Sly Stallone as Rambo by Jarrod “The Yardsale Artist” Alberich!

Jarrod Alberich aka The Yard Sale Artist created the Sly Stallone as Rambo piece for pick-up at HeroesCon.  I’ve known Jarrod for years.  He’s a fun guy and an easy artist to deal with.

Jarrod calls himself The Yard Sale Artist because he uses materials that he finds at yard sales, thrift stores and so on. When Jarrod comes across books that with torn covers, missing pages, etc., instead of discarding them, he repurposes the pages for art.  This drawing came from a Rambo movie adaptation novel.

“The In-Laws” (1979) starring Peter Falk & Alan Arkin / Z-View

The In-Laws (1979)

Director: Arthur Hiller

Screenplay: Andrew Bergman

Stars: Peter Falk, Alan Arkin, Richard Libertini, Nancy Dussault, Penny Peyser, Arlene Golonka, Paul L. Smith, Carmine Caridi, James Hong, David Paymer and Ed Begley Jr.

Tagline: While the Father of the Bride was extracting a molar from Mrs. Cohen, the Father of the Groom was extracting $20 Million from the U.S. Mint. And this was only the beginning.

The Plot…

Dr. Sheldon “Shelley” Kornpett’s daughter is about to marry the son of Vince Ricardo.  Shelley likes his future daughter-in-law and her mother.  He has concerns about Vince though.  Shelley thinks Vince tells tall tales (to put it politely) and might even be crazy.

So when Vince comes to Shelley’s office and asks a favor, he’s hesitant.  Vince promises it will just take five minutes.  Not wanting to create waves Shelley agrees.  Soon he’s involved with money stolen from the US Mint, and chased by crooks and the CIA.  Oh, and the wedding is tomorrow.

Serpentine!  Serpentine!

Thoughts (beware of spoilers)…

The In-Laws showcases David Paymer’s feature film debut.

Fran Drescher, who gained fame in The Nanny, was originally cast as the daughter but was fired shortly after filming began.  The part was recast with Penny Peyser.

I saw The In-Laws during it’s original theatrical run and loved it.  I re-watched it recently and am happy to say it holds up.

The In-Laws (1979) rates 4 of 5 stars.

“Eichmann” (2007) / Z-View

Eichmann (2007)

Director: Robert Young

Screenplay: Snoo Wilson

Stars: Thomas Kretschmann, Troy Garity, Stephen Fry.

Tagline: Husband. Father. Soldier. Monster.

The Plot…

Fifteen years after the end of World War II, Adolf Eichmann was captured.  Although a high  official in the Nazi Party, an officer of the SS and one of the major organisers of Hitler’s Final Solution, Eichmann claimed to have no knowledge of the holocaust and was just as a small, insignificant bureaucrat—a “little cog in the machinery” who followed orders.

Captain Avner Less, an Israeli police officer, was assigned to interview Eichmann in an effort to get him to self-incriminate.  It will be a battle of wills to get justice served.

Thoughts (beware of spoilers)…

Prior to his capture Adolf Eichmann was the most wanted Nazi war criminal in the world. CIA documents released in 2006, showed that U.S. and West German intelligence knew that Eichmann was alive in Argentina, but fearing he might expose former comrades who had been useful to the CIA and the German government, did nothing.

Eichmann (2007) rates 3 of 5 stars.

“Normal” starring Bob Odenkirk, Henry Winkler and Lena Headey – The Trailer is Here!

The trailer for Normal is here and I’m on board.

Deal me in!

In theaters April 17
http://normalthemovie.com/

The latest collaboration between Bob Odenkirk, JOHN WICK creator Derek Kolstad and NOBODY producer Marc Provissiero, director Ben Wheatley’s (FREE FIRE, HIGH RISE) kinetic neo-Western stars Odenkirk as an unassuming substitute sheriff with a troubled past who, after moving to a small, sleepy town, responds to a bank robbery and unknowingly uncovers something far more explosive.

For Sheriff Ulysses (Odenkirk), his provisional posting to the quaint Midwestern American town of Normal was meant to be a welcome respite from both his marital woes and recent moral injuries in the line of duty. But when a botched bank robbery interrupts the municipality’s tranquil pace, a dark secret is inadvertently exposed, and Ulysses soon discovers that the town is anything but its namesake.

Starring Bob Odenkirk, Lena Heady and Henry Winkler

Directed by Ben Wheatley

“The AI Doc: Or How I Became An Apocaloptmist” – The Trailer is Here!

The trailer for The AI Doc: Or How I Became An Apocaloptmist is here.  I want to see this film!

“The most urgent film of our time.”

THE AI DOC: OR HOW I BECAME AN APOCALOPTIMIST is only in theaters March 27. Watch the trailer now.

From the Academy Award®-winning filmmakers behind Everything Everywhere All at Once and Navalny; a father-to-be tries to figure out what is happening with all this AI insanity. The AI Doc: Or How I Became an Apocaloptimist is a hand-made, eye-opening documentary about the most powerful technology humanity has ever created… and what’s at stake if we get it wrong.

