Aloha Kakahiaka


before the main attraction hits the stage, take a moment to view the set list:

MORRISSEY LIVE AT EARLS COURT 98%
ANTONY AND THE JOHNSONS I'M A BIRD NOW 97%

QUEENS OF THE STONE AGE LULLABIES TO PARALYZE 97%

THE FALL 50,000 FALL FANS CAN'T BE WRONG 95%
DINOSAUR JR. BUG 97%
LCD SOUNDSYSTEM 94%
BASTRO SING THE TROUBLED BEAST; DIABLO GUAPO 92%
THE PERCEPTIONISTS 90%
ASH MELTDOWN 91%
BUSDRIVER FEAR OF A BLACK TANGENT 92%

{100%=THE GODFATHER II. 95%-99%=THE GODFATHER. 90%-94%=GOOD FELLAS. 85%-89%=THE SOPRANOS. 80%-84%=CASINO. 79% and lower=THE GODFATHER III. (Don't worry about these until you get those.}

X-TRAS/COLEKTBLZ/ RINGS/ARCHIVE/PROFILE/F.A.?/MUSIC ENTRIES/email/
BANNERS & LINKS/CONTRIBUTORS/4-CHINS/LOG YOUR OWN FUCKING LIFE
SONGS/CHEWBACCA UNCIRCUMCIZED
BEWARE THE RANDOM AXE!

And now, ladies and gentlemen....the moment you've all been waiting for. Put down your drinks, and put your hands together for.....

2002-09-03 | GOON

I almost cried at the end of ZEBRAHEAD tonight. I still love that movie. I don't know why. One of my friends made fun of me because I bought it on video one time. Fuck you, Dave, this movie is still great!!

A lot of it is pretty cliche racism stuff, but It's still all-around, a pretty good flick.

If you're interested, I'm going to copy and paste some information about what I'm typing about onto the bottom of this entry.

One of my favorite actors is in ZEBRAHEAD. His name is KEVIN CORRIGAN.

He's been popping up in all these cool independent movies for years. I loved him as "GOON" in BUFFALO '66. He's been in some amazing pictures:

-GOODFELLAS

-KISS OF DEATH

-LIVING IN OBLIVION

-SCOTLAND, PA.

-TREES LOUNGE

-WALKING AND TALKING

-TRUE ROMANCE

and he was even on Freaks and Geeks!

Scotland, PA. is a very cool movie. Please watch it, and tell me what you think.

-------------------------

"ZEBRAHEAD" (R) COLUMBIA TRISTAR HOM, 1992, 102 Minutes

Starring: N'Bushe Wright, Paul Butler, DeShonn Castle, Candy Ann Brown, Michael Rapaport

Director: Anthony Drazan

All Movie Guide rating: 3 stars

An interracial romance sparks social upheaval in this indie drama from first-time writer/director Anthony Drazan. Jewish high school student Zack Glass (Michael Rapaport) lives with his widowed, womanizing father (Ray Sharkey) in one of the nicer areas of Detroit. His pop and grandfather own a pair of vintage record stores full of everything from swing and jazz to soul and disco; Zack carries on the vinyl-centric family tradition by selling hip-hop mix tapes out of his locker and mixing fiddles and Puccini into his DJ sets at local parties. One day at school, beautiful New Jersey transfer student Nikki (N'Bushe Wright) witnesses Zack's girlfriend unceremoniously dumping him; when it turns out that Zack's best friend, Dee Wimms (DeShonn Castle), is Nikki's cousin, the stage is set for romance -- the first interracial pairing for each teen. Dee is happy to play matchmaker, but members of the Wimms clan aren't as pleased with the romance. Nikki's mother, Marlene (Candy Ann Brown), asks Zack point-blank if he's curious about black women -- or just slumming it. Such mild disapproval is nothing compared to the rage felt by Nut (Ron Johnson), a young troublemaker who wants to romance Nikki himself. When Nikki overhears Zack making a racially insensitive comment about her to his pals at a party, she questions the viability of their relationship; the next day, she finds herself making time with Nut, who displays an unexpected tender streak. When Zack shows up at the local skating rink to talk to Nikki and sees Nut pestering her, things spiral out of control. Soon, the lines are drawn in a community-wide debate about interracial dating and urban violence. Zebrahead earned a Filmmaker's Trophy for Drazan at Sundance in 1992 and launched the successful careers of Rapaport and Wright. Indie fans will notice Kevin Corrigan in an elliptical subplot involving the industrial disintegration of the Motor City. ~ Brian Dillard, All Movie Guide

-----------------------------

Kevin Corrigan

BORN: March 27, 1969

One of the most prolific and reliably excellent actors on the independent film circuit, Kevin Corrigan has made a name for himself portraying a painfully memorable array of geeks, stoners, and generally pathetic losers. Consistently good at playing bad, he has elevated the expression of basic freakishness into something of an underrated art form.

A native of the Bronx, where he was born March 27, 1969, Corrigan first became interested in acting as a teenager. At the age of 17, his play The Boiler Room was produced by the Young Playwrights Festival of New York and two years later he made his film debut with a miniscule role as a security guard in Cocoon: The Return (1988). The following year, he had secondary roles in Lost Angels and the Jessica Lange drama Men Don't Leave.

