Monday, November 24, 2025

Doc Watch: Selena y Los Dinos (2025)



Watched:  11/24/2025
Format:  Netflix
Viewing:  First
Director:  Isabel Castro


Living in Texas in the early 90's, if you had your head up at all, you heard about Selena.  While I didn't listen to Tejano or Cumbia, she'd become so big that a dumb Anglo kid like myself heard Bidi Bidi Bom Bom somewhere along the way, and I admit that I probably paid more attention to Selena because she was very pretty with a Colgate smile.

Candidly, in the 1990's and now, the names of most Tejano acts were just not known by Anglos and English speakers.  But Selena was rapidly breaking down that particular divide through sheer force of scale - she was selling out the Astrodome, something reserved for the biggest acts on the planet - and wildly popular local acts like ZZ Top.  

As a Texan whose first language was English, it seemed like Selena was about to cross-over to a larger audience the second she put out a record in English (see: Shakira).

But then, in 1995, at the age of 23, Selena was killed.  

As popular as she was when that occurred, it's very hard to quantify the scope and duration of the public mourning that spilled out.

Chabert Holiday Micro-Watch: Maybe This Christmas (2025)



Chabert may have signed an exclusive deal with Hallmark for making movies and selling some lovely products in Hallmark stores, but after last year's slam dunk ad with Philosophy, she's now got a gig with Maybelline.  And while we don't believe she could possibly have a blemish, this year she's re-teaming with Dustin Milligan to sell concealer.

Over a handful of 30-second episodes, we get more story than most Hallmark movies.

All 5 episodes in one convenient video:



Sunday, November 23, 2025

Noirvember Watch: Ace in the Hole (1951)




Watched:  11/22/2025
Format:  Disc
Viewing:  First
Director:  Billy Wilder


If you ever wanted to crush the human soul with a pair of slick mid-century movies, you could do worse than to schedule this movie alongside The Sweet Smell of Success.  

The movie probably seems a little over the top in some ways, but holy christ, you kind of know it's more accurate about our relationship with the media and how the media keeps us invested than any of us really want to admit.  

Kirk Douglas plays a talented journalist who has been run out of every decent newspaper on the East Coast.  He rolls into town in Albuquerque in a broken down car and takes a job at a small paper that insists he publish only the truth.  

A year later, he's sent to go cover a rattlesnake roundup but en route stumbles across an accident.  At a roadside shop and restaurant they find that across the way the owner of the place has gone into an old cave where he often finds Native American artifacts, and the place had collapsed on him.  Douglas smells a story, and calls it in.  It's the first time he's really been able to cut loose with some real sensationalism, and the story gets picked up by the wire.

Udo Kier Merges With The Infinite



Udo Kier, an actor who has been in a ridiculous number of movies, has passed.

Kier was in some of Andy Warhol's films, Suspiria, and a handful of Lars Van Trier movies.  But also appeared in comedies like Ace Ventura: Pet Detective,  TV classics like V.I.P. and no shortage of German films.





"Hallmark Channel's Christmas Concert" (2019) might be the Hallmark Channel's Star Wars Holiday Special





This item does not appear on the IMDB for Ms. Lacey Chabert under "actor", but under "self" so I'd initially missed it.  But it popped up on Hallmark as an option, and I wasn't going to not watch it.  

So, what is it?

It's a bizarre artifact of where Hallmark was in 2019, I guess.  And the watchword for the whole show is "awkward".  There clearly was a lack of rehearsal time, and a spirit of "we're pros, we'll wing it" that doesn't play particularly well.  No one here is Bob Hope and keeping this on the rails.

The show is *not* exactly a concert, but kinda, sorta framed like one of those old-school Christmas specials where a celebrity pretends they're in their house.  Lacey Chabert is throwing a party where other Hallmark stars are her guests, but she's also acknowledging the camera (and sometimes awkwardly looking at it).  

One-by-one, a series of Hallmark stars come in, and then they each sing a Christmas standard in what I assume is not actually Chabert's livingroom and kitchen.  But it's not a set - I'm pretty sure that's a real house.  No set would be this poorly designed for television coverage.

