Nurse 3D (2013)

nursecover01There’s a lot of goodness here, but it is loosely packed.

No time at all is wasted in introducing Abigail Russell.  She lures a married man up to the roof, and cuts his femoral artery.  She explains how she is actually doing his family a favor so they won’t have to tolerate his philandering shenanigans; then pitches him over the side.  The surreal shots of his plunge and vivid subsequent 3D-friendly impalement on an iron fence set the tone for the movie.

The setting is further emphasized by the credits which rock out grindhouse-style over pulp covers featuring drawings of the main cast.

Maybe (but only maybe) this not-quite-reality enables Paz de la Huerta to pull off her role.  Because in the harsh light of the real world, this is not a hot nurse.  Also, not much of an actress.  But ya know what?  In this movie, I was willing to accept her.

Everything about her is jarring.  Her line readings are as stilted as C. Walken, but to less effect.  Her body, though great, is certainly unusual in its angles and lankiness.  It is also specifically clothed (or not) to achieve a certain effect. Often slutty to the point that she would be arrested around decent folk; sometimes with nothing below the waist — still a rare enough sight in movies to change the vibe of a scene. Her face is like one of those sculptures that must be turned at a precise angle to cast a shadow of something entirely new — the beauty is there, but holy crap do you have to use precision instruments to find it.

Also clearly not from this world is Katrina Bowden playing Danni, a new nurse and Paz’s protege. She is beautiful in every way that Paz is not.  But she could never have played the titular Nurse 3D.

On her first day on the job, Danni freezes at the sight of a badly injured patient.  After getting chewed out by Judd Nelson, she goes to the shower for a good cry.  Sadly, all realism is forfeited in this scene by having Danni take a shower in her panties.  Another way she is the anti-Paz.

nurse01It soon becomes clear that Paz is on a crusade to rid the world of men who, like her father, are non-hackers who do not pack the gear to serve in her beloved reality.

This includes Danni’s psychiatrist step-father who they see out with another woman.  Abby quickly insinuates herself into his life as a patient.  She then seduces him by walking in front of his car in a very shear white dress (and frankly looking a little like a tranny).  Maybe he digs trannies — different strokes (weird, weird strokes), and they are soon making out in the car.  She then jabs him with a syringe to paralyze him.  Abby puts the car in reverse, bails, and lets it back slowly out of the cozy ally they had pulled into.  Fortuitously, a huge truck rams the car, killing him.

There is another murder that I won’t reveal.  OK, it was Bender.

Soon thereafter, Danni arrives at the hospital to stop Abby.  The film then really goes into full action mode, and also steps up the obvious 3D-whoring effects.  Lots of girlfighting, some interesting kills, maybe even a surprise.

The ending ultimately plays out a twist revealed earlier, and capitalizes on yet another over-the-top cartoonish character introduced earlier.  But, again, it worked for me in this hyper-world.  This is the only time you will see one of these here, as it actually relates to the final scene:

🙂

Post-Post Leftovers:

  • Douglass Aarniokoski <> Darren Aronofsky.
  • It is strange the emphasis that is put on Abby’s vendetta against bad husbands & daddies for the first 2 kills, plus in a flashback to a formative trauma in her childhood.  After that motive is established, the film really forgets it and focuses on her obsession with Danni.
  • I have seen one of Aarniokoski’s other pictures — The Day.  I remember almost nothing, but gave it 3 stars on NetFlix.
  • Writer David Loughery was one of the writers on Star Trek V, so this is clearly a step up.  At least no one is singing “row, row, row, your boat.”  The life of a screenwriter must be bizarre.  He had some high-profile movies, a gap of 13 years, then a few more.
  • Trying to think where else I’ve see these kinds of purposely over-the-top performances.  So far, just coming up with Raising Arizona.  Anything else N. Cage did, I don’t think was on purpose.
  • In another scene later, she does it again!  C’mon!

nurse03

 

 

 

Netflix xilfteN

There has got to be a reason for this.

xilften03Yes, they are in 2 different districts, but surely it would be more efficient to have them all open on the same side.  Soon, some MBA will see that .05 seconds can be trimmed off the handling time and ensure carpal tunnel for everyone.

Or maybe having x% of the envelopes open on the opposite side actually helps prevent carpal tunnel.  Now that’s a corporate idea that would impress me.

Alfred Hitchcock Presents – The Hidden Thing (S1E34)

Al gets off a pretty good one to open this episode:AH-Hidden02 Sadly, it is largely downhill from there.

