Tuesday, July 2, 2013

The Dead Girl

This movie shows the impact of the death of a young prostitute (Brittany Murphy) on multiple people, including:

  • The woman who finds the body, played by Toni Collette
  • A family who has lost their daughter/sister (Mary Steenburgen, Bruce Davison, and Rose Byrne), and who believe the dead girl may be her
  • A mother, played by Marcia Gay Harden, who comes to claim the body and learns why her daughter ran away, as well as details of her life before she died
  • A wife, played by Mary Beth Hurt, who comes to believe her husband is responsible for a string of killings
  • The dead girl, in the days before her death
This is the first Murphy movie I've seen since her 2009 death, and I'll admit it's weird watching her, particularly seeing her kind of cracked out yet hopeful and all of it.  

I recommend the movie.

Availability: DVD only
Released: 2006
Added to my queue: 1/1/2008
Reason added to my queue: Netflix recommended based on my enjoyment of Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, Little Miss Sunshine, Brokeback Mountain, and American Beauty.  Please note that while good, this movie is not in the league of these others.

Saturday, June 29, 2013

Movies in which Two or More People Are Held in a Confined Space with No Idea Why

A while ago, when I asked for feedback on this blog, my friend Megan's husband said I should review a couple of movies in the same genre together.  I explained that I didn't actually want format feedback, because I'm pretty much doing this blog the way I do it - I wanted more content feedback, since some posts are long and involved and others really have very little info in them.

That said, lately I've been watching a ton of movies where two or more people are held in a confined space and have to figure out a number of things, including why, how to get out, etc.

To help you navigate through this genre, I am listing the ones I've seen, including the basic plotline.  They're all pretty good, although #1 is the best.  If you can think of one I've missed, let me know and I'll include it.


  1. Saw, the first one:  This movie is ridiculously good.  It was the first movie of its type, not to mention the first movie in years to bring "horror" movies to a new level.  The third and fifth one are also good, but I wasn't that huge a fan of 2 and 4.  After that I stopped watching but aspire to catch up someday.  The plot, as far as I remember it, are that two men wake up in a large, really gross bathroom-ish place, with instructions about how to escape.  There's a saw, and some other stuff.  Neither knows why he is there.  In the meantime, other people are being killed in torturous ways, each for some judgy reason kind of like in the movie Se7en.
  2. House Hunting:  This Marc Singer vehicle involves two families who are looking at real estate.  When approaching one house, they find a disoriented, freaked-out girl running through the woods, so they pick her up.  After that, everything they do leads back to that house.  There's no way out. And they don't understand why they're there.
  3. Nine Dead: This Melissa Joan Hart thriller involves nine people who wake up in a dungeon, each handcuffed to his or her own private pipe.  They have to figure out what they all have in common, or else every 10 minutes one of them will be killed.  But even if you're killed they still have to figure out what you have in common with the rest of them, only you're not there to help.
  4. Hunger: Five people wake up in a cave-like-well-type place with no food, so their captor can see whether they'll eventually eat each other.  
  5. Truth or Die: Five young Brits drive to the country to attend an acquaintance's birthday party, and end up being held hostage and tortured 
  6. ATM: Three coworkers are held hostage at a freestanding ATM building by some dude in a parka, despite their efforts to make him go away
  7. ???: I saw another movie like this awhile ago, where a bunch of people think they're applying for a job, and it turns out they're being held hostage.  I can't remember the name, let me know if you've seen this.
  8. Elevator: Nine people are on their way to an investment group's cocktail party when they get stuck in an elevator.  They have to figure out which one is harboring major resentment and an even bigger dangerous secret!
  9. Vile: Seven people find themselves in a house with weird contraptions on the back of their necks.  They have 24 hours to torture each other to get enough neurochemicals to drain into the contraptions before they all die.
  10. Die: Six people are forced to determine each other's fate with the roll of a die.  Lots of backstory and consequences.  
  11. Unknown: watching it tonight

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Grave Encounters (I and II)

Netflix recommended these to me, and I watched the first one last night and the second one today.

The premise of the first one: a television crew goes to the abandoned, fictitious "Collingwood" mental institution, to film things that go bump in the night.  Spoiler: the crew ends up going bump in the night.  Only it's more drawn out than that.

  • There are some good scares
  • I bet that would be a really scary thing to do
  • Also a stupid thing to do
  • But the kind of thing television crews like to do
  • I bet this would have been good to see in the theater, but when you go back and watch the scary scenes frame by frame, the special effects are WEAK
  • As mentioned before, I've seen Paranormal Activity about 100 times.  One thing that movie has over this movie is more stationary footage - this movie has WAY TOO MUCH footage of people running while holding handheld cameras.  We get it, it's about a television crew, slow down and let us see what's happening for the love of God.
  • Otherwise, decent.
The premise of the second one: a film student doubts the reality of the first movie and takes his pals to "Collingwood" to check it out.
  • Second verse, nowhere near as good as the first
  • And the first wasn't the best thing I ever saw
  • This one MENTIONS how stupid the special effects were in the first one, and then proceeds to have...WORSE special effects?  That shouldn't be allowed.
  • They're supposed to be 10 years apart.  Which is ridiculous: they were released ONE year apart and have the same stupid technology, filmwise, in both of them.
Released: 2011 and 2012, respectively
Availability: DVD and streaming
Reason I watched: Netflix recommended

Apartment 143

This is a movie about a group of parapsychologists who go into an apartment and try to help its occupants (a widower, his teenage daughter, and young son) understand what is happening to them (they're hearing weird things, seeing weird things, the usual ghost hunter/poltergeist movie).

Things to know about me:

  • Paranormal Activity is a movie I have seen probably 100 times
  • Poltergeist is a movie I have seen probably 100 times
This movie is pretty good, and has some great scares.  It's not as good as the abovementioned movies, obviously.  But if you want to watch something different, this might be it.

As I typed this, I kept hearing faint screams and scary noises, and it freaked me out.  But it turned out that a webpage for this movie was playing scenes, which I was hearing through my headphones, which were lying on the bed.  Twilight Zone!

Released: 2011
Availability: DVD and streaming
Reason I watched: Netflix recommended

Fur: An Imaginary Portrait of Diane Arbus

So, okay.

I'm really struggling with this movie.  The premise is that Nicole Kidman plays Diane Arbus, with Modern Family's Ty Burrell as her husband Allan, and Robert Downey, Jr. as their upstairs neighbor, who gradually draws Diane into his world as they fall in love.

So here's my stream of consciousness about this movie...

  • It is so, so good.
  • It bothers me that it isn't really true, despite the fact that the title says "imaginary" - I still want a biopic to be more bio, like maybe Sylvia or something...
  • I would follow RDJ off a cliff without a second thought.
  • Apparently it's pronounced "DEE-anne"
Dude.  I thought I had more on my mind about this movie but I think these points sum it up.  Every actor in this movie is amazing, including and especially Burrell, who is heartbreaking as a husband who knows he's losing his wife and still loves her way more than she deserves (that seems really harsh, and it's clear she loves him too, but the whole thing is just...something else).

I loved it.  If it hadn't been centered on two real people who didn't actually know each other in real life, I'd feel better about it.  I'm not good at abstract statements about real things.  I take a story at face value.  It's a defect of mine.  But if you are someone who can stand back and take the message from a really lovely story, give it a shot.

Availability: DVD
Released: 2006
Added to my queue: 12/20/2007
Reason added to my queue: Unknown

Monday, June 24, 2013

House at the End of the Street

Jennifer Lawrence stars with Elisabeth Shue as a daughter and mom, respectively, who move to a suburban rental house from Chicago after the mom separates from the dad.  Unfortunately, the only reason they can afford the house is because a girl killed her parents in the house next door.  And her brother still lives there.  Lawrence's character befriends him, and then the truth about it all starts to unravel.

This was a decent movie.  I liked it.  Shue and Lawrence are good as usual, and Billy from Ally McBeal is in it as a balding police officer.

Released: 2012
Availability: DVD and streaming
Why I watched it: Netflix recommended

The Factory

This movie was decent but I watched it too close to The Tall Man, and saw some crazy similarities.

It stars John Cusack and Jennifer Carpenter (Dexter) as police detectives investigating the disappearance of prostitutes in their town.  But then, his daughter, played by Mae Whitman, whom I've adored since When a Man Loves a Woman, which if you haven't seen you'd better watch right this minute, disappears as well, amping up the search for their kidnapper.

Nice job by Mind of the Married Man's Sonya Walger, who plays Cusack's wife.

It's decent.  Watch it way separately from the Tall Man.  Or if you have to choose, watch The Tall Man.

Released: 2012
Availability: DVD and streaming
Why I watched: Recommended by Netflix

The Tall Man

This movie was awesome.  I saw it after The Pact, or else I'd be calling it the first good thing I've seen in awhile.  

Jessica Biel stars as a nurse in a tiny, depressed town where children are regularly disappearing without a trace, apparently kidnapped by a tall man who wears only black.

I can't get into it without ruining it for you.  So good.  Watch it.

Released: 2012
Availability: DVD and streaming
Why I watched: Netflix recommended

The Pact

This is the first US horror movie/thriller that has really impressed me in awhile.

The premise is a young woman named Annie (Caity Lotz, who played Donald Draper's California wife's niece on Mad Men), who goes home for her abusive mother's funeral.  Weird things start happening in the house, which make Annie begin to face some of the weird stuff from her childhood.

SUCH A GOOD MOVIE.  See it.

Availability: DVD and streaming
Released: 2012
Reason I watched: Netflix recommended

Dorm

I really liked this Thai thriller about a boy whose parents suddenly send him to an all-boys boarding school where he knows nobody.  He's pretty pissed at his father, for reasons that are revealed late in the movie.  The other boys torment him with ghost stories that make him wet the bed.  He finally finds a friend, who turns out to be pretty complicated...

It's a good, spooky, touching story.  Well done.

