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:: Monday, December 29, 2003 ::

A quick thought about Renee Zellweger's performance in "Cold Mountain". I can't say anything about Renee without first mentioning that I have been a fan of her and have been following her career since "Love and a .45" . I read recently that she is somewhat over the top in "Mountain". The reviewer compared her performance to Debbie Reynolds as "The Unsinkable Molly Brown." I beg to differ. Playing a character like Ruby Thewes might make the actress essaying the role turn into Betty Hutton ("Annie Get Your Gun") but I believe Renee showed a lot of restraint. Here is an actress (as compared to a movie star, like, say Catherine Zeta Jones, who won a Best Supporting Actress Award for "Chicago" last year) who has won some Globes ("Chicago" and "Nurse Betty") but has not been singled out by the Academy yet. Here's a Best Supporting Actress Nod from me. Seldom has someone (other than Robert de Niro) thrown their weight (as in "Briget Jones Diary") into their craft as well as Renee does. I believed in Ruby as a real person, and her arrival in "Cold Mountain" even though it was expected, delighted and surprised me. Renee is a wonderful character "actress" who doesn't fall into the same traps as some well known movie stars who wished they were actresses. She compliments and enforces Nicole Kidman's performance as Ada Monroe. She almost steals every scene she's in away from Nicole, and I've been in love with her since "Dead Calm" so that's saying something!
:: Michael Nyiri 6:37 AM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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:: Sunday, December 28, 2003 ::

Hank and Frannie have been together for five years. Co-habiting in a Las Vegas "fixer-upper", their fifth year anniversary (on the Fourth of July) begins with both partners questioning their choices. An argument ensues, and each chases his fantasy romantic dream, complete with dazzling setpieces imaginatively shot completely on soundstages and music and lyrics from Tom Waits and Crystal Gayle.
In 1982, when director/mastermind Francis Ford Coppola released his avowed favorite movie, "One From the Heart", nobody much seemed interested in his lavishly produced valentine to the musical comedy form, utilizing technical knowhow and some beautiful music, not to mention stellar acting from Frederick Forrest as Hank, Teri Garr as Frannie, and Harry Dean Stanton and Lainie Kazan as their friends and Raul Julia and Nastassia Kinski as their romantic fantasy lovers. Now that the DVD is soon to be released on January 27th. the movie has been re-released in theaters and I got to see it at the Nuart in Santa Monica. Although I have a personal quibble in that the re-edited version cuts what I think is one of the best lines, Teri Garr's "I'm walking. Look at me go." and doesn't finish the first traveling shot into the travel agency from the window display, as I say, I'm merely quibbling. The movie is back, it's on the "big screen", and will soon be in my DVD collection, complete with some commentary by Baz Luhrrman, I understand, who was inspired by "One From the Heart" in making "Moulin Rouge". Here is the link to the official site.


"One From the Heart" has always been one of my personal favorite films for years, and I have regretted for years losing my CED collection, where it lived for many of those years. A laserdisc was never issued, and I understand Francis himself pulled it from theaters after suffering a broken heart when nobody saw it. Sadly, the early show I saw on Saturday, one day after it's opening at the Nuart, only had six or seven patrons. I hope that there are more like me who think of this film as true artistic endeavor, to be lavished upon and experienced more than once, like a favorite album. The DVD has lots of extras, unlike the DVD of "Phantom of the Paradise" which I was so disappointed in I didn't even buy yet, even though it, like "Heart" is a favorite musical from a director whose name doesn't usually come to mind when thinking about the form.
:: Michael Nyiri 12:32 PM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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:: Friday, December 26, 2003 ::
I began to be worried when I read the list of Golden Globes, and noticed all the hoopla concerning Anthony Minghella's Civil War romantic tragedy "Cold Mountain". After all, I championed "English Patient" as Best Picture in 1996. If "Cold Mountain", which hadn't even been released yet, could receive all those noms, then it probably was as epic and tragic as the previews had suggested it would be.
Well, even though I am championing "Return of the King" for my Best Picture nod this year, I wouldn't be surprised or disappointed if "Cold Mountain" takes away the statuette.
The reviews are strong, and although I thought the turnout somewhat weak in the afternoon (every body is still in the five or six theaters in the complex showing "Return of the King" I suppose) the film itself is a work of art, and much more a comparison film in tone and scope to "English Patient" than his earlier "Talented Mr. Ripley".
"Cold Mountain" is brutal. Brutally honest in it's portrayal of war, missed and misguided opportunites, torn emotions, and broken spirits. Brutally honest in the feelings and misguided notions of it's characters. Jude Law should be singled out as Inman, who begins the film in the midst of battle, a somewhat ethereal presence, whom, even in flashbacks seems a silent "everyman" when he meets the stunning Ada Monroe, played with spunk and a regal bearing by Nicole Kidman, whose performance echoed Vivien Leigh's Scarlett O'Hara although not being an homage or even attemtpting to be any thing other than the character. Law is essentially standing in for the audience as viewers of what such a social and historical disaster as the Civil War can wreak on the populace of the nation. We see, through his eyes, and without much commentary, the horrors of war, and how it can reduce even the most innocuous of moments, into utter confusion and carnage in another moment.
I'm blown away by the film. It is stunning to look at, sad to ponder, and wonderfully directed. I'm still partial that Jackson win the Oscar this year, but that's personal. He won't. Minghella has won, and so has Eastwood, so even though their films are both powerful, Jackson has a chance in my book.
I highly recommend "Cold Mountain", however, and give it a 10 of 10 on the Mikometer.
:: Michael Nyiri 7:45 PM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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:: Saturday, December 20, 2003 ::
When I got out of the performance for "Return of the King", I had a couple more hours to kill, so I decided to see "Mona Lisa Smile", the new Julia Roberts movie, with co-stars Kirsten Dunst, Julia Stiles, Maggie Gyllenhaal, and Marcia Gay Harden. Although somewhat pale in comparison to "The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie" from the sixties, I did thouroughly enjoy the acting, produciton design, plot, and characterizations of "Mona Lisa". I even cried during the last scene with the girls pacing Julia in the cab on their bicycles. Upon leaving the theater, a funny/strange thing happened that bothered me. A female patron, who was alone, as was I, sitting a few seats from me, approached me walking out of the theater, and exclaimed: "Did you hate that movie as much as I did?" I shrugged her off with a "No, I kinda liked it" and ducked into the men's room. In retrospect, I think she was just trying to start a converstation, and she said she had noticed me "squirming", probably because of sitting on a theater seat for past five hours, including "Rings". I really was taken aback, though! I enjoy the reverie of sitting in a dark theater seeing a film, and if I enjoy it, like "Mona Lisa Smile" I don't want to deal with someone who doesn't like it at all. I've always maintained that a person either likes a particular movie or not. If one is knowledgeable and intelligent enough to note that a film might be good even if one doesn't like it, then that person is singular. I try to notice the difference, but just didn't want to have to wipe the still wet tear from my eye and try to verbalize the graces of the film to someone who "hated it". Not my cup of tea.
On the other hand, I have always fantasized about a gal coming up to me to discuss the film we had just seen (together in the dark). She should have asked me how I liked it instead of displaying her hatred right away is all.
:: Michael Nyiri 8:41 PM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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"The Lord of the Rings" trilogy comes to a close (too soon, I might add) with the anticipated release of "Return of the King".

