12.21.2024

this place could be beautiful, right? You could make this place beautiful

Life is short, though I keep this from my children. 
Life is short, and I've shortened mine 
in a thousand delicious, ill-advised ways, 
a thousand deliciously ill-advised ways 
I'll keep from my children. The world is at least 
fifty percent terrible, and that's a conservative 
estimate, though I keep this from my children. 
For every bird there is a stone thrown at a bird. 
For every loved child, a child broken, bagged, 
sunk in a lake. Life is short and the world 
is at least half terrible, and for every kind 
stranger, there is one who would break you, 
though I keep this from my children. I am trying 
to sell them the world. Any decent realtor, 
walking you through a real shithole, chirps on 
about good bones: This place could be beautiful, 
right? You could make this place beautiful. 
 
[Maggie Smith {1977- } 'Good Bones', from 100 Poems That Matter {Academy of American Poets}]

12.20.2024

being male is a matter of birth. Being a man is a matter of age. But being a gentleman is a matter of choice

an abandoned mall (not actually the local version)
1. If you could have a lifetime 50 percent discount in any single store at your local mall, which store would it be in? 
    my local "mall" contained the following, last time I was there:
        • BBQ restaurant owned by a high school classmate, which is so good that my tummy growled just thinking about it. I don't go as often as I'd like, mostly because I'd be at least as wide as I am tall before long. SO good.
        • supplements store (never been)
        • sushi restaurant (never been)
        • axe-throwing and arcade games (never been)
        • resale shop benefiting a parochial elementary school (have shopped once or twice, and donated once. There's a bag in my back seat waiting for me to haul it over, in fact.)
        • cell phone store (never been)
another abandoned mall (still not the local version)
        • liquor store (once or twice? maybe?)
        • taekwondo gym (needless to say, I've never been. They've won some state and national meets, though, so if I were to go, that would be a great choice.)
        • little kid gym. Gymnastics? Tumbling? Dance? Who knows. 
        • driving school 
        • internet service provider "store" (really just a call center)
        • license center
    Of those, the first or the last would be freaking AWESOME to access at half price. The rest of them...meh.
 
2. If you had to name the one thing that can most readily ruin your day, what would it be? 
    computer/network/software malfunction. I realize that it's rampant throughout the work world, but it seems particularly problematic when working remotely. There's no IT department to troubleshoot me, after all. 
 
3. If you were to name one person you know who is a true gentleman, who would it be? 
    my friend R. We met in our first year of college, back when we shared both a major course of study and an attitude about behavior and beverages (among other things). We also worked for the same department for our work-study jobs, though in quite different roles. We also sort of dated, briefly.
    We've stayed in touch since then, most of that time in the era before social media. Letters, email, phone calls, and a few visits here and there. Literally here and there, in fact, since it happened both on the Flat and since I returned to home base. 
    My point is that he went out of his way to stay connected to me. There was no clear payoff for him. He wasn't making money on the deal. I had nothing tangible to offer in exchange for his time and effort. We ate and drank and talked, when we could be in the same state and make it work. We have a FB Messenger thread that is probably on its own dedicated server by now. Now and then, we text. Even more rarely, we talk on the phone. And each of those experiences is another piece to the growing puzzle of our friendship.
    So, what makes him a gentleman? Check out this post from 'Gentleman's Journal'. Several of the elements stand out for me—numbers 6, 8, 10, 12, 14, 15 (especially 8 and 12)—but I can verify from my own experience that most of the list is in his arsenal. In short, he's a good guy, he works at things that require effort, and he shows that he cares about the people in his life. And today is prehaps his birthday!
 
uhm, I hadn't expected such a long climb
4. If you could have anyone from history welcome you into the afterlife, who would you want it to be?
    my dad's next-younger brother, my mom's next-younger sister's husband, and my godfather. 
 
