I've been made aware that my blogging as of late has been lacking. Apologies. To make up for it, I'm going to live blog tonight's Academy Awards. Enjoy!
12:07am - Ok, bedtime - thanks for playing everyone!
12:02am - Sorry Seth, I really wanted to like you as a host, but that was borderline disaster. No where near as bad as the Franco/Hathaway fiasco, but a disappointment none the less. And this song about the losers? Dreadful....
12:00am - Wait - they're going to ANOTHER commercial break before they end? IS ABC SERIOUS?!
11:59pm - Ben legit seems flustered. Good for him, but I thought The Town was better.
11:56pm - Argo wins Best Picture, Ben still gets his Oscar, Clooney gets a second. Poor Ang Lee, this is the second time in a row he's won Best Director but lost Best Picture. Bummer.
11:54pm - Oh boo. That totally wasn't live. Welp, here it is, comes down to this. WHAT IS SO FREAKING HARD ABOUT PRONOUNCING LES MISERABLES CORRECTLY?!
11:53pm - WHOA! This is a surprise...
11:48pm - DDL is the first actor to win 3 Oscars in the Lead Actor category. That's at least 5 standing ovations tonight - is that a record? And he's got that wry British humor - what's not to love about this man?!
11:47pm - Would LOVE to see Cooper pull an upset here, but this is Day-Lewis' to lose. He IS Abraham Lincoln.
11:45pm - Lawrence wins best actress, trips up the stairs on the way to collect her statue, gets a standing ovation, and Silver Linings Playbook goes home with at least one award. All is right with the world. 2 more...
11:41pm - Jean Dujardin doesn't seem as charming with that beard. This is a 3 way race between Chastain, Lawrence and Riva. I'm gonna give it to Lawrence. Silver Linings Playbook goes home empty-handed if she loses, which I don't see happening.
11:40pm - STOP CUTTING TO KRISTEN STEWART! Now I'm just getting angry.
11:37pm - THERE ARE THREE AWARDS LEFT. WE DO NOT NEED ANOTHER COMMERCIAL BREAK!
11:35pm - Nope. And Ang Lee gets a standing ovation to boot! Life of Pi was truly a spectacular film. Could this mean upset in Best Picture? Probably not...
11:34pm - Does Spielberg join the 3 Oscars club?
11:27pm - Quintin, we get it. You're anti-establishment. But you're at the Oscars. Fix your tie. Show some respect.
11:25pm - Another theme - Argo takes the top awards. For the record, Lincoln should have won this. Yeah, it was pretty talky, but the language was absolutely beautiful.
11:23pm - I'm sensing a theme tonight. Hey! Lets pair really tall women with men that are at least a foot shorter than them!
11:19pm - Six awards left, and they're all biggies; Original Screenplay (Amour), Adapted Screenplay (Argo), Actress (Lawrence), Actor (Day-Lewis), Director (Spielberg) and Picture (Argo). The only real lock is Actor, the rest could all go to Django, Lincoln, Riva, Lee and Lincoln respectively...
11:16pm - Bets that Adele gives the best speech of the night: even.
11:12pm - Original Song. Just give it to Adele. There's no competition. Seriously.
11:09pm - There they are! Side note: I'm a huge fan of Chicago, but really don't understand all the love it's getting tonight. Yes, it was the first musical to win Best Picture in 40 years, but I wouldn't call that groundbreaking. Presenting award for Score, should go to Life of Pi.
11:07pm - Is this celeb diving show for real?!
11:03pm - Like two sticks of buttah, lashed together in a roughhewn manner!
11:01pm - There it is!
10:57pm - In Memoriam. Apparently there is a committee that sits around a table and goes through lists of everyone that passed away to decide which 40 or so names get recognized on the telecast. How's that for morbid? Thought for sure they'd trot out Babs to sing "The Way We Were" when Marvin Hamlish's name comes up.
10:52pm - KStew couldn't cover up her sex bruise? Classy gal right there...
10:49pm - Daniel Radcliffe was shaking as he presented Lincoln with its first award of the night, Production Design.
10:48pm - Why does Kristen Stewart have a career? She looks like she'd be extremely unpleasant to work with.
10:38pm - NAILS! Can we just give Adele the Oscar and call it a night?
10:33pm - Pretty much game over. Argo takes editing. So far, Lincoln is 0 for 7.
10:32pm - Can someone please make sure whoever wrote the dialogue for the presenters never works again? Thanks, all of America
10:29pm - Editing is next. Whoever wins this (Argo, Lincoln, Silver Linings Playbook) will probably win Best Picture. If Argo wins, it's all over.
10:23pm - Apparently, there was a tie in 1994 for Best Live Action Short, but no one really cares about that. Can someone please give Anne the wrap it up signal?
10:21pm - Look out, here comes Anne. If anyone else wins, hell will indeed freeze over.
10:18pm - The last time there was a tie was in 1968, in the Best Actress category; Barbra Streisand for Funny Girl and Katherine Hepbrun for The Lion in Winter.
10:14pm - A tie?! Is that allowed?!
10:11pm - No shocker Les Misérables gets sound mixing, the live singing wasn't easy. In case you hadn't heart.
10:08pm - Also, we were promised Renee Zellweger, Queen Latifah and Richard Gere - where were they?!
10:06pm - Ok, we get it that the producers want Les Misérables to win. Not. Gonna. Happen. Russell wasn't so terrible, was he? And I do believe he got some entrance applause. Aaron Tveit and Samantha Barks should have been cast as Marius and Cosette, although I don't think I could handle Amanda Seyfried as Eponine.
