Friday, March 23, 2012

The Giant of Bilbao

The Film Crew: The Giant of Marathon (2007)
The Giant of Marathon (1959)

I had high expectations for The Film Crew's assault on The Giant of Marathon, partly because I'd seen the film before and partly because a classic sword and sandal film should be like bread and butter for these guys.   Well, the bread is a bit stale and the butter needs some salt.  

I won't go into my issues with the film itself, because that's a whole other kettle of fish that should be examined at another time.   As for The Film Crew, this is a longer film than their other outings and I was pleasantly surprised by the general quality of the humor.  I think it's short of Wongo in many places, but it was especially nice to see some transgressive ethnic humor.  I can't think of the last time I've seen a film where someone insulted Basques, but....actually I guess Wild Women of Wongo was just one big pile of Basque jokes.  

Anyhow, The Giant of Marathon is a sufficiently ridiculous film (with Steve Reeves, no less) that all the great Hercules jokes could be trotted out.   I still can't help thinking that there was some meddling that prevented any of this humor from having a real edge, but at least the Basque stuff at the end had a little bark if not some bit to it.  

I guess I'd rate this at about the same level as Wongo in The Film Crew oeuvre, maybe even a little higher because of the funny hat sequence.    Nothing beats a good funny hat gag.   Except maybe a funny gag gag.  

So, while I think an angry drunk classics professor (I'm looking at you, Victor Davis Hanson) might be at least as funny providing commentary for this film as The Film Crew, I still think this Film Crew outing was worth watching.   And since it represents the last ride of The Film Crew before they moved on to Rifftrax it has a certain nostalgic appeal, if 2007 is a year you're feeling nostalgic about.  (I'm looking at you, Victor Davis Hanson.)

I suppose I should apologize for making fun of Victor Davis Hanson, because I have no idea if he's a drunk or particularly angry but since he's not of Basque heritage I'm not really afraid of him.   Unless he shows up at my door wearing a giant Athenian pediment as a hat, then I'd be both a little afraid and a little impressed by him, even if he's not Basque.  

Bill Corbett
Kevin Murphy
Mike Nelson
Bob Honcho....Mike Dodge
Bob Honcho's Secretary....Beth McKeever

Trailers
The Film Crew
In this ad The Film Crew burst into the Rhino Records offices and hold some people hostage while a rogue FBI profiler tries to negotiate with them to meet their demands all while a vampire apocalypse is due to happen in a mere 78 minutes.  

Zach Galifianakis: Live at the Purple Onion
In this comedy special Zach Galifianakis plays a rogue FBI profiler who tries to negotiate with a coven of vampires who are trying to prevent copyright infringement.  

Bonus Features
1. An Apology From Mike Nelson
This series of apologies is the best thing that The Film Crew ever did.  

2. Commentary by Walter S. Ferguson  
I think this bonus feature may be a tacit acknowledgement of the failure of the humor of the The Film Crew in their regular identities.    Instead of coming up with funnier (and perhaps more transgressive) humor in their regular track they resort to creating this Walter S. Ferguson character in order to do some interesting things.    

The Amazingly Couth Women of Wongo

The Film Crew: Wild Women of Wongo (2007)
The Wild Women of Wongo (1958)

I have to give special thanks to my friend Ryan for the gift of this film and thus inadvertently compelling me to watch the rest of The Film Crew's oeuvre.  

Wild Women of Wongo is, aside from being an alliterative treat, a quaint film that has all kinds of things that finally The Film Crew can mock with ease.

The framing premise is that The Film Crew is freezing in their basement lair, so this film will be a tropical treat for them.    This premise is quickly discarded because apparently comic writers and performers can't be trusted to keep a premise going for longer than the life span of a sickly fruit fly.

Speaking of sickly fruit flies, I think that was the original intended audience for Wild Women of Wongo.
If you're a sickly fruit fly looking for a mythological origin story with commentary than you're in the right place.

