2.20.2011

The Boulevard: A look inside the lives of Hollywood's costumed characters

By AARON SCHRANK


James stands on the terrazzo sidewalk surveying the bustling foot traffic along Hollywood Boulevard, a notorious thoroughfare in the land of dreams both realized and broken. The colossal façade of the Kodak Theatre stands before him, blocking the sun from casting its rays directly in his eyes. Even the promise of extra cash in his pocket does not always sweeten the proposition of putting on a solid black Batman suit and standing gallantly in public for hours at a time, but this is his job.

As a street performer, a Hollywood costumed character, James is one of hundreds who masquerade as film or TV personalities and pose for pictures with tourists. Dressed in a Dark Knight-era Batman get-up that would make Bruce Wayne jealous, James glances down at footway tributes to Spielberg and Hopkins then slowly lifts his head to meet the beam of a spellbound sightseer. He remembers why he does what he does. He’s doing exactly what he came to Hollywood over a year ago to do—entertaining.

While these may not have been the roles many of these Hollywood hopefuls had imagined for themselves, a colorful cast of characters—from a cheery Buzz Lightyear, to an amazingly authentic Jack Sparrow, to a dismal chain-smoking Marilyn Monroe—canvass the sidewalk-stage between the historic Grauman’s Chinese Theatre and Hollywood & Highland shopping complex.  The performers deliver their shtick or stage photo-ops for tourists in exchange for tips.  For those with the right assets, the activity is surprisingly profitable. 

While he preferred to remain confidential as to his exact earnings, Batman James explained that “the Boulevard” was his primary source of income. 

“On a good day, I make well over minimum wage, let’s put it that way,” James said. “You can make good money when you have a good costume, a good attitude, and you can show people a good time.”

James said that many of the characters are driven only by money and described how the reprobate and unprofessional demeanor of some has introduced an unfair stigma upon the entire group. 

“We’re not all about the same thing,” James said. “I’m not trying to be mean, but I don’t really associate with the ones who come out here and shove a prop in your hand and say ‘picture, picture, picture’ or ‘tip, tip, tip.’ That’s not cool.  Nobody likes that. Nobody wants that. I don’t support that.”

While these costumed characters have served as bastions of the gimmicky glamour of downtown Hollywood for years, a string of incidents over the past several years has brought negative attention upon the mob of superheroes, cartoon characters and lookalikes.  In 2006, a Freddy Krueger look-alike stabbed a man during an altercation. In 2007, a Chewbacca was arrested for allegedly head-butting a tour guide.  A few months prior, an Elmo and Mr. Incredible impersonator were taken in for aggressive begging.  The Los Angeles Police Department organized a ‘superhero summit’ in 2007 to address escalating tensions among the performers, the effects of which, according to James, have mostly dissolved.

While some are territorial, and many appear desperate, a number of characters, James included, approach their occupation with an artistic professionalism. 

Jim, a convincing Jack Sparrow, complete with an eye-patched entourage and controlled queue of pre-teen admirers, is the true star of the show.  Radiating Depp-like charm, he even collects claps from passer-byers.  “You will remember this picture forever, my dear,” he declares to a young brace-faced blonde.   

Jim, who despises the negative attention, brought upon his profession by “crack heads and beggars in Halloween costumes,” sports an outfit so authentic that he attracted the attention of “Pirates of the Carribean” costume designer Penny Rose, who gifted him an original bandana worn by Johnny Depp in the films.  

Captain Jim and many of his colleagues advocate for a higher standard of showmanship among the characters.

“He and I made a vow five years ago to put the best costumes in front of the Kodak,” Jim said, gesturing towards a yellow Autobot, straight out of Michael Bay’s “Transformers.” “We’ve been trying to outdo one another ever since.” 

Both competition and camaraderie exist among the characters. 

To compete with a series of Batmen, James employs the assistance of his on-screen enemy.
“That’s the Joker I work with on a regular basis,” James said, pointing to a Ledger-lookalike prowling behind a pack of giggling tourists. “We met out here on the street, and we just became really good friends over the past year or so.  I’m pretty cool with everybody who’s a quality character out here.”

While a living can be made street performing, many of the men and women behind the masks are involved sporadically with film and TV projects.  Batman James produces short films and music videos.  Ronald Ortiz, a Guatemalan immigrant who plays Nacho Libre, builds sets for Universal Studios.  

