"All the News God Wants
You to Know"
(and not just a cheap publicity
stunt for a new movie)
Issue #1
is brought to you by...
Angels with Angles
by Gene Siskel (RIP)
Angels with Angles,
Scott
Lane's new film opening at the Laemmle in Los Angeles this week, is a masterpiece,
and I'm not saying that just because Satan is holding my children hostage.
Oh yeah, I'm in hell. No critics go to heaven, don'tcha know. That's what
makes it heaven. They wouldn't show Angels with Angles to me in
hell because it would be too pleasurable. In hell, all I get to see are
Jean-Claude Van Damme films (one of which, In Hell, is particularly
appropriate), so special arrangements had to be made for me to sneak into
a screening in heaven.
Sneaking into heaven is harder
than it looks. Security is tighter than Roger Ebert's belt after a night
at an all-you-can-eat Swedish meatball festival. Luckily there are lots
of studio make-up artists in hell, so I was able to sneak in as Mother
Teresa. There was a full body cavity search during which they discovered
that Mother Teresa was apparently a man, but St. Peter didn't look surprised.
"A lot of nuns are men," he said before issuing me my security pass and
giving me his personal business card with a note on the back inviting me
up to his hotel room after work for a bottle of Blue Nun.
Theaters are a lot better in
heaven, not like the cineplexes in hell, where whatever film you're watching,
you can hear the film next door just as loud. Theaters in heaven are the
extravagant old baroque movie palaces, complete with grand staircases,
chandeliers, and ushers - actually cherubs with wings and flashlights.
There was a red carpet leading
to the lobby, surrounded by Klieg lights and banners for the start of the
Heavenly "Top Ten" Festival. I settled into my seat with a bag of popcorn,
marveling that even in heaven, they don't use real butter. The lights went
down, the curtain went up, and the film began.
Rodney Dangerfield's last performance!
Frank Gorshin's last performance! George Burns' first after-life performance!
I feel like I died and went to heaven! Which I did! The first thing I noticed
about Angels with Angles was that Jean-Claude Van Damme wasn't in
it, which already made it the best film I've seen since I died.
Frank Gorshin as George Burns in Angels with
Angles
According to the film, heaven
is a "non-smoking paradise," which makes it less than heaven for level-one
angel, George Burns (the amazing Frank Gorshin), who misses his precious
stogies. He also misses Gracie Allen, who's already grown her wings and
graduated to level-six while he's stuck in level-one. It turns out God
(Rodney Dangerfield) has been cutting down on George's angel status because
all the angels keep mistaking George for him. Just like in real life, God's
got a bit of an ego problem (which is probably why he's keeping Sigmund
Freud in hell).
George makes a deal with God.
If he helps a mortal stay on the right path, he'll not only get to smoke
as much as he wants, but he'll be able to join Gracie in level-six. Voila!
Divine intervention!
Shoomie (Scott Lane) is the slob
George has to help, and he needs it. He's a songwriter whose last hit,
Kinky
Kinky, hasn't produced any residuals in years. Lane charms his way
through a role of a guy with none. He's perfected self-loathing as a performance
art. He needs a shave, he needs a job, he needs a girlfriend, and he needs
George Burns stepping out of his TV like a hole in the head. Soon Burns
ends up joining Shoomie and his edgy pal Howie (David Proval from The
Sopranos) in an escapade to Miami involving Castro's stolen cigars,
counter-revolutionaries with guns (Julie Carmen and Henry Darrow), Fidel's
elite guard, ditsy housewives, thieving pond scum, and Gurus with personality
defects (Frank Gorshin again).
One of the best things about
Angels
with Angles are the celebrity guest appearances. It has cameos galore,
Mae West, W.C. Fields, and the Marx Brothers, enough to make any film buff's
heart go pitty pat, unless it was removed during an autopsy like mine.
Einstein, who just happened to be sitting right next to me, thought the
guy who played him in the movie didn't look anything like him, but George
Burns, who was sitting behind us, swore up and down that Frank Gorshin
should get an Oscar.
I was sure I saw Jerry Mathers
(the Beaver) in the "Gone but not Forgotten" Lounge in the eighth level
of hell but I must have been mistaken. He's still alive and in Angels
with Angles along with Dwayne Hickman, Soupy Sales, Adam West, Frank
Stallone, Zelda Rubenstein (the diminutive "house" exorcist in Poltergeist)
and Richard Moll, making this a perfect film for playing a game of "where've
I seen that face before?" Donald (Hide the Dog) Marino did a particularly
fine job memorizing his lines as Harpo Marx. Here's another fun game you
can play while watching
Angels with Angels. Down one Red Bull every
time you see someone you recognize and you'll get wings, unless you're
already in heaven in which case they're superfluous.
