<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?><feed xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"><title>Flickipedia</title><updated>2010-08-01T08:59:40Z</updated><id>http://flickipedia.net/atom.aspx</id><link href="http://flickipedia.net/atom.aspx" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml" /><link href="http://flickipedia.net" rel="alternate" type="application/rss+xml" /><generator uri="http://app.onlinequickblog.com/" version="2.0">Quick Blogcast</generator><entry><title>"An overwhelming sense of ickiness had set over first period." -- Alicia Silverstone, Clueless</title><link rel="alternate" href="http://flickipedia.net/2010/04/14/an-overwhelming-sense-of-ickiness-had-set-over-first-period--alicia-silverstone-clueless.aspx?ref=rss" /><id>tag:flickipedia.net,2010-04-14:5fe6c35b-3fba-4a40-9bea-c82c89e5e41d</id><author><name>Michael and Laurel</name></author><category term="high school" /><category term="graduation" /><category term="grudation movies" /><category term="high school movies" /><updated>2010-04-14T18:15:00Z</updated><published>2010-04-14T18:15:00Z</published><content type="html">&lt;p&gt;&lt;span style="font-family: georgia; font-size: 13px;"&gt;Graduation approacheth! Since every movie that nails that life moment down is inevitably about "back then," they run the risk of being overlooked by the demographic that could benefit from them the most – the jacked-in, earpod-stuffed, nose-ringed teen of today. &lt;br /&gt;
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&lt;/span&gt;&lt;b&gt;&lt;i&gt;&lt;span style="font-family: georgia; font-size: 13px;"&gt;American Graffiti&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/i&gt;&lt;/b&gt;&lt;span style="font-family: georgia; font-size: 13px;"&gt; (1973) The first coming-of-age ensemble comedy in American movies? George Lucas’s sublime evocation of a midwestern 1962 of cars, rock ‘n roll radio and lost sub-adults certainly established the timeless stereotypes of that post-graduation summer night that everyone experiences: the high school sweethearts confronting college and separation (Ron Howard and Cindy Williams), the itchy smart kid who doesn’t know if college is what he wants (Richard Dreyfuss), the hopeless dweeb looking only to score (Charles Martin Smith), the cool dropout hood who cannot adjust to the real world (Paul LeMat). Roaringly funny and bittersweet. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;/span&gt;&lt;span style="font-family: georgia; font-size: 13px;"&gt;&lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;br /&gt;
Fast Times at Ridgemont High&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;span style="font-family: georgia; font-size: 13px;"&gt; (1982) Amy Heckerling’s overrated and rosily remembered high school farce, based on the book Cameron Crowe wrote after he went undercover in an American high school for Rolling Stone, does etch out various familiar social species (geeks, freaks, hotties, jocks, and the semi-forgotten loser in between), and the performances (Sean Penn, Jennifer Jason Leigh, Phoebe Cates) are genuinely felt.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;span style="font-family: georgia; font-size: 13px;"&gt;&lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;...Say Anything&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;span style="font-family: georgia; font-size: 13px;"&gt; (1989) Remember when you spent all your years of high school yearning after that one person, despairing of ever having him or her realize you exist? That’s just what happens to Lloyd Dobler (John Cusack) but then after graduation, she does notice him and they spend the summer dancing around the possibility of falling deeply in love. This Cameron Crowe movie goes a long way just on charm: Cusack’s diffident-yet-deeply ethical Everyman-ness, Lili Taylor’s awful guitar-strummed songs about lost love, the pack of nowhere boys (including Jeremy Piven) hanging out at the local Gas ‘n Sip philosophizing about women they know nothing about. Best to ignore the secondary plot about Diane’s possibly shady father, and savor the whiff of teenage desires anxiously fulfilled.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;span style="font-family: georgia; font-size: 13px;"&gt;&lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;Dazed and Confused&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;span style="font-family: georgia; font-size: 13px;"&gt; (1993) This is what the beginning of summer, with school a fading memory already a day later, felt like for director Richard Linklater, whose milieu here was Texas in the late ‘70s. Trailing after a dozen or more recently freed high schoolers as they search for a party, contemplate their dubious role in the social order, and inflict/escape from the hazing rituals that may be particular to Austin suburb schools, the film is dense with detail, one-liners, deft performances and astutely observed reality – though it may take two viewings to mesh with the movie’s unique rhythms. It’s also something of The Outsiders of its generation, more or less introducing the world to Matthew McConaughey, Ben Affleck, Nicky Katt, Rory Cochrane, Joey Lauren Adams, Parker Posey, etc.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;span style="font-family: georgia; font-size: 13px;"&gt;&lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;Clueless&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;span style="font-family: georgia; font-size: 13px;"&gt; (1995) Jane Austen’s Emma recast as a 1990s Valley Girl ruling the high school roost, negotiating grades with teachers, and creating a social pecking order based on good looks and fashion savvy. Surprisingly witty and definitely one of the best in the updated-great-lit-for-teens subgenre.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;span style="font-family: georgia; font-size: 13px;"&gt;&lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;Rushmore&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;span style="font-family: georgia; font-size: 13px;"&gt; (1998) A giddily unpredictable comedy that, among other things, harbors an Oscar-ready supporting performance by Bill Murray as an exhausted, self-destructive businessman. Rushmore, both the movie and the prep academy it’s named for, centers around the unforgettable Max Fischer (Jason Schwartzman), a 15-year-old genius who can’t be bothered with schoolwork but instead devotes himself to a kingdom of extracurricular activity. Over-cultured and beneficently powermad, Max meets his first real challenge in the 10&lt;sup&gt;th&lt;/sup&gt; grade: wooing the new kindergarten teacher (Olivia Williams). But there’s no describing how Rushmore does what it does; co-scripted by Owen Wilson, the movie’s comedy is so subtle, organic and eccentric it could fly in under your radar. In fact, scene for scene the story has the loopy, unreasonable feel of life zooming right by you. We’re never told how to judge any of the characters; however whimsical, they carry the possibilities of real people. (The smart kids aren’t smart all the way through, the bullies don’t stay bullies, etc.) The performances, just as unsettling and original, are uniformly fine, but Murray, as the sad-sack ‘Nam vet whose moneyed suburban hell makes him cannonball into his pool and float underwater for peace, is flat-out great.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;span style="font-family: georgia; font-size: 13px;"&gt;&lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;Can’t Hardly Wait&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;span style="font-family: georgia; font-size: 13px;"&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span style="font-family: georgia; font-size: 13px;"&gt;(1998) An overlooked gem among a hundred cretinous teen-party comedies, in which another dozen or so easily recognizable high school types flounder their way through a single night of epiphany, melodrama, humiliation, socialization, and beer. The film’s pulsing, forgiving heart and sharp ear (courtesy of writer/director team Deborah Kaplan and Harry Elfont) are responsible for the movie’s distinction; the joyous chaos of teenage parties are not easy to depict, but this movie gets it, with a title from an old Replacements song no less. Jennifer Love Hewitt and Ethan Embry are the mismatched hottie-&amp;amp;-nerd, but funnier and more believable are Lauren Ambrose’s quasi-goth cynic, Peter Facinelli’s monster jock, and Charlie Korsmo’s ultra-geek. &lt;/span&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;span style="font-family: georgia; font-size: 13px;"&gt;&lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;American Pie&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;span style="font-family: georgia; font-size: 13px;"&gt; (1999) Four friends make a pact to get laid by prom night – as if teenage boys need more motivation than they’ve already got. Raunchy, sophomoric and a smash hit with teenagers for real and undeniable reasons.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;span style="font-family: georgia; font-size: 13px;"&gt;&lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;Ghost World&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;span style="font-family: georgia; font-size: 13px;"&gt; (2001) The pioneering film portrait of a distinctive, universal and heretofore ignored teenage social class: the bitter, frumpy, snobbish, willfully unpopular "weirdos," self-defined only in disdainful opposition to their peers. It’s a state that often provides for a certain amount of lostness after graduation, which is what the heroines of Daniel Clowes’s graphic novel and Terry Zwigoff’s acerbic movie struggle with: the vacuum left once they’re left to their own devices. Thora Birch and Scarlett Johansson are pitch-perfect in what amounts to an act of modern anthropology – rescuing a lovable misfit teen type from obscurity.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/p&gt;
&lt;p&gt;&lt;span style="font-family: georgia; font-size: 13px;"&gt;&lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;Elephant&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;span style="font-family: georgia; font-size: 13px;"&gt;&lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt; &lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;(2003) Gus Van Sant looks sideways at the Columbine High School massacre, tracing and retracing the paths of several high schoolers as they wander through a largely empty high school, looking for... salvation?, before the shootings unexpectedly begin. Every shot is a question – why? – and every detail potent. &lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;img alt="" style="border: 0px solid;" src="http://images.quickblogcast.com/6/6/6/6/1/125004-116666/phoebe_cates_fast_times_ridgemont__large_msg_114158781907_2.jpg?a=73" /&gt;        &lt;br /&gt;
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                     &lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/p&gt;</content></entry><entry><title>"Let’s eat dead bird." – Robert Downey Jr., Home for the Holidays</title><link rel="alternate" href="http://flickipedia.net/2009/11/13/lets-eat-dead-bird--robert-downey-jr-home-for-the-holidays.aspx?ref=rss" /><id>tag:flickipedia.net,2009-11-13:ba87f8f2-5093-48a3-bf18-443ce425923d</id><author><name>Michael and Laurel</name></author><category term="Thanksgiving movies" /><category term="Flickipedia" /><updated>2009-11-13T14:55:00Z</updated><published>2009-11-13T14:55:00Z</published><content type="html">&lt;BR&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Perhaps no national holiday is as well-suited to theme-oriented movie-viewing – no one’s at school or work but it’s cold outside, and the day itself has little to recommend it beside being a big build-up to a mountainous meal of poultry and vegetables. Here're our suggestions, respecting the history but suggesting new kinds of family traditions...&lt;/P&gt;&lt;I&gt;&lt;B&gt;
&lt;P&gt;King Kong&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt; (1933) Growing up a New Yorker in the TV never-never-land of the 1960s and 1970s, Thanksgiving meant one thing: giant apes. For some obscure reason a local broadcast station (back when we &lt;I&gt;had&lt;/I&gt; local broadcast stations) would always air, year after year, &lt;I&gt;King Kong, Son of Kong &lt;/I&gt;and&lt;I&gt; Mighty Joe Young &lt;/I&gt;from noon to dinnertime. In some households it was the Dallas Cowboys, in others it was the Macy's parade, but in certain homes the day was filled with images of black-&amp;amp;-white hand-animated gorillas rampaging through the respective jungles of Skull Island and midtown Manhattan. The then-brand new Empire State Building instantly acquired a legendary aura for millions worldwide who had never been to New York, while Kong's decimation of the Third Avenue El has become -- in our movie culture's subconscious, at least -- how the famed subway actually disappeared. This counterprogramming was so consistent it became an ersatz annual tradition for everyone we knew. Exactly why those anonymous, old-school TV programmers chose this very narrow subgenre of movies for this particular holiday is a mystery; &lt;I&gt;Plymouth Adventure &lt;/I&gt;or &lt;I&gt;Drums Along the Mohawk &lt;/I&gt;would've been more logical, if less captivating. But outsized, stop-motion simians? Whatever you say. Somehow today it makes sense, if for no other reason than because Thanksgiving, to kids, is often little more than a big meal. So, on a day that’s dependably gray, cold and somewhat dull, we were treated to grainy Depression-era urban camaraderie, holy-smokes wisecracker Robert Armstrong, foggy island-scapes, vertiginous cliffs (stalked by pterodactyls!), and horrific images of gargantuan chaos – escapism defined, best seen on the living room rug with a good November rain rasping outside. Annual traditions certainly tend to be asinine and arbitrary in America, and there’s no reason this one shouldn’t catch on again. The loud, exhausting 2005 remake might suffice in some households, since it as nearly as long as all three films combined.&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Son of Kong&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt; (1933) See above. And try to not let that final image haunt your supper.&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Heidi&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt; (1937) Another TV-scheduling conundrum, but by now an established tradition, for a Shirley Temple film that has nothing to do with Thanksgiving. (Maybe the local networks chose it because it heralded Christmas, with sleigh rides over the snow-covered Alps and &lt;I&gt;Weihnachten&lt;/I&gt; in a wealthy Frankfurt home.) But the holiday spirit of appreciating one’s fortune and tenacious family bonds is all over this children’s standby; Temple, a little past her &lt;I&gt;Captain January&lt;/I&gt;-cute days, was still a consummate actress and the reigning box office champ of the ‘30s. The orphan-&amp;amp;-grandfather love story is a lock only if you can stand some more sweetness and warmth after the candied yams and pumpkin pie.&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;Hans Christian Anderson&lt;/I&gt; &lt;/B&gt;(1952) For decades, this stiff-legged musical about the famed cobbler/fairy-tale spinner also served as local-station Thanksgiving counterprogramming in many states. If you know who Danny Kaye is, it might still fly.&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Plymouth Adventure&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt; (1952) Hollywood’s only shot at the Mayflower story, and a pleasant mediocrity untempered by Spencer Tracy and Gene Tierney in their rapidly-aging phases, and an Oscar for best special-effects – which are spectacular.&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;A Charlie Brown Thanksgiving&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt; (1973) The third of the Melendez-Mendelson Peanuts TV specials, and the first&amp;nbsp;mediocrity (too much Woodstock and Peppermint Patty, too charmless a script), although like the others it may’ve been imprinted upon you as a child like a goose’s southbound flight path, so you may not be able to resist it. All the same, is there a more eloquent portrayal anywhere of an American child’s November afternoons?&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Hannah and Her Sisters&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt; (1986) Woody Allen’s great,&amp;nbsp;intimate comedy-drama about a sprawling, neurotic New York showbiz family, their failures, cross purposes, heartbreaks and hilarious obsessions, all of it spanning two Thanksgiving Day celebrations. And they’re not entirely unlike &lt;I&gt;your&lt;/I&gt; Thanksgivings, either – spite, drinking, betrayal, boredom, speeches, chitchat and bustle, wrapped in a family’s unmistakable warmth. The film is segmented into brisk, poetically-titled chapters, scored with a mix of old show tunes and Puccini, and armed with brave performances (Oscar-winning and otherwise) from Allen, Mia Farrow, Barbara Hershey, Dianne Weist, Michael Caine, Max Von Sydow, Maureen Sullivan and a sadly semi-Alzheimer-ish Lloyd Nolan. It’s one of those rare, grown-up films – even from Allen – that summons a palpable sense of healing, joy and resilience without for a moment pandering to the audience’s sentimental wishes or surrendering its sometimes harrowing relationship with the real world. You can tell the Woodman was happy in the 1980s – the movie glows with affirmative energy.