5. If you had to choose the most extreme example of sexual harassment you have suffered, what would it be? 
    besides the one described here involving a law prof, or the one described here starring Toby... it would be one of the first times I went to a bar by myself—well before I was of age—at my hometown's excuse for a "dance club". One of the rare times at that age that I went into a bar without "pregaming", I was totally sober. I walked in the door, intending to walk through to the other bar that was attached, slightly more low-key than the dance bar but also more intentional about the hookups. 
    So. Walking through the dance bar, minding my own business, intent on my goal. Not really paying attention to my surroundings. All of a sudden, guy in a booth by himself reaches out and grabs me by the wrist. Pulls me onto his side of the booth. Clearly wasted, drunk as hell, he slurred out the usual canned blather. As if it was a compliment. I was not interested for various reasons, but most significantly because he was my boyfriend's dad. Not the bf of that moment, but recently enough that I knew him immediately. And he was trying to get his hands on me, and trying drunkenly to pick me up. 
    It was not difficult to extricate myself from the situation. He was hammered enough that I was able to pull my arm from his grip and get away pretty fast. And a bouncer had seen it happen and was headed our way from the door, so I would have been safe, regardless. But that feeling stuck with me for a while, both the physical feeling of being grabbed and pulled and slobbered at, and the emotional feeling of being repulsed and horrified and, for no reason that I could then understand, deeply ashamed.
 
6. If you had to identify the one thing destiny probably held in store for you, what would you say it is? 
     being alone. In my youth, I cared far too much about romantic adventure and entanglement. At times I was probably obsessed with it. That much focus and energy on anything isn't healthy, particularly when so much of it rests on the fickle whims of fate and men. I might wish it were different, but can't be surprised by how that all worked out.
 
7. If you could own a single prop from any film ever made, what would you choose? 
    Léon's sunglasses 
Léon in his sunglasses
 
[from If2: 500 New Questions for the game of life; the title quotation is from Vin Diesel]

12.19.2024

there are times when a critic truly risks something, and that is in the discovery and defense of the new

22. What film do you hate that most people love? 
    Forrest Gump (1994). It's not "hate", but I don't think I could stomach all that sweetness ever again. Blatant emotional manipulation does not equal entertainment to me, and leaves me feeling like I've just consumed a big bowl of brown sugar with whipped cream and chocolate sauce on top.
23. Tell about a movie-going experience you will never forget—not just because of the movie, but because of the circumstances in which you saw it. 
El Orfanato (2007)
    I saw
El Orfanato (2007) in the theater. That in itself is weird enough, given the subject matter. I saw it with my housemates' grown son. We had been casual friends for years and by that time were spending more time together, typically watching movies or binging Nip/Tuck (2003-2010) and similar programs. We saw the film at one of the large theater complexes in the Western suburbs, after going out for dinner. I don't recall where we went or what we ate, but I do know that I drank WAY too much and was far too intoxicated to be getting anything from a movie anyway. We got to the sold-out theater just before credits rolled and managed to get two seats together...in the front row. Drunk, full from a big meal, and sitting at the exact opposite spot in the theater from that which I prefer. In no time at all, I was not just closing but fully covering my eyes (because the light filtering through my eyelids nauseated me), and willing myself not to listen, (because some of the audio would've turned my stomach on a good day) so that I wouldn't projectile vomit. It was agonizing.
24. What aspect of modern theatrical movie-going do you like least? 
    ads before the film begins. In the spirit of Crash Davis' famous "I believe" monologue: I believe in the inherent value of previewing upcoming attractions. They often spur me to see other movies in the same genre or subject matter, or with the same cast. Those on DVDs are especially helpful for making realistic, helpful suggestions, and at least a third of my collection was discovered in this way.
    The ads, on the other hand, are just annoying. As if the theater isn't already getting enough money out of us!
25. What aspect of movie-going in times past do you miss the most?
    I remember the good old days when going to the movies was an affordable night out. The overblown cost of movies—spurred by the obsession with superheroes!—has made it a special occasion event, if that.
26. Have you ever damaged a friendship, or thought twice about a relationship, because you disagreed about whether a movie was good or bad? 
    not yet. There are a couple of people in my life right now who persistently give an inordinately large amount of crap about the movies that I watch, what I like, what I don't watch or haven't seen, and what I don't like. That's a lot of interest in something that ought not to matter to anyone else.
    I don't like my opinions being dismissed.
27. What movies have you dreamed about? 
    oh my gosh, so many! My movie nightmares have been covered elsewhere in the blog, many times. I guess the ones I've dreamed about in depth have mostly been water-related.
The Big Blue (1988, reviewed here), The Shape of Water (2017, reviewed here), Perfect Storm (2000, reviewed here), The Life of Pi (2012, reviewed here) all come to mind.
28. What concession stand item can you not live without? 
    over-buttered and salted popcorn, if it is fairly hot and fresh. A small bowl is fine—there is no need for a "bucket" of any food substance at all. Maybe a small drink, too. This is not "can't live without," but it does enhance the movie theater experience.
 
