Showing posts with label Movies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Movies. Show all posts

Thursday, May 31, 2012

Thursday 13: Great Movie Quotes



A fun one from the archives of Notes in the Key of Life.  What are your favorite movie quotes?


--"What we do in life echoes in eternity." Gladiator, 2000.

-- "You're gonna need a bigger boat." Jaws, 1975.

-- "Keep your friends close, but your enemies closer." The Godfather Part II, 1974.


Al Pacino in The Godfather


-- "Cinderella story. Outta nowhere. A former greenskeeper, now, about to become the Masters champion. It looks like a mirac ... It's in the hole! It's in the hole! It's in the hole!" Caddyshack, 1980.

--"Carpe diem. Seize the day, boys. Make your lives extraordinary." Dead Poets Society, 1989.

--"Every man dies, not every man really lives." Braveheart, 1995.

--"Hello. My name is Inigo Montoya. You killed my father. Prepare to die."  The Princess Bride, 1987

--"I'm your huckleberry." Tombstone, 1993.

Kurt Russell and Val Kilmer in Tombstone


--"Round up the usual suspects."--and--

-- "Louis, I think this is the beginning of a beautiful friendship."  Casablanca, 1942




--"Life goes by pretty fast. If you don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it."  Ferris Bueller's Day Off, 1986

-- "I believe God made me for a purpose, but he also made me fast. And when I run I feel His pleasure." Chariots of Fire, 1981

--"Although my memory's fading, I remember two things very clearly. I'm a great sinner and Christ is a great Savior."  Amazing Grace, 2006

What are your favorites?


Participate in the Thursday 13

Saturday, January 21, 2012

Saturday Review of Books: The Hunger Games


Jennifer Lawrence as Katniss Everdeen in the upcoming "The Hunger Games" movie

After months (years?) of hearing about this book, and the trilogy that it launches, I finally succumbed and read The Hunger Games.

Why had I resisted for so long?  Well, I'm kind of ambivalent about dystopian fiction.  Some of it I'm perfectly fine with, intrigued and captivated even.  But some of it I find just too bleak and depressing.

I'm one who often uses fiction as an escape from reality.  Our own world is awful enough--why escape into a world that's even worse?

But after several friends and loved ones told me that, basically, the story trumps the bleakness in The Hunger Games, I downloaded it on my Kindle, and on a day or two with plenty of time on my hands, I dove in.

My verdict?

I really liked it.

I was hooked from the beginning, when we first meet Katniss Everdeen, a young girl doing her best to help her family survive in a world where food is hard to come by and death by starvation is an everyday affair.

Katniss is a real heroine--brave, intelligent, spirited, and skilled as a huntress.  You like her immediately and are rooting for her right off the bat.

And that's a good thing, because she's about to be plunged into the worst ordeal that could befall a young person in her world.

The Story

The Hunger Games are the ultimate reality show.  Two young people, a boy and girl, from each of 12 Districts in this post-apocalyptic America (now called Panem), will be dropped into an "arena" where they must not only survive, but fight to the death.  The last one standing is the victor.

(The "arena" varies from year to year, from desolate and barren landscapes to those filled with trees and bodies of water.  Basically, whatever the "Gamekeepers" think will make the most entertaining show for the audience.)

As it turns out, the boy from Katniss' district that accompanies her to the Hunger Games is Peeta Mellark, a baker's son who years ago literally saved her and her family from starvation by a single kind act.

The two are mentored by Haymitch, a past Hunger Games victor who is drunk more often than not.  They come up with a strategy to please the "Gamekeepers" and the audience of this intricate reality show.  They'll pretend that Peeta is madly in love with Katniss, and that the two are star-crossed lovers.

But only one can emerge the victor, right?  So not only must Katniss guard herself from actually feeling affection for Peeta, she must remember that ultimately, one or both of them is going to die.

What I Thought

Well, the story did trump the bleakness.

Suzanne Collins is definitely a great storyteller.  Her background in television writing is obvious, as the book practically translates itself into a movie as you're reading it (and of course, it will be a movie, coming out in March.)

