Dinner
and a Movie
From
Fantasy to Fantastic
By
Steve Herte
Pixels (Columbia,
2015) – Director: Chris
Columbus. Writers: Tim Herlihy (story and s/p), Timothy Dowling
(s/p). Patrick Jean (short film). Stars: Adam Sandler, Kevin James,
Michelle Monaghan, Peter Dinklage, Josh Cad, Matt Lintz, Brian Cox,
Dean Bean, Jane Krakowski, Dan Ackroyd, Affion Crockett, Lainie
Kazan, Ron Mustafa, Ashley Benson, Denis Akiyama, Tom McCarthy, Jared
Riley, Anthony Loughran, Jacob Shinder, & Andrew Bambridge.
Color, PG-13, 106 minutes.
Galaga,
Space Invaders, Frogger, Pac-Man, Centipede, Donkey Kong and Q*bert
are well known to the gamers of yesterday. The “Arcaders”
competed for high scores and were proud of their relatively
meaningless titles. Brenner (Loughran), Cooper (Riley) and Ludlow
(Shinder) were addicted Arcaders in their teens (even to swiping the
jar of quarters from a girl selling lemonade – played by Sadie
Sandler – to feed their habit) and all competed against Eddie
(Bambridge) who dubbed himself the “Fire Blaster” and basically
showed nothing but contempt for the other three.
Then
one day in 1984, a Grand Championship was held and the winner’s
score would be included (along with the various games) in a space
probe to announce Earth’s presence to intelligent alien life forms.
Brenner and Eddie made it to the finals playing Donkey Kong and the
MC (Ackroyd) announced Eddie as the winner. Brenner grows to
adulthood (Sandler) believing it was his worst game.
Brenner
is now part of a “Nerd” squad fixing and installing electronic
devices. On one of his house calls he meets Matty (Lintz) and his
mother Violet (Monaghan), who is going through a messy break-up with
her husband (he left her for a 19-year-old – fantasy, remember?)
Cooper (now James) has become President of the United States (I did
mention this was a fantasy, right?), and Ludlow (now Gad) well . . .
he’s Ludlow. As for Eddie (Dinklage), he’s in prison for various
felonies.
The
scene suddenly switches to the island of Guam (as good a place as
any, I guess) where an alien attack is underway. Every time alien
fire hits a structure it breaks up into sparkling cubes (pixels, if
you will). Since there is little effective resistance, the attackers
consider it a win and take a soldier as a trophy. Cooper learns of
this and contacts Brenner, who recognizes the patterns of the game
“Galaga.” White House officials do not want to hear that
occupants of a distant galaxy misinterpreted our probe as a war
challenge for planetary dominance. They are given coordinates for the
next attack/challenge and the location changes to Agra, India.
A
young couple in love strolls by the Taj Mahal and, as he kneels to
present the ring, she screams as the Taj Mahal is gradually destroyed
by a real-life version of “Space Invaders.” Again, since Earth
does not want to recognize what is going on, the aliens win another
round and take as a “trophy” the young boy (Mustafa).
Brenner
and Cooper now realize what’s going on and receive the next
coordinates. They attempt to train a squadron of select warriors to
combat the alien threat. Of course, none of the soldiers take them
seriously. Violet, who is really a lieutenant colonel with DARPA,
supplies the men with “light cannons” (conveniently) to
counteract the space weapons. The new coordinates lead them to London
and the game is “Centipede.” The varicolored mushrooms appear in
the sky and Brenner instantly recognizes his best-scored game. The
soldiers are clueless, so Brenner and Ludlow take over and win the
round. The Earth people are congratulated by a video of Mr. Rourke
and Tatoo from the TV show Fantasy Island and
receive a pixilated version of the dog from the game “Duck Hunt.”
The
next coordinates indicate New York City, and Brenner, Cooper and
Violet realize they have to spring Eddie from prison to get his
expertise. But Eddie has a list of demands: an island, a helicopter,
freedom from paying taxes for the rest of his life and Serena
Williams and Martha Stewart in the Lincoln Bedroom of the White
House. An agreement is reached: no island, no helicopter, yes to tax
freedom and only a date with Serena. The game is “Pac-Man.” Once
again, Violet comes through with the weapons, i.e. the
“Ghosts,” cars painted the colors of the four ghosts in the
videogame. Brenner, Ludlow and Eddie each one with Professor Toru
Iwatani (Akiyama), the “inventor” of the Pac-Man game, occupies
the fourth car.
