Category Archives: Movies

Latvian Moviegoer Shot, Killed In Popcorn Dispute

Another sad thing is he had to sit through all of “Black Swan” first…

This is more sad than ridiculous. Call it sadly ridiculous.

The Guardian of London reports, with a clarification from The Register, that a man in Latvia was shot and killed in a Riga movie theater after a dispute over popcorn. The victim, a 43-year old man, accused a man of chewing his movie snack too loudly, the papers report, something the accused did not take kindly.

The alleged shooter is a 27-year old police academy graduate who holds a law degree. The pair were seeing the movie “Black Swan,” and the alleged shooter waited until the lights came back on to fire the gun. Possibly a questionable decision. Fellow moviegoers called the police, who cuffed the accused.

via Latvian Moviegoer Shot, Killed In Popcorn Dispute.

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Happy Valentine’s Day!

Especially to my partner, Steve…

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Cross-Eyed Opossum To Predict 2011 Oscar Winners

Now, I’ve seen everything…

BERLIN — Heidi, Germany’s beloved cross-eyed opossum, is taking a page from Paul the Octopus’ playbook: the marsupial will attempt to pick this year’s Oscar winners.

Leipzig Zoo Director Joerg Junghold told Germany’s RTL television on Friday that Heidi will be appearing on the “Jimmy Kimmel Show” alongside the Oscars on Feb. 27.

He isn’t revealing much about the show but says: “quite similar to Paul, it will be about tips.” He says Heidi will be filmed in Germany over the next few days for the U.S. show.

Junghold says Heidi’s appearance fee will be donated to an animal protection charity.

Paul correctly predicted the outcome of all seven German games at last year’s World Cup plus the Spain-Netherlands final from an aquarium in Oberhausen. He died in October.

via Cross-Eyed Opossum To Predict 2011 Oscar Winners.

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Remembering “The Great Gatsby”

Since Mia Farrow is 66 years old today, it seems a good time to look back to the early 1970’s re-make of “The Great Gatsby” where she played Daisy.

It was a beautiful, but flawed film.  Mia Farrow was gorgeous and Robert Redford was at his peak.  The art direction was impeccable.

And Nick Carraway, the character I always related to, was beautifully played by Sam Waterson.

F. Scott Fitzgerald has always been my favorite American writer.  I’ve had many Nick Carraway nights in my life and I always think of Fitzgerald’s beautiful prose and elegant observations.

Here are a few quotes from “Gatsby”…

  • “They were careless people, Tom and Daisy–they smashed up things and creatures and then retreated back into their money of their vast carelessness, or whatever it was that kept them together, and let other people clean up the mess they had made.”
  • “the promise of a decade of loneliness, a thinning list of single men to know, a thinning briefcase of enthusiasm, thinning hair. But there was Jordan beside me, who, unlike Daisy, was too wise ever to carry well-forgotten dreams from age to age…”
  • “Americans, while occasionally willing to be serfs, have always been obstinate about being peasantry.”
  • “Can’t repeat the past?… Why of course you can!”
  • “It makes me sad because I’ve never seen such – such beautiful shirts before.”
  • “Whenever you feel like criticizing any one…just remember that all the people in this world haven’t had the advantages that you’ve had.”
  • “I hope she’ll be a fool–that’s the best thing a girl can be in this world, a beautiful little fool… You see, I think everything’s terrible anyhow… And I know. I’ve been everywhere and seen everything and done everything.”
  • “He smiled understandingly-much more than understandingly. It was one of those rare smiles with a quality of eternal reassurance in it, that you may come across four or five times in life. It faced–or seemed to face–the whole external world for an instant, and then concentrated on you with an irresistible prejudice in your favor. It understood you just as far as you wanted to be understood, believed in you as you would like to believe in yourself.”
  • “I’ve been drunk for about a week now, and I thought it might sober me up to sit in a library.”
  • “It takes two to make an accident.”
And my two favorite non-Gatsby Fitzgerald quotes:
  • “Let me tell you about the very rich. They are different from you and me.”  (From “The Rich Boy” in the “Sad Young Men” collection.
  • “There are no second acts in American lives.”
There sadly wasn’t for Scott Fitzgerald- at least while he was alive….all his books were out of print by the time he was 40.  His beautiful, destructive wife Zelda was mad and institutionalized.
He died of a heart attack at 44 in Hollywood trying to churn out film scripts for a living…
Anyway, time for a glimpse of the beautiful, flawed film of the one perfect novel Fitzgerald wrote in his beautiful, flawed life….

