“Oh no. We think you
should go.” – Mike Saunders, Miss Cast Away and the Island Girls
Many of the movies scheduled for the Sunday “Bad” Movies
come from suggestions. People recommend
bad movies to should watch, and they get tossed into the lineup. It brings a variety that only comes from
having multiple inputs. But then there
are the movies that aren’t suggestions. They
come from the collections of bad movies found in discount bins. They come from movies that pop up on Netflix,
where they look like they would fit into this blog. Sometimes movie choices are based on the name
alone. And then there are movies like Miss Cast Away and the Island Girls. These movies are rewatches of bad movies. Only, sometimes they get confused with other
movies and the mistake is only realized halfway through the watch.
Miss Cast Away and the
Island Girls was put into the lineup because I remembered watching it when
I was younger. But it wasn’t this movie
that I was thinking about. I was
confusing Miss Cast Away and the Island
Girls with another television movie from around the same time called Monster Island. I don’t know how similar the two movies
are. I probably only got them mixed up
because of how long it had been since I had seen them. Either way, the movie that I meant to add
into the schedule is not the movie that I added.
The television movie Miss
Cast Away and the Island Girls wasn’t quite what the title described. Yes, there was an island and there were
girls. But there was no specific Miss
Castaway. There were multiple beauty
pageant contestants stranded on an island with pilots Maximus Powers (Eric
Roberts) and Mike Saunders (Charlie Schlatter).
The movie parodied many popular properties of the time including Cast Away, Survivor, The Green Mile,
and Planet of the Apes as the
castaways tried to find a way back to the mainland.
This was not a good movie.
It felt like a Friedberg/Seltzer movie in how the humour was presented,
except it didn’t have the budget that they somehow manage to get for each of
their movies. It didn’t go quite as far
as a movie like The Starving Games,
where it was a legitimate collection of pop culture references rather than
actual jokes, but it did feel similar to something like Disaster Movie. There was a
story being told through the references, rather than the references completely
steamrolling any sense of story progression.
It was still bad, but it wasn’t quite rock bottom.
Anyway, this post is going to entail describing the movie in
some sort of detail. It will happen
through the different movie/television references that it featured. This means that there will definitely be
spoilers. If you don’t want to be
spoiled on Miss Cast Away and the Island
Girls, a 2004 made-for-tv movie that you would have already seen if you
wanted to, then go watch it before reading the rest of this post. For those who don’t care or have seen this
movie, continue on.
Survivor
The most apparent reference that Miss Cast Away and the Island Girls made was to the hit television
show Survivor. The show was huge around the time when the
movie came out. The timing couldn’t have
been better. The movie was released less
than a week before the premiere of Survivor:
All-Stars. It was the perfect time
to show the world their spoof if they wanted it to have any impact.
There are a few ways that the movie took on the Survivor material. The castaways were split up into two groups,
much like many seasons of Survivor
have the contestants split into two tribes.
The tribes go to different sections of the island before merging
together to become one big tribe, much like the later portions of any Survivor season. The other big commonality was the inclusion
of talking head segments. The different
castaways would talk into the camera about their experience on the island. Did they get along with the others? Were they having relationship problems? How did they like the weather? It was all discussed to the camera. That is what made it the most like a reality
show.
Cast Away
The title of the movie is Miss Cast Away and the Island Girls. It only makes sense that the movie Cast Away, which was released four years
prior, would be an influence. The
disaster that leads to being trapped on the island is a plane crash in both
movies. The main characters had to fight
for survival on some unknown land. Miss Cast Away and the Island Girls even
went out of its way to have one character left by himself in the same way as
Tom Hanks’s character in Cast Away.
The other similarity between the two was the use of
FedEx. Clearly, the rights to the name
were obtained for Cast Away. The movie never shied away from the fact that
Tom Hanks was an employee of Federal Express before his island adventure. His way of surviving was to use the packages
that floated ashore as resources until he could sustain himself on the
island. Miss Cast Away and the Island Girls went a similar route with Mike
Saunders. When the tribes separated in a
Survivor style way, he was left on
his own. Nobody had picked him. He created a home in a cave and used packages
from a crashed FedEx knock-off plane to survive. It wasn’t anything high brow, but it was
meant as a parody of the successful film.
Jurassic Park
There isn’t much to this side of the parodies present within
Miss Cast Away and the Island Girls. It’s a fairly simple, brainless parody. A giant pig protected certain sections of the
island from intruders. The pig was
called Jurassic Pork. It looked sort of
like a cross between a pig and a T-rex.
It also ate a couple people.
That’s about it.
Star Wars
What spoof/parody film is complete without referencing Star Wars? The franchise has been one of the most
profitable, influential, and enjoyed of the past forty years. There wasn’t too much of a reference to the
franchise outside of a robot that would project images of people for Mike Saunders. It was similar to R2-D2 having the Obi-wan
message from Leia. Mike was the world’s
only hope. Michael Jackson and the Pope
used the robot’s video projector to relay the message.
Planet of the Apes
This is where the spoilers kick in. Early in the movie, it was established that
the island held Noah’s Ark. The giant
boat was guarded by the Jurassic Pork.
