Showing posts with label Memoirs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Memoirs. Show all posts

Friday, May 26, 2017

"Snatched" and The Week in Reviews

[I review the new Amy Schumer-Goldie Hawn comedy "Snatched" as well as DVDs "Why Him?" and "Shut In."  The Book of the Week is "My Mother's Kitchen: Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner and the Meaning of Life" by Peter Gethers. I also bring you up-to-date with "My 1001 Movies I Must See Before I Die Project" with "The House is Black."]



Snatched


Emily Middleton (Amy Schumer) is happily planning her upcoming vacation to Ecuador with her boyfriend...until her boyfriend dumps her.  She has an non-refundable ticket.  Who can she get to go with her?  Surely, not her overprotective Mom...

Emily lives in New York City and is your typical millennial - and no offense to millennials, but she is a little, well a lot, self centered and clueless with an Instagram addiction.  When her musician boyfriend breaks up with her she doesn't quite get it.

"I'm breaking up with you," he says over lunch.

To which she cluelessly replies, "When?"

Like I said, clueless.

Well, even though she didn't get it, the break-up is immediate and now Emily is stuck with a non-refundable ticket to Ecuador and can't find anyone to go with her. Worse, she has also lost her job.  She goes home to visit her Mom, Linda (Goldie Hawn), and to lick her wounds.  Linda lives alone and is an empty-nester with a lot of fears.  She occasionally checks online for love, but she is still clearly in Mom mode. She spends her time checking the many locks on her doors and taking care of her agoraphobic grown son, Jeffrey (Ike Barinholtz). She also fusses over Emily while Emily takes her mother for granted and basically doesn't approve of her. 

However, while looking through one of her mother's closets, Emily finds an old scrapbook and sees pictures of her Mom from her younger days, traveling and having a great time (this is also a chance for us to also see Goldie back in her heyday which I would bet Goldie wanted us to see since she hasn't made a movie in 15 years).  Emily gets the idea that maybe her mother could be fun and go with her to Ecuador.  After a funny scene where Emily tries to convince Linda to leave her safe environment and have some fun, off they go to Ecuador where Linda plans to sit by the pool and read her book. No mingling with the locals for her!

Meanwhile, Emily meets James (Tom Bateman), a handsome guy who comes on to her in the bar.  He is so handsome and she is so stunned that he wants HER that she throws caution to the wind, much to Linda's chagrin, and goes off with him on a whirlwind tour of the area that includes a party with the locals, where Emily gets very drunk.  But James is a gentleman and returns Emily safely to her room with an invitation for a sightseeing trip the next day. Linda is also invited and reluctantly tags along and that's when it happens....some bad guys ram the car and the next thing Emily and Linda know, they are locked up in a dirty cell.

The two manage to escape the cell, hop a truck and suddenly find themselves in Colombia.  The rest of the film is all about Emily and Linda trying to elude the very bad guy, Morgado (Oscar Jaenada), who didn't take kindly to Emily killing his son.  Emily develops an uncanny and very funny ability to kill bad guys, but more importantly, Emily finally learns that she had her mother pegged all wrong.  Her mother is AWESOME!

Directed by Jonathan Levine and written by Katie Dippold (though I am sure Amy had a hand in it), this is the best comedy to come along in a long while.  Why?  Because it is actually funny.

I know that Amy Schumer is an acquired taste for many.  I actually think she is funny, but sometimes she does go too far with the sex jokes.  Her last stand-up - The Leather Special - was not my cup of tea.  But, hey, I'm old.  I'm not a millennial and probably don't get what millennials like. But that's not to say she isn't funny because she is.

Speaking of millennials, Goldie Hawn might not be a name that young people recognize today.  She hasn't made a movie for 15 years, but for us Baby Boomers she was a household name and made some of the funniest and most enjoyable rom-coms of all time -  "Foul Play," "Private Benjamin," and "Overboard."  Starting out on TV's "Rowen and Martin's Laugh-in," Goldie took ditzy blonde to a new level. 

But no matter what you think of Amy Schumer or whether or not you know who Goldie Hawn is, here is the most important thing - THIS MOVIE IS FUNNY.  Can you believe it?  A comedy that is actually funny.  I haven't seen one of those is a very long time, though I could have done without the scene with the tapeworm.

And in addition to being funny, the film also has a message.  It actually has many messages: it's about the empty nest, mothers and daughters, girl power and even pokes fun at the U.S. State Department, as in don't expect much help from the U.S. if you get kidnapped overseas.

  • The Empty Nest

It's not easy being a Mom and then all-of-a-sudden you aren't one anymore when your kids grow up.  Linda is having a hard time finding herself and restructuring her relationship with her children now that they are adults, and there is a touching scene toward the end of the film when Linda shares with Emily how difficult it is for parents when their children move on without them.

  • Mothers and Daughters
My daughter and I live thousands of miles apart so because of that we try to do a mother/daughter trip together every year so this film really resonated with me, not just the mother/daughter trip but also because of the generation gap, how difficult it is for mothers and daughters to understand each other.  Mothers have a hard time thinking of their daughters as anything other than that little girl who used to sit on their laps and daughters have a hard time thinking of their mothers as anyone other than someone who is getting in their business and trying to tell them what to do.  I know that now that my daughter is an adult, those trips have helped us understand each other better.

