Showing posts with label Sarah Polley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sarah Polley. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 09, 2025

Everything You Ever Need To Know About Life...

... you can learn from:

Take This Waltz (2011)

Margot: Sometimes I'm... walking along the street and a shaft of sunlight falls in a certain way across the pavement and I just wanna cry. And then a second later, it's over. I decide because I'm an adult, to not succumb to the momentary melancholy.

A happy birthday to the great Michelle Williams today. I've been thinking this movie's demanding a re-watch -- I haven't seen it since it came out. I also need to watch MW's series Dying For Sex though -- have any of you watched that yet? I've only heard brilliant things but then, it's Michelle Williams. All there are are brilliant things. 

Tuesday, April 23, 2024

Everything You Ever Need To Know About Life...

... you can learn from:

eXistenZ (1999)

Ted: We're both stumbling around together in this unformed
world, whose rules and objectives are largely unknown,
seemingly indecipherable or even possibly nonexistent,
always on the verge of being killed by
forces that we don't understand.
Allegra: That sounds like my game, all right. 
Ted: That sounds like a game that's
not gonna be easy to market. 
Allegra: But it's a game everybody's already playing.

David Cronenberg's eXistenZ was released 25 years ago today!
If you haven't picked up that 4K yet I recommend doing so.
PS this makes a killer double-feature with Crimes of the Future.

Tuesday, December 12, 2023

Don't Let It Go Away


Let's not talk about how old this makes me feel, and instead just celebrate the fact that it's the 25th anniversary of Doug Liman's masterpiece Go next year -- sidenote: it's the 25th anniversary of a humungous pile of masterpieces next year, given the famed 1999 output -- and the film's soundtrack (which is a stone-cold banger) is getting a re-release on vinyl in February! Pre-order it here. I'm hoping that the soundtrack's not the only thing from this movie that gets attention -- gimme a 4K re-release please! Perfect, perfect movie.

Friday, December 02, 2022

All the Beautiful Santa Booty


The end of the year is the absolute worst time to have any idea what is coming out when -- movies are hitting streaming, movies are hitting New York and Los Angeles, movies are going wide, and keeping track of that is herculean nonsense that even I, with my face pressed to the fishbowl, can't come anywhere near sussing straight. But I'm going to try to steer you toward a few things that are coming out today anyway, because there are several titles of note dropping somewhere, and you can do the work to figure out how you, in the place you live, can see them, whether today or not today. I can't be everywhere! Unfortunately! Cuz if I could I'd really like to be hiding in Jack O'Connell's shower right now. (That photo above is from the new issue of Wonderland magazine and I have been impatiently awaiting more photos to show up for a week but still nothing, sigh. I will surely post them when they do arrive though because my god, look at him.) 

Speaking of Jack though he is on topic here because the new Lady Chatterly's Lover, starring him and The Crown's Emma Corrin, is on Netflix today! Directed by the phenomenally talented Laure de Clermont-Tonnerre (who gifted us with Matthias Schoenaerts in The Mustang previously) this is an absolutely solid and sexy adaptation of D.H. Lawrence's classic provocation -- it's a shame most people will see it on the small screen because it's a movie rich with texture; flesh and fabrics, mud and sweat. Jack and Emma are very fine (in all senses of that word), the costumes are fabulous (Jack looks so good in all those wools and suspenders, swoon) and I recommend checking it out if you're in the mood for a lush period piece with a thrumming pulse.   



Another movie that I recommend that is out today in several cities (and hitting streaming next Friday) is called Nr. 10 and it's another wild eccentricity from Borgman director Alex van Warmerdam -- in fact I have no idea how to write about it since it's a movie populated with so many sudden turns that I'd hate to spoil anyone's ride with it. I don't think you should even watch that trailer I posted above honestly -- if the incredible Borgman didn't convince you to see everything that van Warmerdam puts out for the rest of time I know I can't do a better job than that. Let me just add though that this movie has the best, funniest, most delightful ending of any movie I have seen in years -- if you're watching it and thinking to yourself, "Where the hell is this thing going?" believe me you will never ever in a million years answer that question correctly. My god, I giggled for a full hour.



