst battlefield horrors, and Wayans gives it just the right twist of comedy to put Payne’s bullet-pierced heart in the right place–he’s really just a good guy with an iron-clad exterior. The young recruits strut their stuff in the final round of their cadet competition (their marching rap is good for a solid laugh), and director Nick Castle keeps it all from becoming too stupid or over the top. It’s arguably only for Wayans’s most ardent fans, but as a send-up of all the great movie drill instructors, Major Payne is painlessly enjoyable. –Jeff Shannon

Major Payne Description:

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #2973 in DVD
  • Brand: Universal
  • Released on: 1999-01-05
  • Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
  • Aspect ratio: 1.85:1
  • Formats: Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Color, DVD, Widescreen, NTSC
  • Original language: English, French
  • Subtitled in: English, Spanish
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Dimensions: .25 pounds
  • Running time: 95 minutes


How To Watch Major Payne Movie On iPod, iPad, Xbox 360, wii, or Cel Phone

How To Watch Punk: Early Years Movie On iPod, iPad, Xbox 360, wii, or Cel Phone

Monday, July 26th, 2010

Punk: Early Years Description:

How To Watch Punk: Early Years Movie On iPod, iPad, Xbox 360, wii, or Cel Phone

Punk: Early Years Sale Here

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #48823 in DVD
  • Released on: 2003-10-28
  • Rating: NR (Not Rated)
  • Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
  • Formats: Color, Compilation, DVD, NTSC
  • Original language: English
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Running time: 60 minutes

Best Take on the Raw Spirit of London Punk5
Originally named “Raw Energy”, that title reflected perfectly what this film was about. It captured what was going on in the London punk scene at street level, through great bands that were actually playing regularly, unlike the Pistols, who had been relegated to no more than a media phenomenom in 1977-78 because, as they talk about in the film, they couldn’t play anywhere because of the furore the media had created which caused town councils across the UK to ban their shows. Because this film was capturing a slice of what was going on at the time, it doesn’t attempt to be some great all-encompassing film about everything going on in English punk rock, but merely a very representative look at it through one set of groups and people. I know everything I need to know about the Sex Pistols and Clash and the usual suspects, so it’s fantastic that they concentrated on groups like the Adverts, Slits, and X Ray Spex, some of the most edgy bands of the London scene, and notably bands that all had women in them or in the case of the Slits, were entirely comprised of women.
In dramatic contrast to “Decline of Western Civilization”, which tried to be the same sort of film set in LA with a much bigger budget, this film actually is filled with intelligent commentary from fans, band members, even shockingly enough the record company people interviewed. It’s comical watching the Adverts interrupt each other while trying to make sure they explain “Gary Gilmore’s Eyes” properly.
Though the inclusion of an Eddie and the Hot Rods live performance is seen as “not punk” by purists and perhaps their relation to punk isn’t explained thoroughly enough (they do a fantastic cover of “Get Out of Denver”), they were part of the rock bands that stood out by embracing punk at the time. There were bands like the Tom Robinson Band and others who were notable for touring with punk bands and being excited at how much energy punk was bringing back to music, even while their own material remained rock and roll. That’s the whole point of the Marc Bolan interview, showing that there were existing rockers who joined in and participated in the new excitement, and helped promote it. The New York Dolls had been a huge inspiration for English punk bands, giving glam an attitude, and a lot of the glam rockers recognized that punk was taking some of what they had been trying to do and getting that much more outrageous with it.
There are so many priceless moments in it for true fans of punk history – Siouxsie talking about being considered fascists merely because she “liked to wear a certain badge” is comical. It’s even cool to see a young Billy Idol talk with sincere enthusiasm, rather than the old, strutting rock and roll hack we’ve seen for so many years now. Mark P of the zine Sniffin Glue and the band Alternative TV is a constant intelligent voice interviewed throughout, who pretty much invented the concept of the photocopied punk zine. Sure some of the accents are difficult, but that’s life and just a problem for Americans, punks don’t speak BBC English.
For someone who knows little about the bands portrayed and the scene, it might be confusing because it doesn’t waste time trying to be a primer, so for those people Caroline Coon’s book “1988″ would be a essential read to put everything in the film into context. As a serious punk historian – I wrote the book “Going Underground: American Punk 1979-1992″ – for me this film with all its rough edges captures the honest revolutionary spirit of punk from a ground level perspective better than any other documentary I’ve seen. Could have there been a ton of other things in it? Sure, I’d love a Ken Burns style six hour series on punk that intelligently did the subject justice for once and included everyone, but I think it’s amazing that someone even took the time to capture this culture as it happened, and these kind of documents should be prized.

If you remember or are curious about what punk was REALLY like…4
…then this DVD is invaluable. The previous reviewer of this DVD apparently had a strange or romanticized idea of what early UK punk was like. The reviewer’s description of The Adverts as “no name” will suffice to indicate his or her level of sophistication and knowledge of UK punk.