10 of 10 on the Mikometer.
My pick for Best Picture of 2003. Andy Serkis should be nominated for Best Supporting Actor for his "interpretation" of Smeagol/Gollum.
This is truly a "crowning acheivement" for director Peter Jackson, and the Academy should honor him for his efforts. If not Best Director, then at least give this the Best Picture nod.
(Perhaps it will get a Globe?)
I sat transfixed, even though not a true Ringophile (?) through the conclusion of this epic tale. Posh on the folks who credit the sweep and epic filmmaking ahead of the acting. When Sean Astin as Samwise Gamgee enters the room where Elijah Wood's Frodo is putting the finishing touches on the "books", my tear ducts opened wide. I care for these hobbits, elves, dwarves, humans, and wizards, just as openly as in any humane piece of work. A triumph. A wonder. I've begun watching this "true trilogy" again, by taking out the extended versions of the DVD's and starting from the beginning all over again.
I wish the Academy would listen to me this time. Yes, "Mystic River" was my first favorite, and "Seabiscuit" is a wonderful time at the movies. But Clint Eastwood has his Oscar, and nothing compares to LOTR:ROTK as true "literate" film-making. In 1939, when dozens of great films competed for Best Picture during what has consequently been considered one of the most artistically drenched years in movie history, the Academy Award went to "Gone With the Wind" , a very popular movie based on a very popular book. To this day, the film, one of my personal favorites since I saw one of the reissues as a child in the theater, has endured as one of the greats of all time, and most people agree on it's status. GWTW usually comes in at around Number 3 on almost everyone's list of "best films".
This year, when there haven't been a lot of earthshakingly great films, even though some of the year end crop weigh in pretty heavily, I feel the Oscar should go to Jackson and ROTK. The end of one of the most amazing tales in the history of filmmaking, how a director with a dream fulfills his vision of filming all three of the films at once, ensuring that the vision is not hampered over time. As it is, the "journey" to make the films took seven years. I feel exhausted just thinking about the project.
Yes, I love Clint Eastwood, and since he is aging, my first inkling was that I would champion "Mystic River". Although there are still a few front runners I haven't seen, I don't know if I will think any of them compares with ROTK as my choice. For the past three years, my "losing streak" has made me feel out of touch with the Academy, even though I took pride in my "winning streak" in previous years.
This year I won't predict I will be right.
But Andy Serkis for Supporting Actor, issuing in a new era where a "digital role" would be nominated. (I don't expect him to win, but a nomination would be nice. I'd like him to win!) And "Return of the King" for Best Picture. Best Director to Peter Jackson.
:: Michael Nyiri 6:23 PM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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:: Sunday, December 14, 2003 ::
This weekend I chose to see "The Last Samauri" and it disappointed me. The film is somewhat forgettable and I will quote a reviewer on Yahoo Movies who said she had seen it all before 10 years ago when Kevin Costner played the lead. Tom Cruises through another easy role. I had hoped to see him act. I know he can do it. I really don't expect this to be an Oscar frontrunner after seeing it. The box office isn't as phenomenal as you'd expect for a Tom Cruise movie either. I didn't think the sets were that spectacular, and there's better swordplay in, say, "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon", or "Kill Bill" for that matter. It's a pleasant afternoon at the movies, but no great shakes as far as I'm concerned. I looked at my watch too much. 6 of 10, pretty much the lowest I grade.
:: Michael Nyiri 3:15 PM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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:: Monday, December 01, 2003 ::
I tivo'd 1969's "Paint Your Wagon" recently. The movie is, along with "Hello Dolly", , released the same year, part of the reason why big budget musical comedies died at the end of the sixties. Audiences were not in the mood for big budget musicals at the end of the sixties, even though the best picture of 1968 was "Oliver". "Dolly" came at the wrong time, and put MGM out of business. "Wagon" made the mistake of casting leads who couldn't sing. "Paint Your Wagon" was the most expensive film of it's time, and nearly every critic at the time of it's release gave it the ol' "thumbs down". I believe it is an essential piece of work, however, and this isn't just because I like musicals. It seems everybody can single out Lee Marvin's rendition of "I was Born Under a Wandrin' Star" as one of those songs, like Leonard Nimoy's rendition of "Bilbo Baggins", that are soo bad they are classics, in a Dr. Demento sort of way. At the time, I don't know what the filmmakers were thinking, but in retrospect, seeing both Marvin (as prospector Ben Rumson) and a marvelous Clint Eastwood (as "Pardner") in their only co-starring effort together, was a real treat. The tivo copy, from a standard DirecTV feed on Turner Classic Movies, wasn't good enough to view on the HDTV, but showed up on the analog 60" screen very well.
The Broadway musical was very popular. Joshua Logan directed the movie. The songs were well known, in addition to "Wandrin' Star", there was "I talk to the Trees" and the excellent "They Call the Wind Maria." (To the producer's credit, Harve Presnell as Rotten Luck Willie sings the latter.) The plot concerns what happens when a gruff prospector, Marvin's Rumson, meets up with a homesteading farmer (Eastwood) whose brother dies in the film's opening covered wagon crash, as gold is found in the brother's grave. The pardners, along with other prospectors, found the town "No-Name City", which soon blossoms into a bustling boom town. Albeit with no women in sight. When a Mormon straggles into town with his two wives, the menfolk decide that one man having two wives in a this town is unfair, so the second wife (Elizabeth, played by Jean Seberg) is auctioned off. Although Rumson wins her hand, his pardner Pardner is granted an equal share, and Elizabeth sets up homesteading with them both. Later, the men kidnap a coach full of prostitutes bound for another boom town, and No Name City grows into a metropolis.
The actual town was constructed in Oregon, and this was way before miniatures and digital imaging, so everything is real. The sets are a delight, and the plot moves forward easily, even though the movie clocks in at over three hours. Musicals did pretty much die after the release of "Paint Your Wagon" but I still admire the cinematography, by William Fraker, and the byplay between Seberg, Eastwood, and Marvin is excellent.
I also recently tivo'd "How to Succeed in Business without Really Trying" from 1967, when the musical was still in full flower. The choreography is by Bob Fosse. Robert Morse is at his cutest. Michelle Lee is a delight. Although some of the songs from the Broadway musical were trimmed for the film, the music that is on film, including "It's Been a Long Day", "The Company Way", and "Old Ivy", are staged tremendously. My favorite number from the film is "A Secretary is Not a Toy."
:: Michael Nyiri 5:00 PM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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:: Sunday, November 30, 2003 ::
"The Missing" is not as good a western as Kevin Cosner's latest, "Open Range". Where "Range", like "Dances With Wolves", opts for epic sweep and universal characters, Ron Howard's latest, which I give 6 or 10 on the Mikometer, is a straight ahead story detailing the efforts of a frontier doctor (Cate Blanchett) and her tracker father (Tommy Lee Jones, in a role that fits him too much like an old glove) to find her missing daughter, who has been kidnapped by a white slaver. In an earlier time when there were lots of westerns on the filmic horizon, this would have been a "standard oater", but since westerns are few and far between these days, and since I love the genre, I was waiting for this one. The film is better directed than the usual Howard piece. I liked it better than "Beautiful Mind". But this isn't a classic in any sense.
:: Michael Nyiri 5:00 PM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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:: Saturday, November 22, 2003 ::
The big guns are starting to be rolled in for the holiday/Oscar season. I saw "Master and Commander" and give it a 7 of 10 on the Mikometer. I want to give it a higher position, but I tend to give too high a number to too many films, and in retrospect, perhaps M&C isn't as great an acheivement as Roger Ebert led me to believe after hearing him gush about the film on Ebert and Roeper. First: it's chances for Oscar. I don't think it will rate. I love swashbucklers, although this is more a historical "epic" than a simple "pirate" movie. It is tons better than "Pirates of the Carribean", but falls short of "masterful" to my thinking. The story of Captain Jack Aubrey (I almost wrote "Sparrow") who commands a British frigate, the "Surprise", looking for French to fight during the Napoleonic Wars, it is a rousing tale told with gusto and suspense by director Peter Weir. The film seems somewhat hard to follow at points, and there is a lot of camera buffeting meant to simulate the heaving waves. I'm sure I will like this film better when I get the DVD, (I wanted to rewind some of the movie for plot emphasis). Russell Crowe shows he is today's consummate action guy, and plays a mean fiddle as well. I understand he actually learned how to play violin for the captain's and his ship's doctor's musical interludes. One thing that really kept knawing at me as I watched was that Aubrey's friend, Dr. Maturin , the ship's surgeon, is played by Paul Bettany, who played Crowe's nonexistant room-mate in Ron Howard's "A Beautiful Mind". Next week is Howard's "western", "The Missing".
:: Michael Nyiri 6:00 PM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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:: Tuesday, November 04, 2003 ::
This last weekend I saw "Runaway Jury" in the theater, and give it a 7 of 10. It is a standard Grisham thriller, and I kept thinking of Gene Hackman as the head of "The Firm". Overall it is a fine movie, nothing really special, and not one I will someday buy on DVD. The main attraction, and why I wanted to see it in the first place is the actors, specifically John Cusack as the tampering juryman Nicholas Easter. For some reason I don't really think of Rachel Weisz as that pretty an ingenue or that great an actress, but she did impress me in her "Jury" scenes. Much has been made of the Gene Hackman vs. Dustin Hoffman pairing, but they both seemed to be chewing the scenery in a somewhat usual effect.
:: Michael Nyiri 5:34 AM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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This weekend's "theater film" is the Coen Brothers' "Intolerable Cruelty" and although I wasn't keen on thinking this was going to be "Classic Coen" from the trailers, I give it an 7 of 10, bordering on 8. Both George Clooney and Catherine Zeta Jones are perfectly paired, and the biting Coen humor exists in all it's glory. Especially of note is Cedric the Entertainer as a private dick. The final scene is hilarious. "Cruelty" also has a perfect spit take by Clooney, and one of the best filmed jokes of the year, which I don't want to spoil by giving away. Prime Coen, somewhat below "Raising Arizona", and not in the league with "Miller's Crossing" or "Fargo" but much better, in my opinion, than "Oh Brother, Where Art Thou".
:: Michael Nyiri 5:33 AM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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:: Saturday, October 25, 2003 ::
The DVD versions of all three Indiana Jones movies are out, in a box set, and I have no money. But.... a friend purchased the set, and I was able to catch both "Raiders of the Lost Ark" and "Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom" on my HDTV. I'll have to wait a while for "Last Crusade" and the extras disc. I haven't seen "Raiders" in years, and haven't seen the film in it's full widescreen glory since 1981 in the theater. I had a CED videodisc, which was non-box, and the letterboxed versions of the first two films never came out on laserdisc, so these DVD's are something special, and films I certainly will want to own. Because my friend wanted to see "Temple of Doom" on my HDTV, and had already watched "Raiders", I saw this first, before seeing "Raiders". It might seem that this is out of sequence, but "Temple of Doom" is set a couple of years before the first film, so it makes perfect sense from a timeline perspective.
I still don't like the shrill performance of Kate Capshaw, but this time around I noticed (especially with "Kill Bill" still in recent memory) that the "gruesome" stuff in "Doom" which garnered it the first PG-13 rating in filmdom now seems tame. Somehow in memory, I got the "monkey brains" scene mixed up with real footage featured on the "Faces of Death" series on video, and the footage in "Doom" is fairly tame. I still think "Raiders" is the quintessential entry in the series, and it is still, after all these years, a grand hoot to watch. Karen Allen is delightful as a Hawksian babe with as much moxie as Jones, and I couldn't get over how young Harrison Ford is in the film, which to me, seems like it just came out yesterday.
I'm looking forward to "Crusade", with an excellent turn by Sean Connery as Indy's dad, and to the extras disc.
I understand a box set of Looney Tunes is scheduled for next week, and I missed the original boxed laserdisc set of the classic Tunes so can hardly wait for this release as well.
:: Michael Nyiri 6:00 PM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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:: Sunday, October 19, 2003 ::
There is no justice. "Mystic River" nationwide at 5th place. The remake of Tobe's "Chainsaw Massacre", which was lambasted by critics, and which I just do not even care to mention is No. 1? "Kill Bill" should have at least spent a second week in the top spot. I can't fathom why movies like "Dreamcatcher" disappear, and remakes of classic films can get a number one spot. Shows that, besides being no justice, people have no sense when it comes to picking product upon which to waste $7.50 (I go to matinees, I know it's closer to ten bucks at night, even worse logic.)
I will cry tonight for the moviegoing public. At least Jack Black's starrer (and the Richard Linklater directed) "School of Rock" is holding in there. I've got this one on my list of want to sees but probably won't get to see it in a theater.
Speaking of the senseless moviegoing public, I rented one of my favorite romantic comedies of the past few months, Peyton Reed's "Down With Love" and watched it the all important second time last night. This was snubbed at the B.O. and is one of the most deservedly comical and interesting pieces of filmed product offered in 2003. The DVD is a must have, lots of neat extras, and the full screen "video" version of the "Up with Love" musical number from the end credits. Renee seemed anorexic to me in "Chicago" but I fell in love with her all over again in her homage to Doris Day. Ewan McGregor proves he's a leading man for the ages, and the direction, production design, costumes, pacing, is all a wonder to behold. Why didn't "Down With Love" prove a hit, at least in it's first weekend, like "Chainsaw" remake did this week?. Well, for one, it came out during the summer of sequels and had the misfortune of being original. Two, Hallowe'en is coming up, and the "kids" like the horror movies. I don't know of course, not having seen (or having cared to see) the remake of "Chainsaw." I just rented the remake of "Willard" with Crispin Glover, and when I saw the picture of his character's "father", Bruce Davison, whom of course was in the original "Willard" , plus the set design and atmosphere, I know it will be fun to watch. But no one saw it, as I remember.
"Chainsaw" got 29mil. I'm upset. "Mystic River" is art. "Chainsaw" is probably wallpaper.
Oh Well.
I added a link to the left under the links for my other sites. The webmaster of a discussion group for movies called "MilkPlus" (after a drink in Stanley Kubrick's "A Clockwork Orange" which I remember seeing in Hollywood a long time ago, and which remains one of Kubrick's masterpieces and a damn fine rollercoaster of a film.) asked to exchange links. I haven't done that with the Electric Movies site, so thought I'd give it a try. I'll see if my link is added to that site, probably along with a million other movie blogs. But it's a start. I won't get readers if I don't actively begin promoting and link exchanges did work in the past, so I'll try to get past my skepticism and look at this as a positive step toward said readership.
Also I fully intend on keeping up the posts now. I've got the HDTV, computer, record player, receiver, and digital camera all hooked up. Soon, the capability I've always dreamed about concerning instantly adding images from my collection of movies to the computer will be complete. The scanner went on the blink, but I rarely use it.
Let me hope, dear Electric Movies Diary, that I will begin to post more incisive insights as to why I watch so many movies, again and again, and try to remember to post on this blog the reasons as they hit me.
Ciao. For Now.