Also opening in theaters today -- although I have no idea to what extent -- is 2nd Chance, an absolutely fascinating documentary that's as funny as it is terrifying from Ramin Bahrani (director of 99 Homes and The White Tiger) that tells the only-in-America story of Richard Davis, the inventor of the bulletproof vest. The man shot himself in the chest over and over again to prove his invention's worth, built an empire and changed the world for the worse, and... well you really just need to watch this doc. It is, and I don't say this lightly, unmissable. it is bonkers! And I do say that lightly. What a story.

Then there are a couple of movies I have properly reviewed that are hitting theaters today -- I directed you earlier to my review of the gay tearjerker Spoiler Alert but if you missed that click here. I went into this one with pretty low expectations but was happily surprised to have them surpassed, and not just because it made me cry a bunch since I am the world's easiest crier. It's actually an interestingly structured film that takes a few risks with the formula that I appreciated! And the other movie out today that I have also reviewed is Joanna Hogg's haunted history piece The Eternal Daughter, starring Tilda Swinton twice over as mother and daughter. Here is my NYFF review. I absolutely loved it.

But wait wait wait! There is even more. Can you handle it? I don't think you can! There are also two movies I also saw at NYFF but never got around to reviewing that are hitting limited theaters this weekend, and they're among the very finest films of the year. Only unlike the movies I briefly reviewed up top I won't be briefly reviewing these two because if I do write about them they deserve real, proper, lengthy reviews. I just don't have that brainpower in me today, so I'm just giving you the heads-up that they're out and that they are one hundred thousand percent worth seeing. And those would be Sarah Polley's Women Talking (watch the trailer here) and Laura Poitras' devastating and invigorating doc on photographer Nan Goldin called All the Beauty and the Bloodshed. I have seen both of these films twice now and I haven't had a lot of time for re-watching things -- these are just both so excellent I made the damn time. And so should you.

And finally, one more damned thing. If all of that sounds serious and depressing, with the suicides and overdoses and serial rapes and cancer and such -- sounds like a party to me but what do I know -- there's also the terrifically dumb and silly and fun Santa Claus action-comedy Violent Night out too. Starring (Jack Twist side-piece) David Harbour as the real Kris Kringle pulling the "Danny Glover in Lethal Weapon" routine (aka the "I'm too old for this shit.") there isn't a single Christmas movie this thing doesn't rip off -- from Die Hard to Home Alone to Rare Exports to The Ref to Christmas Vacation and on and on and on every note will feel familiar, but you kinda won't care. Mostly because Harbour's having a blast, and there is some really funny and way over-the-top violence ladled over top. The movie is definitely too long (although its last act is its best) and it very much could've used a stronger cast outside of Harbour (most everybody feels like the D-list version of another more interesting actor) but I also had a lot of fun with it, and nobody needs too much seriousness weighing them down this holiday season. So spike some eggnog and skip a family festivity or two for it, I say. 


Monday, October 17, 2022

The Element of Criterion


If you're an avid physical media collector like I am then you'll know the pain of this only too well -- you'll see that a movie is hard to own and so you'll scour the international sellers for it and find a reasonably priced copy and buy it for only then like a week later to have a new U.S. edition be announced. It's happened to us all. Which brings me to today, where I have ended up now owning two copies of Lars Von Trier's 1984 film The Element of Crime just as Criterion has gone and announced a brand new fancy U.S. edition. A few months ago that movie was on the Criterion Channel and so I watched it and I loved it. 


I loved it so much that immediately went and bought the out-of-print Criterion DVD. And then I realized, "Oh wait! I should see the other movies of the trilogy, shouldn't I?" So I went and I bought a foreign DVD boxed-set of the entire trilogy, which includes his 1987 film Epidemic and his 1991 film Europa. And now here we are and it's literally six weeks later and Criterion has announced they're putting out a boxed-set of 4K restorations of the trilogy come January. Argh, et cetera! Anyway my ultimate point is -- hey anybody wanna buy some Lars Von Trier DVDs?

