Wednesday, December 03, 2008

YouTube Matters: Alphacat, Sara Bennincasa and SNL



Open Letter to Lorne Michaels

Dear Lorne -

It must have been a pain to travel around the country finding the best comic talent for your 31 season hit, Saturday Night Live. The planes, the hotel rooms, the rental cars, the bad food, and those dank comedy clubs - the fact that you stomached it is a testament to your dedication and love for putting the best comic talent on the world brightest comic stage. Now times are changing and America's best talent may only be a few mouse clicks away. This is a huge opportunity for you.

You and I both know that SNL is at is consistently funniest when lampooning American Presidents. To this day the funniest thing I've ever seen on SNL was Darryl Hammond as Bill Clinton addressing the press after he was exonerated; "I am bulletproof." Political satire is what keeps your show relevant. This year has given us the prepackaged hilarity of Sarah Palin, and the fact that Tiny Fey is a dead ringer made her casting a no brainer. But the work of Sara Benincasa as Sarah Palin was spectacular. 23/6, the comedy wing of the Huffington Post (widely considered to be the future of media and recently valued at $100 million) bought the exclusive right to post her material in the final weeks of the election. This was brilliant, not only because Sara B is brillinat, but because Sara B. is cheap. She, along with her friends have created funny without the expenses that accompany a live production. In the world of new media content is still king, but it's also much cheaper.

In the future, Lorne, you will have to augment your award winning cast with a motley crew of ameturs. Check out this clip from Iman Crosson playing President Obama.





I haven't seen a better Obama impression anywhere and I would like to see what he could do on SNL. You still have the biggest comic stage in America and I would emplore you to add some of the brightness light emerging from the most unlikely places.

Aaron

Musical Matters: The Prop 8 Musical

See more Jack Black videos at Funny or Die


You have to watch this in equal portion to the number of episodes of Doogie Howser you've watched, the number of times you've listened to the D, the number of episodes of the West Wing you own and the number of times you've wished you lived in a nation without hate.

Tuesday, December 02, 2008

TV Matters: Silversonic XL

Please check out the latest brilliant product from the infomercial intelligentsia - Silversonic XL.

The commercial opens with a bold question - "Have you ever wished you had sonic hearing?" As opposed to what other type of hearing? The product has many reasonable benefits, "No will ever know that you have sonic hearing!" Unless they've seen this commercial. The commercial goes on to note, "You may even hear things that pleasantly surprise you." Or you may hear that everyone in your office detests you.

Friday, November 21, 2008

Daytime TV Matters: Ellen and Chris Matthews



Ellen is a genius and if I didn't have a job I would watch her show everyday. What's so great about "the incident" is that I really do believe that Chris Matthews was probably a little sketchy back in the day.

Monday, November 10, 2008

Movie Matters: Family of Four Preview



When Morgan Riehl, line producer of Breathing Room (and my landlady) describes the characters of John Suits' upcoming feature, Family of Four, I can sense that he is creating an exciting piece of cinema. The above trailer further confirms my hunch. It's difficult to determine from a three minute trailer how successful the story telling is going to be, but I'm defiantly willing to spend ten dollars to find out.

Sunday, October 05, 2008

Movie Matter: Wall Street - "Live" Blogging

During these tough financial times we must turn to the movies to pull us through. Oliver Stone's classic Wall Street chronicles the rise and fall of Bud Fox, played by Charlie Sheen, a young ambitious broker who becomes the apprentice of the ethically challenged corporate raider, Gordon Gekko, a role Michael Douglass parlayed into an Oscar, who leads Bud to the financial dark side.

John C. McGinley, commissioner of the More Taste League, plays a bit part in this film and his quirky smirk is amazing.

Martin and Charlie Sheen play father and son in this picture and it really helps Charlie sell his role.

This movie is replete with amazing one-liners, the most pertinent to a current crisis comes from Hal Holbrook's character early in film:

"Jesus you can't make a buck in this market, the country's goin' to hell faster than when that son of a bitch Roosevelt was in charge. Too much cheap money sloshing around the world. The worst mistake we ever made was letting Nixon get off the gold standard."



Geneva Roth Holding Corp is the name of the offshore account Gekko's legal council wants Bud to open. That's a bad sign.

Gekko's "Greed is good" speech, like so many Republican speeches about the economy, sounds almost right.

Dayrl Hannah almost ruins this film. She is truly terrible.

Friday, October 03, 2008

Magazine Matters: A New Bearing for The Atlantic

The Atlantic, whose parent company supports the Entertainment Matters editor, has just launched an interesting re-branding campaign. The goal of the campaign is to reposition The Atlantic as the magazine for the "New Intelligentsia," a group of thinkers who are smart and cool.

The campaign itself has borrowed some of the thought provoking questions The Atlantic has asked readers to mull over such as, "Why Do President's Lie?," "Is Porn Adultery?" and "Is Google Making Us Stupid?," and turned them into giant neon signs and placed them in unlikely places. Then they set up cameras and asked passers by to proffer answers. The videos are going up on a snazzy interactive Web site that will fully launch in the coming weeks. They have also endeavored to meet advertisers where they live by inserting these questions on their favorite restaurants' menus and shampoo price tags at the Madison Avenue CVS.

The tagline of the campaign is "Think. Again.," and suggests that The Atlantic can help keep your brain alive. Every liberal arts college boasts that the skill they pass on to students is the ability to think critically. To put that skill to use, and help justify the cost of your student loans, one needs to encounter fresh ideas that challenge the status quo. The Atlantic, whose 1857 mission statement reads, "The Atlantic will be the organ of no party or clique but will honestly endeavor to be the exponent of what its conductors believe to be the American idea" is dedicated to delivering the nourishment your mind needs to stay healthy.

For your mental health, subscribe today
.

Thursday, October 02, 2008

Saturday, September 27, 2008

Movie Matters: Ghost Town



As a self diagnosed Ricky Gervais fiend I was surprised at how heartwarming his first leading man major Hollywood picture, Ghost Town turned out to be. Don't worry, the character Gervais plays, Bertrum Pincus, is perfectly drawn to capitalize on his comedy of manners style of humor.

The plot is fairly simple, a misanthropic dentist, Bertrum Pincus, has a brush with death during a routine operation and now he is haunted by a legion of ghosts visible only to him. These ghosts are on missions to finish unfinished tasked. The leading ghoul,Frank ,played by a betuxed Greg Kinnear, enlists Pincus to break up his widow, played my Tea Leone, and her fiancé. Hilarity and self discovery ensue. If you're looking for a safe romantic comedy to share with that special someone, pick up Ghost Town today.

Movie Matters: Frozen River



Frozen River, is an adult version of The Women. Manicures and facials are out, survival and sacrifice are in. Instead of an affected glossy world of testosterone free bliss, Frozen River is grounded in an unglamorous reality where abandoned women make hard choices for their families. There is no kitschy bond between girlfriends here, instead the bond between women is about survival.

In upstate New York, near the Canadian border, during Christmas time, Ray Eddy, played with grit by Melissa Leo, and her two boys are abandoned and robbed by her husband who's gambling away the down payment for their new home. While looking for her husband and the missing money, Ray gets entangled with a Mohawk woman named Lila who smuggles illegal aliens across the boarder.

As the story unfolds the movie explores the excruciating decisions women make to protect their children. Our mothers sacrificed everything to make sure we had what we needed to survive. There is something uniquely feminine about that kind of strength and I commend the film's writer and director Courtney Hunt for unapologetically portraying real women. See this film if you, like me, like to see woman portrayed as more than mannequins for nice bags and great shoes.

Movie Matters: Paul Newman Dies at 83



Paul Newman was an American treasure and he will be sorely missed. Thanks for entertaining us and inspiring us. Rest in Peace.

Thursday, September 25, 2008

TV Matters: Letterman Exposes McCain



Rarely does entertainment intersect so succinctly with current events. Here we have McCain telling a bold face lie to Letterman for no apparent reason. McCain could have easily said, "David, I have to do "The Evening News" because I suspended my campaign today." End of story. Instead, this clip is going viral and the entire affair exposes McCain to endless ridicule.

