Showing posts with label Food Fight. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Food Fight. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

"You cold-farted itch!" - Thoughts on "Food Fight!"

(NOTE: This isn't the "old friend" I said we'd be catching up with last week.  That was just delivered a few days ago, but a few other more immediate things popped up and I will get to it next week, I promise.)

It feels like ages ago when I found that lonely book-that-makes-sounds adaptation of the troubled animated film "Food Fight", doesn't it?  (And oh dear, the format of this blog during it's first year.)  Since then, it felt as though "Food Fight" was going to end up being one of those strange pieces of animation lost to history that I'd never get to see.  Then again, this was a film that was explicitly a feature-length commercial with various advertising mascots as the characters.  With visions of a movie-length version of the astonishing ill-conceived mall scene in "Eight Crazy Nights" in my head, I wasn't too heartbroken over missing out.

Well, turns out somebody out there in the vast seas of the internet acquired a copy of "Food Fight".  That kind soul decided, for reasons that are unclear, to stream the thing on an ongoing 24-hour loop.  And out of morbid curiosity, plus the fact that OCD is a hell of a psychological problem and I have to tie up loose ends whenever I can, I watched the whole damned thing from the beginning.

Welp.

I'm always kind of grudgingly impressed when I already know that a movie is going to be a worthless piece of crap just based off its reputation, but then that movie actually turns out to be even more horrible in every imaginable way.  Furthermore, "Food Fight" is horrible for many reasons that nobody could ever imagine.  Yes, we've got ourselves a fascinatingly bad movie here.  I'd go so far as to call it the "Manos: the Hands of Fate" of animation.  It's that inept and insane.  (And speaking of classic "Mystery Science Theater 3,000" episodes, nobody has learned from the "Overdrawn at the Memory Bank" episode never to allude to good movies in their terrible movies.  Hell, "Food Fight" goes ahead and makes a lot of weird references to "Casablanca".  Yeah.)

So first off, obviously the fact that there are real life advertising mascots in this movie that was probably going to itself be marketed towards young children (even though it is really not appropriate for anyone) is disgusting.  But the thing is, here are far fewer advertising mascots than I had been led to anticipate from all the reports of "Food Fight" over at Cartoon Brew (which also have some incredible war stories from people who worked on the film in the comments).  None of the mascots who do show up are the "stars" of the movie.  In fact, most of them only show up as very brief sight gags.  And furthermore, and most puzzling, they're all advertising mascots that were either already kind of obscure in 2005 (the California Raisins show up for Pete's sake), or who represent products that kids tend to not be all that emotionally invested in (ie, syrup and floor cleaner).  If this was meant to be the ultimate product placement movie, then it's remarkably bad at achieving even that dubious honor. 

The name-brand products in "Food Fight" are therefore mostly fictional.  At any rate, they're at war with their nefarious off-brand generic equivalents.  The vilification of generic brands is genuinely despicable and, honestly, making it through this film made me want to support every strange generic off-brand product I see.

So already the movie is morally repugnant, but I kind of figured that already.  What I never could have anticipated was how incredibly incompetent and ugly "Food Fight" is, given all the companies that were supposedly supporting it and all the stars in the cast.  As far as the latter is concerned, I would not dare spoil the fun by naming anyone here.  But your brain will probably crap itself during the voice cast list.  And I'm guessing that the reason why certain mascots who were supposed to show up in the movie didn't is because their owners sat down, watched the movie, and bailed as soon as possible.

"Food Fight" is easily the worst-looking CGI animated feature I've ever seen.  The whole thing looks like the dirt-cheap dollar-bin cash-in of itself.  It's hard to even describe it, because I have never seen anything this inept before.  It looks like it's only the second or maybe third pass after the wireframe stage.  The more I think about it, the more I'm trying to convince myself that there is no way in hell that the version of the movie I watched was the final version.  Nobody in their right mind would sign off on a feature-length piece of animation where everything looks very literally like sh*t.

The animation is so terrible, it's actually hard to tell what the hell is supposed to be happening at any given moment.  Nothing moves -nothing even looks- like anything anyone has ever observed in this universe.  It's unreal how the most basic principles of sequential art and animated art are ignored or even violated in every scene.  I'm talking about things you'd learn the first week of drawing class, like how drapery looks and how it works, or the fact that different substances look different and move in different ways, or how gravity affects objects in a space, or how people have skeletons with joints in specific places and muscles that visibly change shape when they move.  There is one character in particular -an annoying comedy relief weasel-thing- who does not move or behave like any healthy living thing in the history of ever.

And that brings us to the characters.  Now, we've seen a lot of movies with eye-bleeding character designs before (what's up, "We're Back"?), but somehow the herky-jerk nature of cheap CGI makes everything look even more terrible than it already is.  The character's faces are so stiff and expressionless, they end up having to flay their arms around to express whatever is on their minds.  Imagine Ralph Bakshi's "Lord of the Rings" and you have the idea, except everyone looks unflexible, mechanical, and totally unaffected by normal physics.

A couple of things make the characters more awkward and awful than they already are.  First off, do you miss all those uncomfortable stereotypes from the early 80's?  Because if you do, you will find some here.  The "jokes" in the movie on a whole would make Piers Anthony proud as they are a discordant mix of childish puns and inappropriate sleazy gross humor anyway, but the mind-blowing sight of old offensive stereotypes stood out (WTF forever at the gay panic vampire bat thing) and I don't even want to know what they're doing in a feature film made in Twenty-Anything.  I also don't ever want to meet the person who approved of that horrifying Catgirl thing who never even looks at anyone she's supposed to be interacting with. She's named Sunshine Goodness, by the way, because this is the kind of movie that is stupid enough to name a character something as impossibly awkward as Sunshine Goodness.  I am guessing that the only reason she is even a Catgirl is because she was originally a human but they figured it'd be weird to have her marry Dogtective (and this is the kind of movie that is stupid enough to name a character something like Dogtective), so they stuck cat ears on her and called it a day.

