Yesterday’s movie: Freaky Friday

A movie that could easily have gone over the edge in sentimentality, obviousness or obnoxiousness didn’t. As a result, the audience with which we saw Freaky Friday applauded when the final credits ran. I didn’t go that far but I did laugh through most of the movie, except for some touching scenes towards the end when I cried. Seriously, this Disney-made flick is just terrific and worth seeing even at the outrageous prices charged here in Silicon Valley.

This remake is the exception, I suppose that proves the rule. You know, the rule which says that remakes are crap. Seriously, how many good remakes can you point to? Warren Beatty’s Heaven Can Wait was great but Chris Rock’s re-remake (Down to Earth) was just sad. As great an actor as Robert Deniro is, was his Cape Fear better than Gregory Peck’s? Unlike theatrical productions, movies are best left in their original state. Still, try an idea often enough and there are bound to be some successes, as is the case here.

Jamie Lee Curtis and Lindsay Lohan play the mother and daughter who are the focus of the film (Barbara Harris and a very young Jodie Foster in the original). Curtis has no need to prove her acting skills, anyone who saw her in Trading Places and True Lies will agree, but Lohan was a surprise (some fans might take issue with me for saying that!), a very nice surprise, who makes a terrific mark in her first feature starring role. You will recall that mother and daughter switch bodies, meaning, of course, that Lohan spends a considerable portion of her screen time playing the mother trapped in a 15 year old body. I’m not surprised to read that Disney already has her in production on a movie for next year (Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen).

Harold Gould makes a rare appearance, providing quality as my footie friends would say, as the nutty grandfather, Mark Harmon has a quiet time as Curtis’s fiance, Rosalind Chao looks ageless as the Chinese restauranteur whose mother causes the switch, and Chad Michael Murray is sensitive and hunky as the guy Lohan must have.

The soundtrack is pretty good too. Lohan’s character plays in a band, which is featured on a couple of tracks, but really good are The Donna’s Backstage, Joey Ramone’s cover of What a Wonderful World and a hard rocking take on Britney Spear’s …Baby One More Time by Bowling For Soup; they could have left off the hurried, emotionless remake of Happy Together from Simple Plan.

Definitely recommended

Entertaining entertainments

  • Will The Wire be back next year? Yes, the exceedingly dense show was renewed by HBO for a third season, filming to begin with the turn of the year, no precise air dates yet set.
  • Will Sledge Hammer return?
  • Can sexually transmitted diseases be the basis of a fun game? STD-ster thinks so.
  • Can Kevin Costner make (that is, star in and direct) another good Western? The NY Times says sorry but no.
  • Why did McGarrett wear a coat and tie to romance a hot hippy chick on the beach? No one know the answer to that!
  • Is Freaky Friday a fun movie? Sure is! Review coming up soon

C#: Making progress

Posting has been a little light here this week, so like many another blogger I will make my excuses to you all. I’m pretty sick of politics and am trying to avoid posting rant after rant, because I am trying to avoid working up to the fever pitch of said rants. Not good for my mental health, which has enough other challenges, if you know what I mean. On the plus side, though, I am making real progress learning C# and have actually written a couple of little apps that are completely useless except as learning exercises. Also, lunch was had with a dear friend so I could get all the info on her recent romantic weekend and later coffee with a buddy who is extremely well connected in the local work world and always has an idea or three for me. Tomorrow being Thursday, I will try and post another installment of the comic strip; having to work within the limits of the tool, I think that’s going fine but I should try and do something a bit more substantive with it or quit.

New Clancy novel

In his last few novels, bestselling author Tom Clancy has suffered from what many called verbal diarrhea. He also seemed to have run out of steam with Jack Ryan, going back to tell a tale from the early days in his last book. With The Teeth of the Tiger, just out, Clancy looks to have reinvented his career: the novel is less than 500 pages and, though it works within the established milieu, focuses on a new cast of characters.