&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Avalon&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt; (1990) The third of Barry Levinson’s Baltimore films is also the most ambitious, tracing the arc of a Russian immigrant family from 1914 into the ‘60s, a tumultuous arc punctuated by Thanksgiving dinners – get-togethers that are fraught with generational hostility and growing pains. It’s an ebullient film, but the course of the holiday celebrations allows Levinson to make a strong critical statement about modern life – as the years press on, the family dissipates and fragments, and the ever-present television slowly takes pride of place, instead of conversation and family intimacy. Armin Mueller-Stahl, Aidan Quinn and Elijah Wood constitute the three levels of father and son.&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;Home for the Holidays&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt; (1995) Taken from a bitter &lt;I&gt;New Yorker&lt;/I&gt; story, this hostile, lower-middle-class dysfunctional-family comedy can’t be anyone’s idea of a yearly ritual, unless you’re gay and your family isn’t, and unless your folks still live in Baltimore. But give it a shot once, if you’re priming for a trip to the tension-filled homestead – the tasteless wrangling eventually climaxes with a beautiful scene of quiet rue involving lost single mom Holly Hunter, her grumpy father Charles Durning, and a reel of old 8mm family home movie. If this movie seems to you less calibrated outrage and more docudrama, you have our sympathies.&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &lt;IMG src="http://images.quickblogcast.com/6/6/6/6/1/125004-116666/Hannah.jpg?a=93"&gt;&lt;/P&gt;</content></entry><entry><title>"Whatever walked there walked alone." -- Richard Johnson, The Haunting</title><link rel="alternate" href="http://flickipedia.net/2009/10/20/whatever-walked-there-walked-alone--richard-johnson-the-haunting.aspx?ref=rss" /><id>tag:flickipedia.net,2009-10-20:d3294e60-ada1-43a0-a170-56dc42912c80</id><author><name>Michael and Laurel</name></author><category term="Halloween" /><category term="Haloween movies" /><category term="Flickipedia" /><category term="scary movies" /><updated>2009-10-20T16:22:00Z</updated><published>2009-10-20T16:22:00Z</published><content type="html">&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt;&lt;BR&gt;Halloween -- the most home-video-ish of all holidays.&amp;nbsp;Selecting the right horror film for end-of-October has become a cultural ritual, and here're just a few of our recommendations: &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt;Haxan, or Witchcraft Through the Ages&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt; &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt;(1922) Benjamin Christiansen’s messy, crazy, thoroughly disreputable, frequently banned Danish silent has been resurrected as a creaky novelty at least three times since it was made – once, in 1968, with a narration read by William S. Burroughs. Hardly a serious work of art or even a visceral genre entry, the movie is nonetheless jam-packed with decaying Gothic imagery the likes of you’ve never seen before, from black masses to possessed nuns to witch burnings to multiple Lucifers ruining the lives of innocents and sacrificing infants. You’ll find no better ambient video for a serious Halloween party.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt;The Cat and the Canary&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt; (1927) The first true trapped-in-a-haunted-mansion-on-a-rainy-night-to-read-the-will movie, and hokey as all get-out, but marvelously musty, too, and pungently Expressionistic-with-a-capitol-E (Germanic master Paul Leni was the director, transplanted to Hollywood, and every architectural inch of the movie is ornately trimmed out). It’s a lovely, nightened place to visit, and inoffensive for kids. &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt;Vampyr&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt; (1932) Austere cinema master Carl-Theodor Dreyer – in his first sound film – tried his hand at an outright horror film on assignment, but the end-product cannot be anything the dilettante producers anticipated. Gauzy, somnambulistic, fog-clogged to the point of dislocation, Dreyer’s film is based on a Sheridan Le Fanu story, but is less a tale told than a suffocating dream endured. But Dreyer produces passages that loiter in your skull, particularly the funeral march as seen from &lt;I&gt;inside&lt;/I&gt; the coffin. Independently made and badly preserved, the sound is unreliable, and the multi-national cast never seems comfortable with whatever language they’re speaking. All to the better.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt;The Mascot&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt; (1933) Ladislaw Starewicz was a Lithuanian puppet animator whose sketchy career stretches from the pre-Revolutionary days to the Kruschev era, and is roundly acknowledged as the grandfather of stop-motion animation as it has grown to encompass Czech masters Jan Trnka and Jan Svankmajer, the Brothers Quay, Tim Burton’s &lt;I&gt;Corpse Bride &lt;/I&gt;and even Wallace and Gromit. This inventive short – available on several video collections – presages the &lt;I&gt;Toy Story&lt;/I&gt; films as well, following the adventures of errant toys lost in a dark city, and climaxing with a windblown, Devil-haunted confrontation that is still chilling.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt;Arsenic and Old Lace&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt; (1944) Self-consciously campy about Halloween – buttressed by cartoon-black-cat title cards and lots of faux wind whipping through the studio-Brooklyn trees – this priceless farce remains stagey, and remains a living demonstration of how "staginess" is no handicap at all if the material crackles, and you’ve got Cary Grant, Priscilla Lane, Raymond Massey, Peter Lorre, Jack Carson and Edward Everett Horton to fill out the single set with their earnest energies. Crazy brownstone aunts who also happen to be serial murderers, Josephine Hull and Jean Adair are the straight men in this scenario, which director Frank Capra keeps whipping along like a relay race. A pungent evocation not only of the usual Hollywood backlot atmospherics, but of the Brooklyn autumn of 1944, when this hilarious trifle was what the old neighborhood badly needed.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt;The Tingler&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt; (1949) Perhaps the most inventive of William Castle’s cheapo postwar horror ditties, this barren, desolate fantasy posits a neurological bug on everyone’s spine that, if you’re scared enough and can’t scream, grows to the size of a loaf of Italian semolina (with rubbery caterpillar legs) and kills you. Few things in mid-century drive-in history compare to the look on Vincent Price's face as he finds the foot-&amp;amp;-a-half, insectoid "tingler" in an autopsied cadaver, wraps his rubber-gloved hands around it, and pulls. Of course, the thing gets out, and even attacks a cinema projectionist, crawling across the white screen – at which point, in 1949, Castle had certain wired seats in the theater buzz and jolt their occupants. Those were the days.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt;Horror Hotel&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt; (1960) A public domain bad dream that has surely lodged in the reptile brain of every kid who ever saw it on local pre-cable TV, this otherwise forgotten British-made horror film was virtually remade as &lt;I&gt;Silent Hill&lt;/I&gt;, but the original, however penny-ante and cheesy, still grips, with its shadow-&amp;amp;-cardboard New England setting, a palpable air of neglected-village dread, and a deftly written plot beginning with the Salem witch trials and proceeding to the present. With Christopher Lee in a plummy walk-on, a king’s ransom in dry-ice clouds, and a stirringly heroic denouement.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt;Carnivals of Souls&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt; &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt;(1962) Made for peanuts in Kansas (and the Utah salt flats) by a company normally busy with industrial shorts, this ghostly orphan of the ‘60s is one of those movies whose ill-exposed film, stiff acting and general air of gray yesteryear poverty lends it a fantastic chill. A woman in a car gets run off a bridge – but survives, it seems, into an arid Lawrence, Kansas where the heroine (an unforgettable Candace Hilligoss) sometimes goes unseen like a phantom among the populace, and is herself haunted by silent ghouls. It may be a latent-‘50s adaptation of Bierce’s "An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge," but it’s the dead-air sense of menace and dislocation that makes it stick in your memory like a burr.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt;Burn, Witch, Burn!&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt; (1962) Another British genre toot, this Fritz Leiber-derived witchcraft opus is actually a sharp analysis of marital dysfunction, focusing on a churlish university prof (the rather windy Peter Wyngarde) who discovers his wife of many years (Janet Blair) has long been a practicing sorceress. Pragmatically abolishing the trappings from their life together is his first and last mistake – unbeknownst to him, the wife has been battling rivals and protecting her husband in a secret conjurors’ war. &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt;The Haunting&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt; (1963) Of all the reflexive choices for Halloween self-programming found at your local chain videostore, this Shirley Jackson-derived humdinger may come as the biggest surprise to genre fans born since 1970 – this is a true horror film, dread-drenched and blood-chilling and old-dark-house atmospheric like none other. It is &lt;I&gt;not&lt;/I&gt; a horror film as Hollywood has defined it over the last quarter century: that is, a decidedly unthreatening litany of F/X, gore, soundtracks &lt;I&gt;blam&lt;/I&gt;s and glib jokes. In terms of authentic all-hallow’d vibe, this movie is a treasure trove – chilly drafts, gray skies, dark hallways, rooms not to be entered, sounds in the night. This haunted mansion is &lt;I&gt;not &lt;/I&gt;cozy, the ghosts do &lt;I&gt;not &lt;/I&gt;have problems the plot solves, the heroine is not a plucky teenager. No one gets killed by flying objects; in fact, you don’t &lt;I&gt;see&lt;/I&gt; the phantoms at all. But the scenes of supernatural siege are nonetheless the most alarming and scarifying in cinema history. Try it on some "young adults" who think horror movies are just to be giggled at, and watch them get shaken at their roots. Not to be confused with the 1999 remake, which is less frightening than a car alarm.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt;The Gorgon&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt; (1964) Perhaps the flat-out strangest of all of the Hammer Studio horror films of the British ‘60s, utilizing yet again the peerless cheesy old-village vibe, overlit histrionics and garish monster melodrama so familiar from their Dracula and Frankenstein series, but at the heart of it, haunting a backwards hamlet… a figment from Greek mythology, literally, a snake-headed titan whose visage can, and does, turn men to stone. Peter Cushing and Christopher Lee stalk about contemplating the absurdities, and the Old World chilliness is fab.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt;An American Werewolf in London&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt; (1981) The preeminent Halloween party film, being a delicious fusion of several key elements: sophomoric irreverence (personified by Griffin Dunne’s masterful turn as a decomposing dead slacker), monster-movie shocks (being pre-digital, all of the transformation scenes are done with make-up, robotics and sweaty actors), and superstitious mood – the misty moors, the cramped inn with secretive locals, the stranger-in-a-strange-land vision of London (and English hospitals). Complete with a soundtrack made up of nothing but songs with "moon" in their titles, John Landis’s movie is enough of a reference point to have invaded real life – there has been for years a very real pub in Manhattan’s West Village called The Slaughtered Lamb, with the film’s very same wolf sign hanging outside, and a dusty cellar where the owners have been known to show the film all day on October 31st.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt;The Company of Wolves&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt; &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt;(1984) Another kind of werewolf film altogether – directed by Neil Jordan from the stories of Angela Carter, this dream-like, story-within-a-story fairy tale uses the lycanthrope legend to take on, in all seriousness, the story of Little Red Riding Hood and its overbearing Freudian subtexts. The make-up technology isn’t up to Landis’s movie (or its contemporary, Joe Dante’s Californicated version &lt;I&gt;The Howling&lt;/I&gt;), but the trippy Grimm-ness and overt sexual imagery make it a much stranger experience.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt;The Halloween Tree&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt; (1993) Nobody ever sang the song of Halloween as passionately or as lyrically as Ray Bradbury. (A faithful remake of &lt;I&gt;Something Wicked This Way Comes&lt;/I&gt;, filmed dreadfully in 1983, is waiting to be made.) This Hanna-Barbera-produced cartoon version of his young-reader novel is torn between a brooding plot (four children chase after the soul of a dying friend) and a rather trite and episodic tour of the holiday’s traditions through the ages, but the man’s rhapsodic sense of the season is unmistakable.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt;The Blair Witch Project &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt;(1999) The real deal, a radical realigning of genre prerogatives, and a lean, mean, pants-soiling machine set in the very real American scrub forest of your forgotten preadolescent nightmares. Forget the astonishing hype, spinoffs and spoofs this movie generated when it was first released – that’s just history now, leaving behind the first movie that genuinely understands fear. It is without a doubt the all-time ideal Halloween renter – it’s the audiovisual equivalent of every sleepover ghost story you ever heard, and &lt;I&gt;it really happened!