Availability: DVD
Released: 2006
Added to queue: 2/12/2008
Reason added to queue: Asian Horror Invasion!

Monday, June 17, 2013

Sombre

I did not like this movie and I do not recommend you like it.  I am listing the events here for myself, in case I ever for any reason am tempted to watch this again.
  • French
  • Serial killer of prostitutes picks up a young woman who is stuck in a broken-down car in the rain
  • Later, rapes the woman (a virgin) in front of her sister
  • Takes her out to a club and forces her to get wasted
  • She finally gets away
  • Sees him again in the road and *voluntarily* has sex with him
  • He forces a passerby to drive her home
  • She claims he is her abusive husband who is actually a really nice guy
  • Finally, finally, FINALLY, the movie ends
Having volunteered in the ER with victims of rape and domestic violence, I was irritated with this film on several levels.  Did not enjoy.

Format: DVD
Released: 1998
Added to my queue: 4/16/2008
Reason added to my queue: I wish I knew.  

Thursday, June 13, 2013

Woman is the Future of Man

This Korean film centers around two friends who each had his own relationship with the same woman years before.  They meet up after not having seen each other in awhile, and awkwardly decide to look her up.  Then they awkwardly fumble through the rest of the movie.

It's good.  All the characters seem kind of clueless, except the woman mentioned above, who seems to have become kind of numb after all the crap she's been through.

But if you like relationship dramas or guys hanging out remembering old times although they kind of don't like each other anymore, this is definitely one to consider.

Availability: DVD and Streaming
Released: 2004
Added to my queue: 2/11/2008
Reason added to my queue: I was obviously on an Asian rampage.

Black Christmas

This remake of the 1974 classic just didn't do it for me.

The premise: residents of a sorority house are terrorized by the crazed murderer who grew up in the house (recently escaping a prison by sneaking into a Santa Claus sack).  Michelle Trachtenberg, Lacey Chabert, and house mother Andrea Martin do about as well as you'd expect.  Meh.

But the ORIGINAL!  So scary and good.  Plus, pre-crazy Margot Kidder!  Check it out.

Availability: DVD
Released: 2006
Added to my queue: 2/7/2011
Reason added to my queue: Probably because I saw the original and loved it

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Employee of the Month

I thought this movie was going to be idiotic, but it was actually really cute.  It's a romantic comedy pitting Dane Cook against Dax Shepard (yes, they are two different people) for the title of Employee of the Month of a Costco-esque bulk shopping store.  Whoever wins will allegedly win the affection of Jessica Simpson's character, who is believed to be an EotM groupie.

Dane Cook is endearing as a slacker trying to get it together, while Dax Shepard is the guy who has been EotM for 17 months and acts like it.

If you're looking for a feel-good rom-com, which I never am but actually tend to enjoy, check out this one.

Also, they barely let Jessica Simpson speak.

Availability: DVD only (booooooooo!)
Released: 2006
Added to my queue: 6/2/2007 (Happy 6th anniversary of being in my queue!)
Reason added to my queue: I do not know.

Friday, June 7, 2013

Border Radio

This movie was pretty bad.

Inexplicably in black and white (trying to be artsy?), it depicts an L.A. rocker apparently stealing money from a club and fleeing to Mexico, while the club owner, the other members of the band, and the rocker's wife look for him.  The sound is really bad - anything done outside or in a car, etc., is dubbed over from a studio, so the whole movie sounds like it was recorded in one room.  Weak.

I will say this, though - I thought the movie was from around 1992, and it turns out it was from 1987.  So it was ahead of its time.

But that's according to me.  In reality, 1987 the LA rock scene didn't hit Knoxville until about 1991.

Anyway, I'm still wondering why I had this in my queue for 6 years.

Availability: DVD only
Released: 1987
Added to my queue: 6/2/2007
Reason added to my queue: No frickin' idea.

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

The Red SHoes

I really liked this movie.  If you're looking for a decent Korean horror movie, this might be the one for you.

That said, the shoes are fuschia.  Which wouldn't be that big a deal, except people wear them with red clothes and red lipstick, so it sort of sticks out that they're not red in the slightest.

The premise of the movie is kind of a riff on the Hans Christian Andersen story of the same name - it centers on a pair of shoes with which people become obsessed, to horrifying ends.  The main character is a woman leaves her cheating husband, taking her small daughter to an apartment.  Then things get crazay!  Just kidding.  Only not really.

Anyway, I don't want to spoil it for you - but it's good!

Availability: DVD only
Released: 2005
Added to queue: 2/11/2008
Reason added to queue: Added with all those other Asian horror movies, which had been getting on my nerves, but this one was good.

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Rampo Noir

This anthology include four vignettes, based on stories by the Japanese author Edogowa Rampo (which is apparently supposed to be an homage to Edgar Allen Poe, if you pronounce it (kind of offensively) right.  Each stars actor Tadanobu Asano.  And each involves sexual encounters that are awkward to watch.  I mean for me at least.

  • Mars Canal: no audio.  A man wanders naked through what I assume is supposed to be Mars, but it's green, recalling a pretty violent sexual encounter.
  • Mirror hell: I liked this one.  Women keep dying, and the deaths seem connected to these beautiful hand-made mirrors.
  • Caterpillar: A woman has to "take care" of her husband, who returned from war deformed. 
  • Crawling Bugs: This one was also kind of interesting - a man with a skin allergy becomes a little too enamored with the stage actress for whom he is chauffeur.
Overall, this wasn't my favorite.  

Availability: DVD only
Released: 2005
Added to my queue: 2/11/2008 with all the other Asian horror movies
Reason added to my queue: I was adding a bunch of Asian horror movies

Thursday, May 30, 2013

Ju-On 2

This is the sequel to Ju-On, the Japanese original version of "The Grudge".

I liked this better than the first one.  But it flits back and forth in time, so I didn't really get the hang of what was happening until the end.  So I don't know.

The movie focuses on the curse of the house that was the center of the original (the same house was used for the American version, which starred Sarah Michelle Gellar and was nearly a shot-for-shot remake of the Japanese one).  This time, the curse is impacting people associated with a television show about the curse.

This is going to sound weird, but I think the reason I like this more is that it doesn't spend as much time at the house.  I'm not really that into the house, it gets old.  And the characters are compelling - the main character is an actress who stars in a lot of horror movies, so they refer to her as a "Horror Queen".  The other characters include an extra from one of the horror movies, a girl who works on the television show, the host(ess) of the television show and her boyfriend, and another dude affiliated with the show.

Here's the thing about these Japanese movies: they always involve really long black hair strangling people to death.  Like to the point that I'm surprised any Japanese people have hair past their chins.  Also, mouths sewn shut.  Not sure what that's about.

I mean I liked it though.

Availability: DVD and Streaming
Released: 2003
Added to my queue: 2/11/2008, along with all those other Asian movies
Reason added to my queue: Probably because I had seen the American one

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Alfred Hitchcock Presents

I always loved the revival of this show, which aired when I was in 4th grade.  So, I decided to give the original a chance, and loved it as well.

It is what is referred to as an "anthology" - every episode is a stand-alone vignette, typically a mystery, thriller, or general drama.  Several actors are repeated through the episodes, and they are written by well-known authors such as Ray Bradbury.

Another random tidbit - this is included on Time magazine's list of 100 best television shows of all time.  So that's awesome.

It's really good, from the first episode, where a man decides to take revenge on the person who attacked his wife, to the last episode I've seen, where an aging actor announces he's leaving the business.

Totally recommend.

Released: 1955
Availability: There are 10 seasons.  Seasons 1-3: Streaming; Season 4: DVD.  Not sure about the rest.
Added to my queue: Unknown
Reason added to my queue: Love things like this

Tuesday, May 14, 2013

Honeysuckle Rose

There was a time when I would have thought that a movie featuring Willie Nelson cheating on Dyan Cannon with Amy Irving was a sweet romance.  That time has passed.

The movie is still really good, because you get to see Willie and his friends in a series of concerts doing what they do best - the man didn't write "On the Road Again" for nothing...you can tell he really loves it.

But watching his wife and young son keep the home fires burning while he and the band, including Lily (Irving), the daughter of his best friend (Slim Pickens), who replaces him for a 3-week stint when he retires from the band, is really, really hard.  The band members all know and love Viv (Cannon), and also really like Lily, and it's pretty clear this isn't Buck's (Nelson) first dalliance.  Of course, what happens on the road tends to stay on the road.  In this case, Buck and Lily get really sloppy, and really public, about their affair, which naturally results in what these things tend to result in.

Amy Irving is at her very prettiest in this movie, I will say that.

I wanted to turn it off when I saw where it was headed, but the thought that he might play "Always on My Mind" at some point kept me watching.  Then I realized if he did play it, it would be disgusting, because there was no way it would be appropriate for this movie unless it were played at the very beginning.  Fortunately, he left it out.

Anyway, there are some good aspects of the movie, such as the music, and the actors.  The storyline just breaks my heart for everyone involved, though.

Availability: DVD only (I got it as part of a double feature with Pure Country)
Released: 1980
Added to my queue: 2/16/2010
Reason added to my queue: I think it was because we always listened to the Pure Country soundtrack in college and I wanted to check it out

Pure Country

This is a sweet drama about Dusty Wyatt (George Strait), a wildly popular country musician on tour with a huge spectacular stage show.  Early in the movie, he becomes disenchanted with being the "dancing chicken" and takes off on his own, leaving his manager and former love Lula (Lesley Ann Warren) to deal with the fallout.  He finally lands at a farm somewheres out west, and lives a nice simple life with a simple family, falling for the lady of the house (Isabel Glasser) before, as expected, everything catches up with him.

The good: it's sweet, fun, and Kyle Chandler (Coach Taylor from Friday Night Lights) costars as a greedy young upstart.  Also there's a lot of twangy George Strait music, which is good old country fun.

