Sunday, February 23, 2020

Mini Reviews for February 17-23, 2020

I finished a book this week, so I guess you could say I'm an intellectual now.

Movies

Gretel & Hansel (2020)
Very much an Oz Perkins horror movie, meaning that it's a little stilted, a little opaque, a little off-beat, and a lot spooky. Perkins is making a pretty good résumé (if not reputation—go see these movies, people!) for himself of movies that are just left-of-center enough to be interesting, undergirded by a strong visual eye and a refreshing recognition of mood as the primary building block of horror, not scares. As with most of these movies, there are things that don't work: in this case, I think the synth-core/Stranger-Things-y score is a mistake, an odd choice for a movie whose setting's sole concession to the 20th century is a delightfully incongruous playground slide. But on the whole, this is a really solid late-winter release with some awesomely thick atmosphere and tremendous set design. Also, Alice Krige is quite good. Grade: B+

Frankie (2019)
I've enjoyed Ira Sachs's other movies (Love Is Strange a lot, Little Men somewhat), and Frankie does has a little of that infectious wistfulness that I love. But it's a movie with too many protagonists when, in fact, there should be exactly two—Marisa Tomei and Isabelle Huppert—and that spreads out the emotional resonance perilously thin over some unnecessarily convoluted dramatic geography. I just want Huppert and Tomei walking around the Portuguese countryside together! Beautiful final shot, though. Grade: C





Tomboy (2011)
I remember being four or five and wanting to wear a dress to preschool, and my parents wouldn't let me, and I was a little upset about that. There have been a few moments like that in my life. I don't think I'm nonbinary or anything, and I certainly wouldn't want to equate my mild experiences with the much more severe ones the main character experiences here. But I say all this to explain why the beautiful liberty the protagonist of Tomboy experiences in the movie's early stages resonated with me. Sciamma renders with an artful matter-of-factness the unobstructed self-ness of simply being able to exist within the gendered space you feel you belong, and it's gloriously free. This is of course only a temporary freedom within a society so thoroughly bent around an obsession with matching genitalia with gender, which is the completely obvious but no less heartbreaking tragedy at the core of this movie. Gender normativity freaking suck. Cisgendered normativity is a cancer. Burn it down. Grade: B+

Yellow Submarine (1968)
I was significantly undersold how strange this movie is. There's a major character who is a giant glove with an eyeball on its thumb and a big, toothy mouth between its fingers; there are doppelganger Beatles we're told are the real Beatles who meet the real Beatles we're told are the doppelganger Beatles; there's a creature with a vacuum cleaner for a nose who sucks up the whole movie before sucking up itself; there is a sea full of holes in the animation. A lot of people might say that a movie that structures its plot entirely around the prospect of creating cool images to animate is wagging the dog, but no sir, not me; this is delightful, a movie completely drunk on the boundless possibilities of animation, so intoxicated by its own aesthetic that it literally cares about nothing else except the discography of The Beatles. The only other movie I can think of that's so in love with the pure texture and geometry and whimsical play of animation is The Thief and the Cobbler, and Yellow Submarine is considerably less compromised than that movie ended up being. An animation fan's dream. I guess The Beatles are pretty good, too. Grade: B+

The Girl from Chicago (1932)
I had a really difficult time following this movie—partly because it's a fairly complicated plot created with some very threadbare early-sound equipment and sensibilities (Micheaux never really acclimated to sound cinema, and it's punishingly obvious here), partly because I was so bored that I couldn't keep my mind from wandering. But the musical sequences were fun! Grade: C-