&lt;/I&gt; No, it didn’t, but think about that lucky, traumatized first audience at the Sundance Film Festival who saw the movie &lt;I&gt;at midnight, in the mountains of Utah&lt;/I&gt;, without being told it wasn’t a documentary. Daringly, Daniel Myrick and Eduardo Sanchez’s film is nothing more than the rough footage shot by a three-student documentary team who have decided to make a cheesy film about a chunk of Maryland woods and its accompanying witch legend. What happens is simple: they can’t get out of the woods, the overnight hike turns into days of hysteria in the wilderness, and something – &lt;I&gt;something&lt;/I&gt; – begins to reveal itself to them, in ominous nighttime sounds, pagan signs, and worse. Throughout, the fact that we see only what the beleaguered trio manage to film, and often not even that thanks to the limitations of light and focus in handheld moments of primordial terror, makes this more than just a horror movie – it’s a return to your childhood’s starkest memories of abandonment and dread. Saying &lt;I&gt;The Blair Witch Project &lt;/I&gt;is a convincing experience is only scratching the surface – because you believe it, because your vision is limited, because the actors are in reality alone in the dark, because it doesn’t even seem to be a movie but rather somebody’s home footage gone terribly, sickeningly berserk, it might be the scariest movie ever made. &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt;Sleepy Hollow&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt; (1999) With this high-octane Gothic comic book, Tim Burton continues his unique, idiosyncratic and very personal career project: to reexperience and revivify the toy chest of pop-culture effluvia that sustained him, and many of us indeed, through our ‘Nam-era childhoods. Burton has said he wanted to homage the old British horror movies made by Hammer Studios, and as usual, he beat them at their own game – no Hammer film ever looked this crepuscular, this grandly, rottenly ghoulish. Extrapolating out Washington Irving’s nervous little ghost story (animated not at all ineffectively by Disney in 1949), the movie dazzles us with one Halloweeny motif after another, from scarecrows with candlelit jack-‘o-lantern heads to enough fog to choke L.A. However thin in the story department (like all of Burton’s films), it’s a fabulous hoot, and you feel the filmmaker’s macabre delight in every frame. &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt;Donnie Darko&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt; (2001) Firsttimer Richard Kelly’s film defies description – it’s a wild, unpredictable beast that refuses to be caged by genre or expectations. Enveloped in a mood of cultural doom and psychological unease that is persistently haunting, this saga of teenage alienation is in a more or less constant state of cataclysm – internal or external, you decide. Donnie (the naturally affecting but abstruse Jake Gyllenhaal) is a high schooler in 1988, on the cusp of the Bush/Dukakis elections, attempting to navigate his terrain despite the fact that he sleepwalks, hallucinates, is becoming convinced that the world will end in 28 days, and has decided to stop taking his medication. He’s partnered by a skull-faced rabbit figure inciting him to destruction, and his suburban school is in the grip of a messianic self-help guru (Patrick Swayze), but Donnie’s primary problem is his own flexible reality; he doesn’t know any more than we do exactly how much his mental disturbance reflects and/or causes the cosmic countdown to Halloween. A feverish cult has sprouted around this changeling, and with its sense of ominous portent and middle-class-kid holiday ritual, it may be the best Halloween film ever made, even if it’s not frightening but is instead heartbreaking and mysterious. While the film seems clearly a free-fall study in psychological meltdown, by the end you’re not so sure if it isn’t revisiting &lt;I&gt;An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge &lt;/I&gt;(again!) or, more aptly, simply culminating in a stunning, purely cinematic act of salvation. &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt;Satan’s Little Helper&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt; (2003) Forgotten genre freak Jeff Lieberman – his erratic career began in 1976, as the auteur behind the giant worm saga &lt;I&gt;Squirm&lt;/I&gt; – manufactured this 80s-style gore-farce out of crummy horror-flick spare parts, but the upshot is conceptually maniacal and witty. A semi-delusional kid, obsessed with a Satanic video game, meets and obliviously assists a grinning-demon-mask-wearing psycho as he litters bodies through a prototypical suburbia on Halloween – a setup that, at least, allows Lieberman to fill front-lawn graveyard displays with real corpses and bloodied knives. Never released to theaters.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt;Tim Burton’s&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt; &lt;I&gt;Corpse Bride&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt; (2005) A formal repeat performance of &lt;I&gt;The Nightmare Before Christmas&lt;/I&gt; complete with identical character design and Danny Elfman songs, this sumptuous Black Foresty animation virtually oozes with gray, toyshop atmosphere. Of course, it’s strictly for the irreverent Halloween renter, although this endearingly modest movie has some real poetry in it, and a concrete relationship with centuries of &lt;I&gt;Mitteleuropan&lt;/I&gt; legend and Ukrainian peasant myth. &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt;Monster House&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT size=2 face=Georgia&gt; (2006) High-concept digital animation brought down, definitively, to a trick-or-treater’s level. The myth of everyone’s childhood neighborhood – of the darkened, unkempt house on the block no one knows much about, and which may well be the site of unspeakable creepiness, or worse – is exploded out into a carnivorous piece of rotting architecture, swallowing hapless children (or at least their toys) and inspiring endless prepubescent schemes and surveillances. The climactic battle is naturally too long and loud, in the Spielberg mode (he and Robert Zemeckis were producers), but the draughtsmanship is imaginative, the voices (especially Jason Lee and Steve Buscemi) are sharp, and the tunnelvision of kids on a self-scaring tear is splendidly evoked.&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&lt;BR&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;</content></entry><entry><title>"Those beaches will be open." -- Murray Hamilton, Jaws</title><link rel="alternate" href="http://flickipedia.net/2009/08/06/those-beaches-will-be-open--murray-hamilton-jaws.aspx?ref=rss" /><id>tag:flickipedia.net,2009-08-06:9b1ecbac-b90d-4ac5-beee-72aebfe3c241</id><author><name>Michael and Laurel</name></author><category term="Summer" /><category term="Flickipedia" /><updated>2009-08-06T14:05:00Z</updated><published>2009-08-06T14:05:00Z</published><content type="html">&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt;&lt;FONT size=2&gt;It's still summer! But downward slope of August approaches -- here are a few of&amp;nbsp;Flickipedia's recommendations to help hold onto that firefly vibe and keep it in a jar as long as possible -- &lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;Morocco&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt; (1930) A Legionnaire (Gary Cooper) dallies with a world-weary desert-oasis diva (Marlene Dietrich), who isn’t exactly as cynical and experience-toughened as she thought. The first, epochal American Marlene Dietrich-Josef von Sternberg film is the muggiest, woozy with hot, moonlit Saharan nighttime. Of course it was all done on the Paramount lot, with shadows – according to von Sternberg’s uproariously self-aggrandizing memoir, the Pasha of Marrakech asked him years later why the filmmaker had not visited him when making the film in Morocco, which he’d recognized first-hand. Von Sternberg maintained he’d never been to the country, and Cooper, in his forward to the book, doubts the windy director could’ve found the nation on a map.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;Beauty and the Beast (La Belle et La B te)&lt;/I&gt; &lt;/B&gt;(1946) Jean Cocteau’s definitive incarnation of the fairy tale, and a supremely dreamy summer daydream, shot with silvery shimmering by Henry Alekan, and infused with nursery wonder. Jean Marais’s leonine Beast is fab, but Josette Day’s serene maiden is close to an ideal.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt;Smiles of a Summer Night&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt; (1955) Ingmar Bergman, summery? This famous art-house favorite isn’t the Swedish moper’s only comedy, but it is his funniest, largely restricted to intertwining boudoir farce reminiscent of &lt;I&gt;A Midsummer Night’s Dream&lt;/I&gt; (and reinvented decades later as Stephen Sondheim’s &lt;I&gt;A Little Night Music&lt;/I&gt;), but occasionally embracing love in a haystack at dusk.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt;The Blob&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt; (1958) An alien jelly-mold has invaded Eisenhower-era, drive-in-crazy Middle America, and only honest teen Steve McQueen (who was actually 28) can save us. There’s something quintessential here, a potent feel for small towns at night when everyone’s home looking toward bed except the pesky teenagers – those kids! – and the amused, lazy cops manning the local station.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt;Black Orpheus&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt; (1959) The most evocative tropical film ever made, this peacock of a movie transposes the Orpheus-Eurydice myth to Rio amid Carnivale, and the heavy dose of South American colors, non-stop samba music, sweat, dancing, copulating and Brazilian zest can make you dizzy. The tale is tragic, of course, but one-hit-wonder director Marcel Camus determinedly turns on the juice, and in the end it’s spectacularly life-affirming.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt;Planet of the Apes&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt; (1968) Before there was "the summer blockbuster" (a label on movies now that describes their box-office intentions, not their actual success), there was the matinee movie, meant as a respite from summer heat for pre-video kids with nothing to watch at home and brainpans overflowing with Marvel comics, Aurora models and backyard G.I. Joe scenarios. This beautiful, conceptually fearless piece of all-American pulp – forget the Tim Burton remake – remains resonant and unforgettable, but also invokes an entire decade of summers (what with its frequent sequels and re-releases) for a lucky generation of kids, whose cerebellums are permanently branded with the image of Charlton Heston kneeling on the beach, before the wrecked Statue of Liberty. Ah, to be lost on this desert planet once more...&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt;Once Upon a Time in the West&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt; (1969) Director Sergio Leone virtually invented the Italian-made "spaghetti western," and this hot, sweaty mastodon of a movie may be its crowning exemplar: it's the most overwrought, supercool, breathtakingly lavish, preposterously lyrical western ever made. The sets are huge (farmhouses appear to have 12 or more rooms), the story absurd, the music rapturous, the faux-desert sun hot. Every aspect of it is swooning with the love for Movies – every scene is a western standard jacked up into a feverish fit. The incredible opening credits sequence alone (Jack Elam, Woody Strode, a fly, a deserted train station...) is worth the rental fee, and, like the rest of this super-widescreen mock-opera, must have given the video transfer guys serious headaches. The story involves the westward push of the railroad, a mail-order bride (Claudia Cardinale), a rogue outlaw (Jason Robards), a mysterious man-with-no-name bent on avenging his father's murder (Charles Bronson), and Henry Fonda marvelously countercast as the vilest western villain of all time. As exaggerated and berserk and self-conscious as it is, it's also profoundly sad – Ennio Morricone's crescendoing music makes the loss of the Old West seem a heartrending reality. &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt;The Other&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt; &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt;(1972) Thomas Tryon’s corn-belt-Gothic thriller about a well-off country family in the ‘30s plagued by twin sons (the remarkable Chris and Martin Udvarnoky), one of whom is dead (and a ghost?) and the other of whom may be crazy. A helluva yarn with a nasty taste for Grand Guignol, it’s also an intensely &lt;I&gt;humid&lt;/I&gt; film (thanks to director Robert Mulligan), exploring the kid spaces on a summer-scorched farm, before there were Gameboys and day camps.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt;Chinatown&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt; &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt;(1974) The film that first reincarnated the detective-film noir, Roman Polanski’s majesterial movie is all about L.A., so it’s not shadowy and expressionistic – it’s blistered by July sunshine, and no less affecting for the turnabout. One of the unarguable gems in the American canon, this film can and should be seen for a variety of reasons, but the glare-&amp;amp;-heat seasonal mood is impressive, particularly in view of how the hero – Jack Nicholson’s supercool private dick Jake Gittes – rather hedonistically spends his sweltering mid-days: hanging out, avoiding authority, kinda like a kid.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt;Jaws&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt; (1975) If you were there, in the theaters in the summer of ‘75, you’ve got this movie in your DNA. Truly communal movie experiences like it haven’t come by since – &lt;I&gt;everyone&lt;/I&gt; saw it, &lt;I&gt;twice&lt;/I&gt;, and everyone had a new relationship with the beach. But put the man-eating giant monster shark aside for a moment, and you’ve got full-on, real-to-the-touch Atlantic beach community life, back when people listened to transistor radios in the sand and used suntan oil. The actors’ clothes even seem creased with sand and salt air.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt;1900&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt; &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt;(1977) Italian wunderkind Bernardo Bertolucci had a couple of massive hits, globally, with &lt;I&gt;The Conformist&lt;/I&gt; and &lt;I&gt;Last Tango in Paris&lt;/I&gt;, and so he cashed in his cachet to make this, over-5-hour epic. (Some versions are edited down; find the longest you can, and aim for the Italian-language version, although some of the film’s international cast is dubbed in every version.) Robert De Niro and Gerard Depardieu are an aristocrat and a bastard peasant, respectively, born simultaneously before the turn of the century, and maturing together in Italy through to the rise of Fascism. Politically simplistic (or knowingly nostalgic?), this seemingly limitless pageant is chockablock with masterful set-pieces, scored heartachingly by Ennio Morricone, and its golden Mediterranean aura, consciously reincarnating paintings by Bruegel, Millet and Theodore Rosseau, is something special. &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt;Phantasm&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt; (1978) Perhaps the only effective summertime horror film, Dan Coscarelli’s hallucinogenic original deals with a mysterious mortuary with profoundly weird things going on deep inside of it, but investigated by a lonely kid (Michael Baldwin) in the dead of deeply shadowed, suburban July nighttimes. &lt;I&gt;This&lt;/I&gt; is what we imagined all of that staying-out-late during summer vacation might’ve amounted to. &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt;A Midsummer Night’s Sex Comedy&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt; (1982) It’s possible that no American movie has been as besotted with the sensual realities of summertime as this overlooked and in fact infinitely repeatable Woody Allen comedy, in which three early-century couples gather in a to-die-for Victorian house in the country for a balmy weekend, and endure various mate-swapping peccadilloes. Light on its feet, soundtracked by Felix Mendelssohn, and blessed with the effervescence of Mary Steenburgen and Julie Hagerty, Allen’s movie goes for broke in terms of seasonal glamour: sunlit meadows, firefly swarms, moonlit brooks, rendezvous in the night forest, dining al fresco, daydreaming in cotton dresses, suspenders and straw hats, all of it shot with Vermeerian sublimity by Gordon Willis. It’s time this honey got a reappraisal.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt;A Room with a View&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt; (1986) When this Merchant-Ivory smash was first released, filmgoers didn't know what hit them: the movie's creation of a thoroughly inhabited, semi-mythic, utterly buoyant Britannic universe was so enthralling even E.M. Forster aficionados were taken aback. The movie stayed in theaters for over a solid year in this country; in England, obsessed audiences saw it every week, a kind of Edwardian &lt;I&gt;Rocky Horror Picture Show&lt;/I&gt;. Indeed, it is the most gloriously repeatable of movies, unpredictable, eccentric, large-hearted, rhapsodic and wildly funny. You can easily imagine that more than a few suicides, or at least depression-based behaviors of some regrettable stripe, were prevented in 1986-87, as low-feeling customers returned again and again to balance their lives in favor of essential joy. The movie’s summertime vibe – either in its Florentine chapters, or in the idealized Surrey greenscape – is absolutely infectious. The saga of Lucy Honeychurch (Helena Bonham-Carter) is, archetypally, one of repressed romance, a singsong piece of parlor-room fluff, really. But the movie itself is downright irrepressible, filthy with charming tidbits and background performances and a generous, irreverent tone. The film is paced like a lazy afternoon, and there doesn’t seem to be a limit to its ability to seduce, relax, gladden and captivate. &lt;I&gt;A Room with a View &lt;/I&gt;is the kind of film you envy other people for not having yet seen for the first time – although, honestly, the second, fourth and sixteenth times are their own days in the country.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt;Point Break&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt; (1990) One of the few genuine camp romps of the Reagan-Bush era, this goofball, directed in high, silly style by Kathryn Bigelow, has studly fed Keanu Reeves infiltrate Patrick Swayze’s clan of extreme-sports, surfin’-bird, parachutin’ bank robbers. Idiotic and faux-philosophical, it exudes a thrill-seeking vibe that’s hard to skip, especially when it’s apparent that the stars actually jumped out of airplanes.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt;Belle Epoque&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt; (1993) This Spanish hit has a timeworn vacation-movie story – a well-intentioned boob (Gabino Diego) deserting during the Civil War in the ‘30s takes shelter with a family made up of one crotchety old man (Fernando Fernan Gomez) and his four tempestuous daughters (among them, Penelope Cruz and &lt;I&gt;Y Tu Mama Tambien&lt;/I&gt;’s&lt;I&gt; &lt;/I&gt;Maribel Verdu), all of whom seem in need of a good schtupping. But even though it’s set off-season, it’s still Spain, and it’s got the vibe: Mediterranean heat-beaten stone buildings, Spanish palm trees, beautiful women in sleeveless blouses wandering around thinking about sex even when they don’t think they’re thinking about it. Nothing too artful, but lovely.&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;IMG src="http://images.quickblogcast.com/6/6/6/6/1/125004-116666/Marpessa_Dawn_OrfeuNegro.jpg"&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;</content></entry><entry><title>"Kiss me. Kiss me as if it were the last time." -- Ingrid Bergman, Casablanca</title><link rel="alternate" href="http://flickipedia.net/2009/02/09/kiss-me-kiss-me-as-if-it-were-the-last-time--ingrid-bergman-casablanca.aspx?ref=rss" /><id>tag:flickipedia.net,2009-02-09:b4cdbd00-cde6-45ff-846d-2e1cab3b1b17</id><author><name>Michael and Laurel</name></author><category term="St. Valentine's Day movies" /><category term="Flickipedia" /><category term="romantic video picks" /><updated>2009-02-09T19:20:00Z</updated><published>2009-02-09T19:20:00Z</published><content type="html">&lt;P&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;FONT face="WP MathA"&gt;