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“Crazy Chicks Are Hot?” 8 Messed-Up Portrayals of Women Going Insane in Film | | AlterNet

Interesting article…

I really did not like “Black Swan”, but a lot of people seemed to disagree.

Including the folks at the Academy Awards.  But I lost all respect for them when they gave Best Picture to that Lifetime TV Movie “Crash” over  “Brokeback Mountain.”

They seem to love to watch girls kiss, but not boys.  That upholds my belief that Hollywood has been stuck in the 9th grade for the past decade or so…

Everyone loves to watch a hot babe going batshit crazy. At least that’s what the astronomical success of Black Swan would have you believe, the film in which Darren Aronofsky casts his misogynist gaze upon Natalie Portman, gorgeous and coming completely undone, for what is essentially a two-hour snuff film.

Last week, Newsweek’s Ramin Setoodeh wrote a piece exploring the phenomenon of the insane woman on celluloid, and how American society not only seems to thirst for such depictions but rewards them with box office paychecks and critical accolades. His unspoken conclusion, which he craftily writes around: it’s a one-two combo of schadenfreude and titillation. “In most crazy-chick flicks,” Setoodeh writes, “the female protagonist doesn’t just lose her mind; she loses her clothes. And sometimes she loses her sexual orientation as well.”

He interviewed several actresses who’ve recently portrayed crazy women, including Black Swan’s Mila Kunis — whose own brand of insane, propped up against Portman’s paranoia, is devious manipulation — and Leighton Meester, who portrays a stalker college student in the upcoming film The Roommate. Setoodeh points out the sexism and general ookiness of audiences’ attraction to this type of character, quoting a 26-year-old videogame designer who says, “I can’t think of a crazy girl who isn’t hot.” But he never gets past the basic concepts that seem to drive the psychology behind such desire. Sexist portrayals of women as dangerous and unhinged are statistically inaccurate. Men are three times more likely to be diagnosed with antisocial personality disorders, men are more likely to be stalkers, and men are up to 10 times more likely to commit violent crime. In a kind of mass-gaslighting, the crazy-chick film meme is simply untrue.

While there are feminist portrayals of women gone awry from societal pressures — Frances, Splendor in the Grass, The Yellow Wallpaper — there are far more films that erroneously glamorize the crazy chick. Notably, several of them are clear and direct influences for Aronofsky’s hateful take on Black Swan. [Spoilers.]

via “Crazy Chicks Are Hot?” 8 Messed-Up Portrayals of Women Going Insane in Film | | AlterNet.

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The Lion in Winter

I love this movie…

I usually watch it about once a year or so…

Peter O’Toole and Katharine Hepburn at their peak.

Anthony Hopkins and Timothy Dalton in their first films…

English history….

And one of the wittiest screenplays from one of the wittiest plays…

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Hard Candy and Aggie Boys…

I’ve always loved the song “Hard Candy Christmas” from “The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas.

For some reason, it kept running through my head today, so I went to YouTube and found this excellent version.

I also found this…

If Hard Candy depresses you, the Aggie Boys should take the edge off and lift your spirits….

I somehow just don’t see any of these guys going to the above mentioned place of business…

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Liz and Dick: The Ultimate Celebrity Couple | VF Daily | Vanity Fair

Now these two were Movie Stars!

Who the hell cares about Lindsey Lohan and today’s whiney, tacky wannabes?