Television

Orange Is the New Black, Season 7 (2019)
It's not that the seventh and final season of Orange Is the New Black doesn't have good moments. It does, and it's overall a much stronger season than the abysmal sixth season. But the scars left by that sixth season remain, and much as the writers try to add ripped-from-the-headlines plots (Litchfield becomes an ICE detainment facility) and return the show to a pre-Season-Six status quo (Badison gets shipped off to another prison, e.g.), Orange never really rights itself. Part of this is because most of these characters are too far gone—there's only so much backpedaling you can do, and it's not enough to make these characters interesting again after all the stupid storylines and wasted time in the past year. Another part of it is that the show's creative team, either through apathy or befuddlement at how to tie all the show's many, many threads together, has all but abandoned any semblance of dramatic coherence: new characters are introduced willy-nilly before being sidelined again for the main cast; flashbacks (long a liability in this show) are thrown in inconsistently and for the thinnest reasons; storylines flare up for an episode or two before being more or less ignored; episodes themselves become structureless blobs of one scene ambling after another until the runtime is up and they can do the credits needle-drop. All of these problems have been issues to some degree since the show began, but they become especially apparent now that the show has to work double-time to clean up its sloppy storytelling into some semblance of a finale. And speaking of the finale: it is, like many series finales, something of a curtain call for all its characters, and this means bringing back a lot of the characters we lost at the end of Season 5 when the cast was halved, and I can think of no greater indictment of how the show managed its last two seasons than the feeling of warmth I felt seeing all these old characters, followed by the feeling of deep frustration that I was watching freakin' Daya do whatever she was doing these past two years instead of spending time with these old friends. Orange Is the New Black skated through its inconsistent storytelling for years by the skin of its teeth and the strength of its character bench, and the parts of this season that work function on the same kind of character-above-all magic: Doggett's arc, Ramos's ICE experience, the chicken farm, Nichols's growth, etc. But these are relatively few and far between moments, and with the diminishing effectiveness of these characters, it becomes pretty clear how thin this show could be. Probably the worst case for a finale: I was glad to see this show go. Grade: C+

Books

The Secret Commonwealth by Philip Pullman (2019)
The second book in Pullman's companion trilogy to His Dark Materials is not only a huge improvement to the first one, La Belle Sauvage, but also retroactively helps some of the creative decisions in that book make sense. After Book One, I was left wondering why this story was being told, and The Secret Commonwealth answers that question thoroughly by pulling this trilogy into focus: Pullman's thesis here is centered on the limits of reason as a guiding principle for a worldview and the ways that reason-obsessed skeptics sometimes excise compassion, beauty, and other intangible but vital human qualities from their experiences. A not inconsequential subplot involves Lyra (this book takes place several years after the end of The Amber Spyglass) becoming infatuated with the ideas of a trendy Ayn-Rand-ish philosopher, and it's not hard to map this plot metaphorically onto our world in the same way that readers did the alternate-history Magisterium and Authority onto our real-world ideas about church authority and God in His Dark Materials. The titular "Secret Commonwealth" (i.e. the world of the spirits) serves as a counterpoint to the obsessively "rational" perspective that tempts our characters, and in this light, it becomes absolutely clear what exactly Pullman was up to in La Belle Sauvage, contrasting the relatively realist espionage with a blown-out fantasy finale full of fairies and magic that serves as a kind of foundational event for The Secret Commonwealth. More than just ideas, though, this book is just a rip-roaring adventure story, probably the closest thing to the scope and tone of The Golden Compass we've gotten; here again, Lyra must travel into an unknown world in search of a dear companion: this time she must journey east to find her own daemon, Pan. But it's a much darker and more complex journey than that told in The Golden Compass, much more interested in politics and in particular colonialism than Lyra's earlier trip into the relatively untouched North was, which makes sense. I do wonder if Pullman leans a little bit too hard into Orientalist tropes when describing places like Syria, but he at least goes out of his way to explain that these regions are as war-torn and corrupt as they are because of the influence of Western commerce and religion. But with that aside, it's a completely thrilling ride in the tradition of the best of His Dark Materials, balancing a sharp fantasy imagination with a deep interest in Big Ideas, and I was legitimately sad when I reached the last page. I've read that Pullman hasn't even started the third book, which makes me inordinately sad, because I have to know what happens next. I can't remember the last time I've felt like this about a series. Grade: A