Dana Edwards is making out with his gal Laura in a car parked across from a hamburger stand.  I just get a strange stand-offish vibe from Dana, like maybe he isn’t totally into it.  Could be because he has the androgynous moniker of Dana; also the actor is named Biff — a la the biggest loser in American literature, according to no less a scholar than G. Costanza.

After sharing a smoke, they go across the street to the hamburger stand.  Laura, however, has forgotten her compact (compact what is not specified).  Tragically, she is killed by a hit-and-run driver, but not before this shot which I love so much I am putting it on my Christmas Cards:  rachel02Dana saw the car and the license, but is so distraught by the death of his beard, that he can’t recall either one.  He has taken to spending his days in bed, cared for by his mother (surprisingly, a living woman, not a corpse in the fruit cellar).

He gets a visit from John Hurley, offering to help Dana remember the car and license through hypnosis.  Hurley had similarly lost a son to a H&R driver.  For several days, Dana is reluctant to regress because he would have to relive the accident.  After much persistence from Hurley, he recalls that night with such clarity that it is almost like there is footage of it being replayed.  Anticipating a breakthrough, Hurley has called the investigating officer.

Sure enough, Dana soon remembers the license number.  He gives full credit to Hurley for his help.  The decidedly anti-climactic kicker is that the detective says Hurley did not have a son who was run down, he’s just a police-groupie who frequently shows up on his cases.  “He’s just a nut.”  Cue wacky music.

Almost 60 years later, the dialog below actually provides a more shocking climax than the one shown.

This is the keen analytical mind that enabled him to make detective by age 70.

Post-Post Leftovers:

  • Biff McGuire was in another AHP episode just 3 weeks earlier; the detective was in an episode only 2 weeks earlier.  Were actors really that scarce in 1956?
  • Laura orders a double hamburger because like all actresses from Lillian Gish to Lorelei Gilmore, she does not understand thermodynamics.  Calories in / calories out, ladies.
  • Greater minds than mine have suggested that the driver should have been revealed as one of the other characters.  Really, just about anything would have been better.

Juncture (2007)

Get used to this expression, because you’re going to be seeing a lot of it.juncture01

Maybe it’s not fair to criticize Kristine Blackport for her lack of expression.  Clint Eastwood had a great career based on based on a near-permanent scowl.  Unfortunately, Blackport lacks the gravitas to make this look iconic.  On the other hand, she is attractive enough, and snappy enough, whether in jeans or evening gown, to keep our attention.

She plays Anna Carter, Executive Director for the Lamont Foundation by day, and vigilante by night.  Sometimes also vigilante by day as she is quite the go-getter.  Like Bruce Wayne, she has a family tragedy from her childhood that propels her.  While she lacks the means of Wayne Enterprises, she does have a private jet at her disposal and pretty flexible hours.  She also has a secret — she has 3 months to live, and wants to make them count.  According to IMDb, this was to be the first part of a trilogy.  After 7 years, I’m not holding my breath, but it is a pretty good hook.

We first see Anna on the Golden Gate Bridge, and it is not clear if she is thinking about jumping; possibly even to herself.  But later on a park bench with the bridge still in view, she gets a tip on her first victim.  She tracks a child pornographer to his home and pulls a gun on him.  After dispatching him, she drives back across the bridge because they spent the money to go to San Fran, might as well squeeze 3 scenes out of it.  Oops, a 4th as she tosses the gun into the bay the next morning.

After some exposition of her life and job, she is off to Chicago; which we know because we see the Hancock Building.  In the tenements, where a young size-2 white chick in designer clothes with no track marks will blend right in,  she knocks off a drug-addicted mother whose neglect resulted in the death of her kids.

In Texas, she tracks a judge who got off easy on some DUI deaths.  Unfortunately the bartender who blows into the Judge’s car breathalyzer goes unpunished.  Anna tracks the Judge weaving his way home (or possibly to another bar).  After she forces the Judge off the road to a watery death in a nifty scene, she exhibits this burst of fury and remorse:juncture03judgelakeAgain, maybe unfair — that’s more genuine remorse than Ted Kennedy showed.  OK, I am too harsh as she does yelp on a roller coaster in the next scene.

Here she is holding a gun on a naughty CEO as she rips him a new one for dumping toxic chemicals which led to cancer deaths — as you can see, a passionate subject to her given her condition :junctures04cfogunpoint

And here about to blow away a priest:junctures05priestbelfryWhile there was a certain sameness to her performance, I actually did like her and liked the movie overall.  She was no superhero, and this brought some welcome realism to the genre.  It was a little somber, but there was some suspense, some action, some twists.  It had a little of a Lifetime / Hallmark / Death Wish vibe.  The ending, especially, owes a debt to the Charles Bronson movie.

