June 28, 2009

Drill it!



Both Alicia and I went into the premier episode of Make It Or Break It (Mondays at 9 pm eastern on ABC Family) expecting a full-on campfest, Stick It: The Series. We were expecting pretty much every one of our criteria: asshole boyfriends for all; unsupportive parents ("Your father and I forbid you to do even one more damn gymnastic!"); and a few throwaway training montages set to the Ting Tings.

What we didn't expect was the Friday Night Lights of competitive gymnastics television shows.

Make It Or Break It follows four teenage aspiring Olympic gymnasts as they train to qualify for Nationals. The show is set in Boulder, Colorado, a town where it's apparently a total drag to be a young person.


I can't wait to win all the Olympics so I can get out of this one-horse town.


There is Lauren (seen above), an uber-rich, bulimic c-word-in-training who believes herself to be the top of the heap, when in fact she is only fair. Her bulimia is presented as a simple matter of fact, which was the first indication that this show wasn't going to be the lighthearted teen competition romp we had thought. You just hear her yakking in the bathroom, and then one of her teammates informs her that doing that is super-bad for her electrolytes.

Then there are the two secondary (for now) characters of Paysworth and Whatsherface.



They are both well-meaning and very pretty. Paysley is the top gymnast in the group, and Whatsherface's current claim to notoriety is her secret boyfriend (because no one should ever date a gymnast). Apparently, they, with Lauren, round out the BFF triumfeminate of the Rocky Mountain Gym, the premier gymnastics training center in the Boulder area. But uh oh, here comes trouble (gorgeous, slinky, sexy trouble):


EMILY KMETKO. She's a firestorm of gymnastic power, she's got a troubled past, a mom who looks like Tila Tequila ten years from now, a crippled little brother, and an indeterminate ethnicity. She is unassuming at first, with her Goodwill leotard and unkempt hair, but she soon proves a formidable rival to the conniving Lauren in every field but Lauren's specialty, the beam.

They're all working under the aegis of this handsome coach:



Whose name I can't remember, so for the purposes of this recap, we're just going to call him Coach Stern But Fair.

And now, the plot: Lauren's father, a rich and influential man who has donated a ton of money to The Rock(y Mountain Gymnastics Training Center), wants his daughter to have a promised place at Nationals, but Emily's unbelievable talent has threatened that dream. It looks like this is going to be the main plot contrivance of the series. As long as it doesn't turn into some kind of gymnastics-based Spy Vs. Spy, it should be pretty compelling.



In this episode, Emily was hit hard by both Lauren and her father. From the moment Emily steps into the gym and proves herself to be the coolest dude, Lauren takes a break from vomiting and generally being stank to instruct her two henchwomen to give the new girl the coldest of shoulders. Lo gets some good rich-bitchy insults in, but her friends seem reluctant to get too invested in the rivalry.

This culminates at the climactic tryouts before Nationals, when, at an opportune moment, Lauren pencils in a change for Emily in the distance from the springboard to the vault, placing it five inches further away. It turns out to be some true Million Dollar Baby shit when Emily leaps from the springboard, flips, and fucking smashes her kidneys against the vault. Oh my fucking God, dude, I may have stifled a cry of, "NO!" (But, you know, not stifled it very well.)

However, like every kid with big dreams, not even the promise of shitting blood can keep Emily Kmetko down. She returns to the competition just before Lauren is crowned Queen of The Olympics and asks to redo her vault, this time with the correct springboard distance. They allow it. She's awesome. Lauren goes back to being Queen of the Mediocre County Fair and Parade.



However, Emily's little stunt cost the others dearly. After hiring a private detective, Lauren's dad digs up some undisclosed terrible information on Coach Stern But Fair, forcing him to leave the Rock and work at a facility where he will keep his promise of getting Lauren a guaranteed shot at the Olympics. No one knows what the information is! Cliffhanger!

We're going to do our best to recap this show every week (better than this, with more gifs and shit), because this is honestly an awesome show with a lot of potential, but we're not going to rate it with the criteria, because that would be too much work.

Ladies and gentlemen, we have a release date


On September 1, 2009, this (surely) cinematic masterpiece will be hitting home theatres (or the torrent program of your choice) everywhere.