The bad: while she does a great job, Lesley Ann Warren is forever stuck in my head as Janie's mother in the "Janie's Got a Gun" video, which makes me kind of hate her in everything she does.  How she didn't know about Janie's abuse is beyond me.

Availability: DVD only.  I got it as a double feature with Honeysuckle Rose, which I will watch next.
Released: 1992
Added to my queue: 2/16/2010
Reason added to my queue: We used to listen to the soundtrack in college all the time.  I probably added the movie out of curiosity.

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Holiday

This movie is essentially a shot-for-shot remake of the movie Dirty Dancing.  In Hindi.  With Indian music.

Stop and think.  Even if you are the biggest fan in the world of Dirty Dancing, or of Bollywood, would you want to see an Indian remake?  Having done so, I will venture to say "No."  Sadly, the best character in Dirty Dancing is the music.  I can't speak for Indian people - maybe they used the perfect music and I just miss the American songs - but the storyline and characters, while compelling, just can't carry the movie, in my opinion.

I love me some Bollywood though, and am looking forward to Crimes, which should be coming to me soon and starring the same leading man, Dino Morea.  Quite the dancer, that one.

Availability: DVD only
Released: 2006
Added to my queue: 9/5/2007
Reason added to my queue: unknown

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

Jenifer

AKA, "Butterface"

Steven Weber (Wings, etc.) stars as Detective Frank Spivey, a family man who rescues a young woman named Jenifer from being killed in the woods by what seems to be a deranged man.  Then Frank finds himself drawn to her - I'll go out on a limb and say that this is because she has a really hot body and is continually trying to have sex with him - despite the obvious drawbacks of the situation, which, in no specific order, are that she is mentally retarded, she is a cannibal, he's MARRIED, and she's so ridiculously deformed we wouldn't be having this conversation if everything besides her face weren't hot.

But her face, y'all.

And she eats people.

This movie was released under the "Masters of Horror" label, and was made by Dario Argento.  I'm not sure if I've ever heard of this guy besides the fact that I've known I've had this movie in my queue for the past 3 years - but I would not call this movie a masterpiece of horror.  At best, it's soft porn.  Well, not at best.  If you're hoping for porn, you won't get it.  But if you're hoping for horror, it's going to feel more like porn.

Don't watch it.  And definitely don't spend three years waiting for it to rise to the top of the queue.  This woman's face.

Availability: DVD only
Released: 2006
Added to queue: 6/10/2010
Reason added to queue: Some magazine article or something.

Monday, May 6, 2013

Why We Fight

This documentary is really, really interesting.

It was filmed during the Iraq war, and basically asks why we engage in war at all.  As you might expect, the allegation that Iraq had WMD, the belief that the Iraq war in some way was related to 9/11, and the admission by George W. Bush that it was, in fact, unrelated to 9/11 are all encountered and addressed.  The war machine of the Bush era is also juxtaposed with historical views at prior presidents - most intriguingly, Dwight D. Eisenhower, who had some prescient advice for the country upon his exit from the presidency...advice that we simply haven't taken.

Our history with Saddam Hussein is also detailed, which I didn't know before this documentary (like that he started out as our friend, etc.).  So there's that.

I am not the most political person in the world, and I am not about to get involved with the politics of war.  But we've been in the Middle East since I was old enough to pay attention, and I understand that our defense budget is greater than any budget here on our own soil.  So yes, I have wondered why we fight.  Unfortunately, this movie doesn't spark optimism in me.

Check it out.

Availability: DVD only
Released: 2005
Added to my queue: 10/26/2009
Reason added to my queue: Netflix recommended because I liked Super Size Me, Fahrenheit 9/11, and Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind.  Okay...

Saturday, April 27, 2013

Lady Vengeance

This is the final piece in Korean director Chan-wook Park's revenge trilogy (see entries on Oldboy and Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance).  I think I liked Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance best, then this, and then Oldboy, in case you are wondering.

The movie follows Lee Geum-ja after her release from prison for kidnapping and killing a 5-year-old boy.  It briefly repeats Sympathy's assertion that most kidnappings are basically harmless, with the child being returned completely fine once the ransom is paid.  You can imagine how that turns out in both movies...

Is that true in Korea?  Do kids get kidnapped all the time and then returned, perfectly unharmed, upon payment of the ransom?  Does it happen anywhere?  My understanding is that kidnapping is a messy business and doesn't really work out for anyone involved.  These movies indicate that I'm right, but who knows.

Anyway, Geum-ja spends the movie on a couple of missions, ultimately seeking vengeance against a man connected to her crime.  All while wearing red (!) eye shadow.  Which she can actually pull off, almost.  I say that knowing that nobody in the world can actually pull it off, but seriously, you get almost used to it.

I'll say this for Chan-wook Park: if I ever decide to seek revenge, which I haven't ruled out, but certainly hope I never do, I'll watch his movies repeatedly.  The message I take away from all of them is that it in the end, it's not as satisfying as you need it to be.  And if you watch Sympathy, my God.  Revenge upon revenge upon revenge until, what?  Nobody's left to avenge / be revenged on.

Availability: DVD and Streaming
Released: 2005
Added to my queue: 2/11/2008
Reason added to my queue: I apparently got on a kick where I wanted to see every single Asian horror movie.  And if you think is the last one I'm reviewing, you're dead wrong, there are several more in the queue.

Friday, April 26, 2013

71 Fragments of a Chronology of Chance

This movie shows a mass shooting at a bank, and then shows the victims' lives in the leadup to the shooting, along with real news footage from around the world at the time (1991).

I found the premise and the characters interesting.  It's in German, which might be why I felt sort of disconnected to it.  But it was decent.

Availability: DVD only
Released: 1994
Added to my queue: 5/13/2008
Reason added to my queue: Not sure.  I also added Funny Games that day, so maybe I was on a German kick?  Who knows.

Thursday, April 25, 2013

One Missed Call II

Okay, I can't believe I even watched this movie, considering how terrible the first one (and the American one) was (were).  

But dude, if you have to watch a movie about a cell phone call portending death, this is definitely the one to watch.

It's not nearly as vapid as the first one - the characters are engaging, you actually don't want them to die - and you hope they get to the bottom of the mystery.
No promises on that front.

The premise is the same - creepy ringtone you didn't download, then three days later you die.

Availability: DVD
Released: 2005
Added to my queue: 2/11/2008 
Reason added to my queue: I seem to have added tens of movies that day, nearly all of them Asian horror.  Who knew I'd be paying 5+ years later?

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

Three...Extremes II

I really liked the first one, so I figured the second would be good.  And it was decent.

It's three vignettes, each directed by a different Asian director:

  • In "Memories", a woman keeps trying to get home.  Based on experience with other movies, you will ultimately begin to wonder whether she's actually alive or a ghost.
  • In "The Wheel", a Thai village is haunted by creepy ceremonial puppets.
  • In "Going Home", which I found to be the most interesting and worth watching, a man is held captive while his neighbor prepares for the resurrection of his dead wife.
 Far and away the most disturbing of the vignettes is in Part I, though.  The first one on the the first disc is seriously disturbing.

Watch it, don't watch it.

Availability: DVD only
Released: 2002
Added to my queue: 2/11/2008
Reason: This is when I added all the Asian horror movies to my queue, so I assume I was on some kind of tear.

Saturday, April 13, 2013

The Power of Kangwon Province

I apologize in advance for this review, I'm pretty sure it's going to suck.

This is the blurb about this movie on Netflix:

"After a painful breakup with her married professor, Jisook joins two of her girlfriends for a holiday. But in an eerie twist of fate, her former lover plans a getaway for the same destination, where tragedy brings them together once again."

I watched the movie.  I gave it the vast majority of my attention.  Now, it was in Korean, so that is one area where I may have missed something.  I did see Jisook go on holiday.  I even saw her go back to visit a dude she met on holiday.  Then, I saw her former lover go to the same place she had gone.  But I missed any eerie  twists of fate and if I saw a tragedy, it didn't move me much.

So I mean.  Skip it.  Or watch it and let me know what I missed.


Friday, April 12, 2013

A History of Violence

When this movie came to theaters, I remember thinking it was going to be, literally, a history of violence.  Like a documentary.  And even after I realized that wasn't the case, I didn't want to see it.

It's pretty good, though.  Viggo Mortenson and Maria Bello play a married couple in a small Indiana town.  He owns a little diner, which gets held up by criminals, and his quick reactions save the day...and unleash a host of other problems when Ed Harris comes to town claiming Mortenson is actually a thug from a Philly crime family.

I mean, if nothing else is on, this isn't bad.  It wouldn't be my go-to, though.

Availability: DVD only
Released: 2005
Added to my queue: 2/12/2008
Reason added to my queue: unknown

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Funny Games (German)

I saw the American version of this movie in the theater, randomly, with my friend Wendy in NYC.  It was so violent and senseless, we were kind of dumbfounded.

The German version is, based on my recollection, almost exactly the same.  Shot for shot remake.  Even the house feels the same....

The premise is a family arrives at their lake house for a vacation, and as they're settling in, two strangers come over to innocently borrow some eggs for the neighbors' breakfast.  And then it gets messy.

If you like senselessly violent torture thrillers, one of these two movies is for you.  The German one is cool because it's the original, but the American one is in English and (stop me if I'm wrong here because it's been like 6 years since I saw the American one) they're basically the same movie.

Availability of German: DVD and Streaming
Released: 1997
Added to my queue: 5/13/2008
Reason added to my queue: I'm assuming because I had seen the American version.

Monday, April 8, 2013

Klepto

This indie drama follows Emily (Meredith Bishop), a kleptomaniac who gets caught by a store security officer (Jsu Garcia).  At first it seems like the security guy has her best interests at heart, but his own problems make things even more complicated.  Also interesting is Emily's relationship with her shopaholic mother (Leigh Taylor-Young).

It's decent.

