Sunday, May 28, 2017

Mini-Reviews for May 22 - 28, 2017

Reviews, etc.

Movies


Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides (2011)
It's a modern action blockbuster, so it's like at least thirty minutes too long, and the plotting is convoluted. But thank heavens that it has the good sense to jettison anything resembling the cumbersome mythology of the original two sequels and focus on the humor and swashbuckling action. It's a saving grace that makes the movie more enjoyable than it should be, and I liked it overall, if a bit tepidly. Grade: B-







Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Men Tell No Tales (2017)
After the first (and still obviously best) Pirates of the Caribbean movie, there's been a bit of a trade-off, franchise-wise: the original two sequels that rounded out the trilogy had the madcap energy of gonzo director Gore Verbinski, but they also had a truly cumbersome plot deadened by everything to do with its convoluted maritime mythology and the lifeless romancing between Orlando Bloom and Keira Knightley. The fourth movie lacked Verbinski's weirdo charms but in exchange threw out the insipid mythologizing and instead offered a much lighter, more swashbuckling movie that hearkened back to the charms of the first. It was alright (see previous review). Now we have the fifth movie in the franchise, and shiver me timbers, the freaking mythology is back, and this time without Gore Verbinski in the director's chair. So what we're left with is something of the worst of both worlds: dour, byzantine, and shakily directed, not to mention dull. The movie can't even get Jack Sparrow right, which seems like the bare minimum we could expect of this franchise up to this point—gone is the winking irony and failing-upward luck, and in its place is something resembling emotional stakes and relentless backstorying (did you ever wonder where Jack got his compass? Well, fasten your seatbelt). Midway through the film, there's even a literal jumping-the-shark moment involving Sparrow; it's come three movies too late, of course, but it's never too late to listen. Grade: C


Paterson (2016)
By feelings toward Jim Jarmusch usually fall somewhere within the realm of disinterested admiration: I can see the craft of his films, but they never do a whole lot for me. Now enter Paterson, and that trend seems to have changed. Centering on a married bus driver (Adam Driver) who writes poetry in his spare time, it's possible that this film just intersects too many of my own personal passions in real life to avoid awakening some strong feelings in me. The movie is a quiet, well-observed rumination on the creation and role of art within the repetition ebbs and flows of a life, and I found it tremendously moving. Grade: A-




Hidden Figures (2016)
This kind of history-as-drama-with-overly-broad-emotional-beats film isn't really my cup of tea anymore, but there's no denying that this is a particularly well-acted one of that kind. And I'm all for movies about space, especially those that shed light on (or at least adapt a book that sheds light on) new angles to the same familiar Space Race moments. Grade: B








The Black Power Mixtape 1967-1975 (2011)
"Mixtape" is exactly the right word for this: a hodge-podge of footage (taken by Swedish journalists, which... okay, I guess) of prominent Black Power Movement events and leaders that, collectively, makes a collage of the era. It's an interesting experiment, particularly in the way it uses modern-day audio by those same leaders (esp. Angela Davis) to comment on the decades-old footage, and I can't deny that it's successful at crafting evocative sights and sounds. But there is something vaguely frustrating about the way the movie has little interest in going beyond those sights and sounds—if you know anything about Black Power at all, there's nothing particularly new or enlightening here, while if you're looking for a decent primer on the subject, there are far better resources for that sort of education than this film. But still, as collages go, you can do worse, too. Grade: B


Adventureland (2009)
Well, here's something of a time capsule—an indie dramedy from the days in which Kristen Stewart was still coasting on those Twilight/girl-next-door vibes rather than being an art-house trailblazer and Jesse Eisenberg, pre-Social Network, still hadn't figured out that he was way better at playing sociopaths than Michael Cera clones. It's also an indie dramedy about a sensitive, literate guy with hip music taste who just really, really wants to get laid, a plot that's its own sort of time capsule. I used to eat these sorts of movies for breakfast, and I won't deny the charms of a movie that features this much Lou Reed. But I've also become way more sensitive to the tropes of this kind of film, and while I appreciate the low-keyness of everything, there's also something solipsistic and dull about the way it frames dude-in-his-20s life as a lackadaisical movement between super goofy comedy and angsty pathos. The performances are decent, and the screenplay is warm, but, like... is this all there is? Grade: B-

