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Former Host and Writer of MST3K Launches RiffTrax

dougman writes "Today James Lileks mentioned his 'friend and all-around comic genius/good egg Michael J. Nelson' called, to tell him about his brilliant new project, RiffTrax. Here's the pitch: '...free-lance commentary tracks. Bottom line: Mystery Science Theater 3000-style commentary for big famous beloved movies like Titanic or The Matrix. The hitch: you have to provide the movie. It's genius: no worries about copyright. You buy the commentary tracks for $1.99, rent the movie or get it out of your collection, load the commentary on your iPod or burn it to a disk, then watch them together in true you-got-peanut-butter-in-my-chocolate bliss. ... The first movie is Roadhouse." Cool! I voted for The Matrix as the next one to be riffed." While I (and many others I know) preferred Joel, Mike was not without his share of funny moments too. Without Crow and Servo it just might not be the same, though.

31 of 185 comments (clear)

  1. Open Hangar Doors!! by illuminatedwax · · Score: 4, Funny

    Stay frosty, boys, we've got a flame war coming! Joel vs. Mike seen on radar, heading straight for us! Batten down the hatches, prepare all escape pods, brace for impact!

    --
    Did you ever notice that *nix doesn't even cover Linux?
    1. Re:Open Hangar Doors!! by Flounder · · Score: 2, Funny

      Jeez, Joel vs Mike flame wars are so mid-90's.

      --

      No boom today. Boom tomorrow. There's always a boom tomorrow. - Cmdr. Susan Ivanova

    2. Re:Open Hangar Doors!! by Tibor+the+Hun · · Score: 2, Funny

      What if we have a Chuck Norris vs. Zap Rowsdower war instead?
      Yeah, I know that all of you bitchass fanbois might think Norris is the bomb but,

      Wait a sec, someone's knocking

      --
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    3. Re:Open Hangar Doors!! by ConceptJunkie · · Score: 2, Funny

      My favorite is Joike, you know, the guy the sweater was made for.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
    4. Re:Open Hangar Doors!! by Hao+Wu · · Score: 4, Funny
      Stay frosty, boys, we've got a flame war coming!

      Nothing sadder than a bunch of Slashdotters competing to be "Alpha-dork".

      --
      I suggest you read Slashdot
    5. Re:Open Hangar Doors!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Nothing sadder than a slashdotter coming here to tell us he's above it all.

    6. Re:Open Hangar Doors!! by Improv · · Score: 2, Funny

      Give me rocket number nine! I want to watch!

      --
      For every problem, there is at least one solution that is simple, neat, and wrong.
  2. Not an original concept by EvanED · · Score: 2, Informative

    Might be better than your typical fan-made one of these, but there are other examples. One of which, I think the one I went looking for, was called DVD Tracks, but it seems to have went away... Here's a /. article about this though.

  3. The dream of an MST3K reunion by Flounder · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The site mentions the possibility of having other people join Mike on the commentaries. As far as we know, Mike has kept in touch with Trace Beaulieu (Crow S1-7), Bill Corbett (Crow S8-10) and Kevin Murphy (Tom Servo S2-10) and is still on good terms with them, so it's not impossible.

    --

    No boom today. Boom tomorrow. There's always a boom tomorrow. - Cmdr. Susan Ivanova

    1. Re:The dream of an MST3K reunion by dr_dank · · Score: 2, Informative

      A reunion is not out of the question, but it would take a lot to bring it together. Many of the old props were sold off when Best Brains closed down its production facility and went to a licensing/merchandise business model.

      I'd really like to see more of the side projects, namely another book from Kevin Murphy. A Year at the Movies blew me away.

      --
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    2. Re:The dream of an MST3K reunion by Flounder · · Score: 2, Interesting

      A reunion is not out of the question, but it would take a lot to bring it together. Many of the old props were sold off when Best Brains closed down its production facility and went to a licensing/merchandise business model.

      Since this is audio only, wouldn't having the props be kind of pointless?
      But Mike and the bots have made appearances since the auctions (namely ESPN's Cheap Seats), so I'm assuming they put Crow and Tom Servo in cryogenic storage for such a day.