If you're looking for wild women, though, you should know that the wild women of Wongo aren't really wild.   Suffice it to say that they're wearing underwear and also seem to be couth enough to shave their legs.    Even the women of neighboring Goona have a certain degree of couth you wouldn't really expect from wild women.

There is a modicum of plot to this film, which is a creation myth with Wongo being the land of pretty women and ugly men and Goona being its opposite.  Both cultures are threatened by an outside group of people who storm in and kill some of Wongo's population while the women of Wongo are off appeasing their crocodile god.

Laaaaa
La la la la laaaa
La la la la laaaa
La la la la laaaa

Actually, the crocodile seems to be an alligator and it isn't very big when it has to be wrestled underwater.  The whole thing was muddled enough and what with people making jokes constantly it was even harder to figure out what was going on.   But then, I suppose the jokes were why I was watching this in the first place.

I guess The Film Crew was more comfortable making jokes about Wongo because they certainly seemed to have regained a modicum of humor.    It might still have been better if they could have a robot character to hide behind, but it was an improvement after the last two outings.   Maybe the whole thing would have been better if the Wild Women of Wongo were a bit wilder, but it's too late to fix that.

So, I guess Wild Women of Wongo is worth a chuckle or two and if you want to see the world's saddest dried alligator ritual totem then this is definitely the film for you.  

Bill Corbett
Mike Nelson
Kevin Murphy
Bob Honcho....Mike Dodge
Bob Honcho's Secretary....Beth McKeever

Trailers
The Film Crew
In this promo The Film Crew play three rogue CIA agents who are trying to reclaim their identities while escaping from a rogue vampire cult bent on destroying the world with something that requires a 90 minute long fuse.
Zach Galifianikis: Live at the Purple Onion
In this touching film Zach Galifianakis plays a single mother trying to eke out a living in Detroit while keeping her son from joining a gang.  
Blackballed: The Bobby Dukes Story
Alright, already.  I'll see this movie.  You got me.   I want to see this.

Bonus Features
1. Make Film Crew Dance
Ah, the wonders of moderate interactivity, wherein you can make Mike Nelson dance and then add in Bill and Kevin and finally make them all dance together in the sort of frenzied climax.
"What Madness Drives Her?!"
What madness, indeed.

2. Goodbye, Wongo-Style
Unfortunately, doing it Wongo Style, just means standing next to a cardboard cutout and winking.

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Space Mission Impossible

The Film Crew: Killers From Space (2007)
Killers From Space (1954)

In this outing The Film Crew take on the atrocious Killers From Space, a wretchedly bad movie made by Billy Wilder's slow-witted brother Jim-Bob Wilder and which features Peter Graves as a pilot/scientist whose plane crashes during an atomic test and who is subsequently abducted by the killers from space who proceed to use him to make sure that a subsequent test will aid in their ridiculously complex plot to conquer earth using giant spiders and geckos.  

In general I'd like to say that The Film Crew does a better job of being funny with this film than they did with Hollywood After Dark.   On the other hand, I still think they must have had some shackles on them regulating their humor to keep them from exceeding the wry smile line.   The first thing that came to mind was the muted reaction to the fact that the USAF planes in this film are given the call sign "Tar Baby."   Thus, the ground controller is forced to pick up a microphone and check in on Tar Baby 1 and Tar Baby 2.
This is how I know that there must be some manner of humor policing going on with The Film Crew.   Because only a great degree of restraint would stop three comedians from going to town on the Tar Baby issue.

Goose:  Maverick, we've got a bogey on our tail.
Maverick:  Is it Jester?
Goose:  No, man.  It's Tar Baby.  I don't think we're going to be able to shake him off.

I'm fairly sure that Killers From Space was not made with the cooperation of the USAF, but I'm extra sure that Killers From Space was not made with the cooperation of the NAACP.
Seriously folks, the pilots' call signs are Tar Baby 1 and Tar Baby 2.   How could you leave that alone?
If I was doing a commentary track on this film I think every other word out of my mouth would be "tar baby."    But that's probably true of every movie I see, so maybe it's just me.