While she's a good writer, she's no better than a host of other writers.  For instance, while reading this, I thought of  Lisa T. Bergren's River of Time series, which also features a brave, spirited, skilled young woman.  Instead of a dystopian setting, Bergren's heroines (Gabriela and her sister) go back in time to medieval Italy, a place teeming with just about as much danger and violence as any postapocalyptic world.

Bergren is every bit as good a writer as Collins.  Collins just came up with this incredible story and she tells it beautifully.

The Hunger Games is an automatic page-turner, because the reader is so invested in Katniss and whether or not she'll survive, you simply can't wait to find out what happens.  Every page is another adventure.

My Thoughts: The Spiritual?

One thing I couldn't help but notice was the complete lack of spirituality in the book.  It makes sense, of course, because obviously this is a world where the idea of God and/or religion has been completely done away with.

For example, there are frequent mentions of special days like one's birthday and New Year's Day, but no mention of Christmas.

Katniss never once calls upon or reaches toward anything higher than herself.  As a Christian, that struck me.  I can't imagine being in extreme peril and not being able to cry out to God.

The world in which Katniss lives is clearly Godless.  And it has reached a point where life has obviously so little value that the society can eagerly and happily be entertained by a lavish production that ends in the deaths of 23 young people.

In this way, the book reminds me of the Roman Empire at the height of its excess and bloodthirstiness.  Just as the Romans eagerly watched Christians being eaten by lions, the society Katniss inhabits takes avid pleasure in watching the gory deaths of the young people.

(The comparison to Roman times is actually fairly clear in the book--even with many of the residents of "the Capitol" having Roman names like Octavia, Flavius, etc., and people like the Gamekeepers sitting at perpetual banquets where they gorge themselves on food and wine.)

You can't help but look at our own society and wonder just how much (or how little) it would take to get us to that point.

Bottom Line...


The bottom line is that The Hunger Games fills all my requirements for a great read:  compelling, intriguing story that keeps me turning pages; characters I care about and become fully invested in, and good writing to make the story come to life.

Do I think it's any better than a host of other books I've read?  No...obviously, like the Twilight series and others, it has just had the fortune to appear at the right time to appeal to a huge audience--and to young people who may just now be realizing how awesome a good book can be.

I will definitely read the other two books in the trilogy.


I'm linking up today with Semicolon's Saturday Review of Books--click the icon for more info!


SatReviewbutton

Friday, August 12, 2011

From the Archives: My challenge to the makers of nasty comedies




(Originally posted Oct. 3, 2008)

1972's "What's Up, Doc?"--not a nasty comedy

Yes, you, Judd Apatow and all the other film makers of your ilk. Here's my challenge:

Make a comedy--just ONE comedy--that doesn't rely on vulgarity, sex, and profane language to get a laugh. Think you could do that?

Hmmm...I'm hearing crickets. Not only are Judd and the others not listening, but even if they were, there's zero chance they would ever take anyone up on that challenge. I honestly don't think there's any way they could make an entire movie like that, and furthermore, I don't think they would want to.

What brought all this up?

Well, several days ago the 1972 movie, "What's Up, Doc?" aired on cable. I taped it for later viewing with my 21-year-old daughter, who had never seen it.

Now, I don't think I had seen the movie since the seventies, so I was curious as to how it would hold up. Actually, it holds up VERY well. The humor is still fresh and clever, the actors truly fun to watch, the dialogue snappy, the slapstick really funny (and I'm not usually a big fan of slapstick, but this is done very well).

The bottom line, it makes you laugh...and without resorting to filth.

After we watched it, my daughter bemoaned the fact that there are so few movies like that anymore. Even the milder, less offensive ones tend to fall back on sexual situations and bad language. What happened to good, clean, classy, LAUGH OUT LOUD comedies?




Watch "What's Up, Doc?" and tell me if you miss the degrading, cesspool humor. Tell me if you thought, "Drat it, I sure could have used a way-too-much information sex scene or a million F-words. It would have made the movie SO much funnier..."

Am I the only one who feels this way? If you're with me on this, movie-maker Kevin Smith thinks you and I are in the minority. Smith recently said: "[Profanity] turns some people off, but that's how mostly everybody I know speaks. It's kind of strange. Whenever somebody goes, 'That offends me,' I'm like, wow, what kind of weird, opposite, bizarro frame of mind do you live in? Cursing is just so second nature, you don't even think of it as cursing anymore. It's just your lexicon."

