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Blood Splattered Cinema
Hosted by: Horror Guru
The Horror Guru reviews the bloodiest, wildest, and weirdest horror that cinema has to offer!
Cartoon Palooza
Hosted by: Joey Tedesco
A satirical review show where a guy from Jersey watches and criticizes cartoons, including everything from comic books to animated movies. Whatever it is, Joey will either tell you to run out and see it... or fughetabouit!
The Cheap-Arse Film Review
Hosted by: Liam Barrett
It's the Cheap-Arse Film Review, where a young(ish) man finds out if it's possible to live the life of a cinephile super-nerd on the strictest budget possible. Inspired by growing up in the wilds of Essex, England (that's only partially a joke, by the way) and the current harsh economic times, Liam only reviews DVD that can be purchased for £1.00p or less!
The Cinema Slob
Hosted by: Cinema Slob
The Cinema Slob is here to defend the movies that everyone else seems to hate, for some reason. His reviews of underappreciated and misunderstood classics of modern cinema will surely entertain and maybe even change a few minds.
The Count Jackula Show
Hosted by: Count Jackula
There are vampires, and there are men from outer space, but there is only one vampire from outer space! Join Count Jackula from the Planet Drakula as he explains the ins and outs of horror, from the mythic to the modern. Blood, off-color humor, and an obsession with Elvira are in store for you!
The DVD Shelf
Hosted by: David Rose
Life is short, so skip the bad movies and let your host David Rose reveal, review, and recommend the ones you should have on your own DVD shelf. The DVD Shelf is a film-lover's safe haven to bask in the warm glow of cult favorites, over-looked cinematic gems, rediscovered classics, and downright fun flicks on both DVD and Blu-ray.
The Examined Life (of Gaming)
Hosted by: Roland Thompson
Just when video games were getting good, the late '90s and early '00s came along. The Examined Life (of Gaming) dares to delve into the good, the bad, and the value-priced games of this dark period, and sometimes we find something worth playing!
The Film Renegado
Hosted by: Film Renegado
Coming to you from south of the border, it's the Film Renegado! A civil engineer with a cinephile complex, the Film Renegado uses movies made in Mexico or by Mexican directors to share bits from his country's culture, past and present. You will both learn and be entertained! How cool is that?
Friday Night Fright Flicks
Hosted by: Count Jackula & Horror Guru
Welcome, fright knights, to Friday Night Fright Flicks! Join your hosts Count Jackula and the Horror Guru as they stumble their way through current horror releases, letting you know which ones are worth the price of admission.
Good Bad Flicks
Hosted by: Cecil Trachenburg
Good Bad Flicks is a show not only dedicated to rare movies, but also forgotten classics and misunderstood box office bombs. Your host Cecil takes you through each movie, discussing the promotional materials, and taking a look at what went on behind the scenes. With a healthy dose of Irish sarcasm, he throws a few jabs at even his most cherished favorites.
The Graphic Novel Picture Show
Hosted by: Sybil Pandemic
Your host Solkir presents The Graphic Novel Picture Show, a retrospective of the history of comic book movies!
Joshua the Anarchist
Hosted by: Joshua Bell
Charged with the crime of liking Batman & Robin, Joshua the Anarchist has been declared insane and committed to Arkham Asylum. Locked away in a padded cell, he'll endure movie after movie as doctors attempt to "treat" him. He may not have gone in a madman, but he soon will be.
Movie Dorkness
Hosted by: Sofie Liv
It's the show formerly known as Red Suitcase Adventues! Join Sofie Liv, a nice Dane (who may not be as negative as everyone else!) as she dissects pop culture phenomena to explore both the good and bad in popular films.
The Movie Skewer
Hosted by: Team Agony Booth
From the makers of the Agony Booth™ comes The Movie Skewer, where terrible movies are roasted over an open flame for your enjoyment. Watch the very first online review/recap series that’s too much for one host to handle!
Mr. Mendo's Hack Attack
Hosted by: Michael A. Novelli
Need a healthy dose of cynicism from a guy whose face you can barely see? Then Mr. Mendo’s your man! Whether a movie suffers from Hype Backlash, Intellectual Dishonesty, or is just Complete Shit, Mr. Mendo is there. Mr. Mendo wasn‘t raised in this country, so he takes nothing for granted: if something ain‘t right, he’ll nose it out. So join him as he takes on Oscar winners and legendary flops alike in front of a blanket suspended between his couch and recliner!
PGSM Summaries
Hosted by: Nycea
Pretty Guardian Sailor Moon (PGSM for short) is a hilarious live-action retelling of the Sailor Moon story. On this show, your host Nycea summarizes and riffs on this gloriously bad series—one episode at a time.
Reel vs. Reel
Hosted by: Animated Heroine
Animation isn't just for kids; it's also for adults who never learned how to grow up. In Reel vs. Reel, the Animated Heroine looks at two similar animated films to see which one comes out on top and why. Her love for good animated films is only matched by her cynicism towards the bad ones.
Stuff You Like
Hosted by: Sursum Ursa
Stuff You Like is an original show where redhead Sursum Ursa waxes enthusiastic about movies, TV shows, and anything else that comes to mind! Expect singing, snarky subtitles, random pictures she finds on the internet, and lots of fangirling!
Terror Obscura
Hosted by: Fear Fan
Terror Obscura is a show dedicated to exploring the best and worst horror films ever made. While some shows are content to just mock bad films, this one isn't afraid to take even the most sacred of cows to the slaughterhouse. If you like horror, humor, or if you're just looking to find some titles you might want to rent, Terror Obscura is the show for you!
Tom's Retrophilia
Hosted by: Thomas Stockel
Is he a connoisseur of vintage media, or just a bitter old man trapped in the past?  Either way, tune in and watch Tom take a look at the movies and television shows from a time when he was actually in the target audience!
The Unusual Suspect
Hosted by: Unusual Suspect
The Unusual Suspect reviews popular movies, and tears 'em apart! They may be good, but no movie is perfect, and there's always things you may have overlooked and hadn't thought about. So join the Suspect as he exploits and ridicules the films you know and love. Just don't kill him for it!
What We Had to Watch
Hosted by: Il Neige
Il Neige is a smart-ass with a love-hate relationship with movies from the new millennium. Sure, reviews can be fun or cathartic, but there's also the risk of the occasional Twi-hard invasion or fireball to the face! ...That's how these things usually go, right? So join Il Neige as he braves the cinematic dangers that lie just beyond the fourth wall to critique the best and worst of 21st century filmmaking!
Click to see all our shows!
the agony booth
 
