To mark the end of the year (and 37 films), I present "Le Honor Roll", a collection of stories that I really applaud and give 2 hands raised way up :). Overall, it was a great mix of free spirits (independently produced and later commercially picked-up) such as The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou and Thank You for Smoking, true independents that include Dead Man, Little Fish, Croupier, and The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada, and finally one powerful classic: A Clockwork Orange.
Le Honor Roll :)
Sunday, December 31, 2006
Friday, December 22, 2006
37 - The OH in Ohio
Parker Posey is just plain hilarious :). She always delivers, doesn't matter if its a bit part, cameo, or lead (like in this one). What I expected to be flat out comedy actually turned out to be a really warm story about finding your way. Danny DeVito comes through with both comedy and sensibility (yeah, it can happen ;) ) the same way he did in Living Out Loud.
Oh, and Heather Graham has a bit part (no, not as RollerGirl, but not too far from that industry :) ).
Saturday, December 16, 2006
36 - Over the Hedge
Thursday, December 14, 2006
35 - Cars

At first I was skeptical of how Pixar could pull off a cartoon using cars as characters. It sounded like an old idea...or maybe because I've been pre-programmed with Chevron cartoon commercials. But it is a Pixar film and I was willing to at least check it out. The more I watched the film, the more I grew attached to it and by the end of the film I was sold.
If you were ever immortalized as a vehicle, what would you be?
Thursday, December 07, 2006
34 - Little Athens

Little Athens was a really interesting look at the life a young generation in a small town. The fact that this all happens in a small town is what probably gives this story its flavor. The cast is an interesting mix of familiar faces.....Eric Szmada (CSI), Jorge Garcia (Lost), DJ Qualls (Road Trip), and Rachel Miner.
What was your life like when you were 18?
Saturday, December 02, 2006
33 - A Clockwork Orange

He turns everything around, and in full circle in some cases...the effect of Beethoven's ninth, the twisted mind of the criminal and then becoming a victim, and the victim suddenly turning to evil, an inmate somewhat cured and then turned back.
When it seemed like it didn't make sense, it actually did...and when appears to make sense, it really doesn't as much...its really amazing how stimulating Kubrick has made this experience.
Monday, November 27, 2006
32 - Croupier

Clive Owen has shown a lot of potential in action, but in Croupier (which is actually an older film; pre-fame) we see him engaged in a character study. Following the thought process and story was engaging and Mike Hodges did a great job mixing narration and normal storytelling.
With all the insight into casinos and gambling, this would make a great companion to Rounders.
Wednesday, November 15, 2006
31 - Casa De Los Babys

The list of cast members was heavy: Maggie Gyllenhaal, Lili Taylor, Marcia Gay Harden, Darryl Hannah, mary Steenburgen, and you can't help but think that the scenes were probably extended to give everyone time to be in their element...and that may have worked against this film. The real heroes of this film, I have to admit, are everyone (and everything) meant to support it: the mexican cast, the location, scenes of Mexican life.
John Sayles told the story of Lone Star really well and maybe I was expecting the same approach. Still, this film exposes a lot of prejudiced views that are not always caught on film and is worth watching, if only to be witness to such realities.
Saturday, November 11, 2006
30 - Morvern Callar

I remember seeing bits of this when it was running on cable and was always drawn to how it gives you this drunken feeling. Samantha Morton's eyes can be really terrifying. When she stares at you, you will do her bidding ;). The texture of the film reminds me of Breaking the Waves and, like Emily Watson, Samantha delivers this continuously spaced out personality that may appear lost but is resilient and able to survive.
Saturday, November 04, 2006
29 - Crimson Rivers 2: Angels of the Apocalypse

Thursday, November 02, 2006
28 - Crimson Rivers

Ever since Leon, I've always considered anything Jean Reno does as gold...even when he played those bit parts in Mission Impossible, Godzilla, and Ronin. In Crimson Rivers, he plays the lead role and this time I watch him in his natural stage: a french movie.
The story, a murder mystery tied to a long running nazi conspiracy, was really interesting. It's a curious, though sad, echo from human history that still stains us to this day. Vincent Cassel plays the cocky cop...and put up against the stubborn cop (Reno), becomes a tame protege.
Thursday, October 26, 2006
27 - I love your work

I'm still midway into watching this movie as I type this...I'm still trying to keep myself interested. I can see that the director is trying to craft a movie and actors at best trying to stay in their element. But there's something missing and I just can't get a beat on it.
Franka has always had this hidden power...like a solid left hook. In one scene, in a fit of rage arguing with Giovanni Ribisi, she walks and flashes a camera crew. I'd like to think that wasn't in the script and that was just Franka being Franka (boom).
Should I keep watching?
.......
......
....
....
Monday, October 23, 2006
26 - Down in the Valley