10:02pm - GET IT SAMANTHA BARKS!
10:00pm - Ok, wasn't expecting that standing ovation, good for you. Ok, brace yourselves, here comes Les Miserab-less. Will Russell Crowe send them running for the exits? Probably, but I think Amanda Seyfried was worse. For the record, "Suddenly" was put into the film solely so they could earn a Best Original Song nomination. And can we please just give Anne Hathaway her Oscar? Girlfriend's been campaigning for like, 6 months, she must be exhausted.
9:58pm - CZJ was pretty good, but Jennifer Hudson, your 15 minutes were up an hour ago.
9:54pm - Les Miserab-less? Really Travolta? Go back to whatever hole you crawled out of to introduce this.
9:53pm - Here's the musical tribute. Better not disappoint.
9:52pm - REALLY?! The orchestra isn't even in the same building?! SERIOUSLY?!
9:51pm - Haven't seen Amour, but Hanke's last film, The White Ribbon was brutal.
9:49pm - Oh Seth. Had such high hopes for you, but this is going down hill fast. Assassination and Kardashian jokes? Really? And Jennifer Garner apparently has a hard time reading the teleprompter. Foreign Language film, Amour should take this...next...
9:32pm - Taking a break for a few. Shorts/documentary presentations. Need to go pack. Rejoin again soon.
9:27pm - First standing ovation of the evening comes less than an hour in. I still wish it was for Adele. Lame bond tribute. What are Pierce Brosnan, Sean Connery, Roger Moore, Timothy Dalton and Dainel Craig all so busy doing that they couldn't come to the Oscars?
9:25pm - That's it?! That's the big reveal?! A Welsh singer to warble through a song from 1964?! #bringoutadele!
9:24pm - Not impressed with this Bond tribute. Unless the segue into Adele at the end.
9:20pm - wins, but WTF with those pink leggings? "Nobody did her makeup!" says my dad.
9:19pm - Anna wins costume. Make-up/hair styling next. Should go to Les Misérables team. Have to work hard to make those stars look ugly
9:16pm - We're into these craft awards for a while. Next acting award isn't scheduled to be given out for about another hour. #yawn. Costume design - Anna Karenina should take this
9:15pm - So that playoff was rough. Dude's company is going under and Academy plays that? Cold blooded.
9:09pm - This presenter banter is atrocious. Meanwhile, Life of Pi is 2 for 2 tonight. Its got 11 nominations coming into tonight, second only to Lincoln.
9:07pm - ScarJo isn't there cause she's busy being all moody with Ben Walker on 46th street in Cat on a Hot Tin Roof. And does this cinematographer moonlight as an extra on the set of The Hobbit
9:05pm - AVENGERS ASSEMBLE!
9:01pm - First Best Picture montage. Les Misérables, meh. Life of Pi, amazing. Beasts of the Southern Wild, overrated. And thought it was interesting when talking about Beasts, the camera shot to the cast of Silver Linings Playbook
9:00pm - Brave? Really? First (of probably many) disappointments this evening.
8:59pm - Animated Predix - Frankenweenie
8:58pm - Paperman! 1/2 tonight! If you haven't seen it yet, check it out. Saw it before Wreck-It Ralph and it was absolutely beautiful. Adam and Dog was pretty good too
8:57pm - Animated Short - Paperman
8:55pm - And we're back - but this Paul Rudd/Melissa McCarthy banter is pretty terrible...
8:50pm - Christoph Waltz! Two Oscars in 3 years. Good for him!
8:48pm - Supporting Actor. Prediction - Robert De Nero
8:47pm - HA! Loved that closing projection.
8:45pm - Closing in on the 15 minute mark...getting a little tedious.
8:39pm - Ok, the thing with socks and Flight made me lol. The Theron/Tatum bit was pretty good, but the one with JGL and Harry Potter...not so much.
8:38pm - well, that was a little, ahem, flat...
8:34pm - FREE DON CHEADLE!
8:32pm - Aaaand there's the first Ben Affleck snub joke. It only took about 90 seconds.
8:31pm - RDJ can't clap?
8:30pm - IT'S STARTING! IT'S STARTING! I'VE WAITED 364 DAYS FOR THIS!
8:27pm - I think that Seth MacFarlane is going to kill this. So excited.
8:25pm - No Guts, No Glory predix - Argo loses Best Picture, Bradley Cooper wins Best Actor
8:22pm - Not going to lie. Excited for the Chicago performance with Renee Zellweger, CZJ, Queen Latifah and Richard Gere.
8:20pm - TEN MINUTES!
8:17pm - As much as I enjoyed DDL's performance in Lincoln, I thought Bradley Cooper was a revelation in Silver Linings Playbook. So good to see him play against the asshole type he normally plays.
8:14pm - That's it? That's what's in the mystery box? #underwhelmed. And Kelly Rowland better stick to her day job. "I have to axe y'all. What were y'all talkin about in the car on the way ovah hurr?". Still hate Jamie Foxx and the stupid tattoo on his head.
8:12pm - Holy side-boob, Anne.
8:07pm - Paging audio tech....
8:05pm - Cannot handle Adele's speaking voice. Stick to singing. And that dress? The less said the better...
8:02pm - How does one get selected to be a presenter? Celeb status is mandatory, obvi, but other than that? Or how about an invite for that matter. I'm looking at you, Jennifer Aniston.
8:00pm - THIRTY MINUTES PEOPLE! THIRTY. MINUTES.
7:57pm - Does anyone watch Once Upon a Time? That promo made me interested. Also, Kristin is the godmother of Royal Caribbean's new ship? IS THERE ANYTHING THIS WOMAN CAN'T DO?!
