Race to review: Casts Off, Rome, Harry Potter 7, and And the Goat Cried

Stephanie Pearl-McPhee Casts Off: The Yarn Harlot's Guide to the Land of Knitting by Stephanie Pearl-McPhee

Do I even need to tell you I liked this book?  Because I liked this book a lot.  It made me laugh on the metro.  And really, that's a double-bonus, because if you laugh out loud on the metro and you're not talking to anyone, then people move away from you and you can sit alone on a two person bench, reading about knitting while laughing and holding knitting.  Ask me how I know.

Rome: Season II

This show is amazing.  The second season isn't quite as good as the first, because two of the best characters are no longer around.  BUT it's still better than anything anyone on network TV has produced in at least a decade and it makes random people learn about ancient history, so I love it.  Also, Atia proves herself to be a true alpha bitch at the end, and it's one of the best payoffs I've ever watched.  Damn good stuff about damnable tyrants.

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows  by J.K. Rowling

I liked it a lot.  I won't say a darn thing about the plot, on the off chance that anyone who reads my blog and reads the series hasn't read this book yet.  But I will say that I think Rowling has gotten to be a much better writer as the series has progressed, and that she clearly likes both children and teenagers.  I hope she really enjoys rolling in her piles of money.  And if she wants to send an agent my way, I won't complain one bit.

And the Goat Cried: Southern Tales and Other Chance Meetings by Henry Buchanan

I just could not get through this book.  Buchanan himself is apparently a really great guy, so I'm annoyed that I couldn't get into it.  But I'm putting it down because there are just too many books I've never read.  Onward.

Not dead, or missing, or sick

Just working really really hard.  The big new site launches Thursday afternoon, so testing testing testing. 

And Deadwood.  Though Deadwood is gone now.  Sigh.  How could they cancel that show? 

And the Transformers, which I never saw as a kid, and Rowan never saw as a kid, but Scott and Bodwin were excited about.  It was, um, very smashy.  And they do lots of that tight-frame CGI-stuff, which looks to me like lazy animation.  I think MTV is to blame.  Still fun though.  And the pontificating robots apparently ring true to fans.   

And the Smithsonian Folklife Festival--pictures and film coming soon.  Tommy Sands--good as ever.  Food from the Mekong valley--good as ever.  Unfortunately, um, a Mummer from Aughakillymaude was threatening to impregnate me with some braided wheat and a horse costume.  Now, obviously, his understanding of physiology and reproduction was sketchy.  And he  didn't understand why I avowed Scott would be quite displeased or why I disliked the idea so intensely.  Some boyos can't take a hint.  To make things worse, he claimed the Mummer-induced pregnancies also only last six months.  Since when has prematurity been something to shoot for, exactly?  I thought full term was still the way to go . . .  when I was living in Dublin, I did work on that whole birthing reform legislation project, and they were rooting for full-term pregnancies, breast-feeding, and better prenatal care for rural Moms.  The North can't be that different, can it?  Thankfully, I was with people who supported my right to avoid Mummer freakiness.

Also, a great deal of sewing happening, and cutting fabric, and plotting, and some minor sock-knitting. 

Oh, and rereading book five of the Harry Potter series.  Scott's company is hosting a sneak preview tomorrow afternoon, and he got us tickets.  So I decided a quick re-read was in order.  A quick re-read of nearly 900 pages.  I hope the movie is good--I shunted aside a Puitzer-winning novel to support the cause, so I'll be hella pissed if the movie is bad. 

The Illusionist, Emma, and Bleak House

The number of books and films on the right is starting to make me itch now, and after the nutty response I got to that review of several Austen adaptations, I figured I'd just review a few period-pieces at once and duck back into the shadows.

Kate Beckinsale makes a much better Emma than does Gwyneth Paltrow.  This version has a better script, a better cast, and a better director.  Nuff said.

The Illusionist: Edward Norton and Paul Giamatti are really well cast and both give great performances; the story and script are good.  I figured out the twist far too soon, but, well, I do that.  Predictable or no, I like it when justice prevails and, you know, sadistic villains get what they deserve.

The BBC/Masterpiece Theater Bleak House   mini-series is one of the best things I've seen in a long time.  I'm not wild about Dickens' books, so I haven't read the novel and am in the dark about how accurate this adaptation is.  But I don't care!  I want to sent Anna Maxwell Martin a box of puppies, she was so good as Esther.  Gillian Anderson was wonderful as Lady Deadlock.  Burn Gorman as Guppy--priceless.  Philip Davis's Smallweed, Charles Dance's Tulkinghorn, and Hugo Speer!  I just loved the series.  Every minute of it.   I should break down and buy it.

