Wednesday, December 29, 2021

It's a Wonderful Life (1946) ****

The Capra "corn" is still there but if you just go with it, Jimmy's performance is all you need. Long, but well paced.

Tuesday, December 28, 2021

Beauty and the Beast (1946) ****

Jean Cocteau uses nothing but actors, cinema technique and his imagination to create a fantasy world miles ahead of the latest CGI junk from Marvel et al.

Tuesday, December 21, 2021

2021 In Review: Movies

*** The Many Saints Of Newark
** The French Dispatch
** Luca
* Annette
* Fever Dream
* Godzilla vs. Kong
* No Time To Die

2021 In Review: Music

**** David Bowie - Toy
**** Lindsey Buckingham - Lindsey Buckingham
**** MARINA - Ancient Dreams In A Modern Land
**** New Myths - All The Shiny Things (EP)
*** ABBA - Voyage
*** Bad Bad Hats - Walkman
*** Blood Lemon - Blood Lemon
*** Chills, The - Scatterbrain
*** Connells, The - Steadman's Wake
*** Field Music - Flat White Moon (EP)
*** Gloria - Sabbat Matters
*** Grouplove - This Is This
*** Middle Kids - Today We're The Greatest
*** Orange Peels, The - Celebrate The Moments Of Your Life
*** Paul Weller - Fat Pop (Volume 1)
*** Pearl Charles - Magic Mirror
*** Sports - Get a Good Look Pt. 1 (EP)
*** Spotlight Kid - Darkwaters
*** Texas - Hi
*** Weather Station, The - Ignorance
*** Weezer - Van Weezer
*** Winds - Look At The Sky
** Clap Your Hands Say Yeah - New Fragility
** Colleen Green - Cool
** Courtney Barnett - Things Take Time, Take Time
** Field Music - Another Shot (EP)
** Flyying Colours - Fantasy Country
** Goat Girl - On All Fours
** Jane Weaver - Flock
** Japanese Breakfast - Jubilee
** Jaromil Sabor - Mount Vision
** Jorge Elbrecht - Presentable Corpse
** Joy Formidable, The - Into the Blue
** Juliana Hatfield - Blood
** Lily Konigsberg - Lily We Need to Talk Now
** Liz Phair - Soberish
** Matt Berry - The Blue Elephant
** Matthew Sweet - Catspaw
** Midnight Sister - Painting The Roses
** Pardoner - Came Down Different
** Pip Blom - Welcome Break
** Piroshka - Love Drips And Gathers
** Ringo Starr - Zoom In (EP)
** Torres - Thirstier
** Umbrellas, The - The Umbrellas
* Aimee Mann - Queens Of The Summer Hotel

Saturday, December 18, 2021

Newly identified hormone may be a critical driver of type 1 and type 2 diabetes | News | Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health

Many hormones are involved in the regulation of metabolism, such as insulin and leptin. Fabkin is different from traditional hormones in that it is not a single molecule with a single defined receptor. Instead, fabkin is composed of a functional protein complex consisting of multiple proteins, including fatty acid binding protein 4 (FABP4), adenosine kinase (ADK) and nucleoside diphosphate kinase (NDPK). Through a series of experiments, the researchers determined that fabkin regulates energy signals outside of cells. These signals then act through a family of receptors to control target cell function. In the case of diabetes, fabkin controls the function of beta cells in the pancreas that are responsible for insulin production.

Wednesday, December 15, 2021

The Thief of Bagdad (1940) ***

Conny Veidt gives a master class in how to play a villain in this colorful fantasy.

Tuesday, December 14, 2021

Repo Man (1984) **

Quirky and influential comedy/sci-fi hybrid. Well cast, played and directed.

Saturday, December 11, 2021

The French Connection (1971) **

Expertly made police procedural, but can't believe it beat out Stanley for best picture/director.

Who's That Knocking at My Door (1967) ***

Unmistakably Scorsese right from the beginning even on a shoestring.

Wednesday, December 08, 2021

Don't Bother to Knock (1952) **

Weird little thriller is well paced but the casting is a bit off. Anne Bancroft's film debut.

Tuesday, November 23, 2021

Cast a Dark Shadow (1955) **

Dirk excelled at playing amoral sociopaths and here is no different. Tightly paced, nicely shot, top cast.

Office Killer (1997) ***

Nifty Grand Guignol neo-noir showcases two terrific performances and captures the 90's office vibe perfectly. Well made on a shoestring.

Friday, November 19, 2021

The French Dispatch (2021) **

This one just does not work as a complete film. Tremendous art direction, top notch cast but the pacing is way too fast and the sections so short the result is a blur of information and no emotion, no engagement. Will be better on DVD when you can watch and re-watch the sections individually, catching the myriad nuances.

David and Lisa (1962) ***

You just have to let the all-too-pat psycho drivel slide and the trio of fine actors will make the denouement, which can be seen coming from a mile away and redeems the film, work in spite of it all.

