Monday, March 15, 2010

Favorite Books of 2009


Here's a list of my ten favorite things I read last year. It took awhile to compile this list and to remember my initial thoughts on some of these books nearly a year after reading them. I'll try to do this more often and split it into two "best of" book lists a year. But, let's see how this one goes. In no particular order...

THE HOT KID
Elmore Leonard

This was my introduction to Elmore Leonard, and I'm glad I started here. It's an awesome story set in the world of 1930s gangsters and gun molls, following a young kid, Carl Webster, who grows up wanting to become a U.S. Marshall and catch bad guys because a gangster stole his ice cream cone. Sounds like kind of a goofy premise, but it totally works. What follows is a cool story filled with twists and turns as Carl's foil, spoiled rich kid Jack Belmont, sets out to become America's roughest, toughest criminal. Naturally, the parallel narratives of the protagonist and antagonist lead to a climax that's as brutal as it is funny. This is a great read.

TISHOMINGO BLUES
Elmore Leonard

My second foray into the realm of Elmore Leonard turned out to be a different, more comedic journey than the first. Tishomingo Blues follows famous high-diver Dennis Lenahan as he holes up in a small Mississippi town and hooks up with a local hotel owner in an effort to establish his high-dive act as a main attraction. Of course, it all looks too perfect until Dennis witnesses a murder that puts him on the run from the Dixie Mafia, a crew of rednecks who get their kicks staging (in great detail) Civil War reenactments. The entire book is solid, but as soon as we discover the main Civil War reenactment is really a scheme to 'off' Dennis once and for all, I couldn't put it down. May favorite Elmore Leonard book so far.

TO THE WHITE SEA
James Dickey

In the early 2000's, the Coen Brothers were supposed to adapt this book into a silent film starring Brad Pitt. I was super excited at the notion of a Coen-directed lyrical drama set during WW2, but then of course the project collapsed and it all went to hell. I finally picked up the book last year and gave it a read. And I'm glad I did - it's a fantastic, harsh story filled with some of the most fluid prose I've ever read. There is maybe three lines of dialogue in the entire book, and the rest of the time you're fused inside the head of the main character, Muldrow, a U.S. bomber pilot whose plane is shot over Tokyo during a raid. That's act one. The rest of the story follows Muldrow's journey as he makes his way across the dangerous, enemy-filled land of Tokyo and into the 'safehavens' of the North. Forced to do anything to survive, Muldrow kills and murders while descending into madness along the way. It's violent as hell, but a beautiful read. I could easily see what drew the Coen Brothers to this material. Imagine a cross between 'Fargo' and 'No Country for Old Men' and you're on the right track.

THE GIRL WITH THE DRAGON TATTOO
Steig Larsson

My mom recommended this trilogy to me. I'll admit, I'm one of 'those' readers who'll flip to the last page of a book before starting it to peak at the page count. This bastard's about 700 pages with teeny tiny fine print and features some of the most detailed description I've ever read. All that might sound like a bad thing, except for the fact that the book is easily one of the best whodunit crime mysteries I've ever read. Equal parts engaging character study and suspense thriller, the two main characters' narratives start out like two loose ends of string, until they're wound and wound, eventually intertwining and become one. The fall of Mikael Blomkvist in the first several chapters began to get a bit dull for me, but once he's hired by enigmatic tycoon Henrik Vanger to solve the decades-old mystery of his niece's disappearance, I was instantly hooked. There's something so eerie about the manner in which Harriett Vanger vanished, and once Blomkvist moves to Vanger's town and begins to spend time getting acquainted with each of the disturbed family members, I couldn't put the book down. The story takes some weird and freakish turns, but it never failed to keep my eyes glued to the page. I'm definitely looking forward to checking out the second book, 'The Girl Who Played With Fire,', which is supposed to be just as good as this one. Can't wait.

THE YIDDISH POLICEMEN'S UNION
Michael Chabon

I found this book to be much more accessible than 'The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier and Clay.' Chabon telling a noirish detective story set in small-town Alaska is what got my attention, but he really works overtime trying to bathe the reader in countless chapters of Jewish folklore, which I appreciate to an extent. Sometimes it gets a bit tedious, but Meyer Landsman's character is so engaging and self-destructive that I couldn't help but stay tuned for everything that comes next. I didn't ultimately feel that the pay-off of the climax lived up to what the main story was driving toward, but the characters and rich, cultural lore kept my interest. Recommended if you're a fan of Chabon's other work.

