Spielberg

2005 Munich
2005 War of the Worlds
2004 The Terminal
2002 Catch Me If You Can
2002 Minority Report
2001 A.I.: Artificial Intelligence
1998 Saving Private Ryan
1997 The Lost World: Jurassic Park II
1997 Amistad
1993 Jurassic Park
1993 Schindler's List
1991 Hook
1989 Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade
1989 Always
1987 Empire of the Sun
1985 The Color Purple
1984 Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom
1983 Twilight Zone: The Movie
1982 E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial
1981 Raiders of the Lost Ark
1979 1941
1977 Close Encounters of the Third Kind
1975 Jaws
1974 The Sugarland Express
1971 Duel [TV]

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O'Hehir on von Trier

I was going to post this part of Andrew O'Hehir's "Beyond the Multiplex" column at Salon that annoyed me to no end. I've read a few of his columns there because Grist has a premium account. Then I decided, if I thought it was awful, there's no reason to make you read it.

All I really have to say is that I'm baffled when critics leave no room for ambiguity in films they discuss. Von Trier is interesting for precisely everything O'Hehir seems to fault him for. Each of his films that I've seen has depicted the dark side of human nature, used contrapuntal music to heighten the effect of his story and visuals, asked difficult moral questions that he chooses not to answer, and generally draws the viewer into a confusing mess from which there is no easy escape. That is, if you engage with von Trier's films, you've got to struggle come to terms with both the presentation, in terms of form, as well as the reprehensible actions of his characters if you find them at all plausible.

I find I've got a lot more to say related to von Trier and O'Hehir's "review," but nothing pithy or readable.

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Remainders

Let's see here...

Last Friday I shopped at Easy Street in Queen Anne* and later ran into Chloe at the Film Forum. She was at a private birthday party and I was seeing When a Woman Ascends the Stairs. We went to Ballard on Wednesday: Mad Max was playing at the Sunset Tavern and we ate cupcakes at Verite Coffee. Other than the rain and the wind and the cold it was all very nice.

Last Saturday I went to Ballard with Charles. We saw the new library, the Sonic Boom store, Bop Street Records (600,000+ records and counting!), Golden Gardens Park and other waterfront vistas. We ate at some place very near Golden Gardens.

Today we went to West Seattle: Easy Street* (w/ cafe!), bicycle repair/coffee shop, Alki Point (lighthouse closed Sep-Mar), this little hamburger shop on Beach Drive, Camp Long near the West Seattle Golf Course.

Sunday Amanda and I went to Pacific Place to see Match Point.

Monday I got to see where the other people in the house work.

Thursday I saw the Mavericks beat the Sonics. Notable: Sonics strong first quarter vs. the Mavericks' strong second quarter, including an 18-point run for Dallas; Jerry Stackhouse scoring 7 in a row to start the second quarter. Nowitzki going 8 for 8 from the line early in the third quarter; Rashard Lewis's and Ronald Murray's dunks; the bad dunking by the mascot & ushers.

Last night I went to Pacific Place to see The New World. I snuck into Transamerica afterward.

* = list:
  • DJ Koze Kosi Comes Around
  • Jason Forrest Shamelessly Exciting
  • Matthew Dear Leave Luck to Heaven
  • - - -
  • Animal Collective Feels
  • Caro The Return of Caro
  • Four Tet Everything Ecstatic
  • Luomo The Present Lover
  • Ricardo Villalobos The Au Harem d'Archimede

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MP3: Seattle Mix #1

Part 1
31:33

Fat Boys "All You Can Eat"
Hollertronix "Snoop vs. The Cure"
Kylie Minogue "Can't Get You Out of My Head"
Hollertronix "Tippin Toxic"
ESG "You Make No Sense"
Cousin Cole "Foreign Policy"
Dizzee Rascal "Everywhere"
Blondie "Heart of Glass"
Test Icicles "Circle Square Triangle"
Wire "12XU"

Part 2
39:03

Liquid Liquid "Optimo"
Avenue D "2D2F"
Jason Forrest "Satan Cries Again"
Four Tet "As Serious As Your Life"
Annie "Chewing Gum"
Bloc Party "Like Eating Glass"
The Futureheads "Hounds of Love"
Dntel "(This Is) The Dream of Evan and Chan"
Bloc Party "Banquet (Phones Disco Remix)"
The Strokes vs. Chemical Brothers "The Modern Chemical Age (ft. The Edge)"

