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Jon Calderas

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Everything posted by Jon Calderas

  1. Jon Calderas

    Episode 128 - Streets of Fire: LIVE!

    Hey, I met Albert Pyun last week and asked him where I could see "Road to Hell" (the sort of unofficial sequel to Streets of Fire). He said it is available via his Facebook page or website. Check out Albert Pyun films on Facebook or Google his website. He said it is only available for about 2 weeks. I haven't seen it, but I am darned intrigued. I am fascinated that there is any kind of sequel to this movie and from the trailers and videos online it looks like Diane Lane and Michael Pare had a kid (played by Roxy Gunn, who totally looks the part) and this sequel is partly her story.
  2. Jon Calderas

    Episode 129 - The Apple: LIVE!

    More cowbell. Or apfel. And I don't care if the excuse is she's been with us over a year. Fine, call it 23 months. Minus 9 months of pregnancy. That kid should be no more than 6 - 14 months or so and it's easily 3 years old.
  3. Jon Calderas

    Episode 129 - The Apple: LIVE!

    in the course of half a song Alphie grows a beard and starts looking like Will Ferrell. Bananas. Also, good to see the pointy shouldered suits stayed in style...
  4. Jon Calderas

    Episode 129 - The Apple: LIVE!

    Why go to the trouble of remaking it? If you want something sort of in the same vein but much, much better just watch Phantom of the Paradise. I'd love to see them do that for the podcast. Depalma, Jessica Harper, Paul Williams, Gerrit Graham. Covered a lot of the same ground but way better movie and music.
  5. Jon Calderas

    Episode 129 - The Apple: LIVE!

    Wow, okay- when they performed I thought their song was sappy and terrible and was dumbfounded the audience turned around. I thought there was no credible way they could win that contest with a song like that. Real life is stranger than fiction. And I'm not insulting the singer from Eurovision, just surprised that a low key song like that could win. Nice find.
  6. Jon Calderas

    Episode 129 - The Apple: LIVE!

    I think you are giving them way too much credit. I am guessing they ran out of glue, or horns. To think they actually put thought into number and placement location of horns boggles the mind. I love the audience guy that asked, "Do you think when they had the production meeting.." "No."
  7. Jon Calderas

    Episode 129 - The Apple: LIVE!

    I love how they were excited for a second that the music was by George Clinton (Parliament founder and uber funk God- actually Parliament and Bootsy Collins would have fit perfectly in this movie) then realized it was by George S. Clinton. George S. Clinton also did music for all three Austin Powers movies, as well as many, many other movies. Oddly, The Apple is not listed on his resume. I imagine Menahem Golan in his velour track suit pitching it to distributors - "It will be very big! We have music by George Clinton!" http://www.georgesclinton.com/ He kind of looks like Michael Mckean (Spinal Tap): Not to be confused with George Clinton:
  8. Jon Calderas

    Episode 128 - Streets of Fire: LIVE!

    Didn't get into C&O, but got this on twitter (for my It's Like Tokyo poster)- pretty groovy!
  9. Jon Calderas

    Episode 128 - Streets of Fire: LIVE!

    Okay, I looked more and found all you ever wanted to know about the Streets of Fire tarp. Andrew Laszlo specifically says the tarp was designed so they could shoot day for night and avoid night labor premiums and have longer day hours to shoot. Allegedly final cost close to $3 million. Also lots of technical details on lighting and shooting here. But I'm calling Paul on this one, I went back and he claims the tarp was built because Diane was a minor and it was to accommodate her schedule. It had nothing to do with Diane Lane being a minor! https://books.google...%20fire&f=false
  10. Jon Calderas

    Episode 128 - Streets of Fire: LIVE!

    That's crazy, but I guess I can believe it. Seems like LA would be flush with 18 year old actors, but who knows? I've searched and can't find any references that they had to accommodate any minors or Diane Lane's schedule (minor or not). Wonder where Paul found this factoid? I didn't go back to listen, but if he was implying the tarp was built so they could shoot during the day for Diane, I don't see that anywhere. References just say it was built so they could shoot day for night (cheaper and easier).
  11. Jon Calderas

    Episode 128 - Streets of Fire: LIVE!