Tuesday, November 16, 2021

Electric vehicles could fully recharge in under 5 minutes with new charging station cable design - Purdue University News

Though the prototype hasn’t been tested on EVs yet, Mudawar and his students demonstrated in the lab that their prototype accommodates a current of over 2,400 amperes – far beyond the 1,400-ampere minimum that would be needed to reduce charging times for large commercial EVs to five minutes. The most advanced chargers in the industry deliver only currents up to 520 amperes, and most chargers available to consumers support currents of less than 150 amperes.

Ok, now electric cars become viable in the USA.

Tuesday, November 09, 2021

Dean Stockwell in 'Blue Velvet': The Movie That Made Him Timeless - Variety

So Ben, who looks like a candy-colored clown, stands up in front of the room in his huge-collared frilly open shirt and smoking jacket, brandishing a cigarette holder, using an industrial work light as his pretend microphone (it lights up his face), and proceeds to do an act of lip-syncing that is so hypnotic you’re tempted to call it bad-dream karaoke. He’s not actually singing. The sound is all Roy Orbison warbling “In Dreams” (“A candy-colored clown they call the sandman/Tiptoes to my room every night…”). But as the great Roy sings, and as Ben, standing in his self-styled industrial spotlight, mimics that song, you’d swear that you could almost hear him, and time seems to stop. The movie seems to stop. We’re no longer just watching “Blue Velvet.” The film has sliced through all our rational defense mechanisms, pulling us in like the TV set in “Poltergeist.”

Why is Ben standing there, miming that song? Because he wants to; because Frank, whose response to the song is so intense it looks like he’s going to either cry or explode (or both), wants him to. But really, Ben is doing this because David Lynch simply had to stage that scene, because it poured out of him, because he needed to see it and needed us to see it, and knew that Dean Stockwell, performing it with a private smirk that comes off as bizarrely innocent, even as it marks him as a figure out of a horror movie designed to scare children to death, would be the only actor who could make that scene cut across time itself.

Niagara (1953) ***

Lushly photographed oddball noir turns into an actioner in the third act. Well produced and Ms. Monroe is stunning as the femme fatale.

Monday, November 08, 2021

The Hucksters (1947) *

Extremely dated "exposé" of the ad game is laughably arch today. Clark does his best but the role is a cartoon. Deb and Ava fare better.

Sunday, November 07, 2021

Nightmare Alley (1947) **

Not a big fan of Ty Power but he's pretty good here. Too bad the film doesn't have the guts of the superb novel.

Friday, November 05, 2021

Frenzy (1972) ****

Hitch returns to his familiar tropes with a new candor that's still startling 50 years on. Still the master.

Wednesday, November 03, 2021

Why Francis Ford Coppola Was Nearly Fired During The Godfather's Production

"They hated the fact that I decided to set it in New York and they fought it."
At the time, New York had a reputation for being, in Coppola's words, "inhospitable" and "expensive" to film productions. Add to this the cost of shooting "The Godfather" as a period picture, and it gave Paramount reason to balk at the New York idea. They wanted him to film in St. Louis instead.

The JFK Cover-Up Strikes Again by James K. Galbraith

The irony is that by withholding the records, the government has already admitted, without saying so, that the Warren Commission lied and that there are vile secrets which it is determined to protect. It concedes, without saying so, that there was a conspiracy and that there is an ongoing cover-up. If there were not, all the records would have been released long ago. You don’t have to be a “conspiracy theorist” to see this.

Tuesday, November 02, 2021

'Doc' (1971) **

Watchable western is as inaccurate as the sources it is allegedly revising but Ms. Dunaway shines here.

Monday, November 01, 2021

The Brotherhood of the Bell (1970) **

Early conspiracy thriller is well made despite its made-for-tv origins. Better shot than most contemporary Hollywood blockbusters.

Friday, October 29, 2021

No Time to Die (2021) *

Turgid exercise in contemporary movie making. Indistinguishable from any other "action film" made recently. Highly dispiriting viewing.

Seance on a Wet Afternoon (1964) ***

Strong lead performance by Ms. Stanley carries the picture which starts off strong but goes off the rails as the script veers into psycho-babble territory. Well shot in crisp B&W.

Tuesday, October 26, 2021

Mort Sahl Dead: Stand-Up Comedian Tackled Political Themes - Variety

Throughout his career, Sahl frequently provoked his audience. Everyone was fair game. He went after Joseph McCarthy and the blacklist, Eisenhower and even Kennedy, whom he admired. The politically skeptical comic once declared, “Democrats are the left wing of the Republican party. Do you want vanilla or French vanilla?” Another time he said: “Liberals feel unworthy of their possessions. Conservatives feel they deserve everything they’ve stolen.”

He was unyielding, even in old age. In 2011, the 84-year-old Sahl began his show at a Mill Valley, Calif., club before a pro-Obama crowd with the line, “No, he can’t.” He continued performing near his Mill Valley home

“If you were the last man on earth,” Sahl told an interviewer, “I’d have to oppose you. That’s my job.”