Smith, by the way, is the producer of an upcoming new movie about two friends who kill some time by making a porn movie.




So, any suggestions?

Got any recommendations for movies that are funny AND relatively clean? Even if they're old ones, let me know in my comments section!

(Originally posted Oct. 3, 2008)

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

From the Archives: Penelope--A Whimsical Movie with a Good Message


James McAvoy

(Originally posted 9/10/08)

My daughter and I watched a charming movie the other day that must have completely escaped my notice when it first came out. It was Penelope...a whimsical, funny tale that I think has a good underlying message about self-esteem for young girls.

Penelope is a young woman born into a rich family that has been cursed. The first daughter born to the family will be born with a pig's snout...and will remain that way until she is loved by "one of her own kind."

Christina Ricci does a good job as Penelope, bringing just the right touches of humor and longing. Although it's obvious she wants to be released from the curse, she's able to laugh at herself and create a rich world in the privacy of her own room, to which she's pretty much been exiled.

Catherine O'Hara is hilarious as Penelope's mother, who is frantically bent on getting her daughter married off to a blue-blood so the curse can be lifted. Her character should give pause to moms who unreasonably try to change their daughters.

But the real charmer in the movie, for me anyway, is James McAvoy (you'll remember him as the faun in The Lion, the Witch and The Wardrobe) as the guy who falls for Penelope without seeing her...and whose love proves true even when he does get a load of the snout.



Although hiding his beautiful Scottish accent with an American one (why? there are lots of other British accents in the film), it's easy to fall for his character. Who wouldn't love a guy who sees past a horrible defect to the beauty of the girl inside? McAvoy is not conventionally handsome, but he was quite attractive in this movie.

Although modern, the movie has a fairy tale feel. The creators of the film said they tried to portray it as taking place "any time, anywhere," and they pretty much succeeded.

Best of all, besides being fun and entertaining, the movie says good things to young girls in an age where eating disorders and teen-age plastic surgery are all too common.

I enjoyed it very much.

(Originally posted 9/10/08)

Monday, June 13, 2011

True Grit (2010): A movie worth watching


"You must pay for everything in this world, one way and another. There is nothing free except the grace of God."




Every once in a while, a movie comes along that doesn't make me regret I spent a couple of hours of my time watching it...in fact, I regard it as an uplifting experience.

Such was the case with True Grit.

From the moment I saw a verse from Proverbs on the screen, listened to the soft piano notes playing "Leaning on the Everlasting Arms,' and heard the female narrator utter the quote above, I knew this was going to be a special movie.

I had never seen the 1969 version of the movie, starring John Wayne, Glenn Campbell and Kim Darby. And I'm actually glad I hadn't. I had nothing with which to compare this movie, and I have a feeling I might find the original movie lacking. One reviewer called the new version "not so much a remake as a masterly re-creation."

Hailee Steinfeld as 14-year-old Mattie, who is determined to capture her father's killer and avenge his death, is a marvel. From the moment she appears on the screen, we're charmed.

Mattie's young face is a canvas for emotions ranging from stubbornness and coolness to fear and excitement. Her articulate intelligence and naive but confident courage are wonderful to see.

Apparently, Joel and Ethan Coen (the producers) wanted to be faithful to Mattie's characterization in the Charles Portis book on which both movies were based.

According to Wikipedia:

Mattie Ross "is a pill," said Ethan Coen in a December 2010 interview, "but there is something deeply admirable about her in the book that we were drawn to," including the Presbyterian-Protestant ethic so strongly imbued in a 14-year-old girl. Joel Coen said that the brothers did not want to "mess around with what we thought was a very compelling story and character". The film's producer, Scott Rudin said that the Coens had taken a "formal, reverent approach" to the Western genre, with its emphasis on adventure and quest. "The patois of the characters, the love of language that permeates the whole film, makes it very much of a piece with their other films, but it is the least ironic in many regards."


Jeff Bridges is wonderful as the gruff, eye-patched Marshall Rooster Cogburn who initially doesn't want anything to do with Mattie's quest. In a very moving climactic scene, though, Cogburn becomes the father Mattie needs when she needs him most.