THE DARK KNIGHT RETURNS
Frank Miller

I can't believe I didn't read this when I was a kid. I probably would've grown up thinking Batman was a hell of a lot cooler that Superman! That said, this is probably the best Batman story I have ever read. They need to hire Frank Miller to adapt this into a screenplay and hire a great director to shoot it as soon as Nolan & co are finished with their Christian Bale trilogy. Not only is the artwork here simple yet bold, Miller can throw at you three full pages of solid illustration without any words and you completely understand what's happening, and to often great effect. But come on...you really want to read this because you get to see a 60-year-old Batman come out of retirement and kick the shit out of criminal punks less than half his age.

CARRIE
Stephen King

A shower of stones indeed. I've never seen the film version of 'Carrie', and I'm glad I hadn't prior to reading Stephen King's novel. The mom in this book gave me nightmares for a week. The shower scene at the beginning might be enough to turn plenty of readers away, but when Carrie is finally pushed over the edge during her prom and goes on a rampage throughout her town setting anything and everything on fire? Holy shit. It's intense. Stephen King is pretty alright. I really dug this one.

BLOOD MERIDIAN
Cormac McCarthy

In terms of intensity, Cormac McCarthy's sweeping Texas/Mexico novel 'Blood Meridian' makes 'Carrie' look like 'Clifford.' Not only does McCarthy not name any of his main characters, there's not a single redemptive quality about any one of them throughout the entire story. They murder. They abuse. They rape. They pillage. They scalp people. They murder some more. It's utterly graphic. And it's hard as hell to read. The prose is written in kind of a biblical, Old Testament-y tongue, and I found myself constantly having to re-read passages just to understand what McCarthy was trying to say - because you know he's not just telling you the story, he's also making a larger commentary on the world and everything in it that's so complex someone had to write a companion book called 'A Reader's Guide to Blood Meridian.' The character of The Judge is possibly one of the scariest, most sadistic characters I've come across. And if you can accurately explain and genuinely understand what happens in the final scene, I'll give you one thousand dollars. What can you expect from a book whose subtitle is "The Evening Redness in the West"?

BATMAN: YEAR ONE
Frank Miller

A solid companion piece to 'The Dark Knight Returns.' Instead of telling the tale of Batman as an old man, Miller here tells the story of Batman as a young man. As a somewhat idealistic youth who sets out to avenge the death of his parents by...oh what the hell, you've all seen 'Batman Begins' so you know the drill by this point. To me, the coolest part about this graphic novel is the parallel story of Jim Gordon's first few weeks in Gotham City working with a precinct of corrupt cops who are out to sabotage him. A really cool yarn.

THE OLD MAN AND THE SEA
Ernest Hemingway

I never read Hemingway in high school or college, and I'm glad for that in a way. Sometimes literature classes can dissect and analyze and over-analyze stories to the point where you no longer get the pure enjoyment of the thing that matters most - story. So I'm glad I didn't read the book and have to constantly think about whether the old man was supposed to symbolize the sea, the fish was supposed to symbolize the old man, or the fish the sea, or whateverthehell. That's all pretty obvious anyway. I am glad that I could finally enjoy the story of how an old, washed up fisherman gets one last shot at redemption by setting out to catch the biggest goddamn Marlin he and the world have ever seen. That's a story I'd want to read. And I'm glad I did.

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Top 10 Films of 2009


My top 10 film list - WAY belated. But I hadn't seen a few of them until recently so here goes:

1. INGLOURIOUS BASTERDS:

I love World War 2 movies, and I love Quentin Tarantino. To me, this is his most re-watchable film. I literally never get sick of viewing the carefully crafted scenes he puts together here, especially the 15-minute long scene in the underground German tavern. I'm still not 100% sold on Brad Pitt in the film, but Michael Fassbender, Christoph Waltz and Daniel Bruhl more than make up for it.

2. THE HURT LOCKER

After the first five minutes of this film I thought to myself, "Wait...Guy Pearce isn't the main character??" The intro is so well-executed, written/directed that you're immediately immersed into this world of bomb defusers. I'd read a lot about Jeremy Renner's performance ahead of time, and he doesn't disappoint.