Television

Anne with an E, Season 1 (2017)
In approaching this series, it's important for diehard fans of the original book series (and the superb 1985 TV miniseries) like myself to realize that Anne with an E (or simply Anne, as it was released in its original run in Canada) is much more of a reinterpretation and modernization of the original Anne story than it is a straight and faithful adaptation of Anne of Green Gables. This can be a little hard to swallow at times such as the second episode, where a wholly new plot digression alters the relationships among the principal three characters (Marilla, Matthew, and Anne) in a way that feels almost like a deliberate attempt to encourage hand-wringing among Green Gables purists; the same goes for the decidedly more mature content of this series (which includes semi-direct discussions of sexuality and abuse), which aims this show more at a teen audience than the traditional elementary-aged audience of the books. However, this looseness with the source material is also the key to this series's success, too. Any adaptation of a work that already has a successful and beloved adaptation in wide circulation has to contend with the completely reasonable question of why it even needs to exist in the first place, and the same goes doubly for Anne with an E in its opening hour, as it runs through familiar beats and verbatim lines from the book as if it were going through a fandom checklist. It's only when the series digresses in tone and content from the book that it becomes clear that Anne is doing something interesting and rather compelling with its source material: using the familiar, lackadaisical warmth of the novel as a stark counterpoint for the striking psychological realism it gives Anne. A subtext of the novel was the way that Anne's vivid imagination and flights of fancy were coping mechanisms for her impoverished and traumatic life as an orphan before coming to Green Gables, and that idea basically becomes the text of Anne; the cruelty she has experienced in her prior life is depicted unflinchingly here, and it stands in such vivid contrast to the sunny loquaciousness of Anne Shirley that it's not hard to see the heartbreaking desperation behind that cheer (an effect bolstered by a fantastic performance from Amybeth McNulty). The show uses this vantage point to inform all the various wrinkles of Anne's relationships with her new family and peers, from the ways that it causes her varying levels of trust and mistrust of the Cuthberts to how her extreme experiences at society's bottom rung have deteriorated her frame of reference for what is and isn't appropriate human behavior, something that manifests itself most potently in the ways that Anne struggles to make friends in the context of the post-Victorian propriety of the Prince Edward Island middle class. There are things about this series that don't work—the frequent discussion of gender politics and progressive values feels, at times, anachronistic and on-the-nose, and the introduction of a pair of villains in the series's final episode feels way off-base. But on the whole, Anne with an E is way more vital than I was expecting it to be, worthy of its source material even as it innovates on it. Grade: B+

Brooklyn Nine-Nine, Season 4 (2016-17)
Not a lot to say here: Brooklyn Nine-Nine has long been a pleasure, and this season represents no great change in that paradigm. The show's pursuit of consistency over ambition is less a liability (though it does continually keep this show short of greatness) than simply a commitment to classic sitcom craftsmanship, but that said, I'll be interested in seeing how the show restores its status quo after the cliffhanger in this season's finale. Grade: B






Books

Born to Run by Bruce Springsteen (2016)
As with most autobiographies, Bruce Springsteen's autobiography has dead zones that line up with the ebb and flow of the high points of interest in his life. Most exiting are what's expected—his rough-and-tumble childhood, early bar-band career, assembling of the E Street Band, relationship with his father, struggle with clinical depression, etc.; least exciting is his 1990s, i.e. the era of Human Touch, Lucky Town, and domestic stability. The depressing fact remains that as happy as I am that the Boss was so content in these years, it's just not that interesting to read about someone whose life is going very, very well. But even these dull spots are ameliorated by Springsteen's voice, which is about exactly as you'd expect it to be: thoughtful, down-to-earth, idiomatic, impassioned, charismatic. And when the autobiography is at its best (as it frequently is), the pages fly by. Overall, it's an engaging intersection of an artist's life with an artist's voice. Grade: B+

Music

Harriet Tubman - Araminta (2017)
Complex, nervy jazz-fusion for complex, nervy times. This is a political record in the style of old-school political jazz records from the '60s and '70s, more implicating politics and philosophy through dissonant rule-breaking than making any clear text within the album (though Wadada Leo Smith's contribution, "President Obama's Speech at the Selma Bridge" comes close). So what we're left with is a work that feels important in indefinable but grimily tangible ways that make for one of the year's best. Grade: A-

Sunday, May 21, 2017

Mini-Reviews for May 15 - 21, 2017

Just survived the last full week of school. Commence celebration!