Music

Don Cherry - Brown Rice (1975)
Most of the time, the "fusion" in jazz fusion is with rock or R&B, and it's not like Don Cherry's music is free of those influences. But what's so mesmerizing and compelling about Brown Rice (and, it bears mentioning, the rest of his '70s output) is that rock and R&B are just drops in the bucket of influences that form a kind of pan-Eurasian folk music with its mix of not just North American and British musical forms but also Indian and African and Near-Eastern. It's an album that pivots from ambient chants and hypnotic grooves to molten free-jazz solos—a truly adventurous listening experience that transportive and deeply spiritual. I've been obsessed for the past few weeks. Grade: A

Sunday, February 16, 2020

Mini Reviews for February 10-16, 2020

As you may remember, I was sick last week, so this week's post is both filling in the stuff I didn't get a chance to cover from last week as well as writing about the new stuff I saw this week. Enjoy!

Movies

How to Train Your Dragon: The Hidden World (2019)
Gorgeous animation—in fact, it's one of the most stunningly rendered "traditional" (i.e. not Spider-Verse) CGI animated features in recent memory. That this is anywhere close to a positive review is entirely on the strength of those visuals. Aside from that, though, I remain completely unable to understand people's connection to the characters and mythology of this franchise; from where I sit, the character models are still ugly, Jay Baruchel's voice acting is still bad, and the larger sweep of the story trends toward convolution rather than gravitas. I'll say this, though: props to this movie for having what is almost certainly the longest sequence devoted to animal mating rituals in an animated movie since Bambi—landmark! Grade: B-


For Sama (2019)
It is pretty tacky to talk about how this movie is shakily edited together from video journals (of a woman in a situation unthinkably more terrifying than anything I've ever experienced), but to watch a movie is to put yourself in a place of privilege over its subject matter, so that's the critical thought that kept flickering through my head. The rest of the time, though, I was pretty deeply moved, and I don't know if I have ever felt a movie scene more viscerally than I did the emergency C-section sequence. Structural issues or not, this is a powerful document. Grade: B+




A Silent Voice (聲の形) (2016)
Meticulous animation that creates a frequently gorgeous effect—it's an oft-made observation, but this is the perfect example of how Japanese animation puts the full power of its technology behind even the most mundane scenarios, and I have nothing but respect for that. As the for the story itself, it felt a little too long and repetitive for my tastes, and the characters' reactions to the two suicide attempts in the movie seem artificial and strange (though perhaps this is just a cultural difference between the US and Japan?). But all that said, the movie finds a good intersection between the sweetness and sourness of its central relationship, and in examining its central ideas of forgiveness, depression, self-loathing, etc., A Silent Voice movingly resists a lot of the pat answers that other movies might lazily reach for. A thorny watch because of that, but not without some fruit. Grade: B


Step Brothers (2008)
Watched this bedridden with a 101 fever, and I honestly don't even know anything about anything. Time is a flat circle, and the "Sweet Child o' Mine" scene is great, but I dunno about the rest. Something else my fevered brain has been thinking about: Bob Dylan's "Isis," on repeat. I don't think that song is in this movie, but it's a good song. Would recommend. Grade: C








Paris Is Burning (1990)
Everything I liked about Climax with none of what I hated. Alternately, a vital and foremostly fun record of late-'80s NYC "ball" culture, and probably the most thorough and complex analysis of the intersection of race, class, gender, and sexuality in film history. Grade: A








Purple Rain (1984)
The narrative portions of this movie range from charmingly amateur to outright bad—not really sure what to do with either the bleeding-wound autobiographical elements or the copious misogyny here, either. But luckily, the movie is about 50% musical performances, and as every being, mortal and immortal alike, can attest, the music of Purple Rain slaps all the way to the moon and back. It may in fact be impossible to tear your eyes from the screen as Prince just tears up number after number up on that stage, and the decision to end the movie with about 20 consecutive minutes of music is the best one this movie makes. It's not hard to see why people flocked to this movie; it's also not hard to see why people don't really talk about the movie when they talk about this movie. It's Prince, y'all. Who cares what else there is? Grade: B-