[pulled and adapted from The Movie Love Questionnaire; the title quotation is by Ed Catmull, from Creativity, Inc.]

12.18.2024

at the same time, I knew

Last night, 
after thirty-five years of dreaming 
I couldn't remember 
the combination 
of my college mailroom box, 
I finally remembered. 
At the same time, I knew 
the mail inside 
would be for someone else. 
 
[Rob Hardy, ‘Closure’, from Shelter in Place]

12.17.2024

the trouble is, if you don't risk anything, you risk even more

1. What childhood game would you like to put an adult twist on? 
    Truth or Dare is too obvious, right? Hmm. How about Simon Says?
another obvious choice

2. What is the most sexually mysterious thing about you? 
    I hope it's all mysterious, at least in the sense of not being known to anyone who doesn't need to know. And at this point, no one needs to know.  
    In the spirit of it, though... the most mysterious aspect of this area of my life is its specific focus. As far as I can tell, only two people (well, possibly three) have the slightest inkling of the direction that my interest lies. In a lifetime of easily succumbing to a confession compulsion, this is almost unprecedented. How discreet I am becoming, late in life.

3. What is something you've never done in bed before? 
    this is hilarious, coming directly after #2, above. 
    Please believe this: the planet of what I've never done is far more vast, murky, and dangerous than the island of what I have.

4. Do you ever feel misunderstood by the opposite sex? 
    in a sexual sense, or overall? Regardless: yes, naturally, isn't everyone?
    Specifically, guys as a stereotyped generic whole are not great with recognizing the value of intensity and duration of certain matters of foreplay. Understanding that it's a matter of personal preference, it'd be swell not to need to specify every little thing.

5. Are you willing to take a little risk? 
    in almost every aspect of life, yes. A life lived in fear is a life half-lived.

6. Describe a memorable kiss.
    [I may have answered this in a recent - or prehaps upcoming, preposted - posting, but you may as well indulge me since this whole thing is an exercise in my ego.]
    a few years ago, I had a second-time-around opportunity of involvement with someone I'd known when I was young. Something less than "dating" but more than "hooking up," we'd connected in a particularly odd time in our lives, and that connection made a lasting impression. He was my first and strongest 'one who got away'.
    That first kiss, the second time through? It was The Princess Bride of kisses. Sweet, familiar, lovely, and almost innocent...and with the promise of not innocence! Delicious. 

7. Have you ever faked an orgasm? 
    of course not
 
 [from 269 Red Hot XXX-Rated Questions; the title quotation is by Erica Jong, from Fear of Flying]

12.16.2024

if we tell the truth and write the lies, then they aren't lies anymore—they become stories

Average rating: 7. Quite a range.