A summary: Showcasing daring athletics, fierce competition and hot young stars, including Grammy®-nominated recording star and actress Christina Milian, Bring It On: Fight to the Finish sets the bar higher than ever with the story of an East Los Angeles teen who reinvigorates a lackluster Malibu cheer squad with her scorching Latina style.


Haters gonna hate but Bring It On: Fight To The Finish is going to be fucking amazing.

June 22, 2009

MAKE IT OR BREAK IT


ABC Family Channel is answering our prayers with tonight's premiere of Make It Or Break It, or Teen Competition Movie: The TV Show. We're crossing all of our fingers and toes that this is going to be as amazing as we think it might be. And also that there's krumping. Please God let there be krumping.

In other news, we re-watched Fired Up last night and I just want to say that our 10 star, Best Movie Of The Year opinions from our first viewing have held up. Shit's awesome, you guys.

June 10, 2009

Konichiwa, bitches


4 out 5 of our site visits are from people in different countries. I was going to post a list of a million different ways to say hello to all of you, but I just realized it's 5:18 right now and I got off work at 5:00. Sayonara, bitches!

June 8, 2009

Gotta Kick It Up!

Much love to Brista for reminding me of this movie. I remember watching it when it premiered on Disney Channel in 2002, but I've watched so many goddamn Disney Channel original movies that they've all sort of blurred together into a mega-movie about a boy turning into a rollerblading/snowboarding mermaid on his 13th birthday until his smart house ruins everything by quitting the dance squad: The Zequel.


Real talk: Gotta Kick It Up was a star vehicle for America Ferrera and her big ol' overalls-wearing hips. (Back when she was actually fat, not just thin in a lot of layers like on a certain television show that has gone seriously downhill.) Even though FATTY CAN'T ADD in the movie and she manages to turn the can-can into can-cankles, she's a sassy beacon of light in the made-for-TV movie starring That Coach Who Looks Like Carol Brady in The Brady Bunch Movie, Daisy the Mexican Rumer Willis, and a ragtag team of Hispanic stereotypes, including the boyfriend who drops out to become a mechanic and the stern yet caring moustachioed princiPAL. Regardless, can we give this too-tame-for-a-G-rating movie two thumbs up? Si se puede...comer mas tarta de queso!

I know you're saying, "Gosh that's whack, Colonel!" I mean, yeah there's no krumping or aspiring hip hop artists and I think they're all supposed to be 14 even though they all look at least 20, but it's mindless entertainment so let's kick back after school and watch some tube while Marshall Middle School builds their EMPIRE OF DANCE.

Criteria:
  • No points for racial tension or class warfare because they were all poor(ish) and not white. There's not even weight tension! God Disney is so white bread.
  • No points for pursuing a love interest. Daisy/Mexi-Rumer already had it locked down in the high school drop-out boyfriend department.
  • 10 points for a mentor with a failed past in DOT COMS. The 90s!
  • 10 points for the school being too poor to pay for their trip to regionals because that's how it works when it's mostly minorities.
  • 10 points for a training montage full of gay skips and gay hot steps that weren't actually gay enough for my gay roommate's lesboner for cheerleaders.

I bet this is the first gif ever made from this movie. ty Erin.

  • 5 points because there was a lot of threatening-to-leave and almost-kicked-off-the-team moments, but we were cockblocked in the end.
  • So many 10 points for the message of teamwork. Boring! When do I get a teen competition movie with a lesson of shanking your team members for getting in the way of your dreams?
  • 10 points for SEE YOU AT REGIONALS, BITCH.
Bonus Points:
  • 1 point for a skill brawl (kind of?) in Biology class while the minority kid dropped some beats! Beats - the lifeblood of minorities everywhere (in Hollywood)
  • 1 point for a kind of (are you noticing a pattern here with all the 'kind of's in this post? Go big or go home, Disney!) asshole boyfriend who SPOILER ALERT redeems himself in the end.
  • 1 point because parents just don't understand!
  • 1 point because Carol Brady quit Julliard! Gasp!
  • 1 point for a SYAN,B First: High School For The Performing Arts acceptance on the line.
  • 1 point because I thought I got goosebumps but I was really just cold.
  • I can't find any pictures of Eric Alexander Gavica with a cursory google search, but I did find this picture of a Mexican guy. 6 points for a outstanding moustache.

Final Score: 57
So I know it somehow managed to fail but this movie is awesome(ly bad) and I recommend it to anyone who is me or Erin or Brista.