Movies

Alien: Covenant (2017)
Ask a dozen people what was wrong with the 2012 Alien prequel, Prometheus, and you'll get a dozen different answers. Based on the online reaction thus far, the same seems to be be true of Prometheus's sequel, Alien: Covenant. And make no mistake: this is not a perfect movie. The plotting is haphazard, lurching awkwardly from cheap-thrills horror (there is a shower scene that is already, and justifiably, becoming infamous) to cosmic philosophizing, and the screenplay underwrites several key characters, most significantly Katherine Waterston's. But whereas I thought Prometheus failed by leaving its most intriguing philosophical ideas on the table to grow cold and mangled by a dysfunctional screenplay and a reckless abandon for grotesque action, Covenant actually manages to pick up those ideas and run with them in absolutely fascinating ways. The xenomorph action is interesting enough (and appropriately disgusting), but where this movie really shines is in its Big Ideas: the ideas of creation as sadism, of biogenesis, of the relationship between creator and creation—ideas gestured toward in Prometheus but only truly realized here. And they're all developed mesmerizingly via a Michael Fassbender performance (performances, really) to die for. The xenomorph is a sideshow, honestly. The movie (after a brief prologue) begins and ends with Fassbender's android in isolation, and I can't think of a better way for the film to introduce its most compelling character—it's this guy you should be watching. Grade: A-

Nocturnal Animals (2016)
The first thing you'll notice about Nocturnal Animals is its exquisite formalism—this movie looks ravishing, nearly every frame (especially within the nighttime scenes) crafted with the eye of a master stylist. In fact, it looks so great that the second thing you notice might not even register on any level but a naggingly subconscious one. But pay attention; this second thing is very important, and that is that this movie kind of sucks. Aside from its stunning formal achievements (nothing to sneeze at, believe me), the movie is a failure on nearly all narrative and structural metrics. Splitting the story between a "real life" art gallery owner (Amy Adams) and an enactment of the novel manuscript she's reading, the movie cross-cuts between the psychological Expressionism of Amy Adams's plot (where the novel, written by her ex-husband, triggers memories of her tumultuous relationship with the author) and the B-movie smut of the novel's boilerplate murder/revenge saga. The B-movie segments are by-far the superior of the two halves, but by switching frequently between the occasionally robust novel narrative and the positively anemic and thin Amy Adams plot, the film saps the energy out of all of it. At least it's pretty to look at. Grade: C

Fireworks Wednesday (چهارشنبه سوری) (2006)
Released in Iran a decade ago but only recently in the United States, Fireworks Wednesday is a minor, early work by Iranian master Asghar Farhadi. But given that this is Farhadi, of course "minor" still means "quite good." Containing elements of the domestic thriller that Farhadi would later refine to high art, Fireworks recognizably belongs with his filmography, a tense, often exciting, ultimately crushing drama involving a marital spat and the housekeeper unlucky enough to be positioned between the spouses. It's a much looser, less precise feature, being split between the two spouses, than the taut, brutally efficient plotting of A Separation or The Past, but the grounding of the film in the housekeeper's POV is an interesting wrinkle, using her limited knowledge to craft the film into a low-key mystery. Farhadi wouldn't achieve real greatness until his next feature, About Elly, but Fireworks Wednesday is a robust accomplishment regardless. Grade: B+

Solaris (2002)
I haven't read the original Stanisław Lem novel, but word on the street is that when adapting the book—a tall order, given that it already had a masterful and beloved adaptation by Andrei Tarkovsky (my least-favorite Tarkovsky, but of course great nonetheless)—Steven Soderbergh aimed to stick closer to the novel's vibes than the earlier Soviet classic. I can't tell you if Soderbergh succeeded on that metric, but on a regular old movie metric, Soderbergh's Solaris succeeds tremendously, maybe even as much as Tarkovsky's. Relative to the Soviet classic, there are definitely far fewer color-tinted driving, and the runtime is handsomely trimmed by a third (both welcome modifications), and in general, the vibe is much more tactile than the occasionally opaque Tarkovsky touch—we really feel the tangible reality of these characters, which makes it all the more unsettling when their identity is called into question. It's a hypnotic, creepy, and fascinating film; in re-adapting classic source material, Soderbergh crafts one of his absolute best. Grade: A-