The best thing to come out of the McCain campaign are the Sara Benincasa Palin vlogs.

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Movie Matters: Tell No One



Tell No One is a movie that's so great that no one will see it until after it wins an Oscar. A taut murder mystery, Tell No One asks, "What happens when you bury the truth to protect the ones you love?" In this film, the answers are unsettling but always authentic.

I'm going to avoid going into the particulars of the film, the mystery is part of the fun, but I will say that the performance of the lead actor, François Cluzetis, is utterly breathtaking. Tell No One will be released on DVD on October 15, 2008. You can still catch it at the E Street Cinema or Bethesda Row.

Monday, September 22, 2008

Sunday, September 21, 2008

Movie Matters: The Women





In a movie with more estrogen than my friend group, The Women, starring Meg Ryan, Annette Benning, Debra Messing, Jada Pinkett-Smith, Eva Mendes, Bette Midler, Murphy Brown, and Princess Leia, is a jumble of emotions and designer footwear. With mindless quips like "Nobody hates Saks," The Women strikes a tired mantra of, "It's hard out here for a princess."

Four friends, a working mother fashion heiress wife of a hedge fund manager, Mary Haines (Meg Ryan); a high powered fashion magazine editor with a shopping addiction, Sylvia Fowler (Annette Benning); an earthy mother of many, Edie Cohen (Debra Messing); and an accomplished lesbian author, Alex Fisher (Jada Pinkett-Smith) lean on each other to face the challenges of motherhood, marriage, work, and friendship.

The only Y chromosome that actually appears on screen emerges from Edie's womb during the final frames of the film in a truly uterus-tugging moment. The movie is generally cute, but somehow misses the mark. If you like nice bags and sassy women you will like this film, but it’s an empty calorie snack.

Movie Matters: Lakeview Terrace



The above trailer makes Lakeview Terrace look like nothing more than a slightly more serious installment of the old movie trope: frat house A pranks frat house B. Instead, it's a sharp character study about modern day racial tensions, the complexities of marriage, and self discovery.

Samuel Jackson puts in a solid performance as Able Turner, a widower cop who's trying to raise two kids. Tension mounts when bi-racial newlyweds Chris and Lisa Mattson, played with startling authenticity by Patrick Wilson and Kerry Washington, move in next door.

The primary conflict is between Chris and Able who are negative images of each other. Chris is a young liberal carefree optimistic Good (Whole Foods) exec who just wants us all to get along. Able is a conservative 28-year veteran of the Force who sees the world as a dangerous place that he must protect his kids from. These world views collide in interesting and explosive ways as the physical proximity of these two characters force them to interact with each other.

I highly recommend Lakeview Terrace because it exposes truths about the world we live in with a flare only Hollywood can deliver.

Friday, September 19, 2008

YouTube Matters: Black vs. Black



Racial humor is one of the cornerstones of my funny. The above clip explains why exploiting racial stereotypes for comedic affect is so effective. (Did he use affect and effect correctly in that last sentence? - If you asked yourself that question read this other bastion of race based comic genius.)

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Music Matters: <{The Electives}>

<{The Electives}>, Astrodynamics, EP, International Rocket Service (I.R.S.)and Unique Bias Records, Inc.
Download Now: Cleopatra

Remember when you were 16 and all you cared about was impressing that P.Y.T. in 4th period? Well, if you're like me, you always failed because there were always kids like <{The Electives}> in that same Bio class who just got back from the studio and performed at the local "18 to party, 21 to drink" club last weekend. Before the flashback of your humiliating adolescence blinds you with irrational rage against the <{The Electives}> give these aspiring rock stars a chance. Their music is brimming with possibilities and fun to listen to.

For full discloser's sake band member, The Incredible {Maskot} AKA The Kick-Rocker AKA Captain Kidd is my kid brother, Joseph Mosby. Joseph, as you transcend to rock stardom I want you to remember uncle Sput's words, "Don't have a family unless you are planning on having a family." Keep up the fresh.

Satire Matters: Rachel Maddow and Sara Benincasa's Sarah Palin



My number one crush at the moment is on Rhodes Scholar and hottie Rachel Maddow who is only out of my league because she's a lesbian. My second biggest crush right now is on Sara Benincasa who portrays Sarah Palin in a series of leaked vlogs from the McCain/Palin campaign. What really makes the volgs work is the work of Diana Saez whose Dina Heath-Barr apparently loves Rachel as much as I do. The sad truth is that Dina Heath-Barr has a better shot at Rachel than I do. Tear.

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Satire Matters: Sara Benincasa's Sarah Palin



While the world has been clamoring for SNL to bring back Tina Fey to do Sarah Palin, I'm throwing Sara Benincasa's name into the ring. Sara Benincasa's Sarah Palin is likable, believable, and completely insane. With her comic partner Diana Saez as Dina Heath-Barr, Palin's cousin, personal stylist,and campaign manager, Benincasa lampoons the ridiculous vice presidential run of Governor Sarah Palin with an inspired improvisational style.

I was tempted to include all of the Palin Vlogs, but just visit Benincasa's YouTube page. For even more Benincasa comedy visit her blog Que Sera Sara - Whatever will be, will be Sara B.

Saturday, August 23, 2008

Movie Matters: Jason Statham: The John Wayne of Our Time?



First a few facts. John Wayne, the Duke, starred in over 170 films , won an Oscar, and received the freaking Presidential Medal of Freedom. He is an American institution and in a league of his own.



Now to my point. John Wayne often played the good-hearted outlaw; yeah, he'd kill if had to, but you always knew he would protect innocents. With highly entertaining turns in this year's, The Bank Job and Death Race, Jason Statham, a 35 year old Brit, has continued that tradition in a slightly more muscle bound and expletive punctuated way. Whether it's robbing a bank to give his family a better life or killing every death row inmate for a chance to raise his daughter, Stratam plays the quintessential Dukesque movie hero by consistanly doing the wrong things for the right reasons.



There is nothing new or innovative about the films Statham stars in and therein lies another connection he has with the Duke; stick with what works. Wayne starred in over 75 westerns and you knew what you were going to get when plunked down your two bits. Similarly, Statham primarily appears in adrenaline drenched, crime inspired, explosion accented films that rarely fail to satiate my appetite for improbable action sequences. After walking out of his films I'm rarely disappointed.

And ultimately that's what a great movie star provides an audience, consistency. Statham will never win the Presidential Medal of Freedom, but I believe the Duke would acknowledge that the two of them were cut from the same ragged cloth.

Tuesday, July 15, 2008

Music Matters: Girl Talk

Girl Talk - Feed the Animals, Illegal Art
Download Now - The entire album for whatever you want to pay!

If the genius of pop music is its ability to combine disparate genres of music and package them in a way that makes them accessible to the combined audiences of those genres then what happens when you combine pop music with itself? Girl Talk, Gregg Gillis, gives us a musical essay, Feed the Animals, to help us answer that question. The album taps into the nostalgia that underpins the power of pop music.

Sunday, July 13, 2008

The Dark Knight Matters: The Joker's On to Us



The hype for "The Dark Knight" has mainly focused on Heath Ledger's turn as the Joker. Hank Stuver, writing for the Washington Post, hints at why:

Finally, in this reevaluation of Joker, there is the obvious matter that the actor playing him died in January, not long after completing the film.

That's a whole other story, about which much has been written, and there is no denying that Ledger's pill overdose increases the macabre fascination we get this time from watching Joker. Ledger's meaningless death is what passes for deeper meaning in the pop world of outsize comic books and the celebrity costume party of superhero movies. If the Joker were real, he couldn't have planned a more cruel joke.

In all the fretting this spring about whether this would affect the marketing of "The Dark Knight," people found it very difficult to say the awful, Joker-like truth: We like it better because of it.


