Friday, December 10, 2010
Telthorst Running Away with Q4 Title
Well, this season is pretty much over. Telthorst has an insurmountable lead and probably won't need any help from his second or third movies. Damn you Harry Potter.
There is an exciting battle brewing for second place, as Ellen, Tim, Klye, Sarah, and Meg are separated by 26 points and each has at least one movie yet to be released. Completely unscientific handicapping: I'll take Tim to finish second followed by Ellen (who I guess should change her team name next season).
The Q1 season is right around the corner, so keep your eyes out for the draft email chain. It looks like next season might be our most shallow yet, so draft skills in the second and third rounds will be even more important than usual. Also, we will finally get the answer to the question that's been on everyone's mind: Who will have the balls to draft the Justin Beber movie?
Monday, November 29, 2010
Telthorst Rides his Broomstick to First Place
Check it out: it's a sexy sandwich on retard bread. Even though it didn't blow away the critics, "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 1" grossed more than enough money to overtake first place in the Q4 season of the HFL. Even if Matt's second and third round picks completely bomb, and they might, it looks like HP 7 will be strong enough to win him the season.
Tim dropped to second place, and still has his first round pick on the bench. Ellen and Kyle are in a close third and fourth after strong performances from their first round picks.
There are still plenty of movies yet to hit theaters, and plenty of time to score points, but for now it looks like the Q4 season belongs to Telthorst and everyone else will be jockeying for second.
Above are the current HFL standings. Click to enlarge. Movies with dark coloring are final scores, light colored are in progress or yet to be released.
Wednesday, November 24, 2010
Kyle's Q3 Wrap-up

The third quarter of the 2010 HFL season is over, and this time owners needed every last point they could get their hands on as Blanner held off Sarah’s quest for a repeat championship by a single point despite getting a whopping zero points from his second round pick. But did he have illegal, collusion-ary help? Who made the most of their draft position? Who made consistently terrible decisions? Who, five years from now, will have the foresight and courage to take “Threetards” first overall? Let’s get to it.
Round One, Pick One
What they took: Wall Street 2: Money Never Sleeps, by Ellen
Movie score (rank in parentheses): 29 (9)
What they should have taken: Inception
-With the first pick in the draft Ellen showed that her poor judgment is not limited to her choice in men and took the Shia LaBeouf/Michael Douglas’ corpse-starring sequel to a 23-year-old financial thriller, instead of the Leonardo Dicaprio starring big-budget, high-hype sci-fi action thriller directed by Chris Nolan, fresh off the massive success of “The Dark Knight.” But with her future (and now current) husband sitting at pick number two, did Ellen intentionally throw Brian an early wedding gift? And what was her incentive? A popular theory expounded on in secret e-mails obtained by this reporter was that Brian had promised enticing sexual favors to his lady. Once all recipients had had time to stop laughing, no one was sure what the real reason could have been, but in the interest of Ellen’s reputation, we’d like to believe it was something other than faith in the box-office reliability of Oliver Stone.
Overall Value: -8
Round One, Pick Two
What they took: Inception, by Blanner
Movie score: 176 (1)
What they should have taken: Inception
-Like Ellen Page constructing whole cities on the fly, Blanner started constructing his team by taking the top movie of the quarter. In a weird reversal of the events in the movie, Brian’s success was made possible, rather than hindered by, his wife. This, of course, begs a different question about Ellen’s bizarre choice. Were the Blanners in fact playing a huge meta- game with the whole league, subverting and twisting the plot of Inception before our very eyes, only to be revealed once we had seen the movie and the results of the draft?
Overall Value: +1
Round One, Pick Three
What they took: The Last Airbender, by Telthorst
Movie score: 25 (11)
What they should have taken: Despicable Me
-Holy crap. Telthorst wasn’t excited about this pick from the start, saying via e-mail that he felt “like a nerd” for selecting it third overall. But really, at the time, I didn’t blame him too much. It was a big-budget action movie based on an existing franchise. The fact that it was directed by M. Night Shyamalan meant that it would almost certainly be poorly reviewed, but hopefully it could make enough money to make up for it. Well, hope again. Receiving a mere 20 in Metacritic, Airbender was the worst reviewed movie by far this quarter, being edged by 10 points by a movie about cats and dogs with human voices joining forces to overthrow an evil, hairless feline. According the good people at Metacritic, the following movies would have been worth seeing three times rather than seeing Airbender once; Inception, Jack Goes Boating, Despicable Me, Salt, The Town, The Other Guys, Machete, The American, Scott Pilgrim vs. the World, Middle Men. Unbelievably, this only dropped Airbender into a tie for the 11th spot in the standings, which should tell you about what we’re in for the rest of the way.
Overall score: -8
Round One, Pick Four
What they took: The Other Guys, by Tim
Movie Score: 65 (4)
What they should have taken: Despicable Me
-Tim could have done better by taking Despicable Me, but still managed to be the first drafter to nail his position exactly, taking the fourth highest scoring movie with the fourth pick. I saw this, contributing at least a millionth of a point to the 24 that Tim beat me by, and I think I speak for everyone who saw it in saying that I much rather would have seen a movie about the two cops played by The Rock and Samuel L. Jackson than the ones played by Will Ferrell and Mark Wahlberg. Although then we never would have had that sweet death scene, possibly the funniest filmed minute this year that didn’t involve Daniel Tosh or Lethal Weapon 5.
