
Hey guys, can I play, too?
Every so often the mighty Dennis Cozzalio at the fab, recommended and much loved film blog
Sergio Leone and the Infield Fly Rule puts up one of his awesomely film-nerd-o-riffic movie quizzes,
and this time The National Film Board of Ivanlandia ain’t eatin’ no dust!
We have joined the fray!
But before we start SLIF’s
Professor Ed Avery’s Cortizone-Fueled, Bigger-Than-Life, Super Big-Gulp-Sized Summer Movie Quiz!,
may I take a trip down memory lane? It is somewhat germane.
Now, Dennis C. every once in a while mentions
his stint of playing a Delta pledge in the classic National Lampoon’s Animal House, but while I was a member of the
Alpha Gamma Sigma fraternity (AGS; “The Key & Cups”) of Pomona College in beautiful Southern California, I stole a prop
from Animal House.

The Statute of Limitations is seven years, right? I hope I check before publishing this….
In the summer of 1986, our friends
Cannon/Golan & Globus (come back, boys! We need your brand of entertainment again!)
were using the campus of Pomona to film portions of the Sylvester Stallone arm-wrestling truck driver flick
Over the Top (nope, I still haven’t seen it—and I have no intention to either—and to see it now after all these years would be like CHEATING, right? So I won’t. Sorry, Messrs Golan and Globus).
That summer, the last before I graduated and had to work even more for real—I stayed in SoCal, even experiencing being awakened by an earthquake! (
Verrrrrrrrry minor, but cool! BTW, that summer I said “cool” so much that one of my roommates, Konan the Vegetarian, called me out on it. I was shocked, but afterwards appreciated his honesty. And since then, I do try and watch what I say.)
Working as the janitor/delivery man for the school bookstore (and part-time driver for trips to the museum or airport pick-ups for the college (thank Cthulhu for work-study programs! Jeez, do those things still exist?))
I was able to get away from the office and cruise aimlessly around the campus and town.

The
Over the Top film crew had taken over much of the campus, and during one of my drive-bys, I noticed that one very important prop,
the statue of the founder of the military academy that Pomona was standing in for,
was left at the top of the stairs outside the old sociology building (also a location for the infamous and Ivanlandia-loved
Massacre at Central High).
Now this wasn’t just any old Hollywood fiberglass statue of a college president: It was Emil Faber.
You’ve seen it; you know who he is—and it’s his head on the front of the Deathmobile in the climax of
Animal House.

In
Chris Miller’s novelization of Animal House—very funny on its own, and not quite as “nice” (which I like!), there’s a brief scene at dawn the day of the parade, where the sight of the headless statue still on its college square pedestal is a bold portent of doom.
The statue was also zapped by the initial test of Val Kilmer’s laser in 1985’s
Real Genius—
also filmed at Pomona, including extensive scenes in what would become my freshman dorm, Harwood (where I saw
Texas Chainsaw Massacre for the first time in the dorm’s VCR).
And there the Statue of Emil Faber was:
unguarded, alone, in an empty area, with absolutely NO SECURITY, except the campus rent-a-cops random-never cruises.
At the top of the front stairs of a Roman-esque academic building with plenty of columns to hide behind.
He’d returned to Pomona, and he was destined to stay.
I roped Konan the Vegetarian into a plan to nab it, and he agreed:
We needed it more than anybody—we being AGS, our fraternity. The Fraternity.
BTW, it is pronounced
Ay-Gee-Ess. Never “Ags.”
Blegh…
My attitude was we walk calm and cool, dumping it at the first sign of trouble, and heading in opposite directions.
Konan suggested doing it early, just after dark, when two guys calmly walking with something large—like a goddamn statue!—
might be interpreted as normal, as opposed to midnight when snoops would start asking pesky questions.
I agreed, also knowing that I couldn’t hold out too long.
And that’s what we did.
[1986; photo by Mike Larsen]
The film crew offered a meager reward for returning it, but a case of beer for
THIS ARTIFACT OF COOL?
Fuck you, man.
That’s laughable.
It’s Emil “Knowledge Is Good” Faber. Make a real offer or don’t make one at all.
According to
THIS SITE, “The statue of Faber College founder Emil Faber with the Knowledge is Good motto on the base was a prop created specifically for the film.”
The rest of the summer it was in my off-campus room (the house we rented was owned by a cop, and was never entered by him and his pals—you bet we paid the rent on time, sometimes early),
and when the college reopened and we could access our fraternity room (the basement of one of the dorms; Pomona’s fraternities were not allowed “houses”—not that that stopped anything),
Emil Faber’s last residence became the kitchen of the AGS room.
It was there for either five or eight years, rumor has it.
Nobody called him Emil Faber, we renamed him “The General.”

