serai: A kiss between Casey Connor and Zeke Tyler (Default)
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So I watched the movie "Tolkien" last night, and it brought out in full relief what I find so frustrating about most biopics, and that's how unnecessary so many of them are. Take this one, for example. There really isn't anything extraordinary or unusual about his life. He was an orphan, he fell in love, his guardian said "you must wait til you're an adult". Then he went to war and survived (his friends did not). Then he came home and became a professor, got married, had some kids. Nothing about any of that deserves a whole movie. The only thing that makes it interesting is the fact that decades later Tolkien published some amazing stories that appear to have been influenced by his personal history. But other than a couple of anecdotes he related, there's no way to know exactly what influenced him in what way, or whether its influence was direct, or anything else. Tolkien himself said he detested allegory and tried to avoid it whenever he caught a whiff of it, so claiming that the flamethrowers became dragons, or that his personal batman was the reason he wrote Sam Gamgee, is spurious.

And what's really maddening on that score is the things we DO know were direct influences - like his future wife dancing for him on a picnic, which gave birth to an enormous part of his legendarium in that instant - are treated like little throwaway moments, while the film is busy extrapolating HUGE MEANING out of stuff that's iffy at best and a flat out fabrication at worst. AND the film is shy about naming names or doing any direct attribution, so unless you already know his story, you're left wondering what's so important about, say, the steams and smokes rising above the battlefield that the director feels he has to keep hammering home how ugly it all is. It's just so fucking hamhanded and clueless and CLUMSY, I couldn't figure out why anyone would have thought this film was a good idea.

ARGH



And how are all of you?
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More LOL

Sunday, January 28th, 2018 06:45 pm
serai: A kiss between Casey Connor and Zeke Tyler (Default)
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Was over at Pagiba just now reading some capsule reviews of Netflix shows. (I don't get the streaming service, but it's interesting to hear what's on.) In one blurb about I Don't Belong In This World Anymore, this:


... while Elijah Wood continues a streak of oddball indie roles designed to ensure that no one ever finds him sexually appealing again.


HA. I love it. (I didn't like that film. To be honest, I don't like most of the movies Elijah is doing these days. I'm deeply tired of "quirky" films, myself.)


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serai: A kiss between Casey Connor and Zeke Tyler (BoringFinancialCrap)
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Have any of you seen The Big Short?

It's a great film, and really deserves to win the Oscar this year. An entertaining and engaging look at the roots of the 2008 economic meltdown, it manages to present the whole awful morass in a way that is comprehensive and in-depth, and at the same time light on its feet and actually funny. The cast is magnificent (the film is worth watching for Steve Carell alone), and the script is charming and adroit.

One of the best things about it is the way it explains the whole confusing, insane, tangled mess. Whenever the plot starts getting into areas where an average person would get completely lost in econo-tech jargon (and who wouldn't, given that even the damn people who precipitated this horror didn't understand half of what they were doing), the film jumps through the fourth wall and brings in someone completely unrelated to the story to explain things. But it's never an economist or pundit. It's someone like Gordon Ramsay in his kitchen, who looks at you and says, "Okay, I'm going to explain derivatives now. Imagine the economy is like a pizza..." He then goes on in detail, comparing the problem to something like slicing up a pizza**, and then "Now back to the story!" There are others in the film like that, well-known people taking the problems apart and explaining them in completely non-economic terms so that you can continue the story now knowing what the fuck they're talking about in this thing.

It's a stroke of genius. Not only does it make sure your feet are squarely on the ground through the whole movie - or at least as much as possible, since economists still have a hard time explaining just what went down - but it also sustains the intended comedic tone, since the actual events are just so fucking maddening and ultimately depressing if you think about it too much. But this device, along with the magnificently off-kilter performances, keep the film dancing nimbly along, charming you while it's informing you. (Christian Bale as the definitely on-the-spectrum economic analyst who dreams up the idea that tanked our WHOLE FUCKING WORLD starts thing off beautifully, and it only gets better from there.)

Seriously, see this film. I know the 2008 meltdown is not something one would expect to be made into an entertaining romp, but you'll be glad you did. Not only will you get to see great actors in a mind-bending puzzle of a film, but you'll finally get close to understanding just

WHAT. THE FUCK. HAPPENED.

You'll be glad you did. Trust me.


** I can't remember if it was actually a pizza he talked about, as I saw the film about a month ago, but that's the general idea.

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serai: A kiss between Casey Connor and Zeke Tyler (Whoa)
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Another story is gathering in my head. It's another one-off, separate from the main series I've been writing. It's intense. (SHUT. UP.) So much so that my main problem is working up the courage to start writing it. I think it's gonna hurt, frankly.

But that's not what I'm here to talk about. I'd like to present to you a book I've had for many years, one that is little known, but revolutionary in its impact. It's a small book, and it's fundamentally a work of translation. It's called Prayers of the Cosmos, and it's by Neil Douglas-Klotz, who writes about religion and psychology and is also a poet and artist.

