About us

COLIN is an American. A Hoosier. A photographer. A parody rapper. He has seen Zoolander at least 57 times and is convinced Rocky IV ended the Cold War. He has had whole conversations in Supertrooper quotes and one day plans to write an entire screenplay of classic lines recycled from his favorite movies. There is at least an 80% chance he is wearing his orange LeBron James jersey right now.

ALEX can be seen mackin' hoes and smackin' foes on a regular basis. The phrase pimpin' ain't easy does not apply to him. When he's not pimpin' it, he can be seen in your neighborhood multiplex. Don't invite him to watch your favorite sports movie, feel-good movie, or anything associated with Michael Bay because he will not participate. A Penn State grad, but a bigger Hoosier fan than you. There's at least a 59% chance he once sported a pony tail.

Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Shameless Cross Promotion

Around this time tomorrow, I'll be packing up an attractive, yet manly, gray duffel bag with the absolute essentials: 1 neon Bert & Ernie t-shirt, 2 pairs LeBron James Nike shorts, maybe some extra boxers and shorts, and my insanely fresh Steve Francis Rockets jersey. This one. (Maybe if I wear it with some P.F. Flyers and re-engineer myself with several more fast twitch muscle fibers, I can get that high. Here's hoping. Or, more appropriately...here's HOPPING.)

You may or may not know this about me, but I'm in one of Fort Wayne's most popular 6-white-guy rap parody groups: The Bo'z N Da Hood. And while all of the Bo'z hail proudly from the 2-6-0, there are times when there are indeed Bo'z in different area codes. This is one of those times.

Founding Bo member Jon Rocholl is at Columbia in New York City finishing up his high-fallutin' Ivy League degree. And since it's getting to be finals time and he should be studying, most of the rest of the Bo'z are heading out to see him for the weekend. Rage, rage, rage.

So that got me thinking: there have been some phenomenal movies made in the Big Apple. Hell, the city has been partially or totally destroyed a few dozen times (three times in '98 alone...looking at you, Armageddon, Deep Impact, and Godzilla!). And even though it's happened more than twice, they still can't figure out how to keep the top of the Empire State Building giant monkey-free. Get your act together New Yorkers.

Anyways, here's a rundown of some favorite NYC-centric films, in no particular order.


Ghostbusters & Ghostbusters 2 - Doooo...Raaaaay...Egonnnnn! I love these movies, and no, I can't choose or distinguish between them. All I know is that they check in right at the top of my "Scared the bejesus out of me when I was a kid but now I think they're hilarious" list. Right behind E.T. Also, they filmed a lot of Ghostbusters on the campus of Columbia. So if I see Slimer this weekend, I'll be sure to tell him you said "What up."


The Muppets Take Manhattan - Has anyone checked to see if they ever gave it back? Fozzie might still own half of Greenwich Village for all we know.

Coming To America - Also makes my "Awesome movies filmed in Zamunda" list. I don't know if you remember this, but Eddie Murphy used to be really funny, and Arsenio Hall used to be alive. This movie is living proof. And let's not forget that it's soul-ly responsible for the Jheri curl craze in the 80s.

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 2: The Secret of the Ooze - Go ninja, go ninja, go! Ninja...ninja...rap!


I Am Legend - I really don't like this movie. Probably because it has one of the dumbest endings of all time (and to make matters worse, they give you an ending that makes complete sense as a deleted scene on the DVD...why didn't you just use that one morons?!). But, that having been said, the movie gives you a WALL-E-esque glimpse into what would happen to a big city if it was suddenly people-less for a while. And so you get some pretty sweet scenes with Will Smith hunting deer in the middle of a Manhattan city block and. what. not.


#1) Zoolander - (Yes, this list is suddenly in order of increasing importance.) Fun fact: If you look closely at the New York skyline, you will actually see a skyscraper with a giant "M" on top of it. And you'd better damn well believe I'll be making a visit to the Derek Zoolander Center For Kids Who Can't Read Good, which, thankfully, at press time was at least three times bigger than its model.

So yeah, I'm looking forward to this trip. Oh, and the shameless, cross/self promotion I promised? Let's just say there'll be a Bo'z N Da Hood music video or two (those are movies, right?) filmed in the city this weekend. (Like this one and this one, but way cooler.) And I'll holla next week with some pictures I took, because I know this blog has just been aaaaching for some ColinThompsonPhoto(.com!)s. So until next time...

