Frost: Portrait of a Vampire (2002) from Johnny Web (Uncle Scoopy; Greg Wroblewski) |
| Historians have maligned America's involvement in the Russian war in Afghanistan. After watching this film, I realize that criticism is unfair. Oh, sure, our advisors helped create the oppressive Taliban regime, and we armed and trained the future members of Al-Qaeda, but a lot of good came out of that war as well. | |
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For one thing, it helped to restore our dwindling
national vampire reserve. You see, Afghanistan was a real vampire
haven, and some of our advisors were bitten. In turn, they came back
and bit some friends and ... well, you know how it is with vampires. This story shows how the aftermath of that war, and its effect on two men. One of them became a vampire, while the other became a painter and art historian named Jack Frost. (I didn't make that up.) It's not easy to maintain a friendship with an art historian who looks like slugging Yankee first sacker Jason Giambi (right), but it's literally a killer to keep up a friendship with a vampire. After a hard day of painting in the manner of Botticelli, a big, brawny High Renaissance artist just wants a little shut-eye, but his vampire friend is just stretching his legs and getting ready for the anytime breakfast at Denny's. The undead especially love the "ruddy-tuddy, fresh 'n bloody" breakfast, with a nice bloody breakfast steak, and a side order of the waitress's neck. |
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When the friendship thing doesn't work, Giambi decides he had better kill his pal. After all, Giambi is the perfect guy to battle vampires, because he really knows how to handle a bat. In fact, I thought the part really was played by the Yankee at first, but after having seen Giambi's commercials, I realize that he's a much better actor than the guy who played Jack Frost. Of course, Carrot Top is a better actor than this guy. His name is Jeff Manzanares, and his acting career consists of ... well, actually, it consists entirely of "Frost: Portrait of a Vampire", and I don't think his work here is likely to keep his agent's phone ringing. |
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Some of my favorite Grade B movie moments:
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