Into the West

Into the West directed by Mike Newell and written by Jim Sheridan

This is the movie about travellers I do recommend.  It's a kids' film, in theory, but it's a well-written, evocative, entertaining film.  Few American kids' movies will go to the lengths it does, with a drunken widowed father, impoverished, uppity kids, and a grandfather who encourages nomadism over settled life.  The cast is great, the kids in the lead rolls do very well, and the Irish heavyweight actors do what they do.  Watch it.  It will cheer you up.

House of Mirth

House of Mirth by Edith Wharton and House of Mirth directed by Terence Davies

This is where I normally explain that there was some hole in my education, through which some of the great masters slipped.  You know what?  Forget that.  Dear reader, I openly admit that I haven't read everything yet.  Hence, you know, the still reading. 

Anyway, the novel follows Lily Bart, a New York socialite who is increasingly distressed because she's unmarried and has limited financial resources.  Lily is essentially bratty and conniving at the opening of the novel, but witty and resourceful as well.  As the story progresses, Lily sabotages a few of her better marriage prospects because she has unintentionally fallen for a man who has to work as a lawyer, and thus lacks the means to support her in the style to which she has become accustomed.  She makes some bad choices, loses the support of her wealthy benefactress aunt, spirals into the working class, and dies.  Of course she does.  Wharton knew what a tough spot a poor gentlewoman of her era was stuck in.    The book is well-written, engaging, heart-breaking, and intensely modern.  Not that many novelists in the period were writing lead women who were, in many ways, unlikeable.

The film lost some of the bite of the novel.  I like Gillian Anderson too much to buy her as the real Lily.  In the same way that the Fanny Price in the recent film adaptation of Mansfield Park was too strong and funny to be the same character in the novel, this Lily is too good to be the Lily from the novel.  The screenwriter did Lily some favors, which allowed Anderson to do Lily some more favors, and the main character in the film actually gets to be more of a heroine.  The film is also a bit too slow--many period films revel in the hard work done by set dressers and costumers a bit too much, sacrificing pacing for good, clear pans through the beauty.  There's a bit too much of that in the film.  And Anderson's Lily is a bit too indiscreet--the Lily of the novel, for all of her naughtiness, was not making out with guys on benches outside parties.  She mad mistakes, but she didn't knowingly sink her reputation in that particular way.

Slapdash reviews

Punch Drunk Love

This was neglected in my Netflix queue for a long time.  I guess I had a hard time believing that Adam Sandler could act in something serious, no matter who told me it was good.  You know what?  It's really good.  And I love Emily Watson.

Brokeback Mountain

The movie is gorgeous.  The scenery is breathtaking.  The acting is great.  It's all very sad--I feel particularly bad for the two wives in the film.  Really, sad enough for them that I'm extra pissed at their cheating husbands.  I hope that these sort of personal tragedies are significantly less likely as the gay rights movement makes real headway.  Sigh.

Traveller

I watch pretty much every Irish or Irish-themed movie that's released.  My degree requires it.  This one was a big disappointment.  It should have been better, with that cast.  But it plays really terribly into the worst sort of stereotypes about Travellers, so it gave me the gibblies.  It's certainly watchable, and the actors do pretty well, but the plot is all wrong, as is the premise.  Double sigh.

300

300 by Frank Miller, and 300, by Frank Miller, Zack Snyder, Lynn Varley, and some other blokes.

Comic books are good.  Frank Miller's comic books (I'm not going to mess with the "graphic novel" distinction today) are better than most.  We finally got a copy of 300 this Christmas, so I snagged it once Scott had read it.  The artwork is what most expect from Miller--evocative, strong, violent, dark.  The story is essentially a mythologization of the Battle of Thermopylae--Miller wasn't shooting for historical accuracy.  I like it. 

The film is, well, a movie made from a comic book.  It's not historically accurate, and it's not supposed to be.  Leonidas, interestingly enough, is a Scot this time around.  All of the Spartan soldiers are ridiculously sculpted.  The Persians don't look very much like Persians.  It's loud, violent, testosterone-laden eye-candy made using similar techniques to those used in Sin City.  Some of the lines are leaden, some are unintentionally hilarious.  But I like it.  Not everything has to be Jane Austen.

