cannonball: son of satan

Happy Holidays, it's another Cannonball deleted scene!  At the diner, Tony fills Lou in on how the other GWA wrestlers have been coping since Captain Cannonball left them in the lurch.  Some notes:

  • I really wanted to keep the Son of Satan character in the movie. He made me laugh and the character was one of the GWA originals. Curtis McGirr filled the role here.

  • SOS has supposedly found work as a bag boy at a super market and it never fails to make me laugh when he wants this lady to make the 3-count for him.

  • I have no idea if anyone saw what we were doing in the Danville Walmart parking lot, but if they did, I'd love to know.

  • The wrestler lying-in-wait is the Cuban Assassin. Another original. You have a keen eye if you noticed there are some flowing blonde locks peeking out from under that hood. Could this guy actually be Randall Powers? Ahhhh, the mysteries of the Assassin!

lookin' good


Jed Gyurina is one of our favorite people and also a film-festival-award-winning force of nature.  He sent us this picture of himself getting things done in the cow pastures of Pennsylvania.  Here he points out the star of his next project, War Cow.  (PS - not really, and I reserve all rights to the concept of War Cow.)  But one fact that cannot be denied is that our friend looks super stylish in that Bizarnival t-shirt!  So, thank you, Jed for spreading the word of Bizarnival up north!

cannonball: pussyfoot



How about another Cannonball deleted scene to start your week?  Bass Adkins unleashes a full-on verbal assault and brings back a word that has been missing from our vocabulary for FAR too long.  Here are a few notes about this scene:
  • There was a belching sheep on the set.  This thing had problems.  I might try to find and upload some of the outtakes he caused because they were plentiful and epic.
  • We shot at dusk, so the colors are all over the place and I haven’t corrected them for this deleted scene.
  • The first time we shot at this location, the farm was being leased by our friend JR Zinner.  When we went back for reshoots, we didn’t know JR wasn’t leasing it anymore.  So, when the current farmer showed up, we had some awkward moments; especially since we had Bass’ shotgun with us.
  • Multiple shoots led to a number of continuity problems.  You'll notice Todd's jacket disappears in a reaction shot.  All of those were eliminated in the final edit.
  • Like many others, this scene was a casualty of the exhaustive and manic effort to trim about 30 minutes off the movie and get it under 100 minutes.  Every second counted, so this bit had to go since it wasn’t necessary for the story.  Just consider how different our lives could have been today had this made the final cut, as Bass Adkins certainly would have vaulted “pussyfoot” into our everyday vocabulary.

7 Most Hated Holiday Movies

As you could probably tell from the tone of my list of favorite holiday movies, I'm not a fan of most films that are festively themed. I feel like most of them are cheesy, monotonous, over done, generic, unoriginal, and mentally insulting. It's like Hollywood knows we'll shell out money to see anything revolving around this time of year no matter how bad it is. 

There are exceptions, but for me, they are few and far between. So I have weeded through the worst of the worst to compile a list of what I personally feel are the 7 most detestable. The ones that make me feel like I've taken a shot in the pumpkin pecan pie hole from a giant yule log right after getting the mistletoe treatment from Ebenezer Scrooge and drinking some Rudolph poo-flavored egg nog. And I hate egg nog.

SANTA CLAUS: THE MOVIE

Ok, let's be honest; at 8 years old, is there a person in the world that you think is more awesome than Santa Claus? So, as an 8 year old, when I hear that there is going to be a movie about the greatest person on the planet, I am pumped! And I distinctly remember, as soon as it was over, thinking "That was the most boring thing I've ever seen in my life. And why was there so much McDonald's in it?" When you're 8, and you notice an obscene amount of product placement, it's ridiculous. And it is still, to this day, the biggest product-placement deal of all time for a movie. Aside from the fact that it was a 2 hour commercial, the story was lame. An evil toy tycoon takes advantage of a misguided elf to industrialize toy production at the North Pole. Yeah, it was as bad as it sounds.

HOME ALONE 2: LOST IN NEW YORK

You might recall that Home Alone was on my list of favorite holiday movies. So why is Home Alone 2 a stinker? For one thing, sequels are rarely as good as the originals anyway. And this one was no exception. For another thing, if you get caught up in the rush of getting to the airport with 15 people and forget someone once, then it's humorously neglectful. If you lose him again under any circumstances for any reason, it's criminally negligent and we are all wanting to call Child Protective Services and get Kevin the heck out of there. To me, a classic example of why you should leave a good thing alone.