Overall Score: 0
Round One, Pick Five
What they took: The Expendables, by Jesse
Movie Score: 43 (6)
What they should have taken: Despicable Me
-Jesse stuck with his heart, and potentially his head as well with this pick, choosing to take a sure-fire 40 Bustas classic rather than a cartoon, and counting on everyone he knew seeing this movie at least 10 times. What he didn’t expect was that the experience we had seeing this at Blanner’s bachelor party would be so great as to make future viewings seem lacking in comparison. I saw it with Meg and New York Matt a few weeks later, and while it was immense fun, it lacked the unbridled joy of sharing a blend of hyper-violence, homo-eroticism, marginalized female characters, make-believe countries and horrible dialogue with long-time friends and a handle of Mount Gay rum. In retrospect Jesse’s only mistake was believing that more people would be as awesome as all of us.
Overall Score: -1
Round One, Pick Six
What they took: Despicable Me, by Sarah
Movie Score: 155 (2)
What they should have taken: Despicable Me
-Sarah stuck to her winning strategy from Q2 and it paid off huge for her. Despicable Me was the second-best reviewed movie of the quarter and made the second most money. The combination of cartoons appeal to families, Steve Carrell’s star power and those little yellow things that seem to be everywhere made Despicable Me a juggernaut. In fact, Inception and Despicable Me each could have beaten every other team in the league, which would turn out to be a very good thing for both Blanner and Sarah as their drafts took decided turns for the worse after round one. Still, after Toy Story 3 in Q2 and Despicable Me in Q3, the question must be asked; will the rest of us ever learn our lesson?
Overall Score: +4
Round One, Pick Seven
What they took: Predators, by McKenzee
Movie Score: 26 (10)
What they should have taken: Salt
-In a bit of a reverse from Jesse’s “heart over head” choice of Expendables, Kenz took Predators despite her own belief that it would be seen primarily by “idiots.” Presumably she included her boyfriend and his friends in this category, and she would have been right, as this was my next other boozed-up summer movie this year. Unfortunately, Adrien Brody is no Sly Stallone, and Predators, despite getting a 51 (?!?!?) from Metacritic, made just over half of Expendable box office.
Overall Score: -3
Round One, Pick Eight
What they took: Dinner for Schmucks, by Meg
Movie Score: 38 (7)
What they should have taken: Salt
-Meg told me repeatedly that she believed this was one of those movies that showed all the funny parts in the previews, and it seems most of the movie-going public agreed, as it made a mere $67 million. While that’s not terrible, and it got Meg a positive score, it couldn’t hold a candle to Salt, which ultimately didn’t matter since Meg got that too. Could she have picked up Dinner for Schmucks on the way back like she did Salt? Who knows? Who cares? She got them both, and they helped her to a third-place finish.
Overall Score: +1
Round One, Pick Nine
What they took: The Sorceror’s Apprentice, by Kyle
Movie Score: 25 (11)
What they should have taken: Salt
-Remember last quarter, when Kyle’s formula showed us all that Kyle was the best movie drafter? Well, those days are behind us. Siding with his long-time friend Nicolas Cage, Kyle chose a live-action two-hour movie based on a five minute segment of an animated movie from the 30s set to classical music starring the 6th biggest lead from Tropic Thunder over an action film starring the biggest female actress in the world shooting guns and wearing tight pants. Good choice. With back to back picks Kyle failed to equal the score just one selection of Salt would have given him.
Overall Score: -2
Round Two, Pick One (10)
What they took: Eat, Pray, Love, by Kyle
Movie Score: 36 (8)
What they should have taken: Salt
-Kyle missed his second chance to take Salt and instead took Julia Roberts’ return to starring roles. With Javier Bardem, James Franco and plenty of scenery, Kyle figured the movie would rake in female moviegoers and their unfortunate dates and get plenty of Julia-goodwill positive reviews. In fact, neither of those things happened, as the movie made a disappointing $71 million and got tepid reviews. Turns out people aren’t too thrilled about being told how to live their lives by someone who got a hefty advance to write a book about how it’s better to travel the world eating carbs and banging swarthy Mediterranean dudes than it is working behind a desk.
Overall Score: +2
Round Two, Pick Two (11)
What they took: Salt, by Meg
Movie Score: 69 (3)
What they should have taken: Salt
-Meg could have had the third-best movie of the quarter with the 8th overall pick, but just to embarrass her husband and grow her legend she took it 11th instead. Salt looked terrible (and let me assure you, it is), with a black-haired-for-no-reason Angelina Jolie jumping between trucks and staring down Liev Schrieber, and yet still people wanted to see it, with Salt raking in the 4th-most box office dollars of the quarter (and three was Airbender, which really should just be wiped from everyone’s memory).
Overall Score: +8
Round Two, Pick Three (12)
What they took: Middle Men, by Kenz
Movie Score: 0 (25)
What they should have taken: The Town
-Not sure what to say about this one, a movie about the internet-porn industry starring Luke Wilson which failed to crack one million dollars in its first four weeks. I would have thought the combination of sex and a C-list star would have been good for a few bucks, but I would have been wrong. So, since I don’t know what else to say, I’ll say this. This quarter had one movie drafted that was never released, and two other movies get released and still manage to score 0 points. I struggled with how to rank those three movies, ultimately deciding that Middle Men and Jack Goes Boating would share the 25th spot, with The Adjustment Bureau taking 27th and last. My theory is that at least Middle Men and Jack Goes Boating gave their owners a chance to score a point, whereas Adjustment Bureau failed to bring in a single dollar. Let the first great HFL ranking controversy and message board ranting begin!
Overall Score: -13
Round Two, Pick Four (13)
What they took: Resident Evil: Afterlife, by Sarah
Movie Score: 21 (15)
What they should have taken: The Town
-I’m a pretty big zombie fan, and this was a zombie movie in 3-d, so naturally I tried to take it with my third-round pick. Tried, and was rebuffed by the fact that Sarah took it in the second round. A decent pick overall (earning a mere -2) it was still well off the potential of The Town. Had Sarah sided with Ben Affleck and Brinks trucks over Milla Jovavich and post-apocalyptic Vegas, she’d have scored back-to-back titles. As it is, she had to settle for second place.
