Tag: road-house

  • ROAD HOUSE IS A 2-HOUR INFOMERCIAL FOR TESTOSTERONE

    ROAD HOUSE IS A 2-HOUR INFOMERCIAL FOR TESTOSTERONE

    My pride as a lifelong bodybuilder took a glorious nosedive one recent evening when, sprawled on the couch like a man who had long abandoned ambition, I decided to indulge in the cinematic opus that is Road House. This film—if we must use that term generously—stars a Jake Gyllenhaal so sculpted he looks like Michelangelo, midway through carving David, got bored and said, Screw it, let’s make him a UFC fighter instead.

    Gyllenhaal plays a brooding, sinewy bouncer in Key West, grinding out a living by doing what all action heroes must—protecting a bar and its stunning owner, played by Jessica Williams, from the looming threat of corrupt mob bosses. Naturally, this leads to an inevitable showdown with their number-one enforcer: Conor McGregor, sporting the physique of a shaved grizzly bear on clenbuterol, his veins bulging like he’s one flex away from detonating. His performance lands somewhere between rabid pit bull and man who hasn’t blinked since 2019, and frankly, it’s magnificent.

    The plot? Barely there—thinner than a gas station receipt and about as consequential. It’s the classic Western trope: a stranger rides into town, cleans up the mess, and leaves behind a trail of broken bones and smoldering stares. But let’s not kid ourselves—the storyline exists solely as an excuse to showcase glistening, heaving slabs of muscle in slow motion. The camera caresses each bicep, each rippling lat, with the kind of reverence usually reserved for Renaissance art. It’s not an action movie so much as a two-hour infomercial for pre-workout supplements, high-intensity interval training, and whatever unregulated substance has been making its way through underground fight gyms.

    Somewhere between Gyllenhaal’s 47th shirtless moment and McGregor snarling like a man whose only source of hydration is pure testosterone, I found myself reaching for my phone—not to check the time, but to Google Conor McGregor’s diet plan. Because Road House isn’t just a film—it’s a flashing neon sign reminding you that you are, at best, a sentient pudding cup compared to these granite-hewn demigods. This isn’t entertainment; it’s an intervention. And the message is clear: drop the remote, pick up a kettlebell, and try to reclaim your dignity before it’s too late.

    When the credits finally rolled and I peeled myself off the couch, I had a revelation—if I wanted my memoir, Cinemorphosis: How I Become the Hero of Every Show I’ve Ever Watched, to thrive in today’s ruthless marketplace, it too needed a marketing tie-in. Just as Road House is a Trojan horse for fitness supplements and gym memberships, my book needed its own branded merchandise. But considering my subject matter—living vicariously through TV characters—the only viable promotional tie-in would be a chain of Self-Flagellation Chambers™, where disillusioned TV addicts could atone for their wasted lives. Or perhaps a TV Watcher’s Repentance Kit, complete with a burlap sack, an artisanal cilice, and a deluxe “discipline” whip for those long, dark nights of the soul.