There is no deigning that Ledger's death will hang over ever frame making the film more ominous, more dark, more completely a product of the bleakness that shrouds the Batman myth. Batman has always stuck me as Grimm-like fairytale whose original ending, the one in which Little Red Riding Hood gets eaten, has been sanitized for mass consumption. Unlike Superman, the line between good and evil in the Batman universe is paper thin. Bruce Wayne, like every villain in Gotham, is severely psychologically scared by a society that fails him in an extremely personal way. His and theirs response to this is to operate outside of the boundaries of that society to manipulate it to his or their own ends. The overarching message then is not that Batman is good, but that his bad behavior just so happens to benefit the public (minus all of the property damage he causes).

Which brings us to the current chapter of the Batman saga, Christopher Nolan's, "The Dark Knight." I can't comment extensively on this film, as we are still a week away from its release, but if it's anything like "Batman Begins" where the "happy ending" took place on the rubble of Wayne Manor we should brace ourselves for a movie whose moral could be, "Suffering is all around us, and its meaningless." Mass market Hollywood movies rarely carry such a grim message but the gitty anticipation for this film exposes our collective desire to embrace the darkness.

Tuesday, July 01, 2008

Blogs Matter - Megan McArdle

Yes, Society is Gendered - July 1, 2008 Blog Post
By Megan McArdle

"I've had about ten requests from men to explain the phrase "winning the cocktail party". None from women. "


The above phrase appeared in a Megan McArdle (for disclosure's sake she works in my building) blog and the phrase "winning the cocktail party" is meaningless to me as well. Megan's blog explains that the phrase refers to the constant competition that goes on between men in social settings. Maybe it's because I always win, but I have never felt that I'm in a battle to win attention over other males at a party. My goal and goal of men I'm assuming is generally to win the battle for the attention of a specfic person not the party as a whole.

Ladies, correct me if I'm wrong.

Sunday, June 29, 2008

Poetry Matters: Patrick Phillips

Patrick Phillips - Boy
The VRQ Poetry Series, University of Georgia Press


Poetry's magic lies in its ability to articulate feelings and thoughts that you yourself can not express. It brings into focus the blurry images of your mind and allows you to share your new found clarity with others. Unfortunately, mainstream media mostly ignores poetry. But my favorite podcast, The Writer's Almanac with Garrison Keiller, bucks this trend and provides listeners with a daily dose of poetry.

During the week of May 4, 2008 the show featured two poems from Patrick Phillips' newest collection, Boy. I have to admit, while I like listening to Garrison Keiller's soothing voice read me poems, I rarely get the urge to buy poetry collections. Like most exercise, reading poetry is demanding and I'm usually too lazy to bother. But after hearing Phillips' "Matinée" and "Falling" I was compelled to buy the collection and dig into some serious verse.

Phillips' poetry works to articulate the transitions of the modern male experience. In "Falling" we meet a man who admits, "The truth is / that I fall in love / so easily because / it's easy," but ultimately he describes, "the only one / I fall in love with / at least once every day." The poem sheds light on how the primal adolescent behavior of cavorting with as many women as possible morphs into the civilized practice of monogamy. Many of the other poems in the collection deal with the role reversals that occur from childhood to adulthood. The verse is always straight forward and easy to understand which, at times, obscures the great depth of each poem.

If you are looking for consistanly poinent insights into the human condition, check out this collection.

Monday, March 31, 2008

Magazine Matters - Marry Him: The Case for Settling for Mr. Good Enough

Marry Him: The Case for Settling for Mr. Good Enough - The Atlantic
By Lori Gottlieb

Lori Gottlieb is a graduate of Stanford Medical School, a New York Times best selling author, a contributor to NPR, who has written for The New York Times, Time, and The Atlantic. Her career is a runaway success, yet at 40, she's still single. She wrote, what amounts to an open letter to young, smart, career minded woman, in the March issue of Atlantic, begging them to settle for "Mr. Good Enough." It's a very funny/sad article that made me at once ecstatic to be a man and sad for my female friends for whom this article was written.

Many of those friends, mostly twnetysomethings, have gotten their hands on the article and have been talking about it fervently. I would be interested in hearing their thoughts and I hope they take a moment to respond to this post with their feelings about the article. I did talk to one of my married friends who is in her early 30's and without even reading the article she agreed 100 percent that women should settle. This is a non-issue for me because I'll never have to settle. If I don't find the women of my dreams (a 20 something with a bright future and a palpable sexual energy) in the next 15 years, I'll still have another 15 years to keep looking and never diminish my ability to start a family. Women on the other hand, only have a short window to procreate.

Is this fair? Yes. Men are born with just enough genetic code to exist, while women are born with the complete catalogue of the human genetic code. Therefore women are the greater sex. They have the power to create life with the help of just a few cells. Men need an entire woman to pass on their genes. Once science figures out how to manufacture sperm in the lab, the arguments for keeping men around will hold less and less weight. Men start wars, die sooner, are stupider, and most of us go bald. The advantages we do have are that we get more attractive as we age and our sperm works well into our 70's. So I don't feel bad that you have to have all your children by 37.

Read the article and let's have a discussion.

Thursday, March 27, 2008

Music Matters - Melody Gardot

Melody Gardot - Worrisome Heart, Universal Classics and Jazz
Download Now - Worrisome Heart, Some Lessons (Heck just get the whole album for $5.99 at iTunes)

Melody Gardot's sultry jazz vocals are unobtrusive yet deeply affecting. Worrisome Heart, Gardot's first full length album, is the kind of record that you put on for ambient sound, but it's also the album you put on to steady an emotional crisis of the heart. For Gardot, love is real and terrifying. The fragility and urgency of life may be more apparent to Gardot, who survived a serious bicycle/car collision when she was a teenager; she was on the bike. The accident resulted in injuries that require her to use a cane, wear sun glasses all the time, and wear earplugs to treat her Hyperacusis/Tinnitus. She's walks on a fragile frame and has hyper-sensitive senses but the music she makes is sturdy and never overbearing. The musical styling shies away from sugary poppiness and cleaves hard to pure Jazz. The characters in her songs are venerable and exposed, but safe in the hands of Jazz which creates a community of exposed instruments and players. This is one of those rare works of art that meets you where you are and doesn't ask questions.

Wednesday, March 05, 2008

Music Matters - The Rescues

The Rescues - The Rescues (EP), Red Wind
Download Now - "Break Me Out"

The Rescues' self-titled, self-released debut EP is at times fresh and alive, but a sense of inertia prevents the band from breaking new ground. Don't get me wrong, the music is easy to listen to, clean, and likable. For example, "Break me Out" is a perfect spring time anthem that captures the hope of new love and new beginnings. "My Heart With You" is an a cappella masterpiece that is at once haunting and uplifting (think Imogen Heap's, "Hide and Seek"). But the other four songs on the EP lack the same forward motion. In these songs passive actors stand by while their lives happen to them. The musical choices in these songs also seem safe, devoid of risk and adventure. I have the feeling these songs will grow on me but will never become more than background music for reading on the metro.

The Rescues and Me

I have really high hopes for The Rescues. The band is comprised of three singer/songwriters who, after collaborating for years, recently decided to form a band. Adrianne and Gabriel Mann are old friends of mine, but I don't know the lovely Kyler England. For full disclosure’s sake, I'm in love with Adrianne. It's love at first sight when I see her open for Vienna Teng in January 2007 at a show in Annapolis, Maryland. She plays her deeply personal and poetic songs on her acoustic guitar and chats humorously about life on the road. Prompted by one of her anecdotes, I give her my phone number after the show. She never calls, but that doesn't stop me from wanting to see her again. My dream comes true when I read that she's coming to my neighborhood Indie music venue. At this show I'm introduced to The North La Brea All Star Conquistadors, a group comprised of Adrianne, Gabriel Mann, Jay Nash and Garrison Star. Each is a singer /songwriter and the group forms while playing the same venue in southern California. The concert is incredible. Four musicians who can each easily lead a band work seamlessly together to create a rich multi-layered musical experience. But the groups songs are rearrangements of the individual songs of each member. So when I hear that Adrianna and Gabriel Mann have a new band that is going to make new music I get really really excited.

