This past holiday season I watched two musicals set in London.
Scrooge was good; I had never seen this version in its fullness. My favorite part was when Scrooge dies and goes to the underworld and sees Marley again and the devil's slaves bring him his chains. I don't think that is depicted in another other version. I really like the songs including Thank you very Much and December the 25th. Albert Finney was really good and miserly, and I was impressed with the dialogue written by Leslie Bricusse; some expressions I had never heard of such as "prevaricating fraud" and Scrooge is described as "parsimonious" (obnoxious). I liked Alec Guiness as Marley and it occurred to me that he played a spirit ghost long before he did in Return of the Jedi as Obi Wan Kenobi.
It was only made as recently as 1970, but something about it feels so old-fashioned. Maybe that's a good thing, since it's set in the 19th Century anyhow. But everything from the expressions used to the costumes to the toys in the store (below) - everything feels so old-fashioned.
I liked Cats but didn't love it; it probably won't become a favorite of mine. It has a "modern" feel even though it could just as easily have taken place 100 years ago.
I never saw the original show so I don't know what changed. Almost every cat gets their own song and has their own personality, and I liked that; I liked Jennifer Hudson singing "Memory" . There are some dumb jokes, like when Rebel Wilson's cat says to the cockroach, "don't get cocky!' and in another scene says "watch out for the crazy cat lady". She and James Cordin seem to ad-lib some stuff and that's okay but felt the movie could have had more punch to it, and the cats seem to keep changing size; at first they seem like the size of real cats but then they seem to shrink down at times. Also I didn't like the garbage and cockroach scenes. I saw this in one of those "dine-in" theaters and you don't want to see that while eating.
I'd like to see a "making of" documentary about this movie and see how they added in the special effects; every tail and ear moves and wiggles and it's pretty cool. All the actors could have just worn suits and masks.
12/31/2019
12/15/2019
New Releases (Fall/Winter 2019) that look interesting
The following films are ones I am adding to my "To-See" and "Maybe" lists. The ratings and synopsis below are from critics from RogerEbert.com
Drama
A Hidden Life
4 stars Terrence Malick’s “A Hidden Life,” the true story of a World War II conscientious objector, is one of his finest films, and one of his most demanding.
Hala
3 Stars Directed by Minhal Baig (from Chicago). It was released in a limited release on November 22, 2019, followed by digital streaming on December 6, 2019, by AppleTV+. Wikipedia “Hala” possesses something inherently extraordinary by just being about a young, female Muslim-American. It’s an unassuming film that hops on a casual rhythm and shines its wisdom to let its lead character Hala (Geraldine Viswanathan)
Burning Cane
4 stars. Phillip Youmans’ extraordinary debut feature. A drama about a church, a religious family and a preacher played by Wendell Pierce (Selma).
Chained For Life
3.5 stars. A film within a film that looks really good.
The movie they're filming is helmed by an autocratic German director (Charlie Korsmo), and rumors swirl that 1.) he is not even German and 2.) he was "raised in a circus." The pretentious fictional film ("it's called 'God's Mistakes' in German" someone is overheard saying) is the story of a mad scientist doctor and his evil nurse sidekick operating on their disabled patients, removing their disabilities so they can re-enter society. I haven't seen Charlie Korsmo in a movie in a long time, maybe not since 1990 when he was in Dick Tracy.
Low Tide
3 stars. Described as an adolescent “The Treasure of the Sierra Madre” with echoes of '80s adventure classics like "The Goonies" and "Stand by Me." I was not a fan of the show Stranger Things but this might be more to my liking.
Waves
4 stars. It’s about how a series of compounding very bad decisions can ultimately impact good ones. Trey Edward Shults has written and directed an empathetic commentary on the interconnectivity of human nature—a film filled with great, almost unimaginable pain, but also incredible beauty. And it ultimately feels like a call for kindness and forgiveness. Even after the one-two punch of “Krisha” and “It Comes at Night,” “Waves” is unexpectedly ambitious and confident, the work of a filmmaker in complete control of his talents and using them to challenge himself. This is a deeper and more profound film than your average character drama, a masterpiece that’s hard to walk away from without checking your own grievances and grief. Music by Trent Reznor. With Lucas Hedges.
Dolemite is my Name
3.5 stars. Eddie Murphy plays Rudy Ray Moore, the chameleon-like hustler who parlayed his ability to change and his tenaciousness into a career as a stand-up comedian whose signature character, Dolemite, made him famous.
Honey Boy
3.5 stars. An autobiographical story written by Shia LaBeouf. Normally I wouldn't care for his work but he impressed me in The Peanut Butter Falcon so I might give this a watch one day.