Music

Kendrick Lamar - DAMN. (2017)
DAMN. is not as good as any of Kendrick Lamar's last three releases. But since that is just to say that DAMN. is not a mind-bending masterpiece, that's not really much of a qualification. So how about this: DAMN. is Lamar's most scattered, inconsistent release yet, and it's one where he, seemingly intentionally, plays up his most #problematic characteristics—his use of the word "bitch," his depictions of women, etc.—in the interest of rigorous self-reflection that sometimes feels more like some dissonant combination of punishment and aggrandizement than commentary. Which is its own kind of commentary, and interesting commentary at that. But an "interesting" work is not necessarily a successful one. DAMN. is certainly successful—very successful, even—in stretches: the scathing, Fox-News-gutting "DNA.", the despairing, world-weary "FEEL.", the U2-featuring "X*X.", to name a few. It's cool to see Kendrick performing in what is, on the surface, a more mainstream-ready sound than he's touched in several years, and that's offset nicely by what is probably the most interior, abstract concept he's yet tackled—basically, a at-times stream-of-consciousness exploration of the competing impulses of his psyche and the ways that manifests itself in his life, his relationships, and his belief in God (lampshaded most prominently by the juxtaposition of mirror-image track concepts: "LUST." followed by "LOVE.", etc.). But the execution of that concept is where things get a bit dicey, not just because the track-to-track excellence wavers (e.g. I'm not a huge fan of "LOVE." or "LUST.") but because his commitment to the concept itself is slippery. Parts of the album are as incisive and biting as Kendrick Lamar has ever been, but other sections feel only cursorily thought through, skimming over the surface of interesting issues. It's not fatally flawed, and given the way Lamar's music has a way of opening up and metamorphosing over time, I may be premature in writing this review. But as it is, the album feels wounded in such a way that keeps it from stretching up toward greatness. Grade: B+

Sunday, May 14, 2017

Mini-Reviews for May 8 - 14, 2017

Reviews. Come and get 'em.

Movies


Jackie (2016)
Not a biopic so much as the use of Jackie Kennedy's life as an excuse to explore ideas about the creation of history through narrative and media, which is really interesting, but given how distracted I was with the film's meticulous recreation of Jackie Kennedy, the figure known to history through narrative and media (Portman's Oscar nomination is richly deserved, as is the one for Costume Design), I should probably watch it again with its more philosophical themes in mind. As it is, I found the movie more clinical and "interesting" than anything close to emotionally engaging (even given the film's focus on Jackie in the hours, days, and weeks surrounding her husband's assassination). But as far as clinical goes, it's pretty striking. Grade: B+



I Am Not Your Negro (2016)
Using James Baldwin's unfinished Remember This House as a jumping off point for an ambitious and genre-expanding documentary that's as much poetry and montage as history, I Am Not Your Negro is the graceful and vital Important Movie that's absolutely riveting to watch—this is nothing resembling eating your vegetables. The film's genius lies in the way it marries Baldwin's elegant, confident prose (rendered convincingly in voiceover via Samuel L. Jackson) to some truly potent political and historical imagery by way of precisely chosen footage that ranges from interviews of Baldwin himself to familiar historical moments of the Watts Riots and Rodney King beating to contemporary videos of Ferguson, Eric Garner, and more. It's a fiery and thoughtful look at American racial identity and race relations that's a worthy inheritor to Baldwin's brilliance. Grade: A


The Death of Louis XIV (2016)
There's not a lot to the movie beyond the title: over the course of 115 languorous minutes (and 15 days of movie-world time), we watch Louis the Great slowly wither from the most powerful man in the Western world into the pale, deflated shell we all inevitably become as we approach Death's door. The film's cool, medically obsessed point of view (doctors are constantly prodding and examining, and we're even "treated" to a post-death autopsy) makes this for one of the more bracing depictions of death I've seen in a movie, while the psychology of the king himself from frustration to resignation to oblivion is a startling mirror to what I've seen among those I've personally watched in their last days. But what strikes me most about this movie is the way it treats the hollow courtesy of those who talk with the dying; you know what I mean: the soft, tragic irony in the way they refer to the increasingly further gone man as "Sire" and applaud at the smallest bit of food he manages to consume and continue, with grave faces, to talk continually of the possibility for "hope" and "recovery," as if such a fate is actually avoidable. As if we all don't stare down this exact unavoidable end, unsure of which end of the binoculars we're squinting through. Grade: A-