To Kill a Mockingbird (1962)
To Kill a Mockingbird (1962) - "Scout Finch (Mary Badham), 6, and her older brother, Jem (Phillip Alford), live in sleepy Maycomb, Ala., spending much of their time with their friend Dill (John Megna) and spying on their reclusive and mysterious neighbor, Boo Radley (Robert Duvall). When Atticus (Gregory Peck), their widowed father and a respected lawyer, defends a black man named Tom Robinson (Brock Peters) against fabricated rape charges, the trial and tangent events expose the children to evils of racism and stereotyping."
length: 2 hours, 9 minutes
source: I borrowed the DVD from my parents' collection
I watched it because: it's been too long since I've seen this classic star of "legal movies" (last reviewed here)
IMDB: 8.3/10  -  Rotten Tomatoes: Tomatometer: 93% Audience: 93%
my IMDB: 10/10
AFI: 100 Years…100 Movies (original list 1998) #34
    100 Years … 100 Heroes and Villains (2003) Hero #1
    100 Years…100 Cheers (2006) #2
    100 Years…100 Movies - 10th anniversary edition (2007) #25
    10 Top 10 (2008) Courtroom Drama #1
MPAA rating: Approved
notable quote: "There just didn't seem to be anyone or anything Atticus couldn't explain. Though it wasn't a talent that would arouse the admiration of any of our friends, Jem and I had to admit he was very good at that—but that was all he was good at... we thought."
directed by: Robert Mulligan
my notes: Child actors usually turn me off a film, but these two (well, three) are absolutely amazing. Mary Badham (Scout), especially, inhabits the role completely. It's beautiful to watch—as is Gregory Peck, in his finest role and perhaps the best film performance, ever.  
    And the law is spot-on.
Academy Award winner:
• Best Actor—Peck
• Best Writing, Screenplay based on material from another medium—Horton Foote
• Best Art Direction - Set decoration, Black and white—Alexander Golitzen, Henry Bumstead, Oliver Emert
Academy Award nominee:
• Best Picture—Alan J. Pakula
• Best Director—Mulligan
• Best Cinematography, Black and white—Russell Harlan
• Best Supporting Actress—Badham 
• Best Music, Score - Substantially original—Elmer Bernstein
overall: most highly recommended

Rush: Time Stand Still (2016) - "‘Rush built their following the right way. No hype, no bullshit, they did it from the ground up. Their legacy is incredible and their influence undeniable.’–Dave Grohl 
    This feature-length documentary film chronicles the final major tour for legendary rock band Rush. It is an intimate view ‘under the hood’ of a historic moment from the perspective of the band, their fans, crew, and management. Featuring interviews with the band throughout their sold-out 2015 40th Anniversary tour, the film also shows rarely seen backstage footage capturing the final moments of life on the road. Highlighted as well is the impact on the band’s fans and the world that has been built around the beloved Canadian trio. This is the final touring chapter of a band that has meant so much to so many fans around the world. 
    With narration by Paul Rudd. "
length: 1 hour, 37 minutes
source: streamed on Peacock
I watched it because: I watched another Rush documentary—A Rise of Kings (2014, reviewed here)—a couple of years ago and liked it quite a bit
IMDB: .8.3/10  -  Rotten Tomatoes: Tomatometer: 80% Audience: 84%
my IMDB: 8/10
MPAA rating: R
directed by: Dale Heslip
my notes: a treat for a hardcore fan and prehaps inexplicable and even offensive to non-fans, this is endearing to me. Alex and especially Geddy come off as ungrateful and shitty toward Neil, though that's not a flaw of the film.
overall:  recommended

A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945)
A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1945) - "This adaptation of the classic novel tells the story of young Francie Nolan (Peggy Ann Garner) who yearns for life beyond her Brooklyn apartment building. While her daily routine is difficult, she makes the best of her situation, living with her hard-working mother (Dorothy McGuire), alcoholic father (James Dunn) and tough little brother (Ted Donaldson). Encouraged by her kind but irresponsible dad, Francie struggles to keep her hopes up and persevere despite all the odds against her."
length: 2 hours, 9 minutes
source: I borrowed the DVD from my parents' collection
I watched it because: I'd heard of it but knew nothing of the story, and of course I have not read the book, and I am trying to watch more of that sort of thing
IMDB: 8.0/10  -  Rotten Tomatoes: Tomatometer: 94% Audience: 91%
my IMDB: 6/10
notable quote: "Don't you think it would be still better if you'd write about the things you really know about and then add to them with your imagination? Even stories shouldn't be just, well, pipe dreams. Pipe-dreamers can be very lovable people but they don't help anybody, not even themselves. Now, think about it a little."
MPAA rating: PG
directed by: Elia Kazan
my notes: this is An Important Film that is not an entertaining movie. I didn't hate it, and I'm glad I saw it, and I never need to see it again.
    It's unrelentingly bleak from start to finish. I appreciated the performances of Joan Blondell (Aunt Sissy) and Lloyd Nolan (Officer McShane), which brought a little light to the depressing dark. 
    The worst of it, for me, was the stomach-turning behavior of the father, Johnny Nolan, in playing favorites between his kids (to the point of inappropriate, boundary-breaking closeness to his daughter) and flip-flopping in caring for his family.
Academy Award winner: Best Supporting Actor—James Dunn
Academy Award nominee: Best Writing, screenplay—Frank Davis, Tess Slesinger
overall: reluctantly, marginally recommended