3. UP

I didn't love UP when I saw it in theaters in 3-D last summer. At least, not as much as WALL-E and RATATOUILLE. But while watching it again on DVD @ my mom's house over Christmas, a funny thing happened - I choked-up and had to leave the room during the film's opening montage. Whether it conjured memories of my own grandparents or if I was just in a particularly sentimental mood, who knows - but it happened again the second time I watched it on DVD, too! It's so sad but beautiful, and you instantly care for Carl and feel a genuine loss for him and his late wife. The scenes that take place on the Island with all the talking dogs go a little 'left-field', but the film is still fun and filled with a truckload of heart - more than most films any year can claim.

4. DEPARTURES

This won Best Foreign Film of 2008, but it didn't get released in theaters in the U.S. until last summer. I finally caught it on Netflix last month and it really stuck with me. Besides offering a unique window into the world of a 'nakanshi,' or one who prepares the dead for burial, it also serves as a moving film about family, love, and loss. It could easily have been melodramatic, but instead it stays the course. To me this represents the best way to deal with those subjects most of us would rather not think about - with a touch of humor.

5. SUGAR

A really different look at the world of Minor League baseball from an immigrant's perspective. While he's still living in the Dominican Republic, I didn't feel for Miguel "Sugar" Santos' character as much as I did when he relocates to the American Midwest and becomes a fish out of water. Not understanding English, you feel for him when he can't even order off a menu at a diner so is forced to order the same thing every day - eggs; and you feel good when he finally makes a connection with the waitress who teaches him all the different kinds of eggs he can order. While it's affecting when Sugar finally is able to connect to a few people in his new home, the film might have spent a little too much time on Sugar quitting baseball due to his insecurities...but I thought the film offered a really interesting perspective on baseball.

6. BROKEN EMBRACES

I liked BROKEN EMBRACES so much more than Almodovar's last film, VOLVER. I thought it bridged the gap between some of his edgier, more inaccessible films (The Bad Education) and some of his lighter, more commercial fare with Penelope Cruz. This felt a lot more vintage Pedro to me. I like that.

7. CRAZY HEART

Most everyone I've talked to about CRAZY HEART says it's a country music version of THE WRESTLER, with Jeff Bridges essentially playing the Mickey Rourke character. To an extent that's true, they both fit into the same genre, but are way different. Jeff Bridges is always great. It's nice to see The Dude getting some much-deserved recognition. And hey - if he wins this year (which he probably will), it'll sort of make up for Mickey Rourke losing to Sean Penn last year in a weird karmic kind of way.

8. STAR TREK

Fun! Perfectly cast, awesome story...STAR TREK with a budget! Now I kind of wish J.J. Abrams would have been greenlit to reboot Superman in the early 2000's like he was rumored to. And how can you not nod your geeky head in appreciation and silently clap when Leonard Nimoy's Spock walks on screen and saves a young Kirk from a hyper-crazed snow monster? I'm easily excited for a sequel.

9. THE WHITE RIBBON

I think Mike B. said it best in his 'best of' list so I won't expand too much. WHITE RIBBON is one of those films you talk about and debate endlessly with friends after you've seen it, and you're all going to have different theories as to what it meant. I can't believe Michael Haneke wrote this script from scratch as an original story - it feels like it was adapted from a beautiful but violent piece of literature.

10. FANTASTIC MR. FOX

I liked Wes Anderson up until THE LIFE AQUATIC, and then I didn't like him. I REALLY didn't like him when I saw (yeah, I'll admit it) THE DARJEELING LIMITED. I was over Wes Anderson. When I heard he was making a stop-motion version of FANTASTIC MR. FOX, I was curious. The stop-motion was what got me into the theater, but this felt like old-school Wes Anderson. Working from someone else's material forced him to focus on story and not meander on meaningless dialogue and overly-quirky scenes. The outcome - this was a genuinely funny movie with real heart.

Monday, January 4, 2010

Mike B's Top 10 of 2009


Been awhile! I wanted to kick off 2010's first blog post with a top ten list from a friend of mine. His musings are always fun to read and I agree with many of his selections. I'll be posting Mike B's top ten of the decade list this week.

Oh, and if you find any typos or made-up words that's his fault, not mine. Let's see you edit this beast. Without further ado...