One of a kind original to the end. Here is his first recording. The manic energy is stunning.

Monday, October 25, 2021

Cat People (1982) **

Entertaining but half-baked thriller seems like it should have been much better. Great cast.

Saturday, October 23, 2021

Dead of Night (1945) **

Spooky anthology starts to gather some steam then stops for a comedy and a song before returning with its best tale which saves the flick.

Friday, October 22, 2021

Jennifer's Body (2009) ***

Highly enjoyable, with wit to spare and a couple of terrific leads.

Tuesday, October 19, 2021

Divine Intervention (2002) **

Episodic look at life under occupation and its effects is a mixture of comedy, satire and fantasy, not all successful but heartfelt and sad. Well made.

Thursday, October 14, 2021

Fever Dream (2021) *

Another film apparently uninterested in looking like a film and content to be flatly photographed with lots of closeups. Some psycho-thriller aspirations but so dull to look at.

Tuesday, October 12, 2021

Little Murders (1971) ***

Satire is very difficult to pull off in movies but this one is so well made, well written and audacious it succeeds (mostly). One of the blackest comedies ever put on film, it admirably pushes through on its premise and pulls no punches at the finale. Nicely shot by the great Mr. Willis.

Sunday, October 10, 2021

Man on a Swing (1974) **

Risky move to film a police procedural of an unsolved case ends up being unsatisfying but there's much to admire from the emphasis on realism to the offbeat casting to the groovy early '70's vibe.

Friday, October 08, 2021

The Many Saints of Newark (2021) ***

Plays like an extended episode of the series, which is a very good thing. Vera Farmiga is terrific and almost unrecognizable. Well made and enjoyable.

Tuesday, October 05, 2021

After Life (1998) ****

If you could choose your last memory what would it be? A touching, human film.

Monday, October 04, 2021

Schrader on 'Master Gardener,' With Joel Edgerton, Sigourney Weaver - Variety

Schrader commented that “audiovisual entertainment is just fine.” He added, “We have more than we ever had, more than we could ever absorb.” However, theatrical revenue will continue to decline, he claimed. “I am happy to end my career riding that broken-down horse into the sunset. But I have no illusions about the nature of that horse,” he said, also opening up about his struggles. “The biggest mistake you can make is casting. If you miscast a movie, there is nothing you can do. You are just fucked. The other one is getting involved with people who don’t respect you. That has gotten worse because there is more and more money coming from people who don’t like or even watch movies. Every director, male or female, is an alpha creature, so part of you says: ‘Give me a chair, a whip, I will go into that cage full of lions.’ Well. Sometimes, the lions win.”

Thursday, September 30, 2021

The Spanish Prisoner (1997) ****

It's thrilling when from the opening sequence you know you are in the hands of a director in total control. Mamet is firing on all cylinders in this signature style con game flick.

Friday, September 24, 2021

Barcelona (1994) ****

Whit Stillman is like Wes Anderson without the baroque art direction. As Martha would say "That's A Good Thing".

The Europeans (1979) **

Another well made Merchant-Ivory flick but it fails to engage. Lovely to look at.

Monday, September 20, 2021

Crooked House (2017) *

Annoyingly photographed like a modern police procedural (dimly AND overly backlit), tries to make this simple Christie tale seem more complex than necessary.

Saturday, September 18, 2021

Eye of the Devil (1966) *

Seriously un-thrilling thriller wastes a superstar cast and fine b/w cinematography.

Friday, September 17, 2021

Heat and Dust (1983) **

Well made late British Raj flick is too long and doesn't succeed in expressing the character nuances necessary to make the tale relevant. Still, nice to look at.

Tuesday, September 14, 2021

The Power (1968) **

Goofy sci-fi "thriller" has lots of movie-logic moments and interesting shots of late 60's SoCal. Good cast and well made on a shoestring.

Friday, September 10, 2021

I Could Never Be Your Woman (2007) ***

Delightful blend of rom-com and movie/tv insider satire is sharply written, deftly directed and the cast is terrific. Killer soundtrack too.

Thursday, September 09, 2021

Quartet (1981) **

Well produced period piece is nice to look at but confusingly underwritten and directed.

Tuesday, September 07, 2021

Intermezzo (1939) **

Ms. Bergman is luminous in this well shot soaper, better than the original even with the burden of Leslie.

Monday, September 06, 2021

The End of the Affair (1955) **

The lovely Ms. Kerr was never lovelier, Pete Cushing is fine in support, but the dud Van Johnson sticks out like a sore thumb. He's not a bad actor, it's just when he's on screen you keep wondering "Why is he a romantic lead again?"

Friday, September 03, 2021

After Hours (1985) ***

Stellar cast and tight, inventive direction enliven this comic urban nightmare.