Overall Score: -2
Round Two, Pick Five (14)
What they took: The Adjustment Bureau, by Jesse
Movie Score: 0 (27)
What they should have taken: The Town (or really, a movie that got released)
-I saw Jesse during the time between this draft and the time that Adjustment Bureau was supposed to come out. A good segment of it filmed in Meg and I’s neighborhood, and the subject came up as we walked through. Jesse was pumped for what he termed the “steal” of the draft. Jesse’s a big Philip K. Dick fan, and an even bigger Philip K. Dick-movie-adaptation fan, so the chance to take the latest Dick-daptation (new word!) starring Matt Damon and the bitchy girl from Devil Wears Prada was too exciting to pass up. I can see him now, constantly hitting refresh on his e-mail page, fingers crossed, praying that no one would get to Bureau before him, worrying that he should have taken it in the first round and been done with it, then, months later, frantically updating IMDB for news on whether or not this movie would ever see the light of day. Well, feat not, young Gato! Adjustment Bureau is slated for a March 4, 2011 release, a mere half a year after the end of this scoring period.
Overall Score: -13
Round Two, Pick Six (15)
What they took: Machete, by Tim
Movie Score: 16 (18)
What they should have taken: The Town
-I know what everyone was thinking when Tim drafted Machete; “sure, a bunch of idiots will go see it, but it’s gonna get trashed in the reviews. Any money you make will be eaten up, Shyamalan-style, by its Metacritic score.” Well, you (and I) were part right. Machete managed a score of only 16, but it wasn’t because critics hated it. It managed a very respectable 60 on Metacritic. Its problem was that no one went to see it. I saw two of this quarters movies drunk, and neither of them was Machete. I’m Machete’s core audience! When you can’t get someone in the door who enjoys laughably bad action movies, has plenty of time, and actually wanted to see Machete, it’s not a good sign for your box office.
Overall Score: -2
Round Two, Pick Seven (16)
What they took: The American, by Telthorst
Movie Score: 21 (15)
What they should have taken: The Town
-Matt went safe with the always-dependable George Clooney starring as a gun-maker and assassin living abroad (Italy? I never saw it) and waiting for “one last job.” The previews made it seem like a serious action movie, something along the lines of the Bourne movies, which made me think this would turn into a huge sleeper this quarter. But, from what I hear, the movie is exceptionally slow and dialogue-driven until the last 15 minutes or so. Once word got out that George was essentially playing a 60-year-old antique dealer instead of an ass-kicking spy, the box office fell apart pretty quick. Still, it got a 61 on Metacritic, one better than Machete!
Overall Score: +1
Round Two, Pick Eight (17)
What they took: Jack Goes Boating, by Blanner
Movie Score: 0 (25)
What they should have taken: The Town
-It’s going to be tough to top Wall Street over Inception for most confusing pick of this draft, but Brian tried awfully hard to give that title to Jack Goes Boating over anything else. As I said earlier, I understand the Middle Men pick to a degree, and Jesse’s love of Dick-daptations made Adjustment Bureau a mortal lock for him (and probably would have worked out if it had been released), but this I didn’t, and don’t, get at all. If I said to you, “hey, let’s go see a movie, your choice. We can see a bank-robbery movie with Ben Affleck; an animated movie about fighting owls; a romantic-comedy with Jen Aniston and Jason Bateman; a graphic-novel adaptation with Michael Cera and crazy effects; an over-the-top piranha attack movie in 3-d; a bank robbery movie with Stringer Bell; a movie about secret agent cats and dogs; an adaptation of a beloved children’s book; the sequel to a movie about a hideous British nanny; a romantic comedy with Justin Long and Drew Barrymore (they’re a couple in real life too!); or “a tale of love, betrayal, friendship and grace” about a limo driver and his fateful blind date; how many of those would you choose before the one about the limo driver? More importantly, how many would you suppose the mass of Americans would choose before the one about the limo driver? I say at least six, maybe all of them, depending on how cool the owls look. Brian said none. In other news, he won the league this quarter. We should all hang our heads in shame.
Overall Score: -8
Round Two, Pick Nine (18)
What they took: The Town, by Ellen
Movie Score: 57 (5)
What they should have taken: The Town
-Ellen nailed it where so many others failed to. The Affleck-directed and –starring bank-robbery movie was a hit with critics and audiences and was the 5th-highest ranked movie of the quarter. However, not all is good news. In light of their respective second picks, doesn’t the case for Brian and Ellen’s rumored collusion become stronger? Brian clearly had no idea what he was doing, as evidenced by Jack Goes Boating, and Ellen must have felt that her superior drafting skills would more than make up for the fact that she didn’t get the lead-pipe lock that was Inception. So she threw her man a bone, took Wall Street 2 and hoped for the best, figuring the worst-case scenario was that Inception proved to be such a juggernaut that even Brian couldn’t screw it up and at least the title would come home with the newly-minted Blanners. And that, my friends, is exactly the way it worked out.