The crew does better with their reactions to the startling extreme closeups that keep popping up out of nowhere, and in fact they close out the film with some fake film knowledge about the "Robichaix" which is the name they bestow on this technique.  

The film itself is so ridiculous that it makes Hollywood After Dark look like Hollywood After Dark.
Actually, Killers From Space is still more coherent than Hollywood After Dark, but at least Hollywood After Dark had some dancing.   The most action we get here is Peter Graves standing in front of a projection of a "giant" spider.  

And with googly eyed space aliens I would have expected more jokes and better jokes from the commentators.   But maybe they were still in shock from hearing "tar baby."   Or more likely still, they were probably still in shock from seeing Rue McClanahans's naked sweaty back in Hollywood After Dark.  Or maybe they had to cut the part where they couldn't stop talking about Peter Graves's nipples.

There were long chunks of this film that made me wish someone had edited in one of the "dance" sequences from Hollywood After Dark into this film, but then I'm not sure if that would have encouraged The Film Crew to break their imperial conditioning and make a few jokes.  

So, I guess Killers from Space is just for people who like Peter Graves (but still want to hear three guys making fun of his movie), people who insist on seeing the whole Film Crew oeuvre, and for people who really like to hear three guys reacting to extreme closeups.  
It's slightly more amusing than the previous outing, but there's something about it that just isn't adhesive the way other things are, like, say tar babies.  

Bill Corbett
Mike Nelson
Kevin Murphy
Bob Honcho...Mike Dodge
Bob Honcho's Secretary....Beth McKeever

Trailers
The Film Crew 
So, there's this thing called The Film Crew (perhaps you've heard of them?) and here they are commenting on movies and one of those movies is Killers From Space.   I'll bet you're thinking to yourself that you'd like to see that and you'd be in luck because here they are right on this DVD.

Zach Galifianakis: Live at the Purple Onion
In this stand-up comedy feature Zach Galifianikis plays a rogue CIA agent looking for revenge when a rogue CIA agent kills his family.  A thrill ride.  It's like The Bourne Identity, only with a big beard.

Bonus
"Did you know...?"
In the informative snippet we learn about the technique of backward masking and how it can be used to create things that sound like unintelligible alien speech, sort of like Last Year at Marienbad.

The truly great thing here, though, is that if you let the menu run as long as possible the frustrated Kevin Murphy will repeatedly ask you to make a choice and then eventually get off his stool and leave and then look back in to see if you've selected anything or not.   I'm a big fan of the menu screen comedy, so it was nice to see an attempt.  

Outtakes
This consists of a series of "outtakes" of a scene with an alien on a rock with a raygun speaking in lines that were then run backward and are now "recreated"  to reveal an angry bit player who has a beef with Peter Graves.  
"Pissing Me Off"
In this scene the bit player reveals that Peter Graves is pissing him off because he keeps trying to sell him insurance.
"Stupider"
In this scene the bit player reveals that his googly eyes are stupid and he says that the film's designers are even "stupider."
"This Costume"
Now he talks about how his costume makes him look like a tar baby and smell "like a Dutchman's crotch."  
"My Last Day"
In this scene he reveals that it's his last day and he's going back to work with the phone company because the film industry "smells like a Dutchman's crotch."
"Dressing Room"
Finally, our bit player declares that he's left Peter Graves a warm steaming going away present in his dressing room.  