:: Michael Nyiri 1:42 PM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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:: Saturday, October 18, 2003 ::
I saw "Mystic River" last night.
This is the Best Picture so far this year.
Clint Eastwood has directed, in the later part of his life, a masterpiece of unparalleled quality and unflinching emotion. The story of three friends who suffer an emotional and indelible separation early in their lives when one of them, Dave, played in "later life" by Tim Robbins, is molested, the movie is a straightforward and unblinking look at a lot of Eastwood's motifs from earlier films, yet culminates in a career milestone, even for a director who has already won an Oscar for the gut wrenching "Unforgiven" in 1993.
While last weeks "movie of the week" "Kill Bill" is relentless in it's bloody revenge engine driven plot, it is ultimately and admittedly cartoonish. Eastwood's "River" is heartrenderingly "real". The one murder which drives the plot started a flood of tears to well up and gush over me, causing me to wipe my glasses numerous times. The buzz on Robbins, who plays completely against the "type" to which he usually is cast, has overlooked the rare gem of a performance of this piece. And this is a film (sans the director, who does not have a role) with excellent performances all around. The Oscar should go to Sean Penn, whose performance gives chills as the "hardcase" of the group, Jimmy. I would say that his performance supersedes mere "acting". I felt each and every moment with him as if I were feeling his feelings myself.
Kevin Bacon, as Sean, the third of the friends, is a marvel as well, in a different way, with a mannered performance. Clint doesn't show up as another actor (a la Woody Allen in "Bullets Over Broadway" in John Cusak's performance.) Bacon is a cop, but he certainly isn't Dirty Harry. No squinting or histrionic outbursts here.
Credit should be given to Eastwood, who is a true "actor's director", to the complete cast including Morpheus (I mean Laurence Fishburne), Marcia Gay Harden, and Laura Linney, who all play characters they have not played before. And the city of Boston is a character as well. I'm so glad Clint insisted that the movie be shot on location. His earlier location work on the overlooked gem "Midnight In the Garden Of Good and Evil" (Savannah, Georgia) was equally impressive and wonderfully shot. Tom Stern shot "Mystic River", and is no stranger to Eastwood's ouvere, having photographed not only "Unforgiven", but "A Perfect World" and "Bird" among other works of art by the director.
The film is dark, both in tone, and in the way it is shot. The characters are "normal", but deeply flawed, as with a lot of Eastwood, specifically William Munny and John Wilson, the director (based on John Huston) in "White Hunter, Black Heart."
Best Picture. Best Actor for Sean Penn.
Best Supporting for either Laura or Marcia Gay. (Marcia's won, so let's give it to Laura.)
Lot's of interesting films coming up. I loved "Lost In Translation" Sofia Coppola's second film, although haven't written about it in the blog yet, I don't believe. I loved Bill Murray's performance, and it is very good, and deserving of a nomination. I have a suspicion I'll love Tom Cruise in "The Last Samaruai" too, but right now, Sean Penn's aching realism, and unflinching emotion has bowled me over.
I have to mention that the screenplay by Brian Hegeland is based on the novel by Dennis Lehane. I didn't read the book. I only saw the excellent preview for the movie a few months back, and marvelled at the acting.
Excellence.
On all counts.

I was thinking when Bob Hope died that the world lost an icon. Same with Gregory Peck. Same with Kate Hepburn. Then I thought of Clint. He's not ancient, like Hope. He's still working. Hell, "Blood Work" is vintage Clint. Even though nobody saw it! But someday hopefully not for a decade or so, when Clint Eastwood passes from us, I will feel as if a special friend has left. I implore anyone who wants to see a chronological view of the cultual and political history of America to buy and watch in order the Dirty Harry DVD collection.

Clint Eastwood, Rowdy Yates, The Man With No Name, Dirty Harry, Director.
A true movie God!!!!!!! And he saw to it that "Mystic River" was good.