Availability: DVD and Streaming
Released: 2003
Added to my queue: 12/6/2007
Reason added to my queue: unknown

Sunday, April 7, 2013

Paper Clips

This documentary centers on Whitwell Middle School, in Whitwell, Tennessee (or, the way they pronounce it, TENNessee).  This tiny town is almost entirely white, with only several thousand residents.  One year, the principal, Mrs. Cooper, decided that the 8th grade should have a consciousness-raising project to promote diversity understanding and tolerance.  One of the teachers, David Smith, attended an educational conference, and returned with the decision that this project should be about the Holocaust.  All the teachers read up on the Holocaust, and started teaching the kids about it.  Upon hearing that 6 million Jews were murdered in the concentration camps, one student admitted that he really didn't have a good grasp of 6 million - he had never seen 6 million of anything.  So they decided to collect 6 million somethings...and started researching what would be the most meaningful thing to collect.  They discovered that paper clips were invented during WWII, by Norwegians who used them in solidarity against the Nazis, wearing the clips on their collars as a testament to the atrocities that were being committed daily in German-controlled areas.

I won't spoil it for you, but this film is so touching, I literally had goosebumps for the entire first half, and most of the rest of the movie.  I so much want to go to Whitwell and see their work for myself!

Highly recommend.

Availability: DVD and Streaming
Released: 2004
Added to my queue: 1/10/2011
Reason Added to my queue: Netflix recommended, based on my enjoyment of: March of the Penguins, Schindler's List, and Dear Zachary.

Note: Dear Zachary is so sad and so disturbing, I can't even.  Amazing, though.

Saturday, April 6, 2013

Mad Men

If you aren't already watching Mad Men, I'm not going to attempt to talk you into it.  It is SO good, its characters are SO real, everything I say will sound cliche.

This is up to you.  Don't make the wrong decision.

Availability: DVD and Streaming; new episodes begin April 7 at 9pm EDT, on AMC.
Released: 2007


Friday, April 5, 2013

Thumbsucker

I honestly can't figure out whether I thought this was a good movie.  While watching it, I was kind of like, "eh," but then at the end, I was like, "that was a good movie".  So I guess I liked it?

It centers around 17-year-old outcast Justin Cobb (Lou Taylor Pucci), who still sucks his thumb.  It embarrasses his parents, Audrey (Tilda Swinton) and Mike (Vincent D'Onofrio), and his orthodontist (Keanu Reeves) (!!) offers to hypnotize him to make him stop.  And the story just kind of goes from there.  Justin is a member of the debate team, whose adviser is played by Vince Vaughn - making this one of the rare one-two Vince punches with both D'Onofrio AND Vaughn.  Justin's romantic entanglements with Rebecca (Kelli Warner) add cringes to an otherwise already cringe-inducing film.

I mean if Keanu Reeves is your orthodontist, something is already wrong.

The story is saddish but engaging.  I think I did like it.

On a side note, I sucked my middle and ring finger on my left hand until I was 28 years old.  This was an interesting movie for me because it was a boy, and his parents were pressuring him to stop, and his teeth had  been affected.  I don't really know why I did it, except that my parents were kind of distracted when I was around the ages that a kid would usually stop sucking fingers, and I just happened to never stop.  So the whole time I was in elementary school, middle school, a dance cult, high school, COLLEGE - I had boyfriends AND was in a sorority and nobody ever made fun of me to my face.  That may not be true, but I think everyone basically was fine with it.  I made it to adulthood, again with the boyfriends, friends, etc. - and then when I was 28, Santa gave me a handheld video game that I started playing when I was watching TV or falling asleep - the times I had previously sucked my fingers - and I just sort of stopped.  Like, accidentally.  With no fanfare.  I remember once, my sister-in-law kind of made a jab at me about it, and I was like, "I don't do that anymore."  And she didn't believe that I would have stopped with no mention of it - but seriously, it just went away.  No orthodontic problems, either.

Availability: DVD only
Released: 2005
Added to my queue: 1/1/2008
Reason added to my queue: Unknown

Thursday, April 4, 2013

Network

This movie wasn't on my radar in any way.  I had of course heard its catchphrase, "I'm mad as hell, and I'm not going to take it anymore!" - but had never really thought about its origins.

It was powerful!

The premise is a network struggling with coming in last in the ratings in 1975 - which would have been a fairly big deal back then, before cable, right?  The film is "satirical" which I generally assume means an exaggeration of reality for the sake of comedy, usually dark comedy.  I don't think I really thought the movie was funny, although the continuing game of musical chairs in terms of who's head of UBS (the fictional network in question) was kind of amusing...it doesn't take much for one person to get replaced by another.  Anyway, the primary storyline in the film is the on-air breakdown of a news anchor, which has interesting results, again driven by ratings.  Everyone in the movie is great, particularly Faye Dunaway, who plays a blindly ambitious director of programming; William Holden, who plays the network division president who unknowingly provokes the anchor's (Peter Finch) breakdown by letting him go because of poor ratings.  Robert Duvall, who plays Dunaway's boss, is also great, as is Ned Beatty - in the most passionate role I've ever seen him play...and I feel like I've seen him in a lot of stuff.

Anyway, I'm not going to add spoilers, because the film should stand on its own - but it was really good.

Availability: DVD only
Released: 1976
Added to my queue: 4/11/2010
Reason added to my queue: Netflix recommended based on my enjoyment of: Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, Lost in Translation, and Taxi Driver.

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

That 70's Show, Season 3

If you haven't seen That 70's Show, you should give it a shot.  It's really cute.  It's in the old canned-laughter sitcom format, and takes place, well, in the 70's.

Season 3 spans 1977-78, and opens with Hyde (Danny Masterson) just having been arrested for holding Jackie's (Mila Kunis) stash.  Red ( Kurtwood Smith) considers throwing him out, until he hears the truth.  Also found in this season (sorry for the spoilers, I'm basically posting this for myself to read when I start Season 4 in 5 or so years)...

  • Eric (Topher Grace): is still with Donna (Laura Prepon), but he turns kind of clingy (including reading her diary) when she finds herself wanting to spread her wings with a new job down at the radio station (fun cameo from Howard Hesseman in that episode).  He also pulls her pants down in a pickup basketball game, exposing her granny panties.  They also go to a hotel for a romantic weekend, but his parents end up in the next room.  Gets Donna a promise ring in the last episode, and breaks up with her when she gives it back.  Ay, que loco!
  • Hyde: after almost getting thrown out of the Forman's basement for holding Jackie's stash, he ends up moving out voluntarily when his father (fun cameo from Airplane's own Ted Striker, Robert Hays) shows up on the scene.  Throws a big party at his dad's, which his dad breaks up after Eric goes home drunk and the Formans encourage Mr. Hyde to take a heavier hand with his son.  Also goes on a date with Jackie.
  • Donna: gets to go on-air with her new job; also lands tickets for everyone at a Ted Nugent concert and then gets to go backstage, where The Nuge gives her an interview.  Eric is irritated with her for leaving him alone to go back stage, but she is unapologetic.  When Eric tries to solidify their relationship with a promise ring in the season finale, she ultimately gives it back after realizing she isn't sure what she sees in her future.
  • Kelso (Ashton Kutcher): starts the season dating Eric's sister Laurie (Lisa Robin Kelly), but she cheats on him, so he realizes how bad Jackie was hurt when he cheated on her, and spends the rest of the season trying to get back together with Jackie.  It works.  Gives her a promise ring in the last episode, which she accepts.
  • Jackie: Starts the season obsessed with Hyde since he took the fall for her with the pot.  When he finally goes on a date with her, they kiss and realize they have no feelings for each other, so that ends. She gets a callback for a modeling agency, but Donna exposes it as a fraud.  Ultimately gets back together with Kelso, which is a sweet process.
  • Fez (Wilmer Valderrama): gets a girlfriend, Caroline (Allison Munn), but she's batshit crazy so they break up.  Spends the rest of the season lonely.
  • Red: spends the season trying to maintain control over the family.
  • Kitty: gives up her nursing career and spends the rest of the season trying to figure out what she wants.
  • The Pinciottis: Bob loses his job; Midge admits she's unhappy.

Ready for Season 5!

Availability: DVD and Streaming
Released: 2000
Reason I added to queue: who knows

Sunday, March 31, 2013

The Killing, Seasons 1 and 2

I actually watched the first few episodes of The Killing when they first aired, and didn't continue with the series because felt like a Twin Peaks knockoff.  Then, I remember when the first season wrapped up and the titular "killing" had not been solved, which had fans up in arms.  However, it was solved at the end of the second season, and people who like this show REALLY LIKE THIS SHOW.

Also, Netflix kept it in my Top 10 recommendations for a long time, and we all know how well Netflix knows me.

So, I watched it.  And, as usual, Netflix nailed it.

The premise: the blue-collar Larsen family returns from a camping trip to discover their daughter, 17-year-old Rosie, who they left behind to spend the weekend with a friend, *surprise* lied about where she'd be staying, and is now missing.  Before the episode ends, Rosie turns up dead.  I won't spoil any more details, except to say that while this show is a very very slow burn, it is entirely worth sticking with it.  The characters (which develop just as slowly) are excellent - Mireille Enos (Detective Sarah Linden) is a stone-faced bride-to-be single mother, and Joel Kinnaman (Detective Stephen Holder) plays her skinny, white, Snoop Dogg-sounding partner.  Billy Campbell, who I loved on Once and Again, is humbly quiet as a local mayoral candidate, but the real star of the show, in my opinion, is the city of Seattle.  It's hella rainy there, y'all.  And NOBODY USES AN UMBRELLA!

I will say that I'm glad I waited to watch it until I knew the case took two seasons to resolve.  Each episode is one day, and each season is 13 episodes, so the murder takes less than a month to solve - which in the scheme of things isn't ridiculous.

I highly recommend this series if you like mysteries and/or thrillers.  And crime dramas.  And Seattle.

Also, Season 3 starts in June, so there's plenty of time to get caught up!  DO IT.