So I download the EP and its good but I want it to be great. I tell myself that this is just the EP and they are saving the real gems for the LP. I tell myself, give it time and you will love every song. And I tell myself, you are one of the lucky few who even know the magnitude of their potential and I'm satisfied. I feel how Gabriel Mann might have felt when he helped an unknown local artist, Sara Barellies, get some of her songs on tape, that is, I feel confident that I hold important music in my hands that needs to be shared with the world.

Monday, March 03, 2008

Oscar Matters - Marion Cotillard's 9/11 Thoughts

An Open Letter to Marion Cotillard

Dear Marion -

Now that you have an Oscar, your in-depth analysis of the geo-political and economic reasons why the 9/11 attacks were faked are now going to make news. As someone who wants to see your slender body of work fattened up over time I have one request; stick to what you know. You are an actress, heck the best actress of 2008, so when you give interviews talk about your expertise. Your advice on craft could help untold numbers of aspiring actresses achieve their dreams. Your insight into on set politics could save productions time and money. You have real life experience in acting that others could benefit from, so I'm begging you, talk about that in your next encounter with the press.

You are not Rosie O’Donnell. Rosie can say and do whatever she wants because she made us fall in love with her before she told us she was a crazy person. She's like our crazy Aunt who we will always invite over for Thanksgiving and always send home early in a taxi because we are stuck with her. But we barely know you. Your first impression was good and we invited you to the ball. But now you've insulted us and maybe it's because you're French and think you don't need us, but honey, the real truth is we don't need you. I'm all for free speech and holding the government to account, but Hollywood isn't afraid to blackball people to protect its financial interests. For your own good, make us fall in love with you through your work before you poke us in the eye.

At the Oscars your dress was gorgeous and your French accent was super sexy and I want to see you around for years to come. Don't pull a Tom Cruise and torpedo your career.

Your acquaintance,

Aaron

Thursday, February 28, 2008

Oscar Matters: 80th Academy Awards - Winners!

The 80th Academy Award winners and my thougts about them.

Best Motion Picture
WINNER: "No Country for Old Men"
• "Atonement"
• "Juno"
• "Michael Clayton"
• "There Will Be Blood"

I love the Coen Brothers and I'm happy they won a bunch of Oscars. My vote would have gone to “Atonement,” but that's because I'm obsessed with British entertainment.

Performance By An Actor In A Leading Role
WINNER: Daniel Day-Lewis in "There Will Be Blood"
• George Clooney in "Michael Clayton"
• Johnny Depp in "Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street"
• Tommy Lee Jones in "In the Valley of Elah"
• Viggo Mortensen in "Eastern Promises"

There is no question that Daniel Day-Lewis is one of the best actors of our time. His win was not a shock, but I hoped the Academy would finally give Johnny Depp his due. Hopefully he'll get another shot.

Performance By An Actress In A Leading Role
WINNER: Marion Cotillard in "La Vie en Rose"
• Cate Blanchett in "Elizabeth: The Golden Age"
• Julie Christie in "Away From Her"
• Laura Linney in "The Savages"
• Ellen Page in "Juno"

I've only seen two of these films but Julie Christie was freaking amazing in "Away From Here." Netflix that today. Ellen Page was cute in "Juno," but come on, Best Actress?


Performance By An Actor In A Supporting Role
WINNER: Javier Bardem in "No Country for Old Men"
• Casey Affleck in "The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford"
• Philip Seymour Hoffman in "Charlie Wilson's War"
• Hal Holbrook in "Into the Wild"
• Tom Wilkinson in "Michael Clayton"

This might have been the strongest category of performances. Tom Wilkinson is brilliant, but he has an Oscar. The exact same thing goes for Philip Seymour Hoffman. Hal Holbrook, who I thought was dead, should be up for an Honorary Award soon. Casey Affleck is the man and I expect to see him up on the Oscar podium in years to come.


Performance By An Actress In A Supporting Role
WINNER: Tilda Swinton in "Michael Clayton"
• Cate Blanchett in "I'm Not There"
• Ruby Dee in "American Gangster"
• Saoirse Ronan in "Atonement"
• Amy Ryan in "Gone Baby Gone"

Tilda Swinton looked amazingly bad...ass when she accepted her Oscar. Amy Ryan is someone to watch. Be sure to check her out on "The Wire." The kid from "Atonement" is cute, but seriously, Best Supporting Actress?


Achievement In Directing
WINNER: Joel Coen and Ethan Coen for "No Country for Old Men"
• Julian Schnabel for "The Diving Bell and the Butterfly"
• Jason Reitman for "Juno"
• Tony Gilroy for "Michael Clayton"
• Paul Thomas Anderson for "There Will Be Blood"

The Coen Brothers RULE!

Adapted Screenplay
WINNER: "No Country for Old Men" by Joel Coen and Ethan Coen
• "Atonement" by Christopher Hampton
• "Away From Her" by Sarah Polley
• "The Diving Bell and the Butterfly" by Ronald Harwood
• "There Will Be Blood" by Paul Thomas Anderson

The Coen Brothers=Awesome. Cormac McCarthy’s entire corpus is on my must read list. Look for Emily Muth's review of "Away From Her" coming soon to "Entertainment Matters".


Original Screenplay
WINNER: "Juno" by Diablo Cody
• "Lars and the Real Girl" by Nancy Oliver
• "Michael Clayton" by Tony Gilroy
• "Ratatouille" by Brad Bird, Jan Pinkava and Jim Capobianco
• "The Savages" by Tamara Jenkins

"Juno," the cute indie movie that could was written by a stripper. I can't write that well with my clothes on. See?


Achievement In Music Written For Motion Pictures (Original Song)
WINNER: Glen Hansard and Marketa Irglova for "Falling Slowly" from "Once"
• Alan Menken and Stephen Schwartz for "Happy Working Song" from "Enchanted"
• Jamal Joseph, Charles Mack and Tevin Thomas for "Raise It Up" from "August Rush"
• Alan Menken and Stephen Schwartz for "So Close" from "Enchanted"
• Alan Menken and Stephen Schwartz for "That's How You Know" from "Enchanted"

There was some controversy that “Falling Slowly,” a song that I've had on my iPod since last spring, wasn't written for the film. Who cares? The part it plays in the film is essential. All of the “Enchanted” songs, save for the sappy "So Close" are destined to be classics. Amy Adams' performance was magical. I love her. Seriously.

Achievement In Music Written For Motion Pictures (Original Score)
WINNER: Dario Marianelli for "Atonement"
• Alberto Iglesias for "The Kite Runner"
• James Newton Howard for "Michael Clayton"
• Michael Giacchino for "Ratatouille"
• Marco Beltrami for "3:10 to Yuma"

The typewriter in the “Atonement” score was awesome. I wish the Radiohead inspired score of “There Will Be Blood” would have nominated. It was intensly scary, but spot on for the film.

Achievement In Cinematography
WINNER: Robert Elswit for "There Will Be Blood"
• Roger Deakins for "The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford"
• Seamus McGarvey for "Atonement"
• Janusz Kaminski for "The Diving Bell and the Butterfly"
• Roger Deakins for "No Country for Old Men"


The cinematography in "There Will Be Blood" captures the majesty of the American West perfectly. Shooting from the perspective of a one-eyed quadriplegic is an amazing achievement. It's also depressing. The only thing that happens in "The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford" is cinematography.

Achievement In Film Editing
WINNER: Christopher Rouse for "The Bourne Ultimatum"
• Juliette Welfling for "The Diving Bell and the Butterfly"
• Jay Cassidy for "Into the Wild"
• Roderick Jaynes for "No Country for Old Men"
• Dylan Tichenor for "There Will Be Blood"

There are so many cuts in "The Bourne Ultimatum" that I seriouly got a headache. Great job.