The heavenly revival circuit
is much better than the one in hell, where all the prints are scratchy
and the soundtracks messed up. The only version of Van Damme's Cyborg
that's ever shown in hell is dubbed into Portuguese with Farsi subtitles,
so I stuck around heaven as long as I could. In heaven, all films are shown
with pristine prints in their original language. I ended up catching a
lot of other movies I hadn't seen in a long time. Among the other films
joining Angels with Angles in the heavenly top ten are Warren Beatty's
Heaven
can Wait, Albert Brook's Defending Your Life, Wings of Desire
(in hell, all we get to see is Shwings of Desire, starring a
Van Damme look-alike), Beetlejuice, Bedazzled (the original),
Bill and Ted's Bogus Adventure, Monty Python's The Meaning of
Life, that episode of The Simpsons where Homer goes to heaven,
and mysteriously, Die Hard, presumably because it takes place on
Christmas eve. Apparently God's a real Bruce Willis fan. I inquired why
It's a Wonderful Life wasn't on the list and was told that everyone
in heaven had already seen it too many times on television, so seeing it
again would be too big a slice of hell for their delicate sensibilities.
All good things must come to
an end, which means the Bush administration might go on forever. I decided
to make a dramatic exit, took off my disguise, and loudly announced to
anyone who cared, "Look, I'm Gene Siskel, I'm a critic, and I'm in heaven."
I was promptly maced by a cherub and dragged down to the eternal pit of
fire and damnation, where I am now, typing this into a computer. In hell,
all computers use Windows 98, so let's hope you don't get this review with
a virus. All I can say is if Frank Gorshin doesn't get a posthumous Oscar
nomination for his astounding portrayal of George Burns, there is no God.
Oh, and Roger? Roeper sucks.
See you soon.
Heavenly Cryptogram of the
Week
Answer below
Angels with Angles,
Lies, Lies, and More Lies
by Chester Gigolo: Honorary Chairman of the God-Fearing
Atheists of America
This film is an insult to atheists
everywhere. Not only do rational atheists have to do battle with those
who think God is a bearded old man in the sky who watches everything we
do, now we have to do battle with those who think God is Rodney Dangerfield,
a stand-up comic famous for his addiction to cocaine and prostitutes. So
let's get this straight. God is not anything like Rodney Dangerfield because
God doesn't exist, and if he did, he hasn't done any coke since his college
years.
On the other hand, Rodney Dangerfield
definitely exists, and I can prove it. Just watch Caddyshack. Proving
God's existence is another thing altogether. It's a matter of faith, and
not the prostitute named Faith whom Rodney had a thing for, even though
she shouted "Oh God oh God" every time he was with her.
Angels with Angles perpetuates
the myth that heaven is a place where good dead people gather to have fun,
and conversely, that hell is a place where bad dead people gather to have
misery. Nothing could be further from the truth. Heaven doesn't exist and
dead people, good or bad, don't do anything but decompose. If it was writer/director/star
Scott Lane's purpose to show how ridiculous the Judeo-Christian version
of the afterlife is, he did a good job. But if it was his purpose to show
that good deeds can actually reserve you a bit of eternal bliss, he can
go to hell, if it exists, which it doesn't.
I also question whether George
Burns would have actually gone out of his way to spend more time with Gracie
Allen. Maybe he was sick of her. After all, it was George Burns himself
who said "Happiness is having a large, loving, caring, close-knit family
in another city."
The makers of this film clearly
believe in God. As a member of the Jehovah's Witness Protection Program,
that means everybody involved in this film must stay at least 50 feet away
from me or I can have them arrested.
Since any ultimate reality
like God is probably unknowable, I really can't commit to believing in
either the existence or non-existence of angels who smoke cigars, or whether
this film is any good or not. Quantum mechanics shows that the world isn't
as logical as we thought, so movies that make absolutely no sense are the
only ones that accurately reflect reality. Since Angels with Angles
makes sense, it's clearly fiction, which proves there is no God unless
it cleans up at the box office.
Lane got one thing right. In
Hollywood, just like Rodney, God can't get any respect.
Dueling Quotes
The following quotes from the old testiment seem to contradict themselves, but since God is perfect, they obviously don't.
| Happy is the man that findeth wisdom, and
the man that getteth understanding.- Proverbs 3:13
|
For in much wisdom is much grief; and he
that increaseth knowledge increaseth sorrow.- Ecclesiastes 1:18
|
| Those that seek me early shall find me.-
Proverbs 8:17
|
Then shall they call upon me but I will not
answer; they shall seek me early, but shall not find me.- Proverbs 1:28
|
| Blessed is the man that feareth the Lord...