The book is very simple. It takes the two best known Christian prayer-passages (the Lord's Prayer and the Beatitudes), gives you the original Aramaic (with the King James version on the facing page), then a phonetic breakdown. After that, the book takes each line separately and gives you first the Aramaic, then the English, then a list of possible translations (more on that below), and then a little essay on that line and its components, the syllables and sounds in the words and their meanings. Then as a nice addition, there is an exercise in breathing and tuning you can do to use the line as a meditation point or mantra.

I tell you, the book is a revelation. I had no idea of the scope of the divide separating us from the original words of this man. It's unbelievable. Here's just one example:

-------------

1. Our Birth in Unity )

Maniac

Monday, October 12th, 2015 02:54 pm
serai: A kiss between Casey Connor and Zeke Tyler (ScreamRunning)
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Just watched this film last night. WOW.

Let's just stipulate the obvious: SPOILERS AHEAD )

Town & Country

Sunday, August 30th, 2015 06:48 pm
serai: A kiss between Casey Connor and Zeke Tyler (ScreamRunning)
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Okay. So, in my quest to see everything Josh has done, I just got finished watching Town & Country.

Oh. My. God.

Christ in a sidecar. With a helmet and goggles. Holy shit, I'm impressed. Seriously. I didn't think a movie could suck like that. Just...OH.

Sidebar here: Why does anyone make movies with Warren Beatty? Honestly, I don't understand this. When was the last time you heard a movie he made didn't suck? The guy's been riding on his rep from fourty years ago for decades now, and people just keep falling for it. I don't know, maybe he's really fun to work with? But I've sure never heard that about him; in fact, just the opposite - he's supposed to be utterly maddening.

Anyway, this one stayed absolutely true to form. Oh my god, just deeply painful almost from the first moment. (Almost. The first couple of minutes, I was thinking, "Hm, this isn't so bad. A little stilted, but it is one of those Rich White People comedies, so....NOPE. OH MY FUCKING GOD, IT SUCKS." It really was that abrupt.) Holy shit, it's bad.

And totally not worth it if you're looking to see Josh's part. It's exactly the part you'd think he got - Warren Beatty and Diane Keaton's son - and it's miniscule. There are only two reasons to dig out this turkey for Josh: one is the sight of him in a tux (UNF), and the other is about ten seconds of Wild Sex Noises coming from behind a closed door. (Josh's Wild Sex Noises are really quite fetching, as I'm sure you'll all agree.) Those two things together, while not making the film at all good in any way, did make me stop regretting the time I wasted. And it really wasn't that much time. Since I figured Josh was going to be in the scenes that take place at the family home (I was right, for the most part), it was easy enough to just skip all the inane crap and badly written farce dialogue. Even so, most of it is just forgettable.

Verdict: Josh is very cute, but completely wasted, and not in a good way. Awful, awful movie that tanked several actors' careers for a while. If you're really desperate, don't let me stop you, but I'd recommend another viewing of August, myself.
serai: A kiss between Casey Connor and Zeke Tyler (JoshNeck)
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Watched August last night. Uh...yeah. Seems Josh has been wilding on camera for a while now. Mm, mm, mm. Yummy, yummy man.

I'm getting a little jumpy at the way sex scenes are just THROWN at you these days, though. There doesn't seem to be a lot of buildup anymore. Two characters are having a conversation and then BAM, they're rutting like crazed animals. It's a bit...abrupt. I'm not exactly complaining - the slam of erotic energy I got when the film cut from a sexy look to full-on FUCKING!!! was certainly enjoyable. I'm just glad nobody else was in the room, because I made a pretty bizarre sound when that happened, LOL.

The film itself was surprisingly good. It's one of those Some Guy indie films, like Thumbsucker. Some Guy (or Some Gal) films don't really have plots so much as they have spans. Here's a guy, here's where he works, here are the people he knows. He goes places, he talks to people, things happen, and then it's over, but you haven't necessarily gone any great distance. They don't have plotting in the classic film sense, and they depend on the characters' ability to engage the audience, so the actors are really important.

This one is about a Zuckerberg type who runs a start-up, and right from the get-go I was rooting for him to get a massive bitchslap. Wow, he is a shit. And Josh played it beautifully, all smug manipulation and manic narcissism, spouting off that terminally annoying techie nonsense as if it actually meant something. Gods, the self-stroking horseshit was astounding. I wonder how hard Josh had to work to learn those lines, because there is absolutely NOTHING to hang your understanding on unless you actually do that kind of work. He might as well have been speaking in numbers: "Nine fifty seven eight hundred thousand? ZERO FOURTY NINE AZIMUTH MILLION SQUARE ROOT SKEWEY, ASSHOLE!!!" It really did sound like that - just mouthfuls of hot air, but he rattled it off like every word had import. That's something I really admire in good actors - their ability to inject real meaning into things they might not understand at all. I guess those "recite the alphabet as if you were breaking up with your girlfriend" theater games really do pay off.