    Well, if you believe Wikipedia (oh, and why WOULDN"T you)...production began April 1983 and ended August 1983. Diane Lane would have been 18 on January 22, 1983. Maybe rules were different in 1983, but current laws only apply to 17 and under and say total of 10.5 hours on set, 6 hrs of which are for work, 3 for tutoring (on school days), 1 for break and 0.5 for meals. 8 hours on non school days, still total 10.5 hours. So, doesn't sound like Paul is right on this one. If there were minors in the crowd, I am guessing they would have recast them instead of having a multi million dollar production shoot around non essential extras.
  12. Jon Calderas

    Submit your new HDTGM logo here!

    Silly, but kinda cool. Like the show.
  13. Jon Calderas

    Episode 128 - Streets of Fire: LIVE!

    Nice of you to share this - I have a lot of affection for it too. Chalk it up to right place, right time, right age for it to make an impression. I loved that Jason repeatedly defended it. I agree, I'd much rather have heard June on this one. When you start off saying, "It was a piece of s**t", it's all downhill from there. I watched The Apple (which is up next) over Christmas break because I saw it mentioned in the Canon films documentary ("Electric Boogalo: The Wild, Untold Story of Cannon Films" - highly, highly recommended) on Netflix. The Apple is absolutely terrible (but in horrible, misbegotten way that will be great for the show). This one is not (though the podcast was fun).
  14. Jon Calderas

    Episode 128 - Streets of Fire: LIVE!

    Also since I mentioned her several posts back, here's Laurie Sargent's band face to face. Not the punk band face to face. You can hear echoes of Ellen Aim's voice in hers. This song was a minor hit in the 80s around the same time as Streets.
  15. Jon Calderas

    Episode 128 - Streets of Fire: LIVE!

    Man, I love Sisters of Mercy and that song. I did not know Steinman produced that! Now that you say it, it is obvious. Wow. Cool trivia!
  16. Jon Calderas

    Episode 128 - Streets of Fire: LIVE!

    It is neither. It's a blend of Laurie Sargent and Holly Sherwood.
  17. Jon Calderas

    Episode 128 - Streets of Fire: LIVE!

    And...can I ask the obvious question that Paul needs to think hard about. WOULD THIS MOVIE BE BETTER WITH NICHOLAS CAGE IN IT? Before you answer, consider these options: -Cage as Cody -Cage as Raven -Cage as Fish Discuss.
  18. Jon Calderas

    Episode 128 - Streets of Fire: LIVE!

    I love the thought that this movie was big in Japan and I could totally see that. Some geniuses put these together and it would be amazing if they actually did an anime like this. It really is like Tokyo.
  19. Jon Calderas

    Episode 128 - Streets of Fire: LIVE!

    So, they asked what’s a Sorel? and came up blank. Well, I’ll throw this out there. Walter Hill likes myths and heroes and violence (see The Warriors).. I did some searching and found out that Georges Sorel was a French philosopher. Wikipedia sez: “His notion of the power of myth in people's lives inspired Marxists and Fascists.[4] It is, together with his defense of violence, the contribution for which he is most often remembered.” This source sez: http://www.encyclope...rges_Sorel.aspx “Reflections on Violence is the work of Sorel‘s which aroused by far the greatest response. This book is chiefly a philosophical commentary on revolutionary syndicalism, a commentary strongly inspired by Bergson‘s thought. In it Sorel developed the notions of “myth” and “violence.” “ And this source doubles down and sounds a bit familiar… “Sorel believed that the Proletariat, properly motivated, had all of the necessary traits to become what Nietzsche had called “the blond beast.” Sorel was referencing the archetypal Roman legionnaire or Homeric hero whose disciplined bravery had “cleared a path for [them] on land and see, everywhere erecting imperishable monuments for good or evil.” He equated this momentous bravery with what he called a “heroic mentality.” Sorel saw the acquisition of this mentality as essential for the proletariat’s ultimate destiny: the accomplishment of feats of glory. This philosophy was so alluring because it advocated immediate violent action…Sorel’s doctrine allowed individuals to take the course of history into their own hands.” http://www.joejerome...ments/sorel.pdf I think if you read this, it is clear why this movie had to end in a sledgehammer battle. Sorel also means a “Young buck (deer) in its third year” or a yellowish or reddish brown color. I'm gonna guess the color reference is not intended, but "young buck"? Maybe. If either of those are true, it is the most obscure, elliptical band name ever.
  20. Jon Calderas