What's absolute gold is, it's a chance for Hallmark stars who would love to also sing for a living to ham it up and show off their talents in a barely contained format.  The set is just a living room with a piano shoved into a corner, and an increasing line of Hallmark actors, as each ding-dongs the doorbell and Lacey lets them in as they sort out spacing, blocking and trying to not make this look like a disaster they seem to know it is.  Then they wind up sitting too closely together on the furniture while whomever is singing stands at the end of the couch, facing the camera.  It's designed so everyone is always on camera, crammed into the end of a shoe-box shaped room.

It's so weird.  I have absolutely no idea why they set it up this way.  It's also not clear that these people actually know each other.  There's no real reason they would.  They clearly didn't really rehearse and trusted they all know the songs as the penultimate song, which appears recorded at the time, is a trainwreck.


Back when this came out I guess Hallmark had a sort of talk show called Home and Family, and it seems Larissa Wohl was on it?  Because she's not an actor.  She has lots of "self" credits on IMDB appearing on shows about dogs.  Because she has no acting credits, for a minute I thought maybe the dog trainer just assumed she was on screen for a holiday show, so she dressed up and they were like "yeah, you look terrific.  Join the show."  But, no.  She's a TV personality type.

Happy the Dog and his three minutes of screen time gets a credit but the kids choir which briefly appears does not.

2019 is also just before Candace Cameron Bure got mad they let movies have gay people in them and was so furious she ran off and started her own network, Great American Family, and took a few Hallmark stars with her.  It may be that this special is the last time two or three of these people worked for Hallmark before defecting to the GAF camp.  Because only like 2.5 of them are still among the favored actors Hallmark is shoving at fans in 2025.  

I also don't think any of the other actors like Jessica Lowndes.  It's just a vibe.

By the way, clearly Chabert doesn't trust her own voice enough to sing solo.  And yet, she's the host of the sing-along show.  She is also clearly a bit unsure of herself as she keeps dropping the Chabert chuckle and straightening her dress.  You're doing great, Lacey!  No worries.

There's just odd bits of chatter, like when one of the other actors takes way too long to tell a story about fudge.  And then proceeds to lip synch to "Sleighride" while decorating cookies, which is accidentally flirty as they decide to not look at the camera and only at each other.

Really, among the show's biggest challenges was decided if the actors were supposed to acknowledge the cameras or not.  A sub-problem is that it seems like the other actors really brought Lacey presents and she has to respond in real time.  And is like "oh, nice.  Anyway, we have another song to do."

It's all so half-assed.  Even pre-recorded, no one has a phenomenal voice that would lead one to believe this was a good idea.

That Hallmark never did this again is probably very telling.  

As mind-numbing and tedious as the Star Wars Holiday Special?  No.  But do you get to see actors kind of make goofs of themselves on camera in the most cringe-tastic way?  You sure do.  But it is blessedly short.

Saturday, November 22, 2025

Happy Birthday, Jamie Lee Curtis



Today is the birthday of Signal Watch favorite Jamie Lee Curtis.  

Happy b-day to actor, director, writer, etc... et al...  Ms. Curtis.  




Friday, November 21, 2025

Happy Birthday, Ingrid Pitt


Today marks the birth of actor and author Ingrid Pitt, born this day in 1937 in Warsaw, Poland.

If that date and location seem a bit ominous, Pitt was also Jewish and spent time in a concentration camp.  She and her mother escaped.

Pitt became an actress in Europe and tried her hand in America.  Her largest success was in England, especially in horror films.  In the US, she's a cult horror figure, famous for appearances in The Wicker Man, The Vampire Lovers (one of my favorite films), Countess Dracula, The House That Dripped Blood and others.  She also appears in British action movies, including the dynamite film Where Eagles Dare (recommended).  

She also penned a few books, including an autobiography and a series of horror-related books.

Her filmography is not particularly deep, and she was never a Bond girl, so her exposure in the states in minimal.  I, personally, think she's great.  In the sea of Hammer's extraordinary talent, in my opinion, she's one of the absolute best to do it.

Pitt passed in 2010 at only 73 years old.



Chabert Holiday Watch: Matchmaker Santa (2012)




Watched:  11/20/2025
Viewing:  First
Director:  Davis S. Cass Sr.

