So, a recap of the last few movies:
Every Day
I quite liked this. Not sure why, but I did. It might have been Eddie Izzard as the crazy boss, but somehow I don't think so. I love Eddie to bits, but watching him act is like watching your parents explain proudly their knowledge of some recent pop sensation because they've seen them on Fern. You don't need to know about this to be good at what you do! Stop trying so excruciatingly hard to do everything.
It is relentlessly depressing, dealing as it does with themes of what life actually turns out to be, even when superficially you've got the things you're supposed to have wanted to get. Maybe that's why I like it. The ideal job? You're dealing with assholes. The perfect family? Maybe suddenly your gay teenage son doesn't fit the script you'd written for yourself as well as you thought. And ageing parents? Who knew the horrors in store? The gorgeous partner that you've been convinced is all you'll ever want? meh...
Schadenfreude fans will like it. Also borderline depressives will find some affirmation.
American Gangster
You know that Denzel Washington? He's great, isn't he? I mean, did you ever see a film with him where you didn't think he was good? No. That's because he's a damn good actor.
American Gangster really wants to be Heat. If there's been no Heat, maybe this wouldn't seem at all like a tired re-tread, and maybe a lot of people wouldn't have been put off.
I enjoyed it. I know, like a lot of these films, they've gone for the "authenticity" angle whilst massively lying through their teeth about the protagonists in this "true-life" story, but it's well done. If you like a long, juicy crime thriller, this is long and juicy. It's not original. It is polished.
Taken
Also not original. Liam Neeson
This is a film where you can see everything coming. Liam "Jack Bauer" Neeson plays a guy so committed to his mustn't-tell-anyone secret service job that he's lost touch with his teenage daughter. His teenage daughter is as whiney and spoilt as the whiney, spoilt daughter in 24. His ex is a cocky pain in the arse SO cocky that she may as well be wearing a t-shirt that says, "Before this film is through, I will have to humbly eat my words".
So Liam's kid gets "Taken" (hence the title) and being the kind of hard-ass he is, he goes after her. No hold barred. You realise early on that you're going to have to suspend any kind of disbelief (and he didn't get arrested for that because...?...and he survived that certain death encounter because...?) but it's fine. As long as you start going "Hurgh!" during the predictable-as-fuck car-chase instead of "What the? As If!!" you'll be OK.
Neeson is great and doesn't disappoint. Worth an evening if anything I've said about it doesn't grate on your every last nerve.
Jackass 3-D
I know. i'm as surprised as you are.
My preconceptions about Jackass were that a) it involved people doing things that seemed blatantly stupid because you'd get hurt, and then subsequently getting hurt and b) that they particularly favoured blows to the manpacket. I therefore expected somewhat dull, mindless viewing.
I wasn't wrong, but I was impressed by the creativity by which blows to the manpacket were presented to the viewing public. I found I didn't mind at all watching people get mindlessly hurt as long as they fell down amusingly. Go figure, as they say across the pond.
A few musings.
1. I'm never going to like jokes that involve people who aren't a party to it beforehand. The ones in this were mild, not humiliating and quite imaginative but nevertheless I still find it much more uneasy than funny to watch.
2. I quickly got more interested in the Boy Dynamics than anything else. The heart of Jackass is that if you're prepared to do something massively unpleasant for the general amusement of all onlookers, you're In. Seeing how readily guys will partake in humiliating, scary and painful experiences as long as they think their mates will approve makes a whole lot more sense of things like, say, WW1.
3. I got particularly interested in how the wussier members of the cast got treated.
"Danger Ehren", for example, was clearly scared/put off at an number of points. The bully factor then kicked in.
4. I'd love to know how many times, off-camera, people really kicked off. Quite a lot, I suspect.
Watch it. But stop before the last stunt because, really, nobody needs that in their head.
Anita Shreve
I forget sometimes that I'm supposed to be doing books as well.
I've recently read Strange Fits Of Passion and Eden Close and I'm really impressed. Both books have been sitting around in my must-get-to-that pile for years because, based on the cover, it seems there's very little going on in them.
I'm kinda not wrong. In the cold light of day, when you think about what you've read, little happens - and the themes tend to be very uncomfortable, not experiences you'd initially want to share. What she makes up for in lack of action, though, is a very readble sense of tension, beautifully drawn characters that you can empathise with down to the last idle thought, and an incredibly atmospheric sense of place. If you read about something in her books, it's as real to you as a place you've visited. I've found myself itching to get back to the books just to lose myself in them again. That's the sign of a good writer for me.
30 Days of Night
I've had this in the pile waiting to be watched for ages because, tbh, it says "Vampire" and "horror" in big letters on the cover.
I've always hated vampires in any horrors I've seen. Weak yet predatory - sex offenders, basically - all of the bad stuff and none of the qualities I like in a good villain.
Horror films don't really do it for me as a genre. I don't seek out repulsion as an experience. I have seen decent horror films but it's not the horror element that makes them good.
So, expectations low, I stuck this in the DVD player - and I was impressed. Atmosphere is a big thing for me and this film had it in spades. I felt like I understood the dark little Alaskan town before anything really happened. I felt like I was there - and right with the peole wanting to get out before the darkness set in.
It was well acted and understated enough to stay believeable and edgy, and it never felt predictable or cliched. It fell short of being a classic - not enough character focus for me - but if it remotely sounds like your cup of tea, give it a go.
Thank you and goodnight.
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