Google: creeping all the way to everything

  • News – pulled in from thousands of sources all over the globe and, except in very unusual circumstances, no human intervention to determine importance.
  • Calculator – for the mathphobic and the geekheads, calculations from the simple to the sublime.
  • Stock Quotes – go to the main page, type in a ticker symbol (say, MSFT), and click the I’m Feeling Lucky button and you go straight to the Yahoo! Finance Page for that stock.
  • Dictionary and Spell Checker
  • Phone Book – type in your phone number and see what comes back!
  • Street Maps – where do you want to go today?
  • Even machine translation of web pages and plain text.
  • Finally, of course, Google also owns Blogger, used to publish this message for you.

[Note: New version of Blogger, same old crappy handling of lists in posts.]

Board meeting night

Board meetings are only every other month because I don’t think anyone would agree to serve if they were more often. Tonight, for instance, we got the pleasure of starting off with four complaints from a single homeowner. Any one of his issues wouldn’t have been to bad but the sum was just a bit too much. Then came the 800 pound gorilla, discussion and approval of the annual budget: a $50 monthly increase in the unit dues.

Doesn’t that just suck? There is no real alternative, though, as we’re going to have a major repaving next month and roof replacement program beginning next year. Previous boards (for what reason I’m not sure, probably inadequate reserve studies) just didn’t put enough money away in the kitty for this stuff and we’ll have to make it up now. Uggh!

Thankfully when I walked in the door just before 8:00 TS1 had a delicious dinner of BBQ boneless country pork ribs and spinach ready for me. And a public TV station was showing a classic 1980 Beach Boys concert from Knebworth (that’s in England), one of the last shows with all six of the original Boys together on stage. Talk about your California chill pills!

Two Movies: A Hard Day’s Night, Don’t Look Back

Since this little essay seems to be the 200th movie review (to use the term loosely) published here on BillSaysThis, I thought I’d pair these two films about the mid-60s concert scene by what are arguably the two most important popular music acts of the era, The Beatles and Bob Dylan. I watched the former a few weeks back (thanks Pam for the present!) and the latter am still enjoying some of the DVD extras as I write this but was struck by the similarities and differences.

First off, both are Definitely Recommended as long as you think you’ll enjoy the music and not worth watching otherwise. Fortunately for me, I do very much. Second, don’t expect anything close to a normal movie in either instance: one was thrown together just to capitalize on the band’s popularity without time to plan or think things through and the other is an avant-garde documentary that makes no attempt to provide context or comfortable familiarity.

In A Hard Day’s Night, the Beatles take an overnight train trip to London for a performance, joined by their road manager and Paul McCartney’s grandfather (actually a wiley old actor named Wilfred Brambell). Director Richard Lester in many scenes simply worked from a setup and suggested bit of action; even though Alun Owen wrote what many said was an excellent script, very little of his dialogue and staging was used.

The DVD has lots of extras and one that was particularly interesting to me was a series of interviews with people involved in organizing and making the movie (though none of the Beatles themselves participated). We find that the studio executives in America who provided the financing were mainly interested in getting a soundtrack record and its publishing rights; the go ahead was given before the group had made much of an impact in the States though their instant godhood via that first Ed Sullivan show performance came before filming began. Little did they realize…

From our perspective in 2003, Hard Day’s Night may seem amateurish and even a poor outing by the Fab Four (except, of course, for the actual music) given our familiarity with more modern efforts, especially the million dollar major label videos seen over the last decade or more but remember that in 1964 there was no such thing. Rock and roll in the movies was pretty much Elvis in whatever dreck Colonel Parker put in front of him and Frankie and Annette beach movies and music television was American Bandstand plus the occasional crumb of an appearance on Sullivan, who was more interested in his Broadway pals and circus acts. In fact, Lester lampoons the latter by having a dance troup and ‘plate spinner’ appear with the Beatles on a TV broadcast.

