Jumat, 06 Juli 2012

Review: Oliver Stone's 'Savages'

Review: Oliver Stone's 'Savages'

(EW.com) -- "Savages" is Oliver Stone doing what he should have done a long time ago: making a tricky, amoral, down-and-dirty crime thriller that's blessedly free of any social, topical or political relevance.

How liberated from an agenda is this movie? It's about two marijuana dealers in Laguna Beach who run afoul of a Mexican drug cartel, and the film has nothing at all to say about either undocumented immigrants or the war on drugs. Yet you can feel how alive Stone is to the material. He stamps every scene with his darkly combustible cinematic personality.

Based on a novel by Don Winslow, "Savages" is grandiose underworld pulp staged with screw-tightening skill and a taste for nasty kicks that spills over into sadism and dread. It's like a jacked-up "Miami Vice" told from the point of view of the criminals.

The film is narrated, in a "Sunset Boulevard"-meets-"Kill Bill" way, by Ophelia (Blake Lively), known as O, a free-spirited California blonde who lives with, and loves, two guys and is their anything-goes siren-goddess. Chon (Taylor Kitsch), a scarred, sexy hunk of an Afghanistan war vet, is the tougher and more volatile of the men. His friend and business partner, the gentler Ben (Aaron Johnson), is a wispy-bearded nihilist hippie.

'Savages' Travolta's first film in years

The two went into the drug game together with a crop of ''primo'' marijuana seeds that Chon smuggled back from Afghanistan after enlisting in the military for that purpose. They've harvested those seeds into a greenhouse crop that yields weed with THC levels of 33% (the best high anyone's ever had).

But the popularity of their product threatens the cartel's business, which is why the gangsters come calling like a vicious corporation that talks ''partnership'' when it means ''hostile takeover.''

Run by a ruthless matriarch (Salma Hayek) from her hacienda, the cartel issues a warning in the form of a creepy Internet video of a dungeon full of freshly decapitated victims. But Chon and Ben are too arrogant to know what they're dealing with. So the gangsters kidnap O and place her in the dungeon, where they threaten to hack off her fingers.

"Savages" is violent enough to risk turning off a portion of the audience. Yet even as the movie descends into blood-spattered exploitation, it's revving up the suspense. When characters are threatened with stuff this brutal, you'd better believe there's something at stake.

To get O back, Chon and Ben must become masterminds and warriors. They have to descend into savagery themselves. Stone presents some bravura set pieces, from a pulse-quickening encounter with a highway cop to an incendiary multivehicle heist to every scene with Benicio Del Toro as a very scary sociopath.

As for Taylor Kitsch, he wipes away any lingering John Carter cobwebs with his explosive performance, and John Travolta is funny and desperate as a DEA agent up to his ears in slime.

Exciting as it is, "Savages" does slide off the rails during the last half hour. The film goes from intense to indulgent, plausible to preposterous. But it's still a pleasure to see Stone settle into this dark groove. B+

See the full story at EW.com.

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'Savages': Oliver Stone's mayhem feels like Quentin Tarantino movie

'Savages': Oliver Stone's mayhem feels like Quentin Tarantino movie

'Savages' review: Oliver Stone's violent movie keeps the eye engaged, if not the mind.

By Peter Rainer, Film critic / July 6, 2012

'Savages' actor John Travolta (l.) makes a cameo as a corrupt DEA agent.

Francois Duhamel/Universal Pictures/AP

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Oliver Stone is back in form with “Savages,” which will be good news only to those who liked Stone’s form to begin with. Based on the acclaimed 2010 novel by Don Winslow, it’s about a pair of extremely successful southern California pot growers, the blonde bimbo they share, and the vicious Mexican cartel that wants into the business. I suppose you could call it Stone’s version of “Jules and Jim,” plus beheadings, torchings, bombings and strafings.

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Chon (Taylor Kitsch) is an ex-Navy SEAL and his partner in crime is Ben (Aaron Johnson), who is as hang-loose as Chon is hot-wired. Together they’ve built up a vast business derived from Afghanistan cannabis seeds that are exponentially more potent than the competition’s. Ophelia (Blake Lively), or O, as she likes to be called, is their mutual love object. She likes being in the middle of the men. “For me,” she says “they are one big man.” O, fittingly, is kidnapped by the cartel while shopping in the mall.

