Thursday, December 20, 2012

The Five Things That Actually Cause John McClane Grief In Life


Anyone who has a passing relationship with SpoilerAlert Podcast knows how I feel about the Die Hard series.  Actually, anyone who’s around me for more than five minutes can deduce that one:

Actual Author Photo

However, in honor of Brando’s favorite holiday film, I thought I’d ruminate on poor John McClane’s lot in life.  It is imperative that you understand that I am not pointing out plot holes, merely illustrating a surprising fact of his existence.  You see dear readers, if you think that McClane’s world would be all sunshine and farts if only it weren’t for all those pesky terrorists, well you got another thing comin!

So sit back and enjoy the real pains in McClane’s ass:

1) THE FBI IS CONSTANTLY SCREWING HIM OVER.

            McClane is a cop from New York who worked in LA for a spell, but he is NYPD through and through.  But if there is one thing that his experience should have taught him its this: never trust the FBI! In the original Die Hard, a major plot point of the film is that the FBI’s incompetence actually makes the bad guy’s plan work.  Hans “Bubby” Gruber even refers to them as his Christmas miracle, and at one point (granted it’s a case of mistaken identity) they actually open fire on McClane while he’s trying to get hostages to safety.

Interagency Cooperation

Bad first impression you say? Ok, how about in Die Hard With A Vengeance when they reward McClane’s saving of hundreds of lives in a New York subway explosion with an interrogation and slyly insinuate that he could be in on the plot? That’s Bureau procedure if ever I’ve seen it.  At this point in his career, McClane should be able to threaten the President and still get the benefit of the doubt, but the FBI still isn’t too sure about him.  Of course, the best moment comes in Live Free Or Die Hard when we find out that the FBI is basically responsible for the entire freakin’ plot of the film, as they hired the villain to protect America’s computer-automated systems (www.runseverything.gov), fired him, and proceeded not to change one damn thing that he left in place.  I’m serious, they don’t even change his login password after he basically tells them the cyber version of, “I’ll get you my pretties!!” To make matters worse, to cover their asses, they keep all of this a secret until they admit it to the only FBI Agent that thinks McClane is worth a damn, and his only response is a sneer so intense that it completely conveys the words “Senate Judiciary Review”.”

Way to go boys, J. Edgar would be proud!

2) NO ONE EVER BELIEVES HIM.

            Maybe its never been said that John McClane never told a lie, but for some reason, anytime he says anything remotely insightful he is immediately met with criticism and disbelief.



            After risking life and limb to kill a terrorist and steal a radio in the original Die Hard, McClane gets to the roof of the Nakatomi building and begins to broadcast a desperate plea for help on the emergency band using clear and cohesive language.  The immediate response from a trained 911 operator? He’s a crank caller. After he tells the LADP not to breach the building because of the terrorists’ superior firepower, they can’t wait to blow him off to go get killed by the very rocket launcher that he warned them about.  In Die Hard 2, after half the movie goes by and McClane has been right about EVERY FREAKING PLOT POINT, Capt. Lorenzo actually threatens to arrest him for being out of his mind once McClane spoon-feeds him the bad guys’ entire plan.  Only after McClane unloads on Lorenzo with an automatic weapon loaded with blanks (that the terrorists were using) does McClane’s theory start getting some play.

Proper Police Procedure

By the time Die Hard With A Vengeance happens, McClane takes the time to call Inspector Cobb and reveal the terrorists’ plan, all the while dodging an exploding Manhattan.  The Inspector’s response to McClane, the officer that he sent on the mission to literally figure out the terrorists’ plan and report back, is to question whether or not he has been drinking. And of course, once the beloved FBI shows up in Live Free Or Die Hard to get McClane’s take on things, their only response is to tell him that the scenario that they are actually experiencing is simply not possible.  At what point does someone say, “You know, he might just have a knack for this stuff”?

3) NO ONE REMEMBERS WHAT HE DID AT THE AIRPORT BACK IN 1990.

            John McClane fought his way into our hearts by using his wits, a Beretta, and the only cool wife-beater ever to overcome thirty terrorists in the Nakatomi Building in LA.  We all loved the movie, and in the Die Hard universe, this is what he’s known for.  He’s constantly getting ragged about it in the second film and the entire plot of Die Hard With A Vengeance seems to be a revenge driven rampage because the bad guy is Hans Gruber’s older brother.

Nepotism

            When Zeus asks him if he’s famous or something, McClane off-handedly mentions the skyscraper incident depicted in the original film.  The problem? In Die Hard 2, he basically wins the country’s war on drugs, takes out Manuel Noriega, and quells a ridiculously high level military special ops mutiny, not to mention that he also solves the biggest FAA crisis in history and saves the lives of literally THOUSANDS of people.  This would be SUCH a bigger deal than the Nakatomi Building incident!! That was thirty terrorists stealing money; this is the Cocaine Kingpin of Panama and TWO (count ‘em!) Green Beret quality rouge Army platoons. Yet from the moment its over, everyone he meets is like, “John McClane? Right, that building in LA.” That would be like meeting Aaron Rodgers and only remembering that he worked at the food court. 

