The pitch:

Lolo is an actress and is working hard to make it. She just landed the lead role in a feature film, a high point for her. When her father learns that he has cancer and behaves like a child about it, the machine jams and everything goes haywire. Her quest for serenity turns into a quest for identity.

A comedy drama created by, written by, co-produced and co-directed by, and starring Eléonore Costes.

Eleonore Costes in episode 6

image host

Muriel Combeau in episode 1

image host

Defoe’s film clips are here. Combeau also offers a very brief flash of her buns and pubes.

Afterthoughts about Shatner’s birthday:

You know, the verb “to suck” has taken over the world. When I used to say, a few decades ago, “I suck at Asteroids,” women actually got offended. Now everyone says “suck” on family shows and “Meet the Press.” In fact, most of the impolite slang we used in New York and New Jersey in the 1960s has been adopted and legitimized by mainstream society. The only thing they haven’t adopted from our old slang is the traditional “this” response. Example? The priest says, “Dominus vobiscum.” Then you say, “Dominus THIS, Padre,” and grab your crotch. This works on all occasions and as a response to any comment. (Or, as an alternative, you can grab your crotch and say “I got your Dominus right here, Padre”, but my friends found this variant too verbose.). To relate this to the “suck” verb, one guy would say, “your cigar sucks,” and the other guy would grab his crotch and say, “suck THIS.” There you have plenty of merriment and an instant Algonquin Round Table of witty repartee for all occasions.

The co-opting of “suck” by the mainstream culture leads to a lack of gradations. Is it fair to say that Cher’s singing sucks, when this is the same way you would describe Yoko Ono? Of course not. So I therefore propose four degrees of suckeration. To focus on the musicians for a minute, here’s how it would work if they were members of your family.

  • First degree of suckeration: people who are OK, but not really as good as you might expect from the success they’ve achieved. An example would be Jewel. If you got all your cousins together, Jewel would sing about as well as the best one. She has a pleasant voice, can carry a tune, knows some guitar chords, looks good. She’s OK, you just can’t quite figure out why she is a star and 100 million other equally talented women are not.
  • Second degree of suckeration: people who really aren’t good enough to be doing what they do professionally. If you assembled your cousins together and had a karaoke contest, they would finish somewhere in the middle of the pack. Cher and Jerry Vale would be in this category.
  • Third degree of suckeration: people who don’t have a clue how to do what they are supposed to be professionals at. Your most incompetent cousin could do it as well. Sid Vicious belongs in this group.
  • Fourth degree of suckeration: people who are so bad that they not only can’t do what they are supposed to be good at, but they cause nausea and/or laughter when they try to do it. If these people were your cousins, you wouldn’t even admit it. And if you had a family karaoke contest, you’d have a kindly aunt distract them to another room to look at baby pictures. Examples would include Carol Channing, Yoko Ono, and Shatner.

Shatner is an excellent illustration of this principle, because you might casually say “Bill Shatner sucks as an actor,” and/or “Bill Shatner sucks as a singer,” but the word “suck” doesn’t really mean the same thing in both sentences, does it? As an actor he’s only a first degree suck. He has even shown brief flashes of genius. As a singer, however, he’s not only guilty of fourth degree suckeration, but he could actually be in the fifth degree, since he pretty much sucks deeper and harder than anybody has ever sucked in the history of music. In fact, if Shatner had lived before the age of recording, and your grandpa told you how bad he was, you would think the old boy was exaggerating. Even if you believed your gramps, you would not be capable of imagining how bad the performing was, because there is nothing else to compare it to. If the recordings of Shatner did not exist, we simply could not conceive of anything that bad. In a sense, ol’ Kirk, as much as Newton and Freud, stretched the very boundaries of human conceptualization.

We owe him so much.

Taken from my review of Game of Pleasure, which has nothing to do with Shatner other than being to film what Bill is to singing.

Johnny points out:

“There’s a slight drop-off in the number of movies this year but a higher number of movies that are mostly long forgotten. To finish this update I had to make videos from 8 movies that I hadn’t done yet and ended up doing so much more than I was planning. This looks like the norm for the rest of the 80s as I’ve probably only watched about half of what’s available. So the following updates are going to be a struggle until we get to the 90s.”

To find Johnny’s previous updates, just scroll down from 1983.

Pretty decent choices, but not perfect – more of a conversation starter. It’s difficult to defend The Lone Ranger or Green Lantern, but Knight of Cups should be on the list, and no list on this subject is complete without Cats, which is arguably the worst big-budget movie ever (2.8 at IMDb, 19% at Rotten Tomatoes), and each of those movies cost at least twice as much as Hansel and Gretel.

Will anyone be able to make a decent film about Green Lantern? I’ve always found him to be one of the stranger creations of DC. On the one hand he wields almost unlimited cosmic power, capable of defeating Superman himself. On the other hand, what if his nemesis is dressed and face-painted entirely in yellow? Then he’s just some guy wandering around with a cheesy ring and a Coleman lantern.

This has actually happened in the stories. Batman and Robin once battled the ol’ Lantern while they were painted yellow in a yellow room. Robin bullied Lantern, took his ring away, and would have beaten him to death had Batman not intervened.

So he can either defeat Superman or get his ass kicked by Robin. It all depends on the spectrum.

“In brightest day, in blackest night,
No evil shall escape my sight.
Let those who worship evil’s might
Beware my power, Green Lantern’s light.
I crush the plans of each evil fellow
Unless, of course, he’s wearing yellow.”