Mike B.'s Top 10 Films of 2009:

Overview: The 10 Best Picture nominees thing has people tripping over each other to call this a weak year. They hate the change so much that they’re willing to say there aren’t ten films worth nominating not because it’s true, but because it helps their case. Last year was a weak year. This year was anything but. Not only did I see 10 films worthy of the term “great” (including one everlasting masterpiece), but I have an unusually high 29 honorable mentions. Any year that gives us 39 films worth checking out cannot be called weak. Not to mention films like Drag Me to Hell, Up, Sin Nombre, Adventureland, Bronson, That Evening Sun, Watchmen, and a few others that I enjoyed very much but don’t necessarily think are definitely worth two hours of your time. There were also a few films where the parts were far greater than the sum: the first half of Funny People (the second half is one of the most self-indulgent hours of film you’re likely to ever see), the first third of The Lovely Bones (due mostly to Saoirse Ronan’s exquisite performance), and the humbling final scenes of Gomorrah.

Honorable Mention: Anvil! The Story of Anvil, Big Fan, Broken Embraces, Brothers, An Education, Goodbye Solo, The Hangover, Hunger, The Hurt Locker, I Love You Man, In the Loop, The Informant!, Invictus, Julia, Julie & Julia, The Maid, Me and Orson Welles, The Messenger, Michael Jackson’s This Is It, Moon, Notorious, Paranormal Activity, A Prophet, Revanche, Rudo y Cursi, A Serious Man, A Single Man, Up in the Air, Zombieland

Note: If I had room for an 11th film it would be Me and Orson Welles. I walked into this one solely to kill some free time and I’m obviously glad I did because it’s probably the most unapologetically corny film (in a good way) I saw this year. Some movies I’ll be talking about below are refreshing in the way they avoid formula at all costs, but this one is just as refreshing in the way it perfectly executes its formula. It’s 1937, and a 17-year-old aspiring actor charms his way into a production of Julius Caesar directed by Orson Welles. As the lead, Zac Efron is mediocre at best, but the script is so damn solid that not even his mild acting talents can trip this vehicle up. We meet everyone you’d expect to: the unattainable love interest, the pig-headed womanizer, the veteran producer who’s seen it all before, etc. But everything is so immediately whimsical that it wins you over before you’ve even had a chance to contemplate resisting its appeal. The best thing about the film is Christian McKay’s towering, madcap performance as Welles. He’s brilliant at showing us the layers of the man who was the epitome of confidence and the purveyor of insecurity. His Welles is much more than just a voice (but wow does he have the voice down). It’s an engaging little film about theater and the draw of acting, and you don’t need to know a single thing about Orson Welles to savor every moment. A homerun from Richard Linklater.

10.) CRAZY HEART: If The Wrestler made my list last year, then this one sort of has to make my list this year since they’re the same fucking movie. This thing might as well have been called The Country Singer it’s so similar. From the aging superstar performer battling an addiction to the single mom love interest who will never be his wife to the estranged kid who wants nothing to do with him, the parallels are all too apparent. Randy “The Ram” puts on a show in front of a handful of people in a high school gym; Bad Blake puts on a show in front of a handful of people in a bowling alley. But don’t let my snide tone mistake you. Crazy Heart, like The Wrestler, is a helluva character study. The day Jeff Bridges gives a bad performance is the day I stop caring about movies. There are a few points in the film where the character has to curb his pride and while a weaker actor would let the character’s outrage rule the screen, Bridges allows Bad to also be humored by it all. The character is so defeated he expects nothing less than to be dealt these cards and can only smirk and shake his head. Another small moment of defeat I absolutely love is when he’s being interviewed by Maggie Gyllenhaal’s character. He’s wearing an unbuttoned shirt and when it suddenly dawns on him that this woman is attractive he drapes the sides of his shirt over his exposed gut. He’s so conquered that he can’t even be bothered to button his shirt. The script doesn’t really explore any new terrain, but I did appreciate that Colin Farrell’s former protégé turned megastar character isn’t the cliché it could’ve been. You’re expecting some sort of unappreciative egomaniac, but he’s anything but and it makes way for some really fresh, surprising conversations. It also gives us greater insight into Bad’s own frustrations, both with how he’s perceived by others and with the music business in general. And in a final note, I should say the music in the film is actually good. Really good in fact. I’m not above saying I sat there through the final credits, comforted and just a little but touched by the gift my ears had been given. Crazy Heart won’t change your life, but for two hours it’ll make you forget about it.

9.) WHERE THE WILD THINGS ARE: I would love to live in a room where all four walls are covered with framed images from this film. I think what I appreciate most about Where the Wild Things Are is that it weeds out moviegoers who can’t find beauty in the untamable. It’s a film for people who don’t mind a little paint on their clothes; for people who can cry at the beauty of a lightning storm. It tethers itself to the idea of showing us a fantasy from the mind of a child living on the emotional edge and in doing so forces us to confront the terrifying, yet comforting reality that all children ride on the edge of sanity. And it’s not methodical. There are no obvious tricks up its sleeve. Max doesn’t come in and put a broken family back together like most films would demand. If anything, he leaves them even more broken. It’s a film of staggering beauty and nuance. And I’ve said it before but I’ll say it again: I don’t care if she has 1 line or 100 lines, Catherine Keener can do no wrong.

