A Few Words About Movies

filmPeople get old; there’s no sense in getting all pissy about it.  First of all, there are tons of benefits, like a seat on the bus. Second, you’re way smarter (in most cases) than you were at 25; and third, most importantly, the alternative is a total bummer.  However, there is one tragic downside to getting old.  And since this is Cannes Film Festival Week, I thought I’d point it out.
If you live long enough, you get to see a lot of movies more than once.

Some would say this is a good thing.  For example, I’ve seen Casablanca so many times I know the dialogue — all of it — and I’ve never regretted the time spent.  But, believe me, there is a darker side.

** SPOILER ALERT **

1 — The M. Night Shyamalan Effect
You just shouldn’t watch some movies more than once.  These are the twisty ones that leave you gasping at the end, with your mouth open.   I’m looking at you, The Usual Suspects, The Sixth Sense and The Crying Game.  These are fantastic films, and sometimes you might think you’d like to see them again.  Don’t!  Watching a surprise ending movie twice is like trying to lose your virginity — a second time.  When you know what’s about to happen, it’s just not the same.

2 — OMG! What a piece of trash!
Some movies have added significance because we saw them at a particular time and place in our life.  (Puberty, third dates and your sophomore year in college are notorious for this.)  The problem is when you see them again, you realize they’re crap.  In this case, disappointment is the least of your worries because, invariably, you also remember the stupid stuff you did because of the feel-good contact high.  Like the time you went to see Two Of A Kind with Matthew Stilwell’s roommate Veronica Thompson (not their real names) and it felt totally cool ’cause it was right after Grease and had a decent sound track.  But then you went home and slept together — ’cause somebody said “It’s over between us.” Except it wasn’t, and then you had to spend the entire semester trying to get rid of those two psychos.  Er — uh — anyway, stuff like that can happen, and every time that movie comes back on TV, ya hate yourself — all over again.

But the very worst is:

3 — The damn thing still doesn’t end the way it’s supposed to.
In any good movie, you start cheering for the characters.   It’s perfectly natural.  You want Sean Astin to play in the big game, Kirsten Dunst to fall in love with Toby Maguire and somebody — ANYBODY — to finally kill that bastard with the British accent.  However, sometimes, despite all the emotional currency you have invested in the film, it all goes sideways.  This happens because writers are dicks.  They take perverse pleasure in writing a perfectly great script and then toying with us.  For example, we all know that Scarlett Johansson is way too flaky for anything long-term with Javier Bardem and Penelope Cruz.  Okay, fine!  But what about Rebecca Hall (the real story’s about her, anyway) so why doesn’t she give it a go?  She’s a way better fit in that relationship — totally more interesting.  Besides, she wants to, he wants her to, I want her to, my wife wants her to and Penelope Cruz doesn’t care.  But, no!  She settles for Chris Messina, gets on the plane and commits herself to a life of perpetual beige.  WTF?  Every time I see that movie, I think “God, Vicky!  Juan Antonio’s standing right there.  What’s your problem?”  Woody Allen, you’re such an asshole.

Oscar 2017 –Again

oscar-memeI guess it’s not too late to talk about Oscar some more — everybody else still is.  The ceremony was fairly cool.  The sets were gorgeous, most of the gowns were not and the ongoing faux feud between Jimmy Kimmel and Matt Damon played out very well.  Things fell a little flat when Jimmy tricked a bunch of ordinary folk into the auditorium for a “Hey! Let’s meet the peasants!” segment, but the millionaires were gracious and the peasants weren’t too unruly.  The best line, however, came when Kimmel got a little too honest and quipped that Viola Davis was such a good actress that she had just won an Emmy for her very dramatic acceptance speech.  As the man said, “The secret of success is sincerity.  Once you can fake that, you’ve got it made.”