      --

      No boom today. Boom tomorrow. There's always a boom tomorrow. - Cmdr. Susan Ivanova

  4. Sometimes silhouettes were funny by lawpoop · · Score: 4, Informative

    I think this is really great, but sometimes my favorite parts of MST3K were jokes they played with the silhouettes on the screen. In one of the Godzilla movies, there was a bird's-eye-view scene of some Japanese soldiers with round, white bubble-helmets on. Joel stood up, knocked on one of the helmets, and the soldier looked straight up into the camera! :D Classic.

    --
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    -- Pablo Picasso
  5. This reminds me... by ephraimX · · Score: 5, Interesting

    ...of Wizard People, Dear Reader, a similar one-off project by Brad Neely; it's an audiobook-style replacement narrative for the first Harry Potter movie that, when synched up with the DVD (or DivX or whatever) makes for a freaking awesome movie.

  6. Re:Good idea but... by icebike · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Maybe a MythTV plugin would be in order.

    Record the show and wait an hour or 5 before playback and you could have Henry Kissinger pitching snide remarks to Gretta Van Susteran while watching War of the Worlds.

    Wait a month and you could have some really cool total-replacement sound tracks of Bush calling a world cup game.

    --
    Sig Battery depleted. Reverting to safe mode.
  7. And for the multiple-tracked among us... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    it could get a trifle complicated if they put out a commentary to go with "The Wizard of Oz"...you know, playing the movie, the commentary AND "Dark Side of the Moon".

  8. Re:No worries? by kidgenius · · Score: 3, Informative

    All this is, is an additional commentary act. The original sounds of the movie are coming off the dvd that you provide. There is nothing that should stop me from sitting in a room, making a recording on my comments of the movie, and then releasing it. Granted, entities such as Major League Baseball are currently trying to prevent people from providing their own sportscasts of baseball games. Not sure all the details there, but this maybe, eventually, could be prohibited. Let's hope not.

  9. Re:Good idea but... by JAFSlashdotter · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Maybe a MythTV plugin would be in order.

    Record the show and wait an hour or 5 before playback and you could have Henry Kissinger pitching snide remarks to Gretta Van Susteran while watching War of the Worlds.

    Wait a month and you could have some really cool total-replacement sound tracks of Bush calling a world cup game.
    Maybe even better would be a plugin or player that also allowed the overlay of video from another source (e.g. the silouhettes, as an mpg file) in addition to just sound.
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  10. Share Crow with ShareCrow? by Robotech_Master · · Score: 5, Informative

    Don't forget you can use ShareCrow to sync these commentaries easily if you have a Windows machine that uses compatible DVD player software.

    (And check Commentary Central for a bunch of freebie alternate commentary tracks, including my own for Lupin III: Castle of Cagliostro ...)

    --
    Editor Emeritus and Senior Writer, TeleRead.org
  11. Two Dollars? by pete-classic · · Score: 3, Funny

    He should do "Beter Off Dead" next, since he wants his two dollars.

    -Peter

    PS: Remeber kids, there is no "-1: I don't get it." moderation option.

  12. This raises a good question.... by wowbagger · · Score: 4, Interesting

    This raises a good question: what if the MST3K folk were to release their commentary as a file that, when combined with the correct DVD player, would place their overlayed silhouettes over the movie. BAM! All the advantages of MST3K, no copyright worries over the movie.

    Imagine the fun the bots could have with some of the real stinkers that have been released too recently to be available to them: MST3K of Waterworld, or of, well, any Adam Sandler movie.

  13. Re:No worries? by Kaptain+Kruton · · Score: 3, Interesting

    This isn't analogous to releasing diffs or modified code. If you want to use your linux code analogy, it would be similar to someone writing a lot of non-technical comments and opinions about the code and releasing the comments, but not any actual code. Because the person wrote all of the comments himself and did not include any of the code (modified or unmodified), I don't think he isn't breaking any licensing agreements.

  14. Re:Thanks in Advance by heptapod · · Score: 3, Informative

    You're seeing them because you, genius, don't know how to adjust your reading threshold.

  15. Speaking of which... by identity0 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Hey, speaking of amusing but uninformative MP3s (just kidding, guys... :-) ), when are you guys at Slashdot going to restart Geeks In Space, or at least restore the archives? In case you haven't noticed, many of the old MP3s are missing from thesync.com. It's wierd, some of the MP3 files seem to have been replaced with a tribute page for a deceased person sometime in 2004.

    Can you please host the whole archive of shows again?