  • Girl Power
Once Emily and Linda decide they need to do something about their predicament and take on the bad guys, they do the requisite "Power Walk."  The Power Walk has now become a cliché.  When the filmmakers want us to be sure to know that the heroes or heroines are now going to kick some butt, there is always the Power Walk, where the actors walk in slow motion toward us, shoulder to shoulder, with determined looks on their faces and an iconic soundtrack behind it.  In the most recent "Guardians of the Galaxy, Vol. 2 (which I will review next week)," there wasn't just one Power Walk but TWO!  Anyway, Emily also demonstrates more girl power when she discovers that she has a knack for killing bad guys in a couple of very funny scenes.

  • The U.S. Government
When Jeffrey gets the ransom call from the kidnappers, he immediately calls the State Department where he speaks with Morgan Russell (Bashir Salahuddin), a beleaguered bureaucrat who doesn't take kindly to Jeffrey asking that they send in the A-Team.  The only help he can give is to tell him the women need to get to the consulate in Bogata.  Not very helpful considering the women are miles from Bogata with no money.  Jeffrey and Morgan have a contentious and very funny relationship as Jeffrey continues to try to get him to do something to find his mother and sister. 

Amy is very funny and even a bit toned down, but for me, Goldie was the revelation.  No ditzy blonde, here. She is funny, yes, but she also shows her acting chops and why she was and still is, such a big star. She was totally believable as Emily's Mom, and I loved her.

Ike and Bashir were also stand-outs who provided some of the funniest moments in the film.

And then there is Roger (Christopher Meloni).  When the women are on the run, they meet Roger, who is dressed very much like Indiana Jones. They are thrilled to get his help, because Roger appears to be someone who knows his way around South America.  He has a boat (reminiscent of the boat in Herzog's "Aguirre, Wrath of God") and offers to take them down the Amazon to Bogata. Unfortunately, Roger is not what he appears to be and one of the funniest moments in the film is when he reveals his true identity and why he is in South America.

Wanda Sykes and Joan Cusack also provide some comedy but seem like after- thoughts as characters.

Rosy the Reviewer says...this is a very sweet film that mothers and daughters should see together (I wish I could have seen it with mine), but more importantly, FINALLY, a comedy that is actually funny.




***Some Movies You Might Have Missed***
(And Some You Will Be Glad You Did)!

On DVD






Why Him? (2016)


What does a Dad do when he doesn't approve of his daughter's choice of husband?

Stephanie (Zoey Deutch) is attending Stanford and, while Skyping from her dorm room with her Dad, Ned (Bryan Cranston), on his 55th birthday, what should he see?  Her boyfriend, Laird's (James Franco), bare bum coming into view as he enters her room with no pants on.  That's our and Ned's first glimpse of Laird.  Not a good start and that sets the stage for what a nut he is and why perhaps Ned would not approve of him.

Ned and his wife, Barb (Megan Mullally, whose voice to me is the equivalent of fingernails on a blackboard) are straight-arrow Midwesterners from Grand Rapids, Michigan (my old neck of the woods, so I know all about those kinds of parents), and when next we see them, the family has flown out to Palo Alto to visit Stephanie, and Stephanie wants them to meet Laird, who it turns out is a billionaire owner of a tech company.

They meet Laird at his impressive compound.  In a classic East meets West culture clash, as in buttoned-up, up-tight East meeting overly-friendly, hugging West, Laird appears and happily shows the family his new tattoo: Stephanie's family's Christmas card picture tattooed on his back, including "Merry Christmas."  Laird is watched over by his major domo, Gustav (Keegan-Michael Key, who is always funny), and one of Gustav's jobs is to attack Laird without warning as a way to keep Laird fit and on his toes, so that is a bit of a shock to our Midwesterners . Laird is also very liberal with the F-bomb and other profanities, which doesn't go over really well either.  Not a great start.

But Laird is trying very, very hard to win Ned and Barb over.  He has put in a bowling alley at his home, because he knows Ned likes to bowl and even has Richard Blais on tap to fix them their meals.  Unfortunately, Blais has prepared edible soil and plantain foam (You "Top Chef" fans will remember that Blais always liked his foam).

So overall Ned is not impressed.

Here is your classic comedy where a seemingly normal young woman has her boyfriend meet her parents and the  boyfriend is decidedly NOT normal and strangely everyone can see that except the girl.  Think "Meet the Parents."

But Ned loves his daughter and wants her to be happy, so despite his misgivings, he says he will give Laird a chance.  Unfortunately, Laird has no filter, overshares, and is very inappropriate, and when he tells them that Stephanie and he are living together and he plans to pop the question, Ned goes ballistic. However, Laird wants Ned's blessing and says he won't marry Stephanie without it.  Just give him until Christmas Day to prove he is worthy.

So now the incentive for Ned is to not give his blessing and to dig up dirt about Laird to prove to Stephanie that she shouldn't marry him.  But naturally it all backfires on Ned.

Laird throws a big Christmas party and does everything he can to impress Ned and Barb.  Kiss, Barb's favorite band, even shows up. It seems that everyone is won over by Laird except Ned. 

James Franco loves to play odd characters that bely his good looks - that nice head of hair and that dazzling smile.  So many in fact that at this point, it would actually be difficult for me to take him seriously in a romantic drama.

Bryan Cranston must have wanted to shed his "Breaking Bad" character and remind us that he can do comedy (he did do comedy earlier in his career with "Malcolm in the Middle."). How else can you explain his being in this film after recent successes in dramas such as "Trumbo" and "All the Way? " And unfortunately, I don't think comedy is his forte.  He seems forced here and is actually just not very funny, even when subjected to some cringe worthy scatological scenarios, one of which has Ned trying to cope with a paperless Japanese toilet.