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Film Roundup #2

The Ladykillers [No stars]
The Coen Bros., 2004

I didn't realize the Coen brothers were capable of something this awful. Maybe I just saw it like critics seem to see other of their films, as transparently empty and overly clever exercises in expired genres. What was really reprehensible to me here was not the lack of successful comedy (the only time I actually laughed out loud was at the case full of back issues of Mother Jones magazine, and then only at the object itself and not the situation), but the contempt for humanity. Everyone in the film is either cretinous, dim-witted, or small-minded. And this from a fan of Kubrick and von Trier, and someone who tends to take a rather dim view of humanity more often than not. This felt like an insult to the viewer and to anyone resembling the characters depicted. I do, however, want to see the original UK film from the 50's with Michael Caine.

One [No stars]
Ward Powers, 2005

Interesting comments from Richard Thurman and Thich Nhat Hanh, but really atrocious filmmaking, annoyingly "post-modern" commentary about how amateurish the filmmakers. Really self-congratulatory and way too self-referential. Never start a movie by discussing the project itself. Jerk-offs.

I was supposed to see this Chinese film as part of the Global Lens film festival, to which I'd gotten a free pass, but they sent me to the wrong part of the theater. I could tell something was up by the inane conversation around me and the surprising number of families present. Unfortunately, once I confirmed that I was in the wrong place, I was stuck in the middle of the crowded theater. Fortunately, I had nothing else to do.

Donnie Darko: The Director's Cut **
Richard Kelly, 2001

This is the third time I've seen this (I think), but the first time for the director's cut. I don't mind the information overlay or the extra scenes, but it reminded me of reactions to Mulholland Drive. (Actually several parts of this reminded me of Lynch, though not entirely.) People wanted to know what "the box" meant and all that crap, specifically they wanted to know what Lynch meant, as if their own interpretations were invalid, perhaps even that if there was no specifically intended meaning then there was no point to the film. This mindset annoys me for so many reasons, but I won't detail them. Donnie Darko is similar in that it's a strong enough film to be enjoyable without interpretation, though you're certainly free to read into it as much as you want. Ultimately, of course, there are a number of valid readings and even if Richard Kelly knows exactly how everything fits together, that knowledge is not relevant other than as an interesting sidenote. It's like when people want to know what happened to the characters after the end of a film, and they want the director to tell them, as if the story implies an all-encompassing world, when really it's just sketches that happened to pop into the writer/director's head. To me it demeans both the film as art and the experience of watching the film, asking more than should be required or perhaps is even useful or good.

The Five Obstructions **
Lars von Trier, 2004

Summary: Lars von Trier challenges one of his idols, Danish filmmaker Jorgen Leth, to remake his 1967 short film, The Perfect Human, five times with five different obstructions of von Trier's choosing. The film here includes all five shorts as well as footage of their production and conversations between the filmmakers.

For one, it's interesting to see von Trier in his element, being devious in a film-related fashion. Specifically, it's interesting to see him being devious toward Jorgen Leth, one of his acknowledged heroes and role models, especially as a Danish filmmaker. The key to von Trier here is, as apparent to anyone who's seen the film, the last of the "obstructions," the stipulation of which is that von Trier directs the film, writes the voiceover, but Leth must take the credit. Even better, Leth, as narrator, reads von Trier's observations about him out loud over the last version of The Perfect Human.

It's hard for me to tell how much of my interest in this project is dictated by my interest in the "art of cinema" rather than the more basic enjoyment I take in watching movies. I find the concept of the movie brilliant in that, while perhaps intially seeming snobbish or crazy and experimental, it's really just playful (and productive) fun for two talented filmmakers. Why not, I asked myself, try things like this more often? Why not refuse the path of least resistance that is narrative film and do whatever comes to mind? Steven Soderbergh (Bubble) and R. Kelly (Trapped in the Closet) are two other great examples of well-known artists choosing to seemingly just put out whatever they want because they've got the power. Admittedly endeavors like this often fail either artistically, commercially, or both, but if we're not able to allow artists the possibility of failure, how are we ever to experience anything more than what we've already got?