8.) THE HOUSE OF THE DEVIL: The trailer for this one really caught my eye (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NHvSkTDWFfk) and it had a good amount of buzz in the horror community, but I still wasn’t prepared for just how good this wound up being. The comparison to Polanski is spot on. Like Rosemary’s Baby, this is a study in tone. A girl answers an ad for a babysitter and most of the film focuses on her lounging around a big house watching TV, listening to music, and doing pretty much nothing. It’s horror at its most bare, and shows how more jolting simple scares are than extravagant ones. Director Ti West really knows his shit when it comes to the genre. Not only does it take place in the 80s, but the film has this beautiful washed out graininess to it that makes it feel like a lost gem from the John Carpenter/Tobe Hooper horror boom. Plus it gives us the fantastically creepy Tom Noonan delivering the second great terrifying performance of his career (his Francis Dollarhyde from Manhunter still gives me nightmares). Not only is this one of the ten best films of the year, but it just might be one of my ten favorite horror movies of all time.

7.) INGLOURIOUS BASTERDS: I’m glad this movie came out in August. Had it come out in the last few weeks it probably wouldn’t have made this list (let alone in 7th place). I hold Tarantino to the highest of standards and expect nothing short of greatness every time I watch one of his films. Anything less than a masterpiece is a disappointment. Though I liked Basterds very much upon my initial viewing, I had quibbles with it and thought that though it was a very good film, it was not a great film. Jesus was I wrong. The first time I walked in ready to love the film I thought it would be, and it hindered my enjoyment to a degree. But I watched it again recently open to the film it is, and I can only judge it for what it is not what I wanted it to be, and it was like watching a completely different movie. All the issues I had seemed insignificant when planted amidst these sardonic five chapters. It’s mistitled for starters. It’s not about the Basterds (years of expecting one thing and getting another certainly delayed my ability to embrace it). It’s an engaging, astonishingly multi-layered 3-way dance between the good (Shosanna), the bad (Hans), and the ugly (the Basterds). It has scenes of such great tension where you feel uneasy with the knowledge that anything can happen in this moment. The opening scene is one of the five greatest scenes in Tarantino’s entire filmography. A later scene between Hans and Shosanna (an interrogation that takes place, once again, over a glass of milk) is just as powerful. The three lead performances from Christoph Waltz, Melanie Laurent, and Brad Pitt are all outstanding: one terrifies us, one garners our pity, and one makes us laugh our fucking ass off (yes, I’m STILL laughing over the face he makes when he realizes their plan is thwarted). I still have some problems with it: Eli Roth and Mike Myers are a waste and I don’t completely buy the Jew Hunter’s final about face. But neither of those things dampens my growing love for this film. It’s so delightfully Peckinpah, so romantically Bertolucci, and so vintage Tarantino. And all due respect to Life on Mars (the BBC version), but there has never been a better use of Bowie in any scene, EVER.

6.) FANTASTIC MR. FOX: Though I see all his movies, I’m not what you’d call a Wes Anderson fan. Aside from The Royal Tenenbaums, I hate all his movies. But I love Tenenbaums so much that I keep going back hoping some day he would once again hit that note I found so sweet some years ago. With Fantastic Mr. Fox, he’s done it, and it may even be his best film. This thing is so charming, so adorable, and so clever (as a fox…get it?), I can’t imagine anyone being able to resist its magical spell. I read in a rave review of this film (by someone who also wasn’t a fan of his) that it made him realize Wes Anderson has always been making cartoons and that he just now got the idea to animate one. Sounds about right to me. I’ve grown tired of looking at the snarky faces of Jason Schwartzman, the Wilson Bros., and the rest of the Anderson gang, but when claymated animals, I think they’re all aces. This film also brought about the added bonus of seeing many children disappointed because they didn’t get any of the jokes.