THE GRINCH

Please, somebody, anybody, tell me why in the world animated classics keep getting made into live-action movies. Have any of them ever been anything more than massively disappointing? Garfield even got Bill Murray to be the voice of the fat feline, and it was still awful. The Grinch keeps this tradition alive. The problem I have with it is that it takes what I love about the story of the Grinch (Christmas is more than "stuff"; it's about heart) and doesn't practice it in production. EVERYTHING is over done, even if it wasn't necessary. It was almost like they wanted to see how much money they could spend on making the movie, and gave Jim Carrey the green light to be as over-the-top as he wanted, and it just all feels forced. Plus, Max the dog sucked...

SANTA WITH MUSCLES

This movie saved Jingle All the Way from making this list. They were released at exactly the same time in 1996, so I can't help but compare the two. And Santa With Muscles is by far the worst. Which is no easy task. The reason I even saw it in the first place is because I was an incredibly hopeless pro-wrestling geek in the 90's so, anything that involved one of it's icons, I was going to give a shot. So here's the plot: Hulk Hogan plays a fugitive from justice who disguises himself in a Santa costume. After a blow to the head that knocks him silly, he regains consciousness only to believe that he is the jolly old elf himself. So he spends the rest of the movie doing good deeds and making up for his former lifestyle. I don't think I need to say anything else at this point.

PRANCER

There are three movies that I have ever walked out on before it was over:  First Knight, In and Out, and this little gem. I was 12, so I'm not even sure what in the world was going through my mind when I decided I wanted to see a movie about one of Santa's steeds being nursed back to health by a little girl, but it didn't take the full duration of it for me to regret it. I stood up, walked out mid-film, and, in the middle of December, walked home. The film may not be as bad as I remember it, and honestly I can't remember much about it, but from the 12-year-old critic inside of me, it's the worst holiday movie I've ever not finished.

CHRISTMAS WITH THE KRANKS

Has anybody in the history of film benifited more from the big budget, star-studded, campy, generic comedies than Tim Allen? You've got Wild Hogs, you've got For Richer or Poorer, you've got Jungle 2 Jungle, and you've got this holiday stinker. Why, oh why did he feel like he needed to branch away from The Santa Clause franchise? I honestly don't remember even smiling one time during the whole thing. I mean, is it just me, or are Botox jokes in a Christmas movie as out of place as Samuel L. Jackson preaching at a Baptist church. The circumstances surrounding the film's premise just came off kind of stupid and a little erratic. It's basically about a couple who are trying to run from and avoid Christmas. Someone should have told Tim to do the same thing from this script.

IT'S A WONDERFUL LIFE

I am already preparing for the backlash I'm going to get from putting this on the list, but I have to be true to myself and the readers, and I hate this movie. It's a Christmas movie about suicide. A Christmas movie..........about suicide. Aren't the holidays tough enough for some people? Now I know it has a happy ending, and I know that there is a touching, heart warming message. But it's a Christmas movie. About. Suicide. And I know it was the 40's, but there is enough cheese in this movie to supply Kirchoff's deli for a year.

I Love Lucy and The Honeymooners are the only thing from around this time period that I can compare it to, but neither one of them are this blatantly corny. And I don't like corny if it's unintentional. Also, is it just me, or is it a complete, unabashed rip off of Dickens' A Christmas Carol to have a "higher being" show you past, present, and future around Christmas time? "Every time a bell rings, an angel gets his wings." Well, every time this movie is on, Allen gets an impulse to set his TV on fire.

So there they are. My 7 most despised films for the holidays. Hopefully your favorite is not on the list, but if it is, let me have it. I probably deserve it. And please feel free to add to the list in the comments. Or just let me know what you think. I limited my list to movies that had theatrical releases, but feel free to branch out to the made-for-TV awfulness. I'd love to hear about some of those too.