7:55pm - I want to hang out with George Clooney, Matt Damon, Ben Affleck...basically the entire cast of Ocean's 11.
7:53pm - Uncle Jesse puts in an appearance!
7:50pm - Seriously. Loving Kristin Chenowith as a co-host. BUT GIVE UP THIS STUPID MYSTERY BOX THING!
7:42pm - Where was this college program when I was at UMass?!
7:38pm - A+ to ABC for getting Kristin Chenowith for the pre-show. Her interview with Bradley Cooper is excellent. F for the #oscarmystery thing though.
7:33pm - Like the retrospect google put together, except it was scenes from the same 10-12 movies.
7:25pm - I lied. Charlize Theron/Ryan Seacrest is amazing. He's a munchkin!
7:21pm - Oh Anne Hathaway...this is your big night and you chose that? Also, props to Liev Schreiber for netting Naomi Watts. He's been making the rounds at all the parities this season, and goes from C lister to A lister by association.
7:16pm - This shot of Kristin Chenowith and Jennifer Lawrence is amazing. A midget and a giant. "Ohmigod you like 'Dance Moms'? IS THE POPE CATHOLIC?!"
7:13pm - Yup, still over Quvenzhané Wallis. And she's been cast as Willow Smith's replacement in Jay-Z's updated Annie. Yawn.
7:06pm - (switched over to ABC. There's only so much Ryan Seacrest can stomach). Kelly Rowland is one of the co-hosts? Why? Yes, Destiny's Child had a minor reunion at the Superbowl, but one reunion performance does not a relevant celebrity make. Glad that Robin Roberts is there though, such a great story.
7:02pm - Sorry, took a quick dinner break. Quick catch up: Amanda Seyfried sucks, she was atrocious as Cosette, and was a bitch during her interview. Stick to being Karen Smith. Cute that Joseph Gordon-Levitt and Sally Field are dates for the evening (his meeting Dustin Hoffman was priceless). Jennifer Lawrence looks great, but stop pulling at your top. And whenever the guy from E! who is commenting with Kelly Osborune speaks I want to gauge my eyes out.
6:34pm - Channing Tatum, why are you here? Oh, you're presenting, I guess that's ok. And Reese Witherspoon, could you make Legally Blonde 3 happen? Totally over the girl from Beasts of the Southern Wild and her puppy purses. Thought it was one of the most overrated films/performances of the year.
6:27pm - Samantha Barks cleans up nicely. Eponine who?
6:21pm - (E!'s pre-show coverage) Jessica Chastain, whoa! Ryan Seacrest, did you comb your hair that way so that you feel taller? So many live tweeters/blogs to follow, not sure if I'll be able to keep up.
Sunday, February 24, 2013
Thursday, December 27, 2012
Do You Hear the People Sing?
It would be an understatement if I said that Les Misérables wasn't my most anticipated film of 2012. I'm a musical theater whore, and Les Misérables is in the pantheon of great musicals. It was part of the British invasion of Broadway in the 1980's (see also Cats, Miss Saigon and the current longest running musical in Broadway history, The Phantom of the Opera)
that became known for their lush, dramatic scores, opulent sets
(floating tires! A helicopter! Crashing chandeliers!) and their
simplistic, yet iconic advertising. They all ran for at least a decade
and were seen by millions of people around the world, myself included
(For the record, Miss Saigon is my favorite of the bunch). I
remember exactly when I saw it, May of 2002 at the Colonial Theater in
Boston. We were in the third row center, and I was completely enamored
with the production, especially the turntable and the barricade that was
vital to Act II. I had listened to the original Broadway cast recording
numerous times, and knew nearly every word, and was completely amazed
at seeing it come to life on stage right before me.
With their incredible success and familiarity, it was just a matter of time before they transferred to the silver screen. The Phantom of the Opera was first in 2004, no doubt trying to cash in on the recent success of Moulin Rouge! and Chicago, and crashed and burned relatively quickly. Musicals aren't easy to do on screen, let alone a well-known one that an entire generation grew up with.
I had incredibly high expectations, especially with the cast assembled. Hugh Jackman was the definition of a star in The Boy from Oz, Anne Hathaway has an excellent voice, and a fair amount of actors with a musical background rounded out the cast. The only question mark in my mind was Russell Crowe (although I'm a huge fan-boy and I'd watch him read the phone book), but I'd give him the benefit of the doubt. The trailers that came out over the spring and summer only increased my excitement to see it, and early buzz anointed Les Misérables as the front-runner for Best Picture at the Oscars. There was extensive coverage of the decision to have the actors sing live during filming rather than record the musical numbers and add them in during post production. The initial reviews from advance screenings after Thanksgiving were near rapturous, and told of multiple standing ovations, and tears streaming down the face of attendees at the films conclusion. It scored well with some of the precursor awards, multiple nominations at the Critics Choice, SAG and Golden Globe Awards and was named Best Cast and among the top 10 films of 2012 by the National Board of Review. The critics started weighing in and their response was less than enthusiastic. Many cited director Tom Hooper's choice of two shots for most of the film - the extreme closeup and the sweeping wide shot. Many bemoaned the fact that it was bloated, and the performances were a little more than self-indulgent, including the incredibly out of his league Crowe as Inspector Javert. It didn't really matter to me, I was planning on seeing it anyways, sure that I would love it.