“Battling Butler” (1926) directed by and starring Buster Keaton / Z-View

Battling Butler (1926)

Director: Buster Keaton

Screenplay: Al Boasberg, Lex Neal, Charles Smith, Paul Gerard Smith; based on Battling Butler
(a 1922 play) by Stanley Brightman, Austin Melford

Stars: Buster Keaton, Sally O’Neil, Walter James.

Tagline: KEATON wins the laugh championship of the world in this greatest of all screen comedies! A love story. A prize-fight story! A knockout – and how! You can’t stop laughing!

The Plot…

Alfred Butler has grown up with all the luxuries a wealthy family can provide.  Alfred, although a young man, even has a personal assistant.  Alfred is a small, gentle young man who his father believes needs to toughen up.  So Alfred and his valet decide to go roughing it in the woods.

While camping Alfred meets a poor young woman who lives with her family in a mountain shack.  It’s love at first sight.  The woman’s brothers are tough mountain men.  In order to impress them, Alfred’s valet says that Alfred is a famous fighter called ‘Battling Butler”.  Alfred reluctantly goes along when it becomes clear that the family is impressed.

Alfred never dreamed he’d really have to enter the ring against the real “Battling Butler”.

Let’s get ready to rumble!

Thoughts (beware of spoilers)…

Battling Butler was released the same year as Keaton’s classic The General.  Ironically, The General, during it’s initial release, was considered a huge flop, while Battling Butler became Keaton’s second biggest hit.

Battling Butler (1926) rates 3 of 5 stars.

RIP: Robert Duvall

Robert Duvall died yesterday at the age of 95.  No cause of death was given.

Robert Duvall’s mother was an amateur actress and his father a Rear Admiral in the US Navy.  Mr. Duvall graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in drama from Principia College in Elsah, Illinois.  He then served in the US Army.  During his stint in the service, Mr. Duvall acted in amateur production.  He felt he had found something he was good at.

Mr. Duvall then, on the GI Bill, studied acting at the Neighborhood Playhouse School of the Theatre in New York City.  Fellow classmates included James Caan as well as Dustin Hoffman and Gene Hackman who also became roomates with him.

Mr. Duvall’s professional acting career began doing summer theater at the Gateway Playhouse in Bellport, Long Island, New York.  He played a pilot in Laughter in the Stars.  Many other stage roles and bigger parts followed.  Mr. Duvall’s first television role was on Armstrong Circle Theater in the episode titled The Jailbreak.   His first feature film role was as Boo Radley in To Kill a Mockingbird.  By this time Robert Duvall was making regular guest appearances on television.  Soon after, his career would take off in feature films.  He was equally adept at lead or supporting roles.

Over the course of his career Robert Duvall continued to act, direct, write and produce.  Some of the Awards he was nominated for and/or received include:

  • 1973 Academy Award Nominee as Best Actor in a Supporting Role for The Godfather.
  • 1980 Academy Award Nominee as Best Actor in a Supporting Role for Apocalypse Now.
  • 1980 Golden Globe Winner as Best Actor in a Supporting Role – Motion Picture for Apocalypse Now (Tied with Melvyn Douglas for Being There)
  • 1981 Academy Award Nominee as Best Actor in a Leading Role for The Great Santini.
  • 1984 Golden Globe Winner as Best Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture – Drama – Tender Mercies (Tied with Tom Courtenay for The Dresser)
  • 1984 Academy Award Winner as Best Actor in a Leading Role for Tender Mercies.
  • 1989 Primetime Emmy Nominee as Outstanding Lead Actor in a Miniseries or a Special – Lonesome Dove – “Gus McCrae”.
  • 1990 Golden Globe Winner as Best Performance by an Actor in a Miniseries or Motion Picture Made for Television – Lonesome Dove
  • 1993 Primetime Emmy Nominee as Outstanding Lead Actor in a Miniseries or a Special – Stalin –  “Joseph Stalin”.
  • 1993 Golden Globe Winner as Best Performance by an Actor in a Miniseries or Motion Picture Made for Television – Stalin
  • 1997 Primetime Emmy Nominee as Outstanding Lead Actor in a Miniseries or a Special – The Man Who Captured Eichmann –  “Adolf Eichmann”.
  • 1998 Academy Award Nominee as Best Actor in a Leading Role for The Apostle.
  • 1999 Academy Award Nominee as Best Actor in a Supporting Role for A Civil Action.
  • 1999 Golden Globe Nominee as Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role in a Motion Picture – A Civil Action
  • 2007 Golden Globe Nominee as Best Performance by an Actor in a Miniseries or a Motion Picture Made for Television – Broken Trail
  • 2007 Primetime Emmy Winner as Outstanding Miniseries – Broken Trail – Shared with: Stanley M. Brooks, Rob Carliner, Chad Oakes, Walter Hill, Damian Ganczewski
  • 2007 Primetime Emmy Winner as Outstanding Lead Actor in a Miniseries or Movie – Broken Trail – “Prentice Ritter”.
  • 2015 Golden Globe Nominee as Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role in a Motion Picture – The Judge
  • 2015 Academy Award Nominee as Best Actor in a Supporting Role for The Judge.