Friday, August 27, 2021

Charlie Watts - Modern Drummer Magazine

“I probably was a typical musician, but I wasn’t, and am still not, a Rolling Stone. I mean, I am because that’s what I do, but the other stuff is bullshit. I don’t know what the Rolling Stones are. For that you should talk to someone else other than me. I don’t know what they are. To me, they’re friends of mine. They are whatever you’ve read and they’re worse and they’re better. I never read the bullshit in the papers and I don’t have to hide in hotel rooms. I used to do that and I hated it. The worst time in my life was about the time the Rolling Stones became like the Beatles, I suppose. There were girls screaming and carrying on and I couldn’t stand it because I thought it was silly. I loved it for what it meant and what the band was doing, but I couldn’t stand not being able to do anything. I hated that. That doesn’t mean anything and I never wanted that. I’m just not interested in that. The only time I love attention is when I walk on stage, but when I walk off, I don’t want it. For the band, I want everyone to love us and go crazy, but when I walk off, I don’t want it. I guess I want both worlds. I never could deal with it and I still can’t. I don’t know how Mick does it. He’s an incredible man. So is Keith—an amazing guy. I don’t know how they do it, I’m serious. Like doing so many interviews. This is the only time I’ve so much as spoken to a journalist this whole tour and the reason I’m doing this is because drumming is something that I love.”

Wednesday, August 25, 2021

Mr. Topaze (1961) **

Sellers the actor is very good, but Sellers the director lets the others run amok. It also feels like a good 30 minutes could be cut and it's only an hour and 37 minutes to begin with. Well shot though.

Saturday, August 21, 2021

Annette (2021) *

Technical triumph and the allegorical nature might have been acceptable had the songs not been so resolutely awful and the main character not so completely unlikable. A tremendous waste of Devyn McDowell (who steals the picture in one scene) and the best marionette work in film since Being John Malkovich.

The Night of the Iguana (1964) **

Star power aplenty and a gorgeous location make this mostly tedious Williams play watchable.

Friday, August 20, 2021

Psycho (1960) ****

Iconic, massively influential, bold, daring and extremely well made. So many scenes, even though they've been imitated so often over the years, still hold their own and surprise. Even the clunky finale can't diminish it.

Friday, August 13, 2021

Algiers (1938) **

Shot for shot remake, done better the first time.

Thursday, August 12, 2021

The Legend of Frenchie King (1971) *

A hint of self-awareness might have made this enjoyable. As is it is a waste of two lovely leads.

Wednesday, August 11, 2021

Paprika (2006) *

Superbly animated, but the repetitive dreamlands gets tiresome.

Tuesday, August 10, 2021

The Medusa Touch (1978) *

A fine cast in a deadly dull and misbegotten "horror" flick.

Monday, August 09, 2021

The Return of Martin Guerre (1982) ***

Thought provoking tale of 16th century Basque area of France with exceptional cinematography, art direction and acting.

Tuesday, August 03, 2021

Contagion (2011) ***

Expertly made neo-disaster flick can no longer be called science fiction unfortunately (it is more faithful to facts than many so-called documentaries). Hard hitting, no nonsense procedural with a stellar A list cast.

Friday, July 23, 2021

Into the Night (1985) ***

Michelle on the run with lots of celebrities gleefully playing the bad guys in cameos. Fun but just a tad too long.

Monday, July 19, 2021

A Quiet Place Part II (2020) **

More of the same without the panache of the original.

Wednesday, July 14, 2021

The Last Seduction (1994) **

Neo-noir has one of the more vicious femme-fatales, played to perfection by Ms. Fiorentino, but never seems to gel.

Tuesday, July 13, 2021

The Naked Kiss (1964) ***

Some pretty racy content mixed with some over the top sentiment all handled deftly within a shoestring budget.

The Trip to Greece (2020) ***

Fourth enjoyable romp this time with a bit more gravitas thrown in.

Thursday, July 08, 2021

French Exit (2020) **

Enjoyable as a showcase for the singular Ms. Pfeiffer but that's about it.

Friday, July 02, 2021

The scientists hired by big oil who predicted the climate crisis long ago | The Guardian

When I started consulting for Exxon, I had already begun to understand that the Earth’s climate would be affected by carbon dioxide. There were only a small number of people in the world who were actively working on this problem because the global warming signal had not yet manifested itself in the data. So I was invited to join a research group at Exxon and one of my conditions to join was that we would publish our scientific research in peer-reviewed journals. It was a bunch of geeks trying to figure out how the planetary atmosphere works. We were doing very good work at Exxon. We had eight scientific papers published in peer-reviewed journals, including a prediction of how much global warming from carbon dioxide buildup would be 40 years later. We made a prediction in 1980 of what the atmospheric warming would be from fossil fuel burning in 2020. We predicted that it would be about one degree celsius. And it is about one degree celsius. It never actually occurred to me that this was going to become a political problem. I thought: “We’ll do the analyses, we’ll write reports, the politicians of the world will see the reports and they’ll make the appropriate changes and transform our energy system somehow.” I’m a research scientist. In my field, if you discover something and it turns out to be valid, you’re a hero. I didn’t realize how hard it would be to convince people, even when they saw objective evidence of this happening.