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&lt;P align=right&gt;&lt;FONT size=2&gt;&lt;I&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt;St. Valentine's Day! A monster rental day – once a relationship is past those first few rookie years, romantic movies are called upon across the land to warm this February evening. &lt;EM&gt;Flickipedia &lt;/EM&gt;is there!&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt; 
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&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Peter Ibbetson&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;(1935) Semi-obscure and precious as a pearl, this woozy mid-Depression projectile is filmed like an old maid’s opium daydream, but the story is what makes your head spin: after being separated as children, Gary Cooper and Ann Harding meet again with a husband between them, and after he’s accidentally killed, Cooper’s unpretentious architect goes to prison &lt;I&gt;for life&lt;/I&gt; – but as the couple ages, they literally meet, forever young, in their dreams. For &lt;I&gt;decades&lt;/I&gt;. French critic Georges Sadoul wrote about this in his famous 1965 reference volume &lt;I&gt;Dictionnaire du films&lt;/I&gt;, saying that "it is difficult to discuss this film without tending to invent certain details more than 25 years after being burnt by its flame." He didn’t invent much in his synopsis, but the flame is very real.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Wuthering Heights&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;(1939) Whatever can be said about &lt;I&gt;Wuthering Heights &lt;/I&gt;as a romantic experience fit for Valentine’s Day or any other day to kindle powerful emotions, it can’t possibly be enough. This is it, the seminally cosmic love story of all time, of Cathy and Heathcliff, of a yen so powerful it can transcend the grave and jealousy and fate. Samuel Goldwyn, director William Wyler and screenwriters Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur worked up a Bronte reduction sauce, story-wise (the movie stops at chapter 16, which is fine, because the next generation never mattered anyway). But the combined natural forces of Merle Oberon (not a skilled actress, but a galvanic movie star), a young Laurence Olivier, the moors (actually Los Angeles County), and Bronte’s fierce storytelling make this a larger-than-life experience. &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Ignore the few stodgy details, and submerge into its self-destructive passions. &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Ninotchka&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;(1939) On the lighter side, this Ernst Lubitsch comedy is a bliss-out, a paean for Parisian mad love-&amp;amp;-fun, pitched by hedonistic American expat Melvyn Douglas to steely, humorless Soviet comrade Greta Garbo, who’s in town on a matter of state business (goofy Russian agents distracted by the Gallic pleasure principle). Of course, Garbo is masterful as the comically grim maiden in a gray suit, barely disguising a warm heart and yearning for love that we can always see beating beneath the Marxist-Leninist ideology. A little champagne, a little Paris skyline, a little woo from the rather satyric Douglas, and she opens like a lily (figuratively speaking, at least; this is 1939). It doesn’t hurt that Lubitsch had the subtlety and timing of a Hollywood Mozart, and &lt;I&gt;Ninotchka&lt;/I&gt;’s screenplay, mostly by Billy Wilder and Charles Brackett, is one of the wittiest and gentlest of the entire Golden Age.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Casablanca&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1942)&lt;I&gt; &lt;/I&gt;Novelist and semiotician Umberto Eco called it not "a movie," but The Movies, and yet that still doesn’t explain the deathless allure and hypnotic dramatic slam of this greatest Hollywood concoction, as much of a still vibrant myth system as it is a super-romantic wartime soap. Persistently popular for decades after its premiere, &lt;I&gt;Casablanca&lt;/I&gt; ran the natural risk of becoming over-familiar, a storehouse of cliches and fabulous dialogue snippets that have, by now, found their way into the language without very many of us knowing where they came from ("I’m shocked, &lt;I&gt;shocked&lt;/I&gt;..."). But, today, it rarely has occasion to show up on TV anymore, and Humphrey Bogart is no longer a teen-hip, counter-culture icon. Never mind: it’s still the quintessential mating dance between tough-guy cynicism and hearttugging love fable, between self-satisfaction and self-sacrifice, be it in the context of saving the world from Nazis or limning a love affair, or, as in this film, both. Which means it is not, like so many of today’s romances, strictly a "chick flick" – the sensibility at work here, primarily the voice of a remarkable screenplay written and rewritten a day at a time as the movie was being shot, acknowledges, caters to and converses with both genders. Bogart is virtually the 20&lt;SUP&gt;th&lt;/SUP&gt; century’s first definition of a man’s man: ugly and short, but indescribably charismatic and so cool he can run into his lost love (a daydream-inducing Ingrid Bergman), spar with Nazi officers, crack jokes &lt;I&gt;and&lt;/I&gt; subtly reveal a lifetime of bitterness and desire, all at exactly the same time. Bergman, for her part, is both intelligent, gentle and fantastically desirable, the despairing hub around which the battle for the free world revolves. That’s what makes it ideal St. Valentine’s Day viewing – no one’s indulging anyone else, and yet everyone is focused on the tragic intercourse of love and history. &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Lola&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1960) New Wave romantic Jacques Demy takes to the streets of Nantes in his first café love tangle, in which Anouk Aimee is a luscious cabaret singer flitting above a messy but congenial web of lust and love, waiting for her true, idealized love to return to her. &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Heaven Can Wait&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt;&lt;FONT size=2&gt; (1979) Warren Beatty’s remake of the pretty-swell &lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;Here Comes Mr. Jordan &lt;/B&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt;&lt;FONT size=2&gt;(1941)&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt; &lt;/B&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;is a wonderfully lighthearted love story of an aging quarterback who is plucked up to heaven’s way-station before his time – and before his final Superbowl. Too late to go back among the living as his old self, he gets temporary custody of a millionaire’s body, becoming smitten with an Englishwoman (Julie Christie) in the bargain. Beatty and co-writer/director Buck Henry cut the sweetness with plenty of satire – and watch Charles Grodin’s every duplicitous move. Hardly a moment in the movie that isn’t a pleasure.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Shakespeare in Love&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1998) A light-hearted and lovely tale of Shakespeare’s own unrequited love story, which proved the inspiration for &lt;I&gt;Romeo and Juliet&lt;/I&gt; (and &lt;I&gt;Twelfth Night&lt;/I&gt;), as light on its feet as the play is weighty with tragedy. The comic timing is impeccable, from a large and buoyant cast, and the lovable energy of the movie is embodied in Shakespeare himself (Joseph Fiennes), who never seems to sleep and is in constant athletic motion. The players deliver masses of Shakespearean dialogue, sometimes disguised, with complete conviction, wit and speed, and there’s enough heat between Fiennes and Oscar-winner Gwyneth Paltrow to warm the home fires.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Serendipity&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (2001) John Cusack and Kate Beckinsale meet during a holiday shopping tug-of-war for a pair of cashmere gloves at Bloomingdale’s and then continue their flirting over the famous frozen hot chocolate at nearby Serendipity III, following up with skating in the snow at Wollman Rink. Is it fate? She thinks so, to an almost psychotic degree, and so decides to test it, and thus the movies carries on through several years and many monstrous dalliances with destiny, before the inevitable hook-up. &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Before Sunset&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (2004) The setting is Paris, the archetypal hub of romance, and we rejoin Celine and Jesse nine years after they left each other at the train station, swearing to meet in Vienna six months later, in Richard Linklater’s &lt;I&gt;Before Sunrise&lt;/I&gt;. (Look for that in the "Dating" chapter of &lt;EM&gt;Flickipedia.&lt;/EM&gt;) Clearly, we were supposed to wonder if they’d actually meet up – and, just as clearly, we weren’t supposed to know for sure either way. But this sequel, coming a decade later, with a decade’s wear and tear having accumulated on the actors &lt;I&gt;and&lt;/I&gt; the characters, gives us a St. Valentine’s Day-style answer we had no right to expect. It’s both intelligent and sexy and whether you sigh dreamily over the notion of love at first sight or scorn it, the screenplay approaches it in such an original way you won’t have the heart to scoff: Celine and Jesse share humorous, off-beat musings on life while they meander around Paris in the late-afternoon sun the same way they wandered Vienna, but avoiding – and then not being able to avoid – the paths their lives have taken, because, no, they never reunited as they’d promised. Ethan Hawke and Julie Delpy have invested so much in these characters that they share screenplay credit with director Richard Linklater; hard-bitten realists, the three of them are dogged about not letting anyone off the hook romantically-speaking, and yet the movie comes booby-trapped with the sneakiest happy ending ever, a slow dawning as Delpy sashays around her apartment, impersonating Nina Simone. Irresistible.&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &lt;IMG src="http://images.quickblogcast.com/6/6/6/6/1/125004-116666/Wuthering1.jpg"&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;</content></entry><entry><title>"What I want to know is how we're going to stay alive this winter." -- Ralph Richardson, Dr. Zhivago</title><link rel="alternate" href="http://flickipedia.net/2009/01/07/what-i-want-to-know-is-how-were-going-to-stay-alive-this-winter--ralph-richardson-dr-zhivago.aspx?ref=rss" /><id>tag:flickipedia.net,2009-01-07:ede3aa32-cd8a-4496-a29d-3d9012da83c5</id><author><name>Michael and Laurel</name></author><category term="winter films" /><category term="Flickipedia" /><updated>2009-01-07T21:47:00Z</updated><published>2009-01-07T21:47:00Z</published><content type="html">&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt; 
&lt;P&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;&lt;BR&gt;It’s too cold to go outside, isn’t it? If you lean toward counteracting the months of frost with a blast of tropicalia, see the "Summer" section of &lt;EM&gt;FLICKIPEDIA&lt;/EM&gt;. But we’ve found that if you’re hunkered down in the warmth of your home, all the better to punctuate the extreme weather outside, from a comfortable distance, of course. Here're just a few of our Christmas-to-February recommendations:&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;South&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1919) Forget the recent movies, IMAX and otherwise, that recreate the doomed Shackleton &lt;I&gt;Endurance&lt;/I&gt; expedition of 1914-16 to the South Pole; this astonishing film was shot on the spot by one Frank Hurley, who stood there stranded on the ice with the rest of the crew, watching the ice shelves crush the ship, not knowing whether he was in fact doomed or not, and yet still filming, beautifully. All other movies about polar survival are pretenders by comparison.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;The Chechahcos&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;(1924) Amateur Alaskan filmmaker Lewis S. Moomaw’s silent film is an extraordinary Klondike melodrama shot in the northern wilderness and featuring stunning on-location glacier footage. The story is antique, but there’s no denying the veracity of the on-location action. Available on a DVD set titled &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Treasures from American Film Archives: 50 Preserved Films. &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;SOS Iceberg&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT size=2&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt;(1933) This early sound epic is a prime example of the 1920s-30s specie of German adventure film known as "the mountain film," invented and primarily directed by one Dr. Arnold Fanck, and starring primarily one Leni Riefenstahl, just a few years away from being the Third Reich’s most famous propaganda filmmaker. The key attraction is the copious amount of location footage – when Riefenstahl and her comrades are scouring the Arctic circle for lost comrades, it’s no studio set. Of course, man’s triumph over nature’s adversities is just one shading of the &lt;I&gt;ubermensch&lt;/I&gt; obsession that fired the Nazis. Other terrific examples available on disc are &lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;The White Hell of Piz Palu &lt;/B&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT size=2&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt;(1929) and &lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;Storm Over Mont Blanc &lt;/B&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;(1930).&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Portrait of Jennie&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;(1948) After &lt;I&gt;Gone with the Wind&lt;/I&gt;, producer David O. Selznick’s career project was largely taken over with erecting large, crazy movie-poems in honor of his beloved wife Jennifer Jones, and this unashamedly naive phantasia might be the most lovesick. Joseph Cotten plays a struggling artist in a New York where it’s nearly always snowing, and Jones is a girl that appears to him – and only to him – with a ghostly backstory of her own, inspiring him with her inner light. &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Doctor Zhivago&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1965) Boris Pasternak’s Russian-revolution love story, done up in ‘60s-epic style by grandmaster David Lean, about a good-hearted doctor-poet (Omar Sharif) swept up in a political storm he cares nothing about. In fact, he’s passive about pretty much everything, including his torn love for both his gentle, devoted wife and legendary beauty Lara (Julie Christie). This is Russia, so the springtimes feel like winters in Minnesota, even if this was shot almost entirely in Spain (!), and the subarctic ambience is completely fabricated out of white wax. Fake or not, the swirling flurries are relentless, and there are moments where you feel like you’re watching the story unfold from inside a snow globe. &lt;I&gt;Doctor Zhivago&lt;/I&gt; is over-wrought and visually constipated (so much massive history, so many small rooms), but the Zhivago-Lara-stranded-in-the-ice-house set-piece has a cozy-wintry chill that’s hard to beat.