Some of the television projects that feature Robert Duvall acting include: Armstrong Circle Theater; Playhouse 90; Great Ghost Tales; Cain’s 100; Shannon; Alfred Hitchcock Presents; Naked City (4 episodes); The Untouchables; Route 66 (3 episodes); The Twilight Zone; The Virginian; Stoney Burke; Arrest and Trial; The Lieutenant; Kraft Suspense Theater; The Outer Limits (3 episodes); The Fugitive (3 episodes); Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea; The Defenders (3 episodes); Bob Hope Presents; Hawk; The Felony Squad; Shane; Fame is the Name of the Game; The Time Tunnel (2 episodes); T.H.E. Cat (2 episodes); Combat (3 episodes); Cimarron Strip; The Wild Wild West; Run for Your Life; Judd for the Defense; Mod Squad; The F.B.I. (5 episodes); MASH; Ike: The War Years (3 episodes); The Terry Fox Story; Lonesome Dove (4 episodes); Stalin and The Man Who Captured Eichmann.

Some feature films that Robert Duvall include: To Kill a Mockingbird; The Chase; The Detective; Bullitt; True Grit; The Rain People; Lawman; TH1138; The Godfather; The Great Northfield Minnesota Raid; Joe Kidd; Badge 373; The Outfit; The Conversation; The Godfather II; We’re Not the Jet Set (director); Breakout; The Killer Elite; The Seven-Per-Cent Solution; Network; The Eagle Has Landed; The Greatest; Invasion of the Body Snatchers; Apocalypse Now; The Great Santini; True Confessions; Angelo, My Love (writer/director); Tender Mercies; The Natural; Colors; Days of Thunder; Newsies; Falling Down; Geronimo: An American Legend; Wrestling Ernest Hemmingway; Phenomenom; Sling Blade; The Apostle (writer/director/star); Deep Impact; A Civil Action; Gone in 60 Seconds; The Sixth Day; John Q; Assassination Tango (writer/director/star); Open Range; Secondhand Lions; Thank You for Smoking; The Road; Get Low; Crazy Heart; Jack Reacher; The Judge; Wild Horses (writer/director/star); Hustle and The Pale Blue Eye.

I probably first saw Robert Duvall acting in To Kill a Mockingbird.  If it wasn’t there it could have been on so many different television shows I watched as a kid.  Mr. Duvall was so great in so many roles it is hard to pick a favorite.  So I’ll pick productions that feature him in parts I never grow tired of: To Kill a Mockingbird; The Godfather (Parts I and II); Apocalypse Now; The Great Santini; Open Range and Lonesome Dove.  Robert Duvall was without a doubt one of our greatest actors.

Out thoughts and prayers go out to Robert Duvall’s family, friends and fans.

“His & Hers” (2026) starring Tessa Thompson & Jon Bernthal / Z-View

His & Hers (2026)

Developed by: William Oldroyd; based on HIS & HERS by Alice Feeney

Directors:

  • William Oldroyd (Eps. 1-2; 6)
  • Anja Marquardt (Eps. 3-5)

Teleplay:

  • William Oldroyd (Eps. 1; 3)
  • Tori Sampson (Ep. 2)
  • Erika Sheffer (Ep. 3)
  • Dee Johnson (Ep. 4)
  • William Oldroyd and Tori Sampson  (Ep. 5)
  • Bill Dubuque (Ep. 6)

Stars: Tessa Thompson, Jon Bernthal, Pablo Schreiber, Marin Ireland, Sunita Mani, Rebecca Rittenhouse, Crystal Fox, Kristen Maxwell, Leah Merritt, Tiffany Ho, Isabelle Kusman, Dave Maldonado and Chris Bauer.

Tagline: None.

The Plot…

A murder brings television news reporter Anna Andrews back to her small hometown.  Her estranged husband, Jack is a Detective working the case.  Things take a turn when Anna finds evidence that Jack may have been the killer.  At the same time Jack is finding clues pointing to Anna as the murderer.

Thoughts (beware of spoilers)…

I’m a Tessa Thompson and Jon Bernthal fan.

Pablo Schreiber and Chris Bauer co-starred together in Season 2 of The Wire.

As we were watching I told my wife who the real murderer was.  She laughed and said that would be too crazy.  I then said, “No, it’s really _____.”  My wife replied, “That would be even more out there.”  Guess what?  I wasn’t wrong.

His & Hers (2026) rates 3 of 5 stars.

Otis Frampton Goes to “Paradise Alley”

Otis Frampton did his take on Sly from Paradise Alley way back in 2009 when every Sunday [okay, ALMOST, every Sunday], Otis had a live UStream broadcast that he called the 7×7 Sunday.

Lucky fans could get a head sketch of ANY character drawn live by Otis on a 7X7 inch bristol board for 7 bucks postage paid. It was the best deal going.  Watching Otis drawing live and interacting with fans kept me up even if I wasn’t a sketch winner.  As you can see above, sometimes I was.

Good times!