Availability: DVD and Streaming
Released: 2011
Reason I watched it: Netflix told me so

Wednesday, March 27, 2013

Rope

You know, before last week, I had never heard of this Hitchcock classic...except for the fact that it was headed my way from Netflix.  Then, I told my father I had a Hitchcock movie coming and maybe we could all watch it, and he said "Which one, Rope?" and then tonight I was watching an old Mad Men episode, and they referred to it as well.

What is this movie!?

Well, the premise is that two friends, played by Farley Granger and John Dall, are super-psyched about having murdered their friend and locked him in a chest, thinking they're going to get away with it.  Their former professor, James Stewart, is on to their act, though.

It's good, the color is good given that it's from 1948 (which makes it seem newer) and the cinematography is cool - if you aren't paying close attention, it seems like it's all done in one long shot.

I like Hitchcock a LOT, and this one is good.

Availability: DVD
Released: 1948
Added to my queue: 11/6/2010
Reason added to my queue: Netflix recommended it to me, based on my enjoyment of (get this) Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, Arrested Development, The Office (UK), and Memento.  Um, okay.

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Sympathy for Mr. Vengeance

This movie is SO intriguing and SO brutal and SO bloody and SO horrible and SO good if these are things you like.

My explanation has tons of spoilers, so don't read it if you want to see this movie.

The premise is that a deaf and dumb Korean factory worker takes care of his sister, who needs a kidney transplant.  He does everything he can to ensure that she will get one, but none of it is enough.  On top of that, he gets laid off.  So he and his girlfriend kidnap his boss's young daughter, believing that the boss will simply pay the ransom, which is exactly enough for the sister's operation.  Unfortunately, the sister figures out what is going on, and kills herself.  Ryu, the brother, drives the sister's corpse and the little girl out to a lake-type place to bury the sister under some river stones.  Unfortunately, the little girl wakes up alone in the parked car and goes looking for Ryu.  She yells to get Ryu's attention, but he's deaf, so she swims out to meet him.  She has never had swimming lessons, and drowns.  So now a kidnapping that has become pointless results in the death of the child.  So, the father finds out about the death of his daughter, and makes it his life's purpose to find those responsible.  Also, Ryu goes to kill some people who could have helped his sister and didn't.  So now they're dead.  The father learns who did the kidnapping, and tortures Ryu's girlfriend to death, despite her declarations that she is a member of a terrorist organization that will kill him.  Ryu and the father somehow meet, and the father kills Ryu.  And then a bunch of guys follow him out to a deserted area and kill him.  Turns out she was right about the terrorist organization.  

The end.

If you like Korean psychological thrillers that are brutal and bloody, this is totally the movie for you.

Availability: DVD and Streaming
Released: 2002
Added to my Netflix queue: 2/11/2008
Reason added to my queue: unknown

Sunday, March 24, 2013

Scrubs, Season 2

I was in the middle of watching this season of Scrubs when I learned I was accepted to nursing school.  Something tells me I'll be relying on Scrubs a lot in my life for some much-needed levity about the medical profession, as well as for a comedic take on hospital hierarchy :-/

Anyway, for those of you who haven't watched Scrubs, it's such a good show.  But I'm sure you know other people that have told you that and if you seriously haven't seen it in all the years since it came out, I mean, I'm not wasting my time telling you about it.  I'd rather waste my time packing in all the Netflix I possibly can before I put my nose to the nursing grindstone come fall.

Spoiler Alert - the following is to remind us what happened in Season 2 for when I get Season 3 five years from now:

  • My favorite episode of this season is the first one, My Overkill, which has Colin Hay singing "Overkill" - a lovely song that is now one of my go-to tunes.
  • JD: Now a medical resident, but still pretty far down on the food chain and basically Dr. Cox's whipping boy.  Falls for Elliot again when she is crashing at his place, but she doesn't want to commit (and doesn't know he does want to) and so they are just friends.  Hooks up with the very hot gift shop girl but that doesn't work out because he likes Elliot.  Then hooks up with Tasty Coma Wife Amy Smart, whose comatose husband dies.  So they start dating but she needs drama to fuel romance, so that ends.  His brother Dan (Tom Cavanagh) visits and hits on Elliot and shenanigans ensue.
  • Elliot: has the JD drama, plus starts dating nurse Flowers (Rick Schroeder) but he's controlling and they split after her "I love U2" comment is misconstrued and the relationship goes to the next level on accident.  Gets disowned by her father for not wanting to go into OB/Gyn, so is forced to live in a moving fan for awhile until it gets stolen.  
  • Turk: now a surgical resident, which is better than a medical resident, respect-wise.  But he's still on the bottom of the surgical food chain.  Proposes to Carla, who takes forever to give him an answer; his brother visits and announces he is getting divorced; moonlights at a walk-in clinic to make extra cash. 
  • Carla: gets mad when Turk suggests she become a nurse-practitioner instead of "just" a nurse.  Accepts Turk's proposal.  When her mother dies, she wants to get married right away, but he sweetly shows her she doesn't really want that.
  • Cox: starts sleeping with pregnant ex-wife Jordan, then falls back in love with her.  At the end of the season, JD reveals that Cox is actually the father of Jordan's infant son, which makes Cox end things with her.  She refuses to accept the breakup so they get back together for realsies.
Good stuff.  Ready for Season 3!

Availability: DVD and Streaming
Released: 2002
Reason added to my queue: unknown

Thursday, March 21, 2013

Freaks and Geeks

This show has been on my radar for awhile now.  In fact, I own it on DVD - and it even survived my apartment burning down.  Somehow I never watched it until last week, however.  ???

It's awesome.  

The show is set in the 1980-1981 school year at McKinley High School in a suburb of Detroit.  It focuses on two groups of students: the "Freaks" which is what they call the pot-smoking burnout types, and the "Geeks" or nerds.  Specifically within these groups, the protagonists are Lindsay and Sam Weir.  Lindsay, the older sister, used to be a "Mathlete" but has decided to explore new avenues, resulting in her hanging out with the Freaks for the year.  Sam, a freshman, is so little and cute that you feel sorry for him while also knowing that he's going to hit puberty momentarily and be completely fine.  The storylines are standard high school fare such as unrequited crushes, bullying, overbearing parents, unfaithful parents, parents dating teachers, wrecking parents' cars, extracurricular rock bands, drug experimentation, a hippie guidance counselor, the list goes on.  There are only 18 episodes - the show lasted just 1 season - but here are the reasons you should watch it.
  • Judd Apatow executive produces.  If you like his kind of funny (Knocked Up, 40 Year Old Virgin, Pineapple Express, etc.), you'll like this show. 
  • Linda Cardellini plays Lindsay Weir.  If you like her cute snarky smirkiness (ER), you'll like her in this.
  • John Francis Daley plays Sam Weir.  He is SO CUTE I just want to put him in my backpack and walk around with him all day.  He's the perfect freshman, so cute and young and you just know everything is about to totally change for him.  Which is true.  He grew to 6' and has a regular gig on Bones now.
  • James Franco plays Daniel Desario, the requisite heartbreaker pothead.  Messy hair and Cheshire grin, check. 
  • Samm Levine plays Neil Schweiber, Sam's best friend, who is also tiny but was like 16 when this filmed and thus didn't get much bigger (5'4").  Neil is a confident, Jewish, ventriloquist of a guy. 
  • Seth Rogen plays Ken Miller, with his standard smartass with a hidden heart of gold charm.  He falls for a tuba player in the school band, which is funny and sweet and weird.
  • Jason Segel plays Nick Andopolis, a drum-playing dreamer with an Army man for a dad.  He's sweet and likable, in a different way from his How I Met Your Mother character, Marshall.
  • Martin Starr plays Bill Haverchuck, a cringe-inducingly heartbreakingly sweet and gentle nerd, complete with goofy glasses and goofy teeth and a hot single mom who starts dating the gym teacher.
  • Busy Phillips plays Kim Kelly, Daniel Desario's sometime girlfriend, a sort of complex tough girl.  This is the only thing I've ever seen her in, where I actually liked her.  So I mean that's an endorsement right there.
Why did I just list the cast and an executive producer above?  Because many of these people could carry their own show, but to see them in an ensemble like this at the beginning of most of their careers is a rare treat.  It's a really good show.  Highly recommend.

Availability: DVD and Streaming
Released: 1999
Reason added to my Netflix queue: unknown

Monday, March 18, 2013

One Missed Call (Japanese)

In the winter of 2008, I went to Northampton, MA to visit a guy that I was very interested in.  We will call him Kennedy, because he looked like one, although that is not why I liked him.

Five years earlier, I had been set up with him - we met at a wedding, at which I paired off with someone else, later realizing that Kennedy and I were much better suited.  However, by the time I was set up with him in 2003, I was sort of interested in another guy we'll call JC, who lived in NYC and was in my group of friends.  I'd had a crush on JC for months, and he was beginning to like me back.  I know it's sounding like I had boys on board and boys on deck, but this was 10 years ago and I am awesome.  But anyway, the 2003 setup with Kennedy was really just bad timing.  We stayed at our mutual friends' house, who I will call Rob and Damia.  Rob and Damia are like the funnest, most amazing people in the entire world.  All three of Rob, Damia, and Kennedy have history in a capella groups, which means they can sing anything, any time, all of a sudden, and it sounds amazing.  A living soundtrack.  The best part of that particular weekend was hearing them sing "Our Lips Are Sealed" which I remember even now, 9.5 years later.

So, the first night, I slept on the same air mattress as Kennedy, and realized the whole thing was a mistake for two major reasons, the second of which was that I really wanted to see where things went with JC.  I just hadn't really thought of that beforehand.  I won't get into the first reason.

The next morning, I admitted to Damia and our friend Kelly, who I just realized was also there, that I really couldn't move forward with Kennedy, and that I was going to head back to NYC.   Kelly (who lived in Boston) and Damia were like, "No no stay!  We will figure something out tonight."  Although maybe I'm remembering it wrong because Kelly went back to Boston that day.  I was also moving in a week or two and was worried about packing.  I do remember that Rob and Damia decided that if I stayed that night, they would come to NYC the following weekend and help me pack.  Which they totally did and that was awesome.