Overall Score: +13
Round Three, Pick One (19)
What they took: Legend of the Guardians: The Owls of Ga’Hoole, by Ellen
Movie Score: 25 (11)
What they should have taken: Legend of the Guardians: The Owls of Ga’Hoole
-Ellen nailed it again, getting the highest-scoring third-round pick. Her second-round pick was the second-highest in that round, so had she simply taken Inception this thing would have been wrapped in a bow for her. Her extraordinary success in the last two rounds confirms it beyond a doubt. She handed Brian the title knowingly. If I live to a thousand years old hanging out on that crappy beach with Ken Watanabe nothing will ever convince me I am wrong about this. She took a 3-D animated movie about fighting owls and turned it into a +8 in overall score. She was at the absolute peak of her powers. Had she taken Inception she would have finished with 258 points, meaning in a fall season she would have had enough points to score 2nd in the summer season. We’ve only had two seasons but I’m pretty sure that’s a difficult thing to do. Like Lebron James, I am in awe of her talents and mourn her decision.
Overall Score: +8
Round Three, Pick Two (20)
What they took: The Switch, by Brian
Movie Score: 14 (19)
What they should have taken: Takers
-Brian bounced back from Jack Goes Boating with a modest success. While he should have taken Takers no one can really blame him, because that movie featured Hayden Christiansen in a porkpie hat as a badass bank robber, and performances from TWO rappers turned actors. So it seemed more like a cross of Life as a House and Belly than a box-office success. In other news; did you know this movie was originally titled “The Baster,” after the turkey baster that Amanda Peet jokingly tells Jason Bateman was used to impregnate Jen Aniston? How much more likely would you have been to see that movie? 100 times? 1000?
Overall Score: +1
Round Three, Pick Three (21)
What they took: Scott Pilgrim vs. The World, by Telthorst
Movie Score: 20 (17)
What they should have taken: Takers
-Another success, another person I can’t blame for not being stoked about a Paul Walker-Matt Dillon collaboration. Still, this movie was marketed towards people like me, I wanted to see it, I had time to see it, I didn’t see it. Not a good sign. Well-reviewed, poorly attended seems to be the story of Q3. Speaking of Matt Dillon, his last movie before Takers was Armored, with Laurence Fishburne, who, since Mystic River, has been in Matrix Revolutions, Assault on Precinct 13, M:I 3, was the narrator in TMNT, the voice of the Silver Surfer in Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer, 21, was in a string of movies you’ve almost certainly never heard of, Armored, and Predators. Can we stop calling this guy a good actor yet?
Overall Score: +4
Round Three, Pick Four (22)
What they took: Piranha 3D, by Tim
Movie Score: 13 (21)
What they should have taken: Takers
-Tim had a nice, easy narrative this draft. In both rounds two and three he took movies that looked sure to make money off people looking for intentionally unintentional comedy but that would be knocked off by their Metacritic scores. And in both cases the complete opposite happened. Piranha 3D was decently reviewed and made hardly any money. Once again, a movie marketed to me that I did not see. Although it’s a mortal lock to be Netflix streamed after a day of heavy drinking when I decide that I need to do some more heavy drinking with my friend Ving Rhames.
Overall Score: +1
Round Three, Pick Five (23)
What they took: Takers, by Jesse
Movie Score: 24 (14)
What they should have taken: Takers
-Leave it to a fan of The Wire to correctly value Idris Elba’s appeal. Jesse bounced back from the debacle of The Adjustment Bureau to salvage a 7th place finish with Takers. Had he gotten four points from his second-round pick he would have beat me for 6th. As Nick Demere would say, he really got “Dick-ed over.” Get it? Dick-ed over? Like the saying, “dicked over,” meaning to be screwed, but in this case it was by a movie based on a book by a guy named “Dick?” Get it? I’m not sure if you do. You see, most people would say you got “dicked over” if you got screwed by someone or something, like a bad movie choice, which happened in this case. But, also in this case, that dicking over happened through Jesse’s selection of a movie based on a book written by a guy named Philip K. Dick. So, “dicked over” becomes “Dick-ed over,” with high-pitched emphasis on the “Dick.” Get it?
Overall Score: +9
Round Three, Pick Six (24)
What they took: Cats and Dogs: The Revenge of Kitty Galore, by Sarah
Movie Score: 12 (23)
What they should have taken: Nanny McPhee Returns
-Sarah took the wrong crappy-looking kids-movie-sequel. Still, I was really pissed she took it, as I was hoping for this to be my third-round sleeper. Did you know the first Cats and Dogs made nearly $100 million? Do you realize how many parents must have sat through that with their kids for that to happen, especially considering the reduced price of children’s tickets? Do you realize those same kids were probably old enough by the time of the sequel to not want to see it but to want to see Last Airbender instead? Are you sure you want to have kids?
Overall Score: +1
Round Three, Pick Seven (25)
What they took: Ramona and Beezus, by Kenz
Movie Score: 13 (21)
What they should have taken: Nanny McPhee Returns
-Nice work by Kenz here with a late-draft success story. I guess you can’t go wrong pairing a Disney channel star with a best-selling children’s book. You’re getting the kids and the Latin pedophiles in the theatre no matter what. Also, this movie was a veritable cornucopia of second- or third-tier stars. The aforementioned Disney star (Selena Gomez, the Latina Miley Cyrus), John Corbett (the other dude that Sarah Jessica Parker likes in Sex and the City), Bridget Moynahan (the chick who almost certainly pulled the goalie on Tom Brady), Ginnifer Goodwin (the third wife in Big Love), Sandra Oh (the Asian from Sideways or Grey’s Anatomy, whichever you prefer) and Josh Duhamel (the husband of a pop star who once pissed herself on stage, using the excuse that she didn’t want to make her fans wait for her to take the stage).