Achievement In Costume Design
WINNER: Alexandra Byrne for "Elizabeth: The Golden Age"
• Albert Wolsky for "Across the Universe"
• Jacqueline Durran for "Atonement"
• Marit Allen for "La Vie en Rose"
• Colleen Atwood for "Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street"

How many awards can 16th century costuming receive? Apparently one more.

Achievement In Art Direction
WINNER: Dante Ferretti and Francesca Lo Schiavo for "Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street"
• Arthur Max and Beth A. Rubino for "American Gangster"
• Sarah Greenwood and Katie Spencer for "Atonement"
• Dennis Gassner and Anna Pinnock for "The Golden Compass"
• Jack Fisk and Jim Erickson for "There Will Be Blood"

The blood pallet in "Sweeney Todd" was fully explored in glorious gruesome detail.

Best Animated Feature Film
WINNER: "Ratatouille"
• "Persepolis"
• "Surf's Up"

I don't know where Disney is going with the whole adorable rodent thing. You can't build an empire on something like that. I think the Academy is all penguined out. And a cartoon about Islamist oppression sounds cute and wholly depressing.


Best Animated Short Film
WINNER: "Peter & the Wolf"
• "I Met the Walrus"
• "Madame Tutli-Putli"
• "Même les Pigeons Vont au Paradis (Even Pigeons Go to Heaven)"
• "My Love (Moya Lyubov)"

These are the scariest and most bizarre cartoons I have ever scene. I liked (i.e. didn't want to hide from the scary images) “Peter and the Wolf” and “Even Pigeons Go to Heaven,” but even those where excessively morbid.

Best Live Action Short Film
WINNER: "Le Mozart des Pickpockets (The Mozart of Pickpockets)"
• "At Night"
• "Il Supplente (The Substitute)"
• "Tanghi Argentini"
• "The Tonto Woman"

Every single one of these films is worth seeing and I would have been happy with any of them winning. "The Mozart of Pickpockets" has a really cute thieving child and the dumbest criminal duo since those guys in “Home Alone.” "At Night" is a heart wrenching story about three women with cancer who spend New Year's Eve together in a hospital ward. "The Substitute" is an extremely funny story about the merits of misbehaving. "Tanghi Argentini" reassures audiences that giving is better than receiving. And finally, "The Tonto Women" is a western that deals with beauty and femininity in new and fascinating ways.

Best Documentary Feature
WINNER: "Taxi to the Dark Side"
• "No End in Sight"
• "Operation Homecoming: Writing the Wartime Experience"
• "Sicko"
• "War/Dance"

Read my post about "Taxi to the Darkside", see the movie and then go see "No End in Sight" and "Operation Homecoming." I haven't seen "War/Dance" and "Sicko" is next in my queue, but I'm assuming they are both must see films. The real world matters and we can no longer afford to not see it.

Best Documentary Short Subject
WINNER: "Freeheld"
• "La Corona (The Crown)"
• "Salim Baba"
• "Sari's Mother"

"Freeheld" tells the story of a New Jersey police officer who earned a pension for her 24 years of service and as she was dying of lung cancer she wanted to make sure she could pass her pension benefits would be passed on to her spouse who happened to be a women. A powerful story that deserved the Oscar. "La Corona" tells the story of a beauty pageant in a Columbian woman's prison and it's hilarious. "Sari's Mother" tells the story of a child who contracts AIDS through a blood transfusion in Iraq. Done without narration, the harsh reality of the subjects lives is seared to the viewers mind. "Salim Baba" is a light-hearted story about a man in Kolkata who is passing his family movie business to his sons. The family pushes an old fashioned movie theater on wheels around the city. It's about the power of film blah blah blah, this is the only one of these films you should skip.

Best Foreign Language Film
WINNER: "The Counterfeiters" (Austria)
• "Beaufort" (Israel)
• "Katyn" (Poland)
• "Mongol" (Kazakhstan)
• "12" (Russia)

I saw none of these films. Thank God for Netflix.

Achievement In Visual Effects
WINNER: Michael Fink, Bill Westenhofer, Ben Morris and Trevor Wood for "The Golden Compass"
• John Knoll, Hal Hickel, Charles Gibson and John Frazier for "Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End"
• Scott Farrar, Scott Benza, Russell Earl and John Frazier for "Transformers"

Great.

Achievement In Makeup
WINNER: Didier Lavergne and Jan Archibald for "La Vie en Rose"
• Rick Baker and Kazuhiro Tsuji for "Norbit"
• Ve Neill and Martin Samuel for "Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End"

I really wanted Norbit to win an Oscar.

Achievement In Sound Editing
WINNER: Karen Baker Landers and Per Hallberg for "The Bourne Ultimatum"
• Skip Lievsay for "No Country for Old Men"
• Randy Thom and Michael Silvers for "Ratatouille"
• Christopher Scarabosio and Matthew Wood for "There Will Be Blood"
• Ethan Van der Ryn and Mike Hopkins for "Transformers"

Bourne was an auditory assault of Oscar worthy proportions. I defiantly understood more of what I heard then what I saw.

Achievement In Sound Mixing
WINNER: Scott Millan, David Parker and Kirk Francis for "The Bourne Ultimatum"
• Skip Lievsay, Craig Berkey, Greg Orloff and Peter Kurland for "No Country for Old Men"
• Randy Thom, Michael Semanick and Doc Kanefor "Ratatouille"
• Paul Massey, David Giammarco and Jim Stuebe for "3:10 to Yuma"
• Kevin O'Connell, Greg P. Russell and Peter J. Devlin for "Transformers"

Bourne was an auditory assault of Oscar worthy proportions. I defiantly understood more of what I heard then what I saw.

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Oscar Matters: Joining the Conversation

Movies influence our national conversation and the Academy offers Oscar nominated films to frame a specific discussion. This year I find myself less concerned about the winners and more interested in finding out what the Academy has on its mind. So, I decide to see as many Oscar nominated films as I can.

On Saturday, February 23 I spend nearly six hours at the National Archives to watch three hours and forty-two minutes of Oscar nominated short films. The two hours and change not spent watching film is spent standing in line outside. The temperature on the National Mall peaks at 36 degrees while a wintry mix drizzles non-stop. I don't mind the weather conditions because I'm in a robust conversation with several people about the film scene in DC, this year's Oscar nominees, and the movies in general. No doubt some of the people out here want to ensure they win their office Oscar pool. I point those competitors to David Carr's comment about the Oscar nominated Live Action, Animated, and Documentary shorts in The New York Times, "If you really are forced to choose these obscurities in your office pool, you should probably switch jobs." Picking Oscar winners is not hard. At my own Oscar shindig, having seen more nominated pictures than anyone in the room, I should be the expert, but I fail to pick more winners than anyone else. There are reasons, other than the hollow glory obtained by guessing more Oscar winners than your cubicle mate, why I or anyone else spends an entire Saturday watching these particular Oscar nominees.

Granted, there are practical considerations. These short films live obscure lives on film festival screens mostly in Europe. Of the 14 nominated shorts, 11 of them are made outside of the United States. Americans love the movies and will pay $10 or $12 to see Spider-Man 3, but we are not going bundle up the kids , drive to the movie theater, buy $40 worth of refreshments and watch a 20 minute movie about a child who recently contracted AIDS in Iraq. Even if avid film enthusiasts want to see short film, their local art house might show the Oscar nominated shorts for few days a year, but that will be the extent of their yearly short film schedule. (The same sort or analysis applies to many of the films nominated this year. Juno is the only nominated film that grosses over $100 million at the US box office. It doesn't win.) Living in DC, I can go to the E Street Theater and pay $30 to see these films or I can go to the National Archives and see the films for free. As one of my fellow film goers says, "I don't know what these films are about, but the price is right."