SPOILERS )

Yeah, this is one I'd definitely recommend if you're looking for things he's been in. It's a tour-de-force, too - he's in every single scene. The movie is completely about him, and yet it never really enters him. I mean, it's not terribly hard to figure this guy out, but he never gets explained. Know what I mean? I don't know if the filmmakers actually want to you to sympathize with him or not; it's really hard to say. But I enjoyed it, and I think you will, too.

P.S. The character's name is Tom Sterling. I find that incredibly funny, myself. It's a name seemingly crafted to put across every bit of his egocentrism and superficial charm.
serai: A kiss between Casey Connor and Zeke Tyler (DudeWhatever)
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I know there are a least a couple of Harry Potter fans on my list, so this is for you:




Bum Review - Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince

Reviewed by Chester A. Bum



Ever seen a Bum Review?

They're one of those internet phenomena, the sort of thing that has flourished in the egalitarian atmosphere of the web. Chester A. Bum is a character created by That Guy With The Glasses, who's responsible for the brilliant and infamous Five-Second Movies (which had a brief life on YouTube before the studios decided to get pissy about it). In the Bum Reviews, Chester gives us his well-considered, extremely enthusiastic, and occasionally sane opinions on current films. Of course, since he is a bum, he has a tendency to go off on wild tangents, but in spite of this (or often because of it) his observations are both smart and cutting.

Hope you enjoy Mr. Bum and his amazing review.
serai: A kiss between Casey Connor and Zeke Tyler (SigourneyBoobies)
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Just came from seeing Star Trek.

YAY! How cool is this movie? WAY COOL! I had a great time, far more than I expected. It's definitely a yummy way to start the summer.


However... (FYI) )


It's a wonderful film, no doubt about it. (40-year ST fan talking here.) The casting is great. Example: At first I thought Zach Quinto resembled the original Spock, but after a while I realized he didn't - but he has that...look. And that's all he needs. (And before you ask, YES, Karl Urban rocks as McCoy!) The ship is hot, the uniforms are classic (yay!), and the story is nimble and well-thought out. Setting aside the issue of the Enterprise - the finest vessel ever commissioned by Starfleet - apparently having crappy sensors and no brig, it's just as cool and fun and fast and cheerful as I'd hoped.

And that's what I always loved about Star Trek, and so many other fans do. It's cheerful. It looks at the future with optimism and hope and confidence in humanity's ability to overcome problems. (In that manner, it's perfect for the new political landscape in America. This was the best time Abrams could have chosen to re-tool and -launch the Enterprise.) And best of all, in the Star Trek universe, the most difficult and challenging of those problems lie not in big technical geekery (of which this film has plenty *hugs Simon Pegg*) but in the hearts and minds of the people out there, exploring the galaxy. That they always rose to the challenge, or were willing to try, made us love them all.


ETA: See below for some more observations. :)


ETA Junior: Ahaha. Apparently some people have trouble finding their balls. Clearly you don't know me, so allow me to enlighten you: Coming here to drop pissy anon comments and then run away will NOT work. I will just delete them (as I already have). If you want to play in this sandbox, you'll have to wear your name tag.

Capice?

*sigh*

Saturday, March 7th, 2009 05:26 pm
serai: A kiss between Casey Connor and Zeke Tyler (Elektra)
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Just saw Watchmen at the neighborhood moviehouse. Been waiting 24 years for a movie of this book. My judgment?

Meh.

That's actually kind of depressing. I think I'd rather have hated it than just shrugged. But by twenty minutes in, I knew it wasn't going to get me. It was meeting Ozymandias that did it - WOW, was that guy wrong for the part. And Christ, I couldn't understand half of what he said.

It is a stylistic triumph...in some ways. The design work has a faux-future-romance look to it, like when Disney revamped Tomorrowland to look like it was desingned by Jules Verne. You're looking at America in the 80's, if history had taken certain turns about fifty years before. It's the same as now, but not the same; its ideas aren't quite the same. The film's design captures that parallel-veering-away aesthetic well.

But in other ways, the style very annoying. McG is not what I'd call a great director; he's far too egotistical to realize when his fillips just get in the way. That stop-and-start thing, now. I'm sorry, but that's commercial bullshit. This is a heavily anticipated, major motion picture, not a fucking Apple ad. There's other crap like that as well, including the horrifying use of songs on the soundtrack. Heavy-handed would not be nearly adequate to describe it, but here's an example: there's a fuck scene accompanied by Leonard Cohen's Hallelujah. 'Nuff said, I hope.