Despicable Me 4 (2024)
Despicable Me 4 (2024) - "Gru and Lucy and their girls—Margo, Edith and Agnes—welcome a new member to the Gru family, Gru Jr., who is intent on tormenting his dad. Gru faces a new nemesis in Maxime Le Mal and his femme fatale girlfriend Valentina, and the family is forced to go on the run."
length: 1 hour, 34 minutes
source: streamed on Peacock
I watched it because: my Peacock subscription ends in a couple weeks and I'm trying to see everything on my watchlist in a big hurry
IMDB: 6.2/10  -  Rotten Tomatoes: Tomatometer: 56% Audience: 87%
my IMDB: 4/10
notable quote: "They got so many different kinds of milk. Almond milk, soy milk, oat milk, goat milk, chocolate milk, half and half, powdered, and Of Magnesia."
MPAA rating: PG
directed by: Chris Renaud, Patrick Delage
my notes: one time funny, four times not. And the worst of it is that I haven't seen the 3rd one, so now I've got to go back and get that one out of the way. 
    (First reviewed here, Minions reviewed here. Second was seen but not reviewed.)
overall:  recommended for completists and maybe if there was nothing else on
 
[the title quotation is from A Tree Grows in Brooklyn]

12.14.2024

the sigh of the air still clinging to your ear

Nothing older than grieving. 
Not love nor the lurch of leaving 
the ground for the first time. (You 
remember someone tossing you 
into the air.) This is older 
even than that. (You land, colder 
from your small fall through space, the sigh 
of the air still clinging to your ear.) You lie 
where you fell on the brown grass. Why 
you, why grass? Why not name 
everything that's going to die with the same 
this, this—a neutral tissue, a moss. Pressed, 
each syllable ravels into mist, its weight unguessed 
and wet on the blades of your tongue. (For-
lorn, you are grass, soft as what you mourn for.) 
 
[Claire Wahmanholm, ‘Primer’, from Meltwater: Poems]

12.12.2024

you can be cerebral about things you hate, but most of the things you like tend to be very emotive

8. What’s the scariest film you’ve ever seen? 
    
    I've got to make a list. (If you don't know me by now...)
        • nightmare inducing: American Me (1992) (not reviewed but mentioned many times). It has two indelible scenes that absolutely terrified me.
        • psychologically scary: Wait Until Dark (1967) (reviewed here). It works on some basic fears and vulnerabilities.
        • horror scary (and specific to my phobia): The Omen (1976) (reviewed here). It's certainly not "a dog movie" but the dog aspects are deeply frightening to me.
        • creepy scary: The Bad Seed (1956) (reviewed here). This one has all the ingredients to a creepy soup—demon kid, oblivious adults, and some surprisingly realistic violence.
        • button-pushing scary: The Night of the Hunter (1955) (reviewed here). My, oh my. An example of how they used to do scary films, with dialog and music and lighting and acting combining for an overall, inexorable tension. Yikes.
9. What’s the most romantic film you’ve ever seen? 
    Sullivan's Travels (1941), reviewed here. There's something really accessible and lovely about it, despite the ethereal gorgeousness of Veronica Lake and Joel McCrea. Nobody in the real world looks that good, and the ultimate point of the movie is that they managed to look not-that-good almost the whole way through. They passed for real people.
Sullivan's Travels (1941)
10. What’s the first television show you ever saw that made you think television could be more than entertainment? 
M*A*S*H (1972-1983)
   
