Monthly Archives: May 2009

Film Review: Drag Me to Hell

Gypsy woman (Lorna Raver) hexes poor Christine Brown (Alison Lohman) in Drag Me to Hell

The creepiness of Spider-Man director Sam Raimi’s new movie, Drag Me to Hell, slowly works its way on you much like a gypsy curse. In the initial viewing of it, you might squeal a bit and laugh a lot but never really squirm from actual fear. It’s not til much later, when, say you have to walk to your car in an empty garage or when you have to turn on the light on the far end of a dark room that the creepiness sets in. Eeeee! Lamia!

I think it’s because I underestimated its scariness. Because, Drag Me to Hell is really more a slapstick comedy in the guise of a horror film than something instantly chilling like The Ring. And that’s classic Raimi. His Evil Dead movies from the ’80s (my fave is Evil Dead II) may have dealt with the walking and twitchy undead, possessed and murderous hands, and blood gushing out of walls but they were also pretty hilarious. I half-expected Bruce “Gimme Some Sugar, Baby” Campbell (Ash from the Evil Dead movies) to have a cameo.

DMTH’s storyline is a good enough scary story with the hapless Everygirl Christine Brown, played by the doe-eyed Alison Lohman, who is tormented by a Lamia via a gypsy curse and tries desperately to undo the hex. What sucks, like any tragedy, is that this didn’t have to happen. See, she’s a loan officer at this bank and she could have extended the creepy gypsy woman’s home loan (I would have!), but because she so badly wanted to impress her boss enough to get the vacant assistant manager position, she doesn’t. And that’s when things go very badly for our young heroine. Ay yi yi.

And yes, there were many times when I hid behind my hair but that was only to avoid gross-out moments. Of which there were many, like the oozing green goo from embalmed bodies and flying eyeballs that kept my bf and the rest of the theater shrieking with laughter.

While I kept my eyes averted from the screen, I couldn’t help but wonder, why has this movie been lauded by film critics, earning a 94% on RottenTomatoes.com? It’s not scary, and one too many times it resorts to that cheap scare tactic used in modern horror movies — chilling music buildup, momentary silence with sigh of relief and then LOUD surprise. Bah! Oh, is this when I should get in the fetal position? After the 10th time, I didn’t even flinch, except to roll my eyes.

From A.V. Club:

[Sam Raimi] wants viewers to jump out of their chairs, to laugh and scream and cheer, and to nudge each other over the transcendent ridiculousness of what they’re witnessing. This is junk filmmaking at its finest.

And I don’t know if it was just the mall movie theater I was in — AMC Loews Broadway 4 on Santa Monica’s Third Street Promenade — but the volume felt like it was turned to 11. The tweeners in the audience, of course, loved it, but OW my old ears!

But I didn’t hate the movie. It was good fun, the characters were likable (except that overly creepy gypsy woman), and it wasn’t too formulaic. In fact, I liked how they didn’t go for the easy save. Tragedies had to happen here and often did. Awesome.

I think DMTH is the perfect flick to watch on a weekend night before that barhop. If you’ve already watched Star Trek, that is. Drag Me to Hell is such a refreshing scary movie in this era of torture porn and remakes. And I naturally welcome Raimi’s return to horror and can’t even wait to see if there really is going to be an Evil Dead IV in 2011.

BTW, I highly recommend that you see this movie at the ArcLight or any movie theater that’s not in a mall. Since it’s PG-13, it seems that it’s the perfect opportunity for teenagers to socialize.

During our Friday night screening, gaggles of teens populated the theater screaming at the screen, text messaging with their bright phones and conversing during the movie’s critical moments. One group even got kicked out. HA ha!

Bar Food in Brentwood: Grownup Happy Hour

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Jason, Jason, Jason. When reading the Yelp reviews of Brentwood’s Bar Food, Jason Killalee seemed to be all the reviewers ever talked about. Apparently he’s the charming Irish host and owner of the newish gastropub on Wilshire Boulevard.

I was looking for an affordable place to grab a bite in Brentwood and miraculously found Bar Food on Yelp. And in addition to all the gushing about Jason, there were lots of good reviews about the food, too. So my bf and I went there during happy hour on a Wednesday, just a little before 6 and found it to be empty. So weird considering it’s a happy hour (which happens 5-7pm) but at the same time I couldn’t help but be grateful.