The whole thing's like that. Really great stuff coupled with just plain lame. Not to mention the necessity of cutting so much of the background and underground of the book, which just leaves the topmost layer, the superhero plot, and that was always the framework, not the whole thing. A lot's been lost, and that I don't blame McG for; a film of Watchmen could never contain the whole thing. (That's a mistake that a lot of people make about Alan Moore's work. They think that his use of framing as a device similar to camera work makes his work cinematic, but it doesn't. Just because Watchmen looks like a movie doesn't mean it could ever really be one, or at least a good one.)

Haley Joel Osment was one of the first actors offered the role of Harry Potter. He refused, saying "Some books should stay books." Whether you agree with him about Potter, he is damn right in a general sense. Some things translate, others don't. I suppose it could have been far worse.

And that's kind of depressing.
serai: A kiss between Casey Connor and Zeke Tyler (KickItUp)
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By the way, I went to see Vantage Point earlier this week. Excellent film! Really well scripted, the editing was MARVELOUS. Tight and tense as hell - I was literally reduced to biting down on my jacket sleeve, I was so wound up, thinking oh shitshitshitshit oh shitSHIT. SO much fun.

The story is presented in a Rashomon style, from the viewpoint of several different characters. After we see the central event - the shooting of an American president while visiting Salamanca, Spain for a political summit - the film rewinds back to the beginning and we see the thing again, from another viewpoint. Then again, from another, and again, from another, and with each rewind, we learn more about the event, the people involved and exactly what is happening. Which, of course, turns out not to be what we think is happening at all. It's very deftly handled, culminating in a great chase sequence.


Now, here's the funny thing about this movie. It's being called a "political thriller", but it actually isn't. After it was over, I was thinking about it on the way home, and I started wondering just what was the point to the thing. Because really, there isn't one, at least not the kind that the advertising and reporting is claiming. Yes, it's about a political figure, but the film doesn't actually have a thing to do with politics. That's just the frame that it's hung in. It's really an old-fashioned chase movie, a shoot-'em-up thriller. No message, really. It's just a rip-roaring good time, with damned fine actors having an awful lot of fun. (William Hurt, Dennis Quaid, Forrest Whitaker, Sigourney Weaver, Matthew Fox, James LeGros - it's an awesome cast.)

For example, one of the reasons I wanted to see it was the setting; there are almost no mainstream films made set in Spain. But I realized eventually that the film could have been set anywhere; the fact that it's Spain is irrelevant. It could just as easily have been London, or Paris, or Moscow, or Reykjavik, or any one of a hundred other places around the world. It could also have been about any world leader, not necessarily an American. It doesn't matter, because the politics is not finally the point. The setting and characters are just an excuse to play with the idea of points of view, hidden motivations, untangling threads, and GREAT fucking acting. (And the casting is divine - ahahahaHAHA, Matthew Fox! That was inspired.)

Keeping that firmly in mind, I definitely recommend this film. Not every movie has to be about something, after all. Sometimes movies can just be tense, intense fun. Not everyone's cup of tea maybe, but as another president who took a bullet once said,

For those that like that sort of thing, I think it is just the sort of thing that they would like.

Day Zero

Wednesday, December 19th, 2007 03:42 pm
serai: A kiss between Casey Connor and Zeke Tyler (DudeWhatever)
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OK, I'm gonna talk about Day Zero now. Not a full review, just a gathering of thoughts.

MASSIVE SPOILERS. DON'T WHINE LATER )


Okay, so it is a review. Once I start I can't stop; so sue me. ;)
serai: A kiss between Casey Connor and Zeke Tyler (YouKnowYouWantIt)
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I just found out that this film has finally come out on DVD. And I knew I had to tell all of you about it.

This is one of my top five films. A one-hour piece based on a short story by the great Kurt Vonnegut, it is a small, quiet tale about two painfully shy people, and the transformative powers of theater. Christopher Walken plays a small-town hardware store clerk so introverted that he cannot actually look other people in the eye; as one reviewer says, "Few actors invoking the title of their film as a line of dialogue have had quite the shattering effect that Christopher Walken does." But his difficulty is matched by that of Susan Sarandon's character, a telephone company worker who has never had a fixed home, as she follows her job assignments around the country. It's only when they take to the stage in the town's community theater production of "A Streetcar Named Desire" that either of them finds a true voice, and the magic that ensues. (Walken's character is a regular member of the troupe, and in that ultimate irony of the actor, who spends his life speaking heart's truth but almost never in his own words, he is impassioned and brilliant only when he is someone else.)

Who Am I This Time? was made in 1982, before either Walken or Sarandon were well-known, and the energetic youth and freshness of their delivery, and the palpable chemistry between them contribute to the sheer delight of this lovely little film. For many years, it's been available only in one limited video edition, but joy! It is now on DVD. Unfortunately it's a catalog release, meaning that the disc contains no extras, only the film itself. But that is more than worth the price.

The last ten years have seen many out-of-the-way treasures given new life, cleaned up and decked out, and it's such a treat to see things like this brought up from the vaults. If you enjoy wry, gentle stories about real people and the magic that sometimes happens in real life, I'm sure you will love this film.