Oh, and MERRY CHRISTMAS from the whole WSF gang. We love ya!

stocking stuffer


We're quickly approaching D-Day or, in this case, C-Day.  Do you have your stocking stuffers?  Guess what.  We have the perfect thing for everyone on your list!  Cannonball DVD's are now only $4.99!!  Yes, that is insane.  The Bomber got one last year and, as you can see, he was stoked.  Every dollar that goes into the WSF coffers goes directly to making more goofy/wonderful productions which means you're funding a questionably worthwhile cause! Autographed copies and pages of the script are also marked down, so go get yours and I'll have it in the mail the very next day!
Learn anything you want to know about Cannonball at CannonballMovie.com

cannonball: straws



Some of you said you'd like to see Cannonball deleted scenes.  Well, here you go.  This first scene was one of the earliest set pieces in the script.  It was an idea Allen and I discussed when we had a very similar experience in the drive-thru line at Sonic.  (Hence, Tony acts out our wish fulfillment here.)  You'll notice that most of the deleted scene edits are rougher around the edges.  This one has uncorrected vignetting around the edges thanks to our janky wide-angle adaptor.  In the final version of the film, each and every one of those shots was corrected with effects software.

Within the next few days, Cannonball DVD's will have a significant price cut, so get hyped and get your dollars ready.

crime spree

Are you

CrimeScening

yet?  This game is spreading its good times across the land, so get on board early.  And, as you can see, the kids love it too.  I believe the current leader in the clubhouse might just be @CharlieCox66's surprise capping of @CamperJohnson for its Dutch angle framing and weird giraffe/mirror-filled background.  (

Find the rules here

.)  It's not everyday that a guy gets gunned down in front of a giraffe.  Well played.

7 Favorite Holiday Films

Every year around the holidays, Hollywood decides they are going to do us all a major solid and pump out a few festive films to make our Halloween candy a little sweeter, Thanksgiving dinner a little more filling, and Christmas presents more shiny and fun. Most of these movies are really, really awful, but some of them are downright unwatchable. However, over the years, there have been a few gems sift through the cracks of boring, mediocre cheesiness. I've put together a list of seven of my favorite holiday movies that I feel are the most enjoyable. And trust me, there ain't many...

HOME ALONE

Kevin McCallister became iconic for all kids in the late 80's/early 90's. He was a voice for those of us who are "tweeners" of Generation X and Y. He was smart, independent, sassy. He took on his bully brother. He took on his creepy uncle. He took on his fear of the furnace in the basement and of his terrifying neighbor. He took on the "Wet Bandits". Kevin was, for me, exactly how I wanted adults to see me as a kid. I'm not sure if he actually gave us more of a voice, but I definitely felt like he did. The script was clever, the story was solid, and there was just enough sappiness to keep the "reason for the season" theme relevant without being dominant. I watched it again this week with my 12-year-old daughter, and it still held up for her and for me.

DIE HARD

One thing you will quickly learn about me, if you don't know already, is that I could possibly be the biggest geek fora really good "Bad A" movie. And there are few guys that have pulled it off as well as Bruce Willis as "John McClane". Any guy that can make the phrase "Yippee-ki-yay" that cool is going to be at the top of the list. Walking across the broken glass bare foot. Sending a "Ho Ho Ho" message in blood on the dead thug's sweat shirt. Talking "I killed your brother" smack to the baddest of the gang while he's LOSING the fight. Just writing this and thinking about all of these classic moments, I'm smiling. And for those that might be questioning whether or not this is an actual "holiday movie", Argyle listening to "Christmas in Hollis" by Run DMC in one of the movies opening scenes should seal it for you. If you still don't agree, then as Johnny McClane would tell you, "Lets see you take THIS under advisement, jerkweed."

CHRISTMAS VACATION

This is easily the most quoted movie in my household. And it doesn't even matter if it's Christmas, July, at Wal-Mart, or in church, we wear the script of Christmas Vacation out! In my opinion, it's the best of the Vacation series. Cousin Eddy (Randy Quaid) is on his "A" game. Chevy Chase's physical comedy, which I believe is typically underrated, is impossible to overlook in this one, and it's at it's best. The demented, nutty old people are perfect caricatures of folks we've spent holidays with. If your family does not have a tradition to watch this one during the holidays, then this is the year to start one.