Woman in Gold (2015)
A disappointingly pedestrian treatment of a topic (the reclaiming of art stolen by Nazi Germany) I find fascinating. While there are good touches here—mostly in the flashback portions involving the actual Nazi occupation and especially in scenes involving the always-great Tatiana Maslany (speaking fluent French, no less—is there anything she can't do?)—the majority of the film is choked with prestige-film tropes. Ryan Reynolds wears glasses, so you know he's serious; Katie Holmes is a nagging wife, so you know Reynolds is playing a Great Man because she's holding him back. Etc. The photography is handsome, and, as I said earlier, the WWII-era flashbacks have an emotional urgency and Maslany. But on the whole, I didn't find this very interesting. Grade: C+



Antichrist (2009)
In a film whose litany of offenses includes rampant misanthropy, juvenile psychologizing of grief and sex, explicit genital mutilation, and a fox that howls "Chaos reigns!" in an unapologetically Optimus-Prime voice, the sharpest slap to the face is the end-of-film title card that dedicates this rat pit of a movie to Andrei Tarkovsky. Yes, Lars von Trier, your leering salute to sadism, sophomoric philosophizing, and nature as "the church of Satan" is, on a purely imagistic level, tremendously beautiful in a way that recalls the pristine severity of a Tarkovsky picture. But Tarkovky was one of the most profoundly religious filmmakers we've ever had, capable of infusing his images with an unspeakable meaning of what it's like to yearn for the transcendent, whereas your film, Mr. von Trier, is merely an ode to the aforementioned obscenities and trendy nihilisms. Clever. Grade: D

Television


The Last Man on Earth, Season 3 (2016-17)
As inconsistent as it can be (and it is mighty inconsistent, often not working for multiple episodes at a time), The Last Man on Earth continues to be one of the strangest, most ambitious sitcoms in what is shaping up to be sort of a golden age of network sitcoms right now. It mostly manages this through a combination of its winsome love of silly puns and situational humor and a willingness to take its apocalyptic setting dead-seriously—for real: main characters die! And not infrequently! The tandem goofiness and astounding cruelty of this show's world makes for some strange tonal tightrope walks that the show doesn't always manage, but when it does (as in a standout episode starring Kristin Wiig), it's gold. And even at its worst, it's no exaggeration to say that this is like no other show on TV right now. Grade: B+


Superstore, Season 2 (2016-17)
It's always a pleasure to see a promising show find its voice, and that's exactly what's happened with Superstore in its second season. The character dynamics have been ironed out and optimized, the writing has gotten more consistent, and the deep ensemble bench has figured out how to make their characters feel lived-in and familiar without broadening them beyond what is recognizably human. The result is a show that feels something like a gentler version of the early couple seasons of America's The Office mixed with a more traditional workplace sitcom a la Cheers, a light satire of American consumerist mundanity and corporate oppression with a sometimes startling commitment to sharp character development. Those of you who've been on the fence with this show, now's probably the time to jump in. Grade: A-

Music


Shamir - Hope (2017)
Released out of the blue last month, it's hard to call Hope, Shamir's followup to 2015's excellent Ratchet, a "disappointment," exactly, given that there was no expectation or buildup. And given the album's hyper-low-fi, indie-rock/R&B-ish vibes, it's also hard to complain that it's left behind the infectious disco production of Ratchet, since it's clear that Shamir is trying something of a palate-cleanser here. It's admirable that he's trying something this tossed-off and different. I'm all for artists pushing themselves in new directions. But darn it all, Hope just isn't as good as Ratchet: the lo-fi production doesn't really accommodate Shamir's style, and the songwriting is clearly suffering from the quickness of the recording. It's not terrible, but it's got little of the promise or go-get-'em excitement of what Shamir's done in the past. These are exactly the sort of comparisons Shamir was hoping to dispel by releasing something this off-the-cuff and stripped back, and I respect that. But I can't help it. Grade: C+

Sunday, May 7, 2017

Mini-Reviews for May 1 - 7, 2017

Movies and a TV show. Go get 'em!