Alatriste

Saturday, March 17th, 2007 11:28 pm
serai: A kiss between Casey Connor and Zeke Tyler (OrcsOnAPlain)
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Tonight I went with my dad to the American Cinematheque presentation of Alatriste, Viggo Mortensen's newest film. Review follows... )

The Number 23

Monday, February 26th, 2007 06:13 pm
serai: A kiss between Casey Connor and Zeke Tyler (Whoa)
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A very intriguing, strange film. Shot by Matthew Labatique, the genius who gave Everything Is Illuminated its dreamy, surrealistic tone, the film is awash in lighting work so lyrical that it feels like a narrative voice of its own. The story is measured and comes at you in an oblique, almost diffident way. Is the dog important? Why? Who left the book there? Is 23 really a haunted number? What the hell is going on here? Is anything going on here, or is the main character as crazy as the author of the book? Are we as crazy as he is?

That's an interesting point right there. I remember when I was reading about Othello, and all the intense reactions that play has caused over the centuries, and realizing that the main reason people react so very viscerally to it is not the story itself (which is quite tragic enough), but rather the fact that, by talking directly to the audience, Iago is not only drawing us into his machinations, but also implicating us in his crimes, since we know what he'll do and yet do nothing to stop him. Of course, the fact that we can't stop him is what frustrates the audience and makes the situation so intolerable. We become accomplices to a horrifying deception, a cold-blooded murderous calculation that we are forced to watch play out, and that can truly enrage people. (One actor playing Iago in a road company in the Old West during the 1800's actually got shot to death by an audience member!)

I think this film achieves something similar (though by dint of its very different tone, not quite so involving). It seeks to draw the audience into the weird numerological madness by sidelong steps, and I think it succeeds in that. The way in is unobtrusive and unsettling - I didn't know what to think about all this at first, but a little at a time I started to wonder if the number really was "coming after" people.

And what a great idea - that a number can choose and deliberately attack a victim. I've never come across that concept before; it's original in my experience. (Though I'm not well versed in numerology or in numerical conspiracy theories.) It first crops up in the credit sequence, which is quite masterful, and sets the confused, low-grade-fever, paranoid tone right from the outset. From the first moment, 23 is a character in the story, not just an abstract concept. I love this kind of metaphysical gamesmanship in a film. So many filmmakers treat the medium as a straightforward record of events in a story, that it's refreshing to see the medium played with in an impressionistic style - using the very stuff of light and ideas to change the structure of the world, to evoke the inside of someone's head as it feels from the inside.

And yo. You might think I'm nuts, but Jim Carrey is a serious HOTTIE. Damn, but that man is fuckable. Who knew that was lurking under Ace Ventura's rubber grin? I'd actually noticed his yumminess a while back, but it really comes to the fore in this film. Part of it is his bone structure, his gorgeous smile, and that hot fucking bod of his. (He doffs his shirt in a few scenes, and he is cut. :p~~~ )

But a lot of it, for me anyway, is his eyes. I've always thought his eyes were beautiful, but the clincher is the pain that's in them. You can see his woundedness even when he's doing comedy - this is not a guy with a happy history. (Spike says he has "hang-dog eyes".) That serves him very well in dramatic roles, as was made clear in Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (wherein he broke my heart). As much as I appreciate the artistry and overwhelming difficulty of comedy - after all, no other genre of performance depends on forcing a physical reaction out of the audience for its success - I think he is far more effective in dramatic roles, and I really hope he follows that path in the future.

So if you like odd, mysterious films that require some pondering - I really feel I must see this one again - you could do a lot worse than give this one a try.
serai: A kiss between Casey Connor and Zeke Tyler (NoSirIDontLikeIt)
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A few days ago, Spike and I attended a free screening of the Neil LaBute remake of...


The Wicker Man.


Usually, I'd write up a review, but the one on the other side of that link did the job wonderfully. (If you're interested, you can read my thoughts, those that weren't covered by the review itself, near the bottom of the comments.)

How bad could it be? Let me put it this way. Who could they have cast in the lead role to practically guarantee that it would suck?

If you've been reading my LJ for any length of time, you know the answer to that one. Yes, indeed, it's none other than...


...wait for it...


...Nicolas Cage.


And damn, does the film ever live down to that detail.


It's too painful. I can't talk about it. Just read the review.


ETA: Okay, for those of you who don't want to click links, here's the review's text:




Dude, this is the worst Lilith Fair ever!

