"I'd call that a philosophical argument."

Last night we had our (heretofore) annual Swiss Chalet festive special. We watched Love Actually but not Die Hard as there’s some debate as to whether or not it’s a valid Christmas movie. We had many chocolates and other such delicacies. After everyone left I wound down the evening by watching the recorded Canadiens game (they won again) until about 2 AM and went to bed. Unfortunately, how late I went to bed seems to have little to do with when I wake up, and I was out of bed by 8 AM. Just as well; I have a ton to do today.

.:.

Over the weekend we managed to squeeze in a long film (though not so long as its predecessor): Manderlay (imdb | rotten tomatoes). It didn’t have the same impact as Dogville, since the set was neither as stark nor as surprising as in the original, and the Iraq metaphor was a little too blunt to be as clever as I think Von Trier wanted it to be.

Ultimately it’s hard to compare the two films fairly as I saw them under such different circumstances (film festival crowd at the Elgin theatre vs. my living room) but I don’t feel Manderlay had the same punch that Dogville did.

[tags]xmas party, manderlay[/tags]

Best films of 2006

It’s way too premature for me to write this as there are still several films I want to see that could well make the list — Apocalypto, Bobby, Borat, Deliver Us From Evil, Fast Food Nation, Flags of Our Fathers, For Your Consideration, Half Nelson, Jesus Camp, Little Children, Marie Antoinette, Pan’s Labyrinth, Running with Scissors, Shortbus, Shut Up And Sing, The Fountain, The Good German, The Good Shepherd, The History Boys, The Journals of Knud Rasmussen, The Last King of Scotland, The U.S. vs. John Lennon, Volver, World Trade Center, etc. — but screw it. Here it is anyway, in alphabetical order.

Three of those — Blindsight, Day Night Day Night and Kurt Cobain: About A Son — were from the film festival and haven’t even hit theatres yet. Four were documentaries; I’m starting to think I should have separate categories.

These were the best movies I watched this year that weren’t made in 2006:

  • 24 Hour Party People
  • A Very Short Engagement
  • Cinema Paradiso
  • Darwin’s Nightmare
  • Hustle & Flow
  • King Kong
  • Little Dieter Needs To Fly
  • Match Point
  • Mr. Death: The Rise And Fall Of Fred A. Leuchter
  • Munich
  • Omagh
  • Primer
  • Riding Giants

Oh look…four more documentaries.

Happiness is a clean inbox

I love it when my work inbox is completely empty. I’ve become ruthless about managing incoming email. None shall pass!

.:.

Six days from now I’ll be on my way to Nova Scotia for the holidays. I’m quite excited; both my brothers are coming home, as are their SOs and kids (where applicable). Good thing my parents have the big farmhouse; 8 adults, 3 kids and two dogs are quite an occupying force. I’m thinking we’ll need an extra tree as well; all those presents are going to take up a lot of space. Then again, Nellie and I are doing our part to cut back on the gift volume; we’ve asked for donations to charities in our name(s) in lieu of presents.
In the meantime, we have a lot of xmas stuff yet to do. We still have to buy a lot of presents, send ~50 cards, and watch our traditional holiday movies — Die Hard and Love Actually — whilst mowing down on Swiss Chalet festive specials. I think maybe we’ve been slack on the gifts and the cards ’cause it still doesn’t feel like Christmas…no snow yet. And it’s 6 frickin’ degrees outside.

I’m also trying to finish off my last stats assignment before we go, but it turns out doing tons of regression analysis isn’t the most exciting exercise, so I’m having trouble getting through it awake.

[tags]email, clean inbox, xmas, die hard, love actually[/tags]

Sur la trace de Stephen J. Dubner

The TIFF group has announced their top ten Canadian movies of the year; I can’t say I’ve seen any of them. Actually, five of them have yet to be released to theatres, so I don’t really feel bad. There’s some controversy over what was left out, but I’m not sure how anyone could be surprised that a film festival group would skip the commercially successful (relatively speaking; this is Canada, after all) films.

Anyway, Cinematheque will be showing each of them in the new year, so perhaps we’ll catch a few.

On a related note I bought tickets to see Doc Soup’s presentation of Jesus Camp next month. I really should buy a subscription; they just had a screening of The Bridge, another one I want to see.

.:.

Last night I emailed the Freakonomics guys about this story in the Globe:

“Ontario teens under the age of 18 will lose their driver’s licence if they drop out of high school under a new law passed Tuesday.”

Today Stephen Dubner emailed me back with a link to their blog post about the story. I love that these guys have a mega-book and they still a) blog frequently about interesting things, and b) read (and answer) email from random people with something to say.
[tags]tiff top ten, cinematheque, freakonomics, ontario driver’s license dropouts[/tags]

"I'm a normal [ed: extremely hot] person, I'm doing all right."

My brother has left the dark ages and entered the age of enlightenment. That is, he’s switched from Blogger to WordPress. Go say hi.

.:.

From Yahoo: Kate Winslet slams ‘ultra-thin’ glamorization. Hear, hear. For my part, I encourage more women to look like Kate Winslet.

The three examples the article suggests as poor role models are “Kate Moss, Nicole Richie and Victoria Beckham”; I daresay there are reasons beyond their looks which make them poor role models…

.:.

After leaving the latest season of The Wire sitting on the shelf for several weeks (except the season premiere, which we watched a few weeks back), we’ve been on a tear this weekend. We have just four episodes left…and I think the finale aired tonight.

Dominic West has hardly been on this season; maybe he was busy filming 300.