M*A*S*H (1972-1983). I grew up with this series, which was on its original run from my infant to teen years, and it was on our TV that whole time. When I was little, it was a funny comedy show, and I didn't like or was uninterested in the episodes that were not overtly comedic. As it neared the end, though, I had started to realize that it was far more than I'd seen before. I started to look forward to the more melancholy episodes and the more thoughtful characters—and they stuck with me a lot longer and in different ways. I started learning from it, and maybe it helped launch my lifelong fascination with history.
11. What book do you think about or revisit the most? 
    I think most about The Brothers K (David James Duncan, 1992), and I revisit (as in, reread) Alisa Kwitney's entire backlist, in chronological order, every year or so, starting with The Dominant Blonde (2002).
Steve Miller Band Greatest Hits 1974-78
12. What album have you listened to the most, and why? 
    Steve Miller Band Greatest Hits 1974-78. There are "better" albums and more popular and more meaningful, but when it comes down to it, I have consistently enjoyed and played this one since I first had access to it.
13. Is there a movie that you think is great, or powerful, or perfect, but that you never especially want to see again, and why? 
    Schindler's List (1993) (reviewed here), which is too heartrending for me to go through again. I do believe that it is great, and powerful. It is perfect, too, in terms of the way it was filmed (black and white is such a daring move with modern audiences) and acted (nothing over-the-top, and real emotion and vulnerability even among the reprehensible characters). I admire some of the actors so much. It's an unforgettable movie that makes me sob.
14. What movie have you seen more times than any other? 
   according to my recollection, Dodgeball (2004) (reviewed here). It was a staple during the Nick years, and I've seen it several times on TV when nothing else good was available, and I've owned it once or twice but sold a couple copies already. It's dumb, and funny, and oddly inspiring.
 
 [pulled and adapted from The Movie Love Questionnaire; the title quotation is by Chuck Klosterman]

12.11.2024

two people at the start of a world

What a gift to be on earth when all the failures 
of the human family have arrived at once. 
To swarms of locust, add freon. 
To floating cities of plastic, add animal souvenirs. 
To ancient streams diverted off the volcano, add tree thirst. 
And let's not forget this addition... 
 
Yesterday at Makena landing we met a free diver who told us 
how he will deliver his proposal. 
He will dive into the white tip shark cave, climb the ledge past them, 
light a circle of candles, 
then bring in his lovely and ask for her hand. 
Danger. Purpose. Direction. 
Once again, two people at the start of a world, making a plan in a cave. 
 
[J P White, ‘Free Diver at Makena Landing’, from A Tree Becomes a Room]

12.09.2024

not that action, you idiots! The kung-fu thing!

Average rating: 8. Four solid films!

Flushed Away (2006)
Flushed Away (2006) - "After an ignoble landing in Ratropolis, a pampered rodent (Hugh Jackman) enlists the help of a sewer scavenger (Kate Winslet) in finding his way back to his posh London flat. Getting home is not the only problem, however; a rodent-hating toad (Ian McKellen) wants his notorious cousin, Le Frog (Jean Reno), to exterminate the pair."
length: 1 hour, 25 minutes
source: streamed on PeacockTV
I watched it because: Le Frog!!
IMDB: 6.6/10  -  Rotten Tomatoes: Tomatometer: 72% Audience: 65%
my IMDB: 7/10
notable quote: "I find everyone's pain funny but my own—I'm French!"
MPAA rating: PG
directed by: David Bowers, Sam Fell
my notes: cute, clever, funny. It's no Ratatouille (2007, reviewed here), but it's a good rodent movie (and by far better than the unmentionable one, 1997, reviewed here). I will definitely watch it again when it comes along.
overall:  recommended

Dead Poets Society (1989)
Dead Poets Society (1989) - "Painfully shy Todd Anderson has been sent to the school where his popular older brother was valedictorian. His roommate, Neil Perry, although exceedingly bright and popular, is very much under the thumb of his overbearing father. The two, along with their other friends, meet Professor Keating, their new English teacher, who tells them of the Dead Poets Society, and encourages them to go against the status quo. Each does so in his own way, and is changed for life."
length: 2 hours, 8 minutes
source: I own the DVD
I watched it because: (reviewed here)
IMDB: 8.1/10  -  Rotten Tomatoes: Tomatometer: 85% Audience: 92%
my IMDB: 9/10
AFI: 100 Years…100 Cheers (2006) #52
MPAA rating: PG
notable quote: "'"Show me the heart unfettered by foolish dreams and I'll show you a happy man."'
    '"But only in their dreams can men be truly free. 'Twas always thus, and always thus will be."'
    'Tennyson?'
    'No, Keating.'"
directed by: Peter Weir
my notes: a beautifully sad movie that pokes me in all the right, hard places. Yes, I've seen it a dozen times (at least) and, yes, I sobbed again.
Academy Award winner: Best Writing, Screenplay written directly for the screen—Tom Schulman
Academy Award nominee:
• Best Picture—Steven Haft, Paul Junger Witt, Tony Thomas
• Best Actor—Robin Williams
• Best Director—Weir
overall: highly recommended