Despite my not being able to cope with her voice, Mullally is an excellent comedienne and provides much of the humor in this film.  She is expert at under-her-breath, throwaway lines, so listen for those, and she has some of the best lines.

Directed by John Hamburg and written by him with Ian Helfer (Jonah Hill is credited for having something to do with the story too), this is the story of an uptight Midwest conservative learning from a spaced-out West Coast millennial, which could have been rich fodder for some fun, but doesn't hit the mark. It's even got a bit of a metaphor, though it falls into overly sentimental territory: Ned runs a printing company in a world that is becoming increasingly paperless.  I get it. The lack of understanding between the older generation (paper) and millennials (paperless), right?  

For the first hour, this film was mildly amusing as we got to know Laird and could see the steam coming out of Ned's ears, but then I got bored waiting for this thing to resolve itself.   This plot - daughter brings unsuitable suitor to meet the parents - has been done to death and didn't bring anything new to it.

You know you are in trouble when Kiss and a Japanese toilet play a major role in a film.

Rosy the Reviewer says...not why him?  Why ME?





Shut In (2016)


A widowed mother and her disabled stepson live an isolated existence  with a storm coming in this thriller where some strange and scary things start to happen.

Naomi Watts stars as Mary, a child psychologist with a very difficult stepson, Steven (Charlie Heaton) and difficult issues of her own.  Steven has just unwillingly gone off with his Dad to boarding school while she stays behind. En route there is a car accident.

Flash forward six months later...

Lifetime movie cliche anyone?  (for more information on Lifetime Movie cliches, see my blog post "Lifetime Movies: A Baby Boomer's Appreciation"), and that flash forward is not the only Lifetime movie device you will encounter in this film.

Anyway, Mary's husband has been killed in the car accident, and now the stepson is living alone with Mary.  Unfortunately he was badly injured in the car accident, and he is a paraplegic with brain damage.

Mary is informed that one of her patients, a little boy named Tom (Jacob Tremblay), who is hearing impaired, is going to be transferred to another school in Boston. Mary is not happy about that, but there is nothing she can do. Later, Mary hears glass shattering and her car alarm going off. Naturally she goes outside in THE DARK all by herself or this wouldn't be a classic thriller about a woman living one her own with a disabled son who would be no help to her should something bad happen.  

Entering the garage, Mary finds one of her car windows smashed in and Tom, that little hearing-impaired boy I mentioned earlier, fast asleep on the backseat. She brings him inside, but after discussing him on the phone inside her office, when she returns, she finds her front door standing open and Tom is nowhere to be found. Mary informs the police and they search for Tom while Mary continues to hear sounds in the night and to experience strange, dream-like horrors.

What the hell is happening?

This genre - a woman all alone plagued by things that go bump in the night -  always has certain criteria.  Glad you asked.  Let me share those with you:

The Top 20

#1 - An idyllic but very remote location.  What could possibly happen in a beautiful place like this?

#2 - The woman is alone or with someone who can't really help her, in this case the only other person with her is her stepson who is a paraplegic.

#3 - Next, expect the unexpected - it's always the least likely person or our heroine does something least likely.  Just think least likely. 

#4 - Our heroine has to be troubled - in this case, she is having problems dealing with her stepson and actually dreams of drowning him.  She is also an insomniac which calls everything she sees into question.

#5 - The woman goes out into the dark alone to investigate a noise and opens up the gate thus possibly allowing bad guys to get in.  And right here, I have to say, I shouted at the screen (I am prone to that kind of thing when I get frustrated), WHY???  What woman in her right mind would hear a noise out there in the dark and go out by herself to investigate - without a gun?

#6 -  A black cat jumps out making us all jump and then we and our heroine breathe a sign of relief thinking that it was only the cat that made the noise.  If only.

#7 - A knock on the door.  DO NOT ANSWER THE DOOR! (I am shouting at the screen again)

#8 - Another strange sound and she goes outside AGAIN, this time leaving the front door open, forcing you to scream "WHAT IS WRONG WITH THIS WOMAN?!"

#9 - A nightmare scene occurs, so now we are questioning truth vs. reality.  Is Mary imagining all of this?

#10 - I am now reminded that next time I am home alone at night I am going to be terrified.

#11 - Oh, geez, now she is going down into a dark basement by herself!

#12 - A dark figure runs across the screen behind her.  SHE IS NOT ALONE!

#13 -  Many gotcha moments that make you jump, most of which turn out to be nothing, thus letting your guard down so when the big payoff comes you really jump out of your seat.

#14 - A reminder that all bad things happen at 2am (my mother warned me about that).

#15 - There is a warning that a big storm is coming.  Of course there is.  And the power could go off. And of course it does because in movies like this the lights always go off so that our heroine can go down in dark basements by herself like an idiot.

#16 - Phone goes dead. Of course.

#17 - Cat and mouse game begins.

#18 - Friend who comes to check on our heroine gets killed.

#19 -  Big twist.  Things are not as they appear - and it all goes crazy.

#20 - Our heroine stops being a victim and goes ballistic.

There you have it.  Any questions? 

Directed by Farren Blackburn with a screenplay by Christina Hodson, this film asks the question: who is really the shut in here?  It also asks, just how many movies exactly like this have you already seen?

Rosy the Reviewer says...a psychological thriller that checks all of the above boxes and, despite the usual good performance by Watts, prompts me to ask:  Why?  You've probably seen this film already a million times on Lifetime.




