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Sunday, January 8, 2023
Adam Rich
Saturday, January 7, 2023
A Potential TV Appearance for the DanDan
Friday, January 6, 2023
OMG Girl
Thursday, January 5, 2023
White Noise
White Noise is the Netflix adaptation of the postmodern, US National Book Award winning novel of the same name by Don DeLillo. Adam Driver, Greta Gerwig, and Don Cheadle share top billing.
Now, with a pedigree like that, you expect a movie to be a little stiffer than the norm, and less concerned with entertainment than with making a point about the human condition. Weekend at Bernie's this ain't.
That said, I think it still made a good effort to keep the viewer, if not happy, than at least willing to stick around for the ride.
Jack and Babette are a married couple in charge of a large blended family - he is on his 5th marriage, and she is not far behind - and while they are madly in love, both with each other and their children, death is constantly on their minds. They worry about it. They fear it. They talk about it. They avoid talking about it. And so on.
When a train accident creates an "airborne toxic event" in their sleepy little college town, the family hits the road to flee, and begin to confront their fears, not altogether successfully.
The movie is told in three narrative blocks: the lead up to the train accident, the escape from the "event", and a 3rd block devoted to a jarring departure from the first 3/4ths of the movie.
The acting was top notch, right down to the child actors playing the kids. I enjoyed the movie (my last of 2022) but it is, undoubtedly, an acquired taste and not for everyone. I'd grade it a C+.
* * *
In closing I pause to express an irrational complaint I have about the film:
It is set in the mid-1980's a fact that is contextually established by the clothing, music, cars, and product packaging. Maybe it won't be enough to identify the era if you're watching it from the year 2345, but it should be more than enough clues for decades to come.
Yet, for a film that tries to immerse itself in the subtlety of human thoughts and fears, they hammer the setting home with an obvious, out of sync bit of dialogue that was jarringly out of the blue [my apologies if this isn't verbatim]:
"I can't believe how long its been. I started the program in 1968, and here it is, sixteen years later!"
Groan.
Wednesday, January 4, 2023
Tuesday, January 3, 2023
50 Years Ago Today
Monday, January 2, 2023
A Horrible Event on Monday Night Football
Prayers needed for Damar Hamlin
She would have been 100 today
Round 1
Sunday, January 1, 2023
NYE Traditions
2022 Highlight
Saturday, December 31, 2022
Roberto Clemente - Gone 50 Years
Pope Benedict XVI
Friday, December 30, 2022
Barbara Walters
Facts
Thursday, December 29, 2022
An improvised Zuppa Toscana
Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery
Glass Onion, the second film in the Benoit Blanc "Knives Out" series, is a destination mystery set on an island paradise during the pandemic.
If you're watching it for the mystery, while it is well done, there are better tales out there to discover. But as a ensemble mystery/thriller with comedic undertones and, this one was a hoot. I greatly enjoyed it, and I eagerly await the next entry in the series.