I was not too thrilled to see Tobe (October) fall too fast for Harlan...but I guess that does happen in life sometimes. The relationship she shares with her brother, Lonnie, is a typical one...that of the younger, quiet one in the shadow of the older, more sociable and rebellious sister. Where Tobe's character is confused, Lonnie's is more passive and innocent. David Morse's character fills in as a father trying to be a parent. Ed Norton pulls another psychological personality (like he did in Primal Fear) as someone who believes he's a cowboy...and maybe he's supposed to represent a few lost demeanors and realities.
Although the movie revolves around Ed Norton's character, I wish there was more depth in the other, more accessible characters that David Morse, Rory Culkin, and Evan Rachel Wood portrayed. I think it would have blended well with Ed Norton's lost world. Evan and Rory delivered their roles really well, and I believe they could have given more.
Friday, October 13, 2006
25 - Bad Santa

"I'm on my f***ing break!"
Hey...yeah...you gotta give Santa a break sometimes :). I think Billy Bob enjoyed making this movie. It's as if Billy and Tony Cox were released in to the wild and they just flat out started ambushing all the local wildlife. I couldn't find a lot of substance in the relationship with Lauren Graham (other than the fetish) but that would have been a nice subplot to give more depth.
In one of John Ritter's last performances, I saw him reprising his character from Sling Blade...god bless you, John.
Sunday, October 08, 2006
24 - Little Fish

It's refreshing to see Hugo Weaving in a different character and I totally forgot his Agent Smith character (Matrix) while watching this movie. Cate Blanchett's Tracy was in such torment that you can't help but pray that life gives her a break somewhere. It was funny to hear her speak some Chinese, too!...or was that Vietnamese?
And boy, Dustin Nguyen...last I saw him was in his 21 Jump Street era...jeez, its been a long time.
Wednesday, October 04, 2006
23 - Thank You for Smoking

I love how this movie was constructed. It's the grand buffet of debatable topics, and yet it's really telling the story about the life of a lobbyist.
The humor is smart and I just found myself bursting in laughter at all the well placed punchlines.
The MOD squad was a stroke of fictional genius. Can you imagine the top speakers on tobacco, alcohol, and gun control being friends and having regular lunch get-togethers? And somewhere amid all the chaos are bits of love...bond among friends, bond between father and son, hidden bond between parents.
....it was an argument, not a negotiation...
Saturday, September 30, 2006
22 - The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou

Jacquer Cousteau was a big part of my childhood. I remember spending a lot of time just watching him in his travels. Even though his programs focused a lot on oceans and sea creatures, I remember being focused more on the journey that was a huge part of his documentaries. It was that life at sea that kept me watching. The Life Aquatic accentuates that aspect, in this case, of Steve Zissou. I love how the movie covers a lot of life stories but wraps them all with this dark humor and smart wit of the characters.
Angelica Houston will always be Morticia Addams for me...and here she kinda brings that back (for me, personally anyway :) ). It was fun listening to all the Portuguese David Bowie acoustic music. Willem Dafoe and Cate Blanchett play excellent character studies and, as expected, just simply deliver.
Saturday, September 23, 2006
21 - Full Frontal

The first twenty minutes or so was an exercise for me identifying all the actors. Watching a movie with a huge cast was fun. It actually kept my attention... I'd like to think that the idea here is to play not just a couple stories but an endless series of incidents. Cathy Keener had the oddest scenes (and the most amusing) :)
Wednesday, September 20, 2006
20 - Hard Candy

Care for some dose of Misery 2? (well, this one ain't a Stephen King flick)
I admire the tension that the director maintained throughout the movie. It was a mixture of dialogue, suggestion, and doubt that just kept you on the edge. It makes you question the actions these characters did and sometimes think in general...does one become a vigilante and make things right? What does right mean? What if you were wrong? But everyone is capable of making a mistake.
The initial hurdle was getting over Ellen Page's character (who was rather annoying)...and then trying to constantly rationalize. It was exhausting and there were scenes that just made me want to turn away (but of course I didn't :) ). The feeling reminds me of Requiem for a Dream...it was very difficult to watch Ellen Burstyn's deterioration in that story. You just want to jump in and give em a piece of your mind.
But hey, it's a movie ;).
Saturday, September 16, 2006
19 - Confessions of an American Girl