Mainly, the film has the boys (in their early 20s at the time) have fun with a bunch of situations: on board the train, getting from the station to the hotel, in the hotel room with each other and with room service, finding Grandpa when gets loose, backstage at the show, and even at a police station where they go to retrieve the old man. Absurdity, nonsense, and the occasional tip of the cap to Spike Jones and old school Peter Sellers.

Did I say mainly? Okay, that’s true in terms of minutes but the primary source of entertainment is the music, perhaps the peak of their early period, with Lennon and McCartney confident in their own writing abilities but still working within the existing forms. The title song, amusingly enough, wasn’t even written until after the filming when everyone was trying to figure out a name for the movie; when one was arrived at, Lennon came back the next morning with the complete song.

On the train, in fact, we’re also introduced to Patti Boyd as one of two girls that Paul tries to talk up but who end up flirting with Grandpa instead. Boyd took up with and then married George, later becoming the object of Eric Clapton’s unrequited affections when he wrote Layla for and about her, though she eventually gave in and left Harrison for him. Clapton, in his happiness, then wrote Wonderful Tonight for her.

Don’t Look Back is much more difficult to pin down; documentary maker DA Pennebaker completely ignores convention and simply edits together bits of film that he expects will, in sum, present a meaningful portrait of Bob Dylan. Shot in 1965, almost exactly a year after the Beatles’ movie, and also in black and white, Dylan is captured before he retreated into his shell, before he decided to essentially stop saying anything in public other than his lyrics (or even less connected to reality).

There is absolutely no inclusion of, say, captions to let the viewer know where some scene is taking place, except for the odd mention by a hotel staff or glimpse of signage such as on the approach to Royal Albert Hall. Pennebaker seems to have laid down on the back floor of limousines and simply wandered where he would with a small camera to get his shots, giving the film a radical perspective, an awesome feeling of simply being inside the space. Where Hard Day’s Night laid the foundation for two generations of rock films, Don’t Look Back had a more immediate impact as the rock festival films like Woodstock and Monterey Pop came out and took the Pennebaker style as their own.

I think that there must be hundreds or thousands of feet of unused footage filmed early on, before Dylan and his pals–mainly Joan Baez, Bob Neuwirth, Albert Grossman, and Marianne Faithfull–got used to the camera’s intrusiveness. Still, on screen Dylan is comfortable and has, for example, an outstanding exchange with a small-time British reporter sent to interview him. The singer turns the tables on the out of his depth young man, questioning him on life and his worth rather than simply responding to standard questions posed a thousand times before; one really gets a glimpse of his intelligence and twistedness.

Donovan (Leitch), just making a name for himself in England at the time of filming, comes up in conversation early in the film and then later on shows up in a hotel room where he and Dylan trade performances. Baez sings a few times as well, and Alan Price, who’d just left The Animals after playing keyboards on their hit House of the Rising Sun.

During the film itself, most of the stage performances are cut short, just excerpts, but the DVD has recordings of all five songs in the extra material; my favorite of them is It’s all Over Now, Baby Blue. Also added is an alternate version of the Subterranean Homesick Blues video which opens the movie–the one where Dylan stands there nonplussed and drops cards with a word or two from each line to the ground.

Atkins update: W00T!

11 months, eight days into the diet: 51.5 pounds and 10 waistline inches lost. TS1 is doing quite well, looking very svelte and sexy, as well. This weight is actually one of my major milestones as it is less, by half a pound, than my low weight on my previous Atkins episode in 2000. I hope Doc and the other bloggers doing Atkins and other weight loss approaches are succeeding too.

One liners: Gay Marriage

The Mercury News has a new feature in their Letters to the Editor page, featuring short but sweet retorts. Today the paper published a letter from a man who doesn’t object to legal recognition of a partnership between two individuals of the same gender but says “I just don’t want it to be called ‘marriage.'” So here’s the one liner I submitted:

Memo to Tim Herklots (Letters, 8/9/3): I want a million dollars but that doesn’t mean a law should be passed giving it to me.

Geeks in the sun?