***My 1001 Movies I Must See Before I Die Project***



201 to go!

Have YOU seen this classic film?





The House is Black (1964)



A short documentary about a leper colony in northern Iran.

Written and directed by Forugh Farrokhzad, this 22 minute black and white short combats the "ugliness" of lepers in a leper colony by using poetry, religion and gratitude, challenges you to see beauty in creation.  The film was meant to shed light on leprosy so that something could be done about it.

The film starts with a black screen and a narrator warning about the images to follow. It makes the case that leprosy is a disease of the poor and with proper care and medical treatment it can be cured.  However, the way that people with leprosy were treated was to segregate them and neglect them in leper colonies.

People in the leper colony are seen eating, having medical treatments, in class and going about their daily lives.  There are children playing but also people with rotting flesh and parts of their faces and bodies eaten away. The images are sometimes difficult to look at.

All of the images are accompanied by narration by Farrokhzad of her own poetry and religious readings and begs the question:  Is there still beauty in creation when the creation isn't beautiful? Can beauty be found in ugliness?  Despite deformities, can one still be grateful for what one does have? 

It was the only film directed by Farrokhzad before her death in 1967.  During shooting she became attached to a child of two lepers, whom she later adopted.  The film received little attention outside of Iran but has since been recognized as a landmark in Iranian film and helped to pave the way for the Iranian New Wave of filmmakers.

I think this film would have been more meaningful having done a little research beforehand.  Seeing the film cold, it was difficult to see the point but understanding why the film was made and something about the filmmaker makes the film more potent.

Why it's a Must See: "At once lyrical and extremely matter-of-fact, devoid of sentimentality or voyeurism yet profoundly humanist [this film] offers a view of life in the colony...that is spiritual, unflinching, and beautiful in ways that have no apparent Western counterparts; it registers like a prayer."
--"1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die."

Rosy the Reviewer says...a grotesquely beautiful film, but certainly not for everyone.
(b & w, in Persian with English subtitles)



 
***Book of the Week***





My Mother's Kitchen: Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner and the Meaning of Life by Peter Gethers (2017)



Nothing like a son writing admiringly about his mother.

Peter Gethers is an author, screenwriter, playwright, book editor and film and television producer.  His mother, Judy Gethers, was the daughter of the founder of Ratner's restaurant, a legendary Jewish kosher dairy restaurant on New York City's lower East Side. She herself became a legendary figure in the L.A. cooking scene, when, at the age of 53, she took her first job, working with Wolfgang Puck at Ma Maison, running and teaching at its cooking school with Julia Child, Maida Heatter and Paula Wolfert.  She was known as the "Ma of Ma Maison."  Later she followed Puck when he opened Spago and wrote several cookbooks.

Judy faced several health challenges over her lifetime, but when she suffered a stroke in her 80's, she was robbed of her ability to cook, but through regular visits with her son, Peter, she and he talked about food and her life which culminated in this book.  Through their visits, Peter learned about his mother's favorite dishes, and though he did not consider himself much of a cook, Peter decided to honor his mother by preparing her breakfast, lunch and dinner, each consisting of her favorite dishes - and in so doing mother and son drew closer.

The menus?


Breakfast

  • Ratner's Matzo Brei
  • The Beverly Hilton Coffee Shop's and the Cock'n Bull's Eggs Benedict.

Lunch

  • Barbara Apisson's Celeriac Remoulade
  • Louise Trotty's Chocolate Puddy
  • Joel Robuchon's Mashed Potatoes
  • Yotam Ottolenghi's Quail

Dinner

  • Before-Dinner Drink: Peter Kortner's and The Martini Brothers' Perfect Martini
  • Wolfgang Puck's Salmon Caulibiac
  • The Tornabenes' Buccatini with Cauliflower, Pine Nuts, Currants, Anchovies and Saffron
  • Solferino's Steak with Truffle Cream Sauce
  • My Almost-Made-Up Fava Bean Puree
  • Nancy Silverton's and Abby Levine's French Boule and Challah
  • Romanee-Conti's Greatest Red Wine: La Tache
  • Smoothest White Wine There Is: Batard-Montrachet
  • Burgundian Store-Bought Cheese: Epaisses
  • Martha Stewart's Tarte Tatin

Quite a daunting set of menus for someone who can't cook! 

But therein lies the humor...and the love that exudes from this book. And yes, there are recipes as well as stories about the people, food and drink mentioned in the menus, as well as tales about his family and his growing up years all interwoven throughout the book as he goes on a quest to prepare these special meals for his mother. 

For each meal, Gethers shares the menu and then gives often very funny accounts of trying to find the right ingredients, the proper tools and then trying to prepare the meal exactly as it is supposed to be prepared as per his mother.  It is funny and very touching to envision this grown son wanting to do something like this for his mother.  We mothers can only hope our own sons would care as much.

Gethers also shares what he learned about himself:

"Here's what I learned from cooking with my mother and talking to her and absorbing her wisdom.  Here is what I learned in my search to find meaning in my mother's kitchen: Food is not a be-all and end-all.  It does not provide meaning, though it does provide pleasure.  Nothing that provides pleasure can do so in a vacuum.  It is sharing our pleasure that provides real pleasure.      Love can fade.  Families can break apart.  Nothing you do in the kitchen can really alter that.  But love can also last...And food can be used to celebrate and cement love and family, strength and comfort.  It did for my mother.  It does for me now."

Gethers' recollections of his mother who he clearly admired and loved, and his attempts to get the food just right for her was all very touching.  I cried.