Christmas night I went to Cinemaworld in Fitchburg ready to be enthralled. I was pretty surprised at how crowded it was, but as soon as the first notes of the prologue played I became totally engrossed in the film. For the uninitiated, Wikipedia describes Les Misérables as "...set in early 19th-century France, it is the story of Jean Valjean, a burly French peasant of abnormal strength and potentially violent nature, and his quest for redemption after serving 19 years in jail for having stolen a loaf of bread for starving relatives. Valjean decides to break his parole and start his life anew after a kindly Bishop inspires him to, but he is relentlessly tracked down by a police inspector named Javert. Along the way, Valjean and a slew of characters he becomes entangled with get swept into a revolutionary period in France, where a group of young idealists make their last stand at a street barricade".
I absolutely loved the first 90 minutes or so, but then it quickly went down hill. Truthfully, I don't think that's necessarily the fault of Tom Hooper, structurally Act II is much weaker than Act I until the finale, but he certainly didn't help. I did notice that most of the musical numbers were filmed up close and seemed to trap the actors. The sweeping wide-shots were also overused, and the CGI seemed to be a little too noticeable at some points. There was also way too much imagery created in the stage version that was attempted to be recreated for the film which simply did not work, most notably the barricade, it seemed incredibly small compared to the rest of the set pieces, and the death of a major character that was incredibly moving on stage, but was borderline ridiculous on film. There was also the reshuffling of some songs, that didn't really work for me either.
As for the performances, let's get this one out of the way first - Anne
Hathaway is just as good, if not better, than you've heard. She commands
the screen every time she's on it, and her rendition of "I Dreamed a
Dream" is simply heartbreaking. If she's not nominated and wins Best
Supporting Actress, I'm boycotting the Academy Awards forever (ok, so
that's a blatant lie, but seriously). She's THAT good. Hugh Jackman on the other hand, was a major disappointment. His physicality was incredible, but his voice was one note - loud. He completely ruined "Bring Him Home", which is supposed to start as a an almost quiet prayer and continue to build to an emotional climax, it's the money song for Valjean, and was a completely missed opportunity. Jackman pretty much belted out the entire thing, and didn't have anywhere to go. Most of the music seemed to be at the top of his register, and he seemed to be straining more than once. Color me not impressed. Ditto for Amanda Seyfried (who will always be known as Karen from Mean Girls), her vibrato/trill became incredibly irritating as the film went on. Russell Crowe, however, was somewhat of a surprise. Is he the best singer? Not by a mile, but I think that his voice worked well for Javert, rough and kind of untrained. I bought the CD yesterday, and his voice is starting to grow on me, I think that his version of "Stars" is actually pretty good. The other stand outs? Eddie Redmayne as Marius and Samantha Barks as the doomed Eponine were both excellent. Redmayne should be a star by now (he was fantastic in 2011's My Week With Marilyn) and Barks gave an excellent rendition of "On My Own", arguably the best known song from the musical. Aaron Tveit was also quite good (minus a ridiculous and completely unnecessary wig) in the somewhat thankless role of Enjolros. He's an amazing actor, I saw him as Gabe in Next to Normal and gave a tour-de-force performance as Frank Abginale in Catch Me If You Can. His final song in the show, "Goodbye" is incredible. He should have won a Tony for that performance, but I digress....
Overall, I thought it was good, not great. The score is excellent, the first 90 were amazing, and Anne Hathaway is well worth the price of admission alone. Three movies left to see, Django Unchained which I'm seeing Sunday, Zero Dark Thirty which FINALLY opens in Boston next Friday, and Amour which is TBD. Feel free to leave comments on your thoughts about Les Misérables below.
With their incredible success and familiarity, it was just a matter of time before they transferred to the silver screen. The Phantom of the Opera was first in 2004, no doubt trying to cash in on the recent success of Moulin Rouge! and Chicago, and crashed and burned relatively quickly. Musicals aren't easy to do on screen, let alone a well-known one that an entire generation grew up with.
I had incredibly high expectations, especially with the cast assembled. Hugh Jackman was the definition of a star in The Boy from Oz, Anne Hathaway has an excellent voice, and a fair amount of actors with a musical background rounded out the cast. The only question mark in my mind was Russell Crowe (although I'm a huge fan-boy and I'd watch him read the phone book), but I'd give him the benefit of the doubt. The trailers that came out over the spring and summer only increased my excitement to see it, and early buzz anointed Les Misérables as the front-runner for Best Picture at the Oscars. There was extensive coverage of the decision to have the actors sing live during filming rather than record the musical numbers and add them in during post production. The initial reviews from advance screenings after Thanksgiving were near rapturous, and told of multiple standing ovations, and tears streaming down the face of attendees at the films conclusion. It scored well with some of the precursor awards, multiple nominations at the Critics Choice, SAG and Golden Globe Awards and was named Best Cast and among the top 10 films of 2012 by the National Board of Review. The critics started weighing in and their response was less than enthusiastic. Many cited director Tom Hooper's choice of two shots for most of the film - the extreme closeup and the sweeping wide shot. Many bemoaned the fact that it was bloated, and the performances were a little more than self-indulgent, including the incredibly out of his league Crowe as Inspector Javert. It didn't really matter to me, I was planning on seeing it anyways, sure that I would love it.
Christmas night I went to Cinemaworld in Fitchburg ready to be enthralled. I was pretty surprised at how crowded it was, but as soon as the first notes of the prologue played I became totally engrossed in the film. For the uninitiated, Wikipedia describes Les Misérables as "...set in early 19th-century France, it is the story of Jean Valjean, a burly French peasant of abnormal strength and potentially violent nature, and his quest for redemption after serving 19 years in jail for having stolen a loaf of bread for starving relatives. Valjean decides to break his parole and start his life anew after a kindly Bishop inspires him to, but he is relentlessly tracked down by a police inspector named Javert. Along the way, Valjean and a slew of characters he becomes entangled with get swept into a revolutionary period in France, where a group of young idealists make their last stand at a street barricade".