Blockade (1938) **

Heavy handed pro Spanish Civil War Republican propoganda is surprisingly well made. Hank Fonda is very good here.

Wednesday, June 30, 2021

Mr. Arkadin (aka Confidential Report) (1955) ***

Orson overdoes the Dutch angles, but otherwise an entertaining romp through Europe with one of the great directors having fun.

Monday, June 21, 2021

Time Without Pity (1957) **

Beat the clock thriller is thrown off by McKern's hammy performance. Nice to see Peter Cushing in a non-ghoulish role.

Sunday, June 20, 2021

The Blue Gardenia (1953) **

Lukewarm noir still features a top cast and plenty of cigs, booze and misogynistic activity. Plus the great Nat Cole shows up.

Luca (2021) **

So-so Pixar still has the precise animation although the characters' look seems to be veering closer to Aardman style. No overt political/sociological message here other than be true to your friends.

Tuesday, June 15, 2021

Elyse (2020) *

Ms. Pepper has a certain screen presence but she doesn't have the chops to overcome the rest of the film's shortcomings. Should have been re-written to make Sir Anthony's character the lead.

Sunday, June 13, 2021

Don't Think Twice (2016) **

Genial dramedy about the conflict between being an artist and a success. Trigger warning: annoying improv comedy bits.

Thursday, June 10, 2021

Hollywoodland (2006) **

Very good cast, particularly Mr. Affleck, in an over-written, way too long depiction of the mystery surrounding the death of Superman.

Monday, June 07, 2021

Woman on the Run (1950) **

Lots of SF locales highlight this nifty noir. Witty script.

Stromboli (1950) ****

Italian realist minimalist masterpiece crystalizes the human predicament. Perhaps Ms. Bergman's best performance.

Monday, May 31, 2021

Confidentially Yours (1983) **

The most important aspect of the "falsely accused man on the run" flick is we MUST root for the man on the run. M. Trintignant is a fine enough actor but he can't pull this off. And it is totally unbelievable that Ms. Ardant would give him the time of day let alone be madly in love with him.

Thursday, May 27, 2021

Notorious (1946) ****

Shows what star power and a suggestive script can do when in the hands of a master director.

Wednesday, May 26, 2021

A Severed Head (1971) ***

Enjoyable rondelay among the elite with a stellar cast especially the lovely Ms. Remick and Ms. Bloom. Colorful, witty.

Monday, May 24, 2021

‘Take it easy, nothing matters in the end’: William Shatner at 90, on love, loss and Leonard Nimoy

It feels rude to ask a 90-year-old if he worries about death, so I ask instead what he wishes he had known at 20 that he knows at 90. “Here’s an interesting answer!” he says perkily. “I’m glad I didn’t know because what you know at 90 is: take it easy, nothing matters in the end, what goes up must come down. If I’d known that at 20, I wouldn’t have done anything!”

Shadow of a Doubt (1943) ***

Uncle Psycopath comes to visit. Hitch beats Lynch to the punch by 43 years?

Green Grow the Rushes (1951) *

Another one of those post war British "comedies" that just doesn't hold up. Interesting to a point.

McCabe & Mrs. Miller (1971) ***

If you stick with it through the meandering, borderline disgusting first half, it becomes haunting, lyrical, resonant.

Monday, May 17, 2021

Continuum (2013) *

Misguided script, a woeful lead and terrible design. A waste of some fine actors.

I See a Dark Stranger (1946) **

Deb Kerr shines in a wee bit of blarney about spies in WWII Britain.

Friday, May 14, 2021

The Iron Lady (2011) ***

Ms. Streep is astonishing. Too bad the rest of the film is nothing to write home about.

The Strange Woman (1946) **

Hedy plays the archetypal femme fatale and gets all the guys even though lovely Hillary Brooke is not only available but a nice person. Go figure.

Tuesday, May 11, 2021

What Happened Was... (1994) ***

Karen Sillas is terrific in this two-hander about a first date between 2 broken souls.

Journey to Italy (1954) **

Part travelogue and part Scenes From A Marriage a bit heavy handed at times but the two leads rise above.

Charles and Lucie (1979) **

Droll comedy of the "string of mishaps" variety doesn't hit the heights but doesn't really try to either. Marseille and environs are well photographed.

Sunday, May 09, 2021

Scorpio (1973) **

A bit too long but nice to watch two pros play spy v. spy in 70's Paris and Vienna.

Friday, May 07, 2021

Sabotage (1936) ***

Not like other films of the day this one has ultra creepy characters, little backstory, no heavy-handed music and NO Hollywood ending. Excellent Hitchcock.

Tuesday, May 04, 2021

The Blue Dahlia (1946) **

Average direction and some lackluster leads sink what could have been a classic. Chandler's script is a fan's delight.