:: Michael Nyiri 10:09 AM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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:: Sunday, October 12, 2003 ::
This weeks movies:
"Kill Bill: Volume 1": 8 of 10 "In Theaters Now". Relentless entertainment without a pause. I wanted to see Clint Eastwood's "Mystic River" this weekend, because Eastwood is one of my favorite directors, the buzz is Oscar-worthy, and I'm just sure Clint might get to have another of those golden statuettes in his hand some time this coming April, but "River" is playing on only three screens in LA this week, and I missed it. By about 10 minutes, to tell the truth. Because I couldn't find a parking place in the garage by the AMC Century 14.
Instead, a choice at the local multiplex between the Coen's "Intolerable Cruelty" and the "4th Film by Quentin Tarantino", the relentless "Kill Bill".
The Coen film seemed to much, to me anyway, by viewing the previews, to be a standard romantic comedy, and I remember being excited to see, and then disappointed by after I saw their immensely popular "Oh Brother Where Art Thou", and didn't want to brave the same kind of disappointment.
Instead, I saw "Bill" (Only his hands in Vol. I) and spent the afternoon wandering the back aisles of Quentin Tarantino's Memory Video Store.
Relentless, as I just said. Unwavering entertainment consisting of enough severed limbs and movie references to making me long for the day when they sell the DVD in the lobby so I can "rewind" and "review". There are so many wonderful filmic tricks, sweeping camera moves, and frenetic editing, not to mention a brief but beautifully bloody anime section, that viewing this film once is, like De Palma's "Femme Fatale", is futile. This viewing is merely the preamble to the full experience. (Which continues in February with the release of the second part.
I only give "Kill Bill" an 8 because it's not done yet. I do gush (and that's an apt word) when thinking of Quentin's 4th film. The critics have all mentioned the lack of plot, or more specifically, the "simple revenge scenario." Well, as with all great opera, and operatic films, such as, say "Moulin Rouge", even though that's a musical and this is a drive-in exploitation spaghetti samauri bloodbath, the simple plot is merely the hook to hang the cloak of moviemaking wonder and multiple themes, and Quentin overdoes himself.
I got to thinking, perhaps this is not as grand as I had wished, coming off of (six years ago!) "Jackie Brown", but it's even grander in retrospect.
Don't go if you feint at the sight of blood. More blood is spilled and or/gushes/flows/spurts/pumps than in any movie of recent and perhaps past memory. The setpieces are a filmgoer's feast. The restaruant scene is to die for. There's allusions and references to every thing from Star Trek, de Palma, Ennio Morricone, Bruce Lee, and Run Run Shaw, to the old "Feature Presentation" reels and bad sound editing which show up on all the old drive in exploitation films Quentin loves and so reverentially pays homage to here.
I don't think "Bill" is for everybody. "A man's film" is what my friend said upon leaving the theater, and he looked at his watch quite a few times during the feature.
As I said, relentless entertainment.
Quentin can be proud.
I also saw "You've Got Mail" and "A Man for All Seasons" again on DVD. I love those old English play/movies like "A Man" where the setpieces are all filmed on old castles that look old, instead of new, as they were when the events took place. I thought it weird back then, and do now. But the acting is great.


:: Michael Nyiri 11:20 PM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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:: Tuesday, October 07, 2003 ::
Movies this week:
"Dreamcatcher" 10 of 10
I can't fathom why some of the worst dreck makes tons of money, but a truly great piece of work like Lawrence Kasdan's adaptation of Stephen King's book was overlooked from the beginning. This is a well crafted, excellently acted, and very scary film, and while some might not recommend it for it's similarities to King's "It" or "Stand by Me", I found the two hours a rollicking roller coaster ride into a hellish situation, resolved as some of King's aforementioned work (like "It") could not be, simply because of the advancements in computer generated special effects.
Thomas Jane, Jason Lee, Morgan Freeman, and especially Damien Lewis as Jonesy collectively and separately act up a storm, a cold one at that, in this excellent film adaptation, now out on DVD. I don't want to spoil this one, because I had the luxury of not having read the book, and thankfully, no one ruined the plot for me. I'll only say that besides the "Stand by Me" qualities of the plot and characterization, which is typical for a King work, the film does a terrific and scary turn, sort of like in Richard Rodriquez' "From Dusk till Dawn" although that's not really an apt comparison.
Good show from start till finish, and a recommendation not to watch alone in the dark, especially if you've had any disturbing medical news in the past few weeks before viewing.


:: Michael Nyiri 5:15 AM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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:: Saturday, October 04, 2003 ::
Movies this week:
"A Mighty Wind" 9 of 10
"The Core" 7 of 10
A delightfully cheesy sci fi "throwback" with an excellent cast , thrilling effects, and a dose of much needed imagination. I truly enjoyed this film.
:: Michael Nyiri 5:08 AM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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:: Thursday, August 07, 2003 ::
Finally got around to watching "K-19:The Widowmaker' (2002), which I didn't much care to see, really, thinking, 1. It's "another" submarine movie, and 2. Am I going to believe Liam Neeson and Harrison Ford as Russians. Well, I didn't realize it was directed by Katheryn Bigelow, whom I admire, and whose Near Dark (the rockabilly vampire movie), "Blue Steel", "Wild Palms" TV miniseries, and recent "The Weight of Water" are all films I admire. The good news about "K-19"? It's a darn good adventure film, and is probably second only to Wolfgang Petersen's "Das Boot" (1981) which is the benchmark submarine movie of all time. "K-19" gets an 8 of 10 on the Mikometer, and is truly a movie that matters. I trust viewers will have no problem with any of the castmembers. I found both Harrison Ford and Liam Neeson's acting to be commendable. I believed in and cared about these characters, and the film treats the heroism and the humanity of all involved with bravura and panache. I love movies with a fine attention to detail, and this one certainly qualifies. Plot is about the maiden voyage of the K-19, a Soviet super sub, powered by nuclear reactors, and the miscalculations and ultimately heroic acts which mark the voyage. A must see. I'm always astounded when I finally see a film I didn't care to, and it turns out to be so good.
:: Michael Nyiri 4:15 AM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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:: Monday, July 28, 2003 ::
Last week I had an incredible urge to see Disney's "Pirates". I saw it. It was okay. Mikometer Rating: 7 of 10. This is the kind of movie where it is useless to try to keep up with the plot, as one could probably pilot a couple of frigates through the holes. It wasn't a very pleasant experience, however, because two "family units" in front of me had 3-5 year old kids whining and screaming throughout the film, which at 2.5 hours, is quite a buttsleeper.
The good news is the second film I saw in the theater this weekend. Although only "No. 5" in this mornings "tout sheet", the excellent "Seabiscuit" directed by Gary Ross, whose first film,"Pleasantville" is one of the underrated films of all time, is, at least for me, the first Oscar worthy film out of the gate this year. I'm writing a "full blown" review. (I actually started it on Saturday after coming home from the theater, I'm not kidding.) I saw it without checking out Ross's credentials. I really enjoyed "Pleasantville" back in '98, and thought it showed remarkable heart and soul. "Seabiscuit" shows for sure that this wasn't a fluke. As a screenwriter, he has written some heartstring tuggers, besides "Pleasantville", and "Seabiscuit", which he adapted from Laura Hildenbrand's book, he wrote "Big" and "Dave".
"Seabiscuit" is definitely the answer to the age old question, "Why don't they make movies like they used to?" This one doesn't have careening freeway crashes, snappy with it dialogue (except perhaps for William H. Macy
s "Tick Tock McLaughlin" radio announcer) or modern cultural references. This is a film for the ages, made "as they used to" with older filmic conventions (including the first montage I've seen in years) fantastic acting, and it gallops at a reasonable pace. 10 of 10 on the Mikometer. I can't deny that "Seabiscuit" is so far the best movie this year!
:: Michael Nyiri 6:56 AM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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:: Wednesday, July 23, 2003 ::
1. "Pirates of Perserverance, Part II" I just saw my Tivo'd copy of Ebert and Roepper from two weeks ago, with their Pirates review, Ebert loved Depp's performance, gave a nod to Geoffrey Rush's over the top acting, and gave it thumbs up. I never pay particular attention to Roepper. No, he gave it thumbs down, I do believe, and thought the "swashbuckling" went on forever. I'm just so sure I'm going to love this movie. This weekend I'll be going for sure. Still probably will want to see Ahnold before he goes straight to DVD, too.

Last night I pulled out a laserdisc title I didn't remember I had. The Coen's "The Hudsucker Proxy" from 1994. A few weeks ago, I had rented their excellent "Miller's Crossing" from Netflix, and asked my roommate:"What do you think is the quintessential Coen Brothers film BESIDES "Fargo". His pick was "Blood Simple". Mine is "Miller's". But I had forgotten ("Sure, sure") just how inventive, funny, and well made "Hudsucker's" is. Besides wonderful turns by Tim Robbins as Norville Barnes ("You know....for kids"), and Paul Newman as Vice President Sidney Mussburger ("Yeah, yeah"), plus would be Muncie girl but actually hard bitten career girl reporter Rosalind er', I mean, Jennifer Jason Leigh as Amy Archer ("Only a numbskull thinks he knows things about things he knows nothing about."), there is an angelic performance by Charles Durning, who exits the movie (almost) in the first scene, and Charles Buscemi, Peter Gallagher, and Bruce Cambell put in appearances. I was surprised a few weeks ago when a friend told me Sam Raimi had a hand in the film, co-writing the thirties screwball /fast talking newsroom/boardroom comedy along with Joel and Ethan. This was post Sonnenfeld, and I was equally surprised to find that Roger Deakins had done the cinematography.

