Song of the month December 2016

Waste a Moment–Kings of Leon

Hoo-boy this song is all over the radio this month.  I like it, and because I’m usually driving when I’m listening to music on the radio, I can’t Shazaam songs.  So I do my best to remember a line or two and then google later.  The line I chose to remember was “she’s a live wire.”  This isn’t even the correct lyric, it’s “HE’S a live wire.”  But it didn’t work to google it, because you have no idea how many songs have the phrase “live wire” in them.  It’s enough that someone has complied a list.  I had to wait to hear the song again and try for a different phrase.

Video=film school attempt at deep meaning

All We Ever Knew–The Head and the Heart

Aside from the fact that there are three separate parts to this song (intro, regular part, super cool break) I just love how earnest this is.  The super cool break (feeling low, feeling high, feeling down, why isn’t this enough?) feels like 70s soft rock in all the right ways.  It’s also a sad song that sounds happy, which is an 80s thing I always enjoy encountering.

The video includes the classic tropes of “band plays in a cool location” interspersed with lots of slow-mo (walking, throwing feathers from a pillow, etc.)

#52MoviesbyWomen goal complete!

In 2016 I set out to watch 52 films written or directed by women.  I have completed that goal.

Here’s my list:  https://letterboxd.com/stenaros/list/52-films-by-women/

What I learned:

While it’s fairly normal for male directors to write and direct films, it’s rare for a woman director to do so.

When male directors have hits at Sundance, they often get distribution and three-picture deals.  Women, not so much.  Example: the 12 year gap between Kelly Reichardt’s Sundance-lauded River of Grass (1994) and Old Joy (2006), her first feature film

The filmography for male directors over a 10-20 year span tends to have a movie every year or so.  The filmography for women directors tends to have a movie every four or five years (or more).  The gaps tend to be filled in by guest directing television shows.

The best thing you can do to support women directors is to go see their movies in the theater on opening weekend, because box office returns drive so much in the industry.  Might I suggest the Woman and Hollywood weekly email list?

Even if you have a box office hit (Catherine Hardwicke’s Twlight) it’s likely to be discounted.

Favorite Directors and films:

Forgotten Director:  Elaine May.

Most famous for her bomb Ishtar (which I think is funnier that most people give it credit for), she did great work in the 70s with the darkly funny A New Leaf. Her film The Heartbreak Kid anticipated the “uncomfortable humor” seen on shows such as The Office by several decades.  (There’s a remake of the Heartbreak Kid with Ben Stiller that I do not recommend)

Woman who I wish would direct a movie every year:  Gina Prince-Bythewood

Love and Basketball is a sports movie without the big game.  Beyond the Lights shows the tradeoffs made for fame.  Both focus on relationships and shifting loyalties.

Rock Star Director:  Catherine Hardwicke

Her movies go full-tilt, while also managing to break your heart.  Thirteen (co-written with an actual 13-year-old girl) is bright and horrifying, Lords of Dogtown is full of amazing 70s-skater period detail and humanity, Miss You Already tells a friendship and cancer story that I don’t usually see.

Best Micro/Macro Director: Mira Nair

She can zoom out for flamboyant set pieces and zoom in for interpersonal exchanges.  Her Vanity Fair is bright, not stodgy.  Her Monsoon Wedding is modern, traditional and full of love.

Director as Artist:  Julie Taymore

I watched nothing by her this year because I’ve already seen everything she’s directed.  She got her start in the theater (if you’ve marveled over the costumes in the Broadway production of the Lion King, you’ve seen her work) and her movies are like moving works of art.  Across the Universe was heartily embraced by teenage girls–and thus dismissed by a lot of people—who fell for the way she brought Beatles songs to life.  Frida was the best homage the artist could have asked for.

The Quiet One: Kelly Reichardt.

I’m guessing the scripts for her films are a fraction of the average because most of her movies don’t have much talking.  But she gets her actors to get so much across without the words.  Old Joy is the story of male friends grown apart, set in the woods around Portland (Bagby Hot Springs makes an appearance).  Meek’s Cutoff is a different kind of Oregon Trail story.  Night Moves is an environmental activist story from the people perspective, not the ideological perspective.