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;McCabe and Mrs. Miller&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;(1971) This moody, fur-bundled frontier odyssey might be the best Robert Altman film of all. Warren Beatty plays a entrepreneurial rogue who sets up business in a muddy northwestern mining town (it looks, no kidding, as if it were shot in 1830), and eventually teams up with an opium-smoking madam (Julie Christie) looking to set up a whorehouse. Trouble sets in when gangsters try to squeeze the pair out, and resort to authentic prairie ethics to get their way. This movie teems with life like beehive; nobody was better than Altman in filling movies up with believable inhabitants and texture, and here the misty, greasy, snowy reality of range life is evoked like nobody’s business. No chicanery here – this was how Rocky Mountain life (shot in Vancouver) without utilities were like. Even the relentless Leonard Cohen songs begin to get under your skin. The movie is also a dead-lift triumph of the American New Wave – those years between 1966 and 1977 in which Hollywood went out of its way to make gritty, truthful, challenging films you could believe in.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Promised Land&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1988) Michael Hoffman’s neglected, "personal" drama tracks the post-school lives of two Utah kids: Keifer Sutherland’s shy, geeky damaged goods, and Jason Gedrick’s basketball star-turned-local sheriff. Meg Ryan co-stars, launching her fledgling career with her portrait of a bipolar nightmare very far from the upturned-nose sweetheart she became famous for. The landscape is frozen, and the characters are lost. &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Edward Scissorhands&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1990) They have winter in Florida, too, and this lovely, melancholy Tim Burton fantasy is for the Southern-most snow-deprived of Americans. Anyone who’s had rolls of cotton wadding stapled to their hot roof as fake snow will treasure this eagle-eyed film for its satiric take on postwar suburban chintz, but in the end there’s snow after all – born of misfit heartbreak and devotion. &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Archangel&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1991) A genuine whatzit, this second feature by hermetic Canadian avant-gardist Guy Maddin comes in the guise of a scratched, faded, forgotten movie circa 1930, set in the eponymous Soviet city after WWI, but quite obviously shot on cardboard sets and more believably taking place in Maddin’s movie-crazed headbone. The cheapjack surrealisms and crazy non sequiturs are the joke, covered in fake snow and subject to the harshest winds fans can produce.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Fargo&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1996) A poker-faced slalom through the icy fields of true-crime docudrama, Joel &amp;amp; Ethan Coen's cascade of frozen Minnesotan cops and crime is probably the loopiest based-on-fact murder drama ever made, something like &lt;I&gt;In Cold Blood&lt;/I&gt; reimagined by Dave Barry. Somehow, the filmmakers tell the snowbound saga of a tumbling-dominoes 1987 permafrost bloodbath – featuring nerve-frayed scam source William H. Macy, wired hired gun Steve Buscemi, and serene pregnant policewoman Francis MacDormand (an Oscar) – as cold realism and yet retain their trademark absurdism and larky rhythms. Having grown up in a Minneapolis suburb, the Coens know the vernacular inside and out; though it often feels like a snarky plummet down a long flight of stairs, the movie ends up being a celebration of quiet banality. By the time we reach the woodchipper, we're as thankful as MacDormand’s Chief Marge that there's a mittened world full of idiotic pleasantries and all-you-can-eat restaurants to go back to. &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;The Ice Storm&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1997) At its heart, this Ang Lee adaptation of the Rick Moody novel is a humane, sane, hilarious and rich-as-mousse dispatch on the woes, risks and costs of the all-American family, climaxing in the very real 1973 winter storm of the title and its largely symbolic fallout. The multiple character study encompasses an affable Dad (Kevin Kline) equally bewildered by his affair with a trendy neighbor (Sigourney Weaver) and his slowly disintegrating family, a haunted Mom (Joan Allen) lost somewhere between girlhood and disillusionment, a rebellious daughter (Christina Ricci) experimenting with shoplifting and mock sex with the neighbor’s boys (Elijah Wood and Adam Hann-Byrd), and a sweet-natured pothead son (Tobey Maguire) impassively grappling with puberty. But the real subject is vain, media-drunk modernity itself, and how it leaves us unprepared for the worst things in life, things that can happen at night when everything’s frozen over.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Atanarjuat, the Fast Runner&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (2001) The first film shot in Inuktitut, this 2 1/2-hour epic about Inuit love, family and betrayal is all Arctic, all the time, shot with a wholly convincing native cast on digital video. Primal, enthralling and very cold.&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &lt;IMG src="http://images.quickblogcast.com/6/6/6/6/1/125004-116666/Archangel2.jpg"&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;</content></entry><entry><title>"... isn’t just a day, it’s a frame of mind." -- Edmund Gwenn, Miracle on 34th Street</title><link rel="alternate" href="http://flickipedia.net/2008/12/22/-isnt-just-a-day-its-a-frame-of-mind--edmund-gwenn-miracle-on-34th-street.aspx?ref=rss" /><id>tag:flickipedia.net,2008-12-22:fc384db1-e3da-4e21-81eb-784baa724d7e</id><author><name>Michael and Laurel</name></author><category term="Christmas movies" /><category term="Flickipedia" /><updated>2008-12-23T00:45:00Z</updated><published>2008-12-23T00:45:00Z</published><content type="html">&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT size=3&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;&amp;nbsp;"The&lt;I&gt; mother&lt;/I&gt; of all holidays," is how Jean Shepherd put it in his narration of &lt;I&gt;A Christmas Story&lt;/I&gt;, and true enough – but Christmas is also the year’s most demanding day (or fortnight, really) in terms of atmosphere, emotional temperature and point of view. We don’t feel a need to get all colonial or even terribly grateful on Thanksgiving; nobody talks about "getting into the spirit" of Mother’s Day, Veterans Day or even Independence Day. But for Christmas, there is a pervasive compulsion to summon reserves of tolerance, generosity, congeniality and child-like upbeat-ness, and we go to extraordinary cultural lengths to make it happen. Hence, the phenomenon known as the Christmas movie, all of which serve as narrative windows into that edenic space where cold hearts are warmed, charitable love dawns on the greedy, and, most of all, the childhood memories and the purest notions of home become easier to grasp and hold. Old movies – closer to the idealized past from which all adult ardor for the holiday flows – are best; crassly commercial contemporary parables about crass commercialism (&lt;I&gt;Jingle All the Way, National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation, Christmas with the Kranks&lt;/I&gt;, et al.) are not, and we’ve largely left them behind. The season is short, after all. Here, we've left out the reflexive favorites everyone knows, though rest assured we vet them in &lt;EM&gt;Flickipedia&lt;/EM&gt;.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;The Night Before Christmas&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1905) This fabulously arthritic Edison production from the infancy of film history – directed by narrative pioneer Edwin S. Porter – is a dusty dream of Victorian faerie-ism, opening with Santa feeding a herd of real reindeer and teeming with antiquey landscape paintings and pre-tech toys. It’s also the climactic short on Kino’s DVD &lt;I&gt;A Christmas Past&lt;/I&gt;, a collection of silent, "vintage holiday films" that includes D.W. Griffith’s fiercely moralistic &lt;I&gt;A Trap for Santa&lt;/I&gt; (1909), the utterly lovely Edison film of realistic snowfall frolicking &lt;I&gt;A Winter Straw Ride&lt;/I&gt; (1906), and &lt;I&gt;Santa Claus&lt;/I&gt; (1925), an amateur film proudly shot on and around the Alaskan glaciers. A hypnotic time capsule and an effective pre-modern weapon in the war against shopping and accumulation for their own sakes.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Scrooge&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1935) It’s a tiring parable, but Charles Dickens’s chestnut &lt;I&gt;A Christmas Carol&lt;/I&gt; is all but unavoidable. Preachy, sure, but it’s such an overused story that you can hardly watch an hour of November television without being pelted by a commercial’s reference to it. Better to go to the source – reading! – or this first sound version, British-made, starring stage vet Sir Seymour Hicks as Scrooge. A creaky, attic-webby beaut, choked with shadow and fog.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Remember the Night&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1940) An overlooked screwball masterpiece from Hollywood’s Golden Age, written by bad-boy satiric genius Preston Sturges and directed by premier woman’s director Mitchell Leisen, in which whimsical bachelor-DA Fred MacMurray takes sexy shoplifting tramp Barbara Stanwyck with him to his homestead for Christmas. Sturges’s dialogue, volleyed by these pros four years before &lt;I&gt;Double Indemnity&lt;/I&gt;, is mint, but the idiosyncratic comedy slowly, organically seeps into melancholy. The film is as smart-mouthed as it is stunningly compassionate, and Sturges’s fat heart comes through in ways that are unique in a Christmas film. The characters’ feet are planted in the real world, and the season’s triumph is rescue from the memory of a poisoned childhood. &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Beyond Tomorrow&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1940) An fiercely odd septuagenarian Christmas tale from the authoress of &lt;I&gt;Love Affair&lt;/I&gt;, this forgotten dilly concerns three bachelor fogeys (buoyant Charles Winninger, crusty/affable C. Aubrey Smith, dyspeptic Harry Carey) who die and return as ghosts to facilitate the seemingly doomed romance of young ‘uns. The character-actor star-power alone makes it worth seeking out, but the story is a fabulous lark. Sometimes retitled &lt;I&gt;Beyond Christmas&lt;/I&gt;.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Holiday Inn&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1942) Possibly the best movie to watch while wrapping presents. Bing Crosby and Fred Astaire are a pair of showman who decide to open a country inn that celebrates every holiday with song and dance. That’s it for story. As you’d expect, most of the film is caught up with other seasonal occasions; Christmas is just one page on the calendar. It just so happens that the movie’s endearingly canned studio winter and Irving Berlin’s "White Christmas" are the most memorable things about it. That’s fine: you’re looking for tape. Anyway, from today’s perspective, there’s something inherently Christmasy about the hat-wearing, crooner-loving, homefront ‘40s, isn’t there? &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;The Holly and the Ivy&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1952) A cozy, mature and rarely-seen British heartwarmer in which an aging parson and widower (Ralph Richardson) convenes with his three adult children and other relatives on their cozy village homestead for the holidays - to reminisce about the war, remember dead loved ones, and to lay bare a few family secrets. Director George More O’Ferrall is no Frank Capra, but there’s a lot of genuine warmth to go around.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1964) Baby-boomers know this puppet-animated fable’s &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;scary oddnesses inside and out: the Burl Ives snowman in a plaid vest, the icy toy mansion in the snow, the feverish anxiety about reindeer employment, the Island of Misfit Toys’ winged lion-king, the too-chilling Abominable, complete with giant shark teeth and autonomously mobile fur. Forgive us if we think this decades-old kid’s fodder more than a little strange, from the song lyrics ("We all pretend the rainbow has an end," the key ballad says, "and you’ll be there my friend someday...") to the ending credits, when a sleigh-riding elf, distributing umbrellas to the toys and then tossing them overboard, figures a toy bird can do without and drops him, not knowing it’s a Misfit Toy alum and cannot fly. But that is all decidedly beside the point; for most intents and purposes, because we grew up with it being broadcast every year, it’s an annual must-see. Of course, the Rankin/Bass animation mill rapped out other seasonal staples, all to some degree essential: &lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;The Little Drummer Boy&lt;/I&gt; &lt;/B&gt;(1968), &lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;Frosty the Snowman&lt;/I&gt; &lt;/B&gt;(1969),&lt;B&gt; &lt;I&gt;Santa Claus Is Comin’ to Town&lt;/I&gt; &lt;/B&gt;(1970), &lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;The Year Without a Santa Claus&lt;/I&gt; &lt;/B&gt;(1974), and others far less memorable. But &lt;I&gt;Rudolph&lt;/I&gt; is the genre’s greatest head-trip, a weird dream within which we all remain bewildered children.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Comfort and Joy&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1984) Scottish director Bill Forsyth is – or perhaps was, since his only film since 1993 was never released in the U.S. – a master of gentle discombobulation, and his Christmas movie is appropriately wacky, but in a quiet, generous way. The holiday here is experienced by a middle-aged Glasgow radio personality (Bill Paterson), whose sexy kleptomanic girlfriend walks out on a mysterious whim, and whose subsequent Christmastime loneliness is abated only by his involvement in a turf war fought between two rival ice cream vendors. With Forsyth it’s all in the details and rhythms, and the movie has a thoughtful, ruminative personality that could do wonders, as the titled implies, for the sad-sacked and lonesome.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Gremlins&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1984) A nasty, fantastically clever antidote-film for those of us who think that Christmas commercialism has gotten completely out of hand. Here, seemingly innocent Christmas presents have a Hyde side, take on carnivorous lives of their own and hunt down their recipients. The mayhem of Joe Dante’s badtime-dream – in which adorable Muppet-ish furball creatures, once introduced into suburbia as gifted pets, transform into raving homunculi – might be the most astute metaphor for holiday capitalism ever devised; what seems at first an ordinary act of giving becomes a bloodthirsty battle to the death. (Is there a more triumphant moment in all of ‘80s Hollywood than the hero’s mom, faced with a kitchen full of malevolent harpies, gearing into combat mode and dispatching the cackling creatures in the blender and the microwave?) Should we all have to fight our gifts? We’d certainly give the exchange, and the intent behind it, a lot more thought.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;The Dead&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;(1987) Director John Huston may have been close to dying, but apparently no one else was going to film James Joyce’s most famous short story, and make it an indelibly mournful, Old-World Christmas experience. Two spinster aunts host a Christmas dinner in turn-of-the-century Dublin, when ladies wore long skirts and high lace collars and guests entertained each other with stories, songs and dancing. Outside, horse-drawn carriages glide gently through the snow; inside, the holiday feast is an occasion to discuss scandals and politics before setting aflame the Christmas pudding. That is, before a plaintive singing of a sad Irish ballad, and suddenly the past returns and the present begins to decay and the season’s marking of time and age inspires a deep and universal melancholy. Something of a family affair (Huston’s son Tony wrote the ingeniously expanded screenplay, and daughter Angelica stars as the wife with a secret story), this dreamy adaptation refuses to be hurried, and Joyce’s prose (narrated by Donal McCann, as the husband) is surpassingly eloquent. With logs for the fire and a toast in hand, it’s a salve for those hungering for a more literate, and subtly powerful, holiday film.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Nutcracker: The Motion Picture&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1987) It may be one of America’s best kept secrets: we don’t really like the ballet of &lt;I&gt;The Nutcracker &lt;/I&gt;very much, and resent having to ingest it every year as if it were a citizenship requirement. Most of us would be surprised to learn that the original E.T.A. Hoffmann tale has precious little to do with sugar-plum fairies and all to do with a rather vicious war between toys and monster mice. Filming ballets has always been a bad move in any event, but this Carroll Ballard film version has a few saving graces, beyond the score: it’s designed by Maurice Sendak, and it has a bewitching opening act, in which the Drosselmeier figure embarks on his epic toymaking, shot in intricate close-up. Then there’s dancing.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Elf&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;(2003) Christmas sappiness plus flatout contemporary yucks, with Will Ferrell making himself a bankable star as a human-raised-as-North-pole-elf who gets detoured, in &lt;I&gt;Miracle on 34&lt;SUP&gt;th&lt;/SUP&gt; Street&lt;/I&gt;-slash-&lt;I&gt;Big&lt;/I&gt; fashion, to the new New York – which isn’t all that different from the old New York of our Christmas movie memories, down to Ferrell’s employment at Gimbel’s (shot, it seems, in the survivor of the department store giants, Macy’s). An unexpected surprise is Zooey Deschanel crooning "Baby, It’s Cold Outside" in a voice rich enough to rival the original Esther Williams version.&amp;nbsp;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&lt;IMG src="http://images.quickblogcast.com/6/6/6/6/1/125004-116666/stanwyck.gif"&gt;&amp;nbsp; &lt;/P&gt;&lt;FONT size=2&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;</content></entry><entry><title>"A long time ago, but only if you measure in terms of years..." -- Richard Dreyfuss, Stand by Me</title><link rel="alternate" href="http://flickipedia.net/2008/08/25/a-long-time-ago-but-only-if-you-measure-in-terms-of-years--richard-dreyfuss-stand-by-me.aspx?ref=rss" /><id>tag:flickipedia.net,2008-08-25:e491b6c0-6a13-41bf-b1b9-eb5504fdd350</id><author><name>Michael and Laurel</name></author><category term="Grade School Movies" /><category term="Flickipedia" /><category term="Going Back to School Movies" /><updated>2008-08-25T23:29:00Z</updated><published>2008-08-25T23:29:00Z</published><content type="html">&lt;P&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;FONT face="WP MathA"&gt;