    And new shows would be good, too. I'd love to hear Cliff rant on about the name Wii, or Taco get cranky over Vista.

    And to not be totally offtopic... I can't be the only one who thinks it won't be the same without the shadows in the corner. Especially not without the robots. What I would love to see, though, is a group of totally insane people like the cast of SeaLab 2021 commenting on the movies.

  16. Parody and Criticism exceptions to the code. by plasmacutter · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Without actually embedding them in video feed youre not reproducing the work

    There are also numerous examples and case courses resolved against copyright holders in cases of parody and criticism.

    Nelson has a mountain of case law on his side, but youre right, i wouldnt put it past these people.

    --
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  17. Re:No worries? by ClamIAm · · Score: 5, Insightful

    IANAL. However, my completely IANAL-ish opinion is that these are not copyright infringement, and fall in the realm of fair use. I say this because I believe this type of work is nearly the same thing as writing a review of a movie, or posting some facts about a movie.

    Most movie reviews are very similar to an additional audio track, save for the fact that one is designed to be synced up to the movie, and the other is written on paper. Reviews often comment on aspects of the film, such as a specific scene or a recurring theme or something. The only real difference an audio track has is, once again, the fact that it is designed to be played along with the film.

    Posting facts about a movie is also considered fair use. You can say "this movie is two hours long", or "the lens looks messed up in these scene", and this is not infringement. An audio track seems to be very similar to this.

    Other types of media also follow these rules. It is not infringement to say "this painting is ten feet tall", or "Mark Knopfler used a Gibson Les Paul when he recorded 'Money for Nothing'". It is also not infringement to say "Charles Dickens sucks".

    There's even prior art: Dark Side of the Moon.

  18. Re:Spend your money! by Twisted64 · · Score: 4, Funny
    Maybe some money will drag Joel in from whatever strange mountain cabin he's retreated to....
    I hear his bosses didn't like him, so they... shot him... something something.
    --
    Consciousness is a myth. Trust me.
  19. Joel vs Mike... Sigh... by John+Fulmer · · Score: 4, Informative

    CowboyNeal *DOES* know that Mike was a writer on the show from season 1 on, and the head writer starting season 2, right.

    That's one thing that I've never understood about the Joel vs Mike thing.... The writing staff was pretty much the same for both (with the huge exception of Frank Conniff leaving. Things were never quite as.... surreal afterward).

    jf

  20. Re:Good idea but... by Kadin2048 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Actually it's pretty trivial to do this with a recorded audio and video file in Quicktime Player. (Yes, yes...I know, the Slashdot hivemind hates QT Player.) I don't know whether you have to buy -- *cough*typeinserialnumber*cough* -- it in order to do this or not, but you just open your audio track in one player window, hit Cmd-A, Cmd-C to select and copy it, then go back to the video and paste it in. It's been a while since I've done this, but I think you can even do this so that it pastes the audio into a new layer rather than mixing it with the existing audio, so that you can turn it off and on at will.

    You can also do the opposite and add the video to the audio, which is advantageous if you want to use the "paste and scale" option: Quicktime can paste in a video track and alter its timing so that it ends up being the same length as the track it's being pasted into, which is very helpful if you have two tracks that are supposed to be the same length and in sync, but they've gotten desynced during processing somehow. (This used to happen a lot in the bad pre-HandBrake days of DVD ripping on the Mac, when you had to process the audio and video tracks separately.)

    The only problem with this method is that the resulting file is a Quicktime MOV (not an MP4) regardless of the format of the original video, which is sure to lead to bitching from PC users if you send it to them.

    You can also do fun things like paste music overtop of video to see if it matches up (I recommend 2001: A Space Odyssey and Pink Floyd's Meddle, personally).

    I don't know of any way to do this with incoming streams, save just playing one in the background in your streaming audio player application, while watching the video in front with its audio turned down.

    --
    "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
  21. EDLs are still A-OK. by Kadin2048 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    In your comment about the "cut list" I think you must be referring to the 'cleaned DVDs' topic of a few days ago, and I think you're misunderstanding that ruling.

    What was prohibited in that case was the reproduction that Clean Flicks was doing in order to produce the edited versions. They were taking a movie, editing it, and then selling the edited version -- yes, they were selling each edited version packaged along with an unedited version, but they were reproducing the film just the same. That's where they ran into copyright problems.