Welcome to Mr. Smileys!!!

The fact that no one can recall this incident leads me to believe that McClane’s awesomeness caused every other person on the planet’s brain to immediately erase the memory or face total protonic reversal (yeah, it’s a real thing).

4) HIS WIFE IS A TOTAL BITCH.

            When we meet McClane, he is separated from his wife Holly because of career matters; he’s a New York cop and she has been transferred to LA with a very lucrative  executive job. They embrace and then launch into a fight about how they are both unhappy with what is essentially a common marital problem.  At the beginning of the second film, he’s an LAPD cop, having given up his career in New York for his family and followed her out to the coast.  By the time he saves her for the second time, they’re established as a loving couple with this little problem of always inviting too many terrorists for Christmas.

Party Crashers

Once we get to the third film though, they’ve been squabbling again and McClane has gone back to New York even though they’re still married.  When he finally gets the gut check to swallow his pride and call her, he unfortunately has to run off at the last second to save the United States entire MONETARY BACKUP and must leave her hanging on the line.  Her reaction is to immediately start cussing him out over the phone.  McClane once threw a guy through a jet engine turbine just because he threatened Holly’s safety, and her reaction to a missed phone call is to immediately assume he’s just screwing around with her emotions again?  Further more, he’s completely faithful to her.  In the original film, when a drunk executive flirts with Holly and invites her out for a romantic evening, she coyly retreats into her professional demeanor and chides him about the true meaning of Christmas. (I’m sorry, I hope my wife would say something along the lines of, “I’m married ass-hat and this is totally unwanted sexual harassment! I can’t wait till some German terrorist blows your cocaine addled brain out the back of your skull!”)

A Proportional Response

McClane’s way? In Die Hard 2, when the attractive Rent-A-Car Girl (the character’s legitimate name) asks McClane if he’d be interested in getting a drink, he immediately points to his wedding ring and laughs off the invitation.  But the biggest knife in the back from our girl Holly is when McClane goes to visit his daughter Lucy in Live Free Or Die Hard and finds not only does she use her mother’s maiden name out of allegiance to Holly after the divorce, but she makes several comments hinting at the fact that mom thought he was a crappy guy.  How does it pan out? After one afternoon in her dad’s world, Lucy can’t wait to tell anyone that will listen that her last name is McClane and she is her father’s daughter.  Perhaps, just once, Holly should have set the kids down and explained to them that even though Mommy and Daddy aren’t married anymore they both love them very much and Daddy is just a little busy because often times he is literally the only thing keeping America safe from complete annihilation.

5) THE F*&%$#G WRITERS HATE HIM.

            John McClane is a descent guy who just happens to do incredible things (the entire appeal of the first film is that he’s an everyman who rises to the occasion).  He’s a loving husband and father, an honest cop, nice to everyone who isn’t trying to kill him, and, oh yeah, every now and then he saves the freakin’ world.  However, somewhere around pre-production on Die Hard With A Vengeance, the producers discovered that they could save some coin by not hiring back Bonnie Bedelia and Reginald Vel Johnson.

Cost-prohibitive. And surprisingly gay.

To facilitate this casting decision, in the third film McClane becomes an alcoholic, washed-up loner. WHAT?!? Everything he does in the first two films is for his family and the safety of others, but now he’s a perpetual screw-up that can’t keep his life on track.  To further this thread, and to play off the idea that McClane is an anachronistic guy living in a modern world, by the time Live Free Or Die Hard rolls around he’s completely aware of how much of a loser he is! He actually tells Justin Long how much his life sucks because he’s pretty much a superhero.  See above WHAT?!? I once helped a guy at a traffic accident and when the guy told me thank you, I told that story to literally every human I interacted with for a month.  John McClane should walk the earth never having to pay his own bar tab and spend most of his time wondering why everyone else can’t get their shit together, but instead the writers have Silent Bob and the Mac Kid ragging on him because he doesn’t know what a USB port is.  When the bad guy hacks into his personnel records, he even makes a snide remark about how pathetic McClane’s financial picture is.  Could that be because he’s an honest cop that never stole the free crap that the terrorists were constantly leaving in their wake or because he never sued the Beretta company for making their grips so damn slippery? (Seriously, watch the movies again, that gun slips out of his hand every ten minutes!!)

Beretta Handle Stick-um

So, what is his reward for being so mind-blowingly awesome? Divorce, estrangement from his children, and a blown liver.  Thanks a lot writers!!

Hmm… Perhaps I watch these movies a little too much…

From all of us at SpoilerAlert Podcast, Merry Christmas!!

Monday, November 5, 2012

Kyle Ranks the Star Wars Movies


It's worse than you think!

With last week’s stunning revelation that the Disney Corporation had purchased Lucasfilm from that turkey-necked madman, George Lucas, for $4.1 billion dollars the entire internet was thrown into a heated debate over what this could mean for the future of the Star Wars franchise. Was the four decade reign of terror by what increasingly seemed like a sophisticated cyborg sent back in time to destroy everything nerds hold dear finally over? Was this just the beginning of a new chapter in mind-bendingly insane cinematic decisions? Is Mickey Mouse still as irrelevant and boring as he was when I was a child? I think before we get too excited about the future of the Star Wars universe we should take a brief look at where the franchise has been, and how else to do that than the tried and true internet method of making a snarky list! Huzzah!