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Olden Girls

The Film Crew: Hollywood After Dark (2007)
Hollywood After Dark (1968)

The Film Crew was a brief project by some of the minds behind Mystery Science Theatre 3000 who would afterward go on to produce RiffTrax.   For the two people in the world who don't know what these folks do, here's the gist of it:  it's some people who tack on a humorous commentary to mostly awful movies.    The premise of The Film Crew is that these mooks in a workshop are sent films by their big boss Bob Honcho and they have to provide a commentary track for these poor films that don't have them.  
In the middle of the film the guys take a lunch break and we are treated to their antics.   
Word on the interweb street is that Bob Honcho was originally named Bob Rhino but when the owners of Mystery Science Theatre threatened to pull releases of future MST3K material from Rhino Entertainment, Rhino pulled out from The Film Crew and thus the lines where the guys mention Bob Rhino's name were re-looped with the word "Honcho."   If you look carefully you can see this.   The result provides meta-meta-fun for those of us who are tempted to do a commentary on this commentary because there's nothing more hilarious than seeing guys who make fun of films with horrible re-dubbing have to do the same thing themselves.  

This film being riffed upon here is Hollywood After Dark, a black and white "film" that features a young Rue McClanahan as a stripper.
Have you stopped screaming yet?
I'll admit that I've known about this film for several years ever since I was horrified to see a copy put out by Something Weird Video (of course) that was at the local Borders.    That version was part of a Rue McClanahan double feature with something called The Rotten Apple, where Rue plays some sort of shanty-dwelling prostitute.
I was a little disappointed by the paucity of Golden Girls jokes.   I can only imagine that there must have been some legal reason for this, because a good Bea Arthur joke is worth a thousand random quacking noises.  
Given the lameness of the commentary here and the cheap lameness of the framing scenes I can only assume that there was some sort of restraining order that prevented "The Film Crew" from saying or doing anything that might be really funny.
I'm pretty sure I could have gathered two of my friends and done a more entertaining job of making fun of this horrible movie.    Maybe the robot characters were just more interesting than three mooks watching a movie.

Of course, I understand that when a film is jaw-droppingly bad it's sometimes hard to find anything funny to say that will be any funnier other than to point out how stupid the film is.
In this case, there are multiple dance sequences that seem to go on forever.   Let me correct that last statement.   They don't "seem" to go on forever, so much as they actually go on forever.
I can appreciate that after 15 minutes of watching Xexa the Jungle Queen (or whatever her name is) dance with her feather pasties there's not much you can say in minute 12 that wasn't covered somewhere around minute 2.   And whereas some exploitation movies only put you through one awkward dance sequence this film gives you four.    There's one with a blonde that is mercifully brief, there's the really long one, there's the one with Rue McClanahan wearing some sort of upholstery and there's another one with a woman in pasties and a long fringe skirt that wouldn't be half bad if the sequence didn't last another eternity.    By the way, it's dance sequences like this that will kill your enjoyment of jazz music.  

Now, maybe my level of expectation was high (or maybe I needed to be high) but the best I could muster for The Film Crew's humor here was a slight sense of amusement.  You'd think you'd get more out of three funny guys making fun of the world's worst heist movie (oh, yeah, it's a scuba diving heist movie) but all we really get is mild amusement.    

I'm fairly sure there is nothing to be gained from attempting to watch this film in its original version, but there's not that much more to be gained from watching it with the help of The Film Crew, who in this outing are just not that funny.
So, unless you're an MST3K and associates completist, or you just want to see Rue McClanahan's sweaty naked back (go ahead, scream for a second.  get it out of your system) you can safely skip this film without a sense of loss.   

Mike Nelson
Bill Corbett
Kevin Murphy
Bob Honcho.....Mike Dodge
Bob Honcho's Secretary....Beth McKeever

Special Features
This DVD came with a movie ticket Film Crew patch which will look great on my letter jacket.

Shout Factory Trailers
The Film Crew
Here's an ad for The Film Crew, which helpfully lets you know something about what you're about to watch.
Blackballed: The Bobby Dukes Story
I may be sick of mockumentaries, but the cast of this makes it seem like I might have to give it a look.
Zach Galifianakis Live at the Purple Onion 
Genius.  Sheer genius. 

Ode to Lunch
I think this might have been funnier if it had been 30 minutes long.  And by "funnier" I mean I would have appreciated the commitment to punishing an audience by taking a joke that far.   I think making this poem such a short ode makes it less funny.   

