Due to the colossal amount of spam I get on this blog, I am moving it to another address.
If you are interested in visiting my new site www.ffrewind.blogspot.com
Uncategorized 12:50 am
Due to the colossal amount of spam I get on this blog, I am moving it to another address.
If you are interested in visiting my new site www.ffrewind.blogspot.com
Uncategorized 12:40 am
As you should know by now, I am not a fan of mainstream film. And certainly not THIS type of film. I’ve never been a fan of any film or book that has women basing their lives on finding men to marry. I prefer stories about women who’ve broken out of that stereotype. Or those that don’t have love and sex as the focus. But I thought I should review this film because I saw it (with my 17 year old niece) and thought it needed some commentary other than the breathy fawning that has appeared in way too many reviews.
There were parts of the HBO series that I liked but others that I didn’t. The film is the same except that the parts I liked, I liked more and the parts that I didn’t like, I truly hated. I thought that the movie was more realistic than the series, in that when Big leaves Carrie at the altar, she not only doesn’t instantly fall back into his arms after he apologizes, she also has a real, normal reaction to being dumped after ten years of a relationship. She gets very depressed and sleeps through several days. However, she DOES fly into his arms 6 months later, when she sees him at their apartment.
Charlotte is, as always, Charlotte, just as Miranda is true to character. Samantha is the only 50 year old woman on the planet who lives for sex. But what infuriated me was that they made a big deal about her gaining a couple of pounds as if she were morbidly obese. To tell you the truth, I didn’t know why the camera was focusing on her stomach until the accompanying dialogue told me. It was horrible to call her fat. Not only is Samantha not fat, but she’s also 50. The reality is that metabolism changes around 35 and no one is ever as thin as they were before that.
The worst part of the film is the x-rated sex scenes. When I see a film with an R rating, I expect some sex and/or violence, but this was over the top and I have to wonder how they managed to get the R rating. Samantha’s next door neighbor has sex with a different woman every day and Samantha watches, usually from a distance of less than 10 feet. We watch the neighbor as well, graphically screwing the latest girl, showering and undressing outdoors. I’m not saying that sex should not be in films. I’m saying that the rating system is there so that the public can decide what they want to watch. This film is a betrayal of that. In context, sex in film is fine but pornographic representations of sex is not. None of the sex in this film was tastefully represented. Add to this the oversexed dog and it equals a bad experience in film.
And I must say that I am really sick of Kim Catrall’s squinty-eyed sex face. And I am not looking forward to the sequel to this film and will probably not see it at all.
REPLETE WITH STINKIOSITY
Uncategorized detention, film, visitor 8:08 pm
Sometimes when a film comes to the theaters, there is so little fanfare that the public misses it. When The Visitor was released I was in Paducah, Kentucky, a place where non-mainstream film gets no notice whatever. The single single art house theater in town had the annoying habit of showing the same movie for a month at a time. This meant that only 12 films were shown each year. Those of us obsessed with film missed most of the art films having either to go to the mainstream theater (there’s only one) or rent from Netflix. Since most mainstream stuff is crap, I opted for Netflix. Yet somehow, I missed this one.
The Visitor is something I call “An Important Film.” This is a film that says something meaningful and represents the feelings of the part of society that the government always ignores when making laws that apply to everyone. These films are usually political in nature but not always.
Walter Vale is a university professor who has become complacent and bored with his life without realizing that he is merely existing rather than living. When he is told that he must present a paper at a conference, he leaves Connecticut and heads to his old apartment in New York. Once there, he finds that someone has rented his apartment to a young couple who are, unfortunately, illegal immigrants.
These two reignite his life. But, after getting stuck in a subway turnstile, the young man, Tarek, is arrested for jumping the turnstile, which he didn’t do, and is imprisoned in a detention center in Queens. Walter tries to get him released with the help of Tarek’s mother, who has come from Michigan.
During a visit with Walter at the detention center, Tarek reminds the audience what it used to mean to be American. Everyone who came to the US was an immigrant. Now, wanting a better life and coming to this country is a crime. Not everyone is a terrorist if they come from the Middle East or Northern Africa.
This is a well made film as well as an important one and one that has required me to add another category to this blog. Thomas McCarthy has made this a most excellent follow-up to his indie film, The Station Agent.
The Visitor
2007
IMPORTANT FILM
Uncategorized Branagh, Hamlet, Winslet 4:42 pm
The problem with anything done by Kenneth Branagh where he is both director and star is that he doesn’t cut any scene that includes himself, as he might if he were directing someone else. For instance, the soliloquy is too long and makes you so bored that you want to stop the movie and watch a different one. For entertainment, the soliloquy is bad, however, if you’re a Shakespeare scholar or want to see the scene acted in it’s entirety(few do), it’s fine.
Kate Winslet is marvelous as the demented Ophelia. And Robin Williams is inspired as a gay version of Osric. But let’s get to something I do not understand about some of the other casting. Why would Branagh choose Julie Christie for the role of Gertrude? She is dreadful in every sense of the word since I was dreading every one of her appearances onscreen. She had a terrible habit of taking in huge gulps of air that gave her a strange “heaving breast ” kind of thing. The only consolation in watching her scenes is the fast forward button. Sadly, you can only do this in the VHS version, since DVD’s skip through the scenes rather than scrolling through them. But if you get the chance to do this, the scenes are hilarious.
Overall this film is terrible but there are some highlights. If you are really bored and can find a VHS version of it, by all means, watch it. Fast forward through the bad stuff. You’ll get alot of enjoyment out of it this way. But probably not in the way Branagh intended.
HAMLET (1996)
Written by William Shakespeare, Screenplay by Kenneth Branagh
Somewhere Between Boring and Stinky
Uncategorized Agatha Christie, Margaret Rutherford, Murder ahoy 11:38 pm
If you are in the mood for a film that is free of bloodletting and gratuitous violence but still interesting, this film is the one you want.
Agatha Christie wrote many fairly implausible murder mysteries that have endured because of their interesting characters. The best of these characters is Margaret Rutherford’s version of Miss Marple. Her facial expressions are so over the top as to be hilarious to watch. This film contains the best of her particular looks. While investigating a murder, she is looking for clues onboard a ship used to teach trouble boys to be sailors. She is forced to hide in the closet at on point, wherein she gives us the strangest array of faces that are so odd you can’t help but laugh.
The film is overall kind of silly but thoroughly entertaining.
MURDER AHOY (1964)
written by Agatha Christie
Fabulouness on Film
Uncategorized darren aronovsky, fountain of youth, hugh jackman, rachel weisz, The fountain 4:23 pm
Uncategorized As you like it, kenneth Branagh, Kevin Kline, Shakespeare 4:21 pm
It is very difficult to ruin Shakespeare. He is, afterall, one of the genuises of literature. And even though I studied Shakespeare extensively in college, As You Like It was not one of the plays I had read. ( I also skipped some of the Histories) But they had the DVD at my local library so I brought it home to watch.