Well, Brad and Angelina are probably the real thing…And George Clooney.  Maybe a couple of more…but very, very few can live up to the standards of the Stars of the earlier years…

Before Brangelina, before TomKat, before … Speidi … there was Liz and Dick—that is, Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton, the super-couple who set the standard all others can only aspire to in terms of modern celebrity. What other couple has been condemned both by the Vatican and on the floor of the House of Representatives? What other couple lived as decadently, as opulently, and as passionately? What other couple could conquer both Hollywood and Broadway the way these two did over a span of two decades?

More:  Liz and Dick: The Ultimate Celebrity Couple | VF Daily | Vanity Fair.

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“True Grit”, “The Social Network” and The Way We Are

Great article from Frank Rich about “True Grit” and “The Social Network” and how they fit and reflect today’s times….

Here is an excerpt and a link to the full, highly recommended article:

At its core, the new “True Grit” is often surprisingly similar to the first, despite the clashing sensibilities of their directors (Henry Hathaway, a studio utility man, did the original) and the casting of an age-appropriate Mattie (Hailee Steinfeld) in lieu of the 21-year-old Kim Darby of 1969. But what leaps out this time, to the point of seeming fresh, is the fierce loyalty of the principal characters to each other (the third being a vain Texas Ranger, played by Matt Damon) and their clear-cut sense of morality and justice, even when the justice is rough. More than the first “True Grit,” the new one emphasizes Mattie’s precocious, almost obsessive preoccupation with the law. She is forever citing law-book principles, invoking lawyers and affidavits, and threatening to go to court. “You must pay for everything in this world one way or another,” says Mattie. “There is nothing free except the grace of God.”

That kind of legal and moral cost-accounting seems as distant as a tintype now. The new “True Grit” lands in an America that’s still not recovered from a crash where many of the reckless perpetrators of economic mayhem deflected any accountability and merely moved on to the next bubble, gamble or ethically dubious backroom deal. When Americans think of the law these days, they often think of a system that can easily be gamed by the rich and the powerful, starting with those who pillaged Lehman Brothers, A.I.G. and Citigroup and left taxpayers, shareholders and pensioners in the dust. A virtuous soul like Mattie would be crushed in a contemporary gold rush even if (or especially if) she fought back with the kind of civil action so prized by the 19th-century Mattie.

Talk about Two Americas. Look at “The Social Network” again after seeing “True Grit,” and you’ll see two different civilizations, as far removed from each other in ethos as Silicon Valley and Monument Valley. While “Social Network” fictionalizes Mark Zuckerberg, it mines the truth of an era — from the ability of the powerful and privileged to manipulate the system to the collapse of loyalty as a prized American virtue at the top of that economic pyramid.

In contrast to Mattie’s dictum, no one has to pay for any transgression in the world it depicts. Zuckerberg’s antagonists, Harvard classmates who accuse him of intellectual theft, and his allies, exemplified by a predatory venture capitalist, sometimes seem more entitled and ruthless than he is. The blackest joke in Aaron Sorkin’s priceless script is that Lawrence Summers, a Harvard president who would later moonlight as a hedge fund consultant, might intervene to arbitrate any ethical conflicts. You almost wish Rooster were around to get the job done.

“The Social Network” is nothing if not the true sequel to “Wall Street.” The director, David Fincher (no less brilliant than the Coens), makes the atmosphere almost as murky and poisonous as that of his serial killer movies, “Seven” and “Zodiac.” In “Social Network,” the landscape is Cambridge, Mass., but we might as well be in the pre-civilized Wild West. Instead of thieves bearing guns, we have thieves bearing depositions. Instead of actual assassinations, we have character assassinations by blog post. In place of an honorable social code, we have a social network presided over by a post-adolescent billionaire whose business card reads “I’m CEO … Bitch!”

This hits too close to home. No one should have been surprised that those looking for another America once again have been finding it in “True Grit.”

More:  http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/23/opinion/23rich.html?_r=1&ref=frankrich

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You Know How to Whistle, Don’t You?

A little Bogie and Bacall to warm up a chilly January night…

 

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