Love so many songs from The Smiths, but my absolute favorites tend to be the lesser known ones like Jeane:
Movies Watched -- Creature from the Black Lagoon (1954)
79 minute running time so a good length…. lot of cheesy expository dialogue in this one, nearly as bad as an X-Files episode, but this wasn’t terrible … the monster suit was pretty good for 1954 … bathing beauty looked good … not a must-see though.
We've just begun to learn about the water and its secrets
Movies Watched -- The Marriage Circle (1924)
92 minute running time, which is long for a silent movie. Lubitsch, 1923 or 1924 … Viennese high society, unhappily married women, seduction, jealousy, betrayal, etc. Interesting historical artifact, but not a must-see.
Find another doctor, please
Movies Watched -- Hustlers (2019)
104 minute running time, so not too far over the 100 minute upper limit. What are we supposed to think about these strippers who drugged and robbed their clients? They try to conflate the Wall Street mortgage securities “fraud” with the crimes these ladies were committing, but it doesn’t fly. Could there be a more improbable stripper than Constance Wu? She’s obviously sweet and smart, probably grew up in Richmond, Virginia (she did), she can’t dance to save her life, just absurd. Is there a single Chinese-American girl working at Scores? Jennifer Lopez is a more believable stripper (and looks amazing for her age (my age)), but still, none of them was sufficiently dumb and desperate enough to do this. There were some funny bits, but not enough to outweigh the morally repugnant story. Avoid.
Anyone can own one nice suit. You wanna look at their shoes, their watches, briefcases. [I laughed]
Movies Watched -- The Kid (1921)
50 minute running time … silent movie (1921) … Charlie Chaplin comedy (and drama) … like all of Chaplin’s work, it’s a must-see, green-go.
Please love and care for this orphan child
Movies Watched -- Sabrina (1954)
113 minute running time, so about 20 minutes too long. Romantic comedy from the mid 50’s … Humphrey Bogart in an unusual role since he’s such an unlikely sex symbol (54 years old then) or comic actor … was supposed to be Cary Grant playing “Linus,” but he dropped out at the last minute. Anyway, the movie really belongs to Audrey Hepburn (24 years old then), who is wonderful. The first half of the movie is weaker when she isn’t front and center, but once she is, it becomes charming and lovable. The script is uneven, apparently written on the fly, so some parts are funnier than others. But in the end, this gets a green-go rating.
Mon frère a une jolie fille
Movies Watched -- Way Down East (1920)
145 minute running time? I don’t remember it being that long, but it was too long … D.W. Griffith picture starring Lillian Gish … silent movie (1920) … country girl tricked into a mock marriage and its aftermath … pretty amazing stunt scene involving an ice floe on a fast river. This was a John Farr recommendation.
Tell me more
Movies Watched -- To Catch a Thief (1955)
106 minute running time so only six minutes too long. More Hitchcock. Sunburned Cary Grant at age 51, I’m not sure he could have gotten it on with 26-year-old Princess Grace, that ship had sailed. Uncomfortable to watch the Princess speed around those cliffs in the south of France considering how she died. Story isn’t that great, but the dialogue is pretty risque, a lot more sexual double entendres than I’m used to with mid-50s pics. Doesn’t get a coveted green-go rating, but I’ll have to see more 1955 movies before I make the final decision.
Palaces are for royalty. We're just common people with a bank account.
My Beloved Dad
From Chris Buckley’s interview on Booknotes:
“I call it [Vietnam guilt] sort of a sense of having let my country down. James Fallows has written about this very eloquently. The point he made, the point that I reiterated, was that people of my, call it class, if you will--the privileged class, the upper-middle class, whatever you want to call it--prolonged that war by not participating in it because if it had been us getting killed, our parents would have been on the phone to the congressman and the president who were running this country and saying, `Stop this goddamn war.' But as it was, it was the blue-collar kids who bore the brunt of it. And so I was left with--yeah, call them feelings of profound sadness.“
You feel profound sadness for Chris Buckley because he can’t just be himself, he’s always trying too hard to be funny or clever, and he should just say, “My dad is an asshole,” which you know is what he really thinks.
The Gilded Ghetto
From Leslie Chang’s interview on Booknotes:
“… at the time that I knew her that was what she was trying to sort of realize her dream, was just gambling these amounts of money on speculation, especially the commodities market … But my mother's reason, which is the reason why many of these women do that kind of thing, is that--I think that she didn't know what to do with her life. You know, she was a little bit bored but very smart, and she had no other outlet. And so stocks were an interesting thing. And she has a lot of friends who do play stocks and read all about the different companies that are on the exchange. And I think that that's a way of channeling their energy into something that they feel is productive because they never had the chance to do that.“
All members of the Dragon Ladies’ Technical Analysis Association.