Yes, all of that nonsense aside today is indeed Criterion Announcement Day! They've dropped word on the five titles they're putting out in January of 2023 (well four movies plus the above trilogy) and per usual, all gems. Besides that Lars set the one I'm most thrilled about is Mia Hansen-Løve's 2021 film Bergman Island starring Tim Roth, Anders Danielsen-Lie (mmmmm), Mia Wasikowska, and the great Vicky Krieps -- gimme all the Vickys! All of 'em! I'm not the biggest fan of the Hansen-Løve films that I've seen so far -- I tend to like them fine, but not love -- but Bergman Island is far and away my fave of the bunch. It's the Vicky component obviously. That woman is hypnotic.

The other three January titles hitting Criterion are as follows: there is Lemohang Jeremiah Mosese's 2019 film This Is Not a Burial, It’s a Resurrection, which is the only one of the batch I've never seen. I have heard incredible things from people I trust though -- have you seen it? Then there's John M. Stahl's classic 1934 adaptation of Imitation of Life with Claudette Colbert -- I will cop to liking the Douglas Sirk version more, but what can I say? I am gay. And finally there is the 4K version of Terry Gilliam's 1988 classic The Adventures of Baron Munchausen -- I have to admit I am kind of surprised they're jumping into the mine-field that is this movie at this moment in time, as Gilliam's proven himself to be a total dick with his hysterical "anti-woke" screeds, all while Sarah Polley has spent the past couple of years going on the record saying what a traumatic nightmare experience this set was for her as a child actor. That said I've never been a huge fan of Munchausen -- if we were talking Brazil or Time Bandits or Twelve Monkeys here I'd be more conflicted. 


Friday, October 14, 2022

Everything You Ever Need To Know About Life...

 ... you can learn from:


Sebastian: Just the place to bury a crock of gold. I should like to bury something precious, in every place I've been happy. And then when I was old, and ugly and miserable, I could come back, and dig it up, and remember.


Happy 42 to our beloved Ben Whishaw today! Can you believe I've never seen this version of Brideshead Revisited? I need to get on that. I'm sad that Luca Guadagnino's version doesn't appear to be happening -- apparently the budget grew too big and Luca being Luca... well anyway Ben has a lovely role in Sarah Polley's film Women Talking, which I saw last week at NYFF, and y'all should plan on seeing that and while you're at it on Ben making you cry, as he's wont to do. Not sure I'll have a chance to write about that movie at length but I liked it quite a lot. (I did share some photos from the press conference and the new trailer right here though.)


Monday, October 10, 2022

Pics of the Day


If you're not already following me on Instagram this is me saying "Go do that" because I'm in the thick of the New York Film Festival right now and you'll get to see photos and videos from the screenings and press conferences I'm currently attending, not to mention all of the really dumb photos I take of clouds. Above is from this morning's post-screening Q&A of Sarah Polley's film Women Talking (which I totally loved by the way, in case I don't end up writing a review) -- coincidentally that movie just got a trailer! So I'll share that too. 



Women Talking plays at NYFF tonight and tomorrow
and then hits select theaters on December 2nd.

Tuesday, August 16, 2022

Bones & Me


Things sure been quiet in here today, huh? Sorry about that -- my phone was on the brink of collapse from not enough storage so I've been sludging through the laborious process of burning several months worth of photos from it onto discs and yes, this is a thing I do still, as much as I know it dates me. I don't trust having only digital copies in the cloud -- it's the same as why my walls are lined with blu-rays. And as the other week's Warner Brothers debacle proved, I am right! Anyway I mean to do this more often than I do but inevitably I get lulled into comfort of my phone having ten gazillion gigibytes of space on it and before you know it I have to spend an entire day going through this process. I usually do it on the weekend when blogging doesn't happen anyway but I decided to do it from work today. And isn't this the most riveting story you've ever been told? This is what keeps y'all coming back! Jesus. 

Anyway point being the New York Film Fest announced their "Spotlight" screenings today and Luca Guadagnino's cannibal romance Bones and All is playing! (See the teaser here.) NYFF really is the one-stop fall fest as far as I am concerned. See the entire announcement right here -- they're also showing Sarah Polley's new movie called Women Talking, and they're showing all five episodes of Lars von Trier's new run of Kingdom episodes, and they're showing a doc from James Ivory -- do we think we'll get to see Luca and Timmy and James Ivory reunite at the fest??? Oh I'd die. (Especially after Ivory said all those snotty things about CMBYN lol.) 