I heard that he either got smashed up by a FUBAR brother who should have known better, or that when the college outright banned fraternities for various infractions,
and started cleaning out and disposing the rooms’ contents,
The Founder of Faber College was tossed in the trash.

Meanwhile, 1988 was the last time I saw Konan:
After a heroic night of drinking where we picked up a woman on the deck of the Empire State Building, had tour guides yell at me cryptically, lost the woman to an Australian rugby team—then drove to outside Boston to crash at my aunt’s place before Konan headed north to the Maine Boatbuilding School, and points unknown….
Konan the Vegetarian: Where are you, brother? We miss you!


And now, let’s get on with
Dennis Cozzalio’s
“Professor Ed Avery’s Cortizone-Fueled, Bigger-Than-Life, Super Big-Gulp-Sized Summer Movie Quiz!”
[One final pre-quiz digression to put you in a goooood mood, Prof E: I don’t like Nick Ray’s Bigger Than Life.
Okay, let’s start:]
1) Depending on your mood, your favorite or least-loved movie cliché
Least fave: The soldier showing the pic of his girlfriend before getting killed. When I saw this in
Platoon, I knew the movie was going to suck.
Fave: Fruit-stand destruction during a car chase. Gets me every time.
Bill Hickman and
Carey Loftin are gods.

2) Regardless of whether or not you eventually caught up with it, which film classic have you lied about seeing in the past?
A Clockwork Orange: Lied about in junior high—didn’t see it until senior year (at a midnight showing at
NYC’s 8th St. Playhouse (RIP)).
3) Roland Young or Edward Everett Horton?
Brooklyn boy Horton kicks limey Young’s ass! Besides, there’s “Fractured Fairy Tales.”
4) Second favorite Frank Tashlin movie

Y’know, I don’t love Tashlin like I used to….
5) Clockwork Orange-- yes or no?
YES! And I’m glad Stanley K. ditched Burgess’ 21st chapter: that ending is a cop-out.
6) Best/favorite use of gender dysphoria in a horror film
Dr. Jekyll & Sister Hyde (a lame horror movie—not enough gore or violence—but a genius flick about being gay and in the closet, even from yourself)
(I had to look up what “gender dysphoria” means…)
7) Melanie Laurent or Blake Lively?
Neither.
Both are cute, but I hated Melanie Laurent’s character in
Ingroppable Fatherless Children (why was she so mean to that nice sniper?);
and while
I know I’ve seen her boobs, I’m not even sure I’ve seen Lively in anything. (Oh, she was in
The Town? Sorry, I didn’t like that movie.)


8) Best movie of 2011 (so far…)
I Saw the Devil (released in US in 2011)
Followed by
Insidious
And I really enjoyed
Thor. I brought no presumptions, and had a great time. (I’m a
Kirby fanatic—his Galactus for my next tattoo? Perhaps, perhaps—but never read the
Thor comic)
I love the
“Spectacle” of Hollywood product as much as anybody—as long as it’s done well.
Just make a good action/sci-fi flick about Norse Gods in contemporary America dealing with cute civilian astrophysicists and weird spies.
And they did: kudos!

9) Favorite screen performer with a noticeable facial deformity:
The dude from
Sons of Anarchy with the “Glasgow Smile”
10) Lars von Trier: shithead or misunderstood comic savant?
He revitalized Kiki D.’s career! How can he be a shithead? Honestly, I’ve only seen two of his flicks, and, uh…I would’ve liked
Dogville more if it had only been two hours, instead of three.
11) Timothy Carey or Henry Silva?
Tough one:
Both are gods, but Carey wins for
writing/directing/everythinging The World’s Greatest Sinner.
But Silva’s cameo in
Ghost Dog was fucking brilliant.

