Monday, September 30, 2013
Sunday, September 29, 2013
Better Fasten Your Seat Belt
If the Tea Bagger GOP defaults on the national debt, thereby
sending the world economy into another tailspin, no one should pretend to be
surprised.
We have been permitting the press and the parties to treat
delusional and/or power-mad, whored-out cretins like Palin, Cruz and Bachmann
as acceptable political leaders for years now.
Saturday, September 28, 2013
A Romantic Comedy for an Unromantic Age
Tony Danza and Joseph Gordon-Levitt in their father-and-son wife beaters. |
By Dan Hagen
“Pillow Talk” was the romantic comedy perfectly suited to
its year, 1959, which means it’s extremely dated now. But the romantic comedy
“Don Jon,” as 2013 as a text message, is just as funny as the Doris Day vehicle
ever was, and has a bit more heart.
Instead of a smartly dressed Manhattanite on a party line,
we get a lower-class bartender on porn. The veneer of sophistication is
replaced by a veneer of crudity because, as you may have noticed, our times are
crude. But there’s humor beneath the vulgarity, and humanity beneath the humor.
Joseph Gordon-Levitt wrote, directed and starred, and every
smart trick he learned in a Hollywood childhood is up there on the screen. He
knows that one secret to a great screen joke is to startle the audience with its
truth.
He plays a self-contained young man whose self-imposed
limitations power his self-satisfied Jimmy Cagney strut. He has just eight
interests, no more — his body (muscled), his car (muscle), his buddies (beer),
his family (Italian-American), his church (Catholic), his girls (many) and his
apartment (clean, thanks to his quirky Felix Unger fervor). And, of course, his
on-line pornography (addictive).
Secretly, he prefers the perfection of porn to the girls he
beds, until someone even more perfect crosses his path and upsets his balance.
Falling fast and hard for a woman who looks like Scarlett Johannson (because
she is) and sounds like Fran Drescher, he learns that perfection comes with its
own set of demands.
Gordon-Levitt, meanwhile, knows how to make perfect use of
the elements at his disposal, which include Johannson, Glenne Headley, Tony
Danza, Julianne Moore and the satiric possibilities of ritual. He swiftly and
hilariously skewers the ritualized silliness of dance club pickups, of the way
guys yell in cars and even (play within a play) of romantic comedy films (Anne
Hathaway and Channing Tatum pitch in with cameos there). This is the best kind
of comedy, the kind that hits so close to home that the audience is sometimes
momentarily too startled to laugh.
Finally, Gordon-Levitt’s character will need to exceed his
limitations, and to do that he’ll have to heed the voice of wisdom, which comes
from an unexpected quarter.
This movie is a daybreaker (so good it breaks your day cleanly
into halves, before and after). It’s the best film I’ve seen in the last 10
months.
Friday, September 27, 2013
Shazam! It's Fred MacMurray!
Best not to piss Fred off. |
Fred MacMurray could fly,
even without the hot rod he super-souped up in Disney’s “The Absent-Minded Professor.”
The Hollywood leading man had
an odd and hidden history with the beginnings of the superhero genre. He was
used the model for Fawcett’s Captain Marvel on the cover of his initial
appearance in the first published issue of Whiz Comics in 1940, when the whole
superhero genre spawned by Superman was only a couple of years old.
By 1943, with Captain Marvel
and the other superheroes now enormously popular with both kids and U.S. troops
overseas, MacMurray effectively appeared AS Captain Marvel in a dream sequence
during the romantic comedy film “No Time For Love,” co-starring Claudette
Colbert. In 1940, Captain Marvel wanted to be Fred MacMurray. Three years later, Fred MacMurray wanted to be Captain Marvel. You chart the instant, explosive popularity of the superhero genre right there. You can see the film clip right here.
He-man Fred became a superman in this 1943 romantic comedy |
Fortune and Misfortune
Bronze statue from the first century B.C. |
He and his friends were celebrating, making sacrifices in
temples near the Forum, when he saw his name on the white boards there, and went
white himself.
In the shifting civil unrest that prevailed since the
assassination of Julius Caesar, former foes Mark Antony and Octavian (later the
emperor Augustus) had met under truce on a small river island to pool their
power.
They and Antony’s friend Lepidus had formed the Second
Triumvirate, essentially a shared five-year dictatorship. They needed to raise
money for armies to oppose the forces of Caesar’s assassins, but how?
The answer was proscription — declaring on white boards in
the Forum the names of those citizens who were to be killed, with their lands
and fortunes seized. The three of them haggled to create a list of political and personal enemies they wanted to see liquidated. Anyone who
informed on one of the proscribed persons or helped to kill him got a cut of
the loot.
The young Atilius’ only crime was having a fortune worth
stealing. His friends and slaves immediately deserted him, and he went to his
mother, who was too frightened to hide him and turned him away.
Alone, Atilius fled to the mountains. But the rich boy was
eventually forced by hunger to return to the road, where a highwayman kidnapped
and enslaved him. In chains, he managed to escape to a main road where he
identified himself to passing centurions. Unwisely, as it turned out.
They killed Atilius and probably cut off his head. After
all, why drag a whole body back to Rome for the reward when all you need is the
head?
“When you arise in the morning, think of what a precious
privilege it is to be alive — to breathe, to think, to enjoy, to love,” wrote
Marcus Aurelius, the stoic philosopher who was also a Roman emperor. “Do every act
of your life as if it were your last.”
The idea of taking nothing whatsoever for granted may seem
unduly harsh to us now, but the Romans had their reasons.