When a Woman Ascends the Stairs **
Mikio Naruse, 1960

So this is where Neal Hefti got the music for The Odd Couple. It unsettled me for the first few minutes of the movie, mostly since I hadn't been expecting such sound from the Northwest Film Forum's comparisons to Ozu and Mizoguchi. The newly restored print, apparently having played so far only in New York and Boston, looked stunning--nearly three-dimensional at times. DVDs have from time to time sparked this same curiosity in me, but I have to wonder how good this looked back when it was released in Japan. I know I've read Roger Ebert doubting somewhere that certain DVD versions, given newly discovered restoration techniques, may look so unnaturally good that they aren't the same as the original experience in the theater. But that's a point for the 50-and-over crowd to dispute.

While it's tough to judge well without having much knowledge of the geisha culture in Japan, the critics seem correct that this is a great, sharply observed women's film, focused on a strong and put-upon bargirl named Mama. The name throws me a little, too, since it's Japanese and probably not culturally significant. There are a lot of archetypes here, it seems like, but it'd be tough to depict an entire social milieu without them. I found very difficult to read the banker, but still loved his scenes toward the end. It's all predictably tragic but not maudlin.

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Woody

2005 Match Point
2004 Melinda and Melinda
2003 Anything Else
2002 Hollywood Ending
2001 The Curse of the Jade Scorpion
2000 Small Time Crooks
1999 Sweet and Lowdown
1998 Celebrity
1997 Deconstructing Harry
1996 Everyone Says I Love You
1995 Mighty Aphrodite
1994 Bullets Over Broadway
1993 Manhattan Murder Mystery
1992 Husbands and Wives
1991 Shadows and Fog
1990 Alice
1989 New York Stories
1989 Crimes and Misdemeanors
1988 Another Woman
1987 September
1987 Radio Days
1986 Hannah and Her Sisters
1985 The Purple Rose of Cairo
1984 Broadway Danny Rose
1983 Zelig
1982 A Midsummer Night's Sex Comedy
1980 Stardust Memories
1979 Manhattan
1978 Interiors
1977 Annie Hall
1975 Love and Death
1973 Sleeper
1972 Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex, But Were Afraid to Ask
1971 Bananas
1969 Take the Money and Run
1966 What's Up, Tiger Lily?

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MP3: Top 12 Tracks of 2005

Part 1
23:19

Art Brut "My Little Brother"
LCD Soundsystem "Daft Punk Is Playing at My House"
Rex the Dog "I Look into Mid Air"
Four Tet "Smile Around the Face"
Madvillain "Money Folder (Four Tet Remix)"
Gnarls Barkley "Crazy"

Part 2
27:09

The Game "Hate It or Love It (ft. 50 Cent)"
Five Deez "Fugg That"
Caribou "Medium Sized Working Dog (Steady Steady)"
Wolf Parade "I'll Believe in Anything"
Antony & The Johnsons "Hope There's Someone"
Clap Your Hands Say Yeah "Upon This Tidal Wave of Young Blood"

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Delicious and Then Some

Well, it turns out that January 17 was some sort of international release date or something for New York Noise 2, so stores in London or maybe New York probably have it but Sonic Boom does not, in much the same way they do not have the DJ Koze record. That's okay, because instead I got Hrvatski's Swarm & Dither and Radian's Juxtaposition, both used, on top of Anniemal which Charles donated last night.

And now for the backlogged links...

Notes

Not my usual source of MP3s and mixes, but Kottke linked to this Diplo Vs Shadow set of Josh Davis beats and originals mashed up and overlaid with everything else under the sun by master disc jockey Wesley Pentz.

