Monday, November 29, 2010

Empire Strikes Back Director, Kershner Dies at 87


Irvin Kershner, the man who was responsible for directing the best film in the entire STAR WARS saga, The Empire Strikes Back, has died at the age of 87:

Irvin Kershner, who directed the Star Wars sequel "The Empire Strikes Back" and the James Bond film "Never Say Never Again," has died. He was 87.
Kershner died during the weekend but no other details were immediately available, his agent, Derek Maki, said on Monday.

Kershner already had made a number of well-received movies when he was hired by George Lucas to direct "Empire," which was the second produced film but fifth in the "Star Wars" chronology.
The 1980 production was a darker story than the original. In it, hero Luke Skywalker loses a hand and learns that villain Darth Vader is his father. The movie initially got mixed reviews but has gone on to become one of the most critically praised.

Kershner told Vanity Fair in October that he tried to give the sequel more depth than the original.
"When I finally accepted the assignment, I knew that it was going to be a dark film, with more depth to the characters than in the first film," he said. "It took a few years for the critics to catch up with the film and to see it as a fairy tale rather than a comic book."

Kershner said he had only one sharp disagreement with Lucas. The script originally called for the heroine, Princess Leah, to tell space pilot Han Solo "I love you" and for him to reply "I love you, too."
"I shot the line and it just didn't seem right for the character of Han Solo," Kershner said.
Instead, actor Harrison Ford improvised the reply: "I know."
Lucas wanted the original line but after test previews agreed to leave in Ford's reply, which has gone on to be one of the best-known lines in the series.
The Philadelphia-born Kershner had both musical and photographic training and worked as a freelance illustrator before he turned to filmmaking. He graduated from the University of southern California film school and in the 1950s made U.S. government informational films in Greece, Turkey and the Middle East.

He directed a number of noted features in the 1960s and 1970s, including "A Fine Madness" with Sean Connery, Joanne Woodward and Jean Seberg, "The Flim-Flam Man" with George C. Scott, "Loving" with George Segal and Eva Marie Saint, and "The Eyes of Laura Mars" with Faye Dunaway.
Besides "Empire," his big-budget work included the 1983 James Bond movie "Never Say Never Again" with Connery and "Robocop 2" in 1990.
Kershner also was an occasional actor. He played the priest Zebedee in Martin Scorsese's "The Last Temptation of Christ."

Sunday, November 28, 2010

Leslie Neilson Dead at 84

Canadian comedy legend, Leslie Neilson, who brought us such classic lines as, "I'm not joking and don't call me Shirley," from notable movies as "Airplane!", "The Naked Gun" series and "Dracula: Dead and Loving It," as well as the Police Squad televison series has died at the age of 84.

Thursday, November 25, 2010

The Runaways

When the all-girl, teenage hard-rock band The Runaways (Founded by Joan Jett and drummer, Sandy West, which also included lead guitarist Lita Ford, lead singer Cherie Curry (who had great stage presence) and bassist Jackie Fox) were traveling the globe, breaking down barriers and influencing a generation of young girls to play rock and roll, I was a mere boy between the ages of five and eight when they were at their peak. I was just getting into KISS, so how or why would a boy of that age get into a girl band? Well, as I just watched the new movie about the Runaways starring Kristen Stewart and Dakota Fanning, my vague memories were jolted a bit and it made me realize I wish I did. These girls rocked! Even today, listening to songs like Cherry Bomb, You Drive Me Wild (A great blues-based rock song...from anybody) Queens of Noise and I Wanna Be Where the Boys Are fills me with a sort of regret that I wasn't exposed enough to them because now I wish I could see one of their shows. Only now are people like me giving them their critical acclaim and rightful dues.

I don't consciencely remember hearing any of their tunes or seeing any of their pictures in any magazines (then again, back then there weren't really any radio stations playing them) but I must have in between shots of KISS, Peter Frampton, Cheap Trick and other acts of the day in the magazines of the time. I only heard Cherry Bomb for the first time in about 20 years (at the time) when I purchased the soundtrack for the 70s high school flick, Dazed and Confused.

The movie of their short-lived career as a band released back in April of this year has really gotten me nostalgic of late and I've started to rediscover them. I've brushed up on their tunes from four studio releases (The Runaways, Queens of Noise, Waiting for the Night and And Now...The Runaways and a very good live album simply entitled, Live from Japan and have ordered two of them from Amazon. Like anything I delve into, I'll probably ride this wave for the next six months, defending their accomplishments and relevance from naysayers who claim they were just a footnote in music history. Wrong! If I have to mention their breaking of the glass ceiling, their influence to this day and their music, most of which still stands up despite it being bare-bones, three chord rock (which is probably the reason for their music's staying power and attractiveness) I'll be here all day and night.

