![]() Help ensure a future for the Happy Place during an uncertain era AND get sweet merch by pledging to the site’s Patreon account at Īlternately you can buy The Weird Accordion to Al, signed, for just 18 dollars, tax and shipping included, at the or for more, unsigned, from Amazon here. Or you can buy The Joy of Trash here and The Weird A-Coloring to Al here and The Weird Accordion to Al here The Joy of Trash, the Happy Place’s first non-"Weird Al” Yankovic-themed book is out! And it’s only 12.00, shipping, handling and taxes included, 23 bucks for two books, domestic only at īuy The Joy of Trash, The Weird Accordion to Al and the The Weird Accordion to Al in both paperback and hardcover and The Weird A-Coloring to Al and The Weird A-Coloring to Al: Colored-In Special Edition signed from me personally (recommended) over at Pre-order The Fractured Mirror, the Happy Place’s next book, a 600 page magnum opus about American films about American films illustrated by the great Felipe Sobreiro over at So I was horrified but not surprised to discover that the chimp attack in Nope could very well have been inspired by a real-life event as horrifying and traumatic as anything in Peele’s film.īuy The Weird A-Coloring to Al: Cynical Movie Cash-In Extended Edition at, signed, for just 10.75, shipping and handling included OR 23 dollars for FOUR signed copies AND a free pack of colored pencils, shipping and taxes included They’re both victims who do not understand the adult world into which they’re thrust but must make do all the same. ![]() Part of what makes the chimp massacre scene in Nope so powerful is that Jupe, the child actor who will meet a very bad, otherworldly end as an adult, probably has more in common with the chimpanzee that went nuts than the cynical adults exploiting child and animal actors alike. So when I see a little person in an ape suit in a film I have complicated feelings because it invariably looks insultingly fake AND exploits little people actors forced to play non-humans by the nature of the business but I’m also grateful that a trained animal is not being abused for the sake of a stupid movie. Travis’ behavior had become increasingly erratic, and the attack left Nash severely disfigured and Travis dead. The impossible gulf between how animal actors behave onscreen and their awful real lives is heartbreaking and tragic. On February 16, 2009, tragedy struck when Travis the Chimp, a chimpanzee who had gained national celebrity over the years, viciously attacked his owner’s close friend, Charla Nash. ![]() ![]() I will never forget the story of one of the poor orangutans who played Clyde in Any Which Way You Can who was reportedly beaten to death with a wrench for stealing a donut from craft services. ![]()
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