RECOMMENDED: 100 best movies of all time

It's ironic that Stone, whose scripts for Alan Parker's "Midnight Express" and Brian De Palma's "Scarface" were a big influence on Quentin Tarantino, should have made a movie that seems like a Tarantino spin-off.

The torture quotient is high and the human consequences cartoonish. “Savages” does keep the eye engaged, if not the mind. Salma Hayek, in a Cleopatra wig, has a n over-the-top turn as the cartel’s leader, and Benicio Del Toro, looking more toothsome than usual, plays her henchman, a man so ruthless he’s, well, amusing. (Truly bad guys are always more fun than bad guys.) John Travolta has a pungent cameo as a corrupt DEA agent.

“Savages” isn’t about anything except flashily directed mayhem. In this nest of vipers, it’s the slitheriest varieties that survive â€" at least for a time. Grade: B- (Rated R for strong brutal and grisly violence, some graphic sexuality, nudity, drug use and language throughout.)

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Savages: Stoner Flick Tells Why Weed Should Be Legal

Savages: Stoner Flick Tells Why Weed Should Be Legal

Universal Pictures

The new Oliver Stone stoner film, Savages, opens today, July 6. It’s based on Don Winslow’s 2010 novel, but I’ve noticed in reviews that John Travolta has a line about marijuana that isn’t in the book: “This stuff’ll be legal in three years,” he says. “Embrace the change.” It’s an apt update.

Travolta, mind you, doesn’t play some wishful-thinking pothead. His character is a corrupt federal anti-drug agent who, in the novel, seems burned out on the futile task of marijuana interdiction. He’s just as weary of watching the ghastly violence, both in Mexico and the U.S., that results from the illegal trafficking of a multi-billion-dollar drug that at least half of America now believes should be legal. Our largest cities appear to believe it too, including New York, where police have been told they should no longer arrest people found in possession of small amounts of pot; and Chicago, where last month the city council voted resoundingly to let cops give most marijuana violators tickets instead of handcuffs so they can focus on more important crime-fighting targets.

More: Read Richard Corliss’ review of Savages

Given Stone’s penchant for unhinged narco-mayhem, Savages is likely to illustrate, as the book did, why keeping weed illegal no longer makes legal, fiscal or even moral sense. Mexico’s powerful and vicious drug cartels â€" one of which is depicted in Savages as muscling in on a thriving clandestine pot business run by two buddies in California â€" earn more than $30 billion a year trafficking drugs into the U.S., and marijuana accounts for as much as half of that. Which means illicit cannabis cash is responsible in no small part for the more than 55,000 drug-related murders in Mexico since 2006, including the kind of macabre cartel massacres and beheadings that in Winslow’s story (if not necessarily in real life) seem poised to spill across the border.

Decriminalizing marijuana, a drug widely considered no more harmful than alcohol or tobacco when consumed moderately, is one sound way of depriving the traffickers of their revenue and the monstrous arsenals it buys. I don’t smoke the stuff myself, so I don’t have a dope dog in this fight; and I don’t support the legalization of harder, genuinely ravaging drugs like cocaine. But Savages is a useful pop-culture reminder of the absurd, Prohibition-style tragedy that conventional drug-war thinking on marijuana has brought us to. Criminalization too often means that production and sale are in the hands of quasi-degenerates like Winslow’s protagonists, Ben and Chon (OK, they help Third World kids; so did Pablo Escobar) or homicidal psychopaths like Elena and Lado, the Mexican cartel’s queen and her enforcer. Or weed-peddling street gangs in Chicago, where more people have been murdered this year than U.S. troops killed in Afghanistan.

More: Four Decades Later, It’s Time to Scrap the Dead-End Drug War

And that’s only a part of the mess we’ve created. More than half the drug arrests U.S. law enforcement makes each year are marijuana-related â€" and almost 90% of those are for mere possession, which in lock-em-up states like Florida can get you a year in jail for an amount as small as 20 grams, or less than an ounce. In the end, the country squanders an incredible $8 billion a year busting and incarcerating marijuana users â€" a figure that climbs to $14 billion when you include the tax revenue to be gained if marijuana sales were legal and regulated. (Little wonder that 300 economists, including three Nobel laureates, called this year for marijuana legalization.) At the same time, there’s a clear racial component to wrestle with: while African-Americans represent only 14% of U.S. marijuana users, they account for 31% of marijuana arrests.

