Saturday 7 November 2009

Vampires In Vogue

A few years ago we saw the zombie boom, with films like the incredible Shaun of the Dead, a Dawn of the Dead remake not to mention all the other "of the dead" remakes that followed. People challenged the genre (notably 28 Days Later) and made some great entertainment, whilst others just made copy cat zombie tripe.

With 2009 and heading into 2010 we're definitely living in a Vampire world. Almost all types of entertainment are loving the vampire myth and personally i'm loving it. I find the vampire legend a really interesting one, with the different takes on the story all over the place. It had always been an area of interest, with the likes of 1992's Bram Stokers Dracula being extremely popular, however for me this film never did the genre any justice. Maybe it was just the wooden cast of Keanu Reeves and Winona Ryder, but for me the film went too far into the ridiculous.

Films in recent years have brought vampires back in to fashion, the Blade Trilogy and the Underworld films most notably brought it to the big screen early this decade. Areas of these films started to explore what audiences have ultimately taken to, vampires in a real life setting. Easily the most exciting scene of the entire Blade series was the vampire club with blood raining down to the tune of New Order's 'Confusion'. But these films spiralled quickly into the ridiculous with Blade Trinity a particularly stupid example of the Hollywood-isation of what was a pretty exciting franchise. In particular the scene in which Jessica Biel's character deems it necessary to "create a playlist" for her iPod before she can even consider going to slay vamps.

More recently the likes of 30 Days Of Night brought back a dark look at vampires affecting real life, with an attack on a small Alaskan town. For me this was a great film, a dark story shot brilliantly and really captured the idea of a vampire underworld existing in a modern society. However, the setting was harder to relate to being in a tiny alaskan town, even if the snow made it look amazing.



But the big successes have come on the big screen as well as the small screen. Twilight took the younger market by storm with its very cool blue filter take on high school in america with the addition of vampires into the mix. I surprisingly enjoyed the first film in the most part, especially thanks to a great performance from Kristen Stewart, who was also amazing in Adventureland.

Nevertheless by far and away the most exciting thing to happen to the vampire genre in the last 2 years in my opinion is definately True Blood. The whole concept of vampires being able to exist in the real world thanks to a synthetic blood substitute is genius, and the drama created by those willing to conform and those wanting to stick to traditional vampire means of blood sucking just creates real excitement.



Excecuted by a great cast and with some exciting characters both series just kept you hooked. The sexiness of the series drives it on, but the exploration of the vampire legend in a real life context make it an exciting watch. Little nuences such as the vampires not being allowed into a humans house without an invite, and their ability to sense a human after tasting them just added to me being genuinely hooked. Add into that some great songs, and probably one of the best intro sequences ever and you have someone who literally can't wait for series 3.



Long may this good vampire themed entertainment continue, however i suspect it is likely to be band wagoned very quickly and the same thing happen to vampires as the zombie trend of a few years ago. It gets butchered and we are fed rubbish like Lesbian Vampire Killers! The next True Blood series will make or break it, and with other vampire films coming thick and fast (like the recent Daybreakers and the next Twilight instalment) it will be interesting to see if the quality can remain. Lastly i'm keen to see how good the English attempt at a similar series to True Blood will be with BBC's Being Human.

2010 year of the Vampire!!

Suggested Listening = Misfits - Vampira


Sunday 1 November 2009

Generic Mid 90's Punk Rock Bands - Top 5

Although i love my music, i pretty much get the piss ripped out of me all the time for apparently loving music from the 90's, and especially generic mid 90's punk rock bands. So i thought i'd play up to this a little bit and post my all time top 5 most generic punk rock bands from this era:

#5 - 22 Jacks

It's not too often you bump into too many people who would describe themselves as "avid" 22 Jacks, and i was very much the same. They were definitely fairly generic and deserve a place on this list, but they did have a few absolute bangers on their 3rd album 'Going North'. Think one guy in the band formed Side One Dummy and eventually stopped this band, turned out to be a wise choice as SOD have some great bands these days.




Key Album - Going North (1999)



#4 - Bracket


Classic middle of the road Fat Wreck band, exuding mediocrity left right and centre. They did, however, have an addictive gimmick in the form of Warrens Song, which the band had various versions of and i always wanted to get hold of all of them in the Napster years. I think i only ever got Warrens Song Part 6, 7, 8 and 9 but either way fairly standard mid 90's stuff. I still really like Warrens Song part 8 and 9 though, they were actually pretty cool.




Key Album - When All Else Fails (2000)


#3 - H2O

I really never got the obsession with H2O. They really were pretty mundane, and somehow they even managed to bag a major label release with their 4th album 'Go' on MCA. The only song i really found catchy was One Life One Chance a song i was convinced was drilled into my head from one of the Tony Hawk Pro Skater games. But turns out it wasn't on any of them, but i'm almost certain it was on some sort of computer game? Maybe Cool Boarders or something? If anyone knows tell me as it's doing my head in.


Key Album - F.T.T.W


#2 - Guttermouth

Ahhh, Guttermouth! The band every
one jokes as still being my favourite band ever. This was a close second to what eventually came first in this list, mainly because of Lipstick. Too many people knew and loved that song for them to be 100% generic like our #1 band. Musical Monkey was one of my first punk rock CD's after hearing them on the Nitro sampler Deep Thoughts, the compilation responsible for my love for AFI. It had some ok tracks, but none as good as Lipstick. Although it does boast one of the most random intro's of any song on 'Do The Hustle' as after 20 odd seconds of dull guitar the music cuts out to the sound of someone confused saying "Hey, how did everybody get in my room!". They also had the weirdest 30 second song on Short Music For Short People, it was basically an advert for a magicians superstore!

Top Track - Lipstick

Key Album - Musical Monkey (1997)


#1 - Jughead's Revenge

The king's amongst men when it comes to generic 90's punk rock, whole albums with a similar sound and vibe. Whilst i liked them at the time, i find it difficult to now distinguish between tracks, hit and run and victims and volunteers might as well be the same track. They also had that hilarious name change incident where they became known as Jugg's Revenge, although i think that's when they decided to pack it in. The only thing which made them in the slightest bit different was that they had a chronically fat bloke in the band, but even Bowling For Soup had one of them. Plus Bowling For Soups bloke was fatter!

Top Track - No Time (From 1999's Pearly Gates album)

Key Album - Just Joined (1998)

Starting from scratch

So here is the start of my new personal blog. I'm really excited about getting this up and running and hope to share some interesting things with everyone.

I'll be blogging about anything really, mainly talking about hot topics and observations within music, film and football with the odd list thrown in for good measure. Comments encouraged, as it's great to start a discussion and hear everyones thoughts.

You can also follow me on twitter - http://twitter.com/josh_mccarthy

Cheers! Josh