I think that this “warts and all” film does a better job than any other I’ve seen of getting across the giddy experimentalism, frenetic posing, and just sheer lunacy of early UK punk. The American equivalent would be the original DECLINE OF WESTERN CIVILIZATION, which takes a similarly honest look at the highs ‘n lows of the LA punk scene circa 1980.

True, The Slits couldn’t really play when this was shot. That was the point. True, X-Ray Spex were not terribly polished. True, there was a certain amount of uncertainty about what “really counted” as “punk,” and some former pub rock bands like the Hot Rods did get lumped together with more overtly punky bands. True, there were moments of boredom and tedium in the birth of punk; punk was (among other things) a reaction against a sense of ceaseless boredom and this film manages in its rough way to capture some of the atmosphere.

If, like the previous reviewer, you’d like to have a nice, polished MTV video for your documentary of UK punk, well, this DVD isn’t it. If you’d like something a bit more accurate, however, then this is a fine companion piece to FILTH & FURY and WESTWAY TO THE WORLD.

GREAT ROCK ‘N ROLL SWINDLE1
“Ever get the feeling you’ve been ripped off?” – John Lydon. Well, that’s how John used to begin his PIL performances. And it applies very nicely to this DVD. You have the adverts, a great band, but you soon learn that they were horrible live. You have the sex pistols, a great live band, but you never actually see them perform- you see lots of british parade guards, maybe for the jubilee. you see little posters of the sex pistols. and you keep cutting to some girl who had something to do with hooking johnny up with malcolm. as a previous reviewer noted, the generation x song is not synchronized to the band. what he didn’t mention is that billy idol barely lifts the microphone anywhere near his mouth while he’s supposedly singing. it’s absurd. you’ve got some live X-ray spex, but they’re playing to an empty room. doesn’t make for the most exciting footage. bunch of mediocre interviews. perhaps the best is with the late marc bolan. he predicts that in five years, all the punk bands would be using strings, but really aggressive ones. he should have predicted they’d all be dead, himself included. well, there was a string version of some sex pistols song on the great rock and rock ‘n rock swindle. and, just when you’re thinking “this has to get better,” it’s over. i like almost anything related to punk rock. i didn’t like this at all. – d


Punk: Early Years

How To Watch Punk: Early Years Movie On iPod, iPad, Xbox 360, wii, or Cel Phone

How To Watch Tampopo Movie On iPod, iPad, Xbox 360, wii, or Cel Phone

Thursday, July 22nd, 2010

How To Watch Tampopo Movie On iPod, iPad, Xbox 360, wii, or Cel Phone


If you love food and Alton Brown…5
…you will love this movie for it explores (with hysterical results) why food becomes such an important touchstone in life.

Truck driver Goro and Gun are in search of some good eats and run into a widow who is trying to run a ramen shop. Unfortunately, she’s not doing too well so Goro and some unlikely guides offer her some sage advice and help her on her way to becoming a true ramenista. The story is punctuated with some vignettes about the “social aspects” of eating and our behavior with food.

THIS EDITION NOTES: This is a “no-frills” deal with the bear minimum of subtitle options and the movie’s original trailer. Although Amazon is listing the zone playability as “unknown” the jacket lists it as ALL ZONES. It played on our ancient Zenith DVD player which can only handle zone 1 DVDs and nothing else. Picture is good, but sound quality is poor. However, its definitely worth the price to see this wonderful movie once again!

Howdy There Pahdner!5
I’m guessing that the director, Itami, had a great love for all the movie genres, including Westerns, gangster movies, comedies, you name it, because they are all loving reflected in this movie.

As others have noted, the plot is definitely patterned after Italian Spaghetti Westerns–a handsome but weathered character (Goro) comes into town and spots a widowed mother in distress (Tampopo). With the help of his eccentric friends (including a band of culinary hobos that sing in exquisite harmony a farewell song whenever their leader leaves them for a time), Goro helps Tampopo turn her fortunes around by becoming a noodle soup master! I could definitely see John Wayne playing the part of Goro every time he adjusted the brim of his cowboy hat or the bandana around his neck.

In addition to the main story line of the winsome noodle shop owner, several unconnected episodes are included. What ties them all together seems to be the theme of enjoying and appreciating and living for food, from the story of the noodle master imparting his wisdom on the perfect noodle soup to the disciple, to the old woman who sneakily wanders through an upscale grocery store just to TOUCH food, to the charismatic gangster whose dying words to his lover are about the wonders of an esoteric food delicacy, the intestines of freshly killed boars who have dined on yams that make a natural yam sausage.

Sounds odd, I know, but the director has a warm, affectionate viewpoint that lets us enjoy the eccentricities of the characters while still feeling good about them. There is not the faintest trace of meanness or cynicism in this movie. Laugh out loud scenes make this one of the funniest movies I’ve seen in years, and the honesty and poignancy of the wonderful characters will make this movie live in my memory for many years.

The Wild Bunch at the noodle shop. Slurp!5
There are any number of very funny scenes in this lightly plotted and highly episodic romantic comedy from acclaimed Japanese director Juzo Itami. You may recall him as the guy who got in trouble with the Yakuza, the Japanese “mafia,” because they didn’t like the way he made fun of them in Minbo no onna (1992). You may also know that he committed suicide at the age of 64 in 1997 after being accused of adultery. He is the son of samurai film maker Mansaku Itami. I mention this since one of the things satirized here are samurai films.

