Average rating: 8.25
Ball of Fire (1941) - "Hoping to update his chapter on modern slang, encyclopedia writer Professor Bertram Potts ventures into a chic nightclub. Inside, he meets the snarky burlesque performer 'Sugarpuss' O'Shea. Fascinated by her command of popular jargon, Potts invites her to stay with him. But, unknown to Potts, she is the fianc茅e of a mobster and wanted by the police. In the ensuing mayhem, Potts must stay on his toes or be swallowed up by bigger fish."
length: 1h, 51m | source: Amazon Prime | directed by Howard Hawks | why I watched: I had an upsetting day, and wanted something soothing to counteract and distract from it (previously reviewed here)
IMDb: 7.7/10 | Rotten Tomatoes: 100% / 89% Audience | my IMDb: 9/10 | MPAA: Approved
tone & texture: wry, classic Hollywood polish
notable quote: "People like that just, well, you see, dust just piles up on their hearts. And it took you to blow it away."
my notes: unabashedly smart, surprisingly racy, silly, fun, and meaningful. This is an excellent film.
themes: love, found family, identity
overall: very strongly recommended
Die Hard (1988) - "New York City policeman John McClane is visiting his estranged wife on Christmas Eve. He joins her at a holiday party in the headquarters of the Japanese-owned business she works for. But the festivities are interrupted by a group of terrorists who take over the exclusive high-rise, and everyone in it. Very soon McClane realizes that there's no one to save the hostages—but him."
length: 2h, 12m | source: Amazon Prime | directed by John McTiernan | why I watched: it's been too long since I've seen it, and I wanted to glory in the display of masculine power (previously reviewed here and here)
IMDb: 8.2/10 | Rotten Tomatoes: 94% / 94% Audience | my IMDb: 8/10 | MPAA: R
tone & texture: energetic, fast-cut/kinetic
notable quote: "I’m Agent Johnson. This is Special Agent Johnson. ...no relation."
my notes: remarkably entertaining, even in the seventy-fifth watching (or however many times I've seen it). I enjoy McClane's reluctant, resigned, world-weary approach to doing nearly impossible things. I also love Reginald VelJohnson as Sgt. Al Powell.
themes: courage
overall: highly recommended
Labor Day (2013) - "Henry Wheeler, aged 13, grapples with the pains of adolescence while caring for his troubled, reclusive mother, Adele. One day while shopping for school supplies, Henry and Adele encounter Frank Chambers, an intimidating man who clearly needs their help. Frank convinces the two of them to take him into their home, but later it becomes clear that he is a convict who has escaped."
length: 1h, 51m | source: my DVD | directed by Jason Reitman | why I watched: I've been thinking a lot about 2 O'Clock Man lately, who resembles Josh Brolin, and that's made it feel important to see it again (previously reviewed here)
IMDb: 6.9/10 | Rotten Tomatoes: 34% / 54% Audience | my IMDb: 8/10 | MPAA: PG-13
tone & texture: intimate, soft & naturalistic
notable quote: "Nothing misleads people like the truth."
my notes: critics didn't like it, but I loved it. What a shocker.
I admire the portrayal of responsibility, suffering, togetherness, and transformation. Kate Winslet is a very beautiful woman who can disappear into a character, and her quiet vulnerability is perfect for this role. Brolin's physicality and barely-banked power is a striking contrast to the frail, sensitive Adele. And I especially liked Gattlin Griffith as Henry, buffeted by pressures from every angle and still strong.
themes: love, found family
overall: strongly recommended
2046 (2004) - "A train in a futuristic landscape takes passengers to a place
where they can recapture their memories, a place from which no one has ever returned. This is the premise of a novel by the womanizing sci-fi writer Chow Mo Wan (Tony Leung Chiu-wai), who engages in passionate affairs with a series of intriguing women he meets at the Oriental Hotel in Hong Kong. As Chow's lovers offer him inspiration for his writing, reality blends with fiction, and the past commingles with the future."
where they can recapture their memories, a place from which no one has ever returned. This is the premise of a novel by the womanizing sci-fi writer Chow Mo Wan (Tony Leung Chiu-wai), who engages in passionate affairs with a series of intriguing women he meets at the Oriental Hotel in Hong Kong. As Chow's lovers offer him inspiration for his writing, reality blends with fiction, and the past commingles with the future."
length: 2h, 9m | source: my DVD | directed by Wong Kar Wai | why I watched: I bought the DVD knowing nothing about the movie itself, on the basis of my love for the male lead and my admiration for this director
IMDb: 7.4/10 | Rotten Tomatoes: 87% / 85% Audience | my IMDb: 8/10 | MPAA: R
tone & texture: melancholic, high-color/stylized
notable quote: "Maybe one day you'll escape your past. If you do, look for me."
my notes: strange, conceptual, hard to understand. When I stopped fighting it and accepted that "understanding" the "plot" was not the point, then it started to make sense. I expect to watch this several more times, and for meaning to come on in layers.
themes: memory, love, identity
overall: highly recommended to open minds
[the title quotation is from Ball of Fire]




























