Showing posts with label movies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label movies. Show all posts
April 13, 2010
Don't You Want to See This Movie?
Mommy and The Bean do! They've watched the trailer 800 times this month!
January 29, 2009
What The Bean, N. and I Would Be Doing 2/25 if We Wasn't So Far, Far Away
Okay, we wouldn't actually be in the pool. We'd be at MOMA (yes, the Museum of Modern Art) watching our coolest, filmiest friend's documentary Sync or Swim. What, you didn't know the U.S. had its very own synchronized swim team? Get thee to the MOMA, friend!
Mark your calendars: FEBRUARY 25, 2009 @ 6:00 PM. MOMA.
And tell Auntie C if you see her that The Bean(and co.) wants a screening in Lebanon ASAP!!!
Lest Auntie C get in trouble, the above pic is a still from her movie, but we found it on the Internets.
July 28, 2008
What We've Been Doing Other Than Not Having A Baby

No, no bean yet. Do people think we're gonna keep it a secret?
In our remaining days of "freedom", N. and I have gone to Fort Tryon Park and the Cloisters, the Brooklyn Flea, watched the French "thriller" "Tell No One", David Gordon Green's "George Washington", and Werner Herzog's "Encounters at the End of the World". On DVD we watched "Chinatown".
I enjoyed The Cloisters a lot more than I did when I was a kid, which was probably the last time I was there. Remember how boring museums are as a kid? Fort Tryon Park is really neat, too. It has a very different, almost more mountainous feel than Central and Prospect Parks.
We went to the Brooklyn Flea on Sunday. We didn't buy anything since we're in no state to accumulate and nothing seemed really great. The most exciting thing was getting interviewed for The Brooklyn Paper. I love TBP because it's very local and the crime stats are very thinly veiled and funny.
We were interviewed because there's been some controversy since the flea occurs right across from a church and apparently is making parking a problem.
After our interview, we waited on the long line for taco, which turned out to be a bit of a bummer for me. Because of the bean induced heart burn, I couldn't stomach more than a few bites of the deliciousness. Of course N. was more than happy to eat my taco since they are so very tasty and authentic and probably will not exist in New Hampshire. I can't wait till I can eat spice!!
!!!!!Spoiler Alert!!! Do NOT READ THE NEXT PARAGRAPH IF YOU WANT TO SEE "Tell No One."
It seems that everyone with the exception of my parents loved "Tell No One". I'm happy to report that the critical movie viewing genes run deep because N. and I were disappointed with the movie. It's not bad exactly, but suffers from seemingly sloppy editing and, even more to its detriment, some serious plot flaws. The acting is good and there are parts of the movie that are well-done, but then there are some aspects of the plot that are unforgivable. N. and I didn't mind seeing the movie although at various points we both wondered when the movie would end. My more specific thought was actually: if I go into labor now, we'll leave. But it was more of a passing thought. And no, I didn't go into labor because no, we haven't had the bean.
One thing that made N. and I more critical of "Tell No One" is that we watched "Chinatown" the night before. "Chinatown" is such a perfect crime-thriller that most other movies in the genre would pale in comparison.
I love David Gordon Green. You should too. Put "George Washington" on your NetFlix queue. Now.
Werner Herzog is odd. The temperature today in Nico, Antarctica is -64 degrees Fahrenheit.
May 16, 2008
Movies Are Kinda Like Books, Right?

I'm still between books. Perhaps I've been watching too many movies.
Wednesday, N. and I saw Baby Mama, which I knew going into wouldn't be deep or anything. I wonder if I was more inclined to see it since I'm pregnant. It's entertaining, but not in a $10.00/ticket way. Definitely more of a renter or good plane movie. I like Tina Fey and wish she wrote the movie instead Michael McCullers. I felt Fey could have given it a little more bite, made it a little more witty funny. The acting was good; N. dug Amy Poehler quite a bit. Romany Malco was good too, but N. and I fear he's becoming the token black man who kicks it with white women since his role as Oscar was pretty similar as his role on Weeds. Steven Martin was excellent. Pony tail and all.
My problem with the movie was how, in the end, it really privileges the idea of conventional parenting. In the beginning, Fey's character is a single 37 year-old who really wants a baby. When fertilization and adoption don't work she hires Poehler's character to be her surrogate. But at the end, it ends up that Poehler's character keeps her baby (it never was Fey's egg to begin with) and even though the chances were 1 in a million, Fey ends up getting pregnant the old fashioned way. Of course, at the end of the movie not only does she have her "own" baby, but she has the cute dude too. I know I'm acting like I need to write a paper for my undergrad Representations of Women in Film class but still. I thought it was a lame, Hollywood ending.
On Monday N. and I watched Gone Baby Gone since we'd had it out from Net Flix since, like, January. The plot felt a bit unclear and I don't know if it's just me but I thought Michelle Monaghan was like the worst actress. More importantly, I had a HUGE problem with the ethical question the movie tries to bring up. Amanda, this 4 year old, is abducted from her totally horrific, non-parenting mother played by Amy Ryan. All these events unfold and it turns out that the little girl is happily living with Morgan Freeman, the former detective who was the head of the Children's Division, a job he took because his daughter was abducted and killed blah blah blah.
I suppose Ben Affleck/Denis Lehane (it's based on his novel) wanted to make viewers wonder if it's ever justified to take a child from her own poor environment , where she will undoubtedly grow up severely disadvantaged, to live in one where she will have way more opportunities to thrive and prosper. So yes, Amy Ryan's character, is a terrible mother BUT there wasn't abuse and I do believe she loved her daughter although she was certainly guilty of neglect. Still, it seems clear to me that kidnapping is never justifiable. I know there are all kinds of problems with Child Protective Services but to me that's 100% the only route to go.
Also, I couldn't buy that Morgan Freeman would make another parent, regardless of the kind of parent she was, suffer with through the abduction/possible murder of a child.
We also saw The Visitor, which doesn't really fit in with the (inadvertent) baby theme. The Visitor is a terrific film though--quiet, moving, and touching. You should see that one if you don't have anything to read.
PS The answer to the contest that only 1 person (out of my 3.5 readers) entered was: an African-American woman who told me she was once pregnant with twins. Good thing no one won although the next time there's a contest, I will scounge up a prize.
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