I don't know how many other laserdiscs I still have in virgin shrink wrap. I picked up a lot at bargain prices at Ken Crane's when they became DVD Planet. Just as I had picked up scads of CEDs and Beta tapes when those formats went bust. One thing about my love of the movies. I used to love to say "I own it" when talking about a title in my CED library so long ago. When you own these films that mean so much, repeat viewings are always a treat. And even though the laserdisc format was analog (albeit with digital sound) I remember thinking that DVD's would never be as good. Now, of course, when I see a particularly pleasing film on either laser or Tivo, and "really want to see it" on HDTV, of course I rent it at Netflix, and see it in an even better shape. My Hudsucker's laserdisc, fresh out of the shrinkwrap, and a relatively new title when offered, I believe, has a fairly sharp picture. The transfer was pretty good, so I don't need to rent the DVD just now. Over on the IMDB site, I noticed that a lot of people treasure "Hudsucker's Proxy". I didn't think it particularly "worthy" when I first saw it. Normally, a Coen brothers film release is a must see for me. I think they are incapable of turning out a bad film, although their low points for me are (and I'm sure many will disagree) "Oh, Brother, Where Art Thou" and " Barton Fink". "Miller's" is a masterpiece, and "Hudsucker" made me guffaw with pleasure. At the end, when Bill Cobb's "Moses the Clock Man" mentions that someone once tried to jump off the 45th floor of the Hudsucker building....but....that's another story..." I began laughing out loud....as, of course, does the Clock Man.
"Hudsucker Proxy" is the story of big business, big scams, and big disappointments, salvaged by big breaks and big dreams. The script is excellent. The wordplay between the actors, especially any repartee involving Leigh's Kate Hepburn affectations or Newman's gruff stoicism is giddy. Tim Robbins is just Jimmy Stewartish enough in his role without being cloying or annoying. I don't believe "Hudsucker's" is mentioned too much in the Coen's canon, but it should be. An excellent "thirties screwball comedy" as would have been directed by Billy Wilder or Preston Sturges. Sure, Sure. Yeah, yeah. You know.....for kids......!!!

:: Michael Nyiri 6:44 PM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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:: Sunday, July 20, 2003 ::
Another of the hot summer weekends passes, and I haven't been to see a movie in a theater since summer began. Am I perhaps, showing my disrespect for the summer of sequels by not patronizing the local AMC? Hmmmmm. There are two films out right now I want to see in the theater, and perhaps next week I'll catch either "28 Days Later" (not, as you might suspect, a sequel to the Sandra Bullock movie) what looks to be a worthy successor to Gerorge Romerodom by Danny Boyle or (and here's one I just can't wait to see) "Pirates of the Carribean". It's always been my favorite Disneyland ride, and the previews looked fantastic. I love the official website, too.

I'm a sucker for the pirate genre, and loved the wondrous "Cutthroat Island" which was one of the biggest flops in history. I still think it's a great swashbuckler. The Disney animated "Treasure Planet" is a delight. I'm looking forward to a hearty time with Johnny Depp, Orlando Bloom, and Geoffrey Rush, but wanted to wait until enough teenage girls had already caught the flick a few times and had emptied from the theaters. Over the weekend, my biggest epiphany was while watching the 1990 Best Picture, "Dances With Wolves" by Kevin Costner. When I originally screened that film in 1991, it was on a VHS tape rental. As usual, and as I've mentioned many times, to see a well made widescreen movie on TV (my top of the line is 1991 was a 32" Toshiba direct view) in pan and scan is to miss half the movie. Besides the fact that the DVD release, which is relatively new, is fantastic, the visual elements which wash over me from my HDTV prove that I didn't even see the movie when watching VHS in '91. I was merely seeing a "copy".

Costner has directed a new western, for which I saw previews a few weeks ago. He excells in the genre, and "Dances" is surely a "movie that matters". I feel as if I have seen it for the first time on the big screen, even if that screen is in my "media room" instead of at the local multiplex. They can be content to show "Bad Boys II" (I'm guessing at least 40 mil opening, maybe more) on four or five screens. I can watch art in my shorts and try to beat the heat.

:: Michael Nyiri 10:04 PM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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:: Sunday, July 13, 2003 ::
Just walking down the aisles at Hollywood Video the other day, whilst looking for new films to rent, I was astounded by the amount of films I see but don't even mention in this blog. "Frida", for instance, the Salma Hayek starrer about Frida Kahlo, directed by "Titus" director Julie Traymor, at first didn't interest me when it came out in theaters in 2002. But the film, which I finally gave in and rented on DVD, is excellent. I give it an 9 of 10 on Mikometer and classify it as a "movie that matters." Besides showing that Salma is a fine actress, the "artistic" production design, by Felipe Fern?ndez del Paso (I), whom I don't know, but who designed John Sayle's "Men With Guns" in 97, and the art direction, by Bernardo Trujillo (whose only credit I know was "Blow" which isn't a very good film) is wonderful. Traymor, who also mounted the Broadway production of "The Lion King" describes on the DVD documentary on the making of "Frida" how she uses not computer generated imagery, but stage cheats to imbue the "lifelike" nature of the paintings in the shots. I totally glossed over this film, and now it has become one of my favorites.
Funny how perception can be negative, but when the film is actually seen, the perceptions can be blown out of the water. Other boxes staring back at me told me that I don't really pay attention to the fact that a lot of the films I choose to see are in fact masterpieces which languished at their time of release because of the blockbuster nature of the biz.
Although not a masterpiece, I viewed "How to Lose a Guy In 10 Days", starring Kate Hudson and Matthew McConaughey just yesterday. I feel I need to write an actual "review" of this picture. I wouldn't really call it a "movie that matters", and it was described to me by the woman who rented it to me at Hollywood Video as a "chick flick", but I wanted to see it because even though it was lambasted by critics, didn't do too good of business as I remember (but could be wrong) I do remember liking the preview, which was totally enjoyed by the theater audience, and I just love both Matthew and Kate. I like Kate even better than her mother, the always delightful Goldie Hawn. I don't like to call romantic comedies "chick flicks" although I believe this came from "Sleepless In Seattle" a few years back, where Meg Ryan's character is a big fan of "An Affair to Remember" and cries over it every time she sees it on video. There are a wealth of excellent romantic comedies, one of my latest favorites which disappeared from theaters really quickly was Peyton Reed's "Down With Love" with Renee Zellweger and Ewan McGregor which I might have already talked a little about when it was released. "How to Lose a Guy" is similarly delightful, and I cried (PLOT POINT ALERT) when McConaughey's Benjamin Barry grabs the dying "love fern" and straps it on the back of his motorcycle to go retreive Kate's Andie Anderson. But I'm giving away plot here, which I don't like to do. I just wanted to mention that I did get emotional during the film, and, as a "guy", I admit I am emotional during the best romantic comedies, and fully embrace the feeling, just like Meg's character in "Sleepless." Some romantic comedies are "cookie cutter" and seem to star either Julia Roberts or JLo, but some are wonderful and play as emotional triggers for me.
There were other boxes staring at me, and now that I want to remember them I can't as usual.
But at least I just got two mini reviews up here, and mentioned "Down With Love" (again?) That title and "Frida", plus "How to Lose a Guy" shall probably have at least a page each. Heck I still haven't finished my opus filmbook on "Phantom of the Paradise".
I did post some "comments" on the 20 Best Movies list but haven't seen any reciprocal comments on that site yet.


:: Michael Nyiri 8:22 AM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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:: Monday, July 07, 2003 ::
Movies this week:
"Tiger Bay" 1959 8 of 10
I was looking for Hayley Mills flicks, specifically "The Trouble With Angels" from 1966, and which doesn't seem to be on DVD yet, and got this early gem. It's a b&w English film also starring her father John, which interested Walt Disney in her prowess before casting her in "Pollyanna". My Hayley search also netted me "The Moon Spinners" which I hadn't seen since it aired on The Wonderful World of Disney when I was a child. I had never seen "Tiger Bay" until renting it at Netflix Hayley is Gillie, a 10 year old tomboy who witnesses a murder in her low class English housing tract, and later befriends the murderer, played by Horst Bucholtz. Although full screen, meaning I couldn't watch it on the HDTV, it is still mesmerizing and filled with suspense. There are a lot of old b&w English films which not many people have seen, and I recommend this one highly.
:: Michael Nyiri 6:03 PM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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:: Sunday, July 06, 2003 ::
I'm going through files and folders on my server and trying to combine all the pertinent "blog entries" I prepared to different versions of many blogs I wish to destroy, and came upon the following from an unused page in 2002. Instead of deleting the entry, I will post it here. Perhaps I should post it closer to it's actual date, but then, who reads me except me anyway?