But besides practical considerations I brave the elements to learn the vocabulary for this year's Academy discussion. Innovation in film making is always on the Academy's mind. The reason the Academy honors Live Action, Animated and Documentary shorts is because, and I'm stealing this from Margaret Parson, Curator, Department of Film Programs, National Gallery of Art, these films, unencumbered by commercial constraints, are the laboratories for film experiments. Hollywood serves a fickle public so it must present new and different techniques to keep the public interested. Sort of. Only three of the short "laboratories of film" were made in America. Hollywood leaves the lab work to someone else and capitalizes on their innovations when the market is ready. In the mean time the Academy rewards many of these innovators by giving them Oscars and enough time at the podium to stammer in broken English until they give up and thank their friends and families in their native language. To me this suggests that, as far as craft, that is the mechanics of telling stories using film, Hollywood is looking abroad for ideas. But this discussion, while interesting to film nuts, is really for the industry professional. I care more about what the stories are telling us.

Atonement defends fiction's place in telling us stories which is interesting and innovative but the Academy seems more interested in films that ask Americans, "Who are we?" Four of the Best Picture nominees are American films that deal with U.S. specific issues. No Country For Old Men, a western, the most American of genres, wins best picture. But it isn't a western that we've seen before. There is no show down at high noon at or near the OK Corral. The West in this picture seems to have the same rules, but not all the players know the rules and if they do they break them intentionally. This is very unsettling to see as an American. Our entire national myth is tied up in our expansion West and if the rules that govern that place are falling apart, how are we falling apart? This idea is further explored in Michael Clayton and There Will Be Blood, where the American Dream belongs to corporations who rent it to individuals as long as they protect corporate interests. And finally Juno unmercifully strips away the glossy veneer of the American family. These films show that America is not the woman she used to be. She's maturing, and we can not keep treating her like a child. She's an adult and needs to start acting like one.

I encourage you to see as many nominees as you can so the next time I run into you we can talk about what Hollywood thinks is important and try to come to a consensus on whether or not it matters.

Friday, February 22, 2008

Oscar Matters - Taxi to the Darkside @ National Archives

Taxi to the Dark Side

On February 21st at 5:51 PM I arrive at the Special Events entrance to get my ticket for "Taxi to the Dark Side." Free tickets are going to be handed out at 6:00 PM and there is already a line out to the sidewalk on Constitution Ave. My fellow movie goers are all bundled up passing the time by doing "The Onion" crossword or reading a tattered copy of "Atonement" or talking about today's New York Times article about Senator McCain's "concubine." I'm standing next to a young woman who is holding a spot in line for family member who shows up in a well worn HRC hat. An employee of the National Archives walks out and tells us the rules: 1) Tickets will be handed out at 6 o'clock; 2) Doors will open at 6:30; 3) Visit the Starbucks or the Potbelly's across Pennsylvania but be back no later than a quarter of seven. The man in the HRC hat tells his young female relation, "Honey, my philosophy is if you think young, act young, and look young, it will help you stay young." Then he points to his face and says, "That why I got work done." This is a liberal crowd ecstatic to see a film that brings into sharp relief the failings of the Bush Presidency.

The wind is cutting through the pockets of my jacket as I wait for the doors to open. I'm doing everything to keep my hands warm but I know they won't be warm until I get inside. I'm envious of the woman who is being escorted into the building before doors officially open. A National Archives employee shouts ahead, "This is the speaker." The speaker reminds me of my Victorian Lit professor. She's carrying at least three bags and has a vague, confused expression on her face. I can't remember reading anything thing about speakers on the Web site, so I assume she is some sort of academic.

After I find my seat in the lavish William G. McGowan Theater I take a look at the program and read that Ann Hornaday, Washington Post film critic, is the speaker. As she sits in the audience before she's called to the podium I look over her shoulder and see a half page of typed notes. She's been asked to set aside her proclivity to assess the merits of individual films and talk about the DC film scene. Her comments are limited to the half page she had with her. After thanking foundations and vocalizing her hope that Charles Guggenheim's daughter is in the audience, she says, this theater is the center of the film scene in Washington. She goes on to note that seeing these nominated documentaries and short films is a new phenomenon and a privilege. She concludes by saying the films in this series, and any film worth is salt, approach the question, "Who are we?" in interesting and engaging ways.

Taxi to the Dark Side illuminates a dark and complex subject matter; the use torture in the war on terror. Like many of the war policies that come out of the Bush White House, the original torture policy is created hastily and implemented without consideration of long term consequences. The movie, in stark contrast to this mode of reasoning, carefully dissects each aspect of the story to find the underlying truth and lessons to be learned. Taxi and No End In Sight are must see films for every citizen concerned about American's standing in the world. What they ultimately show is that the promise of America lives within the thousands of civil servants who wake up each day to protect our nation and her interest. They also expose the greatest weakness of our nation: a complacence and apathetic public. The packed theater, the funding of several major foundations and organizations, and the general atmosphere of the evening reassure me that we have the capacity to learn from our mistakes and heal our wounded nation.

Oscar Matters - Obsure Nominees at the National Archives

Showcase of Academy Award Nominated Documentaries and Shorts - William G. McGowan Theater - February 20 - February 24, 2008

The Academy of Motion Arts and Sciences, The Charles Guggenheim Center for the Documentary Film and the Foundation for the National Archives have gotten together for the last four years to screen the Oscar nominees for Documentaries and Shorts at the William G. McGowan Theater located at the National Archives in Washington D.C.

These are films that are rarely seen by the public. Documentary features have enjoyed wider releases over the past decade or so, but these films are usually only in theaters for a short time. As for the shorts, unless you are an academy voter, there is little to no opportunity to see these films on the big screen.

Thank goodness for billionaires who had so much money they had to give some of it to the arts. And thank goodness I live in DC where most things artsy are free. I can't make it to every screening but check the blog for the screening I do get to attend.

Sunday, February 10, 2008

Music Matters - Vampire Weekend

Vampire Weekend - Vampire Weekend, XL Records
Download Now - "A-Punk"

Last Wednesday I braved the hardened streets of Northeast DC to see Vampire Weekend play to a sold out crowd at the Rock and Roll Hotel. This was the first stop on the bands self-titled debut album tour. The band is comprised of four young guys from the hallowed halls of Columbia University. Ezra Koenig (lead vocals and lead guitar), Rostam Batmanglij (producer and keyboards), Christopher Tomson (drums), Chris Baio (bass). The band generated more buzz than a bee hive in 2007 by tickling the ears of music reviewers with their short and snappy EP. Their effervescent three minute pop song format made for a energetic, polished and short performance. The band hit the stage at around 9:45 and were packing up at around 10:30. I have to agree with Bob Boylan of All Songs Considered, "this band has it."

Music Matters @ Entertainment Matters

I'm reletivly new to the world of serious popular music. When I was growing up my mother forced me to listen to Christian radio and she didn't mind if I listened to oldies. I didn't take a hold of my own music tastes until I was in college and even then I did so half-heartedly. After I graduated I resolved to figured out how to navigate the current musical landscape.

Every journey into the unknown requires a map. Their are no shortage of map makers in the music world, but finding the right one took me some time. The obvious leaders, such as Rolling Stone and Billboard seemed too be for the seasoned traveler but I couldn’t trust my journey to the cartographic sketch artist of the blogosphere. At the time, my general intellectual musings were guided by various Washington media outlets including The Washington Post, NPR and City Paper and each had a pretty good sign posts for music. Then one day I stumbled across Paste Magazine. I might not have ever looked at this magazine, but Philip Seymour Hoffman was on the cover (the first non-musician to grace the publications cover) and it was the first music magazine that I had ever seen with a sampler CD. Finally, a sonic map for a sonic landscape. In June 2007 I bought an Ipod and started downloading NPR's All Songs Considered and with that I had all of the direction I needed to start my adventure through the contemporary musical world.

I say all of this to help you understand how much of a novice I am when it comes to music. As I read all the reviews of Vampire Weekend, I was struck by the sheer number of references to bands from the 80's, sounds from South Africa, and the other musical building blocks that make this band who they are. After reading all of this I realized that I hadn’t heard most of the music the reviewers were referring to. I also realized that I listen to music with one thing in mind, do I want to hear this song again?