It could have been a good story, but this movie just did not have enough of a script and this is one of those movies that really needed a director that was obsessed about it.
The casting didn't help either. Jena Malone and Brad Renfro have had success before, but they alone couldn't save this movie. This is one of those situations where a great director could have made a difference, gotten the right performance out of the actors, explored the better aspects of the story, and probably pushed the script, editing, and casting further.
I hope someone does pick-up this story one of these days and gives it justice.
Thursday, September 14, 2006
18 - Me and you and everyone we know
Thursday, September 07, 2006
17 - Garden State

I heard it was really good but for the life of me I refused to see it. I guess somewhere in mind I thought this would just be like Natalie's other "coming home" movie, Beautiful Girls, and I probably just wanted to leave it alone.
It was actually a great movie. Surprisingly, Natalie carries another boy name (Sam) in this movie (in Beautiful Girls, she was Marty). Ian Holm only had a few scenes, but he provided the tension with his rather odd character. I just love how he swithes from Frankenstein to intense to normal in each scene.
Friday, September 01, 2006
16 - The Man Who Cried

Cristina Ricci, Cate Blanchett, Johnny Depp, John Turturo...how could anything go wrong? The movie could survive on all the interaction between these great actors :). Indeed, I was very much drawn to the characters they created more than the actual story itself. Cate is vintage Cate (and what great stage presence) and John Turturo shows his bravado as...an italian opera singer (hey...why do I suddenly have flashbacks of him in Mr. Deeds ;)...sneaky?).
Of course, Christina Ricci's cold stare is in full force...and who could match than Johnny Depp (who has that silent stare himself). I would like to take notice of Claudia Lander-Duke (who played young Suzie). I really liked her performance...I thought I saw Wednesday Addams in her scenes...but hey, she does play young Wednesday Addams :) :).
Why can't I write anything serious today...oh well :).

Wednesday, August 30, 2006
15 - Unfaithful

I knew it was "Fatal Attraction" from the other side of the equation...but yet I still wanted to rent it, simply because Diane Lane was in it. There's a lot to say about how beautiful she is, but I have to say I've always been drawn to her eyebrows...I just always end up staring at em.
Anyway, the other reason for renting this film is Adrian Lyne. His films have always blurred lines of sensibility and morality and really makes one pause for thought. His version of Lolita explored the taboo of the adult-child relationship and in "Fatal Attraction", the air of infidelity (as is here). In all of them, I guess I can say that it exposes us as victims of random moments.
I really liked that line from one of Connie's friends about infidelity..."...either someone finds out or someone falls in love...".
.....or both :).
Thursday, August 24, 2006
14 - The Three Burials of Melquiades Estrada

Just watching Tommy Lee Jones speak spanish made this worth the rental :). I mean, honestly, when he did that opening scene in MIB at the border crossing (hmmm....funny coincidence here) and spoke spanish to the illegal immigrants I wish he just kept at it!
Anyway, this movie was really engaging and I could see Tommy's intention to really bring us with him as he tortured Barry Pepper's character, dragging him all the way to Mexico.
Monday, August 21, 2006
13 - Kinsey

When you see a character with such insane devotion to his chosen endeavor, you know it's all set up for success but at a cost and a sure path to self-destruction down the line. Dr. Alfred Kinsey's life, and life work, is painted in such a fashion. He is bound to hurt the people around him...unless they hang on and wait for a turnaround in some way. To think that it all the events in this movie happened in the 50's is just incredible.
As always, Laura Linney plays the excellent role of Mac (Dr. Kinsey's wife). If there ever was a time to play "stand by your man", this would have been it......unless, you of course remember that Laura played the same persona as the supportive wife in Mystic River!
Tuesday, August 15, 2006
12 - Kiss Kiss Bang Bang

Loved it! Val Kilmer and Robert Downey Jr. bounce off of each other really well. It's like watching Riggs and Murtaugh (well, Lethal Weapon writer Shane Black did write and direct this one) but darker and f-ing hilarious :). .....and boy, Michelle Monaghan....wow.....ok she looks great....but her character was also really funny and admirable :)
DVD extra: watch the gag real....more bad cop bad cop banter
Monday, August 14, 2006
11 - Elizabeth
10 - Sword of Doom

It was all going really well......until the movie suddenly ended and for a moment there I thought my dvd player may have skipped some tracks......but no, the story just abruptly ended. Anyway....for whatever reason, it was a great meal cut short. I liked the characters Tatsuya Nakadai(Ryunosuke ) and Michiyo Aratama (Hama) portrayed. And the facial expressions.....especially in black and white, came out cold and bitter.....just as they were meant to be.
Wednesday, August 02, 2006
9 - Napoleon Dynamite
Sunday, July 30, 2006
8 - Scotland, PA

