Can I Get a Hot Beverage?


I caught a screening of Pulse, the Weinstein Company’s new J-horror remake of Kiyoshi Kurosawa’s 2001 film of the same name, last night at the ArcLight in Hollywood, and while I’ll reserve sum total judgment on the movie until a later date, one brief scene tangentially stirred my ire, and got me wondering.

In said scene, Christina Milian, who plays star Kristen Bell’s best friend and a fellow college student, wanders into class late, books cradled in one arm and a takeout coffee cup — presumably just grabbed, en route — in the opposite hand. She holds it, though, not carefully, as with a full, hot beverage, or even as one would an almost empty cup of cold coffee. No, she holds it as it is: an empty cup.

Now, Pulse is hardly the first or most egregious example of this rapidly increasing and annoying phenomenon. It’s seemingly everywhere, including in this summer’s The Devil Wear's Prada, in which, as I recall, Anne Hathaway’s put-upon fashion magazine assistant awkwardly balances a tray with four very obviously empty cups of special-order Starbucks. In fact, whenever movies want to show us a character juggling the myriad, whirlwind, crazy demands of modern day life, they generally put a beverage in their hand, and more often than not ostensibly a hot one.

The thing is, many times said cup will be clearly empty, as minutely evidenced by its weight upon pick up, the complete disregard the actor/character has for item, and/or some combination thereof. Is this some sort of goddamned, ridiculous, arcane production rule or something? I know we don’t want “the talent” scalded, but can we not have actors handle full cups of water or any other room-temperature beverage? I’m not sure, but what was once just a minor irritation has stirred in me a vitriolic rage matched offscreen by those that ride around obliviously with their turn signals on.

Let me know of any examples you spot and/or remember, and together we’ll make up a list to hopefully shame studios and filmmakers into paying attention to this sort of piddling detail that, when botched, really pulls you out of a scene.

 

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