Seberg
Only received 1.5 star, but still looks interesting with Kristen Stewart playing Jean Seberg.
Portrait of a Lady on Fire
4 Stars. French director Céline Sciamma fourth feature has been called one of the best films of the year.
Comedy
Jojo Rabbit
2.5 stars. A satirical comedy that looks really interesting from the trailers I've seen.
Greener Grass
3 stars. DeBoer and Luebbe have created a psychotic suburban world where surface conformity is all, where everyone strives to look and be the same. The smiling faces perch on top of roiling emotions, not even necessarily anti-social emotions, just regular ones, like need, loss, pain. "Keeping up with the Joneses" is pushed to its most surreal extreme. Everyone in the town has braces. Everyone dresses the same, in pinks and light blues and light purples. Everyone drives golf carts. It's like they live in a mini village placed on a country club golf course somewhere.
Between Two Ferns
3.5 stars. One of the most amiable comedies of the year. Starring Zach Galifianakis and based on a skit/web series that I haven't seen but this movie sounds interesting.
Jexi
2.5 stars. This movie sounds alot like Her, which might be a good second feature to pair this movie up with to watch one day.
Horror/Thriller
Paradise Hills
1.5 stars. But looks like it could be good....a sci-fi thriller follows an unruly young woman of the future who’s sent to a re-education camp for young ladies to become more docile and compliant. Starring Emma Roberts, Mila Jojovich and Awkwafina.
Portals
Only 2 stars given, but sounds like my kind of movie, a horror anthology.
Little Monsters
Only 2 stars, but it sounds like it could be an interesting zombie comedy. Haven't seen a bad film with Lupita Nyong’o so this could be interesting.
Villains
3 stars. There is an inherent level of tonal ambiguity baked into the home invasion thriller-cum-comedy “Villains,” the third feature collaboration of the filmmaking duo Dan Berk and Robert Olsen. Also serving as the co-scribes of a story that tiptoes around notes both absurd and unsettling.
With Maika Monroe (so good in The Guest and It Follows) and Kyra Sedwick.
Girl on the Third Floor
3.5 stars. Looks like it could be a good darkly comic haunted house thriller.
Documentary
Recorder: The Marion Stokes Project
3.5 stars. A woman leaves behind over 30 years of recorded tv programming.
63 Up
4 Stars. The latest from Michael Apted and his subjects that he has been following for over 50 years.
The Cave
3.5 stars. Feras Fayyad’s follow-up documentary to “Last Men in Aleppo,” “The Cave" about a last resort hospital staffed by dogged professionals underground.
Midnight Traveler
3 stars. Afghan filmmaker Hassan Fazili and his family shot the documentary entirely on three mobile phones while on the run from the Taliban, which had put out a hit on him.
Gay Chorus Deep South
3 stars. When chorus member Jimmy White admits how painful it will be if his long-estranged father fails to show up to their concert in Jackson, Mississippi—which just so happens to be his parents’ hometown—Seelig stresses the importance of White telling his folks how important their presence will be, rather than assuming they already know.
Varda by Agnes
3 stars. A combination autobiography and career survey overseen by the filmmaker
What She Said: The Art of Pauline Kael
3 stars. Looks good.
Where's My Roy Cohn
3 stars. We get the impression from this film that, right up to the bitter, agonized end, he was engaged in an internal battle to justify himself to himself, and to the world. There was also a television movie about Cohn from years ago that I've been wanting to see. One day when I'm in the mood to learn more about his life I might pair up these two films.
The Gift: The Journey of Johnny Cash
3 stars. Available on demand from YouTube Originals.
The Disappearance of My Mother
3 stars. Looks like a really thought provoking film about a former fashion model now in her late 70s.
International/Non-English language
Chinese Portrait (China) - Documentary
4 Stars. Comprised of about 60 vignettes.
I Lost My Body (France) - Animated
3 stars. Jérémy Clapin’s “I Lost My Body,” a surprise winner of the Critics’ Week Grand Prize this year at Cannes (the first animated movie to do so), is a visually sumptuous slice of macabre storytelling that works best when it uses its director’s magical sense of composition and less when it feels weighed down by narrative.
Atlantics/Atlantique (France-Senegal)
4 Stars. Thrills throughout its runtime, matches its gorgeous imagery with a compelling story, and defies easy categorization. Mati Diop’s haunting narrative feature debut “Atlantics” is one such movie. It’s unlike few other movies you’ll see this year or possibly this decade.
Britt-Marie Was Here (Sweden)
3 stars. Based on a novel by Fredrik Backman (A Man Called Ove), whose themes often include cranky people who isolate themselves and community sports that bring people together. Thankfully, he and director Tuva Novotny keep the characters astringent and his tone wry, so it never gets cuddly or cloying. This sounds depressing but still looks like it could be a very good character study.