Thursday, October 14, 2021

Good Morning, World


Today is the international holiday known as Ben Whishaw's birthday -- our great gay hope is turning 41 today! How are you celebrating? I am celebrating by sharing with you people a dozen or so gifs of him and Andrew Leung rolling around in bed in the opening scenes of the lovely 2014 film Lilting, and then continuing to celebrate by spending the rest of the day thinking about them. Let's quick look at what Ben has coming up ahead work-wise...

... he is in Sarah Polley's next film called Women Talking (I wrote about it here), which is just about as exciting a collaboration as I can imagine. Then you add on the rest of the cast -- Jessie Buckley! Rooney Mara! Claire Foy! Frances f'ing McDormand! I will take one big heaping portion of that, please. The other thing he's got lined up is a British series called This Is Going To Hurt, which has him playing a young doctor in a maternity ward. Everyone involved is very British so I'm clueless, but if it stars Ben I will watch the thing. Hit the jump for more gifs...

Tuesday, June 22, 2021

Ungodly Good


I'm not usually a big fan of using red carpet photos here on the site but I will make an exception for the above photo of actor Luke Kirby at the premiere of his new flick No Man of God at Tribeca because... well he looks real good in it, for one. And for another they haven't dropped very many photos of him in No Man of God yet, which sees him playing the serial killer Ted Bundy, probably because they want to save the reveal for how fucking uncanny he is in the film for closer to its actual release. I'll admit I haven't kept up with Kirby's career since he was terrific (and hot) in Sarah Polley's Take This Waltz way way back in 2012...

... but my boyfriend immediately recognized him as Lenny Bruce on The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel; I haven't watched that program. Anyway I was in no way prepared for how strong his work here is, opposite an also-very-good Elijah Wood as the FBI profiler tasked with getting Bundy's confessions before he hits the electric chair. But I get into all of that in my review of the film which is now on Pajiba -- click on over to check it out. This is one to definitely keep an eyeball out for -- I actually think one of the shots of the year is contained in its midsection, but I won't get into that before more people have the chance to see it themselves...



Thursday, June 17, 2021

I Am Link


--- Now Them's Some Women
-- I was already pleased as a punch to the happy-places when it was announced back in December that not only was Sarah Polley planning on directing her first new movie in nine years (an adaptation of the book Women Talking) but that it was going to star Frances f'ing McDormand, so trying to measure my renewed enthusiasm when a big batch of absolute queens were further announced to fill out the film's cast this week would be a folly's errand. Stratospheric shit! Said queens include Rooney Mara, Claire Foy, Jessie Buckley, and Ben f'ing Whishaw, oh my! The story "follows a group of women in an isolated religious colony as they struggle to reconcile their faith with a series of sexual assaults committed by the colony’s men." This is gonna be something y'all.

--- Friends No More -- I'll admit that my enthusiasm for In Bruges director Martin McDonagh has been dulled a bit by the projects he's done since that -- Seven Psychopaths and especially Three Billboards (ugh) were big letdowns for me -- but today's news that he's reuniting with the stars of his original masterpiece, Colin Farrell and Brendan Gleeson, for his next one well that gives me renewed vim n' vigor, McDonagh-wise. The film will be called The Banshees of Inisherin and will film in August and is about a pair of lifelong friends who're navigating the awkward space where they no longer want to be friends.

--- Ain't No Mountain -- Similarly it's hard to get too worked up over a new Doug Liman movie, even though his earliest work I glommed onto, 1999's Go, ranks among my all-time faves, since he hasn't made anything as good since. But I'm gonna give him another chance with this next project because it stars Ewan McGregor and Ewan is always worth a chance. It's a biopic of adventurer George Mallory, who tried to climb Mount Everest back in the 1920s, and it will co-star Mark Strong and Outlander hunk Sam Heughan.  Oh and it'll be called Everest, just like the Jake Gyllenhaal movie from a couple of years back, but I have a feeling that if Ewan has a nude scene in his Everest movie he'll let them leave it in, unlike Jake, so Ewan wins.