Wild Wild West (1999) Movie Recap Page 3 of 11
Posted by Gareth Basset Posted on: June 25, 2008
Page: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11


Cut to outside, where a buxom young lady peers into the saloon through a pair of opera glasses, repeating Jim and Kline's conversation aloud. We recognize her as one of the women from the stagecoach, and she's identified as "Miss Lippenreider". Subtle, I know. But she's perhaps the best character in the whole movie, based solely on her faux, unidentifiable European accent. Observe:

Lippenreider: Get owt of my vay... get owt of my vay... Oo-Es Ah-mee... Oo-Es Mah-Shal.

Caption contributed by Albert
Pleased to meet you, Miss Lippenreider.
My name is Mr. Nipplereider.

The article continues after this advertisement...

She utters these words to the man in the stagecoach nearby, who you might recognize as one of the best Hamlets of all time, Kenneth Branagh. I'm guessing he doesn't consider this film one of his career highpoints. Mr. Ponytails (he's identified as Mr. Hudson, but at this point, who honestly cares?) arrives with his hostage, no longer in the trunk, and restates what Miss Lippenreider has already revealed about the two lawmen.

In response, Branagh eyes the nearby wagon filled with nitro (which, by the way, has somehow turned around, because the cart is now directly on the cliff's edge). He then picks up a cane that does the most extraordinary thing: it extends like a car antenna. He uses this car antenna to pull the pin that secures the wagon to the horses, and the cart immediately starts rolling down the steep cliff, directly towards the saloon.

Meanwhile, Jim and Kline are still in their standoff. Strangely, everyone else has disappeared, and they're now standing in an empty saloon. Upon hearing the cart rolling their way, they look at each other and ask in unison, "Now what?" Because, you know, it's funny... somehow.

The answer comes when the cart crashes into the saloon and the nitro explodes, sending a huge fireball through the saloon. And then... the screen fades to black. Did the heroes just get incinerated? Is the movie over? Can I hope?

Regretfully, no, because the scene shifts to Washington, D.C., and Jim rides into the shot on his horse. So, I guess that massive explosion... didn't harm anybody? This, by the way, is the first time in the movie (and certainly not the last) that I'll get the feeling a scene is missing.

Jim rides to the front of the White House, where he tethers his horse to a pole. He then walks through the gate and up a gravel path to the front door, through the front door, and into the main lobby. I think it's fair to say they've beefed up security at the White House a bit in the last 150 years. It's only in the lobby where someone finally decides letting an armed man walk into the president's residence isn't such a good idea.

Caption contributed by Albert
"Quick, cut away before I walk headfirst into this mural!"

A guard asks Jim to hand over his gun. Jim allows the man to reach for the gun... before pulling a second gun from behind his back and pointing it at the man's throat, hammer cocked and all. Jim grins like this is hilarious, before offering the second gun to the man. The man reaches for the second gun... only to have Jim point it at him again. Our hero, ladies and gentleman.