    Other companies who took a different tactic towards the problem, and avoided the reproduction step (by delivering to the customer an EDL that would cause the player to fast forward through various 'offensive' parts) were allowed under the ruling.

    There's a pretty good analysis of the verdict on FindLaw, which isn't too long and is worth reading. In particular: "The defendants also argued that they were protected by the so-called "first sale" doctrine ... [they] failed to win on this affirmative defense, because they were not just dealing in the hard copy, but rather making copies of it." (Emphasis mine.)

    If you're willing to spend some more time reading things actually written by folks who have law degrees, I recommend this substantial article from the Georgetown Law Journal, which was written in 2004 and examines the viability under copyright law of several video-censoring technologies, including old-school razorblade tape splicing, CleanFlicks-type digital editing, and EDL-based 'skip over' systems.

    Although CleanFlicks no longer offers the edited copies of DVDs, another company, ClearPlay, still offers an EDL-based product (which IMO is a much more elegant solution to the problem anyway, since it lets you pick what types of smut you personally dislike), as can be seen on their website.

    This type of on-the-fly editing is legal, and was clarifed as such by President Bush's passing of the "Family Movie Act of 2005," which specifically allows you to make changes to an authorized copy of a motion picture, as long as you don't create a fixed copy of the edited version. The best part of the law? It's not limited purely to obscenity edits; according to one Forbes article, it could be used just as easily to protect a fan's removal of the more obnoxious parts of Star Wars Episode 1 as it could the removal of Kate Winslet's nudity from Titanic. (Sadly, apparently the technology can't replace Jar Jar Binks with a naked Kate Winslet. Yet.)

    So the next time you think that G.W. hasn't done anything for you, it seems that he may have let some good slip through after all.

    --
    "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
  22. No DRM by springbox · · Score: 4, Informative
    Anyway.. .. the best way to get the commentary in would be something like imovie and its linux equivalents... for that you can't have DRM.

    I just downloaded Road House from the site and it's in MP3 format. I doubt you have to worry about any DRM getting in the way.

  23. Re:Red-State Edition DVD Commentaries by reverseengineer · · Score: 2, Funny
    It works just as well for blue states- I love the McSweeney's commentary of Howard Zinn and Noam Chomsky on The Fellowship of the Ring. Some choice bits:
    Zinn: And observe the map device here -- how the map is itself completely Gondor-centric. Rohan and Gondor are treated as though they are the literal center of Middle Earth. Obviously this is because they have men living there. What of places such as Anfalas and Forlindon or Near Harad? One never really hears anything about places like that. And this so-called map casually reveals other places -- the Lost Realm, the Northern Waste (lost to whom? wasted how? I ask) -- but tells us nothing about them. It is as though the people who live in these places are despicable, and unworthy of mention. Who is producing this tale? What is their agenda? What are their interests and how are those interests being served by this portrayal? Questions we need to ask repeatedly.

    Zinn: You view the conflict as being primarily about pipe-weed, do you not?
    Chomsky: Well, what we see here, in Hobbiton, farmers tilling crops. The thing to remember is that the crop they are tilling is, in fact, pipe-weed, an addictive drug transported and sold throughout Middle Earth for great profit.

    Zinn: This is absolutely established in the books. Pipe-weed is something all the Hobbits abuse. Gandalf is smoking it constantly. You are correct when you point out that Middle Earth depends on pipe-weed in some crucial sense, but I think you may be overstating its importance. Clearly the war is not based only on the Shire's pipe-weed. Rohan and Gondor's unceasing hunger for war is a larger culprit, I would say.
    Chomsky: But without the pipe-weed, Middle Earth would fall apart. Saruman is trying to break up Gandalf's pipe-weed ring. He's trying to divert it.
    Zinn: Well, you know, it would be manifestly difficult to believe in magic rings unless everyone was high on pipe-weed. So it is in Gandalf's interest to keep Middle Earth hooked.

    Zinn: After Gandalf falls, you get another view of the so-called terrorist Orcs. You know, the regrettable side of the Orcs does occasionally come out. The violence. It doesn't help their cause when these distinct, individual Orcs take it upon themselves to lash out at the inequality of the system. But notice that even these violent Orcs don't seem happy. They're not pleased with themselves. It's a violence borne of necessity.

    Chomsky: Sure. They're trapped in a cycle of violence.

    --
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