Any
doubt that the aliens are serious are wiped away when Iwatami tries
to “reason” with his pixilated “son” and gets his hand
chomped in the deal. The game continues in the maze of New York
streets with Violet guiding the ghosts in the control room. Earth
wins another victory thanks to Brenner’s expert backwards driving
in a multi-level parking lot while counting off the 10 seconds
Pac-Man has to eat his ghost, and Eddie’s clever maneuvers. The
Earth people are presented with another “trophy” – a pixilated
Q*bert (the best character in the movie), who eventually tells the
team how his people felt intimidated by the probe/time capsule and
thus, the reaction.
Later
Matty discovers at a White House ball that Eddie cheated (just as he
cheated in the first competition against Brenner). The aliens know he
cheated as well, and not only take Matty as a trophy, but also send a
barrage of videogame characters including Frogger, Smurfs, and giant
robots to destroy the planet. With Q*bert’s help, Brenner, Cooper
and Violet are invited by Max Headroom (voiced by Matt Frewer) to
challenge “the Master” aboard the mothership. The game? “Donkey
Kong.”
Brenner
is dismayed. This is the game he lost when he played that last round
against Eddie. But he learns of Eddie’s cheating from Matty, who is
stranded on the top level with the other Earth trophies (where the
princess would be) and Brenner rallies and wins the game, thus saving
the world.
Make
no doubt about it, Pixels is a very silly movie. But
it is colorful, very entertaining and full of action scenes. Adam
Sandler does one of his best performances, and does so without doing
something disgusting or peppering the film with vulgarity. I was
surprised at how clean the language was in general. The audience
laughed many more times than I did. I guess I’m not up with the
trend of what’s funny. But I did laugh when I thought it was.
Several
famous names have cameos in Pixels, including Lainie
Kazan, Madonna, Daryl Hall, John Oates, Martha Stewart, and the
entire immediate Sandler family. Parents, it’s safe to bring the
kids to this one. If they understand it they still won’t believe it
but they’ll enjoy the craziness. I particularly liked the view from
the ground of a centipede curling down out of the sky (my favorite
game back when).
Rating:
3 out of 5 Martini glasses.
Tasca
Chino
245
Park Ave. S. (20th Street),
New York
I
had several choices of restaurant in mind for the “special” title
of number 2,680 on my life list and eventually it would come back to
confuse me when the time came to dine. Tasca Chino won the spot with
their fusion of Spanish and Chinese cuisines. Chef Alex Ureña has
managed to serve Tapas opposite steamed dumplings and Paella as well
as the finest duckling.
I
told you I got confused. That was because the other finalist “Upland”
stayed in my mind (26th Street
and Park Avenue South) and instinctively I went to that address
first. Fortunately I had left myself sufficient time to be
fashionably late for my 7:00 pm reservation at Tasca Chino.
Open
to the street, as so many New York restaurants are (It saves money
purchasing permission to build a sidewalk café), Tasca Chino stands
out in brilliant white with the name emblazoned in large gold
letters. The sidewalk café look is accomplished with potted boxwoods
and tropical trees just outside the windows. I announced my
reservation to the two lovely young ladies at the Captain’s Station
and one led me to a perfect table by a window at the far wall.
The
primary color of the restaurant is red, which works for both
cuisines. A red Leroy Neiman-ish modern art painting of a bullfighter
confronting El Toro faces an Andy Warhol-ish quartet of Mao Tse-tung
profiles on the opposite wall. Adjacent to Chairman Mao is a kung-fu
fighter in full attack mode on a red background. The chairs are all
red-cushioned and so are the banquettes. The tables are shiny wood,
with no tablecloths. The well-stocked bar was on the wall facing me.
The
young lady who seated me presented me with the menu and the
wines/cocktails list. The title of one of the specialty cocktails was
simply Chinese calligraphy. The pages of the wine list fanned to the
last page where the “spirits” were and I saw they served my
favorite gin. When my server Monty arrived for my water preference I
ordered my favorite martini. Though the menu was a mere two pages,
there were many interesting choices under its categories: Tapas,
Terracotta Dumplings, Salads, Large Plates, Vegetables, and Paella
(four to choose from).