Girlfriends (1978) ***

Charming, episodic look at female friendship primarily, but also the life of a struggling, independent young woman in 1970's NYC. Nicely done.

Monday, May 03, 2021

Origin of Covid — Following the Clues

The US government shares a strange common interest with the Chinese authorities: neither is keen on drawing attention to the fact that Dr. Shi’s coronavirus work was funded by the US National Institutes of Health. One can imagine the behind-the-scenes conversation in which the Chinese government says “If this research was so dangerous, why did you fund it, and on our territory too?” To which the US side might reply, “Looks like it was you who let it escape. But do we really need to have this discussion in public?”

Dr. Fauci is a longtime public servant who served with integrity under President Trump and has resumed leadership in the Biden Administration in handling the Covid epidemic. Congress, no doubt understandably, may have little appetite for hauling him over the coals for the apparent lapse of judgment in funding gain-of-function research in Wuhan.

You Only Live Once (1937) *

Even in its time this had to be considered far-fetched right?

Scotland, Pa. (2001) **

Loved the soundtrack and the attempt to recreate the mid-70's vibe, but despite a top notch cast it's not really possible to make The Scottish Play into a comedy.

Friday, April 30, 2021

Textised! : Jonathan Flint - Testing Woes - LRB 6 May 2021

Perhaps the real problem is hubris. There have been so many things we thought we knew but didn’t. How many people reassured us Covid-19 would be just like flu? Or insisted that the only viable tests were naso-pharyngeal swabs, preferably administered by a trained clinician? Is that really the only way? After all, if Covid-19 is only detectable by sticking a piece of plastic practically into your brain, how can it be so infectious? We still don’t understand the dynamics of virus transmission. We still don’t know why around 80 per cent of transmissions are caused by just 10 per cent of cases, or why 2 per cent of individuals carry 90 per cent of the virus. If you live with someone diagnosed with Covid-19, the chances are that you won’t be infected (60 to 90 per cent of cohabitees don’t contract the virus). Yet in the right setting, a crowded bar for example, one person can infect scores of others. What makes a superspreader? How do we detect them? And what can we learn from the relatively low death rates in African countries, despite their meagre testing and limited access to hospitals? That we are still scrambling to answer these questions is deeply worrying, not just because it shows we aren’t ready for the next pandemic. The virus has revealed the depth of our ignorance when it comes to the biology of genomes.

Thursday, April 29, 2021

Rope (1948) ***

Hitch goes minimalist and it pays off.

The Owl and the Pussycat (1970) ***

It's Babs' movie, we're just enjoying it.

Tuesday, April 27, 2021

The Hard Way (1980) ***

Gritty, effective, low budget Celtic noir showcases Pat McGoohan's ability to carry a picture.

Friday, April 23, 2021

A Rainy Day in New York (2019) ***

Highly entertaining fairytale of New York from Mr. Allen. Sparkling script, strong performances and interesting directorial choices that work very well.

On the Rocks (2020) ***

Modern screwball à la Sofia with Bill Murray in perfect form. Rashida needs to be in more features.

Sister (2012) ***

Strong leads in this uncompromising look at the have nots at a ski resort. Beautiful scenery, bleak tale.

Wednesday, April 21, 2021

Always Shine (2016) ***

Strong leads, a layered script and tight direction propel this indie slasher.

Monday, April 19, 2021

Godzilla vs. Kong (2021) *

Poorly directed rehash of every monster movie trope imaginable at bone shaking volume. If you like close-ups you'll enjoy it.

The Earrings of Madame De... (1953) **

Well made costume melodrama ultimately fails to engage.

Monday, April 12, 2021

Dial M for Murder (1954) ***

Sir Alfred demonstrates how to adapt a stage play for film. Very talky but still manages to be engrossing.

Young and Innocent (1937) **

Wrongfully accused man on the run flick with a few compelling set pieces. Jazz band in blackface is a jarring part of the finale.

Sunday, April 11, 2021

5 Card Stud (1968) *

High concept western might have single-handedly killed westerns for a while. Awful script, direction.

Friday, April 09, 2021

360 (2011) **

Watchable sort-of-connected tales never seem to add up.

Tuesday, April 06, 2021

The Lost Boys (1987) **

Takes the comedic route too often but has some moments of 80's awesomeness. Ms. Rice has nothing to worry about.

Friday, March 26, 2021

Pandora and the Flying Dutchman (1951) ***

Superbly photographed, stylishly directed fantasy with the lovely Ava Gardner looking never better. One of Mr.Cardiff's triumphs.

The Tenant (1976) ***

Filmed with a mix of American and French actors (some dubbed by American actors) this is a quirky, interesting tale of a mild mannered office clerk driven mad by Parisian apartment life and troublesome neighbors.

Wednesday, March 24, 2021

Any Number Can Win (1963) ***

With a couple of movie icons and the Riviera does it matter that there are gaping plot holes in this stylish heist flick? Pas du tout.

