Sunday, November 29, 2015

Mac and Me (1988) Take Two



Back in April of 2015, I watched the 1988 classic bad movie Mac and Me.  It wasn’t the first time I had seen the film and it wouldn’t be the last.  The movie has gained notoriety for many reasons, some of which I will go over in the post that I am currently writing.  It is undeniably bad and fits right into the lineup of the Sunday “Bad” Movies.  Enough so that this is going to be the second time that I have watched it for the blog.

The reason for the rewatch is that this is the three year anniversary of the Sunday “Bad” Movies.  The posts began on December 2nd 2012.  Each anniversary, I rewatch one movie that I have watched and write a second post for it.  Thanks to the new poll system on Twitter, I created a tournament that covered the movies I watched between Jack and Jill and Chasing Liberty.  One by one, movies were eliminated until Mac and Me stood on top.  It was the movie that I was meant to watch again.

Last time I wrote about Mac and Me, I wrote about some movies that I hadn’t yet covered.  I still have not covered any of those movies, but some have been scheduled for future Sunday “Bad” Movie weeks.  Showgirls is coming up in February, and soon after that will be Troll 2.  Silent Night, Deadly Night 2 was in the schedule until there was an issue and I swapped it out.  It will be in the schedule sometime in the future, however.

This time around, I want to get deeper into the movie.  I want to take a look at some of the things that make Mac and Me into the memorable movie that it is.  I also want to look at some of the things that have helped to put it into the minds of people who aren’t necessarily into bad movies.  The movie has been making a comeback in the cultural mindset to the point that more people are starting to recognize the movie than I can remember happening before.  I will go over why as well as some other stuff as I dive into Mac and Me for the second time in the Sunday “Bad” Movies.

The Story
If you have ever seen Mac and Me, you have noticed the similarities that it shares with another ‘80s movie, E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial.  Both movies are about a child who discovers an alien in his house.  In the case of E.T., the child is Elliott (Henry Thomas).  Mac and Me has Eric Cruise (Jade Calegory), a wheelchair bound child.  The children in each movie are from a fatherless family.  Elliott has an older brother and a younger sister.  Eric Cruise has an older brother and a slightly younger female neighbor.  Together, the children in their respective movies try to help the aliens evade the law enforcement officials that are after them.  In E.T., they try to get the alien home.  In Mac and Me, they try to get the alien reunited with its family.

The notable thing is that these are not two movies released within a year or two of each other with similar plots (I covered some movies of that type in my post for Chasing Liberty).  E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial came out in 1982.  That was six years before Mac and Me’s 1988 release.  There were six years in between the movies.  It wasn’t a coincidence that the two stories were so similar to each other.  Mac and Me was a blatant rip-off, trying to ape the story for a quick buck.  And it wasn’t a re-appropriation of the material either.  It was the same story with the same elements told in the same way.  That’s Mac and Me for you.

Product Placement
This isn’t the first time in the Sunday “Bad” Movies that product placement has been an overwhelming part of a movie.  I covered Foodfight! back in August 2015 and talked about Mr. Clean being used in the movie.  Mac and Me gets almost as blatant with their product placement as Foodfight!  In fact, the two movies are about even in how much product placement they shove in their audience’s view.

Some of this comes from E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial, of course.  The alien in that movie drank Coors (and got Elliott drunk) and ate Reese’s Pieces.  This was before the PG-13 rating existed, hence the alcohol in a movie that most people would think was geared towards children.  Mac and Me was released after that rating was introduced, and thus doesn’t have alcoholic beverages being advertised in the movie.  Instead, the alien drinks Coca-Cola, and the characters visit a McDonalds for an extended dance sequence.  Speaking of which…

The Dance Sequence
The kids in Mac and Me go to a McDonalds about two thirds of the way through the movie’s runtime.  Someone is having a birthday party there for whatever reason.  Mac wants to go with the children, so they dress him up in a teddy bear costume and bring him to the party.  He ends up becoming the life of the party, taking center stage during a dance sequence that feels very out of place.  All the while, the law enforcement people that are after Mac try and capture him at the McDonalds, only to be thwarted by the dancers.

There are a couple of notable things about this sequence.  First, the product placement is at its most apparent during this scene.  They are in a McDonalds.  They mention that a lot.  Who is there with them?  Ronald McDonald is in the McDonalds just hanging out with all the kids like clowns are prone to do.  The other notable thing is that there are two extras who would become stars in their own right.  Jennifer Aniston makes a blink and you’ll miss it appearance.  It’s so short that I didn’t notice it until it was pointed out to me.  Nikki Cox also makes an appearance that is much easier to find.  She is one of the primary dancers during the sequence.  A small girl in yellow who you would later find in the television shows Unhappily Ever After and Las Vegas.  Long before those shows, she was dancing at a McDonalds in Mac and Me.