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&lt;P align=right&gt;&lt;FONT size=2&gt;&lt;I&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt;Going back to school! But what was it like? Doubtless our own childhoods happened differently than the way we all remember them, but who cares: it’s the emotional memories that count, and only a handful of movies have faithfully and intelligently spoke to that truth. From &lt;STRONG&gt;&lt;EM&gt;Flickipedia&lt;/EM&gt;...&lt;/STRONG&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;I Was Born, But...&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1932) Like a &lt;I&gt;Little Rascals&lt;/I&gt; episode writ large and filmed by a meticulous genius, this silent Japanese film by Yasujiro Ozu views the world of two prepubescent brothers from three feet off the ground, as they struggle with the playground hierarchy in their neighborhood, and discover in horror that their office-worker father is subjugated by the same conflicts. Because Ozu was always concerned with perspective and observation above all things, this film focuses on the real give-and-take of being a boy, and being eight.&lt;/FONT&gt; 
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&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Zero de Conduite&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1933) As much as this Jean Vigo mini-masterpiece may be helpful in terms of "Parenting Tweens &amp;amp; Teens," it’s also a vivid snapshot of grade-school rebelliousness – you may’ve forgotten what it was like to spitball a teacher in 5&lt;SUP&gt;th&lt;/SUP&gt; grade, or what it felt like to &lt;I&gt;want&lt;/I&gt; to, but this visionary little gem jacks you into that universal spirit in no time flat, and at the same acts out your craziest preadolescent wishes of ridiculous chaos.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;The Curse of the Cat People&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;(1944) One of the quiet miracles of ‘40s B-moviemaking, this is a dream-like journey into an eight-year-old girl’s fantasy world, as the daughter of Kent Smith, the hero from &lt;I&gt;Cat People&lt;/I&gt; now remarried, is visited by the ghost of his first wife (Simone Simon). Shadowy, gentle, and captivating.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;The 400 Blows&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1958) This semi-autobiographical French New Wave landmark by Francois Truffaut is as potent a vehicle for an adult’s autobiographical ruminations as it is a guide to the new adolescent’s storming terrain. Watch Jean-Pierre Leaud as he watches grown-ups, steals happiness in their absence, and warily regards the world that grates against him at every turn. &lt;BR&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;STRONG&gt;&lt;EM&gt;If... &lt;/EM&gt;&lt;/STRONG&gt;(1969) British critic-turned director Lindsay Anderson made his mark with this boarding-school diatribe, which remade Zero de Conduite down to the rooftop climax, but in the process cut the English disciplinarian education system to ribbons. It was, also, a generational anthem-film, ill-mannered and furious, and it made Malcolm McDowell enough of a key figure to make him Stanley Kubrick’s inevitable casting choice the next year for A Clockwork Orange.&lt;BR&gt;&lt;STRONG&gt;&lt;EM&gt;&amp;nbsp;&lt;BR&gt;Small Change&lt;/EM&gt;&lt;/STRONG&gt; (1976) Truffaut returns to early adolescence, in a tapestry film depicting an array of suburban French children, overcoming ordinary adversities and embracing life’s simple glories in ways that are alien to grown-ups. Invigorating and hope-generating.&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;STRONG&gt;&lt;EM&gt;Welcome to the Dollhouse&lt;/EM&gt;&lt;/STRONG&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1995) If you don’t remember the killing fields of the seventh grade, this movie’s a reminder, opening in the Theater of Cruelty of the junior high school cafeteria, where finding somewhere to sit and someone who will &lt;I&gt;let &lt;/I&gt;you sit with them has all the shivery dread of being lost in a police state without ID. The camera slowly circles around the 11-year-old Dawn Weiner (Heather Matarazzo), standing there holding her tray and surveying the combat zone, her bespectacled face a knot of huddled horror. You’ve been there.&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &lt;IMG src="http://images.quickblogcast.com/6/6/6/6/1/125004-116666/smallchange0241.jpg" width=583 border=0&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;</content></entry><entry><title>"What I used to pass off as a bad summer could now potentially turn into a bad life." -- Chris Eigeman, Kicking and Screaming</title><link rel="alternate" href="http://flickipedia.net/2008/06/26/what-i-used-to-pass-off-as-a-bad-summer-could-now-potentially-turn-into-a-bad-life--chris-eigeman-kicking-and-screaming.aspx?ref=rss" /><id>tag:flickipedia.net,2008-06-26:33ddc7fa-5909-4328-83cc-911b06a9a246</id><author><name>Michael and Laurel</name></author><category term="Flickipedia" /><category term="Summer Movies" /><category term="Graduation movies" /><updated>2008-06-26T21:07:00Z</updated><published>2008-06-26T21:07:00Z</published><content type="html">&lt;P&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;FONT face="WP MathA"&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;School's out, 4-eva, high school, middle school or college&amp;nbsp;-- here're some rentable recommendations from &lt;EM&gt;&lt;STRONG&gt;Flickipedia&lt;/STRONG&gt;&lt;/EM&gt;, capturing or recapturing that tingliest of seasons...&lt;BR&gt;&lt;I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;STRONG&gt;The Graduate&lt;/STRONG&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1967) A generational emblem more than a movie, this Mike Nichols classic is about lostness, anomie and social incompleteness as only movies made in the late-60s-early-70s can be. Dustin Hoffman became a star in the unlikeliest of circumstances: as an aimless college grad who cannot get a fix on what he wants out of life. He is seduced by a family friend (Anne Bancroft), and is then pressured into dating her daughter (Katherine Ross); as life gets more complicated, he searches madly for any reason at all to choose one destiny over another. Credit is due to 1967 audiences, who saw themselves in this ambivalent portrait, and dared to ask big questions of themselves and their movies. Picture, if you can, the new millennium’s freshly graduated degree-holders with the same choice.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;&lt;STRONG&gt;American Graffiti&lt;/STRONG&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1973) The first coming-of-age ensemble comedy in American movies? George Lucas’s sublime evocation of a midwestern 1962 of cars, rock ‘n roll radio and lost sub-adults certainly established the timeless stereotypes of that post-graduation summer night that everyone experiences: the high school sweethearts confronting college and separation (Ron Howard and Cindy Williams), the itchy smart kid who doesn’t know if college is what he wants (Richard Dreyfuss), the hopeless dweeb looking only to score (Charles Martin Smith), the cool dropout hood who cannot adjust to the real world (Paul LeMat). Roaringly funny and bittersweet.&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;&lt;EM&gt;&lt;STRONG&gt;Fandango &lt;/STRONG&gt;&lt;/EM&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;(1985) A narrow but rueful valentine to the college grads of the ‘Nam era, introducing the world to Kevin Costner, as the larky leader of a motley gang of sullen jerks either embracing the war, running from the draft, getting married or merely remaining drunkenly unconscious. Costner’s energy keeps it afloat.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Dazed and Confused&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1993) This is what the beginning of summer, with school a fading memory already a day later, felt like for director Richard Linklater, whose milieu here was Texas in the late ‘70s. Trailing after a dozen or more recently freed high schoolers as they search for a party, contemplate their dubious role in the social order, and inflict/escape from the hazing rituals that may be particular to Austin suburb schools, the film is dense with detail, one-liners, deft performances and astutely observed reality – though it may take two viewings to mesh with the movie’s unique rhythms. It’s also something of &lt;I&gt;The Outsiders&lt;/I&gt; of its generation, more or less introducing the world to Matthew McConaughey, Ben Affleck, Nicky Katt, Rory Cochrane, Joey Lauren Adams, Parker Posey, etc.&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;&lt;STRONG&gt;&lt;EM&gt;Kicking and Screaming&lt;/EM&gt;&lt;/STRONG&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1995) Here was the late-century’s generational anthem film, except no one seemed terribly interested in identifying with it. Writer/director Noah Baumbach’s debut, the movie is a rueful portrait of four preppy, Ivy League-ish friends living off-campus, suddenly left in the weird afterworld where graduation has marked them as grown-ups but the indulgent, trivia-obsessed allure of college life maintains its grip. Baumbach poured a hundred college careers’ worth of ironic humor into the script, and Chris Eigemann, Josh Hamilton and Carlos Jacott are a dry riot. Eric Stoltz almost steals the movie in an improvised role as a philosophical bartender, but it’s hard not to fall for Olivia d’Abo as an impulsive creative-writing major conscious of her braces.&lt;BR&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;STRONG&gt;&lt;EM&gt;Can’t Hardly Wait&lt;/EM&gt;&lt;/STRONG&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;&lt;EM&gt; &lt;/EM&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;(1998) An overlooked gem among a hundred cretinous teen-party comedies, in which another dozen or so easily recognizable high school types flounder their way through a single night of epiphany, melodrama, humiliation, socialization, and beer. The film’s pulsing, forgiving heart and sharp ear (courtesy of writer/director team Deborah Kaplan and Harry Elfont) are responsible for the movie’s distinction; the joyous chaos of teenage parties are not easy to depict, but this movie gets it, with a title from an old Replacements song no less. Jennifer Love Hewitt and Ethan Embry are the mismatched hottie-&amp;amp;-nerd, but funnier and more believable are Lauren Ambrose’s quasi-goth cynic, Peter Facinelli’s monster jock, and Charlie Korsmo’s ultra-geek. &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Ghost World&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (2001) The pioneering film portrait of a distinctive, universal and heretofore ignored teenage social class: the bitter, frumpy, snobbish, willfully unpopular "weirdos," self-defined only in disdainful opposition to their peers. It’s a state that often provides for a certain amount of lostness after graduation, which is what the heroines of Daniel Clowes’s graphic novel and Terry Zwigoff’s acerbic movie struggle with: the vacuum left once they’re left to their own devices. Thora Birch and Scarlett Johansson are pitch-perfect in what amounts to an act of modern anthropology – rescuing a lovable misfit teen type from obscurity.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &lt;IMG src="http://images.quickblogcast.com/6/6/6/6/1/125004-116666/Dazed.jpg" width=462 border=0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;</content></entry><entry><title>"This is a revolution, dammit! We're going to have to offend somebody!" -- William Daniels, 1776</title><link rel="alternate" href="http://flickipedia.net/2008/06/18/this-is-a-revolution-dammit-were-going-to-have-to-offend-somebody--william-daniels-1776.aspx?ref=rss" /><id>tag:flickipedia.net,2008-06-18:c8136cf8-3d73-4e60-9951-f0b1d6ddaed4</id><author><name>Michael and Laurel</name></author><category term="Fourth of July" /><category term="Flickipedia" /><category term="independence day" /><updated>2008-06-19T00:19:00Z</updated><published>2008-06-19T00:19:00Z</published><content type="html">&lt;P&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Independence Day approacheth --&amp;nbsp;parades and fireworks and barbecues – but what if it rains? And what about the evening of the 3&lt;SUP&gt;rd&lt;/SUP&gt;? You can’t count on the movies for accurate history, but they can contextualize the party.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Janice Meredith&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1924) A pulpy silent romance in the D.W. Griffith tradition that positions its heroine, played by Hearst protege Marion Davies, as helping out with both Paul Revere’s ride and Washington’s crossing of the Delaware. Extremely rare, with a sensational cast that also included W.C. Fields (as a drunken Brit officer), Tyrone Power Sr. (as Lord Cornwallis), Fatty’s cousin Macklyn Arbuckle (as Davies’ father), and, as Marie Antoinette, one Princess Marie de Bourbon, a popular model and sole living relative of King Vittorio Emanuele III of Italy, in one of only two known film appearances.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Ah, Wilderness!&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1935) Small-town, turn-of-the-century life by way of Eugene O’Neill, so depression, alcoholism and prejudice cuts the sun-dappled optimism to some degree. But it’s set on and around a 19&lt;SUP&gt;th&lt;/SUP&gt;-century-style, midwestern 4&lt;SUP&gt;th&lt;/SUP&gt; of July celebration, and the exuberant, creaky, cracker-barrel priorities are in line, with Mickey Rooney and his little-rascal buddies setting off firecrackers underneath the grown-ups’ various melodramas.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Lafayette&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1961) A little-seen French historical pageant about the revolutionary hero, good for old-fashioned European attention to period sumptuousness, as well as a spot-the-star cast of internationals, including Orson Welles as Benjamin Franklin, Jack Hawkins as Cornwallis, vet character star Howard St. John as George Washington, and Vittorio de Sica as Edward Bancroft, Franklin’s double agent.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;1776&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1972) Easily the most thorough-going War of Independence film ever made in Hollywood – there aren’t many competitors – this silly anachronism is also a eager-to-please Broadway musical put on film, which says something about how truly interested Americans have been about their own history. Still, it has its devotees, and besides, the facts are there, a good deal of the dialogue is attributed quotes, the cast is game, and the anti-conservative number "Cool, Cool Considerate Men" is now included on video versions, after being initially cut by studio chief Jack Warner at the behest of President Richard Nixon.