“It’s supplemental income in between all the acting and other things that I do,” said Adam, a member of Jim’s pirate-entourage who frequently plays the cephalopod-faced Davy Jones. “I just come out here when I don’t have any regular acting gigs.  I don’t want to have a regular job where I have to beg and plead for the day off to go to an audition or do some acting.”

The described disparity between the quality and lackluster characters is visible even to the untrained eye.  A woman dressed as an unrecognizable bear taps children on the shoulder, soliciting a picture, as she clutches sweat-stained dollars in her frayed paw.  A mustached man in a headless Scooby-Doo costume ironically holds out a Beggin’ Strips doggie treat bag, stuffing cash donations inside.  Dora the Explorer sits against a storefront, rolling a cigarette. 

“They just ruin the thing,” Adam said. “The negative characters give negative energy, but, luckily, there are also positive characters with good costumes that produce positive energy”

According to James and others, it is the inferior characters that garner most attention from the media, rendering the vocation a laughingstock.  Higher caliber characters yearn for regulation. 

“I think it would just make it more professional, higher quality; better characters would be out here,” James said.  “I’m all about it, if we were licensed, then people with crappy costumes who are just out here harassing people for tips wouldn’t be allowed to be on the streets.”

For now, as the two-tier hierarchy of values continues, as shoddy Halloween costumes intermingle with screen-accurate ensembles, a select few endeavor to overcome the social stigma and re-establish their status as legitimate and exciting entertainers. 

“The money is just a byproduct of a job well done,” said James.  “I’m only here because this makes kids smile.  If I saw that my presence on the Boulevard ever became bothersome to people, I would just stop showing up to work.”  

1.23.2011

Top 10 of 2010: Films

While there's plenty I haven't seen, here are my favorites released in 2010. It'll be nice not to have to see something as lame as The Blind Side as an Oscar contender this year.

10. Inception

Writer/Director Christopher Nolan has proven, once again, his mastery of the cerebral blockbuster. Expect many more worthwhile crowd-pleasers in the years ahead.







9. The Town

Affleck set the mark high with his 2007 directorial debut, Gone Baby Gone, but The Town delivered. While it boasts a fairly formulaic heist-movie storyline, its pace and style carry it further.



8. Shutter Island
Certainly not Scorsese's best work, this now nearly-forgotten release of early 2010 was met with mixed reviews. It might take a few viewings for some to appreciate it (it is now streaming on Netflix), but Scorsese and DiCaprio's fourth collaboration presents an affecting tale of psychological deterioration.


7. True Grit
Anything created by the Coens will almost always be among my favorites of the year and True Grit is certainly among the best westerns of the past few decades. While the film's characters hover somewhere between plausible and archetypal, performances like that of Jeff Bridges (and even Matt Damon)afford the film incredible entertainment value. 


6. Exit Through the Gift Shop
Everyone's favorite street artist, Banksy, reveals his ability manipulate the Los Angeles art world a la "The Emperor's New Clothes." What begins as an inside look into one man's experience with street art ends with a revamp of the age-old question: "What is art?"


5. The Fighter
The Fighter expands upon the structure of a traditional boxing movie, chronicling the entanglements of members of Micky Ward's toxic but supportive family. Even the film's most sappy and cliché moments feel real, thanks to the performance abilities of Bale, Wahlberg and Melissa Leo. The Lowell, Massachusetts milieu comes to life with Bale's strung out Dicky Eklund as its tour guide. After watching, check out HBO's 1995 doc High on Crack Street: Lost Lives in Lowell, the shooting and release of which is depicted in The Fighter

4. The King's Speech
The great performances of Colin Firth and Geoffrey Rush turn this predictable, feel-good period piece into something memorable. Directed by Tom Hooper (HBO's John Adams miniseries),The King's Speech is heartfelt and even funny.



3. The Social Network
The Fincher-directed, Sorkin-scripted Facebook movie generated a lot of hype, and rightfully so. The melodrama associated with this Facebook origin myth is eclipsed by its complex characters and witty dialogue. The film avoids oversimplified hero and villain characterizations, challenging audiences to decide for themselves who is right or wrong, if anyone. Eisenberg deserves an Oscar nod for his portrayal of America's second youngest billionaire. 