Some events, well, they just surprise me. Like today, when Linux enthusiasts (and who’s geekier than them?) will gather in Sunnyvale’s Baylands Park for Picn*x 12 to congregate and celebrate the 12th anniversary of Linus Torvald’s email announcing his “operating system (just a hobby, won’t be big and professional like gnu) for 386(486) AT clones.” Celebrating, sure even us geeks do that, but out in the broad daylight in the middle of Summer in a park? Oh my.

Shoutout to the Quakes!

Just want to give some props to the excellent road work last night by the San Jose Earthquakes as they beat the Kansas City Wizards 1-0. The team was lead by Landon Donovan, in his first game back from a month of National Team duty, as he scored the only goal in the 23rd minute off his own rebound (take that, Tony Meola!) and was all over the field in the last half hour after Ramiro Corrales was ejected on a second yellow. The league ought to be reviewing referee Marcel Yonan’s work in the game as he was giving out cards like strip club fliers on Eighth Avenue–there’s no way Corrales should have gotten that second yellow.

Pat Onstad had another terrific night in goal with his league-leading seventh shutout and Coach Frank Yallop earned his club record 36th win on the night as San Jose pulled six points clear of Kansas City on top of the Western Conference. MLS changed the season organization this year, so I was surprised to see that the team still has a dozen games to play but I think I’m going to try and make their next home game, against DC United on the 24th.

Today’s movie: S.W.A.T.

Bang! Ka-pow! I kept expecting to see balloon captions appear above Colin Farrell’s head each time he got into a fistfight, the sound effects of his punches landing were so loud. I’m still unsold on Farrell as (one of) the next big Hollywood stars, even if he does insist on acting like that’s already a done deal, but he does show up as well as anyone else here except perhaps LL Cool J.

S.W.A.T. the movie claims to be inspired by S.W.A.T. the ’70s TV series but honestly I don’t remember the series well enough to compare–though the character names were retained. And the cool theme music got some very headbanging updates, including a version with lyrics that played over the closing credits.

Olivier Martinez and Jeremy Renner play the primary bad guys, both very cool cucumbers. I especially liked their stonecold reactions as they waited for a small jet to land on the 6th Street Bridge during their getaway. Martinez, of course, came to notice last fall by seducing Diane Lane in Unfaithful and more recently in Showtime’s production of Tennessee William’s The Roman Spring of Mrs. Stone. Samuel Jackson plays the one name only Sgt. Hondo but I missed his usual energy here.

Clark Johnson, who I first noticed when he was Meldrick Lewis on the classic TV series Homicide: Life on the Streets, makes the directing leap from small screen to big screen with S.W.A.T.. He did some excellent work on TV, directing the pilots/first episodes of both The Shield and The Wire. I think he has a great future if he sticks to strong scripts.

Recommended

Today’s movie: Flypaper

Back in the mid-90s, a lot of writers and directors in Hollywood wanted to make the next Pulp Fiction. And every studio wanted to release it, which probably explains how a guy like Klaus Hoch, who’d been hanging around Hollywood looking for a break, was able to get the green light to make Flypaper.

This is a very strange movie which just can’t bring off the combination of hardcore and comedy the way Tarantino did. Hell, even Tarantino had trouble with the formula in his followup. Hoch sets in motion a bunch of characters who slowly are drawn into each others’ orbits. Mostly, since he leaves a few loose ends hanging. There’s a sense of absurdity that kept me watching (well, that and the sexual nudity of Lucy Liu and Sadie Frost).

Mildly recommended

Uh-huh: Roundup

Wal-Marting of America: short and shallow but good statistics.

Morgan Stanley Hires Analysts in India to Save on London Wages: globalization moves up the food chain, as it did when Sun announced an agreement with the government of China last week to double the size of its Beijing Engineering Center.

ArnieWatch – Arnie’s Nazi Problem: this is just the start.

Bobby Slayton at the SJ Improv: worth seeing (in October).

Off to the movies…