Saturday, March 3, 2012

Lake Eureka

Lake Placid 3 (Unrated) (2010)
Directed by G.E. Furst
Screenplay by David Reed

I was disappointed that Colin Ferguson isn't actually the sheriff in this film (though he does wear a sheriff-like uniform) until the sheriff turned out to be Michael Ironside.    At that point this film had the critical mass necessary to lure me into watching it even if it wasn't named Lake Placid and I wasn't in the mood for another Sci-Fi creature feature.  I would be willing to watch a buddy cop movie with Colin Ferguson and Michael Ironside.  Aw, heck, I'd be willing to watch a buddy orangutan movie with these two in it.
If Lake Placid 2 was passable, then the presense of Colin Ferguson and Michael Ironside give Lake Placid 3 enough charm to move up the food chain into a better category.  It's still not the film Lake Placid was, but it's a small step in the right direction.  That doesn't mean that this is Eureka with killer crocodiles (now that would have been awesome), but it's like listening to Neil Diamond sing a jingle for cat food.   It's not "Sweet Caroline," but it's still better than listening to anything by Blind Melon.

Is it bad that the first person in this film I recognized was Velizar Binev?   Velizar-freaking-Binev?!   A few years ago if you'd told me that I'd one day be able to recognize someone named Velizar Binev on screen I would have said, "Who the fuck is Velizar Binev?"   Just as many of you are now thinking to yourselves the same thing.   (Except for you, Velizar Binev, because I know that you've Googled your own name and come upon this paragraph which may be the longest mention of you in the English language.)   Velizar Binev is one of the breakout character actors of the Bulgarian sci-fi creature movie genre.  (You can laugh if you want, but now that there are about a hundred films in this "genre"  you're laughing at history.)  He was the deliciously evil villain in Shark Zone.   He's been on screen with Bruce Campbell--twice.   I just saw him in yet another film just this past weekend.  Velizar Binev is like the Bulgarian Burl Ives.   If I could direct a Bulgarian production of Cat on a Hot Tin Roof he'd be my first choice to play Big Daddy.   (Maybe we could get Colin Ferguson to play Brick.)   In this film Mr. Binev plays Dimitri, the owner of Dimitri's American Market.  It's called that in order to remind people that this film is supposed to take place in America and is definitely not set in Bulgaria.
Or maybe Dimitri was really desperate to assure people of his patriotism, what with his thick accent.   Or, maybe because of Aroostook County's proximity to Canada he just wants to draw in the occasional Canadian customer looking for genuine American groceries.   Dimitri is first seen giving a ride to two young folks, let's call them Jason and April, in the back of his pickup truck.   Their names don't really matter, because their excessive sexuality will lead directly to their gruesome deaths in short order.

Jason and April's story is a short morality tale about why you shouldn't be in a hurry to have sex.  Because if you rush down the road to sexual fulfillment you'll end up stripping off your clothes and going at it on the shore of a lake infested with crocodiles.   And if there's one thing that crocodiles can't resist, it's eating naked people.    I don't know what the precise difference between the rated and unrated versions of this film are, but I'm pretty sure that only the unrated version has the bit where Jason's body is dragged underneath April until his face is caught in her thighs for a second, prompting her to say "Now, that's what I'm talking about!" before he is dragged completely out from under her and deeper into the lake where he is chopped into bite size pieces.  Before April can really think too hard about what just happened, she too is dragged off and dispensed with by the ravenous crocodiles.   On the one hand, I suppose the moral of this story is that they just should have waited until they could find a cabin, where at least they'd be murdered by a human or the ghost of a human looking for revenge on the kids whose negligence led to his death at summer camp instead of meeting a grisly fate in the gaping maw of hungry crocodiles.   On the other hand, maybe if Jason (man, the guy is named Jason--of course he's going to die in the lake) was more attentive to April's needs on land then she wouldn't be so pleasantly shocked at his sudden taste for cunnilingus and she might even have realized that he couldn't possibly hurl himself horizontally under her that way on his own.   Granted, by that point he's definitely going to get his feet eaten off by the crocodile, but he might still have lived.   Instead, April is distracted by the all too brief moment of newly found pleasure and thus Jason goes from merely potentially footless to completely dead.  