If you’re looking for gore, this ain’t your pic — it really should have been rated PG-13.  Otherwise, a worthy addition to the revenge canon.

Post-Post Leftovers:

  • That’s it for Hulu — too many commercials.
  • Holy crap, does that director like the left side of the frame.
  • I counted the gunshots — there were only 15.
  • Her friend Chloe is a little flippant with the short-timer comments.
  • At no point do I see the titular juncture.

Ray Bradbury Theater – Skeleton (S2E2)

levy02Hypochondriac Eugene Levy is in the library looking at medical books.  Like his future son Jim in American Pie, he is obsessed with anatomy.  In Levy’s case , however, it is his own and it goes right down to the bone.  So it is a little like his son’s.

waitingroom01He goes to his doctor in a what seems to be a gratuitously bizarre scene.  There is no reason to think this is not a legitimate physician.  In fact, dramatically, he needs to be legit in order to put the next “doctor” into the proper relief.  The waiting room is populated by a man with a neck cast, 2 leg casts, and a halo brace; a punk with spiky hair, a kilt and a skull-print maternity blouse; and a guy in cable-knit sweater.  Although, to be fair, the last guy also seems to have some sort of facial issues; definitely hair issues.

The doctor tells Levy the other patients are nervous enough to be there without him staring at them.  Behind the doctor, Levy sees a window washer that seems to have some significance (but, alas, does not).   The doctor recites Levy’s previous baseless visits, berates his current complaints, lights up a cigarette, and says, “Are you still here?”  Levy tells the doctor that “his office doesn’t even look like a doctor’s office.”  The surly doctor responds, “What do you want?  Pictures of germs on the walls?”  The whole scene reminds me of the “inexplicable malevolence” Jerry Seinfeld talks about in one of the commentaries on the Seinfeld DVDs.

Levy finds a new “Bone Specialist” in the Yellow Pages; how quaint.  In a phone booth; how quaint.  Munigant’s office is also bizarre, more of a museum of bones.  Munigant’s immediate diagnosis is that Levy’s bones do not fit his skin.  Seems reasonable to Levy.  After a scan by a device the Bone Specialist invented, he gives Levy a full size x-ray to take home and study.

In the morning, Levy gets on a scale which helpfully states his weight aloud as, “169 pounds.  You have lost 16 pounds.”  Actually it is 17 lost since the 186 weigh-in at the doctor’s office.  OK, different scales, but why not just make the math work?

Worried that his bones are showing, he goes into a bar and asks a fat guy how to gain weight.  The fat guy makes a little speech that is pretty good, and too profound to sully by relating here.  If you see me in a bar don’t ask me how to lose hair; I will not be as accommodating.

Levy invites  Munigant to make a house-call as his bones are hurting more than ever, he is losing weight, and his wife is unhappy.  He puts Levy in a recliner, has him open his mouth as big as possible, leans in, and simply says, “out.”  Levy awakens and is in agony as somehow his bones begin to disappear from his body.  Or were they already gone when he woke up?

levy10The kicker is fairly botched as Levy’s wife enters and sees him in a heap on the floor, having been completely deboned.  His head seems to have yards of extra skin creating folds around his face.  Sadly, there was no effort to make this monstrosity look like Levy.  It would have been so much more effective — and could have been played for either comedy or horror — just to leave the glasses on, or at least have his famously bushy eyebrows still be prominent.

Munigant is then seen admiring his newly acquired fully intact skeleton as his next patient arrives.  Like many of Bradbury’s works, the science & mechanics of this miracle are less important that the story.

I warmed up to this episode a little more as I was reviewing it.  For one thing, it is hard to take your eyes off Eugene Levy.  He is pretty subdued here, but imminently watchable.  Ultimately, though, it reminded me of how I feel about Night Gallery — with a little more effort, it could have have been a lot better.

I give it 150 out of 206 bones.

Post-Post Leftovers:

  • Eugene Levy has been in 8 American Pie movies.  C’mon, even Chevy Chase said “no” once in a while.
  • The first, slightly less crazy doctor was also a doctor in Thinner.  A mob doctor, see?
  • The second, slightly more crazy doctor claimed to have the skulls of Caesar and Cleopatra.  The actress playing Levy’s wife was in a movie of G.B. Shaw’s play Caesar and Cleopatra.  The actor playing Munigant played Julius Caesar Rat in Faerie Tale Theater.  I know, chills.
  • Whenever I hear an unusual name, I immediately suspect an anagram — Ethan Rom = Other Man, Alucard = Dracula, Spiro Agnew = Grow a Penis, etc.  But for Munigant, I got nothing.  Very curious where that name came from.