HALLOWEEN

Here at Walk Softly Films, we love movies (obviously), but our go-to guy for the "horror" genre is definitely Todd. As youngsters, when we would all make the trek to Lexington to go to the comic book shop, Scott and I would go to pick up missing issues of our favorite super hero series. Todd would go to find any back issues of Fangoria that he may have missed somewhere down the line. The guy loves the scary stuff. I tell you that to say this: John Carpenter's Halloween is Todd's favorite horror film. And it's not hard to see why. Michael Myers is the perfect antogonist for a slasher movie: He's not over-the-top, fantastical like Freddy, not "un-killable" to the point of being silly like Jason. He's just realistic enough to be relative. But unstoppable enough to be frightening. Plus, he made a Bill Shatner mask scary. Ok, that's not a big stretch. Which makes it even MORE realistic...

A CHRISTMAS STORY

I'm going to admit it, and I bet I'm not the only one, but on Christmas Eve, when TBS plays a 24-hour marathon of A Christmas Story, our TV is tuned in to every waking moment of it. And we own the DVD. And there are those moments in the movie when, no matter what is going on around us, we all stop and watch it for the seventh or eighth time of the day. It never gets old. Every character in this movie is perfectly cast, and there are not very many movies you can say that about, period. But if/when I do a list of my favorite all-time cinematic characters, it will be tough to leave Darren McGavin's portrayal of "The Old Man" off the list. Everything he does throughout the entire film makes me smile, at least. If you have never done it, just take one run through of this movie and only watch him. Incredible performance in a holiday classic.

GROUNDHOG DAY

Hey, nobody said that the holiday movie had to take place during the typical "holiday season". I am a big Bill Murray fan. When he is at his Bill Murray best, it's two hours of bliss for me. And he brings it in Groundhog Day.

When the guy can take a scene where he commits a murder-suicide with a groundhog and make it not only enjoyable, not only funny, but stinking hilarious, then you know you are going to get a Murray blizzard of goodness. He makes you run the gambit of feelings toward his character,"Phil", where you hate him in the beginning, then feel indifferent towards him, then sympathize with him, until you finally love him. That's not easy to do in 100 minutes, and he makes it look pretty effortless. Add to that the fact that the script, although corny at times, delivers a solid, original, creative story, and we now have a reason to celebrate what is perhaps the most ridiculous holiday on the calendar.

THE PASSION OF THE CHRIST

There are only a handful of movies that I can honestly say have made enough impact on me to be "life altering" or "life changing". The Passion of the Christ is at the top of that short list. Before Mel Gibson went nuts, he delivered what historians (Christian and non-Christian) have said is an accurate depiction of what Jesus final day was probably like in graphic detail. And personally, as a believer, this film impacted me on so many different levels. We have made it an Easter tradition to watch it at my house, because I constantly want and need to be reminded of what those last hours entailed for Jesus so that it doesn't become generic or distant. And as much as I tried to relate to it before, it became a thousand times more real to me after seeing The Passion.

So there you have it. My top 7 budding roses in the boquet of weeds of holiday movies sprouting from the crapdom of the overdone and underthought. Let me know what you think. Disagree with any of them? Have any that you feel should be on the list? Use the comments section freely. Oh, and don't worry, a list of the worst of the worst is coming soon. So stay tuned.

review: the muppets

Jason Segel with Walter.

I know Allen just gave you a movie review and we aren't trying to make this our regular schtick, but this one seemed like a no-brainer after I gave my thoughts on the current state of the Muppets franchise.  If you read it, you already have some background on my attitude toward this new film, The Muppets, going in. And, as I sat side-by-side in the theater with my 8 year-old daughter, it quickly became clear that we were having two different experiences.

This is the only one that matters, so get ready for it. As the credits began to roll, Sophie Stafford turned to me and said... "I love that movie. It was awesome!" What else do you need to know? A completely honest reaction from an unbiased, yet opinionated 8 year old. A little girl who isn't poisoned by her love of the past and a man who has been gone for 20 years. She loved it. She has been well schooled in all of the Muppet movies of the past (excluding Treasure Island) and, at least for now, this one is her favorite. So, if that's what you were looking for, look away now and don't bother reading the mixed reactions of an old man.

Now, I'll channel Statler and Waldorf and do a little grumbling.  First of all, The Muppets does start strong.  In the title sequence we're introduced to a new muppet named Walter and his human brother, Gary.  It's a clever sequence that gives us background and gets us right into the story.  At this point I'm buying in.  It's a good concept and I like where they're headed.  Basically, Walter grows up happy in a human home, but as the years pass, he begins to feel more and more out of place and that's when he discovers the Muppets on the Muppet Show.  He's drawn in immediately (like so many of us humans were), fanhood becomes his life and he feels that their world is where he belongs.  If we couldn't figure it out on our own, we get a heavy-handed dream sequence to eliminate any doubt.