5.) TYSON: I really, really hate James Toback. It pains me to put one of his films on one of my best of lists, but the power of Tyson is undeniable. Any time you put a microphone in front of Mike Tyson you’re guaranteed gold. But put a microscope on him, and the results are effervescent. Mike Tyson is and always has been, in my opinion, the most compelling figure in modern American history. A battle rages in this man’s head between an eloquent genius and unintelligible child. Sometimes we get one, sometimes we get the other, and sometimes they both find their way into the same sentence. You just want to put on metal armor and give him a hug. Like Me and Orson Welles, you don’t need to be interested in the man to get engrossed by this in-depth tracing of his life. You don’t even need to like boxing. It works as an examination of what happens when we create a monster for a sole purpose and then that purpose no longer needs fulfilling. Toback uses a few too many split screens (we get it, there are many sides to him), but the material is so good you look past it. Tyson is the best documentary of the year.

4.) BAD LIEUTENANT: PORT OF CALL NEW ORLEANS: When I first heard about this project, I groaned. When I saw the trailer, I vomited all over my keyboard. When I saw the actual film, I just threw my arms up and accepted that it was either one of the best or one of the worst movies I’ve ever seen. This movie is out of its mind, but its craziness is carefully constructed and it’s one of the year’s most refreshing experiences. The acting is bad. Really bad, all around. But Werner Herzog is no idiot. It’s intentionally bad, and when you give actors the freedom to be awful it sort of breaks down any self-consciousness they have and lets them explore areas they never knew existed. And when you’re in need of someone to give a bad performance, a performance so bad it can carry a cast of awfulness onto the battlefield of preposterousness, there is but one actor you turn to. Nicolas Cage is perfect in this film. And by perfect, I mean he’s absolutely atrocious. His complete lack of talent creates moments so shocking and ridiculous that you find yourself clapping and cheering simply because of the way he laughs or raises an eyebrow. It’s not many films that can make an audience reverberate with chuckles because the main character (as he comes down from a 3-day coke binge) puts a gun to the head of an old woman in a nursing home. BL: POCNO is so bad it’s good, and it’s a risk only a veteran like Herzog would be willing to take. An instant cult classic with an endless number of lines to be quoted by the cinema-savvy for years to come. It must be seen to be believed.

3.) PRECIOUS: This film definitely lays it on (maybe too) thick. Our main character is 16, morbidly obese, illiterate, and pregnant with her second child (both of whom were created from her being raped by her AIDS-ridden father). Add to this the monstrous, venom-spewing mother she lives with and we get the point pretty immediately that life ain’t easy for Precious. The film’s only real overt weakness is a series of intermittent daydreams in which Precious takes her mind to a safer place anytime she encounters one of her many daily horrors. Early on they work on a comedic level, but as we get deeper into the story they serve only to delay us from seeing the end of involving, urgently dramatic scenes. Lee Daniels suffers from that disease which plagues most directors during their first and second films where they feel an urgent need to prove their talent. They overdirect, and it hinders their story rather than serves it. But good acting can make you forgive a lot. And great acting can make you forgive everything. Precious is overdirected alright, but I’m telling you the acting is so fucking good that you just don’t give a shit. Gabourey Sidibe has a blunt stoicism which finds the right mix between a woman who never got to be a kid, and a kid who doesn’t know how to be a woman. And Mo’Nique charges her way into film history, giving us one of the 50 great screen villains of all time in what is certainly the performance of the year. Precious is a saccharine film with simple messages, but sometimes it’s the sweet and the straightforward that makes the hardest grab at your soul.

2.) STAR TREK: If you told me last year that this list would be comprised of a Wes Anderson cartoon, a James Toback film, and the remake of The Bad Lieutenant, I’d have called you a fool. But if you had told me it would also include Star Trek, I’d know for certain you were lying. I had no intention of even seeing this film. I know nothing about Star Trek. I’d never seen any of the movies and had only ever seen one episode of the TV show. But my love for J.J. Abrams, the kick-ass trailer, and the stellar reviews were enough to make me check this out and, well, here it is. It’s the rare big budget action movie that gets everything right (and that’s not even something The Dark Knight can claim). I had the same feeling watching it as I did the first time I saw the Star Wars trilogy as a little kid. It’s the birth of a franchise, creating characters you adore and can’t wait to follow for years to come. I love every moment of this silly space movie.