Jane Austen movie-thon, part 1

I've been on a bit of an Austen-spree over at Netflix.  I watch one, and the tea-drinking, knitting, misty-eyed fun is just too good to let go of, so then I order others, and more, and more, and it's all Austen all the time, and my poor dear husband has to flee to a room without a crying wife and a screen full of Brits in silly pants with stifled manners.

This time around, I started with the Colin-Firth-plays-Darcy version of Pride and Prejudice.  I'm guessing this mini-series is still seen as the gold standard of Austen adaptations.  Feature films just do not allow enough time to really get Austen's work out to an audience, so the extended length of a mini-series does everyone better justice.  The only qualm I've ever had about this version--and I admit this is both petty and unimportant--is that the actress cast as Jane isn't enchanting enough to be Jane.  Lizzie is supposed to be the sharp-tongued, less attractive sister.  Jennifer Ehle makes a great Lizzie, but you need to cast a breathtaking stunner as Jane to make the novel's pairing of the two sisters make sense.  I love Susannah Harker's portrayal of Jane's grace and passivity, but they should have dolled her up a  bit more. 

Next, I finally found the Rozema-directed Mansfield Park.  I know this film has gotten a lot of criticism because Rozema broke from the text and inserted material from Austen's personal correspondence and her juvenilia .  But, people, Rozema made that clear as day by running a little text saying exactly that during the opening credits.  Her revision of Mansfield Park is funny and bright and really enjoyable to watch.  I probably would have proposed to Frances O'Connor's Fanny Price too, given the chance.  The novel itself is difficult, the original Fanny is less enticing than most of Austen's heroines, and Rozema had a point of view to get across about Austen cum Fanny (holy hell, that sentence is going to send strange people to my site).  I loved it, and I'll probably buy it and torture my charming, Austen hating husband with it for years.

Next, it was on to the newest take on Pride and Prejudice starring Kiera Knightly as Lizzie and with luminaries like Donald Sutherland, Brenda Blethyn, and Dame Judi Dench in supporting roles.  I was prepared for disappointment.  I had high hopes for Knightly after Bend it Like Beckham, which were dashed when she was in some utter crap and seemed to be going down the brainless skeletal actress track, instead of the witty, athletic, ballsy actress track I had envisioned for her.  Well, I think the girl went and redeemed herself, and also ate a sandwich or two and played some more sports--praise be to muscle mass.  The film is gorgeous, as the best Austen films always are.  The cast is pretty damn impressive, and they fill their rolls well.  I wouldn't necessarily chose this version over the Firth-led mini-series, because since it's a feature it cut lots of goodies.  But it's a really enjoyable film made with an excellent cast and lovely cinematography.  I think I'll wallow in it too when I get the chance. 

The Devil's Backbone

The Devil's Backbone is a sort of prequel to Pan's Labyrinth.  Set in the Spanish Civil War, adults again endanger children, and children save the day.

This film is set in a boy's boarding school attended primarily by the sons of rebels.  The school is haunted by the ghost of a murdered student, and the students and teachers are terrorized by a duplicitous handyman.  This film is a bit less dream than its sibling but still wonderful and hugely affective. 

A Weekend of Pleasureable Horrors: Pan's Labyrinth, Bridget Cleary, and Sweater-torture

Let's get the worst part over with first: I frogged most of Scott's sweater.  I was pretty sure I would have to when I wrote that last post, but my resolve solidified when Meg pointed out that I incessantly threatened to burn my lovely green Irish Twist cardigan at Rhinebeck because, well, I was in a seaming snit.  So I pulled out most of the stitches, put the sweater back on the needles, and got right back to work. 

And, another foray into horror here: I'm knitting Scott's sweater on Knitpicks options, which is a wonder unto itself.  I bought a couple pairs of tips and a few cords because I needed really long circulars for a class with Cat Bordhi at the Knitters' Review Retreat.  I assumed I'd use the needles for the class and promptly give them away when they started eating my skin.  Nickle hurts me.  I've been waiting for the needles to attack ever since, tip-toeing around them, waiting for symptoms.  And yet they aren't making my skin peel off.  Either something is different about their plating process, or winter knitting is less likely to cause me to react to nickle because my skin is drier, or I'm finally catching a break from my whacked-out immune system.  Who knows.  I'll keep limiting exposure and washing my hands when I take breaks, but I may be able to make a whole sweater on these puppies. 