I think the core concept was well-founded.  I was totally okay with following this new muppet on his journey of being on the outside, looking in.  But, from there, the story arc got muddled.  Things got a little messy.  Some of it felt low budget; reminiscent of the Elmo movie I had to watch when Sophie was 3.  I love Chris Cooper, but his villain Tex Richman...  There's oil under the old Muppet Theater?  Really?

A lot of the jokes weren't bad.  Some were pretty good.  (I definitely liked the addition of Eighties Robot to the cast as Kermit's servant from a time when things were going better for the Muppets.  That's funny.)  My problem was that so many of the jokes and gags felt disconnected.  Like a couple of writers sat in a room talking about all the things they loved about the Muppets and then tried to rehash and squeeze in as many of those things into the script as they could.  We weren't getting progression for the characters.  It reminded me of the Chris Farley Show on SNL.  "Hey, do you remember when...[the Swedish Chef would talk funny]...  That was awesome."  Too often the gags didn't come naturally within the story.  And that led to the phrase that kept going through my head:  They're trying too hard.

There were other bumps in the execution (like way too much post-modern, wink-wink, tongue-in-cheek, fourth-wall breaking) but the only one I feel like talking about is the Kermit/Walter dynamic.  Right away, they establish that this movie is Walter's story.  But that's a problem when you're doing a Muppets movie, because Kermit so clearly is and has always been their driving force; their heart and soul.  As soon as Kermit hits the screen, the movie wants to go his direction and, as a viewer, you expect it to.  Like I said, it's a problem and, in this case, a problem the writers don't know how to solve.  The story gets pulled back and forth between the two and, unfortunately, Kermit spends most of the movie being mopey, pessimistic, and indecisive.  He is completely neutered.  This Kermit is not the Kermit we know.  Yes, Kermit has always had moments of doubt, but he's the guy who inevitably couldn't be shaken.  The guy who would pull himself up by the bootstraps and make everyone else believe.  Deep down he was filled with unending hope and that's what we loved about him.  His enthusiasm couldn't be ignored.  All of that is gone in The Muppets.  Kermit is lost.  He's out of answers.  He has moments of motivation, but quickly falters and packs it in when the going gets tough.  More than once he needs Walter to save the day.  And in one of the film's final images, there is Walter, hoisted up on everyone's shoulders with Kermit looking up at him as if the tables have been turned.  Now, Walter is Kermit's hero.  That didn't jive with me.  If you're restarting the franchise, are you doing it with Walter on your shoulders and a wishy washy Kermit?

I don't want to sound like I'm trying to murder the film because it doesn't deserve execution.  It was enjoyable, it was entertaining.  It just wasn't magic.  I've seen the magic and it wasn't on the faces in that theater.  The saddest part is that there is nothing we can do about it, because it left us two decades ago.  These guys did the best they could and I applaud them for that, it may just be a hill too steep to climb to capture a curmudgeon like me.  Luckily, they don't have to.  They can make the 8 year-olds of the world happy and if they do, the Muppets can survive. And who can complain about that?

Office Games: Crime Scening

This poor guy never saw it coming.

If there is anything we want to do here, it is to bring joy and entertainment into your life.  We can make our puppet movies and futuristic space dramas, but you've been asking yourself, "When is the WSF gang going to start inventing games I can play at work?"  Well, you can stop talking that trash, because today is the day. Today's game is called Crime-Scening and this is how it works:

You'll need coworkers who will agree to the rules right up front.

  • At any time during the day you can "kill" a coworker by pointing your imaginary weapon and pulling the trigger.  Surprise is key!  (If you'd like to add sound effects, more power to you.)
  • If killed, you must go down immediately, just as if you'd been shot, regardless of what you're doing, carrying, eating, etc. at that moment.
  • The person who made the kill then takes a crime scene photo of the victim.
  • The goal:  to catch a coworker at the best possible moment to create the best crime scene of the day.  (Think of all the revenge hits in the first Godfather.  And don't let me catch you in a revolving door.)
  • Each worker can only be killed once per day, so make it count.

And so, it is done.  Embrace the ridiculousness.  All we can do is bring you amazing, creative games and if you don't want to play them, you'll know why nobody likes you.