The Walmart cheap movie bin is one of the greatest treasure
troves of bad movies. Somehow, for a
store that seems to be getting less and less selection in physical media (at
least in my area), the bargain bin is always overflowing. Sure, most of the movies are ones that weren’t
purchased because nobody wanted them, but there are sometimes good deals in
there. One of the best deals comes in
the form of box sets. The bargain bins
always have the sets of eight or ten movies that nobody has heard of. These movies are usually bad. They end up being so cheap, however, that the
price is almost worth it.
One of these box sets contained a bunch of family
movies. A few of the movies in it were
from the same director, Dan T. Hall. He
directed movies such as Old No. 587: The
Great Train Robbery, and Lil’
Treasure Hunters. He also directed EZ Money, a 2005 movie about brother and
sister Alex Thompson (Jonas Gustavson) and Molly Thompson (Moli Hall), who
scammed an email money scam. They ended
up involved in a government investigation into the scam emails, which brought
them and their little sister Echo (Emma Kinghorn) into dangerous, life
threatening situations.
EZ Money was
filled with many ludicrous things. The
whole movie was a cavalcade of the ridiculous, giving moment after laughable
moment of things that could only be in a family movie that no family would want
to watch. Much of that stemmed from the
comedy, but there were a few outlying serious moments as well. The writing was a collection of bits that
shouldn’t have been strung together.
There were characters who felt like they should have been in different
movies, brought into the same story. It
was an odd movie.
The first thing that EZ
Money set out to let the audience know was the characters who were involved
and what made them into the people they were.
None were more important than the main character, Molly. She was a rebellious girl always getting into
trouble at school. At the start of the
movie, she was taken to the principal’s office because she had loaned money to
a bunch of her fellow students and made a list of which ones to beat up because
they hadn’t paid it back. This was the
way she was set up as a con-artist, which would lead to the scamming of the
email scammers.
Another character was Jut Monroe. He was introduced as a biker, going to a
coffee shop to get a drink. While he was
at the coffee shop, a man came in and tried to rob the place. Jut Monroe didn’t listen to the robber’s
demands. In fact, he ended up taking down
the bad guy and handcuffing him. This
was before he revealed himself to be an undercover cop. Unless he was undercover to capture just one
thief who was trying to steal money from a coffee shop, Jut Monroe blew his
cover for no apparent reason. That’s not
great police work.
Sticking with the authority figures, there was a government
agent who became a pivotal figure in EZ
Money. His name was Silas P. Murphy
(Mike Jansen). He was the man looking
into the scam emails. When a power surge
was accidentally sent through the city, he was electrocuted and lost all of his
memories. He became an impressionist
throughout the rest of the story. He
would imitate people and famous movie scenes to Jut and the children as they
went on their adventure. At one point,
he even pretended to be a dog. Silas
ended up being the comic relief for a movie that was mostly comic relief.
The last character that should be noted for their strange
personality was the little sister of Molly and Alex, Echo. Her name summed up her personality pretty
well. In most situations, Echo would
simply repeat what the other characters already said. On paper, that might seem like a cute trait
to have for a child in a family movie.
In execution, it was irritating.
It was like when the bully has the best friend who just snickers, says
“Yeah,” and then repeats exactly what the bully says. The only difference was that she was on the
good side of things, working with the protagonists.
With those characters set up, as well as the other players
in EZ Money, the movie could get
going. And get going it did. The Nigerian prince scammers tried to scam
the principal of Molly’s school, but she took their email and scammed them
back. The government was also trying to
take down the scammers, which led to a large sum of money being stored in an
online safe called EZ Money. Oh,
look! That’s the name of the movie! When the scammers didn’t get their money,
they travelled to whatever town everyone was in and visited the kids at home.
The confrontation with the children and the Nigerian
scammers led to the kidnapping of Echo.
Molly and Alex took matters into their own hands to save their
sister. Those matters involved enlisting
J.J. (Tori Allen), in one of the most obnoxious scenes of the movie. J.J. was a teenager with a car who could
drive them to the places they needed to get to.
Her car had hydraulics, which weren’t needed for the story at all. Some “Bounce with me” song blared as soon as
the car came on screen, and J.J. quickly gave the driving responsibility to
Molly. Of course, a police officer
pulled them over because a child was driving the car. Lucky for the kids, Jut Monroe showed up and
sent the police officer on his way by saying that the kids were a part of his
investigation. It was quick thinking
that kept the story moving.
