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Thursday, December 20, 2007


Our video year: ThePhoenix.tv's Best of 2007




Queens of the Stone Age does "In the Fade" at First Act Guitar Studio, proving they are just as awesome acoustically as they are plugged in.



James Parker reads a poem about Britney Spears's wild night with Criss Angel, backed by a bunch of jellyfish.



Rilo Kiley live, proving, much to our amazement, that there were actual good songs lurking underneath the studio polish of Under the Blacklights.



No list of internet videos in 2007 would be complete without a Soulja Boy reference...



Spiritualized performs "Soul on Fire," an excellent song from their upcoming album at the MFA.



We visited with the cast of Superbad at a bowling alley. Nice dudes.



Paddy-O's in Faneuil Hall may seem like an odd choice for a rock show, particularly one by a band like The National, but in spite of some dark conditions, it turned out to be a great show.



Way back in February, we checked out the Boston Burlesque Fest. Bet you had forgotten all about the Moononite incident.



Paramore took a break from their march towards world conquest with this performance at First Act Guitar Studio



We got a sneak peek at the truly awesome Rock Band at the offices of the game's developers, Harmonix



Tegan and Sara entertained First Act Guitar Studio with their music and their words.



In advance of the Police's big show at Fenway, we talked to David Bieber, the Phoenix's archivist about the band's early years.



Spoon broke through to the mainstream in 2007 on the strength of their hit single "Underdog," performed live and acoustically here at First Act Guitar Studio.



Film editor Peter Keough interviewed Michael Moore about Sicko in Manchester, New Hampshire



Yo La Tengo brought their Freehweelin' tour to the Museum of Fine Arts in November, and performed a lengthy set of covers and fan favorites like "Stockholm Syndrome."



Michael Palin spoke to the Phoenix's Peter Kadzis, and revealed the origin of the Lumberjack sketch.



We got some bonus footage of Isis.



And now we're premiering this video of My Brightest Diamond covering Roy Orbison. See you all in 2008!


12/20/2007 3:28:37 PM by Carly Carioli | Comments [0] |  




Tuesday, September 04, 2007


You should probably watch Freaks and Geeks




So Superbad is still popular. Knocked Up was a huge summer smash. The 40-Year-Old Virgin was big two summers ago. Doesn't it make you wonder where this Seth Rogen guy (and those other dudes) came from?

The answer is Freaks and Geeks, a show that aired for one season (1999-2000) on NBC and Fox Family Channel. It focused on the travels through high school of the Weir siblings: the unrepentantly nerdy Sam Weir and his geek bros and goody-two-shoes-turned-mild-rebel Lindsay Weir and her newfound "freak" friends.

A lot has been written about how great the show was, so it's not worth regurgitating too much here. It's enough to say that not only was the show hilarious, embarrassing, tragic, and sweet (often in the same scene), it also was probably the only show in TV history about high school that actually might have vaguely resembled a real person's high school experience, in all its uncomfortable glory (yes, moreso than My So-Called Life). It's hard to imagine anyone not liking it, especially when you take into account the connection to the aforementioned hit films.

Plus, check out the talent on hand: Linda Cardellini (ER, Brokeback Mountain, and, um, the Scooby-Doo movies), James Franco (The Spider-Man movies),
Busy Philipps (ER), Joe Flaherty (SCTV), Tom Wilson (Back to the Future), Stephen Lea Sheppard (Dudley from Royal Tenenbaums), Joel Hodgson (Mystery Science Theater 3000), Ben Foster (X-Men 3), Lizzy Caplan (Mean Girls), Rashida Jones (The Office, and we can't believe we forgot her - thanks, Mike!), David Krumholtz (like, a thousand things) and the now-famous "repertory players": Rogen (Knocked Up, Superbad, The 40-Year-Old Virgin), Jason Segel (Knocked Up and How I Met Your Mother), and Martin Starr (the guy with the beard in Knocked Up, also had a small cameo in Superbad). Also: guest spots from Jason Schwarzman, Ben Stiller, and a way-before-he-was-famous Shia LeBeouf. It was produced by Judd Apatow and created by Paul Feig, who went on to direct episodes of Arrested Development, The Office, and 30 Rock.

If you haven't seen it yet, the DVDs are available on Netflix. Why not check it out?


9/4/2007 1:08:45 PM by Ryan Stewart | Comments [1] |  




Thursday, August 09, 2007


The Phoenix interviews the stars of Superbad - Jonah Hill, Michael Cera, and Christopher "McLovin" Mintz-Plasse





Chris Braiotta recently got to sit down at Kings with Jonah Hill, Michael Cera, and Christopher Mintz-Plasse, the stars of the upcoming Judd Apatow/Seth Rogen/Evan Goldberg/Greg Mottola comedy Superbad. He grilled them about the film, specifically how it related to their high school experiences, where it fits in with other classic teen movies, and what they're doing next. We're just glad the interview didn't turn out like this one.

Apatow | Clips | film | interview | video

8/9/2007 3:36:14 PM by Ryan Stewart | Comments [0] |  




Friday, July 20, 2007


Superhero movie news: Wolverine, the Green Hornet





They've announced a director for the Wolverine solo spinoff film: Gavin Hood. I didn't see his Oscar-winning film Tsotsi, but it seems to be well-liked among those who have. I do know this: take a director known for well-liked smaller films and give him a big-budget, high-profile feature and the results are usually good (see here and here.) So this looks like good news for fans. Hugh Jackman is reprising his role, which is probably also good news simply for consistency's sake if nothing else.

Meanwhile, in some truly bizarre news, it appears that Seth Rogen of all people has agreed to write and, in all likelihood, star in The Green Hornet. What? Dude's come a long way since he was Ken Miller. We can now fairly assume that Kato will be played by eitehr Jason Segel, Michael Cera, Jonah Hill, Bill Hader, Jay Baruchel, Paul Rudd, or Martin Starr (a/k/a, "people who have been in Judd Apatow movies.") This gang needs a nickname - Tri-Lamb?


7/20/2007 10:29:15 AM by Ryan Stewart | Comments [0] |  



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