[tags]blogger, wordpress, kate winslet, the wire, dominic west[/tags]

"This is Sparta!"

It really doesn’t matter how many times I watch the trailer for 300 (imdb | official site). I just never get sick of it.

I cannot wait.

[UPDATE] New extended trailer found at The Movie Blog. W00t!

.:.

Still on movie news (though a more different movie it’d be hard to imagine) I watched Dogtown and Z-Boys (imdb | rotten tomatoes). Like Riding Giants, it was a surprisingly entertaining story, considering I have no interest in the subject of skateboarding. It was fascinating to see the history behind moves and a lifestyle we see all the time these days, but which were mainly pioneered by these kids from a shit neighbourhood skating in empty swimming pools.

[tags]300 movie, dogtown, z-boys[/tags]

Underrated films

I believe these seven films take undeserved abuse. I had a whole other list of criminally unappreciated movies, but that’s different. And much longer. Maybe some day.

Warning: I throw a few plot spoilers in there, so if you see the name of a movie you want to watch but haven’t yet, stop reading.

  • The Blair Witch Project. By now we’ve all seen parodies of the famous scene where Heather whimpers and snots up close, but when I saw this movie — on opening weekend, before all the hype — it scared the crap out of me. It was the only movie to ever do that.
  • The Godfather III. Take Sofia Coppola out of the picture and it’s in the same ballpark as chapters I and II. You can’t fault Pacino — especially in the final scenes — and Andy Garcia was perfect. This isn’t a terrible movie; this is a sub-standard Godfather film, which still puts it in the top 1%.
  • Mission Impossible 3. People jumped on this one because Tom Cruise’s psychosis had come to a boil around the release date, but it was probably the best of the series. The first one was overwrought and boring; the second a little too heavy on style and light on action.
  • Romeo & Juliet. The Baz Luhrmann version took flak because…I dunno, people think it’s only meant to be done in floofy accents period costume, but they forget that Shakespeare was a populist writer. The man was the Stephen King, the Danielle Steele of his day. Luhrmann took a well-crafted, overly-familiar story and turned it on its ear, and it was eye-grabbing and innovative.
  • Signs. People seem to dislike this movie, but I think it was Shyamalan’s best. The complaint I hear the most is about the alien, but for god’s sake, the alien was barely in it. The movie was funny, well-acted, well-paced, tense and told a far better story than the vast majority of movies that offer equal scare potential. Shit, any movie with Mel Gibson running around in the dark yelling, “I’m insane with anger!” is worth watching again.
  • Starship Troopers. Is the acting terrible? No. The acting is putrid. Abhorrent. Unholy, even. But there’s more social satire in there than people remember (though not nearly as much as was in the book) and the special effects still look better than most of what you see today, even though it was made nine years ago.
  • Vanilla Sky. Tom Cruise again…what the? Anyway…I admit, I have a soft spot for Cameron Crowe, but even I didn’t like this one at first. My friend Mike convinced me to give it another try, and the second time through it was like watching a whole other film. Watch it with the director’s commentary.

[tags]underrated movies, blair witch project, godfather, mission impossible, romeo, juliet, signs, starship troopers, vanilla sky[/tags]

"My painting went from gentle sweeping strokes to stabbing motions."

There was snow this morning for the first time. Not a lot, just a little bit in the air. Now that it’s December and there’s a bit of snow in the air, I’ll allow myself to feel like Christmas is getting close. T-Bone and I were talking yesterday about how we’re feeling stressed, like we’ve left gift shopping and decorating far too late because the merchants have been decked out for the season since Nov 1…or earlier, if you’re The Bay.

.:.

Speaking of Christmas-overload: the Globe and Mail discusses the now-ubiquitous Christmas Musak. I suppose it’s not fair to pick on yuletide Musak though; it’s awful all year round. Instead, what worries me is that I’ll have to hear the same shit Christmas music every day for the next month; “Wonderful Christmas Time” by Wings, anyone?

.:.

Met M2, KP and DI for some food & drink last night at the Rebel House. I haven’t seen them in a long time, so it was good to catch up and have a few laughs.

.:.

If you liked Shaun Of The Dead, you’ll be as excited about Hot Fuzz as I am. Check out the trailer(s). Bonus points for excellent use of an Eels song too.
[tags]snow, christmas season, musak, rebel house, shaun of the dead, hot fuzz, eels[/tags]

You don't have to be alive to be helpful.

From YesButNoButYes comes this Bravia ad send-up. Brilliant.

.:.

We finally got to see Casino Royale (imdb | rotten tomatoes) yesterday. In short: best Bond movie ever. I say this because it’s the one Bond movie that I would actually classify as a good film. Don’t get me wrong, I love Bond flicks. I have a soft spot for them, and owned them all as a teenager (as a gift my Mom got me every videotape up to The Living Daylights), so it’s not like I haven’t watched Thunderball or For Your Eyes Only a dozen times. But I always liked them for what they were, and top-notch cinema isn’t how I’d describe them.

Casino Royale, however, was very good. Not Oscar-caliber, mind you, but far better than most other action movies you see. Daniel Craig…bravo. Eva Green: hotttt. The parkour scene at the beginning: kickass. Welcome back, Bond franchise.

.:.

We also watched a little Canadian noir film last night, 7 Times Lucky (imdb | rotten tomatoes). It wasn’t very good. Truth be told I only watched it ’cause Liane Balaban was in it, so…yeah. Avoid it (if you’ve even heard of it).

[tags]bunny hopping, bravia ad, casino royale, james bond, daniel craig, 7 times lucky[/tags]