When they got to the bad guys’ hideout, the kids needed a
way to get in. J.J. said she could get
in and immediately began climbing the building.
For whatever reason, she had the skills to climb the front of the
building, get into a window, and toss some rope down to Molly and Alex. What kind of training did the character
have? What was her backstory? There wasn’t much to take from her
non-existent backstory that could tell why she was able to do that.
At the end of EZ Money,
there was a moment right out of CSI:
Miami. It wasn’t the material itself
that felt like CSI: Miami. For the most part, this was much less violent
or gory. It was the way one of the final
lines was read that harkened back to the procedural television show. Jut Monroe, hearing what happened to the
money following the arrest of the kidnapping scammers, said “Looks like life,”
before taking a pause and finishing with “Just got a whole lot easier.” Then he put on his sunglasses. It was a move right out of Horatio Caine’s
playbook.
Jut was in a wheelchair during the final scene of EZ Money, due to the events of the
climax. When the police ran into the
building that the kidnapping scammers were hiding out in, there was a small
fight. During the confrontation, Jut
Monroe was shot. This single moment of
violence felt out of place in a children’s movie. Even the Air
Bud movies, which commonly resorted to dogs being kidnapped, never
escalated things into physical violence of this nature. Families watching EZ Money wouldn’t have expected the hero to be shot and
hospitalized at the end of the movie.
That doesn’t seem like a family movie thing to do. It happened, though. And aside from the life getting a whole lot
better line of hopefulness in the final scene, it was how the movie ended. Dan T. Hall, what were you doing?
EZ Money might
have been the most watchable of Dan T. Hall’s movies up to that point. The nepotism of using his daughter in the
cast was still there. There were weird
choices made throughout the story that kept it from reaching its full
potential. But it felt like Dan T. Hall
was trying to do more than he had in Old
No. 587: The Great Train Robbery, or Lil’
Treasure Hunters. He was pushing his
boundaries and trying something new, and it almost sort of worked. He was a director improving with each
outing. EZ Money wasn’t necessarily good.
It was a step in the right direction, though.
If it weren’t for the Walmart bargain bin, Dan T. Hall
probably would have faded into obscurity.
Even with it, he pretty much did.
How many people are watching the movies in those ten movie packs? Not a lot.
For the few that are, Dan T. Hall is a diamond in the rough. His first three outings weren’t the greatest,
but they showed the potential of a solid filmmaker. Perhaps some of his other movies are even
better than these. The only way to find
out is to watch them. That’s for the future.
These notes are for now:
- Dan T. Hall has directed three movies featured in the Sunday “Bad” Movies. They were Old No. 587: The Great Train Robbery (week 35), Lil’ Treasure Hunters (week 187) and EZ Money.
- Four actors have been in all three Dan T. Hall movies that have been covered. They were Ran Burns, Alex Hall, Dan T. Hall, and Moli Hall.
- There were two actors from Old No. 587: The Great Train Robbery (week 35) that came back for EZ Money. They were Charlotte Battin and Neal McConochie.
- Ethel Booth, Mike J. Ferruzza, Vonda Fuhrmann, Mike Jansen, and Woody Rau all returned from Lil’ Treasure Hunters (week 187) to make appearances in EZ Money.
- Have you seen EZ Money? Have you seen any Dan T. Hall movies? Have you heard of Dan T. Hall? Any of these topics could be discussed in the comments.
- Twitter or the comments are good places to suggest what movies I should be checking out for the Sunday “Bad” Movies. If there’s a movie that you think I should cover that I have not yet gotten around to seeing, let me know. I’m open to all suggestions, though it might be a while before I get to yours.
- Sometimes, when I’m watching the bad movies I watch, I will share clips from them on Snapchat. Do you want to see those? Add me (jurassicgriffin).
- Today is the last day of September, and as such, next month we’ll be diving into horror. Four “bad” horror movies over the next for weeks. That all kicks off on October 7th, when the Sunday “Bad” Movies covers Chopping Mall. Come back next week to celebrate spooky season with the Sunday “Bad” Movies. See you then.
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