This is also a story about parental neglect and children taking responsibility for their actions.   Nathan Bickerman is busy wardening the local game and thus too busy to enjoy quality time with his son, Connor, who has taken up an interest in reptiles.   Meanwhile, Susan Bickerman is also too busy with her real estate career (enjoy it before the bottom drops out) to spend more time with Connor.   That leaves Connor to Vica the eastern European nanny and Vica's yappy little dog, which really means that Connor is left to his own devices because all Vica cares about are American cigarettes and their delicious nicotine.   Parental neglect (and inherent weirdness, perhaps inherited from the same gene pool that produced his father's Aunts Sadie and Delores) has led Connor to a peculiar combination of delinquency and lack of friends that leads to his seeking the company of crocodiles.   The delinquency is a result of his only friends being crocodiles, because Connor is forced to steal meat.   Piles of meat.   At first he just takes meat from his own refrigerator, but when this supply runs out, he goes to Dimitri's American Market and steals meat from Dimitri.    Stealing from a good hard-working immigrant merchant is definitely a bad idea.   Stealing meat to feed a pack of crocodiles that live in the lake near your house is a worse idea.   For kids the moral of the story is don't feed crocodiles and don't steal meat, especially if you're going to use it to feed crocodiles.   For parents the moral of the story is don't leave your kid with an attractive blonde Bulgarian nanny, because he'll just run away from her to steal meat for his crocodiles.

Vica and her yappy little dog are an interesting touch in this film.   If this was Lake Placid 2 then I'd say the dog was safe, but one of the more gratifying moments in the film is when Connor is splattered with the dog's blood as the crocodiles snack on it.    Vica herself is pretty badly mauled by the crocs before she is brought back to the cabin where she is eventually finished off by the crocodiles.   Frankly, I feel more sorry for her yappy dog (it's just a dog, after all) then I do for Vica, because the dog didn't lock the door on anyone when they were running away from a crocodile.    I can imagine that for the Bickermans Vica's death is not only welcome as a moral payback for her treachery, but also as a way to avoid a lifetime of liability issues.  Does Maine law cover workman's compensation for nannies who might be injured or disabled by crocodiles?  

One underdeveloped angle in the film is the ret-conned story of Nathan's Aunt Sadie who kept the crocodiles at the lake.   The ret-conning is especially annoying because it severs one of the better links to the original Lake Placid.

Meanwhile there's the college kids on break subplot.   Aaron has brought Ellie to Maine in order to make his move now that she's dropped her boyfriend.   (After Aaron convinced her that her boyfriend was cheating on her.)   Ellie has brought along her blonde best friend Tara, who loves to read fashion magazines.   (If you've seen Lake Placid 2, this should alert you that Tara will soon be eaten by a crocodile.)    As a counter move Aaron has brought along his buddy Charlie, who is a doofus.   This should be your first clue that there's something wrong with Aaron.  See, if he was a really cool guy then he'd have a better wingman, someone who actually has a chance at distracting Tara long enough to provide Aaron with some alone time with Ellie.   But instead Aaron has Charlie and that doesn't mean that Aaron is a nice guy who is friends with a dork, it means Aaron is a weasel who keeps a dork in tow so that he looks more attractive by comparison.   I imagine Aaron's real fantasy is that he'll get the Ellie/Tara three-way while Charlie goes to town to pick them up some snacks and beer.   You almost have some sympathy for Charlie as a dork who (we know) will soon be eaten by a crocodile.   But he ruins whatever sympathy we might have for him by being an annoying voyeur who tries to look up Tara's skirt while they're lying on the lake shore and who follows the girls into the woods when they leave to change into their swimsuits and proceeds to get some nude pics of them with his phone before justice catches up to him in the form of the gaping maw of a crocodile.   People like Charlie ruin things for dorks who aren't sociopaths.    Thanks, Charlie.   I hope the crocodile chewed you up nice and good.   Now Aaron has an outside chance at that three-way.