The boat was important to the story because it provided a means of
escape for the castaways who were still on the island. The only problem was that they weren’t the
only beings who wanted the boat.
There was a tribe of damn dirty apes who were also
attempting to get their stinking paws on the boat. They wanted to sail out to sea, creating a 40
day flood that would leave apes as the only animals left on the planet. It was a hostile takeover by way of Noah’s
Ark. Not only did the castaways need to
find a way off the island, they needed to stop the apes from taking over and
creating a planet of the apes.
The Sixth Sense
One of the castaways mentioned early on that she could see
dead people. That line was reference
enough, but the movie went beyond that and showed the dead people. It didn’t have the same twist as the M. Night
Shyamalan movie. Nobody was secretly
dead the whole time. Instead, some
famous dead people were depicted, including Marilyn Monroe and Elvis
Presley. This side of the story was
clearly shoved in with the sole purpose of making reference to The Sixth Sense without furthering the
story.
The Green Mile
Much like The Sixth
Sense, this was barely a part of the story, and ended up being much more of
a reference for reference sake. For
whatever reason, Michael Clarke Duncan’s character from The Green Mile was on the plane with the pageant contestants. He also showed up later in the movie to help
in a strange tug-o-war battle. There was
no reason that this character needed to be in the movie. There was no reason at all.
E.T. The
Extra-Terrestrial and Close
Encounters of the Third Kind
This was much more E.T.
than Close Encounters, but I’m
lumping them together because of the ending.
There was a dodo bird that ended up hanging around Mike Saunders. It was like an E.T. character as it had been separated from its family in a
strange new world. You know, because
dodos are extinct and this one was not. The
end of the movie saw a spaceship come to take the dodo home. That’s like the end of E.T. The thing that made me add Close Encounters into this reference was
that many of the castaways got onto the ship with the dodos, much like Richard
Dreyfuss got onto the ship at the end of Close
Encounters. I think the whole dodo
thing was just a straight up Spielberg reference.
There were a lot of references littered throughout Miss Cast Away and the Island Girls. Sometimes they were the story being
told. Cast Away, Survivor, and Planet of the Apes seemed like integral
references to the story being told.
Without those references, the entire movie would have been
different. But then there were the other
references like The Green Mile and The Sixth Sense that didn’t matter at
all. They were in the movie for the sake
of being referenced. There was no bigger
reasoning.
This has been one of the worst weeks for the Sunday “Bad”
Movies. Though I think the jokes might
be a little bit better than those in 30
Nights of Paranormal Activity with the Devil Inside the Girl with the Dragon
Tattoo, or on par with the movies that Friedberg/Seltzer put out, Miss Cast Away and the Island Girls
doesn’t have the budget to make the visuals okay. It looked cheap. It felt cheap. The humour was cheap. It made the entire experience
excruciating. I’m glad that this week is
now past and I can move onto next week’s Thanksgiving themed movie.
Now for some notes:
- I mentioned 30 Nights of Paranormal Activity with the Devil Inside the Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, so there’s the post for it.
- I also mentioned Friedberg/Seltzer, so here’s the post for Date Movie.
- Eric Roberts made his fifth Sunday “Bad” Movie appearance with Miss Cast Away and the Island Girls. He has been in A Talking Cat!?!, Chicks Dig Gay Guys, The Human Centipede III, and DOA: Dead or Alive.
- Miss Cast Away and the Island Girls shared two cast members with Valentine’s Day. They were Jennifer Amy and Kamilla Bjorlin.
- Chris Spinelli returned to the Sunday “Bad” Movies with Miss Cast Away and the Island Girls, after being in 30 Nights of Paranormal Activity with the Devil Inside the Girl with the Dragon Tattoo.
- Mike was played by Charlie Schlatter, who was also in the movie Ed.
- Deuce Bigalow: Male Gigolo had the first appearance of Gabrielle Tuite, who was also in Miss Cast Away and the Island Girls.
- P. David Miller made a return to the Sunday “Bad” Movies in Miss Cast Away and the Island Girls. Miller’s first appearance was in Metal Man.
- Miss Cast Away and the Island Girls saw the second Sunday “Bad” Movies appearance of Daniel Diaz, who was also in Citizen Toxie: The Toxic Avenger IV.
- Finally, T.J. Storm is back in the Sunday “Bad” Movies with Miss Cast Away and the Island Girls. Storm’s first appearance was in Mortal Kombat.
- Have you seen Miss Cast Away and the Island Girls? Have you ever confused it with Monster Island even though it’s clearly not Monster Island? Have you seen Monster Island? You can discuss any of this or more in the comments section.
- Sometimes when I’m bored and watching bad movies, I share bits and pieces of them on Snapchat. Add me there, under the username jurassicgriffin.
- Are there any movies you want me to watch for the Sunday “Bad” Movies? Let me know in the comments or on my Twitter feed. I’ll take them into consideration.
- Next week’s movie is going to be the Thanksgiving animated movie Free Birds. I watched it last night and can say that I don’t find it bad at all. I had a lot of fun watching it. But it got suggested for this blog and I put it in, so I have to write about it. We’ll see what comes out next week.
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