I absolutely loved the first 90 minutes or so, but then it quickly went down hill. Truthfully, I don't think that's necessarily the fault of Tom Hooper, structurally Act II is much weaker than Act I until the finale, but he certainly didn't help. I did notice that most of the musical numbers were filmed up close and seemed to trap the actors. The sweeping wide-shots were also overused, and the CGI seemed to be a little too noticeable at some points. There was also way too much imagery created in the stage version that was attempted to be recreated for the film which simply did not work, most notably the barricade, it seemed incredibly small compared to the rest of the set pieces, and the death of a major character that was incredibly moving on stage, but was borderline ridiculous on film. There was also the reshuffling of some songs, that didn't really work for me either.

Overall, I thought it was good, not great. The score is excellent, the first 90 were amazing, and Anne Hathaway is well worth the price of admission alone. Three movies left to see, Django Unchained which I'm seeing Sunday, Zero Dark Thirty which FINALLY opens in Boston next Friday, and Amour which is TBD. Feel free to leave comments on your thoughts about Les Misérables below.
Monday, December 24, 2012
'Twas the night before Christmas....
Merry Christmas! Christmas is my absolute favorite time of the year, good food, good friends and and good family.
So my last post I mentioned that I saw Pippin at the A.R.T. in Cambridge and was completely taken with it. So taken with it, that I have tickets to see it again after it opens on January 6th. Greater Boston on WGBH ran a piece on it last week, check it out:
The Mystery of Edwin Drood was also quite good, and enjoyed the day in New York. It was absolutely perfect weather, and I love the city at Christmastime.
Going to see Les Misérables on Wednesday, and pretty excited about it. There was an interesting article on Slate as to why the musical resonates with this generation. Not sure if I buy it, but it's a good read none the less. Also hoping to see Django Unchained at some point this week, and hopefully Zero Dark Thirty and Amour before I go back to PEI.
That's it for tonight, will write more later this week.
Merry Christmas to all, and to all a good night!
So my last post I mentioned that I saw Pippin at the A.R.T. in Cambridge and was completely taken with it. So taken with it, that I have tickets to see it again after it opens on January 6th. Greater Boston on WGBH ran a piece on it last week, check it out:
Watch Dec. 18, 2012: Pippin' on PBS. See more from Greater Boston.
The Mystery of Edwin Drood was also quite good, and enjoyed the day in New York. It was absolutely perfect weather, and I love the city at Christmastime.
Going to see Les Misérables on Wednesday, and pretty excited about it. There was an interesting article on Slate as to why the musical resonates with this generation. Not sure if I buy it, but it's a good read none the less. Also hoping to see Django Unchained at some point this week, and hopefully Zero Dark Thirty and Amour before I go back to PEI.
That's it for tonight, will write more later this week.
Merry Christmas to all, and to all a good night!
Friday, December 14, 2012
Corner of the Sky
It's good to be home, even if it's for just a little while. Finished up with PEI for the time being last Friday and had a marathon day of travel, 4 airports, 3 states and two countries. Since it's close to the holidays, flight prices are ridiculously out of control. I had to go the most roundabout way to get from Charlottetown to Boston (Charlottetown - Toronto - Newark - Boston). I was able to go to the company Christmas party and catch up with some folks I haven't seen in a while, so that was good.
Finally got to see Lincoln over the weekend, and it was just as magnificent as I expected. More, actually. I wasn't expecting to be as moved as I was. The measure of any good film (especially one where you already know the outcome), is the suspense that it creates. Argo was a fantastic example of this, and Lincoln was done equally as well. Set in the last 3 months or so of his presidency, Lincoln deals primarily with the passing of the 13th amendment to the Constitution - outlawing slavery. The performances were uniformly excellent, and Daniel Day-Lewis is just as good as you've heard. He is Abraham Lincoln. The rest of the supporting cast was great as well, it was a variable who's who among the Hollywood elite. This could easily be Spielberg's best film since Saving Private Ryan, it really is that good. This past week it scored big with 13 Critics Choice (a record), 7 Golden Globe and 4 Screen Actors Guild Award nominations. I can totally see this film sweeping the Oscar nominations in a few weeks, with upwards of 13 or 14 nominations (the record is 14; All About Eve (1950) and Titanic (1997). The only few films left to see this year are Les Misérables (which has gotten pretty tepid early reviews), Zero Dark Thirty (Kathryn Bigelow and Mark Boal's follow up to 2010's Best Picture The Hurt Locker) and Django Unchained. Hope to see Les Mis and Django between Christmas an New Year's, and Zero Dark Thirty ASAP. It's opening in limited release next Wednesday, but that might only be New York and Los Angeles. Hopefully it comes to Boston.