--- Step Up -- Another addition to the incredibly stacked cast of that true-crime adaptation The Staircase, which already had Juliette Binoche, Colin Firth, and Toni Collette -- ex-twink Dane DeHaan will now also be sleazing around the joint. I was going to make a joke about how he could play The Owl but I don't know if any of you will get that joke. Anyway I apparently missed the news that the series will also co-star Parker freaking Posey too! Everyone, literally everyone, will be there. get me to this set!

--- What's Good For The Gigolo -- An update on a project we've been keeping tabs on: the series re-do of American Gigolo starring Jon Bernthal got picked up by Showtime, a ten-episode order. It's actually technically a sequel to the movie starring Richard Gere; Bernthal's playing the same character, just years later after he's gotten out of jail. See all of MNPP's previous coverage on this series here, but pay special attention to this post. That's the winner.

--- Til Death Do -- Kristen Wiig is going to star in an adaptation of the upcoming book called The Husbands, which "follows an overworked mother who, while house-hunting in a nice suburban neighborhood, meets a group of high-powered women with enviably supportive husbands. When she agrees to take on a legal case involving the untimely death of one resident’s husband, she risks exposing not only the secrets at the heart of her own marriage, but the true secret to having it all, one worth killing for." I can't for the life of me tell the tone from that description; it could be dead serious or it could be Desperate Housewives. Even a gender-flipped Stepford Wives maybe?

--- Channing Sandwich -- Speaking of movie descriptions that I can't get a handle on the tone for, Zoe Kravitz has gone and written herself a star vehicle called Pussy Island (indeed) that will have her heading to the orgy-centric tropical getaway of a tech-billionaire (to be played by Channing Tatum, somehow); while there things go from sexy to dangerous, or something. I don't know. Just throw me in a Channing Tatum Orgy and I'll figure it out as I go.

--- And Finally since I began this post with a crazy stacked cast I'll finish with the same - Apple is producing a psychological-thriller series called Surface from the creator of the High Fidelity series, and it will star several MNPP fave babes including Oliver Jackson-Cohen, Stephan James, Ari Graynor, François Arnaud, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, and Marianne Jean Baptiste. Good grief -- Get me to that set! To all of the sets! I gotta get the fuck outta my house! Ahem. Surface is described as "an elevated thriller about a woman’s quest to rebuild her life after a suicide attempt, and her struggle to remember – and understand – everything that led up to the moment when she jumped." Gugu is the lead. (And hopefully Oliver & Francois are sharing a trailer.)

Friday, December 18, 2020

That's the Sound of Women Talking


Flat out ashamed it's taken a full day to get around to mentioning this terribly exciting news -- I've been so buried in Jake Gyllenhaal's ass (hrm) that I haven't been able to come up for air (hrmmmm) to talk about anything else, I guess -- ahem! Sarah Polley is making a new movie! It's her first since 2012's brilliant and deeply moving Stories We Tell, if you can believe it. (And you should, since I just told you that.) And not just that (although that would be enough) -- it will star Frances McDormand! Frannie, on the other hand, we see lots of, but we're still excited every time. It's going to be an adaptation of the many-award-winning novel Women Talking from writer Miriam Toews, which is described thus via Amazon:

"One evening, eight Mennonite women climb into a hay loft to conduct a secret meeting. For the past two years, each of these women, and more than a hundred other girls in their colony, has been repeatedly violated in the night by demons coming to punish them for their sins. Now that the women have learned they were in fact drugged and attacked by a group of men from their own community, they are determined to protect themselves and their daughters from future harm. 

 While the men of the colony are off in the city, attempting to raise enough money to bail out the rapists and bring them home, these women-all illiterate, without any knowledge of the world outside their community and unable even to speak the language of the country they live in-have very little time to make a choice: Should they stay in the only world they've ever known or should they dare to escape? 

Based on real events and told through the “minutes” of the women's all-female symposium, Toews's masterful novel uses wry, politically engaged humor to relate this tale of women claiming their own power to decide."

No surprise here but Margaret Atwood -- who Polley collaborated with on her TV adaptation of Alias Grace -- is a big fan of this book, having called it a real-life story out of her Handmaid's Tale. Have any of you read it? This book was a best-seller and won "Book of the Year" from the NYT Book Review so I am sure plenty of you have read it. I have not, but it sounds like an ace fit for all these incredible and talented names involved.