Ultimately we realize that although Mattie wanted Cogburn's help because she heard he has "true grit," it's Mattie that has that quality, in spades.

The ending was a bit anticlimactic (not sure, but I think I might have preferred the way the original movie ended it). And I wouldn't watch this with younger children; there are a few violent scenes, one in particular that's fairly grisly.

True Grit received 10 Academy Award nominations, but didn't win a single one. It also was snubbed by the Golden Globes. World Net Daily's Jack Cashill speculated that the Golden Globes, run by the European press, "likely slighted 'True Grit' for its unapologetic celebration of republican virtue. I refer here to those virtues necessary to build a successful republic: self-reliance, resourcefulness, strength, competence, charity, piety."

For me, these virtues were what made the movie worthwhile. Along with terrific acting, a compelling story, and the welcome realization that the great Western isn't dead yet--and that good movies can still be made.

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Thursday Thirteen Flashback: 13 Great Movie Quotes

via

Casting about for something to blog about today, I thought I'd resort to one of my lazy, um, I mean, fun postings of something out of the archives of Notes in the Key of Life.

I decided on re-posting one of my Thursday Thirteen lists. Thursday Thirteen was a meme I used to take part in, a few years back.

Before posting, I thought I'd better check up and find out if Thursday Thirteen is still around. And guess what? It is.

So, although I can't promise I'll participate every week (it can be kind of hard to come up with a list of 13 anything, after a while), I'll definitely be participating today.

Oh, and one of the quotes justifies my visual ode to Russell Crowe above. :)

***********

This was the subject of our Fun Poll on the Marlar in the Morning show 101QFL a while back, and I thought it would make a good Thursday Thirteen. Here are some favorites (some of mine, some of other peoples') in no particular order...


--"What we do in life echoes in eternity." "Gladiator," 2000.

-- "You're gonna need a bigger boat." "Jaws," 1975.

-- "Keep your friends close, but your enemies closer." "The Godfather Part II," 1974.


Al Pacino in The Godfather


-- "Cinderella story. Outta nowhere. A former greenskeeper, now, about to become the Masters champion. It looks like a mirac ... It's in the hole! It's in the hole! It's in the hole!" "Caddyshack," 1980.

--"Carpe diem. Seize the day, boys. Make your lives extraordinary." "Dead Poets Society," 1989.

--"Every man dies, not every man really lives."--"Braveheart," 1995.

--"Hello. My name is Inigo Montoya. You killed my father. Prepare to die."--"The Princess Bride," 1987

--"I'm your huckleberry."--"Tombstone," 1993.

Kurt Russell and Val Kilmer in Tombstone


--"Round up the usual suspects." --and--

--"Louis, I think this is the beginning of a beautiful friendship."--"Casablanca," 1942




--"Life goes by pretty fast. If you don't stop and look around once in a while, you could miss it."--"Ferris Bueller's Day Off," 1986

--"I believe God made me for a purpose, but he also made me fast. And when I run I feel His pleasure."--"Chariots of Fire," 1981

--"Although my memory's fading, I remember two things very clearly. I'm a great sinner and Christ is a great Savior." "Amazing Grace," 2006

What are your favorites?


Participate in the Thursday 13

Thursday, October 07, 2010

When movies were movies


Elizabeth Taylor in one of my favorite classic movies, "Father of the Bride"

Looking at this tribute to June Allyson at Lily Lemontree stirred up lots of memories for me.

(Yes, I'm totally going to be showing my advanced age in this post, but whatever.)

Some of my favorite growing-up memories are sitting up late at night to watch what was called "The Late Show" on TV.

Most often they were those wonderful old black-and-white movies. Whether comedies, musicals or film noir, they were from a different era of movie-making...an era when an entire film could be made without resorted to lewdness, vulgarity, or any language stronger than, "Gee, swell!"

What are your favorite movies or actors from that era? Let me know in my comment section!

Following: some of my favorite stars from movies that comprised The Late Show



Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergman


One of my all-time favorites: Jimmy Stewart


Grace Kelly


Gene Kelly


Classic man of style: Gary Cooper



Elizabeth Taylor: in her youth, she truly must have been the most beautiful woman in the world


The always-adorable Doris Day


Cary Grant--no words!