Overall Score: +4
Round Three, Pick Eight (26)
What they took: Nanny McPhee Returns, by Meg
Movie Score: 14 (19)
What they should have taken: Nanny McPhee Returns
-Boom! Meg coming through like a freight train out of hell! Between this and Salt Meg was sitting at an overall score of +15. She is also the only drafter to get positive overall scores out of all her movies this draft. Despite drafting second-to-last she managed to finish 3rd overall this quarter. If she ever gets a high draft pick she’s going to be a force to be reckoned with. Then again, let’s not give her too much credit. It’s pretty clear to me that Emma Thompson with warts and crappy teeth is a prototypical success recipe in Hollywood.
Overall Score: +7
Round Three, Pick Nine (27)
What they took: Going the Distance, by Kyle
Movie Score: 9 (24)
What they should have taken: Going the Distance
-Last in draft order, first in your hearts, Kyle took a romantic comedy with Drew Barrymore and Justin Long. Drafting last is great, because worst-case scenario you draft exactly what you should have, since I’m too lazy to find out what movies would have scored better that no one took. Best-case scenario people take movies ahead of you that underperform or don’t get released, and you end up with positive points. Plus you get to claim that you would have dominated had you only had better draft position. A win-win all around. Anyway, was anyone else depressed to see Charlie from “Always Sunny” finally getting on the big screen, only to see that it was in this? What a nightmare.
Overall Score: +3
Sum of Pick Values:
Meg: +16
Ellen: +13
Sarah: +3
Kyle: +3
Tim: -1
Telthorst: -3
Jesse: -5
Blanner: -6
Kenz: -12
So there you have it. From Q2 to Q3 Meg went from worst to best, Kenz dropped from 2nd to last (damn you Luke Wilson!), and not a single one of the three best drafters from Q2 made it that high in Q3 (although Sarah was 4th in Q2 and 3rd in Q3). What does this tell us? Is Meg a sleeping dragon waiting to be unleashed with a top pick in the future? Do any of us know a damn thing? Will we have a quarter where every movie selected gets released? Stay tuned.
Tuesday, November 23, 2010
Harry Potter and the $125 Million Weekend
For Q4, all you need to know is that Harry Potter scored 85 in its first three days. Tim is still hanging on for now, but much like the Harry Potter series itself, the end is neigh.
Monday, November 15, 2010
Tim Widens Lead, but Huge Threats on Horizon
The Q4 HFL race is extremely tight so far, with Tim still holding on to the top spot. However, the quarter's most anticipated movies are just hitting theaters and will surely shake things up.
"Megamind" has already notched $90 million in its first 10 days, and is sure to be one of this season's top movies. However, it's surprisingly low 64 Metacritic score will certainly hurt Ellen's chances of making a run at the title.
The unique story to the Q4 season thus far is the movies that didn't get drafted. "Saw 3D" went undrafted, but was the highest grossing movie in the country last week (although it's horrific 23 Metacritic score limits its upside). Also, the Denzel Washington action flick "Unstoppable" scored 16 points in it's opening weekend. It won't be the quarter's highest scoring movie, but it could have been a key contributor to any team's roster.
All of this commentary may be academic after next weekend, when "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hollows" drops, and barring a terrible critical reception, is sure to score a boatload of points and reorder the standings.
Thursday, October 28, 2010
"The Social Network" Makes HFL History
The Q4 season of the Hollywood Fantasy League is already shaping up to be a classic. After all the summer blockbusters, some wondered if Q4 would be a snooze-fest. So far, all indications point to "nope".
Sexy Marmaduke Too pick "The Social Network" came busting out of the gates with a 95 Metacritic score, the highest in HFL history. This immediately throws Meg into the title hunt, but a number of highly anticipated fall flicks are set to hit theaters shortly.
Joining Meg atop the preliminary Q4 leaderboard is Tim's Fo'ty Busta Film and Theatre Company. He's already scored 57 points through the first three weeks of the season, and his first round pick is yet to be released.
The teams with the #1 and #2 overall picks, Telthorst and Ellen, respectively, have gigantic movies waiting to hit theaters, but it remains to be seen if they have deep enough rosters to win the Q4 championship.
Friday, October 8, 2010
Brian Takes Q3 Title in a Photo Finish
In the closest finish in HFL history, Brian edges Sarah to take the Q3 title by a single point. Fart Grab Smell scored only 14 points between his second and third round picks, but rode the second overall pick "Inception", which was the quarter's top movie (176 points).
Sarah fell just short of back-to-back titles. I'm sure she'll have many sleepless nights wondering, "If only a few more people had seen 'Cats and Dogs: The Revenge of Kitty Galore'...."
The Q4 draft is underway. Keep an eye out for the first post of Q4, and a Q3 wrap-up.
Monday, September 20, 2010
Brian Still Holding On
If Blanner is going to hang on to first place, he's going to need someone other than critics to go see Jack Goes BoatingThe Q3 season is going to boil down to the fundamental battle of strategy in the HFL: A bad movie that gets mainstream money or a good movie that no one sees. So far, "Resident Evil: Afterlife" is overcoming its horrendous 37 Metacritic score by getting $43 million at the box office. Meanwhile, Brian's "Jack Goes Boating" has a 65 Metacritic score, but only got $30,000 in ticket sales in its opening weekend.
For the rest of the league, the focus turns to Q4. Next season's draft is already underway...
Above are the current HFL standings. Click to enlarge. Movies with dark coloring are final scores and those with light coloring are in progress or yet to be released.Friday, September 10, 2010
Fart, Wiggles Fighting for Q3 Crown
Old Jason Bourne had an impressive opening week and good critical reception, but Clooney won't be in the Q3 Championship picture.With the Q3 season nearing its conclusion, the race for the championship will boil down to Brian vs. Sarah.
Fart Grab Smell holds a 21 point lead on Sparkling Wiggles, but the conclusion is far from settled, as both teams have their second-round picks yet to hit theaters. "Resident Evil: 3D" is Sarah's last chance to catch Brian and win back-to-back titles.