Even though the Obama Administration and much of the rest of Washington are sticking to their marijuana demonization script â€" especially in an election year â€" much of the rest of the country is moving beyond the Nixonian drug-war mindset. Colorado and Washington have put the marijuana legalization question on their November ballots. In Oregon, pro-legalization candidate Ellen Rosenblum won the Democratic primary for state Attorney General. (So far she’s running unopposed in the general election.) And in the recent Texas primary, pro-legalization candidate and former El Paso City Councilman Beto O’Rourke defeated an eight-term congressman and is almost assured a November victory in his heavily Democratic district.

It’s also fitting (despite the awful Spanish in Winslow’s novel) that Savages opens just days after Mexico elected a new President, Enrique Peña Nieto. This week Peña echoed most of his Latin American counterparts when he told PBS, and indirectly the White House, that the drug war is “not working.” While Peña said he doesn’t favor legalizing drugs himself â€" even if he did, no Mexican President is likely to say so given the $1.5 billion in interdiction aid the U.S. is sending south of the border â€" he did call for a hemispheric debate on drug-war strategy that includes legalization. Many U.S. officials worry that Peña intends to go soft on drug trafficking, as his Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) did in the 20th century when it last held Mexico’s presidency. He insists that isn’t true, although last month he told me that Mexico’s priority, more t han reining in trafficking, “has to be reducing violence.” But the U.S. would do well to listen to Peña since the PRI isn’t as apt as his predecessor’s party to toe Washington’s drug war line.

Last month, Uruguay even proposed legalizing marijuana and making its government the drug’s sole seller. No one of course is suggesting the U.S. consider anything along those lines â€" that would be socialist. But if stories like Savages underscore anything, it’s that even government bureaucrats are preferable to ghastly butchers when it comes to dealing pot. It’s a change we’re ready to embrace.

'Savages' author: 'I don't even do drugs'

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'Savages' author on film

'Savages' author on film

Taylor Kitsch and Aaron Johnson portray marijuana growers in Oliver Stone's

(CNN) -- In the trailer for Friday's "Savages," a potential moviegoer can glean that the film involves: 1) a kidnapping plot; 2) marijuana; and 3) a pair of successful pot growers, portrayed by Taylor Kitsch and Aaron Johnson, who share a girlfriend in Blake Lively's "O."

But what some watching may not know is that Oliver Stone's latest is based on the acclaimed 2010 novel of the same name from writer Don Winslow.

The story follows two Laguna Beach-based best friends and entrepreneurial businessmen: Chon, a trained Navy SEAL and war vet, and Ben, an idealistic Berkeley grad with a brilliance for botany. Winslow writes in his novel that the two developed a plant so dope it "could almost get up, walk around, find a lighter and fire itself up."

Something that potent presumably wouldn't stay within the confines of Southern California for long, and Ben and Chon become so successful that the drug business south of the border takes notice.

When Ben and Chon's wealthy, slacker girlfriend O (short for Ophelia), is kidnapped by a Mexican drug cartel known for decapitating those who cross them, Ben's nonviolent stance is called into question.

'Savages' Travolta's first film in years

CNN recently spoke with Winslow, who shares screenwriting credit for the film with Shane Salerno and director Stone, about adapting his work, how he crafted a story as violent and haze-filled as "Savages," and the creation of the infamous O.

CNN: In "Savages" you play with format a lot -- you take some trajectories into writing it like a screenplay. What was your philosophy with that?

Don Winslow: I just wanted to write a book the way I heard it in my ears and saw it in my mind. If any given scene I saw it more as a film at that moment, I wrote it in screenplay form. If I heard it as poetry or saw it as a narrative, I wrote it that way.

One thing I was trying to get at was the fractured nature of the way we receive information these days. It's constant and it's in short, jagged bits. Even the way we talk to each other. ... Any given moment, we'll have the television on, but we'll also have our computers on. Someone's tweeting us, someone's calling us, someone's texting us, someone's Skyping us. I just think that society these days gets its stories from multiple directions, in multiple ways at once, so I was trying to reflect some of that.