Paul Rudd
The final thing I want to write about when it comes to Mac and Me is Paul Rudd.  No, Mr. Rudd is not in this movie.  He never has been in the movie.  He wasn’t cut out or anything.  But the resurgence of this movie’s popularity can be partially attributed to Paul Rudd’s rise to stardom.  The bigger star power that he has, the bigger this movie has become.  That is why I want to discuss Paul Rudd.

You see, Paul Rudd has a history with this movie.  The history involves Conan O’Brien.  I’m not sure when it started, but Paul Rudd has a history of going on whatever show Conan O’Brien is hosting (Late Night, The Tonight Show, or Conan) and playing the same clip from Mac and Me instead of what he is there to promote.  The clip involves Eric Cruise rolling down a hill and off of a cliff into some water.  Conan seemingly falls for it every time, expecting the joke to stop.  Then the clip plays and the audience goes wild.  I don’t know how popular the movie was before this joke began, but it lives in infamy now because of it.



Now that I’ve seen Mac and Me three times (once was long before it was ever scheduled for the Sunday “Bad” Movies), I can say that it is an interesting study in movies.  The fact that it relies so much upon another movie for story, while also pandering to some corporations that wanted their products featured makes it remarkable.  Mac and Me manages to be unique while lacking any sense of uniqueness.  It is good to know that people keep stumbling on this one because it has an important place in movie history.  It might not be the best.  It might not even be anywhere near the best.  But there is a place for it in movie history and it can help other filmmakers learn from its mistakes.  Everyone should see Mac and Me at least once in their life.
Everyone should read these notes as well:

  •  Here's the original Mac and Me post.
  • Throughout this post, I mentioned Jack and Jill, Foodfight!, and Chasing Liberty.
  • Mac and Me was directed by Stewart Raffill who also directed Ice Pirates.
  • Gary Brockette was in both Mac and Me and Ice Pirates.
  • Another actor in Mac and Me was Jack Ong, who was in Leprechaunin the Hood.
  • Have you seen Mac and Me?  What did you think of the movie?  Have you ever seen Paul Rudd make his joke with Conan O’Brien?  Do you find it funny?  What are your thoughts on product placement?  There is a comment section below if you want to discuss any of this.
  • You can also use the comments section to suggest movies for me to watch in the future.  If you want to find me on Twitter and suggest a movie, you can do that as well.
  • Next week’s movie is How the Toys Saved Christmas.  It’s animated and you’ve probably never heard of it.  Oh well.  That’s what I’m going to be watching.  See you next week.

Sunday, November 22, 2015

An American Hippie in Israel (1972) and How Violence Affects Audiences



Human beings are the worst animals on the planet.  Some people might argue that we are more civilized and therefore more aware of our surroundings and how we affect everything around us.  That does not make humans any better than other animals.  In fact, civilization and intelligence has only led to more destruction with different motivation behind it.  Most animals fight and kill based on instinctual urges.  “I marked my territory.  You stepped in it.  Now you must die.”  That kind of thing.  Humans, on the other hand, fight for politics, beliefs, power, and as many Americans say, freedom.

People also have the added destructive power of mechanical weaponry.  Bombs have destroyed many homes, cities, and lives throughout the wars in the 20th and 21st centuries.  The entire Cold War was predicated upon The United States of America (USA) and The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) being able to wipe out the planet with the push of a button due to their nuclear missiles.  Air raids were commonplace as people feared the end of the world approaching.  Another common weapon is a gun.  Guns are very prevalent in the current day and age as more and more mass shootings occur at an exceedingly rapid pace.  Mass shootings are reported almost daily.  In 1999, a couple of students went to their school in Columbine, Colorado and shot and killed 12 people.  In 2007, a student at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University shot and killed 32 people in two separate attacks.  In July 2012, a man in Aurora, Colorado killed 12 people and injured many more in a shooting at a theater playing The Dark Knight Rises.  This would soon be followed in December 2012 by a man shooting and killing 20 children and six teachers at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut.  Even just last week, there was a mass shooting in Paris, France where over 100 people were killed.  These are off the top of my head.  Many more have occurred throughout the years.

The devastation of these real life events cannot be translated well to film.  Audiences have been desensitized to this kind of stuff through the glorification similar material gets in the summer action blockbusters that crowd the cinemas every year.  Transformers shows action on a level so big that it outdoes the destruction of the human race.  There are still intense moments of destruction in movies.  Don’t get me wrong.  But there is a lack of fear and concern when it comes to the lives lost in all of the destruction.  People, myself included, have no worry about these kinds of catastrophes happening in movies, even though our world is filled with these events on a daily basis.  If it isn’t happening to them, it doesn’t matter.  It is meaningless.  They will continue to live their civilized lives without a worry at all.  You know, first world problems and such.  How will they pay their bills?  Who will they Netflix and chill with?  What did Kim Kardashian do this time?  That kind of stuff.