Monos (South American)
3 stars. Alejandro Landes’ third feature, a fascinating and sometimes frustrating film. These kids—maybe orphans or street kids, maybe kidnapped or pressed into service—and then brutalized by military discipline and indoctrination—are left totally alone, no adults in sight, to create their own world.
In My Room (German)
3.5 stars The German lo-fi sci-fi character study “In My Room” is for anybody who’s dreamed and/or panicked about the existential terror and romantic solitude that attends a classic doomsday scenario: what if you were the last person on Earth?
Synonyms (France)
2.5 stars. Sounds like a really good film.
Drama
A Hidden Life
4 stars Terrence Malick’s “A Hidden Life,” the true story of a World War II conscientious objector, is one of his finest films, and one of his most demanding.
Hala
3 Stars Directed by Minhal Baig (from Chicago). It was released in a limited release on November 22, 2019, followed by digital streaming on December 6, 2019, by AppleTV+. Wikipedia “Hala” possesses something inherently extraordinary by just being about a young, female Muslim-American. It’s an unassuming film that hops on a casual rhythm and shines its wisdom to let its lead character Hala (Geraldine Viswanathan)
Burning Cane
4 stars. Phillip Youmans’ extraordinary debut feature. A drama about a church, a religious family and a preacher played by Wendell Pierce (Selma).
Chained For Life
3.5 stars. A film within a film that looks really good.
The movie they're filming is helmed by an autocratic German director (Charlie Korsmo), and rumors swirl that 1.) he is not even German and 2.) he was "raised in a circus." The pretentious fictional film ("it's called 'God's Mistakes' in German" someone is overheard saying) is the story of a mad scientist doctor and his evil nurse sidekick operating on their disabled patients, removing their disabilities so they can re-enter society. I haven't seen Charlie Korsmo in a movie in a long time, maybe not since 1990 when he was in Dick Tracy.
Low Tide
3 stars. Described as an adolescent “The Treasure of the Sierra Madre” with echoes of '80s adventure classics like "The Goonies" and "Stand by Me." I was not a fan of the show Stranger Things but this might be more to my liking.
Waves
4 stars. It’s about how a series of compounding very bad decisions can ultimately impact good ones. Trey Edward Shults has written and directed an empathetic commentary on the interconnectivity of human nature—a film filled with great, almost unimaginable pain, but also incredible beauty. And it ultimately feels like a call for kindness and forgiveness. Even after the one-two punch of “Krisha” and “It Comes at Night,” “Waves” is unexpectedly ambitious and confident, the work of a filmmaker in complete control of his talents and using them to challenge himself. This is a deeper and more profound film than your average character drama, a masterpiece that’s hard to walk away from without checking your own grievances and grief. Music by Trent Reznor. With Lucas Hedges.
Dolemite is my Name
3.5 stars. Eddie Murphy plays Rudy Ray Moore, the chameleon-like hustler who parlayed his ability to change and his tenaciousness into a career as a stand-up comedian whose signature character, Dolemite, made him famous.
Honey Boy
3.5 stars. An autobiographical story written by Shia LaBeouf. Normally I wouldn't care for his work but he impressed me in The Peanut Butter Falcon so I might give this a watch one day.
Seberg
Only received 1.5 star, but still looks interesting with Kristen Stewart playing Jean Seberg.
Portrait of a Lady on Fire
4 Stars. French director Céline Sciamma fourth feature has been called one of the best films of the year.
Comedy
Jojo Rabbit
2.5 stars. A satirical comedy that looks really interesting from the trailers I've seen.
Greener Grass
3 stars. DeBoer and Luebbe have created a psychotic suburban world where surface conformity is all, where everyone strives to look and be the same. The smiling faces perch on top of roiling emotions, not even necessarily anti-social emotions, just regular ones, like need, loss, pain. "Keeping up with the Joneses" is pushed to its most surreal extreme. Everyone in the town has braces. Everyone dresses the same, in pinks and light blues and light purples. Everyone drives golf carts. It's like they live in a mini village placed on a country club golf course somewhere.
Between Two Ferns
3.5 stars. One of the most amiable comedies of the year. Starring Zach Galifianakis and based on a skit/web series that I haven't seen but this movie sounds interesting.
Jexi
2.5 stars. This movie sounds alot like Her, which might be a good second feature to pair this movie up with to watch one day.