"Here you are, supplying logic to a movie that defies it." Eric Roeper 9/22/02

The most intelligent thing Mr. Roeper has ever uttered, and it was to Roger Ebert, after Ebert tried to justify the existence of the American FBI in Vancouver while reviewing the movie "Ballistic" Often critics, and audiences, attempt to "explain" the inexplicable in an entertainment. Too often, I believe, this intrudes on the enjoyment of whatever art is being presented, so I prefer not to "examine too closely" or "interpret" the entertainment I see, and if there is a glaring mistake in exposition (or lack thereof) plot mechanics, continuity, or bad acting, it acknowledges a groan, and I try to let the movie wash over me again with whatever charms it exudes.
:: Michael Nyiri 1:07 PM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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:: Saturday, July 05, 2003 ::
It's the day after the fourth of July, which wasn't that "liberating" for me since I spent the entire day "locked up" in my media room, which becomes a blast furnace during the summer time, importing images for and constructing my two page "appreciation" of "Gangs of New York", accessible through the image on the post below. Perhaps today will be a "movie day". I do really want to see the new "Terminator" film. My housemate even expressed an interest in going, but from early returns it looks like the crowds will be heavy. "Hulk" dropped last week, and I must say the only thing recommending that film to me is the director: Ang Lee. whose "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon" was my choice for Best Picture two years ago. (Was it that long ago?) He also has directed quite a few "classics" but I'll mention the seldom seen "Ride With the Devil" with Tobey McGuire, a rather eye opening look at the jayhawkers and bushwackers in Missouri during the Civil War. Back to "Ahnold", whose "Terminator II 3D" ride I caught when visiting Universal studios a few weeks ago, I only recently discovered that Claire Danes is in the film. I usually like her work a lot. However, Turan's review in the Times suggests that her role will be one of "the screamer", a genre part I don't care for at all. Makes me think of Tea Leoni in "Jurrassic Park III", Fay Wray in "King Kong", or the piercingly grating Ann Robinson in "War of the Worlds". The best line in the trailer for T3, Ahnold's "I'm an obsolete design" is getting a nod in almost every review.
Although strictly a future DVD rental for me, "Legally Blonde II" is out, and I sure am glad they made a sequel to "Blonde". I remember seeing the original on HBO or Starz a while back, and thought, "Now there are some people I'd love to visit in a future film. Why don't they make a sequel to this?" They must have listened to me!
:: Michael Nyiri 8:41 AM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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:: Thursday, July 03, 2003 ::
Here are some choice quotes from "The Gangs of New York" by Marty Scorsese, written by Steven Zaillian and Kenneth Lonergan and Jay Cocks

"If only I had the guns, Mr. Tweed, I'd shoot each and every one of them before they set foot on American soil." Bill "The Butcher" Cutter
"Each of the five points is a finger. When I close my hand, it becomes a fist." Bill "The Butcher"
"The spirit of the law has to be upheld. Especially while it's being broken." "Boss" Tweed
"Suppose I help myself to everything." "Suppose you do." "Amsterdam Vallon
"The spectacle of fearsome acts. Somebody steals from me. I cut off his hands. He offends me. I cut off his toe. He rises against me. I cut off his head, stick it on a pike, raise it high up, so all in the streets can see.That's what preserves the order of things. Fear." Bill "The Butcher"
"Whattaya say, Jen? One more time for the sweet souvenier." Bill "The Butcher"
"My allegience is to the law. I'm paid to uphold the law." Jack............"What in heaven's name are you talking about? You may have misgivings, but don't go believing that, Jack. That way lies damnation....I want you to go out there, and I want...you...to punish the person....who's...responsible...for murdering this poor little rabbit.."Bill "The Butcher"
"The Earth turns, but we don't feel it move. And one night you look up. One spark, and the sky's on fire." "Amsterdam Vallon"
"The past is the torch that lights our way.Where our fathers have showed us the path, we will follow." "Amsterdam" Vallon
"I wonder if Miss Everdeen could angle her rifle in another direction." "Boss" Tweed
"All Right, Line Up. It's Election Day." Bill "The Butcher"
Bill: "Weapons?" Amsterdam: "That I leave up to you." Bill: "Bricks, bats, axes, knives...... pistols??"
Amsterdam: " No....pistols." Bill: "Good boy."
"For those of us what lived and died in them furious days, it was like everything we knew was mightily swept away, and no matter what they did to build up this city up again, for the rest of time, it would be like no one would even knew we was ever here." "Amsterdam" Vallon
The Gangs of New York page should be finished by the end of the holiday.....
:: Michael Nyiri 8:04 PM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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:: Tuesday, July 01, 2003 ::







I
felt a particular loss yesterday when opening the newspaper and reading
that Kate Hepburn passed at 96.


Even
though she hasn't made a feature in quite a few years, and she certainly
qualifies as one of the last Black and White Stars to pass away, leaving
behind her some of the Cinema's best work, I miaa her presence in this
world.


Just
last month, I viewed one of my mini-festivals, including "Guess
Who's Coming to Dinner", her last film with the love of her life,
"Philadelphia Story", where she plays the inimitable and purely
original Tracey Lord, and "The Lion In Winter", in which she
essays the part of a Queen.


Kate
is and has always been a Queen of the Cinema. As I wonder so often these
days as the last Great Stars of Hollywood leave us. It is up to those
who remember them to keep them in the Cultural Memory of Time, and to
introduce the Work to new generations.


The
Art Is What Matters.