As a society, we are more terrified by losing our civility than the lack of it that we truly have.  What scares people more than the dangerous nature of our species as it currently is would be when people act uncivilized and rely upon their base instincts.  The more horrific imagery to audiences isn’t when people are getting shot or buildings are exploding and falling down.  It is when people act like savages.  Horror does not stem from the large scale destruction caused by Superman and Zod fighting through the climax of Man of Steel.  Audiences weren’t on the edge of their seats worrying about what would happen to someone in one of the buildings destroyed by the fighting.  We are instead fearful of any Lord of the Flies type of situation in which people are removed from their comfortable life and placed into a situation where they regress into the violent ways of our less civilized past generations.  It is not true that past generations were more violent.  Terrorism, deaths due to guns, and other violent actions are a part of our everyday lives.  Two of the largest wars in history, the two World Wars, took place in the past hundred years.  Yet movies like to go back to the base instincts to induce some sort of tension in the audience.

An American Hippie in Israel is a movie that attempts to make the audience fear the civilized world that I wrote about, before the movie turns into one of the savage human stories that resonates so well.  The movie follows an American hippie named Mike (Asher Tzarfati) who travels to Israel to live a life of freedom.  He meets up with Elizabeth (Lily Avidan), Francoise (Tzila Karney), and Komo (Shmuel Wolf).  The four of them go on a road trip filled with dancing, nudity, and all around good vibes before settling on an isolated island.  When their boat goes missing, savagery emerges amongst the four friends.  Spoilers ahead for the movie.

The current cultural climate of the world comes to the forefront in the earlier portion of An American Hippie in Israel.  One of the reasons that Mike went to Israel was to escape two mysterious men who have been following him everywhere he goes.  This could be seen as a personification of “the man.”  These men represent all that is wrong with the current society as I have previously described.  They spread terror in the same way that it is spread in modern times.  They use mechanical weapons to strike down the people that go against what they want.  The culmination of this is during a scene in which a lot of counter-culture free spirits are partying.  The two men enter and fire guns throughout the room in order to kill everyone.  Only Mike and his three friends escape with their lives.  It is shocking but doesn’t leave a lasting impression because of what follows.

In a final attempt to escape the men, the four amigos go on a road trip.  The road trip ends with them taking a boat out to a deserted island.  For the first little while, Mike and company have a good time.  They skinny dip.  There are late night dance parties.  And they express their hatred of modern society by screaming how they feel.  Then their boat goes missing.  The four friends are stranded on a desolate island surrounded by sharks.  They turn savage and begin to fight with one another in exceedingly violent ways.  An American Hippie in Israel ends on some horrific imagery as the four former comrades wrestle to the death atop a goat, killing each other and the goat in the process.  Yes, an animal was harmed during the making of this film.  This final scene is treated much more seriously and terrifyingly than the earlier scene of mass murder.

The depiction of violence throughout An American Hippie in Israel mirrors how society sees this kind of violent material when it comes to entertainment.  The mass shooting is swept under the carpet of the movie in order so show more fun, free-spirited bonding moments.  The four main characters are focused on dancing and getting naked.  They don’t fret too much over the fact that their acquaintances were gunned down right in front of them.  And as an audience, we are expected to also leave that situation without much afterthought.  However, the movie builds up the savagery, explicitly showing how bad it gets.  It never relieves the pressure being built.  Instead, it comes to a head, explodes, and the movie ends.  There is no denouement and the final thought the movie leaves you with is how bad things got when Mike and his pals devolved into savages on the island.

An American Hippie in Israel is a good movie to look at when you think about the different thoughts that people have on how good or bad they are.  The movie showcases savagery as the worst.  It also shows that modern society is bad, but it makes the savagery depicted at the end out to be the worst threat.  Civilization may be bad.  Savagery is worse.  That isn’t necessarily true, as terrorists such as ISIS are showing us.  Weaponized people are just as bad as savages, if not worse.  It doesn’t matter.  Humans are just bad.  There’s no stopping it.  There will always be violence among our species.
There will also be notes at the end of this post:

  • This movie was suggested by @octoeggman and @JonnyLonely.
  • I mentioned Transformers.  I watched the Asylum knock-off series Transmorphers a while back.
  • What do you think about how different forms of person on person violence are presented in movies?  Do you think that savagery is taken more seriously?  Have you seen An American Hippie in Israel?  What did you think?  Answer these questions or talk about other stuff related to this post in the comments section below.
  • Do you have a movie that you think I should watch for the Sunday “Bad” Movies?  You can put your suggestion in the comments or tell me on Twitter.
  • Next week is the three year anniversary of Sunday “Bad” Movies.  That means that it is one of the annual rewatches.  The first anniversary saw me rewatching The Oogieloves in theBig Balloon Adventure.  For the second anniversary, I rewatched Winter’s Tale.  This year, the movie voted by my Twitter followers has been Mac and Me.  So next week will be the second Mac and Me post.