But–and perhaps this is the secret of Itami’s success both in Japan and elsewhere–the satire is done with a light, almost loving touch. Even though he also takes dead aim at spaghetti westerns and the Japanese love affair with food, especially their predilection for fast food noodle soup, at no time is there any rancor or ugliness in his treatment.

If you’ve seen any Itami film you will be familiar with his star, his widow, Nobuko Miyamoto, she of the very expressive face, who is perhaps best known for her role as the spirited tax collector in Itami’s The Taxing Woman (1987) and The Taxing Woman Returns (1988). She has appeared in all of his films. Here she is Tampopo (“Dandelion”), a not entirely successful proprietor of a noodle restaurant. Along comes not Jones but Tsutmu Yamazaki as Goro, a kind of true grit, but big-hearted Japanese urban cowboy. He ambles up to the noodle bar and before long establishes himself as a kind of John Wayne hero intent on teaching Tampopo how the good stuff is made. Along the way Itami makes fun of stuffy bureaucrats, macho Japanese males, heroic death scenes, Japanese princesses attempting to acquire a European eating style, movie fight scenes, and God knows what else.

The comedy is bizarre at times. The sexual exchange of an egg yoke between the man in the white suit (Koji Yakusho) and his mistress (Fukumi Kuroda) might make you laugh or it might just gross you out. The enthusiastic description of the “yam sausages” from inside a wild boar is strange. Surely one is not salivating at such an entre, but one can imagine that such a “delicacy” might surely exist and have its devotees.

Indeed an Itami film has a kind of logic all its own. An exemplary scene is that of the stressed and dying mother of two young children, who is ordered by her husband to “Get up and cook!” This (reasonably relevant) scene is juxtaposed with the one with the college professor which is about being and getting ripped off–which seems to have little to do with the rest of the movie, yet somehow seems appropriate, perhaps only because they are at a restaurant. Another typical Itami scene is the businessmen at supper. They hem and haw until their chief orders and then they all pretend to debate and consider, and then order exactly the same thing except for one brash young guy who dazzles (and embarrasses) the old sycophantic guys by order a massive meal in French with all the trimmings.

The climax of the film comes with plenty of musical fanfare. As Goro and others sit down at the counter, they are served Tampopo’s final culinary creation, the noodle soup now hopefully honed to perfection. As the tension mounts, a musical accompaniment, reminiscent of something like the clock ticking in High Noon (1952), rises to a crescendo. All the while Tampopo sweats and frets and prays that she will triumph, which will be in evidence if, and only if, they drain their soup bowls! (Do they?)

The final credits roll (after some further misdirections and some further burlesque) over a most endearing and ultimately touching shot of a young mother with a beautiful and contented infant feeding at her breast.

Perhaps this was Itami’s best film.

Amazon.com essential video
Like seeds of a dandelion blowing in the wind, the plot of Tampopo wanders in several directions, following the lives of a quirky collection of characters. At the heart of this film is a young widow named Tampopo (Nobuko Miyamoto), who is struggling to make ends meet by running a noodle restaurant. Goro (Tsutomu Yamazaki), a truck driver, saves Tampopo’s young son from being beaten by a group of school girls and is rewarded with a bowl of very bad ramen (noodles). Goro tells Tampopo the awful truth about her cooking and she asks for his help. Together they search for the perfect ramen recipe.

Intersecting this part of the plot are several smaller and less well-realized stories. Koji Yakusho, who stars in Shall We Dance, appears as a sensuous gangster who would rather play with his food than eat it. Then there’s the mysterious Noodle Master who lives with a group of street vagabonds and a young executive who knows how to order food from a French menu, but not how to preserve the dignity of his superiors.

While the film as a whole feels somewhat disjointed, writer-director Juzo Itami manages to infuse Tampopo (which means “dandelion”) with a sense of Japanese joie de vivre that is worth experiencing. Take notes during the “soup scenes” and see what you can cook up for yourself. –Luanne Brown

Tampopo Description:

Purchase Tampopo by clicking here!

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #2610 in DVD
  • Released on: 2005-05-22
  • Formats: Anamorphic, Color, Full length, Import, Subtitled, Widescreen, NTSC
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Running time: 114 minutes

Tampopo

How To Watch Tampopo Movie On iPod, iPad, Xbox 360, wii, or Cel Phone

How To Watch Blue Citrus Hearts Movie On iPod, iPad, Xbox 360, wii, or Any Cel Phone Free

Sunday, July 11th, 2010

Blue Citrus Hearts Description:

How To Watch Blue Citrus Hearts Movie On iPod, iPad, Xbox 360, wii, or Any Cel Phone Free


Blue Citrus Hearts

How To Watch Blue Citrus Hearts Movie On iPod, iPad, Xbox 360, wii, or Any Cel Phone Free