Yesterday I calculated the average of the performers listed in Rolling Stone's "Top 10 Grossing Concert Tours of 2005" to be 53. The average ticket price was near $100. While it's true that expensive tours are more likely to be on this list since it's based on gross and not number of tickets sold, this is still a sad indicator of what our pop music culture values. A quote from a piece on the little known band D-Generation that Simon Reynolds reposted on his blog:
D-Generation, says [group member] Biddell, are dismayed by the way "young people are content to embrace a rock canon handed down to them, and seem unable to embrace the present, let alone posit a future."
I finished those mixes, removing Depeche Mode from the latter and switching around the two Four Tet productions in the former. The latter is the more enjoyable to actually listen to, since it's more about being a mix and less about remembering a year. I'll post MP3s when I get the chance.

Also, I was just thinking last week about how New York Noise is probably one of the best things I've ever bought. Then Pitchfork tells me that the second volume is coming out tomorrow, so I'll probably start spending some of that Christmas funding I've earmarked for CDs on that and probably DJ Koze's Kozi Comes Around, if I can find it.

Oh, and apparently yesterday was the one year anniversary of this particular blog, so hey.

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AMG Search...

I just realized that you can totally avoid the annoyingly designed search tools on All Music & All Movie Guide by using site-specific search on Google, which often results in faster searching and a single click to arrive at your page which will always have the permanent address and not the stupid search tag.

Oh yeah, and I realized that I've got two mixes sitting around I haven't actually, you know, MIXED, and I also wanted to figure out what were actually my top 2005 songs and not just those stupid really long couple of lists I posted a while back. I narrowed it down, by both cunning and brute force, to an irreducible list of 12 tracks. I removed these songs from the previous two mixes and combined them in one 80-minute monster.

Travel Meme

From Kottke.org.

Kalona, IA
Northfield, MN*
Wayland, IA*
Orrville, OH
Goshen, IN
Dalton, OH
Chicago, IL
Tiffin, IA
Nashville, TN
Spartanburg, SC
Myrtle Beach, SC
Lexington, KY
Seattle, WA*
Leavenworth, WA
Gig Harbor, WA
Canton, OH
Brook Park, OH

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The Autism Spectrum Quotient

From Newsweek Interactive

Your AQ Score: 32

How to Interpret Your AQ Score:
0-10 Low
11-22 Average*
23-31 Above Average
32-50 Very High**
50 Maximum

* Most men score about 17
** Most people with Asperger Syndrome or high functioning autism score about 35

Film Roundup #1

Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me *
David Lynch, 1992

Totally bizarre. I thoroughly enjoyed the opening featuring Lynch, Chris Isaak, and Kiefer Sutherland as forerunners to Kyle Maclachlan's Agent Dale Cooper. Beyond that, High school student Laura Palmer (Sheryl Lee) looks older than the twentysomethings starring in The O.C. It's certainly terrifiying in places, as well as terrifically sexy. Weirdly enough, Phoebe Augustine looks exactly like Jennifer Love Hewitt. I spent a significant portion of the movie trying to calculate how old JLH would have been at the time of the film, then decided I'd have to search through the credits anyway. Laura's friend, Donna (Moira Kelly), is both incredibly appealing and heartbreaking in her seeming willingness to throw away her life to follow Laura to her inevitable, sleazy, morbid fate.

Fire Walk with Me turns up the intrigue and tragically submerges the charm that, to me, made Twin Peaks so successful. Of course you have to see it if you're a Lynch fan, but otherwise it's mostly a freaky and unsatisfying diversion.

The Long Goodbye ***
Robert Altman, 1973

Elliott Gould, via Altman, has been like a revelation for me. David Thomson suggests that a large part of Gould's appeal is his gentleness. He exudes that same unassuming, almost lackadaisacal aura in M*A*S*H, California Split, and The Long Goodbye. Among those this is his only solo starring role, perhaps the key to why it's also my favorite. You can't talk about this movie without mentioning the opening scene, in which Gould and Altman take ten minutes of screen time to make an elaborate but ultimately futile attempt at feeding Philip Marlowe's finicky cat.

Yes, the detective from The Big Sleep, among other Chandler adaptations. In the commentary Altman mentions that a big theme here, besides friendship, is that of Marlowe's outdated moral code insinuating itself into the drugged out, hippie-infested 1970's. It's hard to tell from here, thirty years on, but that moral code may also be a part of Gould's counter-cultural appeal. The ending, in which Marlowe shoots, well, somebody important, is both a complete surprise and completely reasonable given that he's a private eye. There's a lot more going on here than when Humphrey Bogart chain smokes and orders his women around. Note Gould's obsession with his character striking a match for his cigarette on any and all available surfaces, although it's really so obvious I don't need to mention it other than cigarette-lighting is a running theme throughout several noir films, see esp. Double Indemnity.