So anyway, I stayed for the rest of the weekend.  Saturday night we went out for dinner and had a great time.  Damia and I fell asleep on a mattress in the living room, and I woke up in the middle of the night feeling like I needed to pee.  But then after I peed I still felt like I had to pee, so that was disturbing.  Damia woke up and I told her what was going on, and then my back started to hurt and I was like "My back is starting to hurt" and then it REALLY started to hurt and I figured it had to be my kidney, because it was only on one side and hurt very close to the surface, as in it hurt to the touch.  This all happened within a few minutes.  Damia asked if I wanted some Advil.  Trying to stay calm, I told her it hurt too much for Advil.  She asked if I needed to go to the emergency room.  I said that I might.  Trying to suss out whether I was a dope fiend, she asked if I went to the ER regularly.  Recalling a recentish visit for cramps (I actually did used to go kind of regularly for cramps that were so bad I was throwing up, until I realized, voila, heating pad works fine), I hedged..."I mean, not regularly..."  Damia admitted she wasn't entirely sure how to get to the hospital, as they had moved to that house fairly recently.  I said I definitely needed to go to the ER.  We got up, and I found my shoes and coat.  As I bent over to put on my boots, a wave of nausea hit, and I went into the bathroom and threw up.  Then I felt really weak and sort of decided to rest on the bathroom floor.  I couldn't really yell out to Damia, because I felt pretty sure I was dying, and all my strength was going toward lying there on the bathroom floor.  I guess Damia woke up Rob and Kennedy and told them we had to go to the ER.  I assume all three of them were like, "WTF, we met this girl at a wedding and suddenly she needs to go to the ER, she has to be either a hypochondriac or dope fiend."  I would prefer not to get into the details of whether or not I'm a hypochondriac, but this situation felt serious enough that I would admit to people I just met and completely adored that I needed medical attention (as opposed to a situation where I felt I needed regular attention and therefore complained so people would feel sorry for me - which I may or may not have done before in my life).

Anyway, after they discussed their concerns, Damia came to the bathroom door and said they were ready to go.  As I lay dying, I realized that I definitely did not have enough life left in me to get in the car with them and drive all over Hampshire County (the Other Side of Massachusetts) to find the hospital of which they may or may not know the location.  Plus, if I came to the ER in a car, I would probably have to sit in the waiting room and fill out forms, which was complete bullshit because I was definitely about to die.  So I told Damia I needed an ambulance.  This was met with the requisite pause and "...Are you serious?" but by now I was not even sure I would ever leave that bathroom floor, so an ambulance was called.  They couldn't get a stretcher into the house though so I had to walk to the ambulance and that was kind of bullshit because I was in really horrible pain.  Damia got in the front of the ambulance, and off we went.  The entire time, I thought about her rendition of "Our Lips Are Sealed" and felt that hearing that song was the only possible thing that could prevent my imminent death.  Once we reached the hospital, they wheeled my gurney past Damia, and I asked if she would sing it to me.  She said no.  I've never fully forgiven her for that.

Once I got into a room, a man walked in and asked me to rate my pain on a smiley face chart.  I told him it was worse than the worst frown possible.  I asked him if I was dying.  He said definitely not.  I asked what was wrong with me.  He said no idea.  I asked if he was the doctor.  He laughed and said no.  I told him to leave.

A nurse came in.  An older lady.  Her task was to insert an IV.  She could not find a vein.  Kudos to her for giving me a new blazing pain to distract me from my old aching pain.  I asked her to leave.

Another nurse came in.  A younger lady named Casey.  She told me they needed a urine sample.  I told her I'd give her a urine sample if she would insert an IV without blowing out the remainder of my veins.  She said no problem, inserted an IV, I did my part, and finally I lay back and started receiving some relief.  Damia sat down and we chatted.  She went out to the waiting room to let Rob and Kennedy know what was going on, as they had followed us in the car.  After awhile, the physician came in and introduced himself as Dr. Krogius.  He was tall and young but not too young - a trustworthy age.  He told me I would be fine, that kidney stones in women usually hurt on the way from the kidney to the bladder but would probably be crushed on the journey and I'd pass it in a day or so.  I asked, "so wait, do I definitely have a kidney stone?" and he said that generally when there was blood in the urine, that meant a kidney stone and without doing imaging, they assumed that was the cause.  "So wait, did I have blood in my urine?"  "Oh, yeah, you had a ton of blood in your urine."

HUGE SIGH OF RELIEF from both Damia and me, because now everyone knew for sure I had a valid medical condition, and could take me seriously and stop thinking I was a dope fiend.  Also, Casey came back in and asked if all was well, and endorsed Dr. Krogius as being awesome.  But she called him by his first name, Tor.  "Tore?" I asked her, making tearing motions.  No, Tor, she said, with her fist in the air like the Black Panthers.  I assume that was intended to like show his Viking strength or something.  This made Damia and me laugh and laugh, and we made fun of everyone and everything and had an excellent time.  Highly recommend Cooley Dickinson ER if you have the chance to try it out.  And superlatively recommend Damia as an ER pal.

I started feeling better, but then started feeling like the pain was coming back.  It probably wasn't, but you never know.  So I told Tor, and he said he could get me something stronger.  He asked how I did with narcotics.  "Like cocaine???" Damia blurted.  I glared at her, not wanting her to ruin my chances of getting something good.  It was fine though, and Tor said he'd get me some morphine.  That seemed extreme.  But while I'm not a dope fiend, I'm also not one to turn down morphine for a condition that hours earlier had me dying on the bathroom floor.  He or somebody else came in with a paramedic or EMT guy who was going to school to become something more important, and told me they were going to let that guy administer the morphine into my IV line.  He wasn't exactly "cleared" to do things like that but they'd supervise him.  I didn't want to be an asshole so I was like, fine.  He sat down and plunged a hypodermic needle into the port on my IV line.  Then they left.

Damia immediately dashed over to me.  "What does it feel like?"
Me: "Nothing."
Damia: "You mean you feel like nothing?"
Me: "I mean I don't feel any differently."
Tor walked in: "How do you feel?"
Me: "I don't feel any different."
Tor: "Are you feeling pain?"
Me: "I don't feel like I'm in pain, but I don't feel like I'm on morphine, like when people on TV are on morphine."
Tor: "If you aren't in pain, then it's working."  Walked out of the room.
Me: "I'm thinking this was a placebo."
Damia: You know, there is a kink in your IV line.  Why don't I-"
Me: "DON'T TOUCH IT.  We'll ask Casey."
Damia: "No really, maybe if I just-"
Me: "DON'T TOUCH IT."
Damia: "There, how's that?  Better?"
Me: "Mor.....phine...."

Then they told me I could leave.  Which was awkward, since the morphine had just hit.

Then Rob and Damia took me to Bruegger's Bagels.  That was awesome.  I think I stayed an extra day at their house and then went home.  I have no idea when or how Kennedy left that day.  We talked a few more times but then I really started dating JC, which lasted 6 weeks until he dumped me for a girl he had seen over Thanksgiving with whom he had gone to high school.

Fast forward to 4 years later.  I went to visit Rob and Damia, and at this point Kennedy was living in a neighboring town, so he came over and hung out as well.  After this visit, each of us told Rob and Damia that we could see ourselves hanging out with each other again.  He came to NYC and took me out for dinner, and I had a great time and asked him to come to (OMG I just realized this) JC's house for a New Year's Eve party.  By this time JC was dating my cousin because he's slutty that way.  So Kennedy and I went to the party and had a great time.  After that, we planned a weekend where I would go to Easthampton to visit him.

So I took the train to Hartford and he picked me up and we hung out all weekend and I had an amazing time and totally wanted to start dating him, full stop.  VERY VERY VERY interested in him.  Saturday afternoon, he took me to a movie and let me choose the movie.

I chose One Missed Call.

This was the American version, which was in theaters, starring Shannyn Sossamon.  I had never seen the Japanese version on which this was based.  But the American version was easily the worst thing either of us had seen.  Terrible movie.  Almost every scene was stupid.  I remember there was an abandoned hospital.  And I remember it was terrible.

We left the theater, and I totally took full blame for making him see that horrible crappy movie, and the whole way to Rob and Damia's, where we were going for dinner, I laughed at all the stupid things that had happened, and tried to make light of having made him take me to the worst movie in the history of ever.  Kennedy dropped me off at Rob and Dame's- he worked at a boarding school and had to attend a certain number of basketball games each season, and this was a night he had to go to a game, so he went while I hung out with Damia and Caitlin, who was dating another friend of ours.

While he was gone, I seem to have acted out the entire movie for Caitlin and Damia, including commentary on what was exceedingly stupid and why.  And we all drank wine and laughed and laughed.  Funnily enough, that is one of my favorite memories of those girls.  Right up there with the kidney stone experience as one of the most hilarious times ever.  My favorite idea was to secretly download the One Missed Call ringtone (all of the bad calls happened with the same ringtone that none of the victims actually had on their phones) to Kennedy's phone so that when his phone rang we would both stare at it like "holy shit how did that happen!!?" but I was never alone with his phone, which was the first generation iPhone, and which totally would have been capable of downloading that ringtone.  So that awesome idea never came to fruition.

Kennedy returned, much more sober than I was, and having had the past few hours to reflect on the fact that I would make him take me to such a piece of shit movie.  He had not gotten to see me act it out, and was not that psyched about any of it.

The next day, Kennedy took me to the train station and basically never spoke to me again.  I could be wrong, but I'm pretty sure he even had Damia tell me he didn't want to see me anymore.  So that sucked.