Food is love.  Preparing a meal for someone is an act that shows that love. I have a similar story in my own life, though the cuisine is hardly as fancy. My Dad was an only child and his parents - my grandparents - lived across the street from us.  As they aged (my grandmother was blind), my Dad would stop by their house on his way home from work and prepare their dinner. I wish now that I had spoken more to him about that, what he prepared and how he felt about it.

This book is very much a literary version of one of my favorite documentaries, "Nothing Left Unsaid," where Anderson Cooper talks with his mother, Gloria Vanderbilt, about her life, to really try to know and understand her so that when she is no longer around, there is nothing he will regret, nothing left unsaid.

Rosy the Reviewer says...an inspiring book about food and love and a reminder to make the most of our time with our parents.  NOW GO CALL YOUR MOTHER!  Or better yet, prepare her a favorite meal.


Thanks for reading!

 

See you next Friday 

 
for my review of
 

"Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2"


and



The Week in Reviews
(What to See or Read and What to Avoid)


 and the latest on



"My 1001 Movies I Must See Before 

 I Die Project." 


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Friday, March 24, 2017

"Beauty and the Beast" and The Week in Reviews

[I review the new live-action version of "Beauty and the Beast" as well as DVDs "Elle" and "Priceless."  The Book of the Week is singer Judy Collins' take on conquering food, "Cravings."  I also bring you up-to-date with "My 1001 Movies I Must See Before I Die" with Luchino Visconti's "Ossessione."]



Beauty and the Beast


The tale of what us girls have to do to get out of our provincial towns: move in with a beast!

Who doesn't know the story of "Beauty and the Beast?"

A spoiled young prince lives in splendor in a castle.  When an old crone offers him a single rose for shelter for the night, he cruelly rejects her, not realizing that she is an enchantress who will retaliate by turning him into a beast, his servants into household objects and erasing the memory of the castle from the nearby villagers. Which she does. The Enchantress then gives the Beast a rose before warning him that he will remain cursed unless he learns to love another and earn her love in return before the last petal falls.

Then there is Belle (Emma Watson), a beautiful young girl who lives with her father, Maurice (Kevin Kline).  Belle is believed to be odd by the townsfolk because she is bookish. Librarians get that every day. But Belle realizes that books can transport her out of her provincial life and expand her world.  Again, librarians have been trying to tell you all that for years and years.  Belle is courted by the handsome Gaston (Luke Evans), who is not only NOT bookish, he is boorish. 

One day, when Maurice heads off to market with his horse Philippe, he is attacked by wolves and seeks help at a nearby castle.  Well, it just so happens this is the same castle where The Beast lives and he imprisons Maurice after Maurice tries to take a single rose from The Beast's garden. The Beast doesn't look kindly on thieves.

When Belle comes looking for her Dad, The Beast says he will free Maurice but she will have to take his place, which Belle does. Belle is that kind of daughter.  A good one.  She takes Maurice's place and over time, the two bond a bit, especially when The Beast shares his library with Belle.  Remember?  She is bookish. But even though she and The Beast have settled into an uneasy relationship, when she gets the opportunity to escape she does but on her way to freedom she is attacked by wolves. The Beast saves her but not before he is injured. Belle could run away, but once again, Belle shows her goodness and returns to the castle to take care of The Beast and their relationship deepens.  Everything comes to an end when Gaston and the villagers storm the castle to save Belle and the true identity of The Beast is revealed.

And wouldn't you know?  Sigh...  The Beast is that hunky Dan Stevens who played Matthew Crowley on "Downton Abbey."

Moral:  Stick with your beast of a guy long enough, and he will start looking better and better to you.

Most of us grew up with this story and saw the 1991 Disney animated classic, so remaking this film was risky.  And you know how I feel about remakes. 

But this film is utterly beautiful and charming and benefits from the live action.

I love musicals and am so glad this year we have had two wonderful musicals: "La La Land" and now "Beauty and the Beast."

Though "La La Land" paid homage to musicals of the past, it also pushed the movie musical to a new level.  However, that doesn't mean we don't still enjoy the old classical musicals like "The Sound of Music," "Oklahoma" and "West Side Story."

And with this new live action rendition of "Beauty and the Beast," we are back to those days of the old style musical with lush orchestration, lavish costumes and gorgeous set decoration.  And in case we didn't notice that it's an old style musical, we are reminded in a scene where Belle sings while doing a 360 degree turn on the top of a beautiful hill a la Julie Andrews in "The Sound of Music," and there is also a full-blown Busby Berkeley dance number as the dishes, candelabra and the rest of the household furniture sing "Be My Guest" to Belle. 

But while it takes us back to the musicals of the past, it's also a new take on the old style musical with today's special effects and the actors singing in their own voices.  Like "La La Land," we don't have the operatic voice of the animated Belle but rather Emma Watson's real voice, reminiscent of Emma Stone in "La La Land," who sang all of her own songs, and Emma Thompson sings the iconic "Beauty and the Beast" song, though Angela Lansbury's rendition will always be in my head. 

So this new version of "Beauty and the Beast" feels like the wonderful, lush musicals of old that some of us may miss but updated by modern special effects and advancements.

