The All Time Best Movie Cameos

Coming Soon posted their choices for The 10 Best Movie Cameos.  Using just their choices, here are my top three plus four movie cameos that would have made my list!

A Whole Slew of Alfred Hitchcock Films
Before Stan Lee was appearing in every Marvel movie, Alfred Hitchcock was inserting himself into the background of almost all his films. An older man with an instantly recognizable look, it’s clear to see why Marvel hopped on the opportunity to steal one of Hitchcock’s signature moves.

Pulp Fiction
Christopher Walken is one of the most beloved and praised actors of the back half of the 20th century, so his appearance in Pulp Fiction deserves some recognition for combining one of the most-respected actors and one of the most-revered films. He’s only on-screen for one scene, but it’s a scene that continues to be pored over.

Tropic Thunder
Tom Cruise wearing extensive prosthetics and wearing an unrecognizable getup makes for (easily) one of the best cameos ever. It’s unclear why or how this role came to be, but we welcome it wholeheartedly (and long for the once-rumored spinoff film about his character).

Now for my favorite cameos that didn’t make their list…

Staying Alive: Director Sly Stallone appears just for seconds as he and Tony Manero (John Travolta) bump into each other while walking down a busy sidewalk.

Young Frankenstein: Gene Hackman goes uncredited in one of the funniest scenes in one of the funniest movies of all time.

Glengarry Glen Ross: Alec Baldwin shows up for a memorable scene that sets up everything to follow.  ABC – Always Be Closing.

Zombieland: Bill Murray.  Need I say more?

John Carpenter’s “They Live” Trivia

Matthew Jackson and Mental Floss present 10 Killer Facts About They Live.  Here are three of my favorites…

1. THEY LIVE WAS INSPIRED BY A COMIC BOOK ADAPTATION OF A SHORT STORY.
They Live is an adaptation of Ray Nelson’s science fiction short story “Eight O’Clock in the Morning,” which was originally published in the 1960s. But John Carpenter’s more direct inspiration was an Eclipse Comics adaptation of Nelson’s story, which he stumbled across in the mid-1980s. Intrigued by the idea of aliens enslaving humanity, Carpenter then sought out the original prose work.

“‘Eight O’Clock in the Morning is’ a D.O.A.-type of story, in which a man is put in a trance by a stage hypnotist,” Carpenter told Starlog in 1988. “When he awakens, he realizes that the entire human race has been hypnotized, and that alien creatures are controlling humanity. He has only until eight o’clock in the morning to solve the problem.”

Though Carpenter liked the idea of the entire populace being controlled subliminally by an alien menace, he wasn’t too keen on the hypnotism idea. He bought the rights to the story and began adapting it, changing hypnotism to the very 1980s notion of Americans being controlled via subliminal messaging.

3. JOHN CARPENTER WROTE THEY LIVE UNDER AN ALIAS.
Carpenter has always been a multi-hyphenate kind of filmmaker, directing, writing, producing and scoring his movies. But by the time They Live came around, he’d grown a little disillusioned with the idea of continuing to have his name plastered absolutely everywhere. With that in mind, he decided that he’d use a pseudonym for They Live’s screenplay credit.

“It was a reaction to seeing my name all over these movies,” Carpenter explained to Entertainment Weekly in 2012. “I think the height of it was Christine. It was like, John Carpenter’s Christine, directed by John Carpenter, music by John Carpenter … what an egotist!”

Carpenter chose the pseudonym Frank Armitage, which is a character from H.P. Lovecraft’s story “The Dunwich Horror,” which he picked “just because I love Lovecraft.”

5. THEY LIVE’S MOST FAMOUS LINE CAME FROM RODDY PIPER.

Even if you’ve never seen They Live, you’ve probably heard someone at some point in your life say: “I have come here to chew bubble gum and kick ass, and I’m all out of bubble gum.” Ever since Nada delivered that line in the film, it’s maintained a life even beyond They Live, becoming one of the most popular and frequently quoted lines in all of pop culture. According to Carpenter, the line came straight from Piper, who kept a notebook full of quips like that to use in his wrestling promos.

“Traveling all around the country wrestling different people, those guys come up with a lot of stuff to hype matches in interviews. They have to come up with one-liners. Roddy had a book full of them that he carried with him,” Carpenter explained. “He’d sit on a plane and come up with these things. He gave me the book when I was writing the script and that was the best one in there. I think he was wrestling Playboy Buddy Rose and he may have said the line then.”

According to Piper, the line actually didn’t enter the picture until the day they shot the scene, but either way both men agree that he wrote it.

“The Friends of Eddie Foyle” Gets the Cinephilia and Beyond Treatment

If you’re a crime film fan, you’ve probably seen The Friends of Eddie Coyle.  If you haven’t seen it, you should. 