Horror/Thriller
Paradise Hills
1.5 stars. But looks like it could be good....a sci-fi thriller follows an unruly young woman of the future who’s sent to a re-education camp for young ladies to become more docile and compliant. Starring Emma Roberts, Mila Jojovich and Awkwafina.
Portals
Only 2 stars given, but sounds like my kind of movie, a horror anthology.
Little Monsters
Only 2 stars, but it sounds like it could be an interesting zombie comedy. Haven't seen a bad film with Lupita Nyong’o so this could be interesting.
Villains
3 stars. There is an inherent level of tonal ambiguity baked into the home invasion thriller-cum-comedy “Villains,” the third feature collaboration of the filmmaking duo Dan Berk and Robert Olsen. Also serving as the co-scribes of a story that tiptoes around notes both absurd and unsettling.
With Maika Monroe (so good in The Guest and It Follows) and Kyra Sedwick.
Girl on the Third Floor
3.5 stars. Looks like it could be a good darkly comic haunted house thriller.
Documentary
Recorder: The Marion Stokes Project
3.5 stars. A woman leaves behind over 30 years of recorded tv programming.
63 Up
4 Stars. The latest from Michael Apted and his subjects that he has been following for over 50 years.
The Cave
3.5 stars. Feras Fayyad’s follow-up documentary to “Last Men in Aleppo,” “The Cave" about a last resort hospital staffed by dogged professionals underground.
Midnight Traveler
3 stars. Afghan filmmaker Hassan Fazili and his family shot the documentary entirely on three mobile phones while on the run from the Taliban, which had put out a hit on him.
Gay Chorus Deep South
3 stars. When chorus member Jimmy White admits how painful it will be if his long-estranged father fails to show up to their concert in Jackson, Mississippi—which just so happens to be his parents’ hometown—Seelig stresses the importance of White telling his folks how important their presence will be, rather than assuming they already know.
Varda by Agnes
3 stars. A combination autobiography and career survey overseen by the filmmaker
What She Said: The Art of Pauline Kael
3 stars. Looks good.
Where's My Roy Cohn
3 stars. We get the impression from this film that, right up to the bitter, agonized end, he was engaged in an internal battle to justify himself to himself, and to the world. There was also a television movie about Cohn from years ago that I've been wanting to see. One day when I'm in the mood to learn more about his life I might pair up these two films.
The Gift: The Journey of Johnny Cash
3 stars. Available on demand from YouTube Originals.
The Disappearance of My Mother
3 stars. Looks like a really thought provoking film about a former fashion model now in her late 70s.
International/Non-English language
Chinese Portrait (China) - Documentary
4 Stars. Comprised of about 60 vignettes.
I Lost My Body (France) - Animated
3 stars. Jérémy Clapin’s “I Lost My Body,” a surprise winner of the Critics’ Week Grand Prize this year at Cannes (the first animated movie to do so), is a visually sumptuous slice of macabre storytelling that works best when it uses its director’s magical sense of composition and less when it feels weighed down by narrative.
Atlantics/Atlantique (France-Senegal)
4 Stars. Thrills throughout its runtime, matches its gorgeous imagery with a compelling story, and defies easy categorization. Mati Diop’s haunting narrative feature debut “Atlantics” is one such movie. It’s unlike few other movies you’ll see this year or possibly this decade.
Britt-Marie Was Here (Sweden)
3 stars. Based on a novel by Fredrik Backman (A Man Called Ove), whose themes often include cranky people who isolate themselves and community sports that bring people together. Thankfully, he and director Tuva Novotny keep the characters astringent and his tone wry, so it never gets cuddly or cloying. This sounds depressing but still looks like it could be a very good character study.
Monos (South American)
3 stars. Alejandro Landes’ third feature, a fascinating and sometimes frustrating film. These kids—maybe orphans or street kids, maybe kidnapped or pressed into service—and then brutalized by military discipline and indoctrination—are left totally alone, no adults in sight, to create their own world.
In My Room (German)
3.5 stars The German lo-fi sci-fi character study “In My Room” is for anybody who’s dreamed and/or panicked about the existential terror and romantic solitude that attends a classic doomsday scenario: what if you were the last person on Earth?
Synonyms (France)
2.5 stars. Sounds like a really good film.
12/14/2019
The Peanut Butter Falcon (2019)
I just watched this movie and really enjoyed it. Somewhere I read that it's a "modern day Huck Finn story", and I didn't really get it until I saw the movie, but now I get it - two characters on a boat, an adventure, bonding, etc. Shia LaBeouf plays a crab fisherman who becomes a fugitive - and meets up with a young man with Down Syndrome also on the run; I don't know that actor's name but his performance is very good as well as Shia's - I don't normally care for him, but this is the first time he impressed me. I like the setting - the outer banks of North Carolina. I'm more of an urban person, but I often feel in another lifetime I probably lived in a rural shack like some of the characters in the movie. This movie reminded me of Into the Wild (2007) another movie I really enjoyed; it has a similar sense of adventure and uncertainty of outcome. I also was kind of reminded of Nebraska (2013) and how the father & son travel together. The dad in that movie - Bruce Dern - has a small part in this movie, too.
