MisterCairo
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 7,005
- Location
- Gads Hill, Ontario
I saw The Lincoln Lawyer at my brother's. Quite entertaining...
The DVD of John Ford's "Cheyenne Autumn" that I ordered hasn't arrived yet, so I watched Broken Arrow and White Feather. It's interesting how Hollywood used plenty of actual Native Americans as background extras, but for the NA characters with prominent speaking roles, they used Caucasian actors in makeup.
... so naturally, I watched Casablanca. Again.
If I'd flicked back and forth between them while dealing with the flu, I'd have gotten them all mixed up, and would have expected Captain Renault to be the coach of one team, and Major Strasser of the other -- and Rick as the winning quarterback!Casablanca was on the same time as the Super Bowl, so naturally, I watched Casablanca. Again.
I'll have to see this. Not often you have a linguist or a philologist (see the original Outer Limits episode "Soldier") as the central character in anything.Arrival - a surprisingly intelligent SF film about first contact with non-humanoid aliens, with Amy Adams as the linguist tasked with communicating with them. Very well done, and its big plot twist totally threw me.
I tried hard not to think of Sal Mineo as "Plato" and Ricardo Montalbán
promoting "corinthian leather seats".
Yeah, but you got to remember, it's a flying machine and don't they have lights on the wing tips? Red on the right and green on the left? And since this advanced aircraft doesn't have wings it stands to reason that the only logical place would be on the fenders?Funny ... might have had something to do with Flubber. The program was pretty advanced -- they have turn signals not seen until the '60s on civilian models.
If I'd flicked back and forth between them while dealing with the flu, I'd have gotten them all mixed up, and would have expected Captain Renault to be the coach of one team, and Major Strasser of the other -- and Rick as the winning quarterback!
Haha!
Major Strasser must've been coaching the Falcons!
I'm sick with cold/allergy and
missed "Casablanca".
So I watched it on a download
I made years ago,
Forgot that it was a colorized
version compliments of Ted
Turner.
And here I thought things couldn't
get any worse!
I first saw Body Heat, that 1981 counterpart to Double Indemnity, in B & W. It works even better that way.Hope you are feeling better.
I can't imagine how anyone ever thought colorizing "Casablanca" or any movie for that matter was a good idea. These movies made great use of their black and whiteness, just as "Gone With the Wind" did with color and "The Wizard of Oz" did by switching back and forth. The director knew he was shooting in black and white and designed the shots, lighting, cuts, etc. - as well as the editing - with that in mind. It's crazy to think you could just slap color on that and make it better.
The irony is, IMHO, it does less artistic harm to a movie to take away its color than to add in color to a B&W movie. I grew up watching most things on an old B&W TV and, other than the momentary shock when you see something in color that was in B&W your entire life, I can't say this or that movie was made dramatically better by color. Sure, "The Wizard of Oz's" wow moment of Dorothy coming out of the house is more impactful, but again, I was still wowed and scared by that movie when I saw it in all B&W for years as a kid.
One of these days I need to watch the entirety of The Human Stain w/ Nicole Kidman and Anthony Hopkins. The DVD I had was scratched or something, and it kept freezing up about 2/3 of the way through it. I know how it ends, but I don't know how the characters got there."Indignation"
Based on a Phillip Roth novel. While I did not read this one, I have read several Roth novels and am comfortable in saying that the day a young Phillip Roth discovered that his penis had additional functionality defined him forever.
You can even think of him as a more phallic-centric and darker Woody Allen. I know (!), how could you be more phallic-centric than Woody Allen? Hard to believe, but Roth is.
And where Allen and Roth both have the "overbearing Jewish family / guilt / responsibility hanging over some young son" thing down - Allen's has a bit of humor to it, a bit of "yea, so what, everybody's upbringing screwed them up a little." Not Roth; for him, it is a more oppressive, darker force.
In "Indignation," this all plays out in a movie that echoes and then departs from "School Ties" as both are set in the '50s at Christian schools where a Jewish boy is an outsider. But where "School Ties" focused on a boy passively denying his Jewish identity, "Indignation" amps it up with the Jewish boy - Marcus - acknowledging his Jewish birth but then publicly renouncing it and all religion as he declares himself an avid atheist.
Not surprisingly, this leaves Marcus socially alienated at the conservative school. But then he meets a Woody-Allen-like-on-the-surface protestant girl who proceeds to go to town on Roth's favorite body part, repeatedly. We soon learn, though, that this seemingly "perfect" blonde is not simply a bit kooky like Annie Hall, but is full-on, slit-the-wrists (literally) disturbed.
Again, this isn't Allen humor, it's serous human pathos that gets darker and more brutal - Marcus' mother basically uses the threat of divorce from his fragile father to break up Marcus' relationship with the girl. Also, playing on in the not-that background is a passive-aggressive dean who maybe has some good intent, but is also trying to push every emotionally disturbing button he can find on Marcus.
The climax ups the darkness again and, then, again. In the end, I was just exhausted. Maybe we grow and learn through these depressing, oppressive, emotional-disturbing windows into broken lives, dysfunctional families and human tragedy. But then, maybe, they just rake us through the coals for the author's catharsis. I don't know. Roth can tell a story and keep you engaged - if it's all worth it is a harder call for me.
I first saw Body Heat, that 1981 counterpart to Double Indemnity, in B & W. It works even better that way.