Television

Joe Pera Talks with You, Season 2 (2019-20)
The second season of the best Adult Swim series of all time not only continues the soft-spoken, sincere nicety of its previous season; it also expands everything about what this show is, and in doing so, it becomes a masterpiece. Often eschewing the essayic digressions of its first season, Season Two increasingly deals directly with the psychological realities of its characters and the small and heartbreaking ways in which the march of time changes even the placidity of the show's Upper Peninsula. It's simple, but never simplistic, and almost always profound. I was openly weeping by the ends of half of these episodes. There's nothing like it on television right now, the unassuming beauty of this series and its quiet but hard-won aphoristic triumphs. Grade: A+

BoJack Horseman, Season 6 (2019-20)
All my shows are ending, y'all. Here's BoJack Horseman, ending its run on a mostly high note. There have been a lot of shows recently that have focused on personal growth and recovery in their final stretch (Crazy Ex-Girlfriend comes to mind), and that's the route that BoJack goes, too, in its closing season; its first half largely centers on the twin poles of BoJack's enrollment in rehab and Diane's struggle with depression that leads her to get psychiatric help, while the second half of the season is largely about the thorny, difficult pieces of life that happen after the formal steps of recovery: after medication, after you get out of rehab. And it's pretty good! Creator/showrunner Raphael Bob-Waksberg has said that he thought Netflix was going to give him more episodes to spread these arcs out over, and that's apparent: secondary characters like Todd get what feels like rushed send-offs that feel like all the show could fit in alongside the main attractions of Diane and BoJack. But allowing for that slightly rushed feel along the edges of the show, it's a mostly compelling conclusion to the series, giving some of the more complex wrestling with "#MeToo" and the idea of problematic protagonists I've seen in a show. It also provides some really stunning individual episodes, most notably the penultimate episode "The View From Halfway Down," which is probably the most frightening and bleak that the show has ever been. And alongside all this, there's of course also the supremely goofy animal puns and wacky humor on clear display, too; I am completely in love with the running gag of the His-Girl-Friday-esque pair of reporters, Paige Sinclair and Maximillian Banks, and there's half a dozen other jokes up to that caliber. This show was special; I'm going to miss it. Grade: B+


The Good Place, Season 4 (2019-20)
The Good Place has always been a show better at exploring ideas than it was developing characters. That doesn't mean that Eleanor, Chidi, etc., didn't have their charms, because they did. But at least for me, if you asked why I came back to the show, it wasn't because I cared particularly strongly for the central cast, winsome as they are. So it's somewhat disappointing that the show's final season leans so heavily on the affection we supposedly have for these characters. Long periods of the final 13 episodes are devoted to giving arcs to the main characters, especially the romance between Eleanor and Chidi, and while I never hated the romance between Eleanor and Chidi, I always appreciated it more as a sideshow to the much more interesting metaphysical ideas this show was batting around. Because when you get right down to it, these characters were not especially complex or interesting; they had an accumulation of traits that worked well for sitcom situations, which was especially helpful in the first season when this show was still halfway a metaphor for the creation of a TV show. But they simply cannot bear the weight of the entire show being put on their shoulders, especially when the characters' emotional arcs are meant also to carry home the ultimate metaphysical ideas the show settles on. About those ideas: I really wish they'd done something more than the whole "eternity is a prison, so the only ethical afterlife is one that eventually leads to annihilation" thing. Look, I know many very smart people have proposed this concept before (including Todd May, a philosopher who makes a cameo in the finale and who argues that life is only meaningful because we are mortal), but I've yet to see anything that convinces me that this whole idea is just unsubstantiated hypothesizing—we don't know anything but mortality, so it seems patently absurd to be so convinced that it is mortality that gives us meaning. Or at any rate, the show is going to have to work a lot harder to convince me that an eternal paradise would eventually become hell. Death is a thief and a bastard, and the ability the choose when it happens only solves half of the problem. As long as we're inventing made-up fantasy heavens, I am willing to risk one without it, thank you. So anyway, it's a final season whose characters can't sustain the weight the show puts on them, nor can the show's ideas stand the scrutiny their placement in the finale engenders. It's not like this last season of The Good Place isn't enjoyable in a lot of the ways the show has been enjoyable since its beginning: it's still funny and goofy and absurd in some pretty fun ways, its zippy plotting keeps things interesting and resists settling into a status quo, etc. But on the deepest levels on which The Good Place has been entertaining in the past, Season 4 falls short, which is too bad. So long to one of network television's quirkiest and most thoughtful delights; I'll remember you for the good times, not the finale. Grade: B-


