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Archive for Posts Tagged ‘pulp-fiction’

Want to pull a heist with me?

December 10th, 2008 by Amelia G

Raines Jeff GoldblumI wonder if Los Angeles has more unqualified people attempt heists than the average city.

I just came in from my balcony. It is too dark tonight to see the Hollywood sign clearly. Or maybe it is too bright and the sign is overwhelmed by the nearly full moon and the holiday decorations visible on top of the Capitol Records building.

I just finished watching the Halloween episode of Boomtown. Boomtown is a long-canceled crime drama, which starred Donnie Wahlberg as a hard-driving detective with a good heart and a depressed wife. Each episode is shot from the point of view of multiple characters, who come together to show the whole story. I imagine show creator Graham Yost probably referenced Pulp Fiction during the pitch meeting. It is a sympathetic way to tell a story, such that the viewer understands where even characters at odds with one another are coming from.

Boomtown’s “All Hallows Eve”, written by show creator Graham Yost, features, in addition to a pumpkin hunt gone laugh-out-loud horribly wrong, an ambulance hijacked by a heist crew of desperadoes, dressed as cowboys, one of whom has been shot. The ambulance paramedic is one of the show’s more lovable characters, yet your heart just goes out to the lead hijacker.

The heist mastermind, Holden McKay, and his wounded brother Sam, came out to Hollywood to be stuntmen. After working as a janitor in a movie studio, Holden decides that a heist would be easy to pull on Halloween, when masks would not seem suspicious. Even though his master crime obviously failed badly enough that his brother got shot, listening to Holden explain how he could have been a janitor in Tulsa, but he came to Los Angeles for something more, I find myself thinking that pulling a heist would be totally reasonable.

Boomtown Donnie WahlbergThe actor seems so convincing and compelling that I’m sure I must have seen him in a major role in something else. According to the internet, I probably saw the actor, named Tyler Christopher, also dressed as a cowboy on CSI, but his main claims to fame are that he used to be married to Eva Longoria of Desperate Housewives (which I have never seen) fame and, oh yeah, he is apparently a huge soap star, having appeared on approximately nine gajillion episodes of General Hospital. I looked up how many episodes of General Hospital George Clooney was on, so I could make a statement about how every huge success in Los Angeles is somehow dwarfed by someone else’s. Only it turns out George Clooney was on E.R. I’m assuming they both take place in hospitals populated by hunky men, so anybody (who had never watched either) could make the same mistake.

A funny thing about Los Angeles is that there is always the sense that there is something bigger, something really huge, something incredibly larger than the average life. And that something is just barely beyond your grasp. It doesn’t matter how ridiculously successful you are either. You don’t have to be a janitor to feel like this here. There is the sense that if you were just a bit bolder, just a bit more extroverted, just a bit more elusive, or just a bit more in the right place at the right time, then you would finally break through to the big time. I don’t think anyone in Hollywood is ever so rich or so famous that they don’t feel like this, like they could hold the moon in the palm of their hand, if they could just figure out how to possess a slightly better balcony.

In “All Hallow’s Eve”, the ambitious lawyer, played by Neal McDonough, who is planning to run for District Attorney goes to a party at a Hollywood home with lavish Halloween decorations. They are there because the attorney hopes to eventually hit the party-thrower up to film a campaign commercial. He and his wife joke somewhat disparagingly about how their host wrote “that one with the bus” and “that other one”. Graham Yost, in addition to creating Boomtown, wrote Speed, which was okay, was indirectly responsible for Speed 2: Cruise Control, which I had the sense not to see, and wrote Broken Arrow, which was bad enough to stall the careers of both Christian Slater and John Woo in one movie.

Boomtown seems solid so far and I was interested in the show because Graham Yost also created the more recent Raines cop drama, which is pure genius. Raines is brilliant enough that I can forgive Broken Arrow. Jeff Goldblum plays depressed Detective Michael Raines who solves crimes by being a crazy person who hallucinates speaking with dead people, but who has the misfortune to know he is out of his gourd, although very good at his job. Detective Bobby “Fearless” Smith from Boomtown has a cameo on Raines, so they both take place in the same world. It is a world where both horrible and wonderful things happen.

So I wonder if Los Angeles, as compared to most cities, has statistically way way way more giant crimes attempted by amateurs. I’ve also got a pal at the District Attorney’s office I could drop an email, but I can’t decide how a statistician would quantify such a thing. Maybe a statistician wouldn’t quantify such a thing. Maybe the aggregate average of longing for greatness, expressed as the cosine of plucking the Hollywood moon out of the sky, can only really be quantified by midnight philosophers and dudes who create unjustly canceled cop shows for NBC.

So, who wants to pull a heist with me?