CNN: Ophelia uses a lot of acronyms, almost talking in text-speak.

Winslow: That was very deliberate. And of course, we now have tweets. I think there's just a new language out there, particularly on the West Coast, but also all over the country.

CNN: So what was the process like to adapt your work?

Winslow: It was challenging, more kind of intellectually than any other way. ... One thing we all immediately agreed upon was we wanted to keep the characters consistent to the book. You knew a few of the story elements would have to change -- the core elements of the story are all there -- so I had to adjust a little bit.

CNN: How did the story come to you? You have a varied background, but it doesn't involve the drug trade.

Winslow: Can we italicize that? Neither as a customer -- I don't even do drugs.

I read a lot, but that was the least of it. About 2005, I'd done a book called "The Power of the Dog," which was a tome about the evolution of the Mexican drug cartels.

The base of my research came from that book. That was 5½, six years of work, and I had an extensive library of articles, court records, police records, intelligence records and interviews with DEA people, cops and drug users and, yes, drug dealers and gang bangers and all that. I had to update it for "Savages," and for [the recently released prequel] "Kings of Cool," there are flashbacks to the 1960s and '70s, so I had to go back in time.

A lot of it was a matter of talking to people -- and that's almost misstated; a lot of it was listening to people.

CNN: I think it's a powerful story not only because of the topic, which is something that's resonating in the headlines everyday, but also because of the characters, especially Ophelia. What were you going for there, how did you develop her?

Winslow: I typed that first chapter [of "Savages"] -- "F*** you" -- with no idea what it meant, who was saying it, [or] why. I had no story, no nothing. I hit page break and just started typing, and then all of a sudden I'm typing from the point of view of a twenty-something Orange County woman, which I'm not, but I know a lot of them, I've hung out there a lot.

I wanted to have a character that was, one, unabashedly in charge of her own sexuality. You know? It's just out there. She is who she is, she's going to do what she wants to do, and she's not apologizing for it. And that's been controversial. I also needed that sort of commentator that could comment on the story and comment on society and ... do it in an honest way that's hopefully funny.

I just got really fond of her. I didn't start taking notes and say that O should be [like this]. It just sort of took over, really ... that's tough to explain from a guy.

CNN: Reading a character like that, especially from a male author, the assumption to me is that perhaps the author is infantilizing her. But she does become more complex to me as the book goes on, in regards to her sexuality, by having a relationship with two men -- there are layers to her. What's been the feedback?

Winslow: Oddly enough, most of it was positive. I was in Heathrow Airport when The New York Times review came out, which was of course terrifying, but it was an absolute rave and Janet Maslin, who is obviously a woman, loved that character. And that gave me I think, frankly, a layer of protection.

But sure, there's been a lot of negative commentary, I've had people come up to me to proactively tell me how much they hated the book. ... And that's fine.

Listen, if a guy is with two women, he's a hero, right? He's a stud. But when you flip it, a lot of hypocrisy comes in. But so be it. I just wanted to write it the way that I heard it.

CNN: After writing the novel, the screenplay and seeing the movie, what's your takeaway on what it means to be savage? You play with that word a lot.

Winslow: I think you walk down certain roads, and that's a road toward savagery, and it's taken a step at a time. And then I think you're there and I don't think there's a going back. I think that's true of individuals, true of organizations, and of countries.

In the beginning of "Savages," I was trying to get this duality going of the savagery of these drug cartels, which is certainly very real, and what I would think of as the economic savagery of a certain strata of Southern California, which is savage in its own way. The endless consumerism, and the endless materialism at other people's cost.

It's funny, we look at other societies and we call them savage, but their families all live together, they take care of their kids and they take care of their old people. They might be technologically primitive, but I think they might look at certain aspects of our society, particularly lately, and think, "that's savage."

CNN: That was the most interesting part of the story, to me, because you're left with the impression that any one of us could behave in that way, if we had the right reason to.

Winslow: I think so; I'm afraid that's true.

CNN: What made you decide to pick these characters back up again with the prequel "Kings of Cool"?

[In "Savages"] I pick them up late in their arc, and I always knew their backstories, I knew from moment one who they were, what their families were like, how they grew up. By the time I finished "Savages," a lot of people wanted to talk to me about those characters and the hows and the whys, so I wanted to write the origin story.