Silicon Valley, Season 6 (2019)
In its final year, the long-running tech satire finds a few new fresh directions, including some topical ones (Richard begins this season testifying before congress making promises about data privacy that he clearly has no idea the feasibility of), and in general, the final season's focus on tech ethics and data harvesting does give Silicon Valley some of the bite it lost in its mediocre last couple years. It's still not nearly as funny as it once was, and the finale bizarrely lands the show on a note of optimism that feels both weirdly out-of-sync for this show and also pretty disconnected from the inescapable hell that is real-world Silicon Valley (I would be shocked if there was a non-zero number of tech giants who intentionally destroyed a very cool piece of code because it had the possibility of destroying the world). But the journey to that note is a solid one, and I had a fun time taking a ride with this show one more time. So yay. Grade: B

Books

March Series by John Lewis and Andrew Aydin, Illustrated by Nate Powell (2013-16)
I was a little skeptical of these books at first, because my impression of them is that they were part of the whole "let's turn a school subject into a graphic novel so the kids these days will learn it!" movement, which isn't a movement without its merits but sometimes does lead to some prosaic stuff. The first book feels a lot like that, too, but each successive book gets increasingly complex in ways I wasn't expecting, eventually forming a cycle of books that gives a rich and difficult conversation about the push and pull between radicalism and centrism within political movements. A large part of this comes out of the grounding of the books within John Lewis's point of view, which gives the books a lot of personality and momentum that wouldn't be possible in a straight history. These books are as much memoir as history, which is great; that point of view also saves the books from a lot of the sanctimony that we often like to give history—it is fascinating, for example, how Martin Luther King, Jr., is presented not just as an important leader but also as both a distant celebrity and a frustratingly conservative (relatively) alongside Lewis's more radical vision from SNCC. It doesn't all work; there's a pretty hokey framing device involving Obama's first inauguration, hokey enough that I wonder if, by the end, there's a kind of bitter irony being engaged in (the book ends by talking about the end of the Civil Rights Movement in the late '60s, which then gets juxtaposed with Obama in ways that feel at-best ambivalent). But on the whole, I'm pleasantly surprised by how moving and powerful I found these books. Kids who won't read could do a lot worse than to learn about Civil Rights from this series. Grade: A-

Sunday, February 9, 2020

Mini Reviews for February 3-9, 2020

Bare-bones post today because I have the flu and haven't finished reviewing everything I watched this week. Don't be an idiot like me; don't put off getting your flu shot!

Movies

The Wind (2018)
Would have vastly preferred the version of this story in chronological order, but even then, I don't think there's a whole lot to this movie, which makes the nonlinear storytelling feel like an attempt to cloak a lack of ideas. Too bad, too, because "possession movie in the Wild West" feels like a real winner of an idea. Grade: C







Waltz with Bashir (Vals Im Bashir) (2008)
For the majority of the movie, my main thought was that the animation hadn't aged particularly well—it's literally Flash animation, and although it's probably the most technically sophisticated Flash animation I've ever seen, it's still got that uncanny, floaty quality to it that always feels flat in Flash. But then that cut into live-action footage in the movie's final minutes hits, and it's one of the most devastating, damningly anti-war things I've ever seen in a movie, all the more so because the the preceding 85 minutes had established a false normality of this artificially smooth, poorly aged style that just shatters when confronted with the final reality—the literalized mechanism of a brain that refuses to admit culpability in a massacre. Nobody ever thinks they're culpable in a massacre. I'm sure I don't. Grade: A-