The Friends of Eddie Coyle was based on George V. Higgins’ crime novel of the same name. The movie was directed by Peter Yates and starred Robert Mitchum and thankfully, gets the Cinephilia and Beyond Treatment in The Friends of Eddie Coyle: Peter Yates’ Crime Masterpiece.  Click over and enjoy!

Sly Stallone Retrospective by Chris Bumbray of JoBlo.com!

Chris Bumbray, over at JoBlo.com has a new series where he takes a look at the careers of famous movie stars.  As you’ve probably already figured out, this week he turns the spotlight on Sly Stallone.

Bumbray does an excellent job with his retrospective and analysis.  No nits to pick except I’d rate Stop of My Mom Will Shoot! as Sly’s worst  (not Rhinestone) and of course, everyone knows how much I enjoy Sly’s Get Carter.

RIP – Franco Columbu

Franco Columbu died yesterday of an unspecified illness.  He was 78.

Columbu was a boxer, weightlifter, bodybuilding champion, actor and chiropractor.  Franco met Arnold Schwarzenegger in the 1960s and they became lifelong friends, with Columbu serving as Arnold’s best man when he married Maria Shriver in 1986.  Columbu is a two-time Mr. Olympia Bodybuilding Champion.  He also appeared in Stay Hungry, Pumping Iron, The Terminator, Conan the Barbarian, The Running Man, Big Top Pee-wee, as well as other movies and television shows.  In addition, Franco trained many celebrities (including helping Sly Stallone get in shape for Rambo and other films).

Our thoughts and prayers go out to Franco Columbu’s family, friends and fans.

Howard Chaykin’s Solomon Kane!

One of the first characters I associated Howard Chaykin with was Solomon Kane.  Kane was created by Robert E. Howard (best known for Conan the Barbarian).  Kane may have created him but when I think of Solomon Kane I always think of Chaykin first.

Thanks to Black & White and Bronze you can read Rattle of Bones by Roy Thomas and Howard Chaykin which first appeared in Savage Sword of Conan #18 (April 1977).

Sylvester Stallone’s 10 Best Movies, According To Rotten Tomatoes

ScreenRant posted Sylvester Stallone’s 10 Best Movies, According To Rotten Tomatoes.  Below is their list and my rankings using just their top ten.  Regular readers would know that Get Carter would have definitely made my list.

ScreenRant

Craig

10. Rocky II 10. Antz
9. Nighthawks 9. Death Race 2000
8. Cop Land 8. Rocky II
7. Rocky Balboa 7. Creed II
6. Death Race 2000 6. Rocky Balboa
5. Creed II 5. First Blood
4. First Blood 4. Nighthawks
3. Antz 3. Cop Land
2. Rocky 2. Creed
1. Creed 1. Rocky

Rex Stout’s Nero Wolfe

If you’ve never read a Rex Stout Nero Wolfe story, you should.  You’d be in for a treat. 

Stout did something unique: he married the British Golden Age, puzzle-solving school of mystery fiction with the street-smart, hardboiled, thoroughly American detective novels of Chandler and Hammett to come up with a seamless blend of thought and action, narrated in a prose that was unfailingly literate, witty, and engaging.

Stout’s Nero Wolfe stories are entertaining with just the right mix of action, mystery and humor.  Neil Nyren (who I quoted above) provides an in-depth look at Stout and his stories at Crime Reads.  Check out Rex Stout: A Crime Reader’s Guide to the Classics.

Ms. Tree: One Mean Mother

I love this cover to Ms. Tree: One Mean Mother.  Ms. Tree was a comic series created by Max Allan Collins and Terry Beatty that first appeared back in the 1980’s!

I have to admit I didn’t get the title’s pun until my buddy, Jim Ivey pointed it out to me: Ms. Tree = Mystery.  He thought I was messing with him, but I truly missed it.  At any rate, Ms. Tree tales are being reprinted by Hard Case Crime.  Here’s how the first is being solicited…

When her private detective husband is murdered by the Muerta crime family, Ms. Tree takes over the business! Cold, calculating, and tough as nails, no case is too small, no violence too extreme, so long as a mystery is solved… and Ms. Tree is paid.

The creation of award-winning crime and comics writer Max Allan Collins (Mickey Spillane’s Mike Hammer, Road To Perdition, Quarry’s War), illustrated by co-creator and pulp legend Terry Beatty (Johnny Dynamite, Mike Danger, Rex Morgan M.D.)!

Collects five classic Ms. Tree stories for the first time since the ’80s, plus the rare Ms. Tree prose story “Inconvenience Store”!

The “D-Day” Trailer is Here!

The D-Day trailer is here!

Some people called it a suicide, but for the Rangers of the 2nd Battalion, that’s another word for #mission. When an elite group of American #soldiers are ordered to take out a series of German machine gun nests, they find themselves blindly venturing into hostile territory. Outnumbered and outgunned they must risk life and limb as they cross treacherous terrain, never knowing where the enemy might be hiding.