Such is the plight of me and the unwashed masses who can't tell that Vampire Weekend draws from Congolese rhythms and South African guitar rifts. We love music without knowing how it got here. Listening to Vampire Weekend is like a Cliff's Notes version of the musical genres and influences from which they are born. I know I should read the book some day, but sometimes, I'm fine with just knowing how the story ends.

So, at Entertainment Matters, I will cover music as sophistically as I can, but I have young ears. Join me on my journey to find music that matters.

Tuesday, January 29, 2008

Oscar Matters - Was "Gone Baby Gone" Snubbed?

"I really feel, as far as talent is concerned, this is the most talented team that I've been part of as a whole, but the most unproven, inexperienced team that I've ever played on" ~ Brett Farve about the 4-12 2006 Packers (In 2007 that team made it to the NFC Championship game)

Ben Affleck is one of the most underrated artists in Hollywood. I guess that's because he's appeared in such gems as Gigli, Forces of Nature, and Daredevil. But for every throw away performance there's a knockout performance in a movie like Dogma, Shakespeare in Love or Hollywoodland. On top of that, he's an Oscar winning screenwriter. With Gone Baby Gone he's added director to his resume and at this point I'm drawing a line in sand; Ben Affleck is one of the most important artist working in Hollywood.

Gone Baby Gone is one of those rare movies that is satisfying on every level. The cast is incredible. At the helm is Ben's little brother Casey who picked up his first Oscar (Best Supporting Actor) nod this year for his performance in The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford, but he could have easily snagged a Best Actor nod for his turn as Patrick Kenzie in Gone Baby Gone. The younger Affleck more than holds his own against acting giants Morgan Freeman (who plays police Captain Jack Doyle), and Ed Harris (as Detective Remy Bressant). Amy Ryan (who I fell in love with as Beadie on the The Wire) puts in an Oscar nominated performance as Helene McCready the drug-addicted mother of a little girl who's gone missing.

The movie's characters are brilliantly drawn. Patrick Kenzie is a young recently minted Private Detective who's spent his entire life in the same South Boston neighborhood. Family and community are the most important drivers of his life. He's a good guy but he comes from the streets, so he looks like a push over, but if you try him he'll lay you out flat. Patrick's girlfriend, Angie Gennaro (played by the beautiful and talented Michelle Monaghan), is his high school sweetheart and perfect foil. She loves Patrick deeply, but is firmly her own person.

We meet the rest of the characters when a little girl, Amanda McCready, has gone missing from Patrick's and Amanda's neighborhood. The girl's aunt, Bea McCready, who has basically raised Amanda, hires Patrick and Angie to work the neighborhood angle of the case. Her husband, Lionel (played by Titus Welliver) also loves Amanda as his own child and his sister Helene is Amanda's negligent mother. The police detective assigned to the case, Ramy Bressant is a harden officer who sees Patrick as an inexperienced hack who will muddle the investigation and his superior Captain Jack Doyle feels the same way. In each character's arc we see how their innate belief structure causes them to make decisions that push the story in interesting and unforeseeable ways.

The plot is chocked full of twists and turns that kept me on the edge of my seat. The witty, biting south Boston inflected dialogue is always crisp and relevant. The move hums with a urgent intensity that consistently highlights the gravity of the moral dilemmas the movie grapples with. There are no easy answers at the end of this film and the choices the characters make expose the complex inter-workings of family and community.

A movie that gets it right on so many levels should have been honored much more that it has been. The script is phenomenal and Ben Affleck and Aaron Stockard should be up for best adapted screenplay. They aren't. Casey Affleck anchors this film and he should be up for best Actor. He isn't (but his best supporting nod could partially be for this role). And finally, the movie should be up for Best Picture. It isn't.

The Academy has been ignoring Ben Affleck because he's decided to make a lot of money by appearing in marginal movies, but it's time for them to stop underestimating him. They sort of saw his potential when they gave him and his friend Matt Damon Oscars for writing Good Will Hunting but (not so) secretly believed that Matt just put Ben's name on the script because they were pals. Now, Ben Affleck has made one of the best movies of the year, a movie about what happens when you underestimate a person of true talent and substance, and its his statement that no matter what Hollywood thinks, he's an artist of great power who will shape the movies for a long time to come.

Monday, January 28, 2008

Oscar Matters - Is this Johnny Depp's Year?

There is no question that Johnny Deep is one of our most talented actors and he deserves an Oscar. It's always been my belief that actors and actresses should win Oscars for their body of work. When hot Hollywood new comers burst on the scene and win an Oscar for their first major role their next major role is historically a high-budget low-substance picture. Who can forget Adrian Brody's turn in The Jacket? Wait, who can remember Adrian Brody?

I love Johnny Depp, but his choice in roles has not always highlighted his true talent. From the first time I saw him on screen in Edward Scissorhands to his haunting portrayal of Sweeny Todd (Tim Burton uses him a lot), he has been my most reliable source for what life's like on the fringes of society. But the fringe doesn't really pay the bills in Hollywood nor does it always give room for versatility.

It took a big budget mass appeal juggernaut like Pirates of the Caribbean: Curse of the Black Pearl to make him an Oscar nominee . Stand out performances in Blow and Chocolat showed that he was more that just the quirky Tim Burton lead and his legion of cult followers have been good for business. Johnny Depp, after putting in memorable performances for 20 years earned his first nod in 2004 for playing Jack Sarrow. The Academy rarely gives statues for comedic performances, this was no exception, but it did give him a second nod the following year for his portrayal of Sir James Matthew Barrie in Finding Neverland. He lost to Jamie Fox (the Academy owes black people some back pay) .

This year is his best shot at winning the golden statute thus far. In Sweeny Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street, Depp reunites with Tim Burton. Todd tells the dark story of a Benjamin Barker who’s exiled because a powerful judge wants to take Barker's wife for his own. When Barker returns from exile, he has nothing and has become Sweeney Todd, a mad man out for revenge. It is here, in the deep recesses of the macabre, where Depp honed his talent and is arguably his most effective. His intensity as an actor helps him humanize the most inhuman of characters. I think it would be no small vindication for him, and his most loyal fans, to win the award for playing a mad man in a Tim Burton picture.

But than again he could easily be in his seat when the Best Actor winner is announced on February 25 at the Kodak Theater. The Academy usually honors the proven best (talent wise and box office wise), but it tends to take them a while. Jack Nicholson is the Academy's most honored actor, with four wins and twelve nominations. He didn't win until his fourth nomination. Peter O'Toole has been nominated eight times and has only won an honorary award. Kate Winslet has been nominated five times and hasn't won yet.

You have to wait your turn, but the Academy likes to share the wealth and three of this year's nominees, George Clooney, Tommy Lee John, and Daniel Day-Lewis, have already won acting Oscars. Viggo Mortinson is up for his first Oscar, making Johnny Depp the most acclaimed actor on the ballot without a win. Johnny's been good, and I hope this is the year the Academy makes him great.

Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Oscar Matters - Best Pictures of 2007

My greatest goal in life is to win an Oscar for Best Picture. In the mean time, lets take a look at why this year's best picture nods matter.

Atonement - This picture asks, can fiction save one's soul? This is an important question as mass market fiction becomes the elegiac touchstone of our collective lives. Stories have always helped to guide people through the collective fog of human experience, but usually religion has had a monopoly on the truth that lie in telling tells. As Sam Harris, Richard Dawkins, Christopher Hitchens, and philosophers of their ilk gain traction in the public conscience, we risk loosing the power of fiction to explain the human condition. But is fiction really that powerful/necessary or is it a poor substitute for careful scientific observation?

Weighty stuff, but Atonement, based of the Ian McEwen book of the same name, uses a simple story to test fiction's mettle. A young girl, Briony Tallis (Saoirse Ronan in an Oscar Nominated performance), deliberately gives a fictitious account of the assault of another young girl. In so doing she sends an innocent young man, Robbie Turner (James McAvoy), to jail and deprives her older sister, Cecilia (Kira Knightly) of his love. In the ensuing years, these three characters are thrown into the harsh realities of WWII. In the climax of the plot, the little girl has grown up and is confronted by her sister and the man she sent to jail.