2. Black Swan

Aronofsky's latest is the unsettling story of Nina(Natalie Portman), a rigid, emotionally stunted ballerina who descends into derangement in her attempt to play the Swan Queen in her cutthroat ballet company's production of Swan Lake. Aronofsky, once again (as he did with The Wrestler) , examines the mental torture artists and performers endure in their pursuit of perfection. The audience is transported into Nina's distorted reality, with help from Portman's authentic performance and the film's stunning visual elements.



1. Toy Story 3
Pixar has proven its penchant for churning out near perfect films year after year. The third installment of the Toy Story saga was as close to perfect as we came in 2010. It ties up loose ends, delivers a few last laughs and a bids a fond farewell to the inhabitants of Andy's Room. Imaginative and poignant, Toy Story 3 delivers on every level. Whether audiences are new to the story or grew up watching the first two films, they will be impressed.

12.17.2010

FILM REVIEW: 127 Hours

Director: Danny Boyle    Release Date: Nov. 5,2010        Rating: 82%                                                            
Review by: Aaron Schrank
It’s awfully hard to sustain a gripping narrative in a film depicting one man stuck in isolation. Without the conveniences of traditional dialogue and character interaction, filmmakers depend on imaginative cinematic techniques to battle plot stagnation. Sean Penn’s “Into the Wild” relied heavily on flashbacks to construct the story of real-life vagabond Chris McCandless. 2009’s “Moon” gave its astronaut a Kubrickian robot companion. “Cast Away” kept Tom Hanks (and audiences) entertained with a personified volleyball.  Director Danny Boyle’s “127 Hours” calls for even more frills, as it chronicles the true story of hiker Aron Ralston who, for five days, is not only secluded, but immobile—his right arm wedged between a collapsed boulder and a canyon wall.

 Aware of his plot’s limitations, Boyle (“Trainspotting”, “Slumdog Millionaire”) makes every attempt to keep things interesting, employing hallucination montages, flashbacks, kinetic camerawork, a potent musical score and a number of plot devices, including the camcorder Ralston uses to document his dilemma. These elements, despite their technical excellence, tend to distract from, rather than emphasize, the raw emotional drama that Ralston’s story boasts. Ultimately, the “127 Hours” storyline is appropriately droning and unexpectedly detached, with a few moments of genuine intensity that make it worth watching.

While James Franco delivers a soulful performance as Ralston, the screenplay, written by Boyle and Simon Beaufoy, fails to provide enough insight into Ralston’s personality for audiences to understand the character on a deeper level. Instead, Ralston is shown as an everyman. Nondescript flashbacks contribute little to his character. As time passes, Ralston grows more self-reflective and the audience learns that he wishes he talked to his parents on the phone more often or that he may have taken an ex-girlfriend for granted. While the vagueness of  Ralston’s most intimate introspections allows audiences to project their own concerns or regrets onto the character, it is crippling to the on-screen story.

“127 Hours” begins with the carefree Ralston hopping in his car and driving to the Utah desert. The wide-open desert, with its beautifully bright terrain and painted skies, is immediately established as the ideal, poised to provide sharp contrast to Ralston’s canyon prison. He rides his mountain bike for miles, snaps photos and appears completely in his element. Ralston meets a pair of female hikers and, in some of the only scenes in film with any dialogue, leisurely gives them an all-access tour of the environment, showcasing his outdoors expertise. After sending the hikers in the right direction, Ralston stomps off, beginning his traverse of Blue John Canyon. Minutes later, he puts his weight on an unstable boulder. He and the boulder drop into a dark crevasse of the canyon. Then, nearly 15 minutes into the film, the title flashes on the screen: “127 Hours”. The clock begins ticking in the mind of the viewer.

As Ralston fights dehydration, hunger and fatigue, his mind wanders—shown on screen with a series of impressive camera and editing techniques. Ralston’s thoughts are depicted in a film-clip flurry of past experiences, daydreams, and pop-culture vignettes. When he’s thirsty, the camera dexterously zigzag-tracks from his crevasse back to his car, settling on a full bottle of Gatorade in the trunk. A montage of vintage soda commercials flashes on the screen. As Ralston fondly remembers his childhood, a home video-style shot of a young female pianist appears. Back in the shadowy confines of the canyon, Ralston subtly smiles: “Way to go, sis.”