I also wanted to write, and this sounds very pretentious, a book that had something to do with America. "Kings of Cool" is largely their search for their origins, and decoding, if you will, their mythology. I wanted to do a little bit of that with America over the decades, and talk about the evolution of the drug trade, and how it's affected the country and how it's changed as the country's mood has changed, and I wanted to deconstruct some of that mythology as well.

CNN: In "Savages" you say that Ben could have been the director of the Peace Corps if he'd been born in a different generation, but then you see in the prequel that the generation before him was involved in the same thing Ben ended up doing. What was the connection there?

Winslow: You have to pay strict attention to history. People don't just come out of nowhere. They come out of a specific place and a specific time and they come out of a specific family. There are always reasons.

CNN: Do you think you'll adapt "The Kings of Cool" into a screenplay?

Winslow: It's not on my mind right now, we've been so, so busy. I did another screenplay with Shane Salerno called "Satori" with Leonardo DiCaprio; Chuck Hogan from "The Town" and I are doing an original screen story; and I have three books I want to write right now. So we'll see.

CNN: Are you sticking with the crime genre, or do you see yourself venturing off?

Winslow: No, no, I live in my neighborhood. Some people tell me that I live in the borders, but I'm a crime writer. I like where I live.

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Kamis, 05 Juli 2012

San Diego fireworks malfunction in big, fast flash

San Diego fireworks malfunction in big, fast flash

SAN DIEGO -- The Fourth of July fireworks display above San Diego Bay was over in a flash after a malfunction that the show's producer blamed Thursday on a computer glitch caused the planned 20-minute spectacle to burn up all at once. The mishap occurred minutes before the scheduled opening of the Big Bay Boom show, the Coast Guard said. Guard spokesman Rich Dann told U-T San Diego he has never seen so many fireworks go off at one time.

fireworks-fizzle-sandiego.jpgView full sizeYachts are illuminated in the foreground as a malfunction causes the entire Fourth of July fireworks show to go off all at once over San Diego Bay near Coronado Island on Wednesday.

Online video shows multiple light bulb-shaped explosions flaring up from barges in the bay, lighting the night sky over downtown San Diego. Rapid snaps and pops punctuate the blazes, which begin to fizzle and sputter in a matter of seconds.

Show producer Garden State Fireworks, the Port of San Diego and the San Diego Fire Department said there were no injuries. Hundreds of thousands of people witnessed the short-lived spectacle.

Garden State Fireworks has apologized, saying they're working to determine what caused "the entire show to be launched in about 15 seconds."

August Santore, part-owner in the company, said tens of thousands of fireworks on four barges and a pier had been prepared. But because of a glitch or virus in the computer firing system, they all went off with one command, he said.

"Thank goodness no one was injured. Precautions all worked 100 percent," Santore said.

The 122-year-old company produced hundreds of holiday shows across the country Wednesday night.

Santore said the company feels "terrible" about the mishap.

Garden State Fireworks has staged pyrotechnic displays for the 1988 Winter Olympics, the Statue of Liberty Bicentennial Celebration and New Year's Eve in Central Park, New York.

"We are a good strong company, and we rely on technology. We'll take the ridicule as long as no one was injured," Santore said.

The Port of San Diego and dozens of area companies and civic groups pay about a quarter million dollars to put on the show, said Michelle Ganon, director of marketing and communications for the port.

Ganon s aid she understood between 350,000 and 500,000 people were expected, but she was waiting for an official crowd count later in the day.

This was 11th year of Big Bay Boom show in San Diego.

Special parking, carpools and free shuttles were set up, the San Diego Trolley was packed, hotel rooms facing the bay were sold out, a patriotic score was set to be simulcast on a local radio station and the show was set to stream live on the Web.

"After the big explosion, a lot of people were in awe ... until nothing came after it," San Diego resident Michael Freeby told U-T San Diego. "The general consensus was that there had been some budget cuts. I waited nearly an hour after, and seemingly so did the large crowd, including people who apparently camped for the fireworks and were still there when I left. Total disappointment!"

Fireworks fallout after Big Bang goes bust

Fireworks fallout after Big Bang goes bust

SAN DIEGO (CNS) - The "BigBayBoom" pyrotechnics show over San Diego Bay went bust because of an apparent computer glitch, the Port of San Diego and fireworks company said Thursday.

