Tag Archives: Maxwell Caulfield

MY MOVIE SHELF: Grease 2

movie shelf

The Task: Watch and write about every movie on my shelf, in order (Blu-rays are sorted after DVDs), by June 10, 2015.  Remaining movies: 245 Days to go: 250

Movie #132: Grease 2

There was never any way Grease 2 would live up to the beloved reputation of Grease. It’s sillier, stupider, and the music isn’t as great. But it does have its merits. I didn’t even find out Grease 2 existed until I was in high school, and I watched it a bunch after that, but for a long time with an element of a hidden shame. I mean, it’s just that cheesy. (And this coming from the girl who loudly and openly likes a LOT of cheesy movies.) When I got to college, however, I discovered there was this whole underground cult of Grease 2 fans — one of the girls who lived down the hall from me in my first dorm could even do Michelle Pfeiffer’s “Cool Rider” dance perfectly (the end where she hops and spins and spells “Cool Rider”). That was huge for me, because it allowed me let my Grease 2 freak flag fly a little more openly. And once I found out Drew Barrymore loved it as well, I voiced my affection with pride. (Drew, call me!)

Grease 2 attempts to turn the tables on Grease by having it be the guy who’s the outsider — Maxwell Caulfield playing Sandy’s cousin Michael Carrington — while the girl (Pfeiffer as Stephanie Zinone) is the super cool one he’s changing for. Some characters are there to bridge the gap between the two films — Didi Conn as Frenchy (finishing her high school degree for some reason), Eve Arden as Principal McGee, Dody Goodman as Blanche, Sid Caesar as Coach Calhoun, and Dennis Stewart gets a slightly bigger role as the same rival gang leader from the first movie, only this time they’re on motorcycles — but mostly the cast of characters are new and the story is its own.

See, Stephanie dumped T-Bird leader Johnny (Adrian Zmed) over the summer because “there’s got to be more to life than making out,” and she’s “tired of being someone’s chick.” But Pink Ladies are supposedly required to be available to T-Birds, even though T-Birds chase around whomever they want, particularly the ladies who work at the grocery store (don’t ask). Meanwhile, Michael is smitten with Stephanie and keeps asking her out, but she brushes him off because he’s not a “dream on a mean machine with hell in his eyes.” She wants a cool rider, see, and “if he’s cool enough, he can burn me through and through. Whoa-oh-oh.” (If it takes forever, then she’ll wait forever.) “No ordinary boy, no ordinary boy is gonna do. I want a rider that’s cool.” Those might seem like the most ridiculous lyrics ever sung, but Michelle Pfeiffer really pulls them off (everyone who was so shocked and thrilled at Pfeiffer’s singing in The Fabulous Baker Boys obviously never saw Grease 2), and so Michael is convinced of his next move: in order to get Stephanie, he must get a motorcycle.

Luckily, the T-Birds this time around are openly stupid (no more mocking the jocks) and pay Michael to write essays for them. So he saves up money and buys a bike and before you know it he’s “a devil in skin-tight leather.” He shows up at odd times — bowling night, or wherever — all mysteriously clad in his head-to-toe leather ensemble, along with helmet and goggles, so nobody knows who he is. But he can jump cop cars with apparently no ramp whatsoever and Stephanie thinks he’s hot as all get out.

Johnny doesn’t like this development, and Pink Lady Paulette (Lorna Luft, aka Judy Garland’s OTHER daughter), who’s been seeing Johnny since school started, gets really mad at him for using her while he’s still getting jealous over Stephanie. The T-Birds chase the mysterious biker over Dead Man’s Curve on the night of the talent show and they don’t know if he jumped it or what, but he’s disappeared. (This is particularly dumb, because Michael is the talent show’s piano player, so if he didn’t show up someone would notice, but the talent show goes off without a hitch until Stephanie zones out during “Girl For All Seasons” and makes up her own song on the spot about her broken heart — it wins, of course.) Michael doesn’t show up until the next day or several days later or whenever the end-of-year luau is. He’s dressed as the cool rider, then reveals his true self, and Stephanie is thrilled. Also, he becomes a member of the T-Birds. The end.

Silly, like I said, but it has merits. Sixties heartthrobs Tab Hunter and Connie Stevens are there as canoodling teachers Mr. Stuart and Miss Mason, and the “Reproduction” song Mr. Stuart starts and the students finish is pretty funny. (“Make my stamen go berserk.”) There’s also a part where Louis (Peter Frechette) tricks Sharon (Maureen Teefy) into believing nuclear war has started to get her to sleep with him, which is pretty underhanded if you think about it but it’s so dumb and she ends up foiling him anyway, so you can just laugh. Paulette’s little sister Dolores (Pamela Adlon) is also a highlight, mostly because she gripes about how “the [Pink Lady] code stinks” and it pisses her off. And Christopher McDonald (of Thelma & Louise and Happy Gilmore, among others) plays a T-Bird named Goose and he is HUGE compared to everyone else. Like, super tall. But if that’s not enough for you, there is also an entire musical number about bowling. (“We’re gonna scor-or-ore tonight!”)

