Category: Reviews

  • Movie: The Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy

    This was a good way to unwind from a long day of moving. The material I’d expect was all there, and still funny, but the timing was a bit off or something. It didn’t quite click along like the radio show. Of course it wasn’t twelve hours long either. The sense of bewilderment at the…

  • Movie: Animals Are Beautiful People (1974)

    The populations of Namib, Pre-Namib, and Kalahara deserts are examined in astounding anthropomorphic detail. I think I had heard of this film because of the footage of animals getting drunk on rotting fruit, but there is plenty of other amazing footage. If I didn’t know the film was made in 1974, I’d swear some of…

  • Movie: Sideways

    One movie was not quite enough for full yard sale recovery, so we set our laptop theatre up on the back porch to watch Sideways. I’d heard that this movie was credited for a big boost in Pinot Noir sales, but I couldn’t imagine how a movie could have that kind of influence. I still…

  • Movie: The Interpreter

    Ann and I were both impressed by this character drama about a white woman from a fictional African country working as an interpreter in the New York UN building. The setting is interesting, and the characters stay pretty real. Ann, having grown up in Zaire, was irritated by a detail here and there (the one…

  • Book: Lying on the Couch / Irvin D. Yalom

    I haven’t read a page-turner novel in a long time, and this one was supremely satisfying. I’ve read some of Jung’s case histories with fascination, but it never occurred to me how a powerful a ficional device psychoanalysis could be. Combined with a good story and enheartening values, I’m impressed enough with this work to…

  • Movie: The Cliburn – Playing on the Edge

    A documentary of the 2001 Cliburn piano competition. It’s a refreshing change of pace to take a look at some real people doing extraordinary things. The music, though, is almost overwhelming. Contestants invariably select the most intense pieces, and the documentary of course shows the most intense segments – it makes for almost exhausting viewing.…

  • Movie: Kingdom of Heaven

    If you can get over the all-but-supernatural perfection of the main character, there is a lot to enjoy about this movie. At its best it’s a movie about the Crusades that’s not on a Crusade itself. The historical details are mashed up, but the setting and the major characters and events appear to be fairly…

  • Book: Farenheit 451 / Ray Bradbury

    Well worth another read. The relevance of the material changes in curious ways over time. I felt especially surprised at this diatribe from Beatty, the fire chief: “Picture it. Nineteenth-century man with his horses, dogs, carts, slow motion. Then, in the twentieth century, speed up your camera. Books cut shorter. Condensations. Digests. Tabloids. Everything boils…

  • Movie: Revenge of the Sith (Star Wars Episode III)

    I’m just relieved that it’s over. It’s a testament to the power of this story that it worked its way into my psyche as a child and made me willing to endure any number of sterile battle scenes and stiffly-delivered, groan-extracting dialogues just to see it continue. Now at last, with Yoda to Degobah escaping…

  • Movie: Bread & Tulips

    A happy Italian tale of a failed marriage and broken family. A housewife loses her family on a tour bus and winds up in Vienna, where she falls in love and finds a new life for herself, but can’t let go of her family obligations. The characters are eccentric and charming, and the film slowly…