It
was difficult to set my mind on food while sipping my perfect martini
in its elegantly etched glass. I asked Monty, “What do people
usually do here when they’re really hungry?” “Order a lot of
food.” He shot back, not missing a beat. “Good answer!” I said,
“But you know what I mean. I’m thinking a three-course meal.”
He suggested maybe two Tapas, and a dumpling dish because I had my
eye on a paella main course. I needed more time and I stopped him as
he tried to remove the wine list upon leaving.
I
had pretty much chosen my meal but the wine list posed a conundrum.
There were a great many reasonably priced wines from different
countries (including Mallorca) that I’ve never tried. The next time
Monty arrived I asked for someone who knew wines, and soon a young
man was at my table to assist. He looked vaguely familiar. He pointed
out and described an Italian, a Spanish and a Portuguese wine as
fitting my requirements and I chose the Portuguese. Then he left but
returned posthaste when he realized that my choice was sold out. I
chose the next one down on the list per his advice. It was 1980 (yes,
a wine older than 2000, a 35-year-old) Caves São João Dão Porta do
Caveleiros, a red blend of four grapes that does not taste its age.
The cherry fruitiness makes the medium body wine last throughout the
dinner and it was delightful with all my dishes. When the steward
tried to remove the cork with a two-pronged implement I’ve never
seen before, it was a surprise that the cork plopped into the wine
instead of coming out. He almost blushed as he told me he would
decant the wine first.
First
to arrive was the Black Bass Ceviche – with
tomatillo, avocado, tomato, onion and lime – served on a beautiful
wavy glass dish that reminded me of the moonscape on the Kodak
Pavilion at the 1964/65 World’s Fair. Monty suggested eating it
with chopsticks and I agreed. The fish was delicate, and a little
spicy, but the avocado helped tone down the spice.
The
other tapas, the Garbanzo Frito & Kimchi – a
crispy cube of chickpea cake, house-made kimchi (Korean spiced
pickled cabbage), ponzu and wasabi mayo – arrived before I was
finished with the ceviche. But that was okay, because ceviche is
served cold and the three cubes of chickpea cake were hot. The kimchi
was not as spicy as the national dish of Korea, but it accented the
garbanzos nicely.
Next
to grace my table was the Wild Mushroom and Truffle Steamed
Dumplings – with delicate wild mushroom garnish – served
in the traditional bamboo steamer. They were glistening, snow white,
tender and full of rich mushroom flavor, almost erotic. The wine
tasted particularly good here.
All
these dishes paved the way for the main course, which I knew from the
menu took 25 minutes to prepare fresh, the Paella de Coco –
chicken pieces, lamb strips, soybeans, English peas over rice in
coconut milk and with drops of yellow curry served in an iron pan. I
took Monty’s caution about the hot pan seriously and tasted the
dish. It was heaven! I’ve been craving a good lamb and rice dish
with a little curry flavor for a long time and this was it. The pure
white chicken was just a fancy garnish to me. I told Monty about the
best part, scraping and eating the socarrat (the rice stuck to the
pan).
That
was wonderful, and I had room for dessert. What else? The Chocolate
Bomb! In another fanciful glass dish was a shiny, perfectly spherical
dark chocolate delight with passion fruit mousse and a raspberry and
mango crumble. It surprised me when it deflated shortly after Monty
left, but it was good. The dark chocolate was smooth and the fruits
played around the flavor like nymphs in a forest.
Double
Espresso? Of course. After dinner drink? New York Malmsey from the
Rare Wine Company in Madeira was deliciously sweet and almost syrupy
rich! I’ve definitely got to get a bottle of this. The wine steward
checked in with me at various times during the meal, as did Monty.
During my last conversation with the steward, he gave me his card. I
was sure I saw him before and the card proved it. He was the
sommelier at Barbounia restaurant a block away. His name? Tayfun
Saracoglu. Admittedly not as memorable as his presence, but we
discussed the delicious Greek fish “barbounia” and its
diminishing supply until I had to leave. Tasca Chino is definitely
worth a second or third visit. It’s friendly, it’s good, and it’s
affordable. Most of all, it’s a great fusion of cuisines.
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