Emma Watson is not a classic beauty, but she has a warmth and loveliness that comes off the screen and is just right for Belle.  Luke Evans as Gaston is appropriately narcissistic and evil, and Kevin Kline as Maurice is appropriately good and kind as Belle's father. I have already gushed over Dan Stevens.  I love him in anything even when he is covered with hair.  Emma Thompson is fine as Mrs. Potts, though one can't help but remember Angela Lansbury's version of the part and the song, and she is joined by the rest of the all-star cast: Ewan McGregor as Lumiere, Stanley Tucci as Cadenza, Ian McKellen as Cogsworth, Audra McDonald as Madame Garderobe and Josh Gad as LeFeu, Gaston's sidekick, all of whom do not disappoint.

Speaking of Josh Gad, his characterization of LeFeu caused a controversy as it was judged to be a gay character. Russia gave it a stricter rating at its theatres and it was banned in Kuwait, Malaysia and a drive-in in Alabama.  Alabama doesn't surprise me but entire countries?  The funny thing is that if he was supposed to be gay, I didn't notice...and trust me, your kids won't either.  I think it's all much ado about nothing.

I would say that this movie is not for the very little children as there are some scary scenes involving some wolves.  However, these days, who knows?  Maybe three year olds are a lot more sophisticated than they used to be.  But let's just say I have a six-year-old grandson who leaves the room whenever something scary happens or seems to be imminent, and I know he wouldn't like some of the scenes in this movie.

But you don't need to take a little kid to this movie to enjoy it.  It stands alone as a great film for young and old.

The direction by Bill Condon, the script by Evan Spiliotopoulos and Stephen Chbosky (which actually ties up some loose ends from the original story), the set decoration, the special effects, the costumes, all wonderful.

"Tale as old as time,
True as it can be
Barely even friends
Then somebody bends
Unexpectedly..."





Now I can't get that tune out of my head.  

And now you won't be able to either!

Rosy the Reviewer says...The film is enchanting!  You won't want to miss it.



 
 
***Some Movies You Might Have Missed***
(And Some You Will Be Glad You Did)!

On DVD





Elle (2016)


A tough businesswoman is raped in her home by a masked man...and then raped again by the same guy.  As she tries to track the man down, she finds out some unsettling things about herself.

Have you ever watched a movie and really liked it but realized after it was over that you didn't have the slightest idea what just happened?  This movie is a bit like that.

Isabelle Huppert, who was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Actress for this role, plays Michelle LeBlanc, a successful owner of a video gaming company.  She is so successful in fact that she can afford a sprawling house and grounds in Paris, one of the most expensive cities in the world.  If you have ever seen "House Hunters International," you know that you can't buy an apartment in Paris big enough to swing a cat for less than a million.  This is the kind of thing I think about when I am watching movies.  I miss nothing. Anyway, let's just say she is very, very successful.  And from what I've seen in this film, kind of kinky.

The film begins with a rape.  A man all in black wearing a black ski mask breaks into Michelle's house and violently rapes her.  However, she doesn't report it to the police but rather matter-of-factly cleans up the mess, take a bath, and tells her friends about it over dinner.  We later learn that Michelle doesn't have a very good relationship with the police because of a heinous crime her father committed and for which suspicion also surrounded her.

Then Michelle starts getting texts from the rapist and she becomes suspicious of everyone.  She decides to find out who the rapist is on her own.  But what starts out looking like a "rape/revenge" movie, turns into something very different.

Michelle has a difficult job running a video gaming company where the men seem to resent working for a woman. In fact the men in this film are all rather difficult or ineffectual. But everyone is this film has their issues, including Michelle herself, who doesn't always come off as a very nice person.

Let's just say "C'est complique!"

Michelle is having an affair with her best friend's husband, Robert (Christian Berkel); she doesn't approve of her son's girlfriend (Alice Isaaz) or her son,  Vincent (Jonas Bloquet), for that matter; her mother (Judith Magre) is romancing a young gigelot of which Michelle also doesn't approve; and Michelle has a thing for Patrick (Laurent Lafitte), her neighbor across the street who, along with his wife, seems to be very religious. Michelle is one strong cookie, but her life is difficult. She has a difficult job, a difficult son, a difficult mother, a difficult ex-husband, and a cat. (Not sure if the cat is also difficult).  And Michelle also appears to be subsidizing everyone, including the cat. Is she a feminist or a victim or both?

Director Paul Verhoeven directed some straight forward blockbuster films with "Robocop," "Total Recall" and "Basic Instinct," but here he has taken on a very strange story (screenplay by David Birke based on the novel by Phillippe Djian) that is anything but straight forward, though it does fall into the Hitchcockian psychological thriller category along with "Basic Instinct" and other films like "The Jagged Edge" and "The Secret in Their Eyes," which is probably why I liked the film even though I didn't really get it.  But perhaps that is the point.  We don't always understand our own lives, let alone those of others.

Like I said, I really liked this film. This was a tour de force for Huppert, who is very believable in the role and, despite the fact that the story was strange and difficult to understand, it inexplicably held my interest. It was also dark and sexually edgy which are some Verhoeven trademarks, especially if you remember "that scene" with Sharon Stone in "Basic Instinct." One thing I didn't get at all, though, was the black cat, who always seemed to be a witness to the rapes and other dramatic moments.  He played some kind of symbolic role, I think, but not sure what.  Bad luck?

Rosy the Reviewer says...a gripping story with a wonderful performance by Huppert, and if you figure out what it was really about, let me know.
(In French with English subtitles)







Priceless (2016)


A man whose life has fallen apart takes a sketchy job driving a truck across the country, no questions asked but when he finds out what his cargo is, his life takes a different turn.

