Sunday, December 13, 2015
Holiday Watch: Christmas in Connecticut (1945)
I'm at the tail end of low-grade but extremely annoying cold. Today it settled in my chest as this loud, dry cough. So, I've been basically laying around since about Wednesday, which may explain why you've seen so much blogging and movie watching.
I really miss being twenty-five and never being sick for more than 48 hours.
I can't say I'm the world's biggest fan of Christmas in Connecticut (1945). It's a sort of mid-century American farce. Elizabeth Lane (Barbara Stanwyck) is the Martha Stewart of 1945, a popular home-making writer for a Redbook-like magazine, providing lifestyle and cooking tips from her New England farm as she makes delectable meals for her husband and baby. What America doesn't know is that Lane is actually a city girl, unmarried and childless, who is sharing the recipes of her friend Felix, a restaurateur. It's a wartime film, and so it follows a sailor who survives a U-Boat attack by drifting at sea and is considered a war hero. Through some convoluted chicanery, Lane's publisher, Alexander Yardley (the always fantastic Sydney Greenstreet) invites both the sailor and himself to Lane's farm for Christmas.
Not wanting to lose her job, Lane borrows her stuffy suitor's farm for the event, having him pose as her husband and she manages to borrow a baby. Like I said, it's got quite a bit of farce to the whole thing.
The movie is a bit of frothy Christmas fluff, a bit of something for the whole family.
Happy Belated 100, Frank
You're correct. You will never be this cool. |
December 12th marked the 100th birthday of singer, actor, Ava Gardner sexer, and true 20th Century man, Frank Sinatra. Old Blue Eyes himself.
Sinatra was a complicated man, and he is beyond our judgment. Like Thomas Jefferson, we can only try to understand such a wild contradiction in life as a product of his times and his nature. For every nightmare story about the guy, there's a dozen about him as a humanitarian.
And now, the first Sinatra song I ever learned specifically because it was Sinatra: "Strangers in the Night". All you need to know about why I learned the song: fifteen year old boys are weird.
Saturday, December 12, 2015
Sci-Fi Watch: Tomorrowland (2015)
Before typing up anything, I had to re-read NathanC's take and Gerry's comments on Tomorrowland (2015). Both are parents, both have an affinity for the Disney Parks that I get, but I am not in the same league. I'd highly recommend you guys read their posts as Nathan and Gerry cover both the Disney aspect and other aspects of the context of the film in a way I'm just not going to.
Frankly, this movie is a mess - something that explained itself immediately when I saw the name Damon Lindelof appear in the credits as soon as the movie ended. But it was the beginning of the movie, the clunky framing device of George Clooney's Frank Walker talking at the screen and being unable to decide where to start the story, where I felt my hackles first rise. The conceit feels like an in-joke, like the creators couldn't figure out how to start their movie, and made their indecision part of the film.
From there on, I'd argue we have two or three completely different scripts competing for screentime, something I felt to be true of Lindelof's Prometheus script as well. Is this a straightforward sci-fi thriller where we have a Chosen-One who has to outrun the baddies until the mystery of their special-ness is explained and they fulfill the prophecy? Is it a talky sci-fi film exploring deeper ideals? Are the characters wacky 2D stand-ins or three-dimensional people with motivations?
Growing Up With Star Wars - The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
At five years old, I'm not sure I really understood the concepts of cliffhangers or ennui, so this was more or less my intro to those ideas. I've read elsewhere about people my age who freaked out about how bleak they found The Empire Strikes Back (1980), or got wigged out that it didn't have a tight ending where the heroes saved the day. And while I get that, I wouldn't say that was my take away.
Prior to the screening, I only vaguely recall being aware that there was a new Star Wars movie coming out because my mom ordered a Boba Fett toy through the mail (yeah, we were one of those families). But one morning The Admiral grabbed my brother and I, tossed us in the car and drove us to a gigantic theater somewhere in Dallas (I've had Dallas-dwellers identify the theater for me a dozen times based on the description, but I can never remember the name), and we watched The Empire Strikes Back with hundreds of other people.
Friday, December 11, 2015
And, lo, there was yet another X-Men film. Hopefully not one too disappointing.
I believe I'm now legally obligated to see this movie. I'm not even sure I'm happy it exists, but I suppose I'll be catching a matinee at some point.
I kind of feel the way about X-Men movies the way I do about X-Men comics. It's how I got into comics, but I kind of lost interest at some point, but I'd be sad if they went away. Also, too much Wolverine.
Thursday, December 10, 2015
Pixar Watch: Toy Story (1995)
Well.
I sure as heck am not bothering with a plot synopsis on this one. If you're old enough to read, you've seen this one.
Disney had a special on Thursday evening talking about the production and legacy of Toy Story (1995), and it was well worth catching. I'd forgotten Joss Whedon was on scripting duties for the movie, and its actually a bit of fun to remember the state of technology and animation from the era. If you get a chance to catch the special on TV or on a DVD extra sometime, I suggest giving it a whirl.
This year marks 20 years since Toy Story hit the big screen and changed animation and entertainment forever.
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