Tuesday night, Miss Alison Hay and I saw Diane Paulus' new production of Pippin at the A.R.T. in Cambridge. I saw her latest production, The Gershwin's Porgy and Bess a year ago on Broadway and it was outstanding. There had been rumblings since it was announced that this production would transfer to New York, since it hadn't been on Broadway since its original production in the 1970's. It was one of Stephen Schwartz first musicals (although he doesn't have to write anything ever again thanks to a little musical Wicked), and was directed by Bob Fosse. Naturally, I needed to get tickets. Basically, a mysterious acting troupe, led by a Leading Player, tells the story of Pippin, a young prince on his search for meaning and significance in life. I didn't really know a whole lot about it other than that, so I didn't really know what to expect. That was all for the better, I was completely taken with the show, and cannot wait to see it again. The acting troupe was/is a traveling circus, the set is a stylized circus tent, so it was like a production of Cirque du Soleil meets musical theater. Clearly, I was in heaven. The circus acts were outstanding, and it was a nice frame to the story. There were also quite a few clever magic tricks that only added to the overall excellence of the production. The score was great, and the re-worked orchestrations made it sound much better than the original recording from the 70's, which was a little to synth heavy for my liking. Hopefully this will get a cast recording. Matthew James Thomas was outstanding as the titular character, and Patina Miller (who I saw a few years ago in Sister Act) gave an excellent performance as the Leading Player. The rest of the supporting cast was quite good as well, but the real stand-out was the ensemble, consisting of seasoned Broadway performers and trained acrobats. The positions that they could contort their bodies into was nothing short of impressive. Seriously, there were multiple times I'm sure I was wide-eyed and open-mouthed. Hopefully this transfers to New York in the Spring. After the dismal start to this season, Broadway needs something like this for a boost. It's playing at the A.R.T. through January. The Boston Globe ran an excellent article on the production a few weeks ago; check it out to get a feel for the piece. Go see it. You won't be disappointed.
Speaking of New York, heading there tomorrow to see The Mystery of Edwin Drood, the Roundabout Theatre Company's revival of the musical from the 1980's based on Charles Dickens last, unfinished novel. I don't know a whole lot about this one either, except that the audience gets to pick the ending. That's a gimmick enough for me, and it opened to rave reviews a month ago. I love New York at Christmastime, combination of my favorite holiday and one of my favorite cities in the world, there's nothing else quite like it. Will be getting up a little extra early though. Since I'm going to be going back and forth between the US/Canada for a while, I applied for the Global Entry program, which is essentially a customs pre-clearence and will cut down on my wait time at the airport. It can be used at any border entry into the US, and is good for five years. Anyway, you have to go to an airport for an interview and to get you finger prints taken, and the earliest appointment at Logan wasn't until mid-February. I was, however, able to get an appointment at Newark on Saturday at 10am. Figured since I was planning on being in the city that day anyway, might as well get it taken care of. So have to leave Ashburnham at 5am. Whatever, this will totally be worth it.
Flurry of awards activity the past week, with Critics Choice, SAG and Golden Globes. Right now things are pretty much status-quo as far as awards contenders go. Lincoln, Les Misérables, Argo, Zero Dark Thirty and Silver Linings Playbook have been popping up everywhere. If it there were still only five nominees for Best Picture, those would definitely be it. This has been an excellent year for film.
Finally got to see Lincoln over the weekend, and it was just as magnificent as I expected. More, actually. I wasn't expecting to be as moved as I was. The measure of any good film (especially one where you already know the outcome), is the suspense that it creates. Argo was a fantastic example of this, and Lincoln was done equally as well. Set in the last 3 months or so of his presidency, Lincoln deals primarily with the passing of the 13th amendment to the Constitution - outlawing slavery. The performances were uniformly excellent, and Daniel Day-Lewis is just as good as you've heard. He is Abraham Lincoln. The rest of the supporting cast was great as well, it was a variable who's who among the Hollywood elite. This could easily be Spielberg's best film since Saving Private Ryan, it really is that good. This past week it scored big with 13 Critics Choice (a record), 7 Golden Globe and 4 Screen Actors Guild Award nominations. I can totally see this film sweeping the Oscar nominations in a few weeks, with upwards of 13 or 14 nominations (the record is 14; All About Eve (1950) and Titanic (1997). The only few films left to see this year are Les Misérables (which has gotten pretty tepid early reviews), Zero Dark Thirty (Kathryn Bigelow and Mark Boal's follow up to 2010's Best Picture The Hurt Locker) and Django Unchained. Hope to see Les Mis and Django between Christmas an New Year's, and Zero Dark Thirty ASAP. It's opening in limited release next Wednesday, but that might only be New York and Los Angeles. Hopefully it comes to Boston.
Tuesday night, Miss Alison Hay and I saw Diane Paulus' new production of Pippin at the A.R.T. in Cambridge. I saw her latest production, The Gershwin's Porgy and Bess a year ago on Broadway and it was outstanding. There had been rumblings since it was announced that this production would transfer to New York, since it hadn't been on Broadway since its original production in the 1970's. It was one of Stephen Schwartz first musicals (although he doesn't have to write anything ever again thanks to a little musical Wicked), and was directed by Bob Fosse. Naturally, I needed to get tickets. Basically, a mysterious acting troupe, led by a Leading Player, tells the story of Pippin, a young prince on his search for meaning and significance in life. I didn't really know a whole lot about it other than that, so I didn't really know what to expect. That was all for the better, I was completely taken with the show, and cannot wait to see it again. The acting troupe was/is a traveling circus, the set is a stylized circus tent, so it was like a production of Cirque du Soleil meets musical theater. Clearly, I was in heaven. The circus acts were outstanding, and it was a nice frame to the story. There were also quite a few clever magic tricks that only added to the overall excellence of the production. The score was great, and the re-worked orchestrations made it sound much better than the original recording from the 70's, which was a little to synth heavy for my liking. Hopefully this will get a cast recording. Matthew James Thomas was outstanding as the titular character, and Patina Miller (who I saw a few years ago in Sister Act) gave an excellent performance as the Leading Player. The rest of the supporting cast was quite good as well, but the real stand-out was the ensemble, consisting of seasoned Broadway performers and trained acrobats. The positions that they could contort their bodies into was nothing short of impressive. Seriously, there were multiple times I'm sure I was wide-eyed and open-mouthed. Hopefully this transfers to New York in the Spring. After the dismal start to this season, Broadway needs something like this for a boost. It's playing at the A.R.T. through January. The Boston Globe ran an excellent article on the production a few weeks ago; check it out to get a feel for the piece. Go see it. You won't be disappointed.