The Watermelon Woman (1996)
This movie does a fantastic job of evoking the alternatingly intoxicating and frustrating feeling of digging into a research project and pulling on loose thread after loose thread. I really dig the ingenuity with which this research project is constructed, too—until the credits told me so, I didn't realize that the "Watermelon Woman" that the protagonist researches here is a fictional figure invented by writer/director/star Cheryl Dunye for this movie, which means that all the primary sources the movie shows are invented, too, so mad props for the dedication to do all that. I just wish this movie were better on a character and screenplay level, though—the dialogue is pretty flat, and the central romance that gets so much attention ends off-screen for reasons I don't fully understand. A fascinating, flawed project that feels ripe for a remake. Grade: B

Mutiny on the Bounty (1935)
This movie has a lot of competition within my immediate film-viewing context, and it's losing: I've recently seen a much better Charles Laughton movie (Ruggles of Red Gap), and I've recently seen a much more entertaining movie in which a group of scrappy upstarts overthrow their terrible boss (9 to 5). But it's a lot better than the other Frank-Lloyd-directed movie to win the Academy Award for Best Picture during the 1930s (Cavalcade, bleh), and I did have a pretty good time here, so here's a positive review. Grade: B

Sunday, February 2, 2020

Mini Reviews for January 27 - February 2, 2020

Had most of the week off of school. Praise be.

Also, if you like weird slacker prog, don't forget to check out my new Prog Progress post on Dün's Eros.

Movies

Miss Americana (2020)
Will write a more in-depth review for Cinematary in the next couple of days, but for now, I'll just say that this is a good—if unspectacular—documentary about all the various political and psychological tensions inherent in what it means to be Taylor Swift (and, more generally, any female celebrity). It's unabashedly in the pro-Taylor camp, and I imagine that people who aren't might accuse this movie of committing sins of omission; I myself would have liked for it to have been just a little thornier, too. But if the relatively unironic embrace of the Taylor brand is the price of having this close of access to Taylor herself, then I'd say it paid off. Grade: B

Edit: Here's the in-depth Cinematary review!

Taylor Swift: Reputation Stadium Tour (2018)
The music is good, of course (minus "End Game," an album highlight that loses a lot of its energy without that weird, compelling interplay between Swift, Sheeran, and Future). But the filmmaking made me want to pull my hair out. So much editing (did any single shot last longer than two seconds?), and that mixed with some astoundingly poor shot composition chops up the presumably impressive stage setup and dance choreography into a jumble of hard-to-contextualize imagery. I'm tilting slightly above the completely middle-of-the-road rating, though, because I want everyone to know that, two years later, the backlash is a lie: Reputation is one of Taylor Swift's best albums—good enough, even, to counteract filmmaking this aggravating. Grade: C+

Paint It Black (2016)
As it turns out, Amber Tamblyn is a really good writer/director—I guess all the hard work that went into the "suckumentary" in Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants really paid off, huh? Seriously, though, this is super solid: a taut indie that pivots effortlessly between warped psycho-drama and a tender exploration of grief, with a great eye for visuals/editing and a great ear for sound design. It's also the acting showcase that Alia Shawkat has deserved since forever. Grade: B+





No (2012)
The story and screenplay themselves have this kind of Argo-ish vibe that takes a real-life event (in this case, the advertising campaigns surrounding the 1988 vote to remove Pinochet) and spins a broad and bright yarn that alternates between humor and dead seriousness. It works well here, though it's nowhere near as deconstructive or bold as director Pablo Larraín's later features like Neruda, and I kind of missed that formal and thematic playfulness. The real draw here is Larraín's decision to film the whole movie on magnetic tape rather than celluloid. It's a choice that not only makes the movie's constructed scenes virtually indistinguishable from the archival footage Larraín often inserts (an effect that gives a striking power to scenes like the one where the police violently break up a "No" rally) but also gives the movie an uncommonly beautiful aesthetic as its rickety, slightly-color-separated video tape limitations collide with some world-class cinematography in breathtaking and unexpected ways. Grade: B+