As if this wasn't enough we have Ellie's ex-boyfriend Brett who has signed up for a hunting tour with the outrageously over the top Reba who leads what can only be called poaching expedition tours.   Yes, that is Yancy Butler as Reba.  I honestly don't know what to say.   I like strong women but Reba is scary.   I don't think I'd go hunting with her because regardless of gender I'd be a little scared that she'd chop me up and use me for chum.   Brett has decided to follow Ellie all the way here to get her back, which is both sweet and a little obsessive.   Yes, Aaron lied to Ellie about Brett cheating on her (he wasn't) but secretly following her to Lake Placid and going on a poaching safari in order to track her down is beyond clingy and it's the kind of thing that's much less alarming in romantic comedies than it is in real life where it's the kind of behavior that gets you slapped with a restraining order.   Of course, Ellie is really cute so I can at least understand why someone would get worked up over her.

Reba's hunting expedition consists of herself, two yahoos who want to shoot big lumbering beasts in Maine and Brett who apparently thinks renting a boat is a more expensive and less efficient way of tracking down his girlfriend and the guy who wants to date-rape her than joining a hunting expedition that will most likely try to avoid other people (like, say, a college girl and the guy who wants to date-rape her) as they look for big things to shoot.   Reba's nemesis is the game warden Nathan Bickerman.  And now we've come full circle.   This is another film that calls into question pro-wildlife regulation when the killer crocodiles are out of control and you really wish you had some poachers with grenade launcher or other distinctly illegal weapons handy.   On the other hand, the hunting expedition is definitely outmatched by the crocodiles, so it's not like keeping Reba the poacher free of regulations will make her useful when the killer crocodiles attack.

So, this is also a film about relationships and how you shouldn't believe what the blonde guy who want to date-rape you tells you about your boyfriend.   And how you probably shouldn't chase your ex-girlfriend all the way to the little crocodile infested lake in Maine where she might end up sleeping with that blonde jerkhole who managed to weasel you out of your relationship.   Sometimes you just have to trust the judgment of that person you care about.  If Ellie is inclined to sleep with Aaron, then showing up with a hunting expedition in tow is the kind of weirdly clingy gesture that is as likely to fail as it is to succeed.  And that kind of failure is perma-fail.   I know romantic comedies encourage giant romantic gestures, but horror films and the legal system are there to bring us back to reality on this score.   I love the fact that this film rewards Brett's big gestures (later he pulls a shotgun on the Bickerman family in order to take the boat back to the lake to look for Ellie) by having him eaten by a crocodile while the reconciled Ellie watches helplessly.   It is one of the most just moments of reality I've ever seen in a killer crocodile film.
(Oh, by the way, belated spoiler alert.)  Of course, Aaron is already dispatched by this point, but not before he reveals the kind of callous jerk he is.   He doesn't care that his friend is missing.  And more importantly he doesn't care that the best friend of the girl he wants to date-rape is missing.  That is a distinctly un-smoothe move for someone who was slick enough to break up a couple.   Tara's death is more regrettable because she doesn't really do anything wrong and she's not nearly as vapid, mean or useless as her equivalent in Lake Placid 2 (whose annoying qualities also didn't merit death.)