Politics took centre stage most of the evening.  And, surprise!  Surprise!  Surprise!  Trump was the target.  Many of the millionaires wore blue ACLU ribbons in solidarity with something or other, and the audience gave several standing ovations to a variety of causes-de-jour — including Meryl Streep.  One director, however, Ava DuVernay, went the extra mile and wore “a gown by a designer from a majority Muslim country.”  She tweeted her bravery out to the world — just in case the Wal-Mart crowd weren’t aware of what a Lebanese-designed designer dress actually looked like.  Given that many celebs charge designers a healthy fee to wear their creations, this might very well have been a politics-for-profit moment.  And speaking of profit, the Swag Bag the millionaires got, just for showing up to the Oscars (actually a good-sized box — hand- delivered) was worth somewhere north of $100,000 this year.  It included — among a boatload of other stuff — a free stay in Hawaii.  Somehow, those calls for equality just got a little hollow.

But it was all in good fun.  Mel Gibson was welcomed back into the fold, Auli’i Cravalho got whacked on the head and some unknown somebody got scattered applause for mentioning the Koran.  Mahershala Ali became the first Muslim to win an Oscar, Damien Chazelle became the youngest director and Faye Dunaway and Warren Beatty became a meme for having one job — one job.  However, their performance deftly illustrates that even though actors have an exaggerated sense of self-worth and a gigantic soapbox, at the end of the day, they’re still just reading the words they’re given, and have very little idea what’s actually going on in the world.

Puzzle — Movie Quotes (1)

It turns out I’m a complete movie nerd with seriously obscure tastes in cinema.  Oh, well!  Of the few (very few) people who tried the quiz, no one got 100%.  So, I’ll save the prize for another time (unless someone has a compelling reason for me to award it to them.)  So, for those of you who want to try again — here are the questions.  For those of you who don’t — scroll down for the answers.

puzzle-snow

1 — “You gonna do somethin’ or just stand there and bleed?”
2 — “And tomorrow we come back and cut off your Johnson.”
3 — “Go away — or I shall taunt you a second time.”
4 — “You are a sad, strange, little man and you have my pity.”
5 — “Looking at the cake is like looking at the future. Until you’ve tasted it, what do you really know– and then, of course, it’s too late.
6 — “Shut up and deal.”
7 — “It’s always gonna be somethin’ with you, isn’t it Joe?”
8 — “You people! If there isn’t a movie about it, it’s not worth knowing– is it?”
9 — “I don’t know how to shut down a neutron reactor — and unless you took a Learning Annex course I don’t know about, I’m pretty sure you don’t know how to shut down  a neutron reactor, either.”
10 — “Get off my lawn!”
11 — “It’s not the years; it’s the mileage.”

—————————————————————————-

A — Sigourney Weaver
B — John Cleese
C — Harrison Ford
D — Clint Eastwood
E — Peter Stormare
F — Kurt Russell
G — Meg Ryan
H — Tim Allen
I — Shirley MacLaine
J — Alan Rickman
K — Nicol Williamson

———————————————————–

1 — “You gonna do somethin,’ or just stand there and bleed?”
F — Kurt Russell
Tombstone

2 — “And tomorrow we come back and cut off your Johnson.”
E — Peter Stormare
The Big Lebowski

3 — “Go away — or I shall taunt you a second time.”
B — John Cleese
Monty Python and The Holy Grail

4 — “You are a sad, strange, little man and you have my pity.”
H — Tim Allen
Toy Story

5 — “Looking at the cake is like looking at the future. Until you’ve tasted it, what do you really know — and then, of course, it’s too late.
K — Nicol Williamson
Excalibur

6 — “Shut up and deal.”
I — Shirley MacLaine
The Apartment (the last line)

7 — “It’s always gonna be somethin’ with you, isn’t it Joe?”
G — Meg Ryan
Joe vs The Volcano

8 — “You people! If there isn’t a movie about it, it’s not worth knowing– is it?”
J — Alan Rickman
Dogma

9 — “I don’t know how to shut down a neutron reactor — and unless you took a Learning Annex course I don’t know about, I’m pretty sure you don’t know how to shut down  a neutron reactor, either.”
A — Sigourney Weaver
Galaxy Quest

10 — “Get off my lawn!”
D — Clint Eastwood
Gran Torino

11 — “It’s not the years; it’s the mileage.
C — Harrison Ford
The Raiders of the Lost Ark

 

Tomorrow: The Academy Awards