Several critics have criticizes the movie for losing focus in the second half. I would suggest that the film makers are merely building their case for the clarity of fiction over the jumble of raw fact. The first half of the movie hums with an electric pace that is propelled forward by crisp dialogue and constant expositional character development. The second half lurches forward at an uneven pace, bogged down by static dialogue, and wild leaps in characterizations. The first half represents the kind of order fiction provides in helping us assign meaning to human actions, while the second half examines how the haphazardness of real life makes meaning difficult to pin down.


Now before you balk at the obtuse metaness of that argument consider the film's closing sequence. The little girl from the being of the story is now an old woman being interviewed about the story we just saw. This kind of narrative stunt suggests that the film makers expect us to take a step back and examine the picture on a higher level. That's why this film matters, and that's why it's best picture nod is well deserved.

Juno - The film explores the ebb and flow of gender roles in today's society. Juno (brilliantly portrayed by Oscar nominee Ellen Page), is an eccentric 16 year-old from Minnesota who unexpectedly gets pregnant and then decides to keep the baby and put it up for adoption. On the surface this seems like a pro-life polemic that says, "See, there's no need to have a choice." Not so fast pro-lifers. She ends up giving the baby to a recently divorced single mother. How's that for woman power? Juno is all set to have an abortion, but when she gets to the clinic she's realize that choice slices both ways. She knows that she doesn't want this baby, but she's empowered enough to take it to term and put it up for adoption where she sees fit. This film is really a celebration of the choice movement.

You can't talk about the choice movement without conjuring up ideas of gender equality. Juno is an autonomous woman who is in charge of her own destiny. Unlike most teen sex comedies, the woman initiates sex and the movie explores how pregnancy affects men. The movie asks a question that pro-choicers need to think about. What role do men in a pregnancy? If woman are self-sufficient automatons, do they need men?

The film makes a strong case for keeping us Y's around for a little while longer. Juno's father raises her when her mom leaves the family. Bleaker (played by Michael Cera) , her baby's bio dad, loves her more than anything in the world. These relationships point to the partnership qualities of male/female relationships that can enrich human experience. And that's why this movie matters.

Michael Clayton - This film examines what happens when people are reduced to a corporate function. In the opening sense, Michael Clayton (Played by George Clooney who gets an Oscar nod for it) explains to a hysterical client that he is not miracle worker, but a janitor. Wow. After $150,000 of law school training, a growling career in public law and several years as an attorney at a major law firm, he feels like an unskilled worker who does his jobs in the shadows, after hours, because the work he does is dirty and shouldn't see the light of day.

Everyone in this picture is doing someone else's dirty work. The plot centers around a class action lawsuit against an Agro-giant who has poisoned an entire community by letting a carcinogenic pesticide sep into the water supply. Tilda Swinton puts in an Oscar nominated performance as Karen Crowder a recently minted General Counsel whose current responsibilities include doing whatever it takes to save the agriculture company she works for from paying out in the suit. The ever brilliant Tom Wilkinson gains a nod for playing Arthur Edens, a corporate attorney who has an apparent breakdown because he realizes that he has logged 30,000 hours defending the corporate greed and corruption that lead to the sickness and death of innocents. But as the movie takes a look at Michael Clayton's life, a recovering gamblholic, in debt to a loan shark (who likes Michael but who has to collect on behalf of his employers) for a botched restaurant deal, prevented from doing the court room work that he loves, and charged with betraying his only friend for the good of his company, you get the sense that Arthur has finally gained his sanity.

The movie's characters are constantly asked to set aside their morality to advance corporate interests. And while to money's nice, the movie suggests that a life exchanged for money and power is not worth living. And that's why this movie matters.

No Country for Old Men - In this film, the classic mano y mano western trope is stretched to its limits as the old west gives way to the new west. The Coen Brothers (Nominated for Director, Adaptation, and Best Picture) present Cormac McCarthey's bleak story about the march of progress. The pivotal character is Anton Chigurh, (played by Javier Bardem in an Oscar nominated performance) a psychopathic hit man sent to retrieve the money from a botched drug deal. Llewelyn Moss (played by Josh Brolin) is out shooting at some food in rural Texas when he comes across the grizzly scene of the botched drug deal. He finds the money and the chase begins.

The simple chase plot is secondary to the greater issue of seismic societal shifts. The story is anchored by the elderly Sheriff Ed Tom Bell (played be Tommy Lee Jones) whose father and father's father served as Sheriff in this rural Texas county. There are a number of scenes in which he is overwhelmed by the pointless violence and mayhem caused by Chigurh. At the end of the ordeal he retires because he feels that he's no longer fit to work in a world that no longer funtions by any rule he can recognize. But the movie makes the point that just because the out comes are unfamiliar, it doesn't mean that the underlying structure of society has changed.

Stephen Hunter of the Washington Post wrote one of the few unfavorable reviews of the movie, pointing out that the ironic ending to the chase plot robbed the viewer of the text book western movie ending that people pay for. He has a point. There isn't the classic high noon show down between good and evil where two men square off and the good guy wins thanks to grit and determination. Instead, as is the case in our day, corporate interest, and a guy behind a desk hundreds of miles away, steps in and exacts a cheaper more effective, yet un-poetic ending. The viewer is rewarded because the corporate tool is dealt with by Chigurh in a twisted "good" vs. "evil" showdown that does remotely align with viewer expectations. This movie shows that although the west has been civilized there is still a barbaric code that thrives out there and in men's hearts. This movie shows that the more things change the easier it is to find the unchangeable building blocks of human nature. And that's why this movie matters.

There Will Be Blood - This movie explores the nightmareish qualities of the American Dream. Daniel Day-Lewis earns another Oscar nod for his portrayal of turn-of-the-20th-century oil man Daniel Plainview. Plainview is an oil prospector who has survived a number of mining accidents, adopted an orphan and who is looking for his big break. That break walks into the door one night in the form of a cleaver young man named Paul who sells him the story of his home town, a place where the ground is actually soaked with oil.

This sets up an interesting look at the power struggle that still has the Republican party at odds with itself till this very day. On the one hand you have Plainview (the great American company) offering widespread prosperity through economic stability and basic infrastructure. Both the stability and the infrastructure come from Plainview’s exclusive right to drill the town's land for oil. This seems like a good deal, except that the enrichment of the community is a secondary goal to the personal wealth and power Plainview seeks.

Luckily, or so it would seem, the soul of the town is being cared for by Eli Sunday (Paul's twin brother, both played exquisitely by an actor to watch Paul Dano) a zealous preacher on a mission to build his church. Like many Christian Evangelical denominations, The Church of the Third Revelation offers eternal salvation in exchange for allegiance to it's doctrine and a weekly tithe. Again we have a mismatch; the enrichment of the soul seems secondary to the personal wealth and power that Eli seeks.

What the film suggests is that the power and wealth grabbing nature of business and religion both rely on people willingly giving themselves up. In this world, and in ours, business and religion team up to make the selling of ones soul and goods seem like a necessity for a successful life. But even as they work together, their greed propels them towards facing off against each other and this showdown is for the possession of everything.

In the heart-stopping last scene of the film Plainview, as the personification of unbridled capitalism, has spiraled into madness brought on by the utter meaninglessness of his life's endeavors, faces Eli, the personification of unbridled religious power, and the film is unambiguous as to which side of this argument will ultimately "win." The movie declares no winners at the end of this film because it believes that the entanglement of business and religion is a poisons relationship that destroys human decency, and bares a poisonous fruit that kills faith. And that's why this movie matters.

Thursday, January 17, 2008

Movies Matter

I'm a glutton for cinema. I savor the finest cuts of cinematic cuisine, and devour its most tawdry fair. I see this blog as my opportunity to chew the fat over movie topics with the world. Bon Appetit!