Land (2021)
Land (2021) - "From acclaimed actress Robin Wright comes her directorial debut Land, the poignant story of one woman's search for meaning in the vast and harsh American wilderness. Edee (Wright), in the aftermath of an unfathomable event, finds herself unable to stay connected to the world she once knew and in the face of that uncertainty, retreats to the magnificent, but unforgiving, wilds of the Rockies. After a local hunter (Demián Bichir) brings her back from the brink of death, she must find a way to live again."
length: 1 hour, 29 minutes
source: streamed on Peacock
I watched it because: ...Demián Bechir...
IMDB: 6.7/10  -  Rotten Tomatoes: Tomatometer: 69% Audience: 84%
my IMDB: 8/10
notable quote: "'Why are you helping me?'
    '... you were in my path.'"
MPAA rating: PG-13
directed by: Robin Wright
my notes: this is a beautiful, quiet, desperately sad, inspirational, well-filmed, thought-provoking film. It's a story for grown-ups.
overall:  strongly recommended

From Here to Eternity (1953)
From Here to Eternity (1953) - "At an Army barracks in Hawaii in the days preceding the attack on Pearl Harbor, lone-wolf soldier and boxing champion 'Prew' Prewitt (Montgomery Clift) refuses to box, preferring to play the bugle instead. Hard-hearted Capt. Holmes (Philip Ober) subjects Prew to a grueling series of punishments while, unknown to Holmes, the gruff but fair Sgt. Warden (Burt Lancaster) engages in a clandestine affair with the captain's mistreated wife (Deborah Kerr)."
length: 1 hour, 58 minutes
source: I own the DVD
I watched it because: it's been ages since I saw it last, and I was in the mood for swoons (not previously reviewed)
IMDB: 7.6/10  -  Rotten Tomatoes: Tomatometer: 88% Audience: 84%
my IMDB: 8/10
AFI: 100 Years…100 Movies (original list 1998) #52
    100 Years…100 Passions (2002) #20
MPAA rating: Approved
notable quote: "You're crazy—I wish I didn't love you! Maybe I could enjoy my life again. ... I've never been so miserable in my life!"
directed by: Fred Zinnemann
From Here to Eternity (1953)
my notes: critically acclaimed puts it mildly. This is a powerhouse film, one of the great oldies with a huge cast, the majority of whom are major household names now. The story of how it was made is a doozy, with some method actors getting hammered before their drunk scenes and so forth.
Academy Award winner:
• Best Picture—Buddy Adler
• Best Supporting Actor—Frank Sinatra
• Best Supporting Actress—Donna Reed
• Best Director—Zinnemann
• Best Writing, Screenplay—Daniel Taradash
• Best Cinematography, Black and white—Burnett Guffey
• Best Sound, Recording—John P. Livadary (Columbia SSD)
• Best Film Editing—William A. Lyon
Academy Award nominee:
• Best Actor—Montgomery Clift
• Best Actor—Burt Lancaster
• Best Actress—Deborah Kerr
• Best Costume Design, Black and white—Jean Louis
• Best Music, Scoring of a dramatic or comedy picture—Morris Stoloff, George Duning
overall:  recommended
 
[the title quotation is from Flushed Away]

12.08.2024

may new sufferings torment your soul but your lips be fashioned as before, for the cry would only frighten us, but the music, that is blissful

1. If you had to describe the best kiss you've ever had, how would you describe it? 
   
anticipated, welcome, slow, long, affectionate, amorous, and rare

 
2. If you could change one of your personality traits, what would it be? 
    it would be good for me to be more generally kind. When focused on someone I care about, I'm plenty nice. The world as a whole, though, gets the pointy end of the stick.
    The sort of kind that I'm lacking: assuming people are doing their best. Waiting my turn with grace and patience. Answering the phone when it's someone I know but would not have called. Tipping more people, rather than the couple that I see regularly and over-tip. Accepting FB and LinkedIn requests without an analysis of the possible drawbacks.
 