Cuddly Rigor Mortis

July 14th, 2006 by Amelia G

I met the talented Kristin Tercek through Ed Mironiuk who has been doing artwork for Blue Blood projects since 1995 or 1996. But Kristin wouldn’t need nepotism to be covered here because I love love love her Cuddly Rigor Mortis doll collection. Kristin is also an accomplished illustrator and completely self-taught. She explains her fairly organic creative process, “I basically sketch out a design and then go to the fabric store and wander around, touching everything, holding it up to the light, stretching it out to see if it might be the right fit.” She generally has an idea what she is looking for. For example, the artist was sure her Pulp Fiction-inspired fetish plush Gimp “needed to be black leather or vinyl” and was pleased when she found just the right soft, black pleather. Some of her creations, however, such as the Tiki plush doll and matching purse came into existence because Kristin found a cotton wood grain print velvet fabric which just begged to be made into something cool.

Although Kristin Tercek’s Cuddly Rigor Mortis plushes have only just been launched, they have already appeared in Frontiers Magazine, been a Yahoo New & Notable and Daily Pick, and been part of the Plush Rush show at Acme Art Gallery in Ohio. Kristin even did an exclusive one-of-a-kind cuddly piece for Plush Rush called Gorbot. The seasonal Gingerbreadman plush was a featured item on Etsy the fast-growing online marketplace for all things handmade. Seasonal means that you can only order Gingerbreadman which his deliciously chewed-on head or the very cheerful Snowman between now and January 31, 2006, although this article will be archived to tease you after the moment of opportunity passes.

Here is our exclusive Blue Blood interview with artist Kristin Tercek, the creator of the fabulous Cuddly Rigor Mortis plushes:

What first lead you on the path to the darker end of the artistic spectrum?
Always been there, always will be. What’s great now is the combination of cute and killer, something I’m obviously attracted to.

How did you get into doing art in general and cool dolls in specific?
I think I was born with a paintbrush in my hand. I grew up on Bob Ross and William Alexander (the same premise as Bob Ross but with a big, old Prussian guy ‘Firing in the trees! with your brush!’). I started painting on my own around 11 and haven’t stopped. About 4 years ago I started dabbling in other mediums and stumbled upon sewing. I’ve always loved stuffed animals (to the point where I still can’t watch any being thrown away) and got sucked into the whole urban vinyl/designer toy movement where all these different artists were turning their work into three dimensional toys. The plush designers like Ugly Dolls, Friends with You and Anna Chambers really inspired me to buy some fabric and let my inner plush-maker out.

What inspires your work?
I guess you could say all the old monster movies do. Certainly artists like Tim Biskup, Seonna Hong, Mark Ryden, Takashi Murakami, everything San-X, Aranzi Aronzo, Toy Field (Japanese Teddy Bear designers), Kariwanz (Japanese Fetish designers) and of course, Steven Spielberg and George Lucas.

Do you whistle while you work?
I don’t listen to much but recently Gorillaz has gotten my attention. I love everything about them, even their toys by Kid Robot (I recently acquired Noodle and can’t take my eyes off of him). Black Eyed Peas is an amazingly good album, too. One of my oldies but goodies is Desi Arnaz. You gotta love Cuba when it was cool. Honestly the past couple of weeks I’ve been going through the original Star Trek DVD’s while I work.

Any additional special credits or bio info you want to mention?
So far I’ve been so lucky with Cuddly Rigor Mortis. Gimp made it onto http://agentchin.typepad.com/cutethings/ . It’s a great list of cool toys that this person liked. So I emailed her to thank her and low and behold it’s Lili Chin one of the creators of “Mucha Lucha”. Gimp now lives with her in LA. He’s also been a part of Tokyo Perve’s Halloween Ball, accompanied by Karin and Wanco of Kariwanz. All of the plushes have sold really well due in no small part to the fact that someone over at Yahoo! (I don’t know who) took a liking to my website and made it a ‘New and Notable’ with only three other sites for a week in October and a Daily Pick in MyYahoo!. My webhits jumped from 3 a day to 5500 (it’s gone down a lot more now…whew!). These little guys have been shipped to Australia, Japan, Germany, the UK, Italy and of course, the good old US of A. I even had a fan over in Iraq in the form of an army soldier. (hope you made it home, Daniel!) who bought three of them! Everyone has been so nice and so happy with their plushes — I can’t ask for anything better.

What are your plans for the near future?
Sew! Sew! Sew! oh and celebrate Christmas with the little ones (2 chihuahuas and a husband, Ed Mironiuk). I was also asked to be part of a 12 artist plush show at Plastic Passion Toys in Seattle sometime in February. Ed and I also want to shop around a gallery show we want to do called ‘Pinups and Plushes’. It includes both our artwork — he’s started making pinups that include and compliment my plushes. Oooh he’s so talented it kills me!

Who is your favorite Blue Blood hottie?
I must say I’ve taken a liking to Dana Dark. I like her dog.


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