Speaking of New York, heading there tomorrow to see The Mystery of Edwin Drood, the Roundabout Theatre Company's revival of the musical from the 1980's based on Charles Dickens last, unfinished novel. I don't know a whole lot about this one either, except that the audience gets to pick the ending. That's a gimmick enough for me, and it opened to rave reviews a month ago. I love New York at Christmastime, combination of my favorite holiday and one of my favorite cities in the world, there's nothing else quite like it. Will be getting up a little extra early though. Since I'm going to be going back and forth between the US/Canada for a while, I applied for the Global Entry program, which is essentially a customs pre-clearence and will cut down on my wait time at the airport. It can be used at any border entry into the US, and is good for five years. Anyway, you have to go to an airport for an interview and to get you finger prints taken, and the earliest appointment at Logan wasn't until mid-February. I was, however, able to get an appointment at Newark on Saturday at 10am. Figured since I was planning on being in the city that day anyway, might as well get it taken care of. So have to leave Ashburnham at 5am. Whatever, this will totally be worth it.
Flurry of awards activity the past week, with Critics Choice, SAG and Golden Globes. Right now things are pretty much status-quo as far as awards contenders go. Lincoln, Les Misérables, Argo, Zero Dark Thirty and Silver Linings Playbook have been popping up everywhere. If it there were still only five nominees for Best Picture, those would definitely be it. This has been an excellent year for film.
Wednesday, November 28, 2012
Richard Parker, meet Pat Solitano
Was able to see Life of Pi and Silver Linings Playbook this weekend. Both were exceptional, but for different reasons. I read Life of Pi in college, and remember reading it quickly, becoming completely engrossed in it. It was quite good, a great, modern-day adventure. Basically, Pi Patel survives a ship sinking in the pacific and spends 200+ days on a lifeboat with a bengal tiger. Questions of spirituality and self-discovery ensue.
There had been rumors of the book being turned into a film since it was published, but nothing ever really came of it. Apparently, Hollywood thought it was un-filmable. In comes Ang Lee (of Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon and Brokeback Mountain fame) and blows everyone away. The previews made it look pretty intense, but that doesn't even begin to prepare you for the entire film. Shot with the skillful (and completely unobtrusive) use of 3D, stunning images jump off the screen. One quiet moment in particular, when Pi puts a note in a can in hopes that it will wash ashore and someone will find him, is particularly stunning. It's not special effects heavy, but the way it was filmed was incredible. The movie itself was a little slow getting going, but one it gets to the shipwreck and Pi and Richard Parker on the boat, the film takes off and doesn't let up. Some will say that it's a little gimmicky, but I fell for it hook, line and sinker.
Silver Linings Playbook was a pleasant surprise. It had gotten pretty good buzz coming out of the Toronto Film Festival (it won the people's choice award, which Slumdog Millionaire (a recent absolute favorite of mine) and The King's Speech (an absolute abhorrence of mine) picked up on their ultimate journey to the Oscar for Best Picture), but I was still skeptical, especially of Bradley Cooper. Thanks to The Hangover, I've placed him mostly as that ass-hole sidekick friend. Thanks for proving me wrong. He was an absolute revelation here, and, if he wasn't already a movie star, would be giving a star making performance. The fact that he was surrounded by an excellent ensemble didn't hurt either. Jennifer Lawrence was excellent as always, and Robert De Niro heads an excellent supporting cast and gives his best performance since Casino. David O. Russell has directed a great ensemble film. Highly recommended.
The study is going well, and I'll be finishing up here on PEI next week. I'll head back to Boston for two weeks to write the final report, come back up here to present it on December 21, and then home for Christmas for a while. Back to PEI to (hopefully) begin the campaign in January 2013. It snowed a little bit here today, and Charlottetown loves their Christmas decorations (and not ugly, tacky ones), so everything looks really pretty. So come visit!
Also, not sure if anyone still watches Survivor, but for some reason I got sucked into this season. It's beyond infuriating that Abi is still in the game, and I'm convinced it's rigged. I guess they need to keep her in, because she's the only semblance of a villain, but she still sucks. I hope she's gone next week /end rant.
There had been rumors of the book being turned into a film since it was published, but nothing ever really came of it. Apparently, Hollywood thought it was un-filmable. In comes Ang Lee (of Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon and Brokeback Mountain fame) and blows everyone away. The previews made it look pretty intense, but that doesn't even begin to prepare you for the entire film. Shot with the skillful (and completely unobtrusive) use of 3D, stunning images jump off the screen. One quiet moment in particular, when Pi puts a note in a can in hopes that it will wash ashore and someone will find him, is particularly stunning. It's not special effects heavy, but the way it was filmed was incredible. The movie itself was a little slow getting going, but one it gets to the shipwreck and Pi and Richard Parker on the boat, the film takes off and doesn't let up. Some will say that it's a little gimmicky, but I fell for it hook, line and sinker.