Wednesday, September 18, 2019

Everything You Ever Need To Know About Life...

... you can learn from:

Bright Star (2009)

Fanny: I still don't know how to work out a poem. 
John: A poem needs understanding through the senses. The point of diving in a lake is not immediately to swim to the shore but to be in the lake, to luxuriate in the sensation of water. You do not work the lake out, it is a experience beyond thought. Poetry soothes and emboldens the soul to accept a mystery.
Fanny: I love mystery.

There are four movies of some note celebrating their tenth anniversaries today. There's this film here by Jane Campion. Then there's Karyn Kusama's horror flick Jennifer's Body, which seems to have finally started getting the respect it deserves now that everybody's hate for Megan Fox has cooled. 

Then there is Steven Soderbergh's The Informant! which I really and truly adore -- mostly for Melanie Lynskey, but I think it's one of his best and I'm a fan. And then finally there is Vicenzo Natali's much maligned Splice, which damn the haters I really enjoyed. I will admit I haven't seen it in ten years, but I think it's one of those movies that got an "F" from audiences that was just too freaking weird for them to get. 

But I digress! I polled y'all on Twitter earlier this week and Bright Star won the poll, just by the smallest of smidges over Jennifer's Body. So Bright Star gets today's post. I am fine with this, as Bright Star is a masterpiece and Ben Whishaw in Bright Star is also a masterpiece. Tell us which of these movies you love the most, or about how much you fell in love with Ben Whishaw here, in the comments!


Wednesday, April 17, 2019

Good Morning, World

.
I know I just posted about Go for its 20th anniversary last week, but I only just got around to properly re-watching it last night and when I saw this hysterical throwaway gag from its final few minutes -- Ronna's waking up in the hospital after getting run down and it's Christmas morning and that sight is the first thing she sees across from her -- I knew I had this morning's "Good Morning" post in the bag. This movie is simply perfect -- yes even the Vegas segment, and I won't hear otherwise. (The Vegas segment has a cameo from my beloved Tane McClure of Crawlspace fame, after all.)
.

Tuesday, April 09, 2019

5 Off My Head: New, You're Still So New

.
It's the 20th anniversary of one of my favorite movies of all time today! Doug Liman's Go came out on April 9th 1999 -- aka the greatest year of movies in our lives; have you voted in the poll yet? Go often gets lumped in with the Pulp Fiction rip-offs that swamped the cinemas of the late 1990s but timeline jumps and multi-POVs aside it's so much more than that, or it's at least the very best of that. To be honest I like it more than Pulp Fiction and you can stick that in your day-glo alien sippy-cup and smoke it.

Anyway I was in college when it came out and I was doing a shit-ton of drugs at the time (hey kids don't do drugs or whatever) and this movie is my American Graffiti -- my Diner, my Grease. It captured one of the happiest times of my life and turned it into a big fun blast of cinema with a huge cast of characters played by a huge cast of up and coming or perfectly of their moment actors. Sarah Polley, Timothy Olyphant, Katie Holmes, Jay Mohr, William Fichtner, Nathan Bexton, Scott Wolf, Jane Krakowski, Taye Diggs, Breckin Mayer, James Duval, Melissa motherfuckin' McCarthy! I mean!

Oh and it's got a soundtrack for the ages...
.
.
... I honestly get a little bit of a high just hearing that song. If you guys knew how much ecstasy I took while listening to the Go soundtrack in 1999-2000 you would weep for my brain cells, but I wouldn't trade them back for those memories I barely retain anymore thanks to all the drugs for the world.

Anyway a happy 20 to a still great film, 
and in its honor, a list!

My 5 Favorite Line Readings in Go

"How would you fuck me?"

"Look how far it got you."

"Gay men are so hot. It's tragic."

"So Zach. Would you say
you're open to new things?"

"There was this one time, you missed each other 
by like three minutes. It was SO exciting!"

--------------------------------

How much do you love Go?
.