Anyway, on Friday I watched the Japanese version of One Missed Call, I assume because I added it to my queue immediately after that weekend.  It was dubbed, which annoys me.  I think it was almost exactly like the American version, but the fact that it was foreign gained it one more star.  So a total of two stars, or "Didn't Like It."  HOWEVER, I did download the ringtone from the American version and now have it on my own phone, which makes me surprisingly happy.

For more on Hampshire County, MA, I HIGHLY RECOMMEND THIS WEBSITE

For proof that Rob and Damia are good singers, THIS IS THE SITE FOR YOU

You'll probably want to skip the movie though.  Not good.

Availability: DVD only
Released: 2004
Added to my queue: 2/11/2008
Reason added to my queue: to see if the Japanese version was as bad as the American version.

Sunday, March 17, 2013

High Tension

In this French psychological thriller/horror movie, Marie (Cecile de France) goes to school friend Alex's (Maïwenn Le Besco) parents' house to study for their exams.  Except as soon as they get there, a dude in a jumpsuit starts killing everyone.

And then it has a surprise ending that made NO SENSE AT ALL to me.  


Oh, AND it's dubbed.


Skip it.


Availability: DVD only

Released: 2003
Added to my queue: 4/16/2008
Reason added to my queue: Who the hell knows

Friday, March 15, 2013

Safety Not Guaranteed

I had not heard of this movie before watching it, and was so pleasantly surprised!  It was so good!

The premise is that a writer for a Seattle magazine (Jake Johnson) finds a personal ad looking for someone to go back in time with the person posting the ad.  The ad says this person must supply his/her own weapons, and safety is not guaranteed, because the poster has only done this once before.  The magazine guy grabs two interns (Aubrey Plaza and an Karan Soni) and drives out to the town where the ad's P.O. box is located.  They find the guy who posted it (Mark Duplass) working at a Wal-Mart, and the movie progresses from there.

Side story: the writer really only wanted to take the assignment so he could spend some time wooing a girl from his boyhood summers in the same town as the P.O. box, so he is kind of distracted from the story.  Because of this (and because his first attempt to communicate with Duplass's character was a stunning flop) he lets Plaza's character do most of the work, with intriguing results.

Highly recommend this one.

Availability: DVD and Streaming
Released: 2012
Reason I watched it: Netflix recommended it

Thursday, March 14, 2013

The High and the Mighty

This movie is billed as "the granddaddy of airplane catastrophe movies" and I think moniker totally fits.  John Wayne stars as a co-pilot on a commercial jet flight from Honolulu to San Francisco (which apparently took 12+ hours in 1954).  Catastrophe ensues, and the bulk of the movie is watching how the flight personnel and passengers handle the stress of knowing they may or may not make it.

Sound familiar?  It did to me, too.  It's like an un-comic version of Airplane!.

  • Why is John Wayne only the co-pilot?  Because, in the war, he had a crash landing and keeps having flashbacks about it.  Over Macho Grande?  I don't think he'll ever get over Macho Grande.
  • When the actual pilot has a momentary freak-out about their chances for a safe landing, watch for the double face-slap so popular in Airplane!.
  • One character comes on the plane with a gun, reminiscent of Sonny Bono's bomb briefcase in Airplane 2.
  • One Marilyn Monroe-esque woman reveals that she is headed to SF to meet the boyfriend she met in a personal ad; she sent him pictures of herself that were 8 years younger than her current self, so she is all freaked out that he'll think she's old...and in her freaking out she cold-creams off her makeup (and most of her drawn-on eyebrows, which was, for me, the scariest part of the movie).
  • One couple scrimped and saved for their trip to Hawaii, during which every possible thing went wrong, and now they're on their way back, facing certain death.

I watched this movie with my friend, Nicole, who dozed through it off and on.  I think we both ended up enjoying it and are glad we saw it.  It won an Oscar for its score!  Which is a bit dramatic, but nice nonetheless.

Availability: DVD
Released: 1954
Added to my queue: 6/8/2007
Reason added to my queue: No idea

Thursday, March 7, 2013

It's All Gone Pete Tong

This movie is SO GOOD, I really recommend it.

Paul Kaye plays a British club DJ (based on a true story?) who is at the peak of a ridiculous career when he goes deaf fairly suddenly.  I cannot explain how good it is without ruining it for you, but please believe me, it's REALLY GOOD.

*Spoiler Alert past this point*
Frankie Wilde is a crazy, drug-fueled, wildly popular DJ who is sickeningly successful and coke-nosed.  His  wife (Kate Magowan) is beautiful but whorish.  His agent? manager? guy (Mike Wilmot) is loud, "American"-accented (I can't see this guy being a real American though) (I just Googled him, and Wikipedia has him Canadian), and has a bluetooth stuck to his ear, so there's that.  The movie largely takes place in Ibiza, Spain, at Wilde's villa.  He DJs at clubs, produces albums, and is all-around dependent on music, until he starts rapidly going deaf.  He completely loses hearing in the right ear, with 20% hearing in his left ear.  That is, until an accident in the studio renders him totally deaf.  His whorish wife leaves him, and he holes up at the villa, hiding from the world.  Ultimately, he decides to pull it together, kicks the coke, and finds a lip-reading teacher (Beatriz Batarda) who shows him a whole new perspective on life...and then he figures out how to appreciate music as a deaf person, makes a kind of shocking comeback, realizes his life was all bullshit when he was famous, and then disappears to start a new family with Penelope.

I really REALLY liked this movie.

Availbility: DVD only
Released: 2004
Added to my Netflix queue: 12/6/2007
Reason added to my queue: unknown

Knowing Me, Knowing You: Complete Series

This is a parody of British "chat" shows, starring Steve Coogan as Alan Partridge.  Its theme is the Abba song of the same name, and Partridge's catchphrase is, "Knowing me, Alan Partridge, knowing you, ______, Aha!" which kind of grows on you.

You will like this if you like cringe-induced laughs, British things, Minnie Driver (who guests on one of the episodes).

I liked it fairly well; there are only 6 episodes, each around 30 minutes long.  

Not sure why the sleeve said 4 hours, but it wasn't that long.

Availability: DVD only
Released: 1994?
Reason I added it to my queue: No idea

Saturday, March 2, 2013

Tales from the Crypt, Season 1

HBO's classic creepfest series got off to kind of a cheesy start, in Season 1's 6 episodes.


  • The Man Who Was Death: Bill Sadler (over)plays Niles Talbot, a former electrician who now throws the switch for all the executions in the state.  But when the state abolishes the death penalty, he loses his job.  And then starts killing people who have been acquitted but are still guilty.  Guess what happens when he gets caught?  Skip this one.  It's stupid.
  • And All through the House: Mary Ellen Trainor (over)plays a wife who kills her husband with a fireplace poker on Christmas Eve.  A madman who has stolen a Santa suit and killed 3 women arrives at her house, and she realizes she can blame her husband's death on him, so she kills Santa as well.  Or does she?  It's less stupid than the first one.  But the Cryptkeeper is not very creepy.
  • Dig that Cat...He's Real Gone: Joe Pantoliano (Joey Pants!!!) (over)plays a man who has been given the 9 lives of a cat.  He spends his life dying in carnival acts so he can get rich.  But he isn't very good at counting.  Of the first three, I think I like the 2nd one best, then this one, and then the first one.
  • Only Sin Deep: Lea Thompson (over)plays a lovely 21-year-old prostitute who pawns her beauty and has 4 months to come back and get it out of hock.  Guess what happens.
  • Lover Come Hack to Me: Amanda Plummer (over)plays a young woman on her wedding night to a man who married her for her money.  Insight into her family history is gained.
  • Collection Completed: M. Emmet Walsh (over)plays a man beginning retirement, who has to get used to his wife's collection of pets he never noticed before, while also trying to find a new hobby to pass the time.
I mean I'm glad I watched it, but if you haven't seen it, start with at least Season 2.

Availability: DVD
Released: 1989
Reason I added it to my queue: I like this kind of thing

Friday, March 1, 2013

Gilmore Girls, Season 3

In which:

  • (SPOILER ALERT!)
  • The relationship between Rory and Lorelai continues to be sweet and funny and adorable, even though
  • Lorelai continues to remind me, at times, of the Progressive Insurance woman
  • Rory and Dean are broken up and she dates Jess, who is sullen and surly and sporadically absent, and, once, almost rape-y
  • Lorelai dates a guy named Alex who stops actually being in episodes after a few
  • Richard gives Lorelai a check for $75K he claims he owes her from a real estate investment he made for her when she was born
  • The Independence Inn catches fire and ultimately closes
  • Rory gets in to Harvard, Yale, and Princeton and decides to go to Yale
  • Paris gets a boyfriend (Brandon Barash - General Hospital's Johnny Zacchara), has sex, and doesn't get into Harvard
  • Rory is student government vice president (to Paris's president) and gets bullied by the senior class president
  • Dean gets engaged to his new girlfriend, Lindsay
  • Lane spends the entire season pretending to date a Korean boy but ultimately convinces her mother to let her date Dave (Adam Brody from the O.C.)
  • Lorelai uses most of the money her father gave her to pay off her parents for Rory's Chilton tuition, which pisses them off because she refuses to continue the Friday night dinners
  • Rory asks her grandparents to put her through Yale, saying she will pay them back starting 5 years after graduation and will reinstitute Friday night dinners (for herself but not her mother)
  • Luke gets a girlfriend and dreams Lorelai asks him not to get engaged
  • Jess moves to California, to live with his father (Rob Estes) and his father's girlfriend (Sherilynn Fenn, with horrible bleached hair).  These two attempt the standard GG dialogue pace and just seem forced.  But at this point I'll put up with anything if it means that horrible Jess is out of all of our lives.
  • Sookie (Melissa McCarthy) is pregnant
  • Rory and Sookie buy the Dragonfly Inn (because its owner dies)
Availability: DVD only
Released: 2002
Reason I added it to my queue: I'd seen seasons 1 and 2

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Dead Ringers

This movie is a psychological thriller starring Jeremy Irons as twin gynecologists.

So.