Sunday, March 21, 2021

Identity (2003) **

The first half is a terrific neo-noir with a stellar cast. Unfortunately there IS a second half.

Thursday, March 18, 2021

The Cat's Meow (2001) **

Well made period piece about early Hollywood shenanigans but a crucial role is distractingly miscast. Nice attempt by Mr. Bogdanovich to avenge Orson vis-a-vis Hearst?

The Man Who Killed Don Quixote (2018) **

As usual with Gilliam films it is beautifully shot, well cast and produced but until the last 15 minutes it's muddled and not engaging. Overall disappointing.

Sunday, March 14, 2021

The Circle (1957) **

Nifty Brit-noir whodunnit has a top cast and plenty of twists to keep you guessing.

Tuesday, March 09, 2021

Death Takes a Holiday (1934) **

Talky and stagy but the main problem is the casting of the leads which sinks the picture. Otherwise well produced little fantasy.

Monday, March 08, 2021

Secret Agent (1936) **

Overall a little too slapdash. It seems like Hitch was only interested in a handful of scenes and the rest of the picture didn't matter. This might have been a classic had he remade it in the 50's and took his time. Still, that handful is worth it.

Saturday, March 06, 2021

Between the Lines (1977) ***

Terrific ensemble cast in a near documentary look at mid-70's mores. Painfully accurate.

Wednesday, March 03, 2021

The River (1951) ***

A visual feast marred by the odd mix of professional and amateur actors that doesn't quite work. A beautiful experiment.

Sunday, February 28, 2021

Swiss Family Robinson (1960) **

Superbly photographed white male adolescent fantasy about being the sole survivors of a shipwreck in the 1800's, living in an imaculate treehouse (with running water) on a tropical island, having wild animals as pets (including a sea turtle, baby elephant, ostrich, zebra and Bengal tiger) and fighting pirates.

Wednesday, February 24, 2021

Shanghai Express (1932) *

Essentially a photo shoot for Marlene.

Tuesday, February 23, 2021

Accident (1967) **

Even Oxford dons are not above a little bad behavior now and then especially when Ms. Sassard is involved. Well made but hardly revelatory.

Monday, February 22, 2021

Jamaica Inn (1939) **

Not nearly as bad as critical consensus has insisted, this is an above average, entertaining costumer with some interesting dialogue, eccentric performances and a lovely debut for Ms. O'Hara.

Wednesday, February 17, 2021

Into the Woods (2014) *

Bereft of imagination which is sad for a musical film whose milieu is fairy tales. I can't think of anything good to say about this one so I had better stop.

Monday, February 15, 2021

Inspector Hornleigh (1939) *

Extremely talky whodunit fails to maintain interest except when the lovely Miki Hood is on screen. She deserved better.

Thursday, February 11, 2021

Searching for Shelley Duvall: The Reclusive Icon on Fleeing Hollywood and the Scars of Making 'The Shining' | Hollywood Reporter

There is a sequence in The Shining that is in the Guinness World Records for "most retakes for one scene with dialogue." The scene features Crothers and Danny Lloyd, the young actor who played Danny Torrance, discussing the ability to "shine," a psychic gift that allows the boy to envision the hotel's horrific past. Kubrick had the actors do it 148 times. But another far more demanding scene — the staircase scene — was shot 127 times. "It was a difficult scene, but it turned out to be one of the best scenes in the film," Duvall says. "I'd like to watch the movie again. I haven't seen it in a long time."

At her suggestion, I google the scene, perch my iPhone on her dashboard and press play. I don't think I'll ever forget the experience of watching 71-year-old Duvall watching her 30-year-old self meekly swing a bat at Nicholson as he threatened to "bash [her] brains in."

"Why are you crying?" I ask Duvall.

"Because we filmed that for about three weeks," she replies. "Every day. It was very hard. Jack was so good — so damn scary. I can only imagine how many women go through this kind of thing."

Tuesday, February 09, 2021

Rebecca (1940) ***

Long, overwrought gothic melodrama with mostly by-the-book direction. A top cast elevates the material. Joan Fontaine is terrific in probably her best role.

Suspicion (1941) ***

Hitch always seemed to bring out the best in Cary.

Monday, February 08, 2021

Rear Window (1954) ****

Not only great fun from The Master, but his direction here becomes iconic. Grace never looked better and is perfectly cast.

She Done Him Wrong (1933) *

Mae West vehicle has a couple of good one-liners.

Tuesday, February 02, 2021

Ethan Frome (1993) **

Handsomely mounted production looks the part but can't quite capture the intensity of the source material.

Old Boyfriends (1979) **

Trying for realism but the story is contrived and not compelling. For Talia fans only (like me).

Sunday, January 31, 2021

Raffles (1939) **

Niven defines the gentleman thief role, but Mr.Clive nearly steals the picture as his butler. Olivia is wasted as the love interest with not much to do.