Friday, March 29, 2019

There's Something About 1999

.
We just mentioned how The Matrix is turning 20 this weekend, which got us to look on back -- what I believe to be the very first big project that MNPP ever tackled, way back in 2006, was a look back at seven years previous: an appreciation of the films of 1999. Now I link to that but I warn you it's pretty basic -- I was just getting my footing with this whole blogging thing then. Still I'd say that was some special foresight on my part, given how we're all going nuts here in 2019 wishing the astonishing run of films from 1999...

... a happy 20th anniversary week after week. Fight Club! Go! Election! Magnolia! The Blair Witch Project! Being John Malkovich! The Sixth Sense! It's endless and astonishing stuff. We were really afraid Y2K was gonna be it -- we were getting out all the good stuff while we could!

So anyway back in 2006 I polled y'all to choose your favorite film of the year (from nine choices I designated) and y'all picked Spike Jonze's film Being John Malkovich as your fave with a hefty 22% of the vote. And hey, that was a good pick! It still looks good here in 2019. I have always had smart readers, awwww. But let's see if we feel differently in 2019. Here's the same nine films -- now vote!

Somewhat surprisingly I haven't had to personally re-pick my favorite films of 1999 yet for our "Siri Says" series, and my favorites now would look somewhat different than it did in 2006, but we'll save that for when Siri tells me to do that. (I live to serve.) But y'all please take to the comments and tell me which 1999 films I'm a fool for forgetting for now!


Tuesday, January 08, 2019

Everything You Ever Need To Know About Life...

... you can learn from:


Geraldine: Life has a gap in it. It just does.
You don't go crazy trying to fill it like some lunatic.

A happy 40 to the great Sarah Polley today, and because we're wishing her a happy stress-free day we will go out of our way not to nag at her to make another movie please please for the love of all things good and decent in this world we need you, Sarah, we neeeeed youuuuuuuuuuuu.... 

... ahem. Sorry, Sarah. I know she's working on that mini-series with the great Charlie Plummer called Looking For Alaska right now. I will be patient. Sigggh.
.

Wednesday, April 04, 2018

Everything You Ever Need To Know About Life...

... you can learn from:

Cosmopolis (2012)

Elise: I like taxis. I was never good at geography, and I
learn things by asking the drivers where they come from.
Eric: They come from horror and despair.
Elise: Yes, exactly. One learns about the countries
where unrest is occurring by riding the taxis here.

(Note to self: check to see if I have done this book store scene for my "Great Moments in Shelves" series yet.) Cosmopolis is a movie that I had one of the most drastic swerves of opinion on ever - I, in the infamous words of Roger Ebert, hate hate hated it the first time I saw it, but then on a second time through I suddenly, out of nowhere, liked it quite a bit. I'm still unable to explain what changed between my first and second viewing - perhaps I was taken over by a pod person? Ha if I was taken over by a pod person I would be, like, way happier... wouldn't I? 

Oh Enemy. How I love Enemy. On that note a happy birthday to the super talented Sarah Gadon! She has made some very fine choices in her career - look no further than her last project, Sarah Polley's Alias Grace, and her next project, Xavier Dolan's The Death and Life of John F. Donovan. She has worked with the cream of the Canadian crop! Cronenberg, Polley, Dolan, Villeneuve... next stop should totally be a role on Schitt's Creek. (Another note to self: the Canadian Mafia is real.)
.

Friday, January 12, 2018

Everything You Ever Need To Know About Life...

... you can learn from:


Paul Morrissey: You call this a groovy light show. I'd rather sit and watch the clothes dryer at the Laundromat. Oh, look. It changed color. Where's a love child? They'll get a kick outta this. Only a hippie would find this even remotely interesting, but I'll tell ya. You spend one day with the hippies, and you realize how truly refreshing and unpretentious, hard core, New York degenerates are.

I really need to re-watch this movie, I haven't seen it in such a very long time. A happy birthday to director Mary Harron today! I am going out of my way to not quote Mary Harron's Masterpiece American Psycho obviously, because that's usually my go-to, but the woman has got a stellar filmography top to bottom... even if the race from the top to the bottom of it is far too brief. Did we all watch Alias Grace by now? Thoughts? And thoughts besides, "I want to bend Edward Holcroft over a barrel" I mean...