The 1990s got off to a promising start for Corrigan with a supporting role as Ray Liotta's brother in Martin Scorsese's critically acclaimed Goodfellas (1990). More gangster action followed the next year with a part in Billy Bathgate, but Corrigan then took a turn toward smaller features with Zebrahead, a 1992 film that opened to generally positive reviews but little box-office action. After supporting roles in The Saint of Fort Washington and True Romance (both 1993), Corrigan had a substantial part in director Matthew Harrison's Rhythm Thief, a black-and-white drama that won Harrison a directing award at the 1995 Sundance Film Festival. The film marked the beginning of Corrigan's immersion in the growing and increasingly lucrative world of independent film, with supporting roles in Tom DiCillo's acclaimed Living in Oblivion (1995), in which the actor provided laughs as a dimbulb cameraman, and Trees Lounge (1996), the directorial debut of Corrigan's Oblivion co-star Steve Buscemi. The same year, Corrigan had substantial roles in the well-received independent comedy Walking and Talking, in which he had a memorable turn as a nebbishy video clerk who sleeps with Catherine Keener, and Illtown, a crime drama in which he starred with Lili Taylor and Zebrahead co-star Michael Rapaport.

Following a turn as a stoner guitarist in the obscure Bandwagon (1996) and a supporting role in Hal Hartley's 1997 film Henry Fool, Corrigan co-wrote and starred in the comedy Kicked in the Head, his second collaboration with Rhythm Thief director Harrison. Although the film was a relative critical and commercial flop, it did bear the distinction of being executive produced by Martin Scorsese, who had signed on after being favorably impressed by Rhythm Thief. The film was also notable for the fact that the misadventures of Corrigan's character -- a guy who gets kicked out of his apartment and dumped by his girlfriend -- were based on events in the actor's own life. He would later remark that the film was a form of therapy and followed it up with what was essentially a form of therapy for another director, Tamara Jenkins' The Slums of Beverly Hills (1998). Playing a Manson Family-obsessed stoner, Corrigan made a repugnantly vivid impression in the widely acclaimed film and the same year made a similar impression in his role as Vincent Gallo's best friend in Buffalo '66. After a small part in Paul Auster's Lulu on the Bridge (which premiered at the 1998 Cannes Film Festival), Corrigan worked on two more independents, the omantic drama Roberta, which premiered at the 1999 Sundance Festival and featured Corrigan in a lead role as a shy computer expert, and Coming Soon, which opened at the Los Angeles Independent Film Festival in April of the same year. ~ Rebecca Flint, All Movie Guide

---------------------------

"SCOTLAND, PA."(R) SHOWTIME ENTERTAINME, 2001, 104 Minutes

Starring: James LeGros, Maura Tierney, Christopher Walken, Kevin Corrigan, James Rebhorn

Director: Billy Morrisette

All Movie Guide rating: 2 1/2 stars (should be 3 in my opinion!!)

What happens if you take one of William Shakespeare's darkest tragedies and move it to a burger joint in the early 1970s? The answer can be found in the satiric comedy Scotland, PA, the first feature from writer and director Billy Morrissette. Mac McBeth (James LeGros) is a hard-working but unambitious doofus who toils at a hamburger stand alongside his wife Pat (Maura Tierney), who has a significant edge in the brains department. Pat is convinced she could do a lot better with the place than their boss Norm Duncan (James Rebhorn) is doing, so she works up a plan to usurp Norm, convincing Mac to rob the restaurant's safe and then murder Norm, using the robbery as a way of throwing the police off their trail. Though two stoners (Andy Dick and Timothy Speed Levitch) and a would-be fortune teller (Amy Smart) warn Mac that bad luck awaits him, he gathers his courage and goes through with his wife's scheme. At first, things seem to have gone just as Pat hoped, and after Norm's sons (Geoff Dunsworth and Tom Guiry) sell the restaurant to the McBeths (they pay for it with the money they stole from Norm), business takes off. But vegetarian police detective McDuff (Christopher Walken) is convinced there's foul play at the new center of the fast food universe, and when the McBeths fear that fry cook Banco (Kevin Corrigan) knows more than he's letting on, Pat decides another murder is on the menu. Scotland, PA premiered at the 2001 Sundance Film Festival; incidentally, Shakespeare does receive screen credit for his contribution to the story. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

- premature ejaculation | tantra +


CLIX click here to make me and Robert light up CLIX

GIMME 5:
music - 2006-08-10
music - 2006-08-10
music - 2006-08-10
RHCP album review - 2006-07-27
The sequel - 2006-05-10


powered by SignMyGuestbook.com
~this page is protected by the one ultramagnetic overseer, a.k.a. dr. dooom pebblestone~
Thank you. That's my time. Enjoy Yaz.

walking the earth (Sept. 6004-Dec. 6004)
the college dropout (May 6004-Aug. 6004)
rebirth (Jan. 6004-Apr. 6004)
days of seclusion (Sept. 6003-Dec. 6003)
i don't wanna grow up (May 6003-Aug. 6003)
teenage kicks (Jan. 6003-Apr. 6003)
adolescent behaviour (September 6002-December6002)
preschool (May 6002-August 6002)
learning to walk (January 6002-April 6002)
the birth (6001)



Site Meter