    Episode 128 - Streets of Fire: LIVE!

    Just read the Blake Harris oral history and he mentioned a nice write up by Greil Marcus (famous rock critic). Here it is. http://greilmarcus.n...s-of-fire-0994/ I caught the last 20 minutes of this urban never-never-land rock fable on A&E one afternoon (cast: Diane Lane, Michael Pare, Willem Dafoe, Rick Moranis, Amy Madigan, Lee Ving, Bill Paxton, Ed Begley, Jr., the Blasters, Robert Townsend), waited out the plot for the final musical number, and had my memories of the film dissolved by the wonder of what goes on. There’s a tremendous unreality to the sound and staging of “Tonight Is What It Means to Be Young”—it’s thrilling but in a prickly, disturbing way. Music videos have never come within centuries of what Hill (and Jeffrey Hornaday, the choreographer) does here with every gesture. Contradictions are the medium: singer Lane’s dress is at once tight and hanging on her like a piece of paper, slit all the way down in back—she’s not thin. The perfection of every move, every cut, is scary, and the sense that this isn’t happening is overpowering: it’s as if this is no performance but a transmission to the stage, by unknown technology, of your deepest performance fantasies. The audience waves its arms, and you peer through them: at the way the drummer, shot from below, makes the beat, the way the guitarist frames Lane with his back to her, his zoot suit touching her skin, the way the black vocal quartet enters the ensemble, strolling and strutting as if they’ve been called forth to walk it like she talks it. On-screen the music—by some faceless aggregation called Fire, Inc.—sounds a thousand times better than it would on a record. This is exactly right for what you know cannot be real: the many female and for all I know male voices coming out of Lane’s mouth. There’s no way in the world what you’re seeing is making the sound you hear, but you can believe the performers, in character, know this as well as you do. As you, in the audience, watch, the performers are projecting their own fantasies onto themselves, desperately, happily, casually, as a matter of life and death. Isn’t this what happens in a real show?
  21. Jon Calderas

    Episode 128 - Streets of Fire: LIVE!

    I was looking on IMDB and I note with shock and not a bit of horror that Pare has 24 projects active between 2015 and 2016. Seven of those are for 2016. And it's January. Also, were they being funny when the guy yelled "Greatest American Hero" and they responded, "He wasn't in that?". I thought they were mocking the guy because everyone knew Pare was in that show.
  22. Jon Calderas

    Episode 128 - Streets of Fire: LIVE!

    He asked for a meme, here you go. I love this throwaway line. To be fair, the first time I saw Tokyo in the rain (with all the neon glaring on the street and people bustling), I thought it looked exactly like Bladerunner.
  23. Jon Calderas

    Episode 128 - Streets of Fire: LIVE!

    Want something truly bizarre? Try watching this 1988 Bollywood flick (Tezaab) that was supposedly inspired by (and is a loose, and I mean loose) remake of Streets of Fire. It was a smash. In India.
  24. Jon Calderas

    Episode 128 - Streets of Fire: LIVE!

    Nope. That's Marine Jahan. She doubled for Jennifer Beals in Flashdance.
  25. Jon Calderas

    Episode 128 - Streets of Fire: LIVE!

    It's like the lowest tech light saber duel ever Sledgehammer battle? That's SO Raven!
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