James (Joel Smallbone) has had a rough time.  His wife has died and he didn't handle that well.  He drank, lost his job and eventually lost custody of his young daughter who now lives with his mother. So he makes his living driving a truck and hauling mysterious cargo.  He is paid well and doesn't ask any questions.  However, one night when he is having trouble staying awake, he drives the truck into a ditch.  When surveying the damage he hears sounds coming from inside the truck, and after hacking off the lock, discovers two young Mexican girls huddled in the back of the truck.

He takes pity on the girls (James is really a good guy at heart), and lets them ride up front with him, and when they stop for gas, he buys them a couple of dresses and tells them to go clean themselves up.  As they continue their journey, the girls, Antonia (Bianca Santos) and Maria (Amber Midthunder), tell James that he is taking them to a place where they will be working as waitresses to pay off some mysterious debt they owe.  And at that point, I'm thinking, "C'mon, James, two girls locked in the back of a truck and you weren't supposed to know that?  Uh...do the words sex trafficking mean anything to you?"  It isn't until he delivers the girls to a guy all pimped up in classic pimp fashion driving a truck filled with girls that James gets the picture. Unfortunately our young girls suddenly get the picture too.

During the trip, James notices the cross that Antonia is wearing around her neck and a discussion about God ensues.  James tells Antonia that God doesn't hear him - remember, James has had a rough life.  Antonia replies that James is never alone.  She tells him she will pray for him because he has clearly lost his faith.  What do you want to bet that James is going to find both God and redemption?

At this point as I am watching, I am now cocking my head and, like James, getting the picture.  This is a faith-based film.

When I realized this was a Christian film or one of those faith-based films, I wondered how it got in my Netflix queue.  Those kinds of films are not usually my cup of tea, but then I realized it was about sex trafficking, and I do have a fondness for movies about the seedy underbelly of life - those are more my cup of tea - so I must have seen a preview for this and put it in my queue, not realizing I was going to get a sermon with my cup of sex trafficking.

Anyway, now James is on a mission to rescue the girls. He joins forces with Dale (David Koechner), the owner of the motel where he is staying. Dale seems to know an awful lot about the sex trafficking going on in his town, and you can probably figure out why.  At one point, James gets a heart-tugging call from his little girl who misses him, and James tells Dale he has to go home to which Dale replies,

"Being a father is the most important job in the world.  All of these girls have a father who loves them. If you hear a voice that tells you to stay, there is a larger voice at play here."

James tells Dale that he doesn't hear the voice and Dale says,

"Then you're just not listening."

Later, as the film progresses and James makes the decision to save the girls, Dale says to James: 

"Sounds like that little voice just got louder.  Welcome to the other side."

Groan.

Though I am not a fan of this kind of beating me over the head with religion type of filmmaking, I know that I need to get out of my movie watching comfort zone from time to time, and I find it interesting to see other genres aimed at a specific audience. And actually, other than the very black and white stereotypes that abound in these kinds of films - the bad guys are very bad and the good guys (and women) are very good - this film actually wasn't too preachy and held my interest.  It was also fairly "G' rated considering the subject matter. However, despite the fact that I know these kinds of films are supposed to be inspiring and promote Christian values, why does Dale, the guy who is trying to get James to listen to God, have to be so smug? 

Dale says things like:

"We were put here to learn on this journey. The pages of our story are still being written. Here's the good news. We're not the author. HE has bigger plans."

And when James says to Dale about Antonia,

"With everything she's been through, do you think she still believes?"

Dale replies,

"I know she does.  That's faith." 

And with that, Dale pats James on the back and they walk off to save those two girls -- and James' faith.  It's a done deal.

I think that's why some people are turned off by a film that is obviously a Christian faith-based film. Too easy with the answers. Too pat. Too smug.

And then...James ends up marrying one of the young girls he saves from sex traffickers?  Don't you find that kind of creepy? I know I do.

However, I want my fans to know that I am an equal opportunity reviewer.  I go into all movies with an open mind because, hey, that's what I do.  I watch movies - all of 'em!  I have nothing against faith-based films, but I just wish they weren't so damn righteous about it all.  Excuse my French.

Here's a funny aside that says something about me: When Dale told James to get rid of the truck he had transported the girls in, he told him he had some bikes and he could use a bike to get around.  That's how much I know.  I thought Dale meant BIKE bikes, as in the kind you pedal.  I didn't realize he meant motorcycles.  Before I figured that out, I had this mental image of James and Dale pedaling bicycles to go save the girls. I was wondering how that would work.  Sometimes I am not very smart.

I have to say, though, that I learned some things from this film: First, I learned what a "God shot" was.  It's that last bit of strength you need to carry on when everything looks bleak. Second, if you really want the police to come fast, wave a gun around in a playground full of mothers and children.

Joel Smallbone is one half of the Grammy-winning Christian pop duo For King and Country, who often use their celebrity to crusade against sex trafficking, so this film is a natural progression and, I have to say that for a singer with few acting roles to his credit, he does a credible job here. 

Directed by Ben Smallbone (Joel's brother) with a screenplay by Chris Dowling and Tyler Poelle, the film ends with a plea for everyone to continue to fight against sex trafficking and points the audience to their website - www.pricelessmovement.com with the reminder that every life is priceless.

Well, who wouldn't agree with that?

Rosy the Reviewer says...if you like faith-based films or Lifetime movies, you will probably like this one.




***My 1001 Movies I Must See Before I Die Project***


209 to go!

Have YOU seen this classic film?





Ossessione (1943)


A drifter starts an affair with the wife of the owner of an inn and the two plot to get rid of her husband.