1.) Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back
Obviously if you’re ranking Star Wars movies, you have to put Empire at the top. I would’t be legally allowed to post this on the interwebs without touting the second outing as the cream of the crop when it comes to exotic space operas. Lucas took a back seat for this installment and let Leigh Brackett and Lawrence Kasdan handle the writing duties, while Irvin Kershner took over as director. Hmmm…that couldn’t factor into Empire being the best of the six, could it?  Granted, Kasdan helped Lucas write Jedi, but come on, I mean, Ewoks. Ewoks people!? If the first movie serves as an introduction to this universe the second fleshes the world out tenfold. The audience travels to multiple new worlds, meets exciting new character (none of which get a song and dance number), and is treated to a plot twist that would make M. Night Shyamalan’s head spin. When it comes to heart, action, and Muppets, you can’t beat Empire. 

 He's no Kermit, but he'll do in a pinch.

2.) Episode IV: A New Hope
Or as anyone born before 1995 knows it, Star Wars. If you’d believe the plaid, bearded one, Star Wars was the little movie that could. Filmed for bubble gum and trading cards, without the full support of its studio*, Star Wars was instantly a cultural phenomenon that I don’t remember because I wasn’t born for another five years.

*Pictured above: Studio apathy

The world was introduced to a young, Aryan farm boy and his two gay robot pals as they searched the galaxy with a criminal and an old man for the only woman alive who turned out to be his sister. As you can see, this movie had very wide appeal.

3.) Episode VI: Return of the Jedi
I go back and forth with Jedi. For one, getting out of Jabba’s clutches at the beginning takes a little too long for my taste and at a point feels like they’re padding the running time. It’s also pretty undeniable that the Ewoks are a frightening omen of thing to come for our beloved franchise, as Lucas delved deeper into merchandising opportunities and less into things that make any damn sense on screen. We are also treated to some fantastic ret-conning when Luke finds out the only girl he’s ever gotten to first base with is also his sister. Don’t worry, they’re kids’ movies! Jedi can’t be completely written off though as the last 45 minutes to half hour are among some of the most strong moments in the series. Also, this happens:


Please don't get up.


4.) Episode III: Revenge of the Sith
Spike TV is making it their mission that I never forget the prequels happened, and the reason that I know when people say, “Sith was actually pretty good” what they actually mean is, “I’ve passed my usefulness as a person”. From the cartoon action sequences to the most ham-fisted disappointing introduction of the galaxy’s prime badass at the end, they’re no doubt that something horrible is in the water at Skywalker Ranch. Only the bloated, hour and a half (probably) fight on Planet Steel Mill at the end pushes this movie just past crime against humanity to unwatchable.

 Yesssssss!

5.) Episode II: Attack of the Clones
I don’t remember this movie despite seeing it in the theater twice. That doesn’t bode well. I know what Yoda turns into a cartoon and this happens though:


Talk about your wardrobe malfunction! I'll let myself out.


6.) Episode I: The Phantom Menace
With almost two decades to stew in the possibility of a new entry in the Star Was saga anticipation had reached a fever pitch in the late 90’s. With the simple act of releasing the title of the first in three new movies a collective “huh?” fell over a confused nation. In hindsight, the title makes perfect sense. The Phantom Menace is the Emperor posing as the senator guy…that or it’s the racist alien caricatures with the weird eyes. Maybe the Phantom Menace is the ever-present threat of government control. I’d say it’s Jar Jar, but there wasn’t much phantom about that menace. Meesa was going to try and get through this without mentioning the lizard horse Jamaican, but it’s proven to be impossible. I guess I’ll just let this serve as my argument against him:


Don't worry Liam, in a few years you'll be in Batman Begins.


Phantom Menace marks the point where all things fun about the original movies was forgotten and replaced with CGI, lengthy discussions on trade negotiations, and confusingly bad child acting.

 Weeeeee!

The Star Wars movies (sixilogy) serve as a beautiful example of a franchise reaching groundbreaking cinematic highs and crushing cultural lows. Let’s hope that by wrestling control from the all-knowing Creator, the Star Wars saga can get back on track since apparently it’s not just going to fade away like we’d all really like it to.

Thursday, October 4, 2012

Pixar Podcast


It’s that time of year again…Kyle and Brandon conned Brad into letting them into his house to record another podcast! This time the dynamic duo count down their favorite Pixar movies while only causing minimal damage to Brad's place. Will they agree on anything? Not likely. Will they knock back a few beers and tell inappropriate jokes? You bet! Pull up a chair, strap in, and enjoy as the guys argue about the important issues facing us today—namely, why are Woody and Buzz so much cooler than those stupid Cars?

Leave your comments below and let us know which you think is the best. Make sure you agree with Kyle!

Pixar Podcast

Click the link above to listen in your browser. Right click and "save link as" to download to your computer. If you have trouble with that link, the podcast can also be downloaded here.