:: Michael Nyiri 5:18 AM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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:: Monday, June 30, 2003 ::
Here is a link to "My Top Twenty Movies Of All Time" on YMDB.comI found the website as a link on another movieblog, registered, and added about six or seven films when the site crashed. I was multitasking about four projects yesterday, thought nothing further about the "list" until this morning, when I noticed two emails referencing "comments" on my list page. Interesting, to say the least. I've had "ElectricMovies" online for half a decade, and can't seem to ever "get the ball rolling" as far as "interactivity" with the cultural bloggers out here in Cyberland, so seeing comments on an unfinished list set me to thinking about giving my all to redesigning my site, and maybe even link up to some likeminded film fans. I've now got 14 entries, oh, wait a minute, 15. I just thought of another film to add. Now with IMDB, and YMDB, not to mention Netflix, where I rent about 8-10 movies a month, I can hopefully begin to compile the ultimate movie list of the Movies That Matter in a historical cultural perspective. If only I take the time to keep at it. I have always had dreams of writing about why certain films need to be seen by everybody. Film is a Universal Medium. Even before sound, filmmakers made films for a global audience. I someday hope to be proficient in explaining the reasons why some of these films are not only popular or worthy of admission on some list, but why some of these films exist as art.
:: Michael Nyiri 6:33 AM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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:: Sunday, June 29, 2003 ::
Three posts today. Wow, it's starting to seem more like a workday sitting in front of a computer than a beautiful Sunday enjoying films on my filmlike projection HDTV in total darkness all night and all day long. What? Is it almost Monday, when the philosophical ramblings become technical jargon on another computer. Tonight, I am posting the first review in about a year, with it's own page and everything! The film is "The Pianist", by Roman Polanski, which took Best Directing Oscars away from Marty Scorsese and Best Actor away from Jack........Deservedly so. (I swear I wrote this all before in this blog on one of those Sunday nights when the computer crashes and you lose the whole intricate blog. Shows me that typing electronically on a computer instead of with the old analog typewriter is as fleeting as thought. And to think about it, Here is the link to My Review of "The Pianist"
:: Michael Nyiri 8:00 PM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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Here's the beautiful Grace Kelly from Alfred Hitchcock's "Dial M For Murder" photographed off the HDTV with the digital videocamera.
:: Michael Nyiri 6:18 PM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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"Phantom Of The Paradise" came out in 1974. I have a Beta version, which I can't play anymore, and don't think it has ever been released on Laserdisc or DVD. I recorded it on the Tivo in letterbox, hooked the machine up to the HDTV on Zoom, and watched it for what must be fifteenth or twentieth time. (Not including the four times in a row at the Cinerama dome with my late lamented friend Tom in a revival in the late seventies. I love the movie, it is an 11 of 10 on the Mikometer, and still packs a punch with me, even all these many years later. (A "spinning newspaper shot' of Rolling Stone magazine is back when they were still in Frisco, and the font face really dates the mag for anyone who has been reading it that long. (Or perhaps stopped reading a while back, like me!) Brian De Palma is a joyous filmmaker, even, I might add, when he is deep into repeatability hell, but after the his fabulous "French Movie" last year, I know he's still in his cups, and can be forgiven for the fact that he doesn't make blockbusters, even though he sure tried after "The Untouchables" gave him a handsome return and then he tried too hard. "Phantom" is, first and formost, not only a cultural blender type story about the music biz, it is a musical, and has some very good music by Paul Williams, who plays the pop god "Swan". William Finley, Jessica Harper, an amazing Gerrit Graham, who makes Gary Glitter look like a rank amateur, the cast is magnificent, the timing is still fresh. This was once destined to become a "cult classic", and when I saw the revival at the Dome it had already attained some of that status. But it also shines as a "Hollywood Musical", and not just one of the Rock Opera riffs like "Tommy" by Ken Russell, either. When the cast is shown at the end of the movie, with Paul Williams singing the theme over the closing credits, I never left the theater untill the lights came on. Rousing good entertainment, and it still shines. (UPDATE 7/4/03: Now the link will take you to the ElectricMovies pages for "Phantom" which incorporates still images culled directly from the digital copy on the Tivo. It does take a while to "create" pages with so many images, but I must admit, the results are rather good. Check it out!)
:: Michael Nyiri 6:02 PM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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This week's movies: DVD rentals: "Tears of the Sun", 6 of 10, "Frida" 9 of 10, "Dark Blue". 7 of 10, Tivo": "After the Thin Man" 8 of 10, "Phantom of the Paradise" 10 of 10. That's a start, and to think I didn't even go to the "theater" for the second week in a row. This week, it's "Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle", by McG, the prequel to next summer's hit "Charlies Angels and XXX: Faster and Furiouser". Last week was "Crouching Computer Generated Hulk: Hidden Meandering" by Ang Lee. I went to Universal Studios instead and saw "Shrek 2-1/2". This week I was astounded again by the simple fact that no matter what decade in history, what amount of money or star power, or what the subject matter, good cinema, truly good cinema remains artistically and socially of merit at any time. Case in point, the 1936 "silver screen" (read glorious B&W) version of Dashiell Hammet's "After the Thin Man" made by MGM (the second of a string of hit "episodes" of the movie series, which lasted from the beginning of the Great Depression to the post WWII war years. William Powell and Myrna Loy are a delight, James Stewart shows why he soon became a major star. W.S. Van Dyke directed with the flair of an old master. This could probably be called the "Charlie's Angels" of 1936. I confess, not having seen the new Angels, since I abhor battling the crowds at the cineplex anymore now that we in full throttle into "beat my weekend grosses", I can only rely on Ken Turan's review, since I haven't seen Ebert and Whatsisname yet, but Turan pretty much says "Angels" is review proof. It's a MAJOR FRANCHISE movie, much like "After the Thin Man". However, to put it in it's cultural perspective, there was no television in those days, and series were usually only heard on the radio and seen before the feature. From the start of movies, some "franchises", like the Tarzan movies, went on forever, oftentimes changing principal actors. The Thin Man movies all starred Loy and Powell, and their comic timing still makes me laugh out loud.
The set design is all art deco. This is a "murder mystery" in silver and black, with top hat and tails. Hollywood was at the top of it's monochromatic glory, sound had been underway for at least a decade, and "After" is a pure delight.
Well, as usual, now I don't want to write anymore, and have only talked about one film and haven't even told how this movie is one that matters.
It matters, as all the MTM do, because it gives modern audiences a "sense of history" no matter how "hollywoodized" it is. I was really somewhat surprised, in these politially correct times, to see Powell''s obvious lush as the hero, and to see (albeit in the criminal class) a thug grab his "moll" by the hair, and then slap her around, to which she lovingly looks at him and says, "Ya big Lug". Women like that dame like it a little rough. Nobody thought anything about offending anybody in 1936, and I bet the line got a laugh.
:: Michael Nyiri 5:15 PM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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:: Thursday, June 12, 2003 ::
The "Official Link" to the new and improved "ElvisMovies" page of "ElectricMovies" is now up and running! I hope.
:: Michael Nyiri 10:23 PM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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I had a dream when putting up a website in 1999 that "we would all have television stations on the web" someday. In the beginning, the little movies you would click on at sites like ifilm.com would be hardly watchable. Now a WMV file can be produced and blown up to 19" full screen size. I made an actual "MikeVideo" on the MGI Videowave program a while back titled "ElvisMovies." I now include a downloadable link to "Elvis Movies" which is taking up a lot of space on my server. Although the personal website mania of a few years ago has subsided, and now everyone is blogging, which is nothing more than the "diary" pages I've always had on AllThingsMike, I have seen a slow crawl recently of the capability to stream video and audio from websites. On ElectricMovies, for instance, to make a point about a great piece of cinematography, I can actually include a link to the clip.
Obviously, (The MikeVideo is copyrighted material the Elvis camp will probably quickly remove, although I credit Elvis Presley Enterprises with the material, and Elvis for the talent. I merely edited it together. If I can make room for them on the server, I have all kinds of ideas for video clips as links.......These files are large so far, but with the two Bollywood clips and the Elvis clips, I am now officially streaming video. (Wait a minute, I streamed the "Come What May" number from the Moulin Rouge tribute page and that was 15 minutes long, streamed as both audio and video, so the dream is still alive for the meantime. It is pretty exciting to now acutally be able to put my copy/cut/and paste digital MikeVideos online.
:: Michael Nyiri 10:09 PM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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:: Tuesday, June 10, 2003 ::
Now that I have finished the delightful DDLJ, as it is affectionately known in India, or translated correctly, "The Big Hearted Wins The Bride", the 1995 film that launched Turner Classic Movies Bollywood festival, I do not want to ruin anything for potential viewers by divulging any more of the plot. I have put some video clips on the internet however, so viewers can sample some of the wonderful musical numbers for themselves. So far, I have two numbers online. I haven't put the best song, the theme song, on the page yet, but it is in the videocamera waiting for me to post it online. Click Here for the "BollyWood Page" of ElectricMovies.
:: Michael Nyiri 5:36 AM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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:: Sunday, June 08, 2003 ::
On Tivo June 2003
Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge
1995, dir. Aditya Chopra
Credited cast:
Shahrukh Khan .... Raj Malhotra
Kajol .... Simran
Amrish Puri .... Chaudhry Baldev Singh
Farida Jalal .... Lajjo
Anupam Kher .... Dharamvir Malhotra
Karan Johar .... Raj's friend
Pooja Ruparel .... Rajeshwari/Chutki
Satish Shah .... Ajit Singh
Anaita .... Sheena

Was just looking over and updating parts of the website again after many months of unuse/neglect, and noticed that this site seems to be in need of a name change to "Electric Cartoons" since it seems that's all I'm interested in these days (by looking at the entries in this site, at least). Well, that's not true, I just don't write as much as I watch, and I hadn't "been here for a while" when I started talking about Miyazaki (and his entry was deleted but there was more talk on the site before the crash, I just didn't rewrite it.) and the Animatrix shorts.

Last week TMC began a Bollywood Festival and I tuned in to the station probably first because I am truly interested in the fact that India produces about 800 films a year (and I understand the industry is in a terrorism fueled slump right now) and I haven't seen any of them. Also, the "Bollywood Style" can be distilled into a simple formula,the stettings and production design are lush, and there are always elaborate musical numbers, which drive the plot. Much like the heralded 1940's and 50's MGM Musicals. This of course is a formula I embrace fully.The musical I chose to watch just happens to be the most heralded and loved movie in India,the almost unpronounceable "Dilwale Dulhania Le Jayenge" (The English translation is something like: "Persistent Young Man will Eventually, Even after two or three hours of film time, Win the Heart, Mind, and Very Soul of the One True Love that He has Been Chasing through six or seven Countries Even though she Has Been Promised to and is Destined to Marry Another in the Land of Her Father".
I'm only kidding. I am thouroughly transfixed with this movie. A short comparison would be "Flower Drum Song" with Hindis instead of Chinese and Punjab, India instead of San Francisco. The movie is a Full Blown Musical Comedy, a form which I have been preaching about for years, which American audiences seem to thave tired of in the sixties (except now that Chicago got an Oscar a trend that will soon change, I hope) and (to a Westerner, especially an American) a very involving and interesting look into another culture and a clue as to how throughout history "foreign" cultures have been colonized and force fed the Western Way, and their very existence is a mishmash of their own and intruding cultural references, some of which they exploit, some of which they embrace, and some of which they abhor. I am charmed at how some of the "imported" Hollywood conventions have been "Hindi-ized" in the Bollywood style.
To wit, the dialogue is scrumptious. I haven't even finished watching the movie, by the way, as I write, because I just wanted to put up another post not involving cartoons.But the rapid fire exchanges between Shakrukh Khan as Raj, the hero (the titular Persistent Young Man") and his father, who is not credited above, because he isn't in many scenes, reminded me of Marx Brothers routines. And as I mention, this is not a major part of the film. The plot concerns Raj's exploits to win Simran (an amazing turn by Kajol, whom I understand is a major Indian talent and poster girl, and no wonder, she is dynamite, sort of like a young Ann-Margret.) who is engaged to be married to the son of her father's neighbor in India in an arranged marriage.
Well, more to come. I'm going to tune in again, now that writing about the movie makes me want to see it. Great thing about that Tivo, I am truly almost living in a world of movies on demand.

:: Michael Nyiri 12:17 PM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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:: Friday, June 06, 2003 ::
I was listening to the commentary from the Animatrix documentary on Animie. I can't remember who mentioned this, one of the directors or producers of the shorts, but in discussing animie, a lot of people immediately notice that a lot of these films involve post apocalyptic themes. The point made was that Japan is the only post apocalyptic society on the Earth. They had atomic bombs dropped on them, and the survivors are the genius talents behind a lot of the best animie films. I am ashamed now that I can't remember this particular artist, because I returned the tape, but one of the animie films I saw years ago was about a boy who survived Hiroshima.