Beyond the top two teams, Meg has essentially locked up third place (improving from her last place finish in Q2), then the rest of the league is lumped closely, fighting for fourth.
Also of note, Jurassic Parka, last season's runner-up, has scored all of 39 points in Q3, with all movies done scoring. Barring a disaster from Ellen's yet-to-be-released team, Mackenzie looks to finish last, and has already broken Tim's Q2 record for lowest points in a season.
Q4 is right around the corner, so start scouting those trailers because the draft will start next week.
Monday, August 30, 2010
Blanner Still Leads: No Threats in Sight?
Anyone think that "Salt" would be the third best movie in Q3? Me neither.There is a huge cluster of teams in the middle, none of which look to present a tangible threat to Fart Grab Smell. Technically, the first pick of the draft has yet to hit theaters, but let's be honest, "Wall Street 2" won't be taking down Chris Nolan's blockbuster anytime soon.
Of the surprises in this season, "Salt" ended its run $100 million plus and a good Metacritic score. The Angelina Jolie thriller tallied 69 points for Meg, not bad for a second-round pick.
On the other side of that coin, "Middle Men" is nearing the end of its run an has yet to gross $1 million. Barring a big week, McKenzie's second-round pick will go down in history as the first movie to be released and not score a point.
Wednesday, August 18, 2010
Q3 Race Heating Up
Let's see if I can knock out a summary in one paragraph:
Inception is still leading, Sarah looks safe from back-to-back titles, Meg is charging hard, Tim landed a solid pick, Kyle's gonna need a miracle, Telt's hopes are hitched to Clooney, Kenz looks completely screwed, I'm finally on the board, and Ellen is biding her time.
Wednesday, August 11, 2010
Hollywood Fantasy League Q2 Recap

As promised, Kyle has compiled a pick-by-pick analysis of the Q2 season. And to no one’s surprise, it’s fantastic. Enjoy:
The second quarter of the 2010 Hollywood Fantasy League is over, and while we now know that Sarah Brockmeyer is the league’s first champion, what we don’t know is; who was the best team owner? From a value standpoint, who had the best draft? What was the best (and worst) draft pick? Who rose above their draft position and made a decent show of it, and who was handed the league on a silver platter and managed to make lemons out of lemonade? To answer all these questions (and hopefully not make everyone hate me) I now give you the full recap of the 2010 Hollywood Fantasy League Draft: Second Quarter.
Round One, Pick One
What they took: Iron Man 2, by McKenzee
Movie Score (rank in parentheses): 162 (2)
What they should have taken: Toy Story 3 (319)(1)
-With the first pick in the draft, Jurassic Parka managed to grab the second-best movie, which finished a mere four points above Twilight: Eclipse and 157 below Toy Story 3. Still, IM2 was the consensus #1 heading into the draft, so no one can much blame Kenz for this one.
Overall Value (How many spots above or below the movies finish it was drafted and the overall rank of how good or bad this pick was): -1.
Rd 1, Pk 2
What they took: Twilight: Eclipse, by Blanner
Movie Score: 158 (3)
What they should have taken: Toy Story 3 (319)(1)
-With Toy Story 3 still out there Blanner grabbed the third installment of the sparkly vampire saga. Yet and still, if anyone thought there was a challenge to IM2 pre-draft, it was Eclipse, which benefitted from tweens and MILFs pent-up desires to sleep with a homeless guy with stripper glitter all over him and better than expected reviews to earn the third-best rating.
Overall Value: -1
Rd 1, Pk 3
What they took: Toy Story 3, by Sarah
Movie Score: 319 (1)
What they should have taken: Toy Story 3
-Sarah becomes the first drafter to nail her position, and grabbed the movie that came two points from outscoring the first two picks all on its own. People still love Buzz and Woody, as evidenced by the conversation I had this weekend, when, while talking about TS3 a grown man said, in shock, “do you realize that kid is in college now?” as if Andy were a real person.
Overall Value: +2
Rd 1, Pk 4
What they took: Clash of the Titans, by Telthorst
Movie Score: 58 (6)
What they should have taken: Shrek Forever After (this will be a recurring theme)
-Telthorst was the first drafter whose 1st round pick was not his highest scoring movie, as it turned out that the non-blue star of “Avatar” in a re-make of a 29-year-old sword-and-sandals epic did not translate to critical acclaim, 3-D by damned. The fact that so many people were willing to shell out money for it helped save Matt’s 1st round and diminish my faith in humanity.
Overall Value: -2
Rd 1, Pk 5
What they took: Kick-Ass, by Tim
Movie Score: 30 (14)
What they should have taken: Shrek Forever After
-Tim managed to make his 1st round pick his high-scorer, but since it shouldn’t have gone until the middle of the second round that wasn’t exactly good news for the Fo’ty Bustas Film and Theatre Company. Although, if it’s any comfort, I liked the movie a lot, and thought it was the best Nic Cage movie since “Adaptation.” Or maybe since “Next.”
Overall Value: -9
Rd 1, Pk 6
What they took: Sex in the City 2, by Meg
Movie Score: 24 (16)
What they should have taken: Shrek Forever After
-Meg went with Sex and the City 2, which, at least judging by its massive publicity blitz in New York, should have been a massive hit. Unfortunately for Sexy Marmaduke Too, audiences and critics alike seem to have tired of the antics of a rich horse-face, a 54-year-old slut, and their two friends that no one cares about. Though it nearly doubled the box office of “Kick-Ass” it managed less than half of that movie’s score on Metacritic.