I'm not an ambi-turner,

Colin

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Back! and...better than ever?

All right, all right. Here we are. It's been a while, I'm sorry. After getting off to a solid start in March, we were starting to be in serious danger of going 0 for April. I can only assume Nix is busy. I mean, the guy is working as a freaking golf professional in two separate states. Not to mention juggling, both figuratively and literally, 16 known girlfriends. Me? I'm just lazy. And somewhat uninspired. With a dash of self consciousness.

Almost two weeks ago, it dawned on me that our absence on this page was starting to get ridiculous. I started planning a grand return for our droves of fans. Something epic, something life changing. "A 15,000 word odyssey chronicalling the evolution of comedy in movies!" I thought. Or, "With the NFL draft approaching, how about a 32 team, 7 round movie draft!?" I set my sights way too high, didn't end up writing anything, and the days went on.

But then something magical happened. Not 12 minutes ago, I finished a great movie. And it reminded me why I love seeing, talking about, writing about movies in the first place.

First, a little tidbit about me that really explains my movie fandom: I'm an emotional dude. A passionate bro, if you will. And I get way too swept up in a good movie for my own good. And, all too often, for a brief while after the movie ends, I've basically adopted the traits and emotions of the character/s I was just watching. Which sounds confusing even to me. So...examples:

- Good Will Hunting: Am I a completely lost college aged guy with deep-seeded issues stemming from his childhood that really needs to befriend a heavily bearded, capable-of-being-the-voice-of-an-awesome-Disney-character, therapist? And also move to Boston? For a while after being exposed to Will and his ridiculously-accented friends, I was pretty much convinced.

- Seven Pounds: Spoiler alert! In Seven Pounds, Will Smith is responsible for a car crash that kills seven people, including his wife. He feels so guilty that he goes to great lengths to find people worthy and needing of his organs, then kills himself in order to be their doner. I could barely stand up when the credits rolled, I felt just beaten up and defeated. My friends went out somewhere afterward, I had to go home. Couldn't handle the rest of the night.

- 300: Man did I want to beat the hell out of some Persians. And definitely a Top 5 gym day for me the following morning.

- Gladiator: See: "300". Also made me want to be one day put in a situation where I would knowingly go to my death for the greater good somehow. And be a hero for it.

Tonight's movie was about a baby-expecting couple in their 30s seeking out a new home to start raising their family. Obviously, I related.

But just as I'm not an orphan from south Boston, and I've never been responsible for a death, and I've certainly never overthrown any Roman leaders, my actual similarities to these characters doesn't matter. In life there's a handful of basic human emotions that we all encounter. Love, loss, happiness, grief, acceptance, regret, insecurity. Overwhelming joy, crushing sadness. A great movie will run the gauntlet of these, and, often, there IS something we can relate to. (Sometimes, lightning strikes, and we get literally every possible emotion in one scene.)

That's why I watch movies, and more importantly, why I actively seek out the best ones. A lot of the time, we see movies to simply be entertained. And, sure, I see some value in that. We laugh together, root for the good guys, act totally surprised when they escape the clutches of death to defeat their nemesis at the last possible moment. But, afterward, do we really care? What did we learn?

(Side rage: Millions upon millions of dollars are made every year by 1) putting a popular actor and actress together, 2) having them fall in love, 3) have a falling out when it's revealed that the guy only went out with her for a bet, or that the girl has been writing a magazine article about how to lose him in a set amount of days, and 4) they overcome any and all odds to be together, because their love is so goddamn special. Secret: It's the same damn movie every time! And we eat it up! Why?!)

Tonight I saw an actual love story. And it made me long to one day have a loud fake argument with my pregnant wife over lunch on a train from Phoenix to Madison. Or fall asleep on a trampoline with her. Or move into her childhood home to start a family. And all that other sappy stuff. Good stuff. Family...love...the stuff of life dammit.

Of course, if I happen to catch Gone In 60 Seconds on TNT (they know drama) for the billionth time tomorrow, expect to see a black Mazda 3 in a high speed pursuit on I-69. Turn on the news around 6, I'll be the guy doing 120 wishing he had a "Go Baby Go" button.

Also, I guess this was all my long winded endorsement of Away We Go. See it.