They started in 1975 and broke up in 1979 due to musical differences after the departure of lead singer, Cherie Currie and bassist Jackie Fox (Nee Fuchs) and the manipulation and mismanagement of Kim Fowley. Jett and Ford went on to success with solo careers and are still rockin' today, although Ford took a 13-year hiatus to get married, raise a family and live on a "deserted island" in the Caribbean. Currie went on and tried acting (she was in the 1980 release Foxes with Jodie Foster and a small part in the Twilight Zone feature, plus other cameos on television) and is now a chainsaw artist in California. Fox went to law school and is now an entertainment lawyer.

But it is Sandy West's life after the Runaways that not only makes me sad, but almost angry that she couldn't have a second life in music. She was one of the best musicians in the band (and hands down the best female drummer in rock history, if not one of the best, period) and aside from Jett, probably the most talented out of all of them, including Ford. West continued her association with John Alcock (the band's manager after Fowley) once the group disbanded. She and Ford attempted to record some music, but nothing materialized. She formed formed The Sandy West Band and toured California intermittently throughout the '80s and '90s. She also did session work with John Entwistle of The Who and became a drum teacher.

However, with no residuals or royalties coming in and in financial troubles she was forced to enter a life of organized crime for a short time. She was in and out of jail numerous times and all she wanted was to have her band reunite one more time. In the documentary, Edgeplay: A Film About the Runaways (produced and directed by another former bassist, Victory Tischler-Blue (aka Vickie Blue, their second bassist to quit) West describes she worked mostly in construction, and spent a small amount of time as a bartender and a veterinary assistant. In other parts of the Edgeplay interviews, she alludes to the fact that she engaged in criminal activity in order to make ends meet (e.g., she describes how she had to break someones arm for money they owed). She wraps up the interview nearly in tears, still confused as to why The Runaways couldn't get back together and keep playing. By her own admission in 2004, she never got over the band's demise. "We were an awesome band!" In a more poignant segment, West says, "It still blows my mind that we can't get together for a world tour and a great album. Why? Aren't they sad we broke up? Don't they miss playing with each other? Can you do it for me? Or is that being greedy? Am I asking too much?" Clearly West was the most affected by the Runaways break up and still hadn't gotten over it nearly 30 years after the fact. Rumors of a Runaways reunion flared up a couple of times over the last few years, but although initially interested, ultimately both were nixed by Ford.

Unfortunately, it will now never happen because in 2005, West was diagnosed with lung cancer, which later spread to her brain, and she died on October 21, 2006 at the age of 47. Jett said in a statement, “We shared the dream of girls playing rock and roll. Sandy was an exuberant and powerful drummer,” adding, “I am overcome from the loss of my friend. I always told her we changed the world.” Currie said, "Sandy West was by far, the greatest female drummer in the history of rock and roll. No one could compete or even come close to her, but the most important was her heart. Sandy West loved her fans, her friends and family almost to a fault. She would do absolutely anything for the people she loved. It will never be the same for me again to step on a stage, because Sandy West was the best and I will miss her forever."

It's really weird that I feel empathy for someone I never met and wasn't really aware of her accomplishments made to rock and roll. But just seeing what the band meant to her and all that music that could have been makes me sad. She was good. Really good. There were not many times when you would catch her without a smile on her face when behind her kit. She really loved this band and all she wanted was to play together with her sisters just one more time. "All I wanted to do is be a drummer in a rock band," she once said.

Like she said. Why couldn't they get back together? Why?

Albums by The Runaways:

The Runaways, (1976)
Queens of Noise, (1977)
Live in Japan, (1977)
Waitin' for the Night, (1977)
And Now... The Runaways (international release title), (1978)
Flaming Schoolgirls ("odds-and-sods" compilation), (1980)
Little Lost Girls, (re-sequenced U.S. version of And Now... The Runaways), (1981)
Born to be Bad (early demos compilation), (1993)
20th Century Masters - The Millennium Collection: The Best of The Runaways (1999)
The Runaways-The Mercury Albums Anthology (2010)



If you would like some more Runaways stories, check out this blog for reproduced Jackie Fox Runaways stories and if you want to check out a review of Edgeplay and a interview with the director, Victory Tischler-Blue (former bassist after Jackie Fox) look here for Part 1, Part 2, Part 3 and Part 4. If you really love the Runaways and want to remember them from the 70s, you probably don't want to watch this documentary seeing that if forgoes, if unintentionally, the sweetness and saccharine of usual rock and roll bios and reveals the very dark side of the industry, culminating in some very real, very sad residual feelings and memories for some of the girls, especially Sandy West. The film was co-produced by Jackie Fuchs (Fox) as well as her being Blue's attorney.

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Hooker Complaint Gets Idiot Arrested

If you went out and bought some marijuanna and weren't satisified with the "product," would you call the cops and complain? Of course not, right? Unless you're this moron...

Sunday, November 14, 2010

Let It Be Written Let It Be Done



Demand KISS in Windsor!
KISS in Windsor - Learn more about this Eventful Demand

View all Windsor events on Eventful

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

The Giants Win the Pennant! The Giants Win the Pennant!

Well the World Series pennant actually. It's the Giants sixth baseball crown overall and their first since arriving in San Francisco from New York in 1958. The last time they won the World Series was in 1954 at the old Giants Stadium.