Sources: “Augustus” by
Anthony Everitt; “Meditations” by Marcus Aurelius
Wednesday, September 25, 2013
Manhood and Its "Prisoners"
Jake Gyllenhaal and Hugh Jackman in 'Prisoners' |
“Prisoners” is an absorbing mystery thriller about a town
plagued by years of child abductions, starring the always-engaging Hugh Jackman
as an authoritarian survivalist male who is out of his depth. Jake Gyllenhaal
gives a subtle performance as a watchful police detective named, for some intriguing
reason, Loki.
It's easy to lose track of the number of prisoners in the film, and some of them — like Jackman's character Keller Dover — are prisoners of ideas that finally do not serve them or their communities well.
It's easy to lose track of the number of prisoners in the film, and some of them — like Jackman's character Keller Dover — are prisoners of ideas that finally do not serve them or their communities well.
Denis Villeneuve’s film gives us things to think about as it
spins out its web of fairly excruciating suspense — among them, the limited
utility of masculine aggression. That very idea violates what is virtually a 21st
century Hollywood movie sacrament.
I was interested to realize, considering the film's ruminations on masculinity, that one of the final breathless scenes exactly parallels a situation in "True Grit." That's what Jackman has, too, and it isn't nearly enough.
I was interested to realize, considering the film's ruminations on masculinity, that one of the final breathless scenes exactly parallels a situation in "True Grit." That's what Jackman has, too, and it isn't nearly enough.
Tuesday, September 24, 2013
Joss Whedon, Agent of FUN
Yes, THAT’S what I was waiting for in ABC’s “Agent of SHIELD
” — the flying sports car from Marvel’s “Nick Fury, Agent of SHIELD” comic book
feature in the 1960s. Creator Joss Whedon always knows the right iconic touch
to include.
The "Agents of SHIELD" interrogation scene, for example,
was pure Joss Whedon gold. "Gramsy?"
And at the center of this pilot episode was a fine ambiguity
about what makes a “good guy super hero.” Isn't the man who fired him a
villain? And shouldn't he therefore be crushed?
Plus, at the finish, did I not hear the echo of a Joad-like
plea for the much-shit-upon American common man?
Yes, this series will be fine. Whedon always strikes the
right balance of humor and melodrama, familiarity and surprise.
“The Man from UNCLE” movie people had better get it right,
because I think they’ve just been beaten to the punch by a series that has crossed
their concept with “Torchwood.” Ironically, the SHIELD comic books were
inspired, of course, by “The Man from UNCLE.”
Sunday, September 22, 2013
Saturday, September 21, 2013
Friday, September 20, 2013
Point Taken
I always thought Chuck Todd was perfectly named.
"Tod" means "death," and sleazy hackwork like his means the death of professional journalism. As Charles Pierce observed, this is how the manure gets spread.
For the record, one of the primary duties of a professional
journalist is to RESEARCH and CORRECT factual misinformation, not merely to
REPEAT it.
Poor, poor Chuck. We criticized him just because he was
honest enough to admit that he is not actually a professional journalist, but a
kind of stenographer-hack, and now we’ve hurt his fee-fees.
Monday, September 16, 2013
All Those Lonely Intellectuals
Edmund White recalls sociologist and author Dick Sennett,
who lived in a converted stables off Washington Square where he entertained the
Sontags and Foucaults who regularly dropped in.
“No one paid much attention to the food or the liberal lashings
of plonk. It was all a plush background for the startling mondaine reality in
the frame: the good talk and the promise of even better talk.
“Dick knew not to quiz the great about their Subjects, their
Accomplishments, but rather to tease them about their secret Vices, their
hidden charms, their unheralded powers of Seduction. He was always grabbing the
hoary hand of a grizzled Oxford don and saying, ‘Oh, what a naughty pussycat
you are! Aren’t you? Aren’t you? Such evil, evil naughty thoughts — and Deeds!
Yes, Deeds, Mr. Pussy-Boy. Okay, everyone, ´å table, ´å table, and remember:
Paws up!’
“No one quite knew what paws
up meant, but it sounded like a cross between an eating club slogan and a
half-forgotten piece of nursery (or else Masonic) mummery.
“All those lonely intellectuals, their eyes hollowed out
from years of reading microfiches and medieval script, from gabbling to
themselves over tinned beans and Bovril in unheated Rooms, were now being
stroked and feted and fed. They were like feral cats being tickled behind the
ears for the first time. They were purring, though still looking around
anxiously for the next boot in the rear, the next nasty review by a rival in
the Times Literary Supplement. Nor
did Dick invite just the old and famous. He knew they needed young and lovely
nobodies to make a fuss over them.”
I had to look up “mondaine,” a sociological term meaning “characteristic
of fashionable society; worldly.” Indeed. I also had to research “Bovril.”
Sounds like dreadful stuff.
— Edmund White, “City Boy”
Sunday, September 15, 2013
And She Sings Like Thunderball
Here's the title theme to Thunderball you never heard. The producers replaced Shirley Bassey’s song at the last minute with the
Tom Jones Thunderball theme, so John Barry's excellent "Mister Kiss Kiss
Bang Bang" is heard only as an instrumental piece during the film.
Although not the best James Bond film, Thunderball remains my favorite. The fourth 007 adventure was a smooth blend of all the elements
that made Bond immensely popular in the 1960s, plus an assured, debonair performance by Sean Connery, a big and thrilling underwater battle scene and a
nuclear blackmail plot that was then fresh and original (such a good idea for a
plot, as a matter of fact, that it has since become a movie cliché).
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