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Blow Out&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1981) Brian De Palma’s tribute to Antonioni’s &lt;I&gt;Blow Up&lt;/I&gt;, Chappaquiddick, Watergate, JFK, sound engineering and Philadelphia, all rolled into a crazy political-assassination plot that the hero (John Travolta, engagingly relaxed) may or may not have accidentally recorded on audio tape. The background of a berserk City of Brotherly Love during the July 4&lt;SUP&gt;th&lt;/SUP&gt; fete is as central, visually and ironically, as Hitchcock’s use of national monuments. All in all, a smashing, thoughtful, stirring piece of pulp, and probably the best movie for the holiday.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Revolution&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1985) A rare attempt by the Hollywood studios to make a serious film about the Revolution, but boy, the engine dropped out of this lemon straight from the factory. Which makes it something like a comedy now, what with Al Pacino’s meant-to-be-historical Brooklyn accent, Annie Lennox stalking around as "Liberty Woman," a sound mix that literally loses 50% of the mumbling dialogue, a stupefying lack of history or action, and an impressive visual pallette that runs from umber to sienna. &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;The Last of the Mohicans&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1992) Though Michael Mann’s buckskin-sex, tomahawk-to-the-head take on James Fenimore Cooper isn’t about the Revolutionary War or national independence, it evokes as few films do the real wilderness of the time, as both homestead, battlefield and frontier. Log cabins, cannon-stocked forts, gunsmoke and mud, eating venison by real candlelight – this may be the closest an American film will ever come to capturing the period. Plus it has Daniel Day Lewis and Madeleine Stowe as star-crossed lovers amidst the warfare, making the most convincingly hot movie pair of the ‘90s.&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&lt;IMG src="http://images.quickblogcast.com/6/6/6/6/1/125004-116666/mohicans.jpg" width=437 border=0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;</content></entry><entry><title>"People get married and then they do the most hideous, unbelievable things to each other." -- Nicolas Cage, Honeymoon in Vages</title><link rel="alternate" href="http://flickipedia.net/2008/05/29/people-get-married-and-then-they-do-the-most-hideous-unbelievable-things-to-each-other--nicolas-cage-honeymoon-in-vages.aspx?ref=rss" /><id>tag:flickipedia.net,2008-05-29:daa353d5-254e-498c-8b0a-675f96d2aff4</id><author><name>Michael and Laurel</name></author><category term="Engagement" /><category term="Weddings" /><category term="Flickipedia" /><updated>2008-05-29T21:14:00Z</updated><published>2008-05-29T21:14:00Z</published><content type="html">&lt;P&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;FONT face="WP MathA"&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;FONT face="Times New Roman"&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Is it that time, time for weddings?! You've got months and months of preparation, and yet do you have any idea what you're in for? Moviemakers heart this familiar social rite like no one's business, and the movies could be ceremony-jitter foot-rubs, fair warning shots across your bow, etc., but remember, they're someone else's story, not yours.&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;The Philadelphia Story&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1940) A famous pre-nup crash-and-burn: Katherine Hepburn is the proud, self-righteous bride-to-be wanting to be knocked down from her pedestal ("I don’t want to be worshiped, I just want to be loved."); Cary Grant is the sarcastic ex determined to make her feel guilty and stop the wedding; Jimmy Stewart the class-conscious society reporter thrust into the maelstrom. General wedding planning tizziness abounds. The comedy is high, and this stable of racehorses all run in peak form – even if the thrust seems to be that women should forgive men their boyish faults, whether drinking, adultery, or just the pinching fingers of the slightly creepy Uncle Willie (Roland Young). Though overrated, this may be a good movie to watch upon engagement if only because it stirs up every doubt and second thought you &lt;I&gt;should&lt;/I&gt; have before tying the knot.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;The Forgotten Man&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT size=2&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt; (1941) (on DVD &lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;Robert Benchley and the Knights of the Algonquin&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;) The old jokes about the bride’s father, milked dry and ignored and sidelined throughout the protracted wedding-preparation process, began here with this vintage Robert Benchley short. No one did or has ever done befuddled paternalism as well as Benchley.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Father of the Bride&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1950) The grandad of all Hollywood wedding comedies, this story begins at the end: an exhausted father in the aftermath of his only daughter’s wedding, sitting among the wreckage of his home, rubbing his aching tootsies. If you’re contemplating a simple home wedding, this movie will give you pause – there’s nothing simple about it and you’ll be left cleaning up after the newlyweds have hopped their plane to Bermuda. Spencer Tracy at his comical best as the ineffectual dad will make you glad if you’re the father of the groom, who seems to get a free ride. Then again, the costs Tracy incurs will seem free by comparison with today’s price tag: $3.75 a head! If only. &lt;BR&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;&lt;STRONG&gt;&lt;EM&gt;&lt;BR&gt;Cousin, Cousine&lt;/EM&gt;&lt;/STRONG&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;&lt;STRONG&gt;&lt;EM&gt; &lt;/EM&gt;&lt;/STRONG&gt;(1975) Bubbly French rom-com: two cousins-by-new-marriage, already unhappily wed to sluts, link up and have an affair, which causes problems in subsequent family gatherings. Sexy and light, with Marie-Christine Barrault holding it together with the easiness of her smile and the lilt in her voice.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Moonstruck&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1987) Romance and Italianate comedy in a kind of dreamy, magical hunk of brownstone Brooklyn, with Cher’s widowed frump dubiously accepting the proposal of Danny Aiello’s dumb momma’s boy and then falling for his troubled, one-handed brother (Nicolas Cage). Luckily, the margins of the movie are filled to the brim with witty character actors, slabs of comedic nonsense, behavioral detail, and a sense of warm-heartedness toward the follies of humankind. Here, John Patrick Shanley captured a cartoon-&lt;I&gt;paisan&lt;/I&gt; flavor, and though it dates, it’s a far better submersion in Mediterranean-emigre boisterousness than &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;My Big Fat Greek Wedding.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;True Love&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;(1989) Nuptial planning, Bronx Italian style, including tacky bridesmaid gowns (rainbow), tawdry wedding halls that serve mashed potatoes dyed to match the color of the gowns, opinionated friends, interfering relatives, and a bride and groom who are swept along with the idea of marriage as something you ought to do and so convince themselves that they &lt;I&gt;want&lt;/I&gt; to do it. Ron Eldard’s groom is hopelessly immature and unromantic but Annabella Sciorra ignores the fact that her marriage is doomed before it starts; she can’t help it, she’s too busy wiping fingerprints off her back. This is probably a lot funnier if you’ve witnessed this Noo Yawk behavior up close; otherwise, it may all just seem completely crazy.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Four Weddings and a Funeral&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1994) A band of single friends, led by the shyly charming Hugh Grant, chase each other around England, attending weddings in various states of disarray and embarrassment. Star-crossed &lt;I&gt;amour &lt;/I&gt;and funny wedding mishaps abound but this international smash sucked in its audience and an Oscar nomination with the grace of its execution – a brilliantly witty screenplay, perfectly staged and acted, and a pervasive fondness for even the bit characters and background extras. &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Walking and Talking&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1996) Nicole Holofcener’s chick flick depends absolutely and generously on the verve and candor of Catherine Keener and Anne Heche as lifelong buddies negotiating their own mutating friendship as one faces marriage and the other faces loneliness. The film has the easy rhythm of a three-hour girl talk phone call, and all the actors run like linebackers with their unpredictable and witty (but not too witty) characters. Keener is particularly radiant and raw, in a way that justifies the whole movie – a dozen things can happen on her face at once. Watching her come up with something to say in an embarrassing situation is like watching a Japanese table-tennis pro play himself. &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Black Cat, White Cat&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;(1998) Anyone familiar with the films of Sarajevo-born filmmaker Emir Kusturica knows what they’re in for with this unrestrained absurdism, about a Rom enclave on the banks of the Danube, a festering nest of stray animals, sniping neighbors, grifters, crooks, and layabouts, as it primes for a particularly troublesome wedding. Car-eating pigs, humping dogs, begging gypsies, dwarf brides, gold-toothed paraplegic mobsters, hidden corpses: you’ll never be bored. Kusturica’s stories (and this movie could hardly function with just one) don’t always work, and his humor is often crude, but his films intend on being filthy, hungry parades of life and they succeed. It can get exhausting – picture a 2+-hour-long Serbian Little Caesars commercial – but who’s going to complain about a movie with too much stuff in it? &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Meet the Parents&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (2000) This brutally comic hit found the lurking fears of every young lover meeting their prospective in-laws for the first time, and lit them up good – Ben Stiller is just, well, Ben Stiller, but his fiancee’s father (Robert De Niro) isn’t just a controlling, disapproving patriarch, he’s actually a semi-retired intelligence ramrod, with only his little girl now to serve and protect. Every step is the wrong step, every action is scrutinized mercilessly, Stiller’s anxious gaze of disbelief as each new mishap befalls him is a wonder, and De Niro flexes all of his dead-eyed menace.&amp;nbsp;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &lt;IMG src="http://images.quickblogcast.com/6/6/6/6/1/125004-116666/WeddingMarch.jpg" width=250 border=0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;</content></entry><entry><title>"Who lit this flame in us? No war can put it out, conquer it." -- Ben Chaplin, The Thin Red Line</title><link rel="alternate" href="http://flickipedia.net/2008/05/19/who-lit-this-flame-in-us-no-war-can-put-it-out-conquer-it--ben-chaplin-the-thin-red-line.aspx?ref=rss" /><id>tag:flickipedia.net,2008-05-19:aa490b88-c7df-4cb9-80aa-0ae8b30ca7f9</id><author><name>Michael and Laurel</name></author><category term="Memorial Day" /><category term="Flickipedia" /><updated>2008-05-19T19:07:00Z</updated><published>2008-05-19T19:07:00Z</published><content type="html">&lt;P&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;FONT face="WP MathA"&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt;&lt;FONT size=2&gt;A perfect example of &lt;EM&gt;Flickipedia&lt;/EM&gt;'s utility -- Memorial Day? Some actually honor the war dead, most of us just barbecue -- but wouldn't the right movie hit the balanced note between reverence and long-weekend recreation? But some war movies are tosh, and many are just jingoistic sensationalism. Here are a few selected recommendations:&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;&lt;STRONG&gt;All Quiet on the Western Front&lt;/STRONG&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;&lt;STRONG&gt; &lt;/STRONG&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;(1930) Erich Maria Remarque’s ubiquitous WWI novel gets an Oscar-winning, early-talkie treatment from director Lewis Milestone, and if the drama is clumsy, the trench-warfare battle scenes are horrifying and traumatic.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;The Fighting Sullivans&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1944) One of WWII’s saddest stories, dramatized in this low-budget propaganda piece: five stick-together Iowa brothers, Navy enlistees after Pearl Harbor, all go down in the Pacific together. Naturally teary beyond belief, and the tale that prompted the core story of &lt;I&gt;Saving Private Ryan&lt;/I&gt;.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;A Walk in the Sun&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1946) Lewis Milestone returns to the battlefield, but with a difference: this stylized, grunt’s-eye-view follows a standard motley assortment of soldiers through Italy, from landing to nondescript farmhouse destination, their dialogue (and often monologues) a form of repetitious, singsong battle poetry. The enemy is never seen.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;The Burmese Harp&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;(1956) A haymaker of an anti-war film from Japanese moviemaker Kon Ichikawa, in which a soldier escapes death in Burma by masquerading as a Buddhist priest, and then finds himself transformed by the horrors of war into a holy man dedicated to burying the countless dead. &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;The Dawns Here Are Quiet &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;(1972) This patient Soviet propaganda movie was nominated for a 1972 foreign-film Oscar and then summarily forgotten, but it might just be the only war film in which the beleaguered infantry is made up entirely of women. The horny male soldiers at a lonely outpost during WWII are replaced by ably trained female volunteers, all of them eager, fresh-faced comrades, each with her own fragile hopes for the future. Soon, a Nazi party presses them into armed conflict, with their avuncular C.O. torn between duty and guardian-guilt. For the Soviets, an inspiring ending meant martyrdom, not salvation.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Overlord&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1975) A low-budget British film comprised of half archival WWII footage and half low-budget, low-key dramatics, Stuart Cooper’s all-but-forgotten film (a winner, nonetheless, at the Berlin Film Festival) echoes &lt;I&gt;All Quiet on the Western Front&lt;/I&gt; in structure and tone, but the very real sequences of bombing raids and smoldering urban craters leave their own welts.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;A Midnight Clear&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;(1992) It’s Christmas, 1944, the Germans have nearly lost and everyone knows it. Six mostly inexperienced soldiers (Ethan Hawke, Frank Whalley, Gary Sinise, etc.) are selected for special assignment because of their high I.Q.s, so we know we’re in for a thoughtful movie – no kill-the-Kraut heroism here. After stumbling through the darkened snowy forest and holing up in an abandoned mansion wondering what to do; the Germans they meet feel likewise, and for a while, but not forever, it seems they won’t exchange fire more dangerous than snowballs. Unjustly overlooked, from a William Wharton novel.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;The Thin Red Line&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1998) The true WWII masterpiece from ‘98, Terrence Malick’s comeback film, after a 20 year silence, takes place during and around the battle of Guadalcanal but is in reality far more concentrated on the emotional experience of battle, and the impact, poetically invoked, of human warfare upon individuals and upon nature. Essentially a three-hour, non-narrative experiment, in which there are no main characters – just an ensemble of thirty or more figures – and no story, just impressions, experiences, feelings (the complex weft of narrational voices often do not synch up with on-screen personas) and astonishing images. Oh yeah, it’s based on James Jones’s 1962 novel, though you’d never know it.