The Wicker Man / Jeremy C. Fox

Neil LaBute’s remake of The Wicker Man is a stupid, stupid movie. When an auteur as widely admired as LaBute makes a movie as clumsy and hackneyed as this, a critic may be persuaded to call it a genre deconstruction or a parody — it’s the critic’s Get out of Jail Free card for a director who has badly misstepped — but I’m going to go out on a limb and call the film what it is: genuinely idiotic. And it’s not just that it’s a terrible movie — that would be a big improvement. If a horror movie isn’t going to be great, the next best thing is for it to be terrible; at least then it can be cheesy fun. No, LaBute’s Wicker Man goes beyond mere badness into clumsy abuse of the most exhausted genre gimmicks (it’s got hideous twins speaking in unison, a dilapidated old barn where rotten boards suddenly collapse beneath our hero’s feet — at one point, he even wakes from a nightmare to find himself in — another nightmare!) and a creepy misogyny that should keep film-studies majors busy theorizing for decades.

Since his debut in 1997 with In the Company of Men, LaBute’s films have often centered around conflicts between men and women, reaching a nadir with 2003’s The Shape of Things, in which Rachel Weisz gives pudgy Paul Rudd an extreme makeover as a (spoiler!) heartless psychological experiment. LaBute got a pass from critics for the misogyny of Company, as most saw him as divorcing himself from the characters’ attitudes, revealing their sickening cruelty without becoming party to it. Maintaining that belief became more difficult after seeing Weisz’s sociopathic manipulatrix in Shape, and audiences might have assumed that by then LaBute had taken the whole woman-as-controlling-bitch thing as far as he could go. But they hadn’t counted on him taking on a horror movie.

That’s if The Wicker Man can properly be called a horror movie. No one’s quite sure what to make of the 1973 original, as it cheerily defies any generic categorization. There are a few frightening elements, to be sure, but there’s also a symbolic battle between Christianity and paganism, enough wacked-out musical numbers to make it feel like the sequel to Hair, and sufficient naked gamboling to qualify it as a very peculiar skin flick. (It’s notable for being the rare horror movie that features far more sex than violence — though, as seen through the eyes of the uptight, virginal protagonist, Sergeant Howie [a pre-“Equalizer” Edward Woodward], the free love on display might as well be a felony. Had he not been [spoiler!] burned alive in the last reel, Howie might have gone on to a fulfilling career on the MPAA’s ratings board.) All we know for certain is that it is a very 1970s blend of post-hippie spirituality and sexuality that contemporary audiences either applaud as a warped masterpiece, mock as high camp, or simply don’t get at all. What it has going for it is its idiosyncratic originality and unpredictability — qualities that LaBute casts aside in favor of the most exhausted banalities of the genre.

The plot of the remake develops along the same basic lines as that of the original, but what a change 30-odd years and a new, monomaniacal writer/director can make. Nicolas Cage — who’s aging into a meatier version of Ric Ocasek, only with overstarched hair desperately trying to hide his male-pattern baldness and such heavy makeup he must have hired Amanda Lepore’s cosmetologist — assays the lead role, Edward Malus (the first name is an homage to Woodward; the surname is the Latin word for evil — which makes no sense, as the character is an innocent drawn to preventing the evil acts of others*). When we first meet him, Ed is a California motorcycle cop who witnesses — and fails to prevent — the sudden deaths of an attractive young mother and her pigtailed daughter when their Pontiac Flammo station wagon instantly ignites after being hit by a runaway 18-wheeler. Haunted by their deaths, Ed’s further thrown into emotional turmoil when he gets a letter from an old girlfriend named Willow Woodward (Homage Part Deux — oh, and she’s played by Kate Beahan, who looks like Fiona Apple after massive collagen injections, if anyone cares). Her daughter, whose age is curiously the same as the number of years since Ed last saw Willow, has gone missing, and Willow can turn to no one else for help. Strangely, there’s no mention of the father. Yes, that’s right, we can see exactly where this is headed a mile off (the fifth line in my eight pages of screening notes is [spoiler!] “he’s obviously supposed to be the father”), yet Ed doesn’t catch on until 45 minutes into the movie, when Willow spells it out in bold and all-caps, with diagrams of conception from an old sex-ed book and a sonogram of a fetus with a pointy nose, hound-dog eyes, and one wicked widow’s peak. Yes, Ed is a grade-A ignoramus.

It’s not just that Ed’s stupid, though, it’s that LaBute seems to assume that his audience is as well. I’m really friggin’ tired of the movie cliche of the haunted-cop-who-must-redeem-himself-for-the-death-he-failed-to-prevent, but at least said cop usually doesn’t also have to save his own child to balance the scales. This sort of double-motivation is a lily-gilding that is entirely unnecessary psychologically — what person wouldn’t save an innocent little girl from a horrible fate, given the opportunity? do we really need a lot of rationalization? — but also wastes screen time and makes the viewer feel as though he’s being treated like a five-year-old.