:: Michael Nyiri 8:51 AM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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A still from
the short film "Beyond" on the "Animatrix" DVD


I rented "The Animatrix" which came out on DVD this week. I am blown away. The "Matrix" sequel, "Reloaded", pales in comparison to the works of art on display in this DVD. Larry and David Wachowski commissioned Japanese anime directors to work with them on the overall "vision" of their mythology, and the animators came up with some of the more thrilling animation in decades. Certain of these "films" have been seen in theaters as teaser trailers, and four have been downloadable from the Animatrix website. Two friends had mentioned the films last month, and I dutifully downloaded the free files but didn't know what to expect from the whole project until I popped the DVD into my player. 10 of 10 on the Mikometer. Excellent animation. Excellent stories. And some fresh epiphanies gained from the documentary detailing the history of the Japanese art form of Animie and Manga. Of the nine shorts, I was particularly awed by three of them. Mahiro Maeda, best known in Japan for "Blue Submarine #6", one of the first animie collections to blend conventional animated characters with CGI composited vehicles and virtual sets, directed the two part "Second Renaissance", which serves as a very ironic, especially in these troubled times,history of the creation of the matrix, from the creation of the first robots, through their subjugation and then dismissal by the human race, which of course is finally defeated by the machines. The imagery is a mix of "newsreel footage", Buddhist Mandala impressions, and CGI generated machines which blend seamlessly into the animated backgrounds. "The Last Flight of the Osiris" by Andy Jones, one of the team responsible for "Final Fantasy" has created CGI "sythespians" which completely overshadow the previous work done on Fantasy. The short could easily be inserted into the new Matrix film and I doubt audiences would even guess it is CGI.
The best film of the nine, in my opinion, is "Beyond", which, according to the documetary on the disc, also took the longest to produce. This one isn't part of the free download, and I recommend buying, not renting the DVD, so you can savor it's elegaic imagery and the wonder emaniting from it's cels. Koji Morimoto ("Robot Carnival") is the director. He worked on the seminal "Akira" in 1988, which for many Americans, signaled their awareness of the artform. "Beyond" tells the story of a group of kids in an overcrowded Japanese neighborhood who happen upon a "haunted" house where objects do not behave as they should in "reality". The place is actually a "glitch" in the matrix, and the adventures taken by the group of kids is awe inspiring and beautiful. I have gushed about anime in the past, and have recently "discovered" the works of Hayao Miyazaki, responsible for the 2002 Best Animated Film "Spirited Away". Miyazaki directs in an almost reverential "early Disney" style rather than the "forced" or "limited" animation seen in most animie. His earlier films, 1986's "Castles In the Sky" and 1998's "Kiki's Delivery Service" (with Phil Hartman in one of his last jobs voicing Kiki's cat) are now available on DVD from Disney. (They only distribute the films. Miyazaki's studio in Japan is called Studio Gibli.) When I first saw his "Princess Mononoke" on Ebert's recommendation, I loved it, but didn't realize when watching "Spirited Away" that it was made by the same team. All the films available are now in my DVD collection. Miyazaki, like Osamu Tezuka (the Godfather of Manga) whose work inspires Taro Rin's excellent "Metropolis" from 2001, crafts some of the best films in any canon, be they live action or animated. American audiences (as pointed out again on the Animatrix documetary, "From Scrolls to Anime") think of animated films as cartoons. The Japanese just think of them as movies. And the best seem to be coming out on DVD all the time. Animatrix is merely the latest.

:: Michael Nyiri 8:35 AM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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:: Thursday, June 05, 2003 ::
The last couple of movies I saw in a theater are:
"Down With Love" 8 of 10, one of those wonderfully synthetic widescreen sixties pictures, like "Move Over Darling", or "Pillow Talk", which invariably starred Doris Day and Rock Hudson or DD and RH clones, and the roles Ewan MacGregor and Renee Zellweger inhabit are likable clones as well. Directed by Peyton Reed, who helmed "Bring It On", the black vs. white cheerleader feud film from a couple seasons back, and also partially responsible for "The Upright Citizen's Brigade", one of Comedy Central's inspired and cancelled satire series, "Down With Love" has been incorrectly criticized in the press because some reviewers simply thought you couldn't "spoof" one of those sixties comedies.
I say you can, brilliantly, and Reed has done so.
Renee is better than she was in "Chicago". Ewan gets better with each movie. David Hyde Pierce does a spot on impersonation of Tony Randall, who shows up in the film for good measure. There is a trend developing where movies from the sixties are being "culturally blended" into our theaters. "Far From Heaven" from Todd Haynes and "Catch Me If You Can" from Spielberg were released last year. I expect as boomer directors age, more and more "homages" will be made to the studio film. As Todd says in his commentary on the "Heaven" DVD, which was inspired by Douglas Sirk films, he wanted the locations to look like sets and the sets to look like locations.
When a character in a film is in the back seat of a car, and the background is backscreen projected behind the back window, the artifice is complete, we know we are watching a movie, and the characters know they are in one. Spielberg and Haynes are not really joking in their respective films, however, and Reed is. "Down With Love" is a tasty confection.
"The Matrix Reloaded" 5 of 10 A not very inventive "middle part" to the Matirx trilogy. "The Animatrix" DVD is better. My favorite character, Agent Smith, is back, with a slew of clones, and there are some exciting setpieces, but Agent Smith is underused, even with his evil twin hordes, and I couldn't shake the feeling that I had seen this all before somehow. (In the fourth or fifth matrix perhaps.) Viewing the trailer for the third Terminator movie before seeing the film also contributed to the Deja Vu feeling. Now that it's two years after the first Matrix hit the multiplexes, (and it didn't really blow me away till I saw the DVD to tell the truth), the flying bullet and digital Depalmarounds are ubiquitous, the freeway chase seemed to pale in comparison to, say , the one in "Minority Report", and there were far too many dank and dark shots of the ships and of Zion. Zion reminds me of the Krell's domain in "Forbidden Planet" mixed with the Road Warrior films, specifically the third one.
Anyway, not that impressed. In fact, I have "The Animatrix" on pause, and you can go see some of those on the Animatrix website. Very interesting stuff, especially the 2nd Renaissance films.
:: Michael Nyiri 7:43 AM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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:: Sunday, March 16, 2003 ::


I can't believe that it's after 3:30 AM in the morning (if that isn't redundant enough, and I just finished posting the first group of images, from "The Court Jester.". All images began as "stills" photographed with the digital video camera off the television screen. Then they are "tweaked" as best I can do in Micrografx Picture Publisher. The "photo album" is a Dreamweaver application. One of the reasons I maintain this website is my abounding joy at the wonders available only in my imagination as I put all these programs to work to "create art". My inspiration for creating movie images pages Is Forrest J. Ackerman, the founder of the infamous "Famous Monsters of Filmland" magazine, whose "filmbooks", plot synopses for text, and an abundance of images from the film, introduced me (and a lot of adult males my age) to a great many of the great science fiction and horror films.
The ability to post to the blog program is almost instantaneous. I tried to get on about an hour ago, but couldn't access the program (and started contemplating just buying the professional blogger software.) The dream from the start, for me, in composing computer composites, is to realize anything I imagine, and as I get these wonderful epiphanies by watching movies, and especially now that digital display monitors make it possible for me to experience the films in an almost dreamlike manner unmatched sometimes even by the actual movie theater experience, I want to transpose the feelings and inspiration I get, and hopefully instill in others a likeminded respect for the film medium at it's best. "The Court Jester" certainly qualifies, and I've taken the time to give it "The Image Gallery Treatment."
:: Michael Nyiri 3:43 AM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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:: Saturday, March 15, 2003 ::


I recently viewed "The Court Jester" in my "media room" on the widescreen television. The DVD master was stupendous, and I was struck, again, as I am so often while seeing movies on the HDTV, that I can only now, after almost reaching fifty, experience to a degree what I have always been told was going to be called "movies on demand". And the movies, like "Jester", which is a wonderful musical comedy film from 1956, starring the genius of Danny Kaye, Glynis Johns, the young and beautiful Angela Lansbury, above, and solid character supporting actors like Mildred Natwick, also above, as Griselda, and Basil Rathbone, riffing on his own role in the 1938 "Robin Hood". Alhtough "Jester" is from 1956, the master (in VistaVison widescreen) is so good that it looks like it was made yesterday. The experience thrilled and delighted me. I rented the movie from Netflix, and I "captured" some images, like the one above, by merely aiming the videocamera at the tv screen. I watch in total darkness, and the only light is from the image on the screen. Some came out rather well, and I will be experimenting with these movie images to hopefully make some points about my love affair with the flickers, now that my blog is up again. This is my "getting back acquainted" post to the blog program. "The Court Jester" is the "Airplane" of it's day. It was probably the first immensly popular satire of the movies themselves, and in some instances it surpasses many of the swashbucklers it parodies.

:: Michael Nyiri 10:01 PM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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:: Wednesday, March 12, 2003 ::
By the way, Christopher Walken deserves Best Supporting Actor for "Catch Me If You Can", the best movie directed by Stephen Spielberg this year. Jack for Actor. Dear Ndugu, I think everyone cast their votes for the rebel who became one of the last of "old Hollywood" of the seventies. Gosh, thirty years have passed too quickly to comprehend. And I've got to see if this page posts.
:: Michael Nyiri 10:50 PM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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Oscars. "Gangs Of New York" deserves Best Picture.

For no other reason than this is the slice of life we, as Americans, need to see and understand so that we can understand the world we come from, and the world we live in. But we won't understand, and we won't see "Gangs" as Best Picture, either. That, I'm afraid, is going to be "Chicago", which is steamrolling itself (over 100 million in BO receipts passed) into the movie I wished "Moulin Rouge" had been. Well, popularitywise, at least.
"Chicago" warrants it's own Oscar ramblings and an image I'm rather proud of. When your mouse passes over Catherine Zeta-Jones, she wiggles.

:: Michael Nyiri 9:54 PM Leave a Comment on this Post ::
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