We grabbed some stools at the bar and were able to chat with Jason and the waitress. He kept climbing up on the bar to fix some computer issues and later tried to push hot dogs on us.

“Hot dogs are free during happy hour and Miller Lite is $3,” he said so happily that I felt really guilty turning them down. Hmm, maybe I do want a hot dog. But no, I resisted and ordered the bar burger ($8.50) instead.

This Weekend: Beer Chick Social, D-Town Scavenger Hunt, ArtWalks Galore

Can’t wait to see Drag Me to Hell. Apparently the critics LOVES it. Oh, and btw let’s get artsy-fartsy this weekend!

Thursday, May 28

Ammo’s Small-Batch Social with “Beer Chick” Christina Perozzi & Telegraph
These Ammo socials are not only informative but yummy and this month’s event features none other than Telegraph Beer. Premier beer sommelier Beer Chick Christina Perozzi, formerly of Rustic Canyon and Father’s Office, will take beer lovers on a tasting tour of Santa Barbara’s Telegraph Brewing Company. A collection of delicious ales, porters and stouts will be paired with Ammo’s food. EstarLA, H.C. and I will be there.

  • 6-8pm. $20. Ammo,  1155 N. Highland Avenue, Los Angeles (map). Reservations (323) 871-2666.

Saturday, May 30

LA Conservancy & Pharmaka’s Downtown Scavenger Hunt
If you’ve always wanted to explore the nooks and crannies of downtown’s Historic Core and Old Bank District, what better way than on a scavenger hunt? Gather your friends to make your own team of 2 to 6 peeps and maneuver your way through the city with a map and a list of clues. Winners will score limited-edition prints, gift certificates or T-shirts. Proceeds from the hunt will go to benefit LA Conservancy and art gallery Pharmaka.

  • 2-4pm. $35. Pharmaka, 101 W 5th Street, Downtown (map). (213) 689-7799

Artwalk 2009 + After Party
It’s that time of year again, art walks. Not only the one in Culver City but the big LACMA one — free culture while you promenade through four museums. Enjoy 20 galleries, artist talks, happy hours and even Bollywood dancing. But of course the best part has to be the after party. This year it’s at the El Rey and there will be live music by Vaud & the Villains (you’ve seen them at the Edison) and the Stagecoach Looters. Partake of open bars by Grolsch, Malibu Family Wine and Pernod.

  • Artwalk 12-8pm, free. After Party at El Rey, doors open at 8:30pm. Advance tickets $30 with code “musewalk,” $40 general admission.

12th Annual Art & Design Walk
Sure, you’ve got open access to over 300 art, fashion and design galleries, restaurants and showrooms on Melrose, Robertson, Beverly and San Vicente, but for me it’s all about the FREE stuff. Oooh free party lashes at Makeup Mandy! Mmm complimentary cupcakes from Buttercake Bakery! Yay a free astrological chart by Crystalarium! You also get 15% off at the Kitson stores and 2-for-1 cocktails at SUR Restaurant.

  • 4-8pm. Avenues of Art & Design, 8960 Melrose Suite M-38, West Hollywood (map).

Sunday, May 31

1st Annual Yelp Restaurant Week
Yelp LA is kicking off its very first restaurant week this year to coincide with the LACMA Muse Artwalk. Enjoy deals from participating restaurants near the ArtWalk galleries — Little Next Door, Cube, Susina Bakery, Luna Park and Electric Karma to name a few.

Lago’s Artisanal Cocktails: Purists’ Margarita and Caprese Cocktail

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I’ve passed Locanda del Lago aka Lago on Santa Monica’s Third Street Promenade a thousand times and have never once checked it out. I figured it was one of those overpriced tourist traps since it’s on the main drag on the corner of Arizona and 3rd and has prime fashion police patrol patio action. Little did I know that this Italian restaurant has been around for 18 years, sports an artisanal cocktail menu and has a happy hour 4-7pm seven days a week.

Yup, every day (only at the bar on the weekends and all day long on Tuesdays) you can score $3 beers, $4 house wine and half-priced appetizers and pizzas. The cocktails, which are normally $12-$14, only come down to $8. But I’d suggest ordering the one-liter carafe of cocktail for $20 (regularly $28) which amounts to about four drinks for $5 each. That’s more like it.