Wuthering Heights (2011)
Andrea Arnold's arrestingly beautiful and relentlessly patient cinematic style reinterprets Brontë's heavily Gothic/Romantic novel through the lens of crushing Naturalism, which obscures some of the primal power of its plot. At the same time, the film also complicates a lot of the novel's ideas about class by also highlighting the novel's very sub-subtext about race (Heathcliff is explicitly black in this adaptation and the subject of some unambiguous racism), which does a lot to bring out a lot of the under-explored geometries of the plot's drama. I'm not sure if it completely works (environmental determinism by way of racial hate definitely fits within the broader philosophical context of Naturalism, but does it work within this specific plot? Still mulling it over), and there are a few unambiguously bad choices—e.g. the fact that there is no way in heaven or on earth that young Catherine as Shannon Beer could have grown into adult Catherine as Kaya Scodelario—that make the film not quite work anyway, even if you buy the intersection of its aesthetic and philosophy. But it's a striking movie whose risks demand consideration, and more classic literary adaptations could stand to be as daring as this one. Grade: B

Dil Se.. (दिल से..) (1998)
Really dug the musical sequences (especially the one on top of the train—y'all know I'm here for train musical sequences), and for a 2.5+ hour movie, this remains startlingly energetic throughout. I'm also very much interested in the romantic elements of this movie and how they intersect the ultimately deeply tragic ideas about the irreconcilability of moderate and radical politics—the shameless romance of the movie's early goings feels bitterly ironic and uneasily complicated by where this movie eventually goes, and that's really interesting. I'm honestly probably a little more positive on this movie than my rating indicates, but I'm hedging my bets with a kind of generically positive rating here because a lot of my positive feelings have to do with some hunches that I have about the way that the movie deconstructs Shah Rukh Khan's protagonist, hunches that I'm not entirely sure are correct, given my near total ignorance of contemporary Indian cinema and culture. Grade: B+

Anyway, if you'd like to hear me say a more in-depth version of the above or if you'd like to hear some other people say a few more interesting things, you can listen to Episode 284 of the Cinematary podcast, where a group of us talk about this movie!


9 to 5 (1980)
Ridiculously entertaining and far stranger than at least I had been told: the first half is basically what I was expecting, albeit much sharper—a workplace comedy surrounding entrenched misogyny and generally dehumanizing conditions at a large corporation. But then in the second half, the ladies steal a corpse from a hospital, and it's somehow not the wackiest thing that happens. Through all the hairpins turns, though, it never loses its wicked sense of humor nor its focus on the wage theft and exploitation inherent in a corporation, and given the sheer number of comedies whose thematic and comedic ideas just spin out of control by the end, I have mad respect for the screenplay and all-star leads who keep all this together. I know that it's unlikely that Dolly Parton has kept her political views secret for so long because she's a red-blooded communist, and yet... and yet... Grade: A-

Music

Pavement - Slanted and Enchanted (1992)
I'm confused by the discussion surrounding whether it is this album or Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain that is Pavement's best—Crooked Rain is clearly better than this album in every conceivable way, while Wowee Zowee is obviously superior to them both. Slanted feels very much like the low-budget EP before their real albums, which isn't a criticism, really, but they would go on to do much more complicated and interesting work. I do like how noisy and lo-fi the album is, even compared to Pavement's famously fuzzy aesthetic throughout the rest of their career, but time and again I find myself drifting toward the songs like "Here" that manage to lift their heads and melodies above the static, and then I just find myself wanting to go to Crooked Rain again. Still, it's not without its moments. Grade: B