What also made me think about was how many adults with DS don't have biological families to call their own, which can be very hard to deal with especially around the holidays. But as the movie affirms, your friends are the family you choose (Bruce Dern's character says that, actually). And the film is about three people who become friends and start a new life.
It's a really well made film. The writing, direction, photography and music is really commendable. With Dakota Johnson, John Hawkes, and Thomas Haden Church.
Supplemental articles:
How the directors came up with the idea for the film and cast the lead actor
https://deadline.com/2019/11/roadsides-peanut-butter-falcon-took-unique-flight-path-to-screen-the-contenders-l-a-1202775598/
During a new interview, the director of “Peanut Butter Falcon” revealed he was offered more money to replace the movie’s lead actor, who has Down syndrome, for someone able-bodied with a “more marketable face,” highlighting the discrimination disabled actors face in Hollywood.
https://themighty.com/2019/10/peanut-butter-falcon-james-nilson-down-symdrome/
What also made me think about was how many adults with DS don't have biological families to call their own, which can be very hard to deal with especially around the holidays. But as the movie affirms, your friends are the family you choose (Bruce Dern's character says that, actually). And the film is about three people who become friends and start a new life.
It's a really well made film. The writing, direction, photography and music is really commendable. With Dakota Johnson, John Hawkes, and Thomas Haden Church.
Supplemental articles:
How the directors came up with the idea for the film and cast the lead actor
https://deadline.com/2019/11/roadsides-peanut-butter-falcon-took-unique-flight-path-to-screen-the-contenders-l-a-1202775598/
During a new interview, the director of “Peanut Butter Falcon” revealed he was offered more money to replace the movie’s lead actor, who has Down syndrome, for someone able-bodied with a “more marketable face,” highlighting the discrimination disabled actors face in Hollywood.
https://themighty.com/2019/10/peanut-butter-falcon-james-nilson-down-symdrome/
Rejected, and what it feels like to be rejected
Rejected
OK, so today's blog post isn't a review or summary of a film, but more personal thoughts about the subject of rejection, because I've had to face it this past fall.
One of the ways to connect with other bloggers is to join an association, and I tried to do that this year with a classic film blogger association, feeling that my blog qualifies. I was rejected. Basically was told that I don't fit in. I'll get over it, but it kind of stings a bit. I wouldn't have joined if I didn't think my blog was qualified.
Surely other bloggers are more lengthy and polished, and many in that association are professional writers, too. I'm not. Maybe that's why I don't fit in.
Some of my posts have been long and very well written, but I suppose they were written so long ago that the judges didn't have a chance to read them. I understand that.
When the committee informed me I wasn't ready to join, I was also informed that my style is regarded as microblogging, however I think of microblogging as what people write on Facebook or Twitter.
Hmmm. So what kind of blog do I have here? It's just me writing what I want, and sharing my thoughts about films. And I always hope to stir interest in some great finds.
It got me wondering exactly when I will be "ready" to join. When I'm 50 or 60 or 70 years old? And writing from my Assisted Living Center?
If you are reading this, thanks for your support and I hope you enjoy what you find here.
OK, so today's blog post isn't a review or summary of a film, but more personal thoughts about the subject of rejection, because I've had to face it this past fall.
One of the ways to connect with other bloggers is to join an association, and I tried to do that this year with a classic film blogger association, feeling that my blog qualifies. I was rejected. Basically was told that I don't fit in. I'll get over it, but it kind of stings a bit. I wouldn't have joined if I didn't think my blog was qualified.
Surely other bloggers are more lengthy and polished, and many in that association are professional writers, too. I'm not. Maybe that's why I don't fit in.
Some of my posts have been long and very well written, but I suppose they were written so long ago that the judges didn't have a chance to read them. I understand that.
When the committee informed me I wasn't ready to join, I was also informed that my style is regarded as microblogging, however I think of microblogging as what people write on Facebook or Twitter.
Hmmm. So what kind of blog do I have here? It's just me writing what I want, and sharing my thoughts about films. And I always hope to stir interest in some great finds.
It got me wondering exactly when I will be "ready" to join. When I'm 50 or 60 or 70 years old? And writing from my Assisted Living Center?
If you are reading this, thanks for your support and I hope you enjoy what you find here.
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