Netflix 8 - Scotland, PA
Outstanding! Movies like this make me regret not having Shakespeare in school. This interpretation or inspiration on Macbeth is a dark comedy laced with cooky characters played to perfection by James Legros (his look reminds me of Harry Connick Jr. in 'Copycat'), Maura Tierney, and Christopher Walken (who does a quikc Maracas dance...yipee!). Even the small parts by Amy Smart and Andy Dick were welcome treats!
Thursday, July 27, 2006
7 - Syriana
Friday, July 21, 2006
6 - In the Mood for Love

My interest to get this movie came from a short descripion I read about 2046 (the sequel). I don't remember what that short description was but since then I kept this movie in my radar. A friend gave me a copy of 2046, so I definitely had to see this one first!
I like how love and affection came through without showing sexual intimacy. That was implied, and the rest of what relationships really hold on to are brought forward with such a sutle and slow manner that you can't help but be drawn to it.
It's quite sad because it does make one think about all these acquaintances that just have a life of their own outside of the normal realm. I guess it's safe to say that most people have experienced it...having an affection for someone but can't really express it fully for fear of losing a good friendship, commitments to other people, or pain awkwardness or fear of rejection...and yet continue to endure the suffering of non-action.
The deleted scenes are a real treat and deinitely worth watching.
5 - The Book of Life

Ok, ok, I admit it. I chose this one because PJ Harvey is in it :).
Sadly, I didn't like the movie that much. I couldnt'f figure out how the unpolished and rough shooting could have done anything to mask the fact that there was either a lack of production or enough substance to shield it.
The actors did all give honest performances of their characters...but there really wasn't that much more to it.... :(
Wednesday, July 19, 2006
4 - The Matador

Netflix 4 - The Matador
This movie rocks!!!! Having been brainwashed into Pierce Brosnan's James Bond character, I enjoyed seeing him go berzerk in this fun story about an assasin losing it. Greg Kinnear is his usual self (feels like he does the same character or personality every time....like in As Good as it Gets).
Friday, July 14, 2006
3 - Dead Man
2 - Munich

Netflix 2 - Munich
It was very believable how they portrayed the assasinations. Whenever I see Ethan Hunt in "Mission Impossible" or James Bond performing the perfect operation, I just wonder how it really would have been had been done in real life.....and the sequences in Munich I think come really close....it's never perfect, and more than once, like lighting a firecracker, sometimes you have to come back and relight the fuse.
1 - The Brown Bunny

Netflix 1 - The Brown Bunny
Not a big fan of Vincent Gallo, but I was wondering what all the controversy was over this movie, and given that Chloe Sevigny is in it and I liked Gallo's "Buffalo 66" (with Christina Ricci), I was willing to start off my subscription....with a bang....well, more like a blow....as I soon came to realize what all the buzz was all about. All I can say about that is that Chloe was really brave to do such a thing on camera. The story does beg you to follow it (like "Broken Flowers") and the ending gives some closure to Bud Clay's behavior.
Have you ever stepped into a situation and just stood frozen in utter horror? We never really do know how we would deal with such an event until it happens. If I were to guess....mine would be similar to an accident....medical attention first....then anger to follow.
You May Fire When Ready...
Okay, so I finally have something in mind for this blog. It's been a painstaking process brainstorming and eliminating ideas and struggling and keeping true to what I felt when I got the name....but hell this one finally pulled the trigger.
What comes next is my journey with my Netflix subscription. When I signed up for the service, I was really taken by this sacred task of creating a queue. I was very picky and spent so many hours just choosing movies I felt I probably would like or want to see. And the process of maintaining the list will probably be equally as stimulating.
I think the choices we make tell us who we are and I look forward to finding out who I am in the next...who knows how far I will go....
Like the Ion Cannon that gave the rebels enough time to leave the Hoth system, this blog aims to help help keep a stream of stories or movies of interest coming...that I would have lost to laziness had I counted on that occasional trip to the video store ;)
What comes next is my journey with my Netflix subscription. When I signed up for the service, I was really taken by this sacred task of creating a queue. I was very picky and spent so many hours just choosing movies I felt I probably would like or want to see. And the process of maintaining the list will probably be equally as stimulating.
I think the choices we make tell us who we are and I look forward to finding out who I am in the next...who knows how far I will go....
Like the Ion Cannon that gave the rebels enough time to leave the Hoth system, this blog aims to help help keep a stream of stories or movies of interest coming...that I would have lost to laziness had I counted on that occasional trip to the video store ;)
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