&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &lt;IMG src="http://images.quickblogcast.com/6/6/6/6/1/125004-116666/WWII.jpg" width=416 border=0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;</content></entry><entry><title>"A boy's best friend is his mother." -- Anthony Perkins, Psycho</title><link rel="alternate" href="http://flickipedia.net/2008/05/05/a-boys-best-friend-is-his-mother--anthony-perkins-psycho.aspx?ref=rss" /><id>tag:flickipedia.net,2008-05-05:e8c1802b-4369-49da-b64c-c809c884155c</id><author><name>Michael and Laurel</name></author><category term="Mother's Day" /><category term="Flickipedia" /><updated>2008-05-06T01:15:00Z</updated><published>2008-05-06T01:15:00Z</published><content type="html">&lt;BR&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;What to watch for Mother's Day? -- please don't assume, like that nitwit Hartford reviewer, that we're advocating that everyone &lt;EM&gt;should &lt;/EM&gt;watch a movie on or in prelude to Mother's Day. Please, make your own plans, eat out, plant zinnias, go for a walk. But if a film is on the agenda, here're some Flickipedia recommendations:&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Mrs. Miniver &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;(1942) The peerlessly lovely Greer Garson is unjustly notorious as merely the prototype of genteel, stiff-upper-lip British resolve in wartime. That’s may be why she won an Oscar for this homefront melodrama, but today her character is a revelation – a wife and mother of three radiating lusty playfulness, real-woman warmth and pre-feminist strength. Luminous, almond-eyed and honey-voiced, Garson never sounded the acting trumpets like Katherine Hepburn or Bette Davis did; she just was, and here she’s the ultimate Mom, confident and unruffled by chaos and yet still stirringly sexy and sweet. William Wyler’s movie is, otherwise, laced with propaganda and hokum, but between Garson’s maternal light and Teresa Wright (another Oscar) as her grown daughter, the movie veritably glows.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;I Remember Mama&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;(1948) The story of a dead-poor Norwegian immigrant clan living in San Francisco circa 1910, whose matriarch is wise, firm, funny, loving and, of course, self-sacrificing. The family could just as well have been Scottish or Asian or shtetl-Jewish – mothers want more for their children the world over and why should they have a new coat when the children need books? Irene Dunne, in her last significant role, flashes that ironic smile as she bustles about with her brood, but she’s fully committed to the woman’s limitations and the feeling of family intimacy. There’s no defense from tearjerking once she sneaks into a hospital children’s ward pretending to be a nurse, just so she can to croon to her sick daughter, and, helplessly, the other sickbed kids as well.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Italianamerican&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;(1974) Early in his career as New York’s signature movie voice, Little Italy-bred Martin Scorsese shot this 49-minute beauty featuring little more than a plastic-wrapped-couch interview with his aging parents in their apartment on Elizabeth Street, in which they detail their lives as second-gen Sicilian-Italians, and life in the lower neighborhoods during the first decades of the century. The movie, like the Scorsese family itself, defers to gregarious, no-nonsense Mama Catherine on most counts, and that includes the credits, which feature her recipe for spaghetti sauce. Mrs. Scorsese appeared in several of her son’s films, but this document is as thorough and priceless as portrait of mother-son love as any ever made. &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;The Joy Luck Club&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1993) Amy Tan’s multi-generational saga about Chinese mothers, Chinese daughters, and Chinese-American daughters gets a compressed-shorthand Hollywood treatment, but the actresses are all dynamite, and the dramatic circumstances of their travails – feudal-era oppression, betrayal, infanticide, abuse, you name it – is a tell-your-Mom-you-love-her emotional bludgeon in any package.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Rugrats&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; ("Mother’s Day," 1997) Chuckie, you will recall if you were lucky enough to have children when this brilliantly inventive and eloquent cartoon series first ran, is the lisping, bespectacled scaredy-cat whose mother died – and in this episode, which can hit you like a truck if you let it, the toddlers try to find, amid the Mother’s Day gift-giving, a mom for Chuckie, until it is realized that she is all around them already, in the garden she planted before she got sick. Whew.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Rabbit-Proof Fence&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (2002) As European settlers took to slowly decimating Aboriginal society in Australia, what began as just one manner of oppression – kidnapping Aboriginal children from their families "for their own good" and training them as servants – became, in the case of "half-caste" children, official state policy. This program persisted, astonishingly, into the 1970s, but Philip Noyce’s film, based on a true story, is set in 1932, when three girls, aged 14, 10 and eight, were snatched from their family and sent to a slave camp 1200 miles away. Indignantly, they escaped, hellbent on returning to their mothers, walking for months back north along the continent-dividing fence, one step ahead of the law. Based on a memoir by a grown daughter of the eldest girl and rarely digressing from the journey itself, the movie is a primal trial, visually arresting and sociopolitically devastating. &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Lovely and Amazing&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;(2002) A caustic film about a family of insecure women plagued with the same flaws and body-image hang-ups nearly every woman has. The mother (Brenda Blethyn) subjects herself to liposuction while fantasizing about the dishy doctor, while each of the daughters flounders in their own lives: the eldest (Catherine Keener) has a disastrous with a teenager, the middle child (Emily Mortimer) is helplessly vulnerable to anorexia and male criticism, and the youngest daugher, an adopted African-American (the painfully genuine Raven Goodwin), overeats to assuage her confusion with life. The film is aptly titled, because it boils down to the mother-daughter bonds keeping everyone’s head happily above water.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Since Otar Left...&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (2003) A Georgian film, shot in Tbilisi (apparently, the Frenchest city in the ex-Soviet regions), and a vivid portrait of a cultured, all-woman family (cranky, reactionary grandmother; bitter, pragmatic mother; rebellious teen daughter) struggling to survive in the new nation after the clan’s son/brother/uncle hightailed it to Paris. Between the three women (in masterful performances across the board), every love-hate tangle we’ve ever had with our mothers is hashed over and healed. &lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;IMG src="http://images.quickblogcast.com/6/6/6/6/1/125004-116666/Miniver.bmp" width=496 border=0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;</content></entry><entry><title>"Let there be dancing in the streets, drinking in the saloons, and necking in the parlor!" -- Groucho Marx, A Night at the Opera</title><link rel="alternate" href="http://flickipedia.net/2008/04/27/let-there-be-dancing-in-the-streets-drinking-in-the-saloons-and-necking-in-the-parlor--groucho-marx-a-night-at-the-opera.aspx?ref=rss" /><id>tag:flickipedia.net,2008-04-27:6ad1189c-f75a-41c0-b972-712a5682e3e9</id><author><name>Michael and Laurel</name></author><category term="Comments" /><category term="Flickipedia" /><updated>2008-04-27T18:34:00Z</updated><published>2008-04-27T18:34:00Z</published><content type="html">&lt;BR&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Recent comments from &lt;EM&gt;Flickipedia&lt;/EM&gt; readers:&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;From Randy M.:&lt;BR&gt;I love FLICKIPEDIA! And sure, my family is always looking for new movies to watch that go with the season, like a good wine. Your "Opening Day" section is terrific, but here's a few you missed, recently on TCM: the Ring Lardner baseball comedies starring Joe E. Brown, Alibi Ike and Elmer the Great. Both use the Chicago Cubs of the day!&lt;BR&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&lt;BR&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Us: &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Good catch! The real players in those movies aren't just Cubs, but Browns, Dodgers, etc.; the cast list on IMDB includes Jim Thorpe, Bob Meusel and Cedric Durst! And they're funny.&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;From Gina Esposito:&lt;BR&gt;this winter my family and i went to Paris for spring break, and of all the movies we watched to get psyched up, we picked Ratatouille! it was perfect, a vacation all by itself.&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;Us: &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Certainly a good prime for dining out... But more "French" than French, right?&amp;nbsp;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;From Daniella:&lt;BR&gt;Love the gray British movies from the 60s in the fall -- The Pumpkin Eater is a great one. And Room at the Top.&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;From F.P.A.:&lt;BR&gt;A terrific baseball movie Flickipedia has overlooked: A League of Her Own! Or is it left out for reasons of your own?&lt;BR&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Us: It's a salient point -- we did leave out &lt;EM&gt;A League of Her Own&lt;/EM&gt; for our own, largely critical reasons. Our book could only touch on what we saw as the imperative choices for each occasion. But in the dialogue here, anything can happen, and any devotion can be exhalted. If only we could be sold on the notion that &lt;EM&gt;A League of Her Own &lt;/EM&gt;deserves a reevaluation...&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;</content></entry><entry><title>"Are her lips as red as pomegranates?" -- Anne Baxter, The Ten Commandments</title><link rel="alternate" href="http://flickipedia.net/2008/04/24/are-her-lips-as-red-as-pomegranates--ane-baxter-the-ten-commandments.aspx?ref=rss" /><id>tag:flickipedia.net,2008-04-24:b167076e-f3a1-4397-9604-2f879c363075</id><author><name>Michael and Laurel</name></author><category term="Flickipedia" /><category term="Passover" /><updated>2008-04-25T00:26:00Z</updated><published>2008-04-25T00:26:00Z</published><content type="html">&lt;BR&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Passover? FLICKIPEDIA bellys up to the seder table:&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;&lt;/P&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;The Ten Commandments&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1923) Cecil B. DeMille’s career-making silent epic, quite stodgy and unimpressive today, but worthy a day in court if you’re sick of the colorful, bombastic 1956 version.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;The Ten Commandments&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1956) Over-the-top Bible epics &lt;I&gt;used&lt;/I&gt; to be so much campy fun before Mel Gibson came along and got all preachy; we bet Easter dinner at the DeMille household was a lot more fun than at the Gibson ranch. Would Passover have been so entertaining over the years without televised visions of Charlton Heston’s chin, John Derek’s pecs, Anne Baxter’s pouty kitten lips, or Yvonne DeCarlo’s heaving cleavage? Even if you haven’t always been at &lt;I&gt;shul&lt;/I&gt;, you know the deal – Moses, Pharaoh, Red Sea, Edward G. Robinson growling, "Where’s your messiah &lt;I&gt;now&lt;/I&gt;?" – and know too that it’s a long enough movie to stretch over at least a few of the nights, if not all eight. "So it shall be written, so it shall be done."&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Exodus&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1960) Leon Uris’ bestselling magnum opus covered much more history than simply the struggle in the late ‘40s to establish a Jewish state, but you gotta give director Otto Preminger and long-blacklisted screenwriter Dalton Trumbo a hand for trying to winnow it down to a dramatic throughline. As Passover viewing, this long (3½+ hours), rhapsodic, muddling tapestry &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;is sure to strike an emotional chord, even if you remain troubled by the way the Mid-East has turned out since. Filmed on location in Cyprus and Israel, and starring Paul Newman as the perpetually pissed-off hero, Ari Ben Canaan.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Wholly Moses!&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1980) As with &lt;I&gt;Monty Python’s Life of Brian&lt;/I&gt;, this Mel Brooks-ish Old Testament parody trails after a schmuck (Dudley Moore) who was &lt;I&gt;almost&lt;/I&gt; Moses. Low schtick, with Madeline Kahn, Jack Gilford, James Coco, and Richard Pryor as the Pharaoh. Director Gary Weis began doing hilarious shorts for &lt;I&gt;Saturday Night Live&lt;/I&gt; in its infancy.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;A Rugrats Passover&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;(1994) As with &lt;I&gt;A Rugrats Chanukah&lt;/I&gt;, this special episode celebrated American secular Jewishness in the wisest and most entertaining fashion, structured this time around Grandpa Boris regaling the kids with an epic, Pickles-style Exodus story.&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;The Prince of Egypt&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (1998) The &lt;I&gt;kinderlach&lt;/I&gt;, their knowledge of Passover limited to macaroons and matzoh balls, are falling asleep waiting for Grandpa to get on with the plagues already – &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;it was probably just such confusion at the Spielberg, Geffen and Katzenberg Seders that led to the creation of this cartoon Haggadah from DreamWorks. It’s quite dramatic and stirring and certainly a cut above many of the animated features that wind up being merchandised into our consciousness. Our kids were completely engrossed and acted as if they’d never heard the story before. The five-year-old said it best during the parting of the Red Sea: "Oh yeah! I want to be on Moses’s team!"&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;&lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;
&lt;P&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Into the Arms of Strangers: Stories of the Kindertransport&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/B&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; &lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia&gt;&lt;FONT size=2&gt;(2000) A conventional but heart-wrenching documentary about the shipment of some 10,000 European Jewish children from their families to England in the year prior to the invasion of Poland, where they waited out the war with foster families and then, afterwards, tried to return home. Other chest-swelling non-fiction portraits of life and survival in the Holocaust era – a fairly recent breed of documentary – include &lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;Fighter&lt;/B&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/I&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt; (2000), &lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;Shanghai Ghetto&lt;/I&gt; &lt;/B&gt;(2002), and &lt;B&gt;&lt;I&gt;The Danish Solution: The Rescue of the Jews in Denmark&lt;/I&gt; &lt;/B&gt;(2003).&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &lt;IMG src="http://images.quickblogcast.com/6/6/6/6/1/125004-116666/TenComm.jpg" width=227 border=0&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;&lt;/P&gt;</content></entry><entry><title>"Who are you really, and what were you before?" -- Humphrey Bogart, Casablanca</title><link rel="alternate" href="http://flickipedia.net/2008/04/01/who-are-you-really-and-what-were-you-before--humphery-bogart-casablanca.aspx?ref=rss" /><id>tag:flickipedia.net,2008-04-01:9109d80c-0a47-42e6-a935-666d5391f99f</id><author><name>Michael and Laurel</name></author><category term="Flickipedia" /><category term="Invitation to Comment" /><updated>2008-04-01T14:07:00Z</updated><published>2008-04-01T14:07:00Z</published><content type="html">&lt;BR&gt;&lt;FONT face=Georgia size=2&gt;Like our book, this website is intended as a conversation -- we'd like therefore to invite any and all to post comments pertaining to what movies they watch or would like to see in connection with their life occasions, holidays, milestones, moods, ordeals and whims. For example, what movies best celebrate opening day? What did you watch on Easter or what will you watch on Passover? What movie, after&amp;nbsp;a long and doleful winter, sings the ballad of springtime in your house? What would you recommend -- or not recommend! -- for Mother's Day? Graduations approach -- what will you watch? What film best summons memories of high school or college for you?&lt;BR&gt;&lt;BR&gt;Feel free as well to ask us for help if you're stuck or tired of the same-old go-to classics. You comment, and we'll post them&amp;nbsp;as entries. Let the discussion commence!&lt;BR&gt;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp; &lt;IMG src="http://images.quickblogcast.com/6/6/6/6/1/125004-116666/Marx.jpg" width=275 border=0&gt;&lt;/FONT&gt;</content></entry></feed>