When I wasn't cowering from the needles, I was engaged in other horrors.  Enjoyable horrors, but horrors nonetheless.

The Burning of Bridget Cleary by Angela Bourke

I first came across Bourke's work when I was in grad school.  She wrote a barn-burner called Husbandry to Housewifery: Women, Economic Change, and Housework in Ireland, 1890-1914.  Bourke is a feminist historian, and that earlier book dealt largely with how women in Ireland empowered themselves by selling eggs and milk and engaging in other cottage industries and keeping the money themselves.  The women's movement was particularly ill-received in Ireland: nationalists and home-rulers argued over and over that women who demanded suffrage and equality were harming the nationalist cause and should just wait until a new state was founded before seeking allowances and freedoms.  In short--Irish women were screwed by their compatriots and their overlords.  No surprise there.  Bourke's thesis was great, her research was meticulous and deep, but the book was largely about egg and milk prices.  I was given the distinct pleasure of critiquing the book for a room full of primarily male history grad students who thought that history was only about war.  I think the prof and I were the only two people who read the book, certainly in that class, and possibly in the US.  We could both handle the fact that the men in the room didn't want to keep reading about egg prices, but hearing men argue in the late 1990s that the anti-suffragists were right nearly led me to strangle some classmates.  Good times, good times.

This time around, Bourke expands on an essay she wrote previously about Cleary's death.  Again, she examines women's work in the period--Bridget Cleary was a milliner and dress-maker, and made a lot of her own money--and how men reacted to the changes in domestic power thus set in motion.  Bridget Cleary's murder was horrific--she was ill for several days, and her husband engaged both the drunken local doctor, who diagnosed Mrs. C with bronchitis and gave her medicine; and a "quack doctor" who claimed that Mrs. Cleary had been taken by the fairies and that the woman in her place was a changeling who must be driven out by fire.  Cleary's husband and family members tortured her a bit, attempting to drive out the fairy spirit, and then her husband burned her to death.  That, apparently, is the wages of uppity.

Bourke skillfully frames the story in the broader Irish, British, and global history of the day.  Fairy lore and Cleary's murder were used as arguments against granting Irish Home Rule, in favor of bigotry against Catholics, in attacks against Oscar Wilde (hence the modern pejorative "fairy" used against homosexuals), and in a misguided form of Cultural anthropology arguing that most folks outside of England were brutes and savages, and thus incapable of self-governance, civilization, or righteousness. 

The book is fantastic--in every sense of the word.  Bourke is a careful researcher, a skilled and engaging writer, and has bigger balls than most of the male historians outselling her by writing only about men.  She's not dismissive of folklore--just enraged by it's manipulation to excuse domestic abuse, murder, and subjugation of a whole country.  I'm going to keep reading her books, and I'm becoming increasingly interested in egg prices in the Victorian and Georgian ages.   Please, join us in our hysteria.

Pan's Labyrinth

Let me start with a tiny bit of venting: the title annoys me.  Pan is not in this movie.  There is a faun in the movie, but we never get his name.  The powers-that-be knowingly mistranslated the title (El Laberinto del Fauno), and so they should be scourged with nettles for a few minutes.   Don't promise me Pan and only give me one of his grandkids, buddy.  I will kick you.

Apart from that, I absolutely loved the film.  Of course, I have a high tolerance for horror, sadness, and tragedy.  This is not a kid's movie.  This is not a happy movie.  It's frightening and sad and gorgeous and dark.

The film entwines a girl's adventures with a faun, some fairies, and the underworld with some localized horrors of the  Spanish Civil War.   Ofelia, our heroine, is taken to the Spanish countryside by her pregnant mother and her evil Step-father, a Captain in Franco's military.  And then all Hades breaks loose. 

At the outset, the fantastical scenes are gentler.  Some part of me wanted the other world to stay kind and spooky.  It can't, of course: little kids are at least as harmed by war as adults, and Ofelia suffers terribly in both realms.  As the World gets worse, so does the Other World. 

The cast is amazing, the visuals are gorgeous, the script is great, the sub-titles seemed pretty darn accurate, though I'm certainly nowhere near fluent in Spanish so I could be completely wrong.  It's a great film, I'll buy it and watch it again and again, and it will probably make me cry every single time.

June 2008

Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30