Friday, January 29, 2021

2021 Prediction #3: Get ready for more GameStops as hedge funds are no longer the only bullies in town | I, Cringely

Now here’s the rub: 138 percent of GameStop shares were shorted. Theoretically that’s not possible, of course. You can’t sell more of something than even exists. Yet from time to time that’s exactly what happens because of another concept called GREED. Somebody (brokers in this case) makes money on all those shorts or calls, no matter how the trade is eventually resolved. Even though the contracts apply to shares that don’t actually exist, a contract is still a contract. The seminal GameStop trade that started all this was Redditor u/DeepFuckingValue buying GameStop puts — the right to sell (rather than buy — that would be a call) GameStop shares at a specific strike price. As of yesterday this $53,000 trade had grown to about $48 million with $14 million of that in cash. That’s some Deep Fucking Value.

Tuesday, January 26, 2021

Did the Coronavirus Escape From a Lab?

As Shi explained to Scientific American, late in December 2019, she heard from the director of the Wuhan Institute that there was an outbreak of a new disease in the city. Medical samples taken from hospital patients arrived at her lab for analysis. Shi determined that the new virus was related to SARS but even more closely related to a bat disease that her own team had found on a virus-hunting trip: the now-famous RaTG13. Shi was surprised that the outbreak was local, she said: “I had never expected this kind of thing to happen in Wuhan, in central China.” The bat hiding places that she’d been visiting were, after all, as far away as Orlando, Florida, is from New York City. Could this new virus, she wondered, have come from her own laboratory? She checked her records and found no exact matches. “That really took a load off my mind,” she said. “I had not slept a wink for days.” If one of the first thoughts that goes through the head of a lab director at the Wuhan Institute of Virology is that the new coronavirus could have come from her lab, then we are obliged to entertain the scientific possibility that it could indeed have come from her lab. Right then, there should have been a comprehensive, pockets-inside-out, fully public investigation of the Virology Institute, along with the other important virus labs in Wuhan, including the one close by the seafood market, headquarters of the Wuhan CDC. There should have been interviews with scientists, interviews with biosafety teams, close parsings of laboratory notebooks, freezer and plumbing and decontamination systems checks — everything. It didn’t happen.

Monday, January 25, 2021

My Foolish Heart (1949) ***

A tight script and strong supporting cast make this a top soaper.

Emma (TV Movie 1996) ***

Well made for TV version of the Austen tale with a top notch cast.

Friday, January 15, 2021

Emma (1996) ***

Enjoyable version of the Austen rom-com prototype with the lovely Ms. Paltrow and a fine supporting cast. Well directed.

Tuesday, January 12, 2021

QAnon Woke Up the Real Deep State | by Nicholas Grossman | Jan, 2021 | Arc Digital

The president appoints and the Senate confirms top officials, from the Secretary of State to the five members of the Arctic Research Commission, over 1,200 in total. Every other executive branch employee — over 4 million if you include the military, over 2.7 million if you don’t — is hired or recruited, not elected or appointed. This means that the Departments of State, Defense, Justice, the intelligence community, and federal law enforcement are staffed with people the agencies hired themselves.

Their mandates are broad. For example, the FBI is supposed to “investigate federal crimes and threats to national security.” While there are laws giving the FBI certain powers (e.g. to arrest people) and limits (needing warrants), a lot is open to interpretation, especially regarding national security threats.

It’s fair to say the FBI, CIA, IRS, CDC, and other federal agencies have, to some extent, taken on lives of their own. So has the military, and the larger defense-industrial complex. They’re under control of elected and appointed leaders, but also not, acting according to established laws, established regulations (many of which they wrote themselves), and individual judgment calls. You could call that “the Deep State.”

Saturday, January 09, 2021

The Pro-Trump Mob Was Doing It For The Gram

But it was also quickly apparent that this was a very dumb coup. A coup with no plot, no end to achieve, no plan but to pose. Thousands invaded the highest centers of power, and the first thing they did was take selfies and videos. They were making content as spoils to take back to the digital empires where they dwell, where that content is currency.

You can see this most clearly in this photo, where the man in the god-knows-what costume, Jake Angeli, the so-called QAnon Shaman, is posing on the dais of the Senate, his friends carefully framing him to get the perfect shot. It is the Trump supporter equivalent of an Instagram influencer getting a photo beside a perfect mural.

Friday, January 08, 2021

Eternally Yours (1939) **

Lackluster direction and a goofy script waste a fine cast in this attempt at screwball romance.

Tuesday, January 05, 2021

Enchantment (1948) ***

Terrific ensemble actors, crisply written and directed and some nifty camera work (especially the flashback/forward transitions) from the great Gregg Toland make this a top-notch gothic melodrama.

Holiday (1938) *

Despite Cary's acrobatics (literally), Cukor can't force this faux-populist drivel into screwball tin let alone gold. Just not good at all.

Sunday, January 03, 2021

Ma Rainey's Black Bottom (2020) **

Excellently acted and written but not so much with the direction and photography. Ms. Davis shines.