I do have one positive thing to say about "Food Fight": it is, like so many of the very worst animated films, mercifully short.  And it's kind of heartwarming that a film so shameless and soulless in concept got as far as it did and never got a theatrical release; hell most people have never even heard of it.  You may be lucky (if that's even the word) enough to still catch it as its pretty easy to search for.  Meanwhile, everyone involved in the movie should take a moment and just sit and think about what they've brought into this world.

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Sketch of the Day!

10.3.12 - Sketchbook Page

Thursday, July 8, 2010

The Worst CGI In History

CHUD.com, a movie news website I enjoy, has been listing their choices for the worst instances of CGI animation in (usually) otherwise live-action films. They range from Wolverine's "Roger Rabbit" claws in "X-Men Origins" to the forty-two sauropod pileup in Peter Jackson's "King Kong". As a person who has blogged quite a lot about animation, I figured I should share it. Right now, they can all be found accumulating here, or you could start with part one and work your way through.
I have to say, I agree with most of the selections (Part One in particular, as it covers the Scorpion King sequence in "The Mummy Returns", which is easily one of the most downright embarrassing and Narm-tacular things ever put on a screen.) I have to nitpick, however, that many of the sequences were done with the best animation available at the time and simply have not aged well. That said, a fair number of them were... not. And I agree with their argument that we wouldn't be having this discussion at all if the sequences that could have been done practically were.
Take entry ten, the "Burly Brawl" in "Matrix Reloaded". Now, when I saw that at the theater I thought it was awesome. Then when I watched it again last summer it was still awesome... up until a point. There is a moment, and you can tell exactly where it is, when the film-makers eschewed practical effects and stuntwork for motion capture. This is about the only scene in the entire trilogy where they do so and... man, it just sticks out like you can't imagine. It looks like something out of "Happy Feet' and happens to be the only really badly animated scene in the trilogy.

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Speaking of absurdly bad-looking animation, I have a very strong feeling that this little slice of WTF that has recently made the animation fan website rounds is shaping up to be the next "Food Fight."

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DRAWGASMIC IS THIS WEEKEND!!! Actually, this may warrant it's own post later...

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Sketch of the Day!
Randimal anidoms!
5.26.10 Sketchbook Page

Friday, November 20, 2009

It's almost Thanksgiving, so let's chew on "Food Fight"!

I have a talent for running into weird animation-related ephemera and stuff. Stuff like, oh, this:



This made me stop in my tracks. I seemed to recall Cartoon Brew bemoaning the existence of a movie by this title. I checked their archives and yes, they were discussing a film entitled "Food Fight".

In 2005.

There's a more recent discussion in early 2007. There is an IMDB page, optimistically saying the film was (or will be) released in 2009. And there is an Official Website, consisting of some phenomenally ugly art*. So apparently this thing is real. Whether it ever got past the book that makes noise stage is a mystery.

I didn't want to pay the five bucks at Mardens for this book just to find out what the hell was going on here. (More to the point, I don't want to become one of those Ebayers who buys things just to sell them on Ebay.)

* - The character designs on the cover may range from strange to bland, but I kinda like them. They have that "Ferngully"-ish "We like Disney a lot but we also want to make our characters a little stranger to be different" approach. (And the fact that there is a film out there that involves a scary CatGirl, a dead-effin'-serious looking moose, Chilly Willy, and D.J. Scatcat intrigues me.)
But the final film, according to the art in the website, will be incredibly cheap-looking, badly-rendered, sub-SciFi Channel made-for-TV-movie quality CGI. *sigh...*

Update: I did a double-take at this Cartoon Brew post. Seems "Food Fight" books are popping up elsewhere too.

Update on that last Update: The story just keeps getting stranger and stranger.

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Feederwatch Friday!!!
First entry of the season and, uh, NMH:
Downy Woodpecker - 1
Blue Jay - 1
Black-capped Chickadee - 3 (Actually, this was kind of interesting as Chickadees usually show up in pairs.)
White-breasted Nuthatch - 1
Northern Cardinal - 1
House Sparrow - 50
And there was a trio of squirrels, of course, but we don't count them.

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Oh my God, tomorrow is SKETCHCRAWL! I might actually get some people together and actually do it right this year! To Facebook!

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I've been getting into the Thanksgiving spirit by watching the video clips included in X-Entertainment's truly epic recaps of Macy's Parades of the past. They are all linked in this blog entry; they take about an hour each to read but it's worth it.

It's really hard to pick out one favorite moment from these incredible clips, but I will say this: when I woke up this morning, I was not aware that the Cabbage Patch Kids line had a mythos as elaborate as any self-respecting 80's toy. With heroes and villains and a (deeply unsettling) origin story and a larger-than-life folklore hero a la John Henry or Paul Bunyan. Now I know, and my life is all the more enriched for it.

I also recommend Strongbad's Thanksgiving. And there is a new review of "La Planet Sauvage" at The Realm , because nothing says Thanksgiving like a movie that resembles what you see after trying every kind of drug there is at once.