1.) THE WHITE RIBBON: The year, is 1913. The place, is a small German Village. The film, is a masterpiece. Four years after the enthralling Cache the great Michael Haneke brings us The White Ribbon, a twisted fable about a series of mysterious, violent crimes that propel us into the black heart of one small, pre-World War I community. A doctor is injured when his horse trips over a wire someone has stretched between two trees. A worker dies after falling through a faulty floor panel. A child is tortured and hung upside down. Everyone is a suspect, but no one dares to vocalize their suspicions. They keep their fear internalized, because acknowledging the existence of such an evil presence walking among them is more hideous than the crimes themselves. The film works as both an Agatha Christie-style whodunit and as a story about what happens to one’s character when there is no longer such a thing as certainty. There are upwards of 40 characters in this epic film and the fact that you never once forget who any of them is speaks to the pure talents of the veteran Haneke. So assured is his direction here that there isn’t a single wasted moment in any of the film’s 144 minutes. At its core, the film beautifully explores the way in which children and adults communicate with each other. Some critics are describing this film as a modern day Lord of the Flies and to an extent that’s true. The children are referred to by their names while the adults are known only by their occupation (and in a story with so many characters it helps that we need only to remember names like The Teacher, The Doctor, The Pastor, The Baron, etc.). This also sets up a running commentary on how we are, at least to our peers, defined more by what we do than we who are. I’ve long resisted the acting of children but I think maybe it’s just the acting of American children which I find subpar. The children in the story match wits with their elders in every way possible. There’s a scene early on between a 4-year-old boy and his older sister about what exactly it means when someone is “dead”, and the emotional balance between the two is revelatory. In a later scene that I just need to highlight, a woman questions her lover as to why he no longer finds her attractive. His answer starts off surprisingly funny, but as his reasons become more hurtful and precise, and as we take note of the lack of any remorse in his stone cold face, our heart breaks. Each time he pauses the woman asks him through her tears to continue and with each request we feel smaller and smaller in our own penetrable shells. So lonely is this woman that she’d rather endure vile criticisms simply because, to her, anguish is a better feeling than no feeling at all. I envy all of you for getting to experience this moment for the first time. Something remarkable happened when the film ended. Instead of shuffling hurriedly out of the theater, people remained in their seats and talked with those around them. The film leaves you with just enough answers so that you think you’ve solved it and just enough mystery so that no matter what you think you will still have some small measure of doubt. I found myself theorizing with a group of strangers because we all needed to compare stories and because none of us, despite the raising of the lights, wanted the experience to end.

Saturday, October 17, 2009

HOLMES Scores! (with UPDATE)

As an aspiring screenwriter, I've submitted my fair share of scripts to countless screenwriting competitions, and have pretty much had no luck. This time was different. My most recent script, HOLMES, has just won 1st Place in the 'Action' Category in the 2009 Creative World Awards feature screenplay competition. I'm pretty stoked. If you want to check out a few links where the results were posted, they're below:

http://www.creativeworldawards.com/awards2010.php

http://www.moviebytes.com/ContestDetail.cfm?StoryID=3683&ContestNumber=2263&NewsTab=TRUE

UPDATE: 'Holmes' also received the following accolades:

Top 10 Finalist in the ScriptShark Insider Competition (http://www.scriptshark.com/script-journal?detail/C18/2009-scriptshark-insider-content-finalists-announced)

and...

Top 20 Finalist in Jim Mercurio’s inaugural Champion Screenwriting Competition (http://championscreenwriting.blogspot.com/2009/11/and-shorts-winners-for-2009-are.html).

Yay!

Friday, April 3, 2009

Superman Rebooted



I'm taking a break from writing about writing today. Instead, I want to draw up my plan for how Warners should fill the roles of the Superman franchise relaunch.

Clark Kent / Superman: JON HAMM



Anyone who watches Mad Men knows he can pull off a more "serious" tone for Clark Kent. He's got the age, the gravitas on his side. And his Funny or Die and SNL skits have shown he can do comedy, if necessary. It would be nice to see SuperMAN rather than Superboy.

Lois Lane: ANNE HATHAWAY



I don't love her in every role, but Anne Hathaway has proven she can play someone who is a mess career-wise - she can be tough, driven, and definitely outspoken. She has my vote.

Jimmy Olson: Michael Angarano



Michael Angarano has proven in films like Sky High and Dear Wendy that he's the geeky, loveable funny guy. That's who Jimmy Olson is. He's not an over-the-top nerd. He's not the cool guy. He's the every-guy. Michael Angarano would serve this character well.

Perry White: Hugh Laurie



Yes, he was originally supposed to play Perry White in Bryan Singer's Superman Returns, but due to scheduling conflicts with House, he had to drop out. Therefore, we got Frank Langella as the grumpy newsroom pitbull.