I’m thankful I undertook this project.  I watched a lot of good movies I wouldn’t have otherwise.  In the future, I will endeavor to prioritize movies made by women.

Three sentence movie reviews: After the Wedding

Jacob, manager of an orphanage in India, must go to Denmark to procure more money, and, as it turns out, have some secrets revealed to him. I liked tracking how my judgement and loyalties shifted the more I learned.  Contains a lot of close-ups of sad/upset people, but captured in a very open and loving way.

Cost: free from library
Where watched: at home

poster from:http://www.impawards.com/intl/denmark/2006/efter_brylluppet.html
(I love the Danish name:  Efter Brylluppet)

Three sentence movie reviews: Doctor Strange

This contained all the elements of what we’ve come to expect from Marvel films,  plus some Christopher Nolan-style Inception things.  It’s also a good reminder that one should not be distracted by things while driving.  All the big-name actors gave good performances, and it didn’t drag, for such a long movie.

Cost: $7.25
Where watched: Century Theaters Clackamas Town Square. (First time at this theater!  Really liked it!  It’s very far away, though.)

poster from: http://www.impawards.com/2016/doctor_strange.html

Z-A games. Eggs & Empires

We’ve made it to “E” in our Z-A quest to play all our games.  This brings us to Eggs and Empires, a game I enjoy because it’s quick to learn, has a strategy, and also isn’t called Exit Empires, like I originally thought when Matt was first talking about it.

In this game, you play cards attempting to capture “good” eggs, and avoiding “bad” eggs.   I killed Matt in this contest, making this one of my few wins in this project.

Progression in phone service: a visual in three parts

First, there was the phone.  Until 2013, I was a landline-only person.  I loved my phone number, so much so that when I moved from downtown, I called the phone company and told them, “I’m moving and I want to keep my phone number.”  Thankfully, rules had relaxed and it came with me when Matt and I moved in together, and then followed us to the Orange Door.

In 2013, I bought my first cell phone*, skipping over all other incarnations and jumping in at the smartphone period.  I was surprised at how much I liked it.  So this was why everyone was always staring at them.  One thing I didn’t like?  My cell phone number.  It started with 971, for one thing.  Who wants that stupid area code?  I didn’t actually want to talk on my cell phone, so I kept the landline, and my awesome phone number.

Just this year, I learned you can keep your landline number and have it ported to your cell phone company.  I would not have to give up my beloved phone number!  It happened that I was due for a new phone, so instead of upgrading and transferring my cell number to my new phone, I instead transferred my landline number to my new phone.  It was easy!**

Now we are not paying the monthly bill for a landline AND I have my favorite phone number.  All is well.

I realize that cool phone numbers are more-or-less moot.  Once the number gets programmed into someone’s phone they never look at it again.  But I know how cool my phone number is. It’s mathematically correct!  So I’m happy.

*Note that this is not cell phone, version 1, it’s cell phone version 2.
**Porting the number was easy, dealing with the fallout from the landline people was not. We lost internet for a few days, which wasn’t fun, and turned out to have not been necessary.

Three sentence movie reviews: Hell or High Water

Interesting perspective on the bank robber movie, with good performances by all.*  I was interested in the inclusion of causal racism in the film and feel like there’s a whole discussion to have there, that no one is having.  Overall, a tense journey with a few surprises.**

Cost: $3.00
Where watched: Laurelhurst with S. North

*There are great bit parts also, played by a bunch of fun-to-watch people. Katy Mixon (as Jenny Ann, the waitress who didn’t want to give up her tips) was my favorite, though Margaret Bowman as the T-Bone waitress was also fun.
**Also an example of a movie where people on both sides of the gun debate could point to and say, “See!  That’s why we should/shouldn’t have open carry laws!”

poster from: http://www.impawards.com/2016/hell_or_high_water.html