See? Merits.

Grease2

MY MOVIE SHELF: Empire Records

movie shelf

The Task: Watch and write about every movie on my shelf, in order (Blu-rays are sorted after DVDs), by June 10, 2015.  Remaining movies: 280  Days to go: 272

Movie #97: Empire Records

“Well Sinead O’Rebellion! Shock me, shock me, shock me with your deviant behavior!”

The first time I saw Empire Records, and Joe (Anthony LaPaglia) opened the store with Mark (Ethan Embry) right behind him, answering the phone, “Empire Records, open ’til midnight,” I told my friend that very moment that the number of people who call and ask when the store closes was probably astronomical. When Mark is later overwhelmed at the register, the rest of the staff busy participating in Deb’s (Robin Tunney) fake funeral, he answers the phone with that same required spiel only to respond with bewilderment and frustration to the unheard caller, “Midnight!” Never set up a dumb customer joke in the first act without paying it off in the third.

Empire Records is not the kind of movie that holds up to much scrutiny or analysis, so it’s best to just enjoy the spectacular ride of Rex Manning Day and all it has to offer. Oh, did I not mention? It’s Rex Manning Day! “Say no more, Mon Amour. Lips are for kissing, baby, je t’adore.”

Rex Manning (Maxwell Caufield) is a washed-up former heartthrob on a comeback tour of record store signings, and his manager Jane (Debi Mazar) has booked him at the illustrious Empire Records (established 1959). Corey (Liv Tyler) has had a crush on Manning since infancy and now she plans to lose her virginity to him (always a sound plan — “Oh, Rexy! You’re so sexy!”). But it’s a day of upheaval in the Empire universe, as the Man wants to turn them into a MusicTown chain. (“Welcome to MusicTown. May I service you?”) Meanwhile, Lucas (Rory Cochrane) stole $9000, A.J. (Johnny Whitworth) is in love with Corey and plans to tell her at 1:37PM, , Deb and Berko (Coyote Shivers) had a fight that ended in Deb feeling shitty and invisible again so she cut herself with a Lady Bic and shaved off all her hair. Gina (Renee Zellweger) steals Corey’s Rex Manning thunder in the count-out room and wants to be a singer in a band. Mark listens to horrible music, eats Eddie’s (James Wills) special recipe brownies and wants to start a band called Marc. And angry “Little Bastard” Warren (not his real name), played by Brendan Sexton III, shoplifts CDs and waves a gun around in order to get a cool job at a record store. It’s a lot to take in. “What’s with today, today?”

The interactions between the cast, however, are phenomenal and funny, and the dialogue is great. It’s infinitely quotable, with a soundtrack that, unsurprisingly, seamlessly meshes with the action and events of the day. And it also, in a kind of absolutely brilliant way, is the most accepting and affirming look at adolescence. Yes, there’s a bit of rivalry and spitefulness among Deb, Gina and Corey, but it works itself out over their mutual realizations that they’re all messed up in their own ways, and that they have common fears and common goals and common enemies. Yes, Lucas gambled away $9000 of the store’s money, but he’s Joe’s family — if not by blood, then by bond — and Joe can’t just discard him. Yes, Warren is acting out in hostile and aggressive ways, but they accept him as a person. And when Joe tries to talk to Deb about her problems, it’s not a twee moment. She asks him, “You gonna fix me Joe?” He takes a moment and tells her she’s doing a great job, which is exactly the kind of thing she needs to hear — nothing patronizing or smarmy, but appreciative and respectful. He lets her know her worth, as an employee, sure, but also, in that one statement, as a person. “I guess nobody really has it all together, huh?”

The day ends with an impromptu concert and fundraising drive that maybe solves all the outstanding issues a little too easily, but that doesn’t make it any less satisfying. “Damn the Man. Save the Empire.”

Empire Records may not be perfect (“Well, not entirely perfect.”), but it’s one of those movies that brings people together. It connects us through witty lines and common feelings and experiences. It’s about people who aren’t related but are family anyway, and how they come together to support one another even when there’s friction between them. For people feeling out-of-place and set adrift — as many adolescents do, kind of in general, as a defining aspect of adolescence — Empire Records offers a community of sorts — one of individuality and acceptance. “I don’t feel that I need to explain my art to you, Warren.”

And honestly (“Always play with their minds.”), it’s a hell of a lot of fun to watch.

“Just another tasty treat from the gang at Empire Records.”

Empire Records