Other extraneous pleasures: Sterling Hayden (The Asphalt Jungle, The Killing) plays the enormous, bellowing drunken writer dominated by the tiny, creepy Dr. Veeringer (Henry Gibson). The Governator makes his screen debut as a muscle-bound hood and David Carradine makes a very brief cameo as Marlowe's cell-mate when he's jailed for abetting his friend, a suspected murderer. The stylistic repetitions of the musical theme is interesting, though perhaps ultimately not all that meaningful. It's impossible to forget the permanently wasted-and-topless yoga-obsessed hippie chicks next door, though, again, it's tough to figure out exactly what's going on there other than setting up Los Angeles in the seventies.

Capote **
Bennett Miller, 2005

I guess this won best film from the National Society of Film Critics. Grim, sad, perhaps a little thin or narrowly focused? Perry Smith (Clifton Collins, Jr.) looks like a lot either like Johnny Cash or Joaquin Phoenix playing Johnny Cash. I'm sure the period hairstyle doesn't hurt. I think there's a lot that Hoffman and Miller want to suggest about Capote that doesn't come out explicitly, but for some reason I feel no compulsion to see this again or really spend much time contemplating his maniacal selfishness. Not exactly sure why, but something here just failed to click for me. PSH maintained my undying admiration and respect, of course. If Hoberman's criticism is to be believed, the fault (if any) lies with the director for not providing us with anything other than wall-to-wall Capote.

J. Hoberman review

Jesus of Montreal ***
Denys Arcand, 1989

Saw this first last summer. The 80's-scarred guitar on the soundtrack is still an embarrassment, but the humor and soul remain. The symbolism to the life of Christ, although very explicit, in neither overbearing nor too direct, allowing for a number of different interpretations for many of the events. Definitely see this if you either went to Sunday School as a youth or enjoyed The Barbarian Invasions. I'm guessing if you've seen anything else directed by Denys Arcand, including Decline of the American Empire, you're probably already onboard.

The Lady Eve ***
Preston Sturges, 1941

Saw this first when I showed it, upon request from Carol Donelan, at Film Society. Watched it tonight at Kate Stalker's house with a number of other recent Carleton graduates. Barbara Stanwyck is still delicious, Henry Fonda's still a lovably dopey bonehead, and the supporting cast is still as colorful as ever.

The introduction to Thomson's New Biographical Dictionary of Film, in a poll of his friends and associates, names this and His Girl Friday and their two most favorite films of all time. Both are utterly delightful and provide a nice gender balance, as it's really hard to say whether Stanwyck's Jean Harrington or Cary Grant's Walter Burns is the more cruelly manipulative. Of course I'd have included To Have and Have Not, Lauren Bacall's single great performance, but you can't have everything.

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They Live!

Brian asked why I liked Ethan Frome, since he'd not gotten much out of it in high school. Here's my [slightly edited] reply:
Ethan Frome is great because at first it just seems like a sad tale of a wretchedly repressed (and depressed) man, but then he falls in unexpectedly requited and illicit love with the housekeeper, but his ailing wife sends her away he loves and then it seems like they're going to perversely sublimate their love, or something, by sledding straight into a tree before she leaves, which nobody was expecting although it had been foreshadowed a little, but then THEY LIVE and essentially become crippled slaves of the cruel and newly vigorous wife, which somehow makes the book both more terrible and fulfilling.

I think in general I like the broad theme of the man who, stuck in a seemingly inescapable rut, rather than accepting his fate engages in wild and taboo activities that may fail to alter his fate, but still attaining a glimpse of happiness that, even if it doesn't last, he can treasure until he dies. [Note: Not sure the sex role matters, and I don't necessarly need to self-identify with the protagonist.] My affinity for this sort of story probably has a lot to do with growing up around so many socially conservative and perhaps overly moralistic people. Ethan Frome is kind of like American Beauty now that I consider it.

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