Annnnyway … unable to resist a damsel in distress, Ed chivalrously flies off to Willow’s home on Summersisle, a small island in Puget Sound, and begins flashing around his out-of-state police badge and conducting one seriously lameass investigation. The island and all its businesses and agriculture are run by women — all of whom wear horrible Laura Ashley dresses and speak like Amish who studied diction (and acting) by correspondence course — and the men — what few we see — are all curiously mute. Being an ignoramus, Ed doesn’t notice. Instead, he conducts his investigation, seeking to intimidate the locals with his (jurisdictionally useless) badge and getting frustrated with their vague responses and obvious mind games. This goes on for a while, as LaBute restages various scenes from the original, neglecting to include all the fun stuff, like the crazy-naked-horny dance that Britt Ekland (the original Willow) and her bootylicious body double did in the upstairs room at the pub. Instead of sexy fun (which LaBute — a Mormon convert who eventually left the LDS church but maintained its prudish sexual morality — is constitutionally incapable of providing anyway) we get a lot of cheap jump-scare effects; tiresome, portentous New-Agey speechifying; and Ellen Burstyn pooting around as Lady Summersisle herself, the queen bee of the island, the Sarah McLachlan of this never-ending Lilith Fair — if you will — who occasionally wears crazy Braveheart face paint, but only when it’s situationally appropriate, mind you.

In its sexual politics, LaBute’s Wicker Man is less like the original film than one of those ridiculous 1950s sci-fi movies about astronauts landing on a planet ruled by women. But the women here, given a position of power, are far more oppressive than the menfolk ever were, cutting out the men’s tongues and subjugating them into the most dehumanizing servitude. In LaBute’s conception, man (of whom Nic Cage is his questionable emblem) is the bringer of rational order, challenging a gynocentric world of crunchy-granola Earth-Mother worship. LaBute’s so scared of the “sacred feminine” that he could be the villain in a Dan Brown novel. His dismal view of women turns conventional film morality on its head — in traditional action movies, particularly westerns, the hero was the man who would never hit a woman. In this movie, Ed becomes heroic when he does hit women. When he pulls a gun on an unarmed woman so as to steal her bicycle, the audience cheers, but when he punches a dykey bitch in the face, they really go hog-wild.

If this movie were about Jews forcing Gentiles to slave away in their bank vaults while they took over the world, no studio in Hollywood would have touched it. If it were about African-Americans who shanghaied white folks into working in their watermelon patches, the NAACP would be up in arms. If it were about gay men recruiting straights to wash the jizz off their bathhouse walls, Carson Kressley’s stormtroopers would force the film’s producers to wear plaid with paisley. So why did an international consortium of production companies (at least seven are featured in the opening titles) scrabble together $40 million for LaBute’s misogynistic vision? Why is it still OK in Hollywood to treat women as the malevolent Other when pretty much every other special-interest group has found a way to prevent being so thoroughly demonized? LaBute’s film certainly offers no insights into relations between men and women, and it’s only scary if you were frightened by a vagina as a child. LaBute has made a loathsome and vile little potboiler, but the thing is, regardless of how offensive the film’s subtext may be, it’s hard to imagine even the most ardent feminist really getting worked up over it. It’s a horror movie without a single real scare, a thriller absent any genuine thrills; the only way in which it might be successful is as a sedative (the friend I dragged to the screening slept through half of it), so who really cares — or will stay awake long enough to notice — if it’s hateful?




And here are my comments:

THANK YOU.

This was not only the worst remake I've ever seen, it's one of the worst FILMS I can remember. It was obvious practically from the first five minutes that LaBute just did not get the point of the original Wicker Man AT ALL. It's not "Paganism is bad", but rather "Arrogance is dangerous". By removing the fact that the cop is a tight-assed fundamentalist Christian (and thanks for cluing me in to the reason for that stupid change), the script completely upended the whole plot, since that's the reason not only why the inhabitants of Summerisle (and why the extra "s"??) lured the cop there, but also why he fell for the whole thing. He was so busy getting offended by the paganism and so abysmally ignorant of other religious realities that he never saw the Wicker Man coming.

But nooooo. LaBute had to go the tackiest route possible, grabbing his balls in utter hysteria at the very idea that women might have something to say when it comes to religion. And just what is up with that change anyway? Why did he feel it necessary to make this what used to be called Dianic paganism? It's not like the kind of religion seen in the original doesn't exist anymore - I know plenty of American pagans. The superfluousness of the whole concept speaks volumes of LaBute's intense problems with women.

Take for instance the fact that the island he presents is so...grim. Nobody seems to have any fun, ever. In the original, you had a population of happy, hard-working, lusty people, tilling the earth and each other, content in their lives. In this version, the place is utterly joyless. No music, no dancing, no smiling, no laughter. Just frowsy, unwashed hags (old and young) ruled over by a horrid cliche of a wicked stepmother. Dreadful.

And the whole thing about "we came here hundreds of years ago to worship the Goddess". OH BITCH PLEASE. No one makes those kinds of claims anymore. That whole "tradition" thing went out the window years ago. Any pagan worth his/her salt knows that for the self-serving bullshit it is. If LaBute was going to make a film about a particular religion, I'd have expected him to do at least a bit of research first. Besides which, the kind of (un-)community presented here is completely unviable - there's no way it could survive fifty years, let alone five hundred.