So is Lake Placid 3 worth your time?   Well, it's still no Lake Placid, but it's a nice effort.   The number of subplots and the attempt to tie them all together is a level of complexity that deserves some commendation for the effort put into creating an interesting structure.   Colin Ferguson and Michael Ironside are big selling points and the brief bit of buddies on a boat hints at what could have been a good Jaws remake.
Still, it's a film that has a lot of charm and despite the cheap scare at the very end (crocodile's gaping maw right in your face) it's a decent monster movie.   Again, if you're looking for crocodiles then this isn't a bad outing.   Maybe you want to see what Yancy Butler's been up lately.  Maybe you're going through Eureka withdrawal.   Personally, I like this film a little better than Lake Placid 2.   Yeah, it's not Lake Placid or Jaws or Atonement or whatever you think you're comparing it with in your mind, but it's actually not a complete waste of your time.
Could I have imagined a better Lake Placid sequel in my mind?  Yes, I could have.  But I'm me.  And nobody asked me, so this is the movie we get.      

Dramatis Personae
Nathan Bickerman, a game warden....Colin Ferguson (Eureka)
Susan Bickerman, his wife, a realtor....Kirsty Mitchell (Triassic Attack, Monarch of the Glen)
Connor Bickerman, their son, a weirdo....Jordan Grehs
Vica, the Bickerman's Bulgarian nanny...Bianca Ilich
Reba, a hunting guide/poacher....Yancy Butler (Witchblade, Lake Placid: The Final Chapter, Kick-Ass, As the World Turns, Brooklyn South)  Yancy is a little scary in this film.  It's good, but I have to wonder why she's so good at playing a slightly crazed hunter.
Sheriff Tony Willinger, Aroostook County Sheriff....Michael Ironside (V, Top Gun, Total Recall, Highlander II) Jester lives.
Ellie, a college student....Kacey Barnfield (Roadkill, Grange Hill, The Bill, Resident Evil: Afterlife)
Tara, Ellie's best friend....Angelica Penn
Aaron, a slimy college student...Nils Hognestad (Blood in the Water)
Charlie Berman, Aaron's dorky wingman...Brian Landon
Brett, Ellie's recently dumped ex-boyfriend...Mark Evans (a Eurovision contestant)
Girl, a girl....Kremena Otashliyska
Town Drunk....Ivo Simeonov (Grendel, Second AD on Lake Placid 2)
Walt....Donald Anderson (Blue Mountain State)
April, a girl looking for a good time on the Lake....Roxanne Pallett (Emmerdale)
Jason, April's boyfriend....James Marchant
Dimitri, owner of Dimitri's American Market....Velizar Binev (Shark Zone, Raging Sharks, Alien Apocalypse, Man with the Screaming Brain, Black Forest)
Station Attendant....John Laskowski (Triassic Attack, Cyclops, Boogeyman 3)
Jonas....Atanas Srebrev (Rage of the Yeti, Hammerhead, Mansquito, Raging Sharks, Boa vs. Python, Grendel, Harpies, Sharks in Venice)

Cinematography by Anton Bakarski (Black Forest, The Grudge 3, Monster Ark)
Original Music by Nathan Furst (Act of Valor, Shark Swarm, Lake Placid 2, Copperhead, Grendel, Roxy Hunter and the Horrific Halloween)

Previews 
1. Blu-ray Disc™ is High Definition!
Sony Blu-ray promo!  Big octopus tentacle amazing show!   Not mandatory!
2. Piranha 3-D
Yes, I saw this film on the big screen.   I still can't believe I did that.
3. Red Hill 
Revenge just rode into town...Australian style.
4. 30 Days of Night: Dark Days
Kiele Sanchez is a rogue CIA agent forced to fight vampires and drug mule clones when a heist goes bad.
5. Game of Death
Wesley Snipes fights vampires and clones sent by the CIA to collect his overdue tax bill.  
6. Faster
Dwayne Johnson plays a rogue agent forced to fight vampires and clones in order to avenge his brother's death following a heist.
7. The Experiment
Adrien Brody and Forest Whitaker are broke rogue CIA agents who sign up for a psychological experiment where they are forced to fight vampires and clones in a fake prison.  
8. Takers
A heist movie with an all (ahem) star cast, plus Hayden Christensen as a rogue CIA agent, who all turn on each other when it turns out they've robbed a coven of vampire clones.