Wealth and riches shall be in his house...- Psalms 112:1-3
|
It is easier for a camel to go through the
eye of a needle, than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God.- Matthew
19:24
|
How is it that the very same God said the things on the right AND the things on the left? Send your answers to What the hell was God thinking when he said such contradictory things?
Kabbalah View of Angels
with Angles
by Eddie Zohar: Astrologist, Numerologist, Crystologist,
and Madonna's faux henna tattoo artist
Angels with Angles presents
us with a particularly wacked-out variation of the traditional Kabbalah
view of the afterlife. Though the makers of this film have clearly done
their spiritual homework, the Kabbalah neglects to inform us that to create
a Golem, all you have to do is raise money to make an independent film.
I know what you're thinking.
Is the Kabbalah a legitimate part of the Jewish Religion, an obscure form
of Hebrew mysticism, or, as the Catholics think, just Gnostic heresy practiced
by new age Wiccans? If none of the Kabbalistic writings were considered
inspired by the Council of Jamnia in the 2nd century AD, which formally
set the canon of Hebrew scripture, then why has it turned into a multi-million
dollar industry? And what do the Jamnia have to say about it anyway? Doesn't
Kabbalism date much further back than the Medieval Era, predating Moses
and Christ? And since officially only men can study Kabbalah, is Madonna
actually a man? Angels with Angles doesn't even come close to answering
these questions.
While Catholics are bogged down
reading St. John of the Cross or Catherine of Sienna or some of the other
ridiculous Catholic mystics, us Kabbalists are mainlining ancient scripture
we won't even let you see unless you're a celebrity. After all, they need
spiritual guidance more than the rest of us poor slobs who work for them.
Just look at George Burns in
this movie. He gives more guidance than he gets and still ends up dead.
And Shoomie comes back from the dead, not because he learned anything,
not because the first time we see him he's splayed out on the floor like
the crucified Jesus, but because he pulls a con on a heavenly gatekeeper.
What's wrong with these people? Hollywood is the new Sodom and Gomorrah
and needs to be wiped off the earth like a pestilential hellhole in the
final moments of Rapture and Armageddon. But I digress.
When the Kabbalah doesn't work for me, or in between the times I'm allowed
an audience with her majesty in order to scribble on her hands, I look
to other stars for guidance. The Love Goddess Venus is in passionate Scorpio
right now, ready to unleash her seductive powers upon all who bask in her
glow. But isn't she in opposition to Mars in Taurus, the "I'm in no hurry"
lover? Doesn't this push-pull aspect actually energize relationships, but
only if you reach out when your love interest is receptive?
Angels with
Angles doesn't even come close to answering these questions.
Angels with Angels proves that
a Golem isn't necessarily an undead servant from the corpse of a deceased
loved one. It can be a comedy.
Short Story of the Week
"Damn," a voice said. "I'm still
alive."
"Who is that?" Ritchie Castleman
asked.
"It's me, Moses Grelich," a voice
inside him said.
Grelich? Ritchie had heard that
name somewhere before. Then he remembered. Grelich was the body he had
bought to live his new life in.
Grelich said, "I was supposed
to be dead. They promised me I'd be dead."
"That's right," Ritchie said.
"I remember now. You sold your body to me. And I was supposed to have bare-bones
possession of it."
"But I am still in it. It's still
my body."
"I don't think so," Ritchie said.
"Even if you are still in it, you sold it to me. It's my body now..."
...Just yesterday he had opted
for the newly developed choice of putting his mind into a new body. This
had become necessary when his congenital heart defect suddenly started
acting up. There had been no time to lose. He had gone to Mind Movers Technology
Company, and found that they had one body he could take over immediately.
Moses Grelich had decided to opt for self-obliteration, to sell his body,
and to leave his money to Israel.
Yesterday the operation had taken
place.
- Robert Sheckley (RIP): reborn again -
Don't let this happen to you
Read Heavenly Times
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Answer to Heavenly Cryptogram of the Week:"God
made man, but he used a monkey to do it."
- DEVO -
Heavenly Times is a
production
"See you in heaven"
Full Disclosure
I was hired to do a publicity campaign for the film Angels with Angles and this is what I came up with. Heavenly Times reflects only the opinions of the writer, Michael Dare, and not Disinfotainment Today or any of its affiliates other than the fact that Heavenly Times is written by Michael Dare, who writes Disinfotainment Today. Chances are this is the one and only issue of Heavenly Times so save it, it's a collector's item. Disinfotainment Today will return sooner than you think.
Last Disinfotainment Today,
Issue
#175, was much better than this one,
and so is Issue
#176.