Gino (Massimo Girotti) is a handsome drifter who arrives in town on the back of a truck.  He heads to the local trattoria where he encounters Giovanna (Clara Calamai), the wife of the innkeeper who immediately gives him googly eyes and seems hot to trot.  Giovanna's husband, Giuseppe (Juan De Landa), is an older, fat man who Giovanna admits she married to get off the streets and to feel safe, but now all she does is cook and clean and her life has been reduced to that of a scullery maid, so she is resentful and sees Gino as a way to escape.

When Giuseppe leaves to go into town, Gino and Giovanna have sex and Giovanna is clearly enraptured and already asking Gino to never leave her. He hasn't been with a woman for awhile so he is enraptured too and what do you do when you are in love with a married woman and she is in love with you?  She gets a divorce?  Hell, no.  Way too easy. If you have seen enough film noir or episodes of "Dateline," then you know that you plot the murder of the husband, of course.

But even after getting what you want, there is guilt, drinking, jealousy, fighting.  Film noir never ends well and this film is no exception.

Though at times, there is some over-acting at work here, Calamai has an expressive face that reminds me of Marion Cotillard and Girotti looks like a young William Holden .

This was the first feature film directed by Italian auteur Luchino Visconti, who went on to direct such classics as "The Leopard" and "Death in Venice." It stands as a classic example of Italian Neorealism and also film noir as here you will recognize the movie "The Postman Always Rings Twice," originally a novel and one of the great film noirs.

Why it's a Must See: "...Visconti's screenplay was clearly lifted from James M. Cain's The Postman Always Rings Twice. Cain and his publishers kept it off American screens until 1976, when it had its much belated premiere at the New York Film Festival.  Cain had jut died and probably never saw it -- a pity, because he would have discovered the best cinematic adaption of his work."
---"1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die

Rosy the Reviewer says...if you loved "The Postman Always Rings Twice" or you just appreciate great film noir, you will love this.
(In Italian with English subtitles)




***Book of the Week***






Cravings: How I Conquered Food by Judy Collins (2017)



Singer Judy Collins shares the story of her unhealthy relationship with food and how she conquered it.  But will it work for the rest of us who wouldn't mind shedding a few pounds or 20?

Not to be confused with Chrissy Teigen's cookbook "Cravings" which I loved and reviewed last year and which is all about surrendering to food, this one is about conquering food by basically denying yourself practically everything.

Judy has written about her life before - "Sweet Judy Blue Eyes: My Life in Music" (2011) and "Sanity and Grace: A Journey of Suicide, Survival and Strength (2003) - but this volume, though it also touches on her life story, focuses on her struggles with alcohol and food.

Judy is a recovering alcoholic and according to her, also a recovering food addict.  Admitting an almost irrational fear of becoming fat, she tried every famous diet under the sun. She alternates chapters between talking about her life and all of the various famous diets most of us have tried: Weight Watchers, Atkins, Gayelord Hauser's Celebrity Diet, The Stillman Diet, Andrew Weil, The Scarsdale Diet while also giving credit to the various "Anonymous" step programs.

This is what she has discovered:

"For me exercise along with a diet free from sugar, grains, flour and junk is the secret and my fountain of youth. I am told that I look at least twenty years younger than my actual age. You can too.. . I also drink a ton of water, probably sixty ounces or more a day..."

"I bought digital scales and use them to eat three weighed and measured meals  a day...I eat only three meals a day, and I do not snack -- not on holidays, not at night, not between meals, not when it is Saturday..."

"I do not take chances when I go out to eat but ask for an extra plate to weigh my food when I need it...I always try to bring my digital scale when I go out to dinner.  I have one scale for my kitchen, one for my purse, one for the car, two for long trips."

"I think my food plan is as close to the organic life of my ancient ancestors as I am likely to have.  A clarity has come over me since I have started eating what is basically the cuisine of the wild hunter-gatherers.  It works for me. And perhaps it will work for you."

Really?  I guess the question for me is whether I want it to work for me or not.

I love you Judy.  I have been to many of your concerts and think you do look wonderful, so whatever is working for you is fantastic.  But if this is a book for the rest of us, I don't think so.  I can't see myself carrying a scale in my purse and weighing my food at a restaurant, though I will say with all of that water you recommend we drink, we would certainly get exercise running to the toilet.

I don't in any way mean to make fun of something that has changed someone's life and that is what this book is about.  And I don't in any way mean to minimize addiction either - to alcohol or food or anything else.  And I know that Judy has had some terrible things happen to her, the suicide of her son being the most horrific, so I am happy she has found her health and her Fountain of Youth, that this plan works for her, and that she has been sober for over 30 years. 

And this book just might be the inspiration you need to solve some of your addiction issues, food or otherwise.

However, I also feel that someone who had the fortitude and discipline necessary to become a concert level pianist, and then one of the most famous singers in the world, giving up wheat, grains and sugar and weighing all of her meals was probably not the hardest thing in her life, though eschewing any kind of snacking at all, period... Wow.  I am impressed.  But for the rest of us who have toiled in our little lives and don't have the discipline she has shown in her life to get where she is today nor the perks of celebrity and fame, some mac and cheese and a piece of chocolate can be life changing.

Rosy the Reviewer says...an inspiring and candid look into the insecurities and struggles of a superstar, and no matter what you think of her diet advice, she DOES look really good at 77 years old.!





Thanks for reading!

and

Hey, can you believe it?

I am back once again on Tuesday, but this time it's

"Make-up 101 For the Woman of a Certain Age."


 
Hope to see you Tuesday!


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