I've been a happy worshipper of the Goddess for thirty years now. The original Summerisle is a place I've always longed to visit. But you couldn't possibly pay me enough money to step foot on LaBute's Island of the Fanged Vagina Monsters. (And yes, I am a woman myself.) It's beyond ridiculous - as the reviewer states here, it's insulting and pathetic, telling far more about LaBute and his genital panic than even he probably realizes.

Feh.


One more comment, in case anyone here didn't know:

The worst thing about this whole stupid film is that Robin Hardy (the director of the original Wicker Man) has been trying to get his update made for years now. Originally titled Riding the Laddie, now Cowboys for Christ, it's about a young fundie couple who come to Summerisle to convert the natives, and run afoul of the Wicker Man. It was set to star Christopher Lee in a reprise of his original role, and Sean Astin was going to play the young Bible-thumping dude. (Don't know who they were eying for the woman in the pair.) It sounded like a really interesting update.

But this utter piece of shite has probably trashed any chance of a really good take ever getting made. So that's another thing that TWM fans have to growl at LaBute about.





*sigh* Oh well. I still hold vain hopes of seeing Sean A. get shoved into that braided inferno someday. (Only because he'd be so damn good in the role, mind you.)
serai: A kiss between Casey Connor and Zeke Tyler (Let'sShootThisFucker)
.

If any of you have considered going to see Miami Vice,


Don't. Just don't.


Trust me. )
serai: A kiss between Casey Connor and Zeke Tyler (FriendFromAnotherStar)
That was soooo BEAUTIFUL... )


Can you read my mind?
Do you know what is is that you do to me?
I don't know who you are
Just a friend from another star

Here I am like a kid out of school
Holding hands with a god
I'm a fool

Will you look at me
Quivering
Like a little girl
Shivering
You can see right through me

Can you read my mind?
Can you picture the things I'm thinking of?
Wondering why you are
All the wonderful things you are

You can fly!
You belong in the sky!
You and I
Could belong to each other

If you need a friend
I'm the one to fly to
If you need to be loved
Here I am

Read my mind
serai: A kiss between Casey Connor and Zeke Tyler (AElbereth)
.
Clearly it should have been a movie from the get-go. The writing in the book is excrutiatingly bad, so clumsy it's embarrassing. I understand that Dan Brown was trying to get the information out to a new audience in the form most likely to be popular, but couldn't he have taken a few writing classes first?

It made an ok potboiler movie, but there were a number of things that I'm sorry didn't make it in. There was almost no discussion of what the ritual Sophie witnessed actually was, so the audience is left with a "devil worship" impression, even though that's exactly what it wasn't. As a pagan, that really irritated me. But at least there was some talk of the Goddess, which is awfully nice after such a long dry spell. It's been years since I saw a movie or TV show that even mentioned the Goddess, let alone put her at the center of the plot! And I wish more of that could have made it into the movie. But this book suffers from the same problem as Stranger in a Strange Land, in that the plot is just a web to hang all the conversations on, and those are really what the book is about. Which, of course, is a damn hard thing to deal with in adapting it to a film.

I was also rather annoyed that Langdon was turned into a skeptic, which he most definitely was not in the book. He was just as into the whole Grail thing as Teabing was, albeit not as personally invested in it. But all this "It's a MYTH, damnit!" crap is obviously a sop to all the people who are yelling about TEH SAKRILEGEOMG!!!11!!! Annoying, that. If the filmmakers don't have the balls to keep the movie true to the whole damn idea of the book, they got no business making the thing, in my opinion. They knew it was controversial going in, so...FEH.

But I have to say that when I first came across that albino monk (I heard it as an audiobook), I rolled my eyes so hard they practically popped out. Talk about a friggin' cliche, and so counter-intuitive, too. Let's see, we have to send out an agent who'll get this super-secret info and kill anyone who won't play along. Who can we send that'll be able to infiltrate and go unnoticed? I know! We'll get that 6'3" crazed zealot albino who goes around in a Dominican monk's robe with cowl, and who DRIPS BLOOD WHEREVER HE GOES! Yeah, he'll be just right for the job. Jesus, my creative writing teacher in sophomore high would've taken away ten points just for that!

But all in all, not that bad a film. Tom Hanks did well with what he was given (which wasn't much), Audrey Tatou was cute and big-eyed (when will that stop being a prerequisite for actresses, I wonder?), and it goes without saying that Sir Ian was a major hoot, all frothy delight and lovely high-toned British Disdain For Frenchness. He was the best thing about the film; in fact, he was the reason I knew I had to see the film. I can't say how great it was to hear him espousing all that stuff about Mary Magdelene and the Goddess, reading from the Gnostic Gospels and all. (But what was that crap about cutting him off just before he finished the line about Jesus kissing Magdalene? Ron Howard is a bit of a coward, methinks.)

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