So I was lucky enough to be invited to check out the brand-new artisanal cocktails which all boast fresh ingredients from the Farmer’s Market that takes place every Wednesday and Saturday just at the restaurant’s doorstep.

Backseat Betty No More: Taking the Motorcycle Safety Foundation Class

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Ever since that first Honda scooter back in high school, I’ve wanted to learn how to ride a motorcycle. It was on my bucket list along with becoming fabulously fluent in a foreign language and roadtripping from L.A. to New York. But I can’t believe it’s taken me this long to finally take that class at Motorcycle Safety Foundation (MSF).

What got me off my lazy butt was winning that Vespa last year. I’ve been in permit limbo where I had to carry a paper permit around in my wallet until I got my actual M1 class motorcycle license.

Driving the Vespa once a week for eight months never really made me a good enough rider to take the DMV skills test. So I figure it was time to just ante up the $250 already and take the MSF class and then not only would I be able to skip that scary DMV test but I’d develop the skills I needed to be a safe motorcyclist. But it wasn’t the cost of the class that was holding me off but rather having to dedicate a whole weekend to it.

A Basic RiderCourse is comprised of one day in the classroom for the written test and then two days of driving on a riding range. All days are equally grueling. I’m not so much a fan of the classroom. I just wanna be an expert already! Fortunately the classes were in my ‘hood: Westside Pavilion for the written test and the V.A. parking lot in Westwood for the riding range. And I even ended up knowing one of the RiderCourse instructors: Jim O’Connor, who teaches on the riding range, and I used to work together back in the day.

OK, so the first day was five hours in the classroom reading a booklet, watching cheesy videos and finally taking the test. We learned things like T-CLOCS (a pre-ride inspection checklist) and what to do if there’s a dog running toward you while you’re riding (hint: don’t kick it). Needless to say, thank gawd for those cheesy videos which basically repeated what we learned by reading the booklet. They really helped break up the monotony of the class.

So next day was where we actually got on motorcycles. You don’t have to bring your own bike as the school provides them for you as well as helmets and gloves. You do, however, have to wear long-sleeve shirts, durable pants (jeans) and ankle-covering shoes like hiking boots.

And I could have used my Vespa in class but 1) I didn’t want to risk dropping it or taking a spill and 2) I wanted to actually learn how to ride a motorcycle what with all its gears and clutch.

For my ride I chose the Honda Rebel. They had sport bikes like the Ninja available, too, but I’m more attracted to the traditional setup. Plus I don’t like my butt in the air like that.

They didn’t let us actually start the bikes until we learned where everything on the bike was located. Most important feature? The kill switch. So if anything screwy happens, like if you accidently give the bike some throttle while you’re trying to just park it, flip the switch before you hit that wall.

Eventually we got to fire up the bikes and we learned how to find the friction zone where you use the clutch for control. We did some start-stop exercises, cornering…and before we knew it we were learning how to swerve in the case of a semi suddenly stopping in front of us. Crazy! OK, yeah, that was over two loonnng five-hour days.

It’s just weird to think that I actually started from the basics like T-CLOCS to learning how to be so comfortable on my Vespa that I now have no qualms about driving it outside of Santa Monica. I can actually drive it home now.

Learning to drive on your own just isn’t good enough. You’d never be able to figure out the limits you can push something on your bike for fear of taking a spill and scratching up your ride. While at the MSF course, those bikes have been dropped all in the name of education. You can learn how far you can lean while making a turn, what happens if you try to brake and clutch during a U-turn and why you shouldn’t try to make a tight turn at low speeds.

It’s definitely the best $250 and weekend I ever spent. Now, I’m thinking of getting a new ride. Hmm, Ducati Monster?

BTW, when taking the riding course, make sure to pack yourself a lunch and bring a ton of water. The breaks are short and there’s nothing nearby to get something to eat.

Westside Motorcycle Academy
Click here for class schedule

110 Wines for $39: Santa Barbara Wine Fest in Century City

Why trek all the way to Santa Barbara when you can enjoy some of their best wines from the future in Century City? Actually, it’s the Santa Barbara County Futures Wine Tasting co-sponsored by one of my fave wine stores, West L.A.’s Wine House, and taking place in Hyatt Regency Century Plaza.