12) Low-profile writer who deserves more attention from critics and/or audiences
Gustav Hasford (bring his books back into print!)
Rudy Rucker
13) Movie most recently viewed theatrically, and on DVD, Blu-ray or streaming
As of June 4:
Thor (in theaters)
Sometimes a Great Notion (bootleg DVD—damn good movie, also available on Netfliclck Stsrzzeeming)
Shark Attack 3: Megalodon (streaming)

14) Favorite film noir villain
Noah Cross (and don’t try and tell me
Chinatown isn’t film noir)
15) Best thing about streaming movies?
It’s like how NYC TV was growing up—a huge variety of flicks of varying formulas and genres that you can watch 15 minutes, then fall asleep on the couch and not care if you see the rest of—but better: Because if you do like it, you can finish watching it.
Heaven.
16) Fay Spain or France Nuyen?
Fay Spain, because she was awesome as a victim’s mom in
The Todd Killings

17) Favorite Kirk Douglas movie that isn’t called Spartacus
Ace in the Hole (I’m also a big fan of the Kirk Douglas-directed
Posse)
18) Favorite movie about cars
Death Race 2000
19) Audrey Totter or Marie Windsor?
Marie Windsor, for
The Killing and
Freaky Friday.

20) Existing Stephen King movie adaptation that could use an remake/reboot/overhaul
Firestarter (but with a
massive overhaul)
21) Low-profile director who deserves more attention from critics and/or audiences
Barry Shear (see my post about
The Todd Killings)
22) What actor that you previously enjoyed has become distracting or a self-parody?
Tie:
Woody Allen/Sean Penn

23) Best place in the world to see a movie
Inside my brain—where it gets FIXED
24) Charles McGraw or Sterling Hayden?
Pot-smoking madman, author and sailor Sterling Hayden. Did you know it was his “I sure picked the wrong time to quit smoking” line in the original
Zero Hour that inspired Lloyd Bridges’ whole shtick in
Airplane!? Add that to General Ripper (“pure grain alcohol…”) and Captain McCluskey? And that he blew off
Jaws for tax reasons?
Man, that’s a rumble nobody can cool.

25) Second favorite Yasujiro Ozu film
Only seen one, sorry, and that was
I Was Born, But…
Sorry…
26) Most memorable horror movie father figure
Jack Torrance, natch.
27) Name a non-action-oriented movie that would be fun to see in Sensurround
Eraserhead
or
Pigs and Battleships (1961)

28) Chris Evans or Ryan Reynolds?
I don’t think I’ve seen RR in anything (that I can remember), but I did enjoy the
Star Trek reboot and
Unstoppable, so CE, I guess.
29) Favorite relatively unknown supporting player, from either or both the classic and the modern era
How come
Charles Tyner never gets no love?
30) Real-life movie location you most recently visited or saw
I live in NYC, dude. Everything.

31) Second favorite Budd Boetticher movie
Rise and Fall of Legs Diamond
32) Mara Corday or Julie Adams?
Julie Adams for her incredible bathing suit in
Creature:
va-va-va-VOOM!
33) Favorite Universal-International western
High Plains Drifter
34) What's the biggest "gimmick" that's drawn you out to see a movie?
Sharon Stone’s snatch.
35) Favorite actress of the silent era
Brigette Helm (mmmm,
sexy robots!)
36) Best Eugene Pallette performance
My Man Godfrey

37) Best/worst remake of the 21st century so far?
Worst:
King Kong (2005, Peter Jack-off)
Best: Takeshi Kitano’s
Zatoichi: The Blind Swordsman (2003)
38) What could multiplex owners do right now to improve the theatrical viewing experience for moviegoers? What could moviegoers do?
Free beer and weed from theater owners.
Moviegoers could not be there when I show up—I love seeing movies in empty theaters.
Thanks for letting me play!
(
And if today is June 6, then Happy Birthday to Damien Thorn,
industrialist, statesman and religious leader!)