Movies

The Red Turtle (La Tortue Rouge) (2016)
This animated feature begins as a kind of Castaway situation and ends as a moving and unspeakably gorgeous rumination on life itself. If that sounds pretentious, just wait until I tell you that there's not one jot or tittle of dialogue and that its plot involves a turtle that inexplicably turns into a woman. This is definitely one of those types of movies where you pretty much know from the outset if this will be your cup of tea or not, but good golly, is this ever my cup of tea, and I will gladly sip from this exquisite mug time and time again. This is the best animated movie I've seen in quite a while, and if I were to go back and revise my "Best of 2016" list, this film would land at the very top. At only 80 minutes, it's a blessed trifle of a watch, too, so even if it doesn't sound like your thing, I'd highly recommend checking it out anyway. And for anyone who's on the fence, I'll close by pointing out that the movie is a collaboration between Studio Ghibli and Dutch animation master Michaël Dudok de Wit, though I suppose that if you know who those are (particularly the latter), then you're probably already in the bag for this movie to begin with. Grade: A

Winter Sleep (Kış Uykusu) (2014)
This three-hour-and-fifteen-minute Turkish drama is too long by a significant margin, which makes it all the more impressive that it's able to be as powerful as it is, considering how diluted that power is by long, meandering scenes full of bourgeois misery and stark, striking, but altogether too lengthy shots of the Cappadocian wild. Depicting a class struggle between a wealthy and blindingly arrogant and self-possessed writer who owns some property and his tenants who are having difficulty paying the rent on that property, the movie is at its best in two centerpiece conversations the writer has between his sister and his wife, respectively. These conversations are riveting, pivoting from abstract philosophizing to trenchant social commentary to piercing character work to just plain old verbal sniping among the principal characters, and they form the backbone over which the movie is able to hang its rather cumbersome whole on without it collapsing entirely under the weight of the runtime. Grade: B

Cocaine Cowboys: Reloaded (2014)
A wild, sprawling, maximalist documentary about the '80s/'90s Miami cocaine trade that itself feels cocaine-addled for all its frenetic energy: the film cuts from interview to interview, splicing together shot after shot into a furious, 2.5-hour montage of talking heads and archival footage. The component parts are great—the interviews are mostly with either law-enforcement officials from the era or, stunningly, with major players in the cocaine trade itself—but frequently, the way it's assembled, with its driving music and frantic cuts and incessant sound-biting, is just way. too. much. I would have preferred a much more methodical, structured documentary that allows its subject to breathe, but this is what we have. And it's decent as it is: informative and shocking as it is crazy, if a bit scattershot. Grade: B

Great Expectations (1998)
It's directed by Alfonso Cuarón and filmed by Emmanuel Lubeski, one of the greatest director-cinematographer power couples in contemporary cinema, so you know it looks great. It's also a movie that adapts Charles Dickens's stone-cold 19th-century classic into a modern erotic romance starring Gwyneth Paltrow at her blankest and Ethan Hawke at his '90s brattiest. I guess you can't win 'em all. Grade: C+






Television

Orphan Black, Season 4 (2016)
After a scattered and convoluted Season 3, everyone's favorite clone sci-fi series returns (correction: returned—I'm about a year behind, as you can see) with what's something of a course-correction, reigning in the discursive plots from the previous season to refocus on its core characters. Most notably, the season is centered around what happens when the main characters pull on the loose thread that is Beth's suicide, bringing the plot full-circle back to the very event that kicked off the show's first (and still best) season. This is a fantastic move by the series writers, deepening existing plots rather than crowding them out with new and emotionally flat mythos expansion (*cough*Proletheans*cough*). There's still the feeling that the show has reached the point The X-Files ran aground of in its fifth and sixth seasons, where the overarching series mythology feels too big for the characters themselves. But as long as the show is able to continue to ground its world-spanning themes in compelling moment-by-moment dramatic writing as it does here, this should only be a minor issue. Grade: B+

Music

Matthew Sweet - Girlfriend (1991)
One of the saddest facts of rock music history is that Big Star has only three albums, and only two with power-pop saint Chris Bell. And as much as the subsequent power pop descendants tried to mimic that band's particular charms, nothing has quite scratched that itch for me. Until now, that I've discovered 1991's Girlfriend. To quote one of the album's best songs, "I didn't think I'd find you perfect in so many ways." It's exactly that kind of sweet, catchy, and achingly melancholy pop/rock that I've been waiting for so long. At fifteen songs and over 60 minutes, the album is far too long, but that's pretty much the sole strike against it. Grade: A-