Overall Value: -10
Rd 1, Pk 7
What they took: Robin Hood, by Kyle
Movie Score: 52 (7)
What they should have taken: Shrek Forever After (but I ended up getting it anyway, so nyah-nyah-nyah-nyah)
-Kyle decided that Robin Hood would be better with a middle-aged Russell Crowe instead of a young Kevin Costner. And he would have been right, if he hadn’t forgotten about the new version’s lack of Bryan Adams. Although Kyle’s choice got him even value, one shudders to think of the juggernaut he could have created if he had taken Shrek in this spot.
Overall Value: 0
Rd 1, Pk 8
What they took: The A-Team, by Jesse
Movie Score: 34 (12)
What they should have taken: Shrek Forever After
-With the 8th pick Jesse took “The A-team,” which wasn’t really a surprise as anyone who knows Jesse knows he probably would have taken it with the first through fourth picks if he could have. Still, not everyone was as pumped about seeing the old black van roll again, and the movie failed to crack 100 million and was further hurt by lukewarm reviews.
Overall Value: -4
Rd 1, Pk 9
What they took: The Losers, by Ellen
Movie Score: 10 (23)
What they should have taken: Shrek Forever After
-Ellen was up against the odds as the owner of the last pick, and managed to come away with, well, not much. On a personal note, I was pumped to see Stringer Bell again, and ended up seeing “The Losers” roughly 1.4 million times, accounting for all of its nearly $23 million gross.
Overall Value: -14
Rd 2, Pk 1 (10 overall)
What they took: Knight and Day, by Ellen
Movie Score: 33 (13)
What they should have taken: Shrek Forever After
-Ellen gets the snake pick, and jumped on Tom Cruise’s return to action. (and no, “Valkyrie” is not an action movie. It’s more like a boring movie with English people playing German people being led by an American playing a German in which no one attempts an accent or to entertain.) Though it was better than her first pick, Knight and Day still managed to disappoint. Here’s hoping she has better taste in men. Oh, wait…
Overall Value: -3
Rd 2, Pk 2 (11)
What they took: Date Night, by Jesse
Movie Score: 42 (tied for 8)
What they should have taken: Shrek Forever After
-Jesse went with “Date Night” and benefitted from the fact that many lazy couples (Mr. and Mrs. Rowe included) decided to make “Date Night” a central part of their date night. The movie was thoroughly mediocre, but it managed to get Jesse positive value.
Overall Value: +3
Rd 2, Pk 3 (12)
What they took: Shrek Forever After, by Kyle
Movie Score: 126 (4)
What they should have taken: Shrek Forever After
-Booyah! The big green ogre comes through again, and Kyle is there to reap the benefits, a full twelve picks after the fourth installment of snarky digital fairy-tale telling should have gone. Though I can’t claim I thought it would do this well (Robin Hood, remember) I am pretty damn proud of this pick. I’d type more, but I just dislocated my shoulder patting myself on the back.
Overall Value: +8
Rd 2, Pk 4 (13)
What they took: Tyler Perry’s Why Did I Get Married Too?, by Meg
Movie Score: 25 (15)
What they should have taken: The Karate Kid
-Meg went with a “diverse portfolio” approach to the draft, grabbing the summer’s only Tyler Perry offering and hoping to get 100% of the black audience, rather than selling her soul, taking “The Karate Kid,” and settling for a portion of the child audience. It was a good strategy, but it didn’t work, as it turns out the main draw for most fans of Tyler Perry is the chance to see Mr. Perry dress as an elderly woman, something this movie sadly lacked.
Overall Value: -2
Rd 2, Pk 5 (14)
What they took: Nightmare on Elm Street, by Tim
Movie Score: 21 (18)
What they should have taken: The Karate Kid
-Tim unbelievably fails to improve on his first round pick and becomes the third member of the league to be tripped up by 80s nostalgia. In Tim’s defense the last time Jackie Earl Haley played a child molester he got nominated for an Oscar. But that movie also featured Kate Winslet getting nailed on a washing machine, and it still didn’t make money, so what hope did this have?
Overall Value: -4
Rd 2, Pk 6 (15)
What they took: The Karate Kid, by Telthorst
Movie Score: 97 (5)
What they should have taken: The Karate Kid
-Telthorst insisted all along that audiences would flock to watch Will Smith’s kid in some sort of desperate attempt at a Will Smith-fix, and it looks like he was right. “The Karate Kid” made nearly $160 million in four weeks, and yet even though this was another tired 80s retread it was the best thing any member of the Smith family has done in three years. On a side note, imdb.com says that including “Men in Black 3,” the senior Smith has 34 movies in pre-production, including “I, Robot 2” and “Independence Day 3.” That’s right, 3.
Overall Value: +10
Rd 2, Pk 7 (16)
What they took: Get Him to the Greek, by Sarah
Movie Score: 37 (11)
What they should have taken: Prince of Persia
-Sarah continued to get good value in the second round, grabbing “Get Him to the Greek,” which benefitted from a respectable Metacritic score to overcome disappointing box office. Who knew that Jason Segal guy was the reason for “Forgetting Sarah Marshall’s” popularity? Though really, it doesn’t take a genius to figure out that pasty-white-guy-full-frontal is worth truckloads of money.
Overall Value: +5
Rd 2, Pk 8 (17)
What they took: Prince of Persia, by Blanner
Movie Score: 42 (tied for 8)
What they should have taken: Prince of Persia
-Blanner can’t seem to get enough of dudes wearing eyeliner, and if that’s your game, Jake Gyllenhaal is your guy. Unbelievably, “Prince of Persia” wasn’t the lowest scoring movie on Metacritic this season, which I would have bet any amount of money on prior to the draft. Anyway, with “Twilight,” Gyllenhaal, and a movie about Jim Carrey and Ewan McGregor’s gay love on Brian’s roster, it would seem Ellen is now taking applications for prima nocta.