3. If you could find one thing, besides money, in your family attic, what would you want to discover? 
    my mother's and aunts' and grandmother's recipes. Some of them, I might be able to get, or to approximate. But to have the originals would be a treasure beyond compare. They represent something about my family that is hard to explain but very special.  
 
4. If you could receive one small package this very moment, who would it be from and what would be in it? 
   
funny timing! I just got a small package this morning! It was a Black Friday order entirely for me (no gifts), from one of my favorite artists, Mr. Matt McCarthy. I got the Lazy Cats calendar for 2025, as well as a couple of sets of Christmas cards.  
    I've been following Matt on IG for ages; he was one of the first accounts to which I really felt connected. Not only is he a talented artist, but also a kind and charming person who is also a dedicated and proud cat dad. 
    I am thrilled with my purchase. Cannot wait to hear the inevitable feedback to the cards. They are cute, charming, fun, and also just flat-out beautiful art. The calendar... it's a shame that no one else is likely to see it, hanging on my office wall as it is (and as the 2024 calendar has). It's like getting a new piece of art to display, once a month.
 
5. If you could have anyone locked in a room so that you could torment them for a day, who would you choose, and how would you torment them? 
    the significant other of a person I know well. Granted, I do not know the SO. However, all that I have heard about them has revealed an untrustworthy, petty, irritating, small-minded person. They are the sort of character that makes me cringe just to think about, much less to hear discussed. And, of course, to meet and interact with them seems excruciating. 
    If I had them locked in a room and could torment them (from a hidden distance), I would enjoy it immeasurably. And, no, I'm not going to share the particular torment I would employ, but the idea of it is terribly appealing.
 
6. If you could be guaranteed one thing in life besides money, what would you ask for? 
    health of family. When all else looks bleak, that makes all the difference.
 
7. If you could go back to any age and start a different life, what age would that be? 
   
34.
    Buh-bye Nick, and Ulysses, as well as anything that took time away from my enduring friendships—Fluffy K., LRTS, my gay boyfriend, Shoe, Chris, Samantha.... 
    Also, name change with the divorce rather than almost 20 years later. 
    And no moving to either the basement apartment or the rathole duplex. 
    And buy a different (nicer) car when the 5-speed had to go.
 
 [from If...Questions for the Game of Life; the title quotation is by Soren Kierkegaard, from Either - Or]

12.07.2024

let anything that clasps offer the kind of prayer it wants to pray

To Max Ritvo, who once said to me:
 
"I can't think of anything I could 
disqualify as the spiritual centerpiece of a poem. 
I don't think the spiritual world 
needs to be claimed or reclaimed by anyone or anything. 
Let religions lay hands upon it. 
Let secularity lay hands upon it. 
But let the hands be gently laid. 
Let anything that clasps 
offer the kind of prayer it wants to pray. 
Let this all be poetry." 
 
Let this all be poetry. 
 
Today I wanted to tell you that this morning 
my oldest daughter said she loves the sound of when 
I write a poem. 
What sound? I ask. 
The wood pencil scratching 
against the paper, she says. 
 
I didn't know I made a sound when I wrote poems, 
and that sound made me want to speak with you. 
 
[Sarah Ruhl {1974- } 'To Max Ritvo, who once said to me', from Love Poems in Quarantine]

12.06.2024

Christmas is here, Merry old Christmas, Gift-bearing Christmas, Day of Grand Memories, King of the Year!

I'm back with the gimme, gimme, gimme list for Christmas, 2024.
 
• peanut butter M&Ms 

• Audible subscription

• small (tabletop) Christmas tree

• floor lamp like this (shown at right) 

• a jigsaw puzzle allowance (I share them with my dad, and we eBay the ones we don't want to keep, but it's still out of my budget)

• dust cover for Kitchenaid 6-quart tilt-head stand mixer, something like this

• 140W USB-C power adapter with 6' cord (Apple)
 
[the title quotation is from Washington Irving]