Bette Davis--truly a drama queen!


Ginger Rogers and Fred Astaire tripping the light fantastic







Yes, our former president, an actor in his youth. Gorgeous much?

Monday, January 18, 2010

Stuff I've Never Done, That's Always Done in the Movies



NOTE: OK, I've re-posted this thing more than once, but it's just so genius! Anyway, enjoy (again?)

Oh, and feel free to add more if you think of any!

********

Several months ago, Men’s Health came up with a list of things that happen all the time on screen, but never in real life: “I’ve never…” At the time, I was still Darren Marlar's co-host on 101qfl, and we had fun talking about the list, and even adding a few of our own.

I blogged about it at the time, but hey, it's worth a repeat! :)


Here it is...stuff I've never done that's always done in the movies...(mostly written from the viewpoint of a man, by the way)

• Bumped my head and gotten amnesia.

• Left the water on in the bathroom sink long enough to flood the whole house.

• Been chased through the forest, tripped, and twisted my ankle, compromising my escape, but I still say, “Don’t stop. Go on without me.”

• Been stuck in an elevator with a woman I hated, but by the time the elevator was repaired, we were passionately making out. (*revised for family friendliness :))

• Been stuck in an elevator with a pregnant woman.

• Said, “Open this door or I’m breaking it down.”

• Found myself on top of a moving train.

• Picked a lock with a credit card.

• Said, “Don’t do it, man. Just give me the gun.”

• Been to a wedding where someone stood up and objected.

• Collapsed onto my car horn.

• Seen a bunch of homeless guys standing around a flaming trash can, singing doo-wop and wearing gloves with the fingers cut off.

• Dialed a “555″ phone number.

• Closed my medicine-cabinet door and seen someone in the mirror who wasn’t there 3 seconds ago.

Added by Darren and me:

• Ran into a church where the girl I loved was about to get married to someone else, but upon seeing me stopped the wedding and professed her love to me (and either ran out the door with me, or WE got married instead...and the former groom admitted he was in love with one of the bridesmaids.)

• Rushed to the airport to stop the woman I just realized I love from leaving, and as I get to the gate, I see her plane pulling away, and then feel empty because I think that my best chance at love is now gone, but, as I turn away, she’s standing there because she decided at the last minute not to get on the plane because she realized that she loves me too and was hoping I would come to the airport to get her.

and...(added by Cindy!)

Woken up in the morning, after a long night of sleeping, with a full face of make-up and breath fresh enough to kiss someone.

Got any to add? :)

Monday, June 08, 2009

Monday Melange


Main Entry: mΓ©·lange
Pronunciation: \mā-ˈlÀⁿzh, -ˈlÀnj\
Function: noun
Etymology: French, from Middle French, from mesler, meler to mix — more at meddle
Date: 1653
: a mixture often of incongruous elements


--Do you have a favorite movie that few other people seem to know or care about? Author and movie critic Jeffrey Overstreet asked on his blog: What movies are in your top ten favorites that probably aren't in anyone else's?

I submitted The Secret of Roan Inish, but apparently I'm NOT alone in loving that movie. Overstreet himself told me it's one of his favorites, as did another commenter.

This charming, mystical little movie is set in Ireland, so it had me at "hello."

What about you? Any little cinematic gems you particularly treasure?

--Get ready to get inundated with Spam! No, not the e-mail variety (I'm already inundated with that, thank you), but the edible kind. Apparently Hormel is seizing on the tight economic times as a good excuse to tout the budget-friendly...meat? More here.

--Organic Sparkling Green Tea Root Beer? Bavarian Nutmeg Root Beer? Apparently an old favorite is getting jazzed up just in time for summer. My personal picks for Best Root Beer Ever?

A & W--preferably in a frosty mug
Culver's--wonderful flavor
Stewart's--you can buy this at Cracker Barrel

Least favorite: Mug's, Dad's, or any generic brand.

Sadly, the best root beer is NOT sugar free, so I no longer indulge in my favorites. :(

Happy Monday, everyone!
Related Posts with Thumbnails