In Ralston’s cramped environment, Boyle employs tight, shaky shots to convey a feeling of claustrophobia and jump cuts to document the protagonist’s deterioration. A stunning reverse zoom from the depths of the crevasse to an overheard view on the entire desert landscape puts things in perspective. Other creative shots attempt to break up some of the tedium of his surroundings, including a camera placed inside Ralston’s water bottle and camcorder shots of Ralston as he records final messages for friends and family. In one camcorder scene, Ralston stages a faux talk-show interview in which he self-deprecatingly reveals that he neglected to tell anyone where he was going prior his trip. A sitcom laugh track adds an element of irony. While Ralston is in isolation, his thoughts and sense of humor keep him company and counter the film’s ability to fully capture the essence of his misery. At one point, beginning to hallucinate, the stranded hiker cries out, “Don’t lose it, Aron!”

Adapted from Ralston’s autobiography, “Between a Rock and a Hard Place”, “127 Hours” is a straightforward illustration of the human will to live, communicated predominantly in the film’s most gruesome scene. Once all hope of a rescue is reasoned away, Ralston is faced with a decision. He must amputate his arm, or die. While the solution is clear to Ralston and the audience, the necessary act is unimaginable. Then, the stunning amputation scene shows the audience just how horrendous such a procedure would be, leaving nothing to the imagination. As viewers squirm in their seats, they realize that their reasoning minds led them to the same conclusion as the man on the screen and that they, under identical circumstances, would take the dreadful action depicted before them. While this scene is causing some filmgoers to faint in theaters, it is certainly the crowning achievement of the film, as it evokes a disturbing truth that will haunt viewers for as long as their memories allow.

As he did in 2008’s celebrated “Slumdog Millionaire”, Boyle examines life through a fatalistic lens in “127 Hours”. In the same way that every seemingly insignificant incident in the “Slumdog” protagonist’s life led to his winning 20 million rupees on an Indian game show, each and every one of Aron Ralston’s missteps has led him here, to this rock. As he deliriously reflects on his past experiences, Ralston remarks, “This rock has been waiting for me for me all my life…and all its life.”

“127 Hours” relies, often too heavily, on musical selections as emotional cues. Indian film composer A.R. Rahman (“Slumdog Millionaire”) provides an original score that is supplemented by tracks from Free Blood, Bill Withers and others. When a violent rainstorm floods the crevasse, a frantic musical arrangement signals an already apparent danger. While an appropriate ear-splitting distortion forcefully indicates that Ralston has struck his nerve during the amputation scene, the music throughout this scene unfairly dictates the audience’s interpretation. Ralston’s final march back into civilization, after severing his limb, should be grand enough on its own, but Sigur Ros’s “Festival” is gratuitously employed to ensure a blockbuster ending. Because of their epic, cinematic quality, Sigur Ros tracks are all-too-often selected in concluding film scenes. In films ranging from “Vanilla Sky” to “The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou”, this cheap technique has been exhausted.

With an undeniably appealing true story, a skilled actor in his largest role ever and technically-perfect director, “127 Hours” has all the makings of a masterpiece. Unfortunately, Boyle is unable to overcome the restraints of this one-man show and propel the plot is an approachable way. The result is a decent, sometimes arduous film that owes most of its worth to the provocative clout of a few key scenes. 

12.15.2010

NPR's Best Albums of the Year


NPR "All Songs" Listeners Pick The Best Albums of 2010.

Here's a sampling of the top ten. Check out the full list HERE.


NPR LISTENER PICKS FOR BEST MUSIC OF 2010

Cover for The Suburbs

1. The Suburbs

  • Artist: Arcade Fire
  • Song: Ready To Start
Cover for Brothers

2. Brothers

  • Artist: Black Keys
  • Song: Everlasting Light
Cover for High Violet

3. High Violet

  • Artist: National
  • Song: Bloodbuzz Ohio
Cover for Sigh No More

4. Sigh No More

  • Artist: Mumford & Sons
  • Song: The Cave
Cover for Broken Bells

5. Broken Bells

  • Artist: Broken Bells
  • Song: The High Road
Cover for This Is Happening

6. This Is Happening

  • Artist: LCD Soundsystem
  • Song: All I Want
Cover for Contra

7. Contra

  • Artist: Vampire Weekend
  • Song: Taxi Cab
Cover for The Age of Adz

8. The Age of Adz

  • Artist: Sufjan Stevens
  • Song: Vesuvius
Cover for Teen Dream

9. Teen Dream

  • Artist: Beach House
  • Song: Zebra
Cover for My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy

10. My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy

  • Artist: Kanye West
  • Song: Monster [Explicit]