As Jeremy Irons is never one to do things half-assed, and there's DOUBLE the Jeremy Irons in this movie, it's full-assed crazy times two.

My main problem with this movie is that I could not tell the two apart, pretty much from the start, so they might as well have been the same character.

It was nuts.  I had asked my stepmother to watch with me, and the two of us were kind of appalled at a lot of it.  Other parts were okay, but the whole thing was kind of ridiculous.

If you like the Jeremy Irons brand of crazy, you might like this?  I don't know.  It's nowhere near as good as, say, Lolita, or the one where he puts his wife into a coma and is acquitted.

Watch...if you want to.

Availability: DVD
Released: 1988
Added to my queue: 2/12/2008
Reason added to queue: who knows

Thursday, February 21, 2013

Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince (#6)

My first impression of this film was pulling the DVD out of its sleeve, seeing the actors printed on it, and realizing "Man, these kids have really grown up!"

And it was wonderful.

*Spoiler Alert*

In case you don't remember the book, this is the one where:

  • Hermione is jealous that Ron has a girlfriend for most of the movie
  • Harry is jealous that Ginny has a boyfriend for most of the movie
  • Both get their intended mates by the end of the movie
  • Harry finds a potions book that used to belong to "the half-blood prince" and uses its cheat-sheets all the way through the movie until nearly the end
  • The book ends up being Snape's
  • Snape makes an unbreakable promise to protect Malfoy / finish any Dark Lord business Malfoy may need him to do 
  • Because of this, Snape kills Dumbledore
  • Helena Bonham Carter is terrifying, as usual
See it!  See them all!  Read all the books!  Love love love!  I was late to the game because the whole premise of the whole series sounded idiotic to me.  But I loved all of it as soon as I succumbed.

Availability: DVD only (Boo!!!!)
Released: 2009
Reason I watched it: It's Harry Potter, dude.  It's good stuff.

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Panic in the Streets

This is a film noir about an outbreak of pneumonic plague in New Orleans.  Directed by Elia Kazan, it stars Richard Widmark as the doctor and Paul Douglas as the police captain; these two spend the movie trying to find everyone who was exposed to the disease in time to inoculate them.  Barbara Bel Geddes (Dallas), plays the doctor's wife, and a young Jack Palance (as Walter Jack Palance) plays "bad" guy trying to elude police because he (bullied?  killed?  I can't even remember, it was so boring) Patient Zero.

My thoughts:

  • This movie is ridiculously low-action for a movie called Panic in the Streets (which has a poster depicting people running for their lives in horror).  Let's call a spade a spade: there can't be a panic if the Department of Public Health refuses to let anyone know (or the press reveal) that there is an epidemic.  Secondly, worst thing about Jack Palance's "Blackie" is how very bizarre Palance looked as a young man.  He definitely peaked in his later years, in my opinion.  
  • And while I'm on the subject of Blackie: watching his stooge and him evade the police was like watching my dog avoid letting me near him to give him a treat: a lot of drama for absolutely NOTHING because all they wanted to do was give him a shot to keep him from dying.  Nobody, but NOBODY, cared about his relationship to Patient Zero.
  • The impact of this movie is certainly lessened by my having seen movies like Outbreak and Contagion.  Maybe it was terrifying in its day, but it really doesn't pack a punch in the 21st century.
I don't really recommend it.  

Availability: DVD
Released: 1950
Added to my queue: 9/5/2007
Reason added to my queue: Who knows

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Tiny Furniture

This is the premiere commercial work of Lena Dunham, the wunderkind behind HBO's hit series Girls.  Months before seeing this movie, I read articles lauding it as the voice of its generation (people who are graduating from college now-ish).

The premise: Aura (Dunham) graduates from an unnamed Ohio college and moves home to Manhattan, to live with her artist mother (Lauri Simmons) and sister.  Her "best friend" from childhood, Charlotte (Girls's Jemima Kirke) is also hanging around the neighborhood (Tribeca), living at home.  The movie basically shows Aura's awkward life, as she tries to fit back in with her family, tries to make new friends and stabs at romance, and essentially hopes her art (YouTube videos) will pan out as a career.  She also has plans to get an apartment with a friend from college, Frankie (Merritt Weaver, whom I recognized from Law & Order: Criminal Intent).

I can sympathize with moving back into my parents' house after they expected me to be gone forever; and living in Manhattan with no money; and the weird romance part.  I guess that's enough.  This is a weird generation, growing up feeling entitled and then coming out of college with no prospects.  I don't really know any of them or like thinking about any of it.

I mean the movie was pretty good though?  I don't know.  I was going to have to see it eventually.

Availability: DVD and Streaming
Released: 2010
Reason I watched it: Netflix said so

Monday, February 18, 2013

Butter

This is a quirky, darkly funny movie about an Iowa City woman (Jennifer Garner) whose husband (Modern Family's Ty Burrell) is forced into retirement from entering area butter-sculpting competitions (which he has won for 15 years).  The woman decides to take his place in the competitions, so there's that aspect of the plot.  Another entrant is a 10-year-old foster child, who is sweet and talented.  I won't ruin the story for you, but it was a decent movie.

The cast was kind of outrageous - so many famous people, yet I had never heard of this movie before I watched it. Thus goes the indie comedy.

Availability: DVD and Streaming
Released: 2011
Reason I watched it: Netflix said so

Sunday, February 17, 2013

Louie

This is the second show to star comedian Louis C.K.; Netflix streams Seasons 1 and 2 (a total of 27 episodes).

The premise is that Louie is a stand-up comedian who is a divorced father of 2 girls, which is also true in real life.  There are essentially 3 components to the show:

  • The stand-up segments: These are generally a little too masturbation-focused for me.  However, I like them because this is the part of the show where you can see him genuinely smile - it's clear that he really likes his job.  And he's very - - I don't know how to say it - - unprepossessing?  Un-self-possessed?  Something about possess.  Or not about possess.  He's just interesting to watch.  Sometimes this veers into cringe-worthy moments, which is hard but generally worth watching.
  • The regular-guy life segments: These often involve Louie trying to date, or somehow stumbling into a potential sexual experience, and are very very often cringe-inducing, but still generally worth watching.  He befriends the mother of one of his daughter's schoolmates (Pamela Adlon, from Californication) and develops an awkward crush on her, which she totally does not reciprocate (and yet I still found myself convinced they would get together).  She's funny.  Except her character's son is named Serge, which every character on the show pronounces "Serj" but she pronounces "Sir".  It's weird.  The most interesting thing about the real-life segments is what a good person he is, which always kind of surprises me for some reason. 
  • The segments with his daughters: These are the best part of this show, as far as I'm concerned.  Lillie is 8-9 and Jane is 4-5 during these seasons, and they're really cute - but Ursula Parker's Jane is, hands down, my favorite character on the show.  First of all, she's totally adorable.  She can't say her "R"s, which adds to the hilarity of everything she says.  Her best work is seen on the family trip to see great-aunt Ellen; the Halloween episode; and Duckling, Part 1.
I really didn't think I'd like this show much, but it definitely grew on me.  

Availability: DVD and Streaming
Released: 2010-
Reason I watched it: Netflix said so


Thursday, February 14, 2013

Queen of Versailles

This is a documentary about David (74) and Jackie Siegel (43) - he is the owner of Westgate Resorts, which is apparently the largest privately-owned timeshare company in...the US?  The world?  I don't know.

The movie begins with the couple talking about their new house that is being built, the largest single-family, single-building home in the US, which is modeled on the palace of Versailles in France.  It's stupid big.  $75 million.

Both David and Jackie come from humble means, and this was intended to be a rags-to-riches kind of a thing.  But during the filming, the 2008 real-estate tumble occurs, and banks stop backing sub-prime investments, which is pretty much exactly the definition of time-shares.

It's a great documentary (a darling of Sundance, etc.) and very interesting (and not a little sad to watch all those time-share employees lose their jobs).  Among other things, David has a bizarre and distant relationship with his grown children from his first wife, and is "closest" to the son (Richard) who is a VP at Westgate, who shows the business side of matters to the documentarians.  They are closest because they work together, but it's not at all a father-son relationship. Also interesting is wife Jackie, toward the end, saying she doubts they will lose the house, and simultaneously realizing that the documentary crew spends more time with her husband than she does and may be privy to information that she doesn't have.

All this is BEFORE David Siegel sued the filmmaker, Lauren Greenfield, claiming he didn't let her make the film and she did it against his wishes.  That's a completely asinine accusation - he gave interviews to the filmmakers!  he totally knew what they were doing and was fine with it! - and he lost the first court battle.

http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/thr-esq/queen-versailles-lawsuit-filmmaker-wins-415325

Anyway, check it out if you like documentaries or watching rich people having to cut down on their domestic staff.  The couple's 8 children (who are being raised as responsible citizens who can't bother to keep pets alive) are just another source of intrigue.

Availability: DVD and Streaming
Released: 2012
Reason I watched it: Netflix and New York Magazine said so

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Oldboy

This is a Korean crime thriller about a business man who finds himself imprisoned (and drugged, and sometimes tortured) for 15 years, and he doesn't know why.  So once he gets out, he spends the rest of the movie trying to figure out why he was imprisoned / get revenge on his captors.  He befriends a waitress, and the two work to face his vengeance together.  But it gets complicated.

My thoughts about this movie: it definitely doesn't turn out the way you think it's going to, so that is captivating.

That said, they DUBBED it instead of using subtitles - and the douchebags they use as the characters' voices, my God.  Just use subtitles.  I spent many scenes - more than several - thinking to myself, "Is this even the right translation?  Is this just a Mystery Science Theater 3000 version, where some jackass watched it on 'mute' and guessed at what the characters might be saying?"

But, I mean.  It was decent.  It held my attention.  If you like Korean movies, crime thrillers, or torture porn, this might be for you.

Availability: DVD and Streaming.
Released: 2003
Added to list: 2/11/2008
Reason added to list: unknown