Job: Baker
Location of story:  Somewhere in California?  Outside of San Francisco
new skill:  Elfing
Job of Man:  Bitch Boy to a CEO
Goes to/ Returns to:  Goes to
Food:  Cookies


Editor's note: I was unable to find this movie during ChabertQuest2025, but saw it was now available on "UP Faith and Family", and so got a 7 day free trial.

So, new to me and not a Hallmark movie, exactly.  This movie is about a Santa who will stop at literally nothing to make sure Lacey Chabert and her boyfriend break up so that he may force her into a relationship with someone else.  Kris Kringle will bend the very laws of nature, create life, destroy roads...  

This Santa is mad with power.

Anyway, for a long time, and maybe still, a lot of the movies on Hallmark were technically independent movies.  I am unclear how it works now, but basically Hallmark would help fund movies in exchange for North American distribution.  But after X amount of time, these movies were back in the hands of the producers.  And so it was I now am enjoying a 7-day trial of the UP Faith and Family Network.

Part of how Hallmark had so many movies in the years where it seemed like a factory cranking out way too many movies, this was the trick.  Hallmark was essentially licensing very cheap indie movies, and part of them funding those movies was that Hallmark was given script approval for kicking in some percent of the film's budget.  

And, thus, the sameness of Hallmark.  They managed to pull off low-risk/ high-reward for years and people learned to write for them.

Thus, Matchmaker Santa (2012) is also, technically, Chabert's first Hallmark Christmas movie.  So, bit of trivia for you.

But you want to know about Santa and his unstoppable interest in getting people to hook up.

Thursday, November 20, 2025

Netflix Watch: Trainwreck - Storm Area 51 (2025)




Watched:  11/19/2025
Format:  Netflix
Viewing:  First
Director:  


So, yeah.  I kind of vaguely remember this occurring.  

In 2019, someone posted a joke online that they were going to "assault Area 51" - ie, gather as many people as they could to "Naruto Run" onto the top secret military base with the idea "they can't stop us all".  

Since X-Files debuted, Area 51 has been part of the zeitgeist.  We all know it's there, it was a major location in the 1990's movie Independence Day, and is rumored to be where the US Air Force keeps downed alien spacecraft.  More likely it is where we test experimental aircraft as that is where the U2 surveillance craft was first deployed, as well as the Stealth Bomber, etc...

The very real Area 51 is in the middle of nowhere and if you cross onto the property and don't stop for the guards, you will be shot.  I guess one might solve the greatest mystery of all as you find out what's beyond this veil of tears.
  
Anyway, the documentary is about how all of this got wildly out of control, the power of social media to attract people with bad risk/reward understanding, and that the kids probably are all right.  Stupid AF, but all right.  It is also about how people who have no practical experience should try to host a million person rave in the desert.  And how relying on the mob can really save your bacon.

Tuesday, November 18, 2025

Chabert Hallmark Holiday Watch: A Merry Scottish Christmas (2023)

what do you know?  I watched this on the 2nd anniversary of the movie's release


Watched:  11/18/2025
Format:  Hallmark
Viewing:  Second
Director:  Dustin Rikert

Job: Doctor
Location of story:  Somewhere in Scotland
new skill:  Lording over peasants
Job of Man:  Groundskeeper
Goes to/ Returns to:  Goes to
Event:  Some underwhelming solstice thing, a banger of a party and a ball
Food:  liquor, really


So, I thought I'd covered this movie because of the image I used for my 2023 Hallmark report when I was moving too fast assembling my ChabertQuest2025 list.  But I had not.  So here we go.

This is a movie about a naive American doctor and her family who inherit a Scottish castle.  However, the diabolical groundskeeper seduces and bamboozles the doctor into falling for him so that he may claim ownership of the lands he's worked since he was a child.  That same labor presumably led to his father's early demise, and this is his revenge.  

With dead eyed smiles, he earns the trust of the stressed out family, offering to take care of everything and let them live off the fat of their inheritance.  

Unfortunately the movie ends just after he's successfully bedded the heiress doctor but before we can put his nefarious schemes into motion, so we never see that part.

(take 2)