The event was scheduled to be a 15-minute show featuring ordnance fired from five locations, four on San Diego Bay and one at the Imperial Beach Pier. Instead, all of the rockets went off at once, creating a series of gigantic explosions that lasted less than half a minute just before 9 p.m.

No one was killed in the accidental launches.

August Santore, owner of family-run Garden State Fireworks Inc. told reporters that the system was tested on Monday and several times before the start of Wednesday's show.

"It's just something that obviously was beyond our control," Santore said. "Anyone who has ever had any kind of computer situation, or otherwise -- it's not perfect -- so we've never had this situation before and God willing, we'll never have anything like this again."

Santore said when he saw what happened, "it pulled the life out of me." He said he will work with show producer Sandy Purdon and the main sponsor, the Port of San Diego, to make amends.

A statement to the media from the port expressed disappointment in the failure, which drew national attention via traditional and social media.

The annual July 4 display draws hundreds of thousands of residents and tourists to the downtown San Diego waterfront, many of whom arrive in the early afternoon to picnic and enjoy the surroundings. YouTube videos, which have recorded hundreds of thousands of views, show attendees cheering at the sight of massive fireballs before the ensuing silence.

According to the U.S. Coast Guard, it took nearly a half-hour to get the word out so people could go home.

The port district contributed $145,000 to this year's event, according to its statement. Visitors to the agency's Facebook page called the short-circuited show "unbelievable and unacceptable," and called for Garden State Fireworks to be sued.

The operator of a bait and tackle shop on Shelter Island wrote that "the 15 seconds that DID happen, was SUPER COOL," emphasizing in an all capital letters.

THIS IS AN UPDATE TO THE PREVIOUS STORY BELOW.

SAN DIEGO (CNS) - The "BigBayBoom" fireworks show at the Port of San Diego went bust in a spectacular way Wednesday, as the rockets' red glare and bombs busting in air all went off at once.

A massive fusillade of bright rocketry lit up North Island and the downtown area just before 9 p.m.

YouTube video from the scene showed a gigantic 28-second blast, with rockets and bombs bursting in a random pattern. Then, nothing.

"It looked like a planet coming," one spectator told a TV station.

Coast Guard officials said it appeared that entire battery of explosives on three of the four launch barges was launched at the same time, possibly due to a "premature ignition."

"It looked like the finale ... you know, right at the end they shoot off everything." said Rich Dann, a civilian Coast Guard employee at the San Diego station.

Port officials issued a statement two hours after the debacle, and said signals between the fireworks command post and the four barges had been tested in the hours and minutes leading up to the 9 p.m. show.

"All these signals tested properly according to Garden State Fireworks, the company that provides the show," the statement said.

"The Garden State Fireworks team will be working throughout the night to determine what technical problem caused the entire show to be launched in about 15 seconds," the port statement said. "We apologize for the brevity of the show and the technical difficulties."

More than 500,000 people were expected to line the bay for the big blast. "It took 25 minutes to get the word out" that the entire fireworks show had blown at once, said the Coast Guard's Dann.

"On the water, there were people on the radio venting," he told City News Service. "A lot of people were unhappy, some had been here all day."

THIS IS AN UPDATE OF THE PREVIOUS STORY BELOW.

SAN DIEGO (CBS 8) - San Diego County's biggest fireworks show was over in a matter seconds, after a technical problem caused all the fireworks to go off at once.

Thousands of spectators had gathered at beaches, parks, and scenic lookouts to get a view of San Diego's 12th annual "Big Bay Boom" show. Some people even camped out for hours to see the fireworks, only to be left disappointed and in the dark.

Producers promised a 20 minute show, including fireworks from four barges strategically located around San Diego Bay, including Shelter Island, Harbor Island, the North Embarcadero and Embarcadero Marina Park South. The show was also supposed to have fireworks at the Imperial Beach Pier.

Instead, crowds were left wondering what happened after large explosions lit up the sky for about 30 seconds before fizzling. 

Organizers said Wednesday night that they were still investigating the cause, only citing a "technical glitch" for bringing the big show to a premature halt.

Nobody was hurt when the fireworks mis-fired.