Overall Value: +9
Rd 2, Pk 9 (18)
What they took: Grown Ups, by McKenzee
Movie Score: 40 (10)
What they should have taken: Grown Ups
-Adam Sandler movies always crack $100 million, unless he’s trying to do some “serious” acting, which didn’t seem to be in jeopardy this time around, and “Paul Blart” made a buttload, so it was a smart, if perhaps personally humiliating move, for Kenz to grab the “all-star” comedy with the 18th overall pick. On a side note, who is the bigger loser on the set of “Grown Ups?” David Spade or Rob Schneider? I say Schneider. Spade was at least Chris Farley’s best friend. I think Schneider is Sandler’s fifth-best friend or something.
Overall Value: +8
Rd 3, Pk 1 (19)
What they took: Oceans, by McKenzee
Movie Score: 13 (20)
What they should have taken: Letters to Juliet
-So it’s come to this: take a sure-to-be horrible romantic comedy or action flick and hope a massive biological attack drives people indoors for weeks at a time, or go with a critical smash and hope it makes enough money that the Metacritic score propels you to victory. Kenz took the latter route, and it worked for her, to an extent. She could have done a lot worse, but, incredibly, she could have done better, if only she had taken a movie about a girl who answers love letters written to a fictional suicide victim and left on the side of a wall.
Overall Value: -1
Rd 3, Pk 2 (20)
What they took: I Love you, Philip Morris, by Blanner
Movie Score: 0 (27)
What they should have taken: Letters to Juliet
-Blanner manages to grab the worst performing movie of the quarter by taking a gay romantic dramedy starring Jim Carrey that is now slated for release sometime in October of 2010. While any other choice would’ve helped more than this, and 2 potential choices (Letters to Juliet and Death at a Funeral) would have gotten his team into second place, at least Blanner saw a movie earn an incomplete, a grade he thought had left his life after his seventh year of college.
Overall Value: -7
Rd 3, Pk 3 (21)
What they took: Jonah Hex, by Sarah
Movie Score: 3 (26)
What they should have taken: Letters to Juliet
-Sarah gambled that more teenage boys would want to watch Megan Fox and a disfigured Josh Brolin than teenage girls would want to watch a bug-eyed Amanda Seyfried and corpe-tastic Vanessa Redgrave, and I would have bet she was right. Jonah Hex was my “sleeper” that I hoped would fall to me in the third round, but in four weeks it managed just $10 million, or one thirty-fifth of the money Toy Story 3 made in the same time.
Overall Value: -5
Rd 3, Pk 4 (22)
What they took: McGruber, by Telthorst
Movie Score: 4 (25)
What they should have taken: Letters to Juliet
-Telthorst chose McGruber, a 90-minute movie based on a series of 90-second SNL skits. In other words, he took the movie adaptation of a skit less fully-developed than “Dick in a Box.” I saw about twenty minutes of McGruber and it was hilarious, but no one else seemed to get the memo, as it earned a mere $8.5 million dollars in four weeks, dead last amongst movies that were actually released.
Overall Value: -3
Rd 3, Pk 5 (23)
What they took: The Back-Up Plan, by Tim
Movie Score: 12 (21)
What they should have taken: Letters to Juliet
-Tim took the J-Lo pregnancy rom-com The Back-Up Plan and found out that no one much gives a shit about Jennifer Lopez, a “star” who has NEVER starred in a movie that grossed $100 million plus.
Overall Value: +2
Rd 3, Pk 6 (24)
What they took: Marmaduke, by Meg
Movie Score: 9 (24)
What they should have taken: Letters to Juliet
-Meg went with Marmaduke, featuring Owen Wilson as the titular Great Dane of newspaper comics fame, voiced by Owen Wilson. Marmaduke did decently at the box office, considering the presence of Wanda Sykes, but not so well with critics, although it was still better-reviewed than Meg’s first pick, Sex and the City 2.
Overall Value: 0
Rd 3, Pk 7 (25)
What they took: Death at a Funeral, by Kyle
Movie Score: 20 (19)
What they should have taken: Letters to Juliet
-Kyle chose Death at a Funeral, stealing a page from Meg’s “Tyler Perry” playbook. Maybe not everyone in America was going to see this movie, but at least all the black people would, went the thinking. Well, if that was the case, there are way less black Americans than I thought. The movie was reviewed fairly well, but failed to top $40 million.
Overall Value: +6
Rd 3, Pk 8 (26)
What they took: Splice, by Jesse
Movie Score: 11 (22)
What they should have taken: Letters to Juliet
-Jesse took an Adrien Brody-Sarah Polley gene-splicing horror movie, and surprisingly the main problem was not the reaction of critics, who reviewed the movie very favorably (tied for 3rd-best reviewed movie of the quarter), but with audiences, who contributed just under $16 million to The Crack Commando Unit.
Overall Value: +4
Rd 3, Pk 9 (27)
What they took: Letters to Juliet, by Ellen
Movie Score: 23 (17)
What they should have taken: Letters to Juliet
-Ellen nails it by trusting Amanda Seyfried with her fantasy life, and she rewarded her by turning in the tied-for-1st-best pick, although it wasn’t enough to offset the 2nd-worst pick of The Losers. Still, Ellen’s drafting skills are clearly present, and her late-draft surge makes her a presence to be watched in the future.
Overall Value: +10
Sum of Pick Values:
Kyle +14
Kenz +6
Telt +5
Sarah +3
Jesse +3
Brian +1
Ellen -7
Tim -11
Meg -12