Lex Luthor: Jackie Earl Haley



Lex Luthor needs to give up his "land" schemes. I don't want to see Lex Luthor the criminal. I want to see Lex Luthor the president of the U.S. A man holding a high, government office who everyone looks up to. He's the hero, adored by the public...until Superman comes along and steals his thunder. He should never be the main villain. Just a man scheming behind the scenes.

Am I close? Do you like these choices? If not, who would you choose to fill the shoes of Metropolis' finest?

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Sell-Out!

Wanna hear a funny story? A horse walks into a bar...no, not that one. An Irishman, Muslim, and architect are stranded at sea...not that one, either. A guy who loves film starts writing design posts for HGTV's 'Design Happens' blog. That one. I actually have no problem writing about design even though I'm probably the last guy you'd ask for design-related advice. The extent of my home makeover experience is tilting my flat-screen television to the right while sitting at the kitchen table eating dinner. So what? It's all relative, right?

I generally contribute between two to four posts per month, so I'll try to plant the links here on this blog (how many blogs are too many?) when they go live.

My first post went up last Saturday: http://blog.hgtv.com/design/2009/03/01/from-screen-to-home/

My second goes lives tomorrow, March 11. You'll be able to find it here: http://blog.hgtv.com/design/

UPDATED: Here's my latest entry: http://blog.hgtv.com/design/2009/03/14/change-of-address/

Let me know what you think!

Shameless Self-Promotion

My awesome sister who works at the Massillon Museum in Ohio always makes me feel like an established writer rather than an aspiring writer. She reads my work, offers me helpful critques and perhaps most importantly, endless amounts of support. One of the many things she's done to help is netting me a nice little mention in the Big Read press release her team put together. Take a look below for the details - and if you happen to be in Massillon, Ohio on March 26th at 7pm, make sure to stop by the night of one-act plays and show your support for a group of talented, hard-working local actors!

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

News Release: The Big Read Night of One-Acts to Star Local Thespians

On Thursday, March 26, the Massillon Museum, with the collaboration of the Massillon Public Library, and Washington High School, will present an evening of original one-act plays relating to The Big Read and this year’s book selection, The Age of Innocence. Washington High School dramatics students will perform three plays under the direction of Eric J. Myers.

The evening will begin in the Washington High School auditorium at 7:00 p.m. with period music performed by members of the Canton Symphony Orchestra. The string quartet will perform between each of the plays.

Massillon Public Library Director Camille J. Leslie—a Georgia native fascinated by foreign languages, animals, folk music, and the The New York Times—wrote “A Heavenly View” for The Big Read project. The characters, representing actual people from Massillon’s history, depict a slice of local life during which an itinerant artist/cartographer began work on the 1870 birdseye view of Massillon. Joseph Morales (Nahum Russell), Samantha Smith (Esther Russell), Rebekah Seesan (Flora Russell), Dorroh Smith (Annie Russell), Alexis Jones (cousin Lucia), Kori Baker (Mary), Daniel Murphy (Albert), and Elizabeth Remley (Dorothy) will portray a scene in the Nahum and Esther Russell home on historic Fourth Street—later the home of the McClymonds Public Library, forerunner to Massillon Public Library.

Screenwriter George Nicholis is the full-time Public Relations Coordinator for Home and Garden Television in New York City. His original one-act for the Massillon Museum’s 2008 evening of one-act plays was well-received during the community's first Big Read project. Daniel Condo and Alexandria Burch will perform the two roles in “The Ghost,” Nicholis’s new play for this year.

Brian Centrone wrote “The Gilded Strings.” An accomplished short story writer, Centrone has an MA in Novel Writing from The University of Manchester (UK). He is an Adjunct Professor of English at SUNY/Westchester Community College (New York). Jenna Brinker plays Mrs. Winterguard, Tyler Bennett plays Howard, Elizabeth Remley is Nellie, and Kathryn Leffler is Ms. Shanksman.

Admission is free and open to all. No reservations are required. Washington High School is located at One Paul Brown Drive Southeast in Massillon.

The Big Read is an initiative of the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) designed to restore reading to the center of American culture. The NEA presents the Big Read in partnership with the Institute of Museum and Library Services and in cooperation with Arts Midwest. The Big Read brings together partners across the country to encourage reading for pleasure and enlightenment.

For more information about western Stark County’s Big Read project, call the Massillon Museum at 330-833-4061 or visit www.massillonmuseum.org or www.NEABigRead.org.