For $65 ($85 for VIP and 1-hour early entry) you can savor over 110 top wines from 39 SB wineries like Au Bon Climat, Flying Goat, Hitching Post, Melville and Qupe, to name just a few of those hand-picked by the discerning Wine House buyers. And what makes this wine fest stand out from most is that you actually have the opportunity to purchase these futures at a discount ahead of their standard release dates.

But the best part? You can actually get tickets to this event for only $39 (plus $6 fee) through Goldstar. Hm, maybe you should book a room at the Hyatt while you’re at it.

EVENT: SATURDAY, JUNE 6 from 2 to 5pm

Hyatt Regency Century Plaza
2025 Avenue of the Stars
Century City, California 90067 (map)

This Weekend: Viceroy Poolside Happy Hour, Intelligentsia Westsiiide, Bigfoot Day Spa

What am I doing this weekend, you ask? I’m going to dress up like Elvis and support my bf and his team as they race the above craptastic “Cadillac” up in Reno. My only regret, besides wearing a black bejeweled jumpsuit and pompador wig in 80-degree weather, is that I’m going to miss out on all these fun events…in beautiful, mild-temperatured L.A.

Thursday, May 21

Foundtrack and Apartment 3 Pop-Up Store at R-Bar
Shopping deals on vintage items, designer samples, accessories, etc. with everything under $35. However, this isn’t just some pop-up store but a bar event with all-night cheap drink specials, free vodka cocktails from 9-10pm, live art and an all-girl DJ lineup. No RSVP required but the password to get in the door is “Rudi Dassler.”

  • 9pm. R-Bar, 3331 W 8th Street, Los Angeles (map).

Friday, May 22

Intelligentsia Venice Grand Opening Party
I’m so happy happy about Intelligentsia opening up on the Westside! And in addition to their fancy coffee, they’ll be importing other goodies from the Eastside just for their grand opening. Partake of beer and wine from Silverlake Wine, sausages by Wurstkuche, and beats by Dam Funk and Peanut Butter Wolf.

  • 8pm-1am. Intelligentsia Venice, 1331 Abbott Kinney Boulevard, Venice (map).

Summer Fridays at Viceroy
Enjoy some early summer swank on the cheap at Cameo Bar’s special poolside happy hour(s) which kicks off this Friday and lasts through August 28. Drink specials are dictated by the hour. Ordering that cocktail at 2pm will cost you 2 bucks and so on til 5:59pm for $5. Budget bites on the bar menu, however, remain the same price: $2 fried chicken and biscuit slider or $4 mini quesadillas. Snag a cabana for $100 rental fee and two-bottle minimum (bottles half-priced during happy hour).

  • 2-6pm. Cameo Bar at Viceroy, 1819 Ocean Avenue, Santa Monica (map). (310) 260-7511

Dtox Day Spa’s Happy Hour Fridays
Another awesome happy hour that kicks off this Friday. Dtox Day Spa teams up with Bigfoot Lodge, home of the Toasted Marshmallow cocktail, to tempt you with pampering and cocktails. Once a month (next one is June 26) you can enjoy a mini spa treatment, appetizers and drinks for just $39. And for an apres spa libation, stumble on over to Bigfoot Lodge a few doors down for a free cocktail!

  • 6-9pm. $39. Dtox Day Spa, 3206 Los Feliz Boulevard, Los Angeles (map). Reservations required (323) 665-3869.

Saturday, May 23

MAC Cosmetics Style Warrior Memorial Day Weekend Concert
MAC Cosmetics on Third Street Promenade will be partying it up with nine live local bands, models galore and a dj at their three-day outdoor event. Plus get your makeup done before you head out for the evening via a MAC makeup artist using MAC’s newest line, Style Warrior. Makeover is free but they’d like it if you at least buy some product.

  • MAC Cosmetics, 1325 Third Street Promenade, Santa Monica (map). Book your appointment with my girl Jules at (310) 451-1281.

Monday, May 25

Tickets for Malo’s 1st Annual Ultra Premium Tequila Show Go on Sale
Imagine this: For only $15, you can sample Partida, Casa Noble, 4 Copas, Maestro Dobel, Ocho, Comisario and Hacienda de Chihuahua sotol tequilas at a caliente cantina. But it’s true! This boozy shindig will also feature Malo’s yummy food and a dj. The event is on Wednesday, June 3 but tickets go on sale on Monday at Malo.

  • Malo, 4326 W. Sunset Boulevard, Silver Lake (map). (323) 664-1011.