Caption contributed by Gareth
This is definitely the kind of mature individual I want
protecting my country.

A voice booms from an adjoining office: It's Ulysses S. Grant, 18th President of the United States! Strangely, Grant doesn't chastise Jim for being a tool, but rather chastises the guard for making Jim late for his appointment. Oh, okay, so I guess Jim's not an asshole, then.

With his integrity given the presidential stamp of approval, Jim walks straight into the office, with both his guns, no less. Grant wastes little time in pointing out that Jim let McGrath slip through his fingers. Jim tries to pin the blame on Kline. Grant interrupts, finally telling us the name of Kline's character: "Artemus Gordon". Henceforth he shall be referred to in this recap as Gordon, because I'll be damned if I'm going to type a goofy name like "Artemus" over and over again.

The president then speechifies for a long time about Gordon, calling him a "genius" and the "best marshal he's got", while berating Jim as a "headstrong cowboy". This speech is so over the top that the audience figures out it's not really Ulysses Grant long before Jim does.

Jim points his cocked gun in the president's face and asks who he really is. Grant insists he's the president, so Jim shoots at the ceiling. In the White House. (Like I said... our hero, ladies and gentleman.) Eventually, another cocking of the pistol convinces Grant to admit he's really Gordon himself in disguise.

Gordon wants to know how Jim figured this out, so Jim points to the class ring Gordon is wearing, saying Grant went to West Point, not Harvard. That's fine, but "the self-ass-kissing speech, that's how" would've more than sufficed as an answer, Jim.

It's only now that anybody notices a gun was just fired in the White House, and moments later the real President Grant enters (confusingly enough, he's also played by Kevin Kline). He demands to know what's going on. Gordon starts removing his disguise—including using a knife to puncture an inflated whoopee cushion under his shirt, fart sound and all—and offers a half-assed explanation of how he was trying to prove how easily an intruder in disguise could penetrate the White House.

Caption contributed by Gareth
Gordon, unable to take any more of this movie, commits suicide while Jim watches enviously.

Grant utters something inane about Gordon's intellect killing him someday, and then scolds Jim for his "patented approach of shoot first, shoot later, shoot some more, and when everybody's dead, try to ask a question or two." That's interesting, since the only shot Jim has even fired thus far was at a ceiling.

It's here that Grant reveals that Jim and Gordon will become buddy cops for the rest of the movie. When they try to object, Grant reminds them he's Commander-in-Chief, and they'll do as he says. Our two new buddies follow Grant through a secret doorway into a room filled with wrinkly old men and outdated machinery. I'm guessing this is the CIA.

Grant takes this opportunity to provide clunky exposition, where he explains that the country's top scientists have been kidnapped by McGrath. He asks why it took Jim and Gordon so long to figure out they were working the same case. Wait, are we sure they've actually figured this out?

Jim reveals a competitive streak right away, pointing out he was trying to catch McGrath, whereas Gordon was trying to "marry him". Actually no, Jim, you were about to shoot McGrath before Gordon happened to stop you.

Grant picks up a note and hands it to Gordon, who reads it aloud. It's the evil demands of whoever kidnapped the scientists. The note explains that the missing scientists are being forced to create an incredibly powerful weapon, and Grant has one week to surrender the U.S. Government.

Grant points out that the note arrived with a cake shaped like the White House, sealed in a glass container. When Gordon tries to get a closer look at the cake, he backs away when he sees tarantulas are suddenly crawling all over it. Gee, that's subtle.

Jim declares that McGrath must be behind this, but Gordon believes there has to be an evil mastermind behind McGrath. He thinks they should gather more intelligence. Jim says that McGrath is heading for New Orleans (thanks, random henchman who can't keep his mouth shut!) and he doesn't need "intelligence" to know that. Gordon's reply? "No, you'd rather rely on stupidity." Burn!

The president informs Jim and Gordon that he's about to leave for Utah to attend the joining of two intercontinental railroads (obvious foreshadowing alert!). He calls them the "best men he's got"—and if that's true, the country is screwed—and asks them to put aside their differences to catch the madman behind this plot. Oh, Grant, don't you know that our heroes must first allow their personalities to clash in theoretically comedic ways before they can share a moment of bonding and finally realize that they have to work together?

With that, the President's "best men" are dismissed.

Caption contributed by Albert
"More juvenile dick jokes? Yes, sir!"

On the way out, a man approaches them and informs them that Grant has given them a train, called the Wanderer, to help them get around. He also gives a round box to Gordon, which is an "item he requested". Must be a new bustier.

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