Silver Linings Playbook was a pleasant surprise. It had gotten pretty good buzz coming out of the Toronto Film Festival (it won the people's choice award, which Slumdog Millionaire (a recent absolute favorite of mine) and The King's Speech (an absolute abhorrence of mine) picked up on their ultimate journey to the Oscar for Best Picture), but I was still skeptical, especially of Bradley Cooper. Thanks to The Hangover, I've placed him mostly as that ass-hole sidekick friend. Thanks for proving me wrong. He was an absolute revelation here, and, if he wasn't already a movie star, would be giving a star making performance. The fact that he was surrounded by an excellent ensemble didn't hurt either. Jennifer Lawrence was excellent as always, and Robert De Niro heads an excellent supporting cast and gives his best performance since Casino. David O. Russell has directed a great ensemble film. Highly recommended.
The study is going well, and I'll be finishing up here on PEI next week. I'll head back to Boston for two weeks to write the final report, come back up here to present it on December 21, and then home for Christmas for a while. Back to PEI to (hopefully) begin the campaign in January 2013. It snowed a little bit here today, and Charlottetown loves their Christmas decorations (and not ugly, tacky ones), so everything looks really pretty. So come visit!
Also, not sure if anyone still watches Survivor, but for some reason I got sucked into this season. It's beyond infuriating that Abi is still in the game, and I'm convinced it's rigged. I guess they need to keep her in, because she's the only semblance of a villain, but she still sucks. I hope she's gone next week /end rant.
Friday, November 23, 2012
Wednesday, November 21, 2012
Happy Thanks......
So Canadian's are weird. They don't have Thanksgiving. I guess it makes sense, the Pilgrims discovered America, right? Not our friends to the north. Anyways, I'm pretty sure that they have turkey in Canada, and also have a lot to be thankful for, but I digress....
Things have been going well here. I've been busy conducting interviews for the study I've been working on, and traveling all over the island. It goes without saying that I'm not a fan of nature, but I can't help but marvel at the sheer beauty here. Today I was heading out to one of the towns on the eastern coast of the island and coming over the hill you could see the ocean, with the land dotted by small houses. It was beautiful. I'm going back that way tomorrow, so I will make sure that I get a picture.
I moved to a new hotel and it's awesome. I booked it online through hotels.com and got a good deal ($89 a night) and made the reservation for about 3.5 weeks. When I called to see if they had a fridge in the room, they surprised me. "We figured since you booked us for about 3 weeks, you'd want something more than just a room with a bed, so we upgraded you to a suite with a kitchenette". Score! I didn't get my hopes up too high, but when I got here on Monday, it was pretty, ahem, SUITE! I've got a full kitchen (stove, oven, etc), and a separate living room and bedroom. It's not huge by any means, but it feels like an apartment. There's also free breakfast, and the wireless is 10x better than where I was previously. There's a gym and concierge here too, which is also a plus. And! You can buy beer from the brewery across the street
Yesterday I survived my first trip to a Canadian grocery store. I say survived because I nearly had a heart attack when I was looking at the prices of food - SO EXPENSIVE! And not helping is the fact that the Canadian dollar is stronger than the US dollar ($1 CAD = $1.05 USD approx), remember when it was almost 2:1 in favor of the US? Yeah, that seems like ages ago.
Excited to see Silver Linings Playbook and Life of Pi this weekend, although surprised that Lincoln hasn't been released here yet. Saw Flight and Wreck-It Ralph two weeks ago; Wreck-It Ralph was cute, and the Pixar short before it, Paperman was excellent, I could have watched a full length feature about that. Flight, on the other hand, was a little disappointing. I'm over Denzel Washington being a bad guy that you're supposed to root for. He did it in Training Day, which I thought was great, and did it again in American Gangster, which was enh. It was about 30 minutes too long, and while I though the first 30 minutes or so were excellent, the rest kind of petered-out.
Hardest thing about this job? I MISS NEW YORK! I haven't been since July and am experiencing some serious withdrawals. Hoping to get there around Christmas to see The Mystery of Edwin Drood, Dead Accounts and the musicalization of A Christmas Story (fun fact, I was in Cleveland for 18 months and never went by the house used in the film, even though I drove by the street it's on about 1,000 times), and just spend some time in the city.
Hope everyone has a happy thanksgiving tomorrow, and have some extra turkey (dark meat, please) for me!
Things have been going well here. I've been busy conducting interviews for the study I've been working on, and traveling all over the island. It goes without saying that I'm not a fan of nature, but I can't help but marvel at the sheer beauty here. Today I was heading out to one of the towns on the eastern coast of the island and coming over the hill you could see the ocean, with the land dotted by small houses. It was beautiful. I'm going back that way tomorrow, so I will make sure that I get a picture.
I moved to a new hotel and it's awesome. I booked it online through hotels.com and got a good deal ($89 a night) and made the reservation for about 3.5 weeks. When I called to see if they had a fridge in the room, they surprised me. "We figured since you booked us for about 3 weeks, you'd want something more than just a room with a bed, so we upgraded you to a suite with a kitchenette". Score! I didn't get my hopes up too high, but when I got here on Monday, it was pretty, ahem, SUITE! I've got a full kitchen (stove, oven, etc), and a separate living room and bedroom. It's not huge by any means, but it feels like an apartment. There's also free breakfast, and the wireless is 10x better than where I was previously. There's a gym and concierge here too, which is also a plus. And! You can buy beer from the brewery across the street
Yesterday I survived my first trip to a Canadian grocery store. I say survived because I nearly had a heart attack when I was looking at the prices of food - SO EXPENSIVE! And not helping is the fact that the Canadian dollar is stronger than the US dollar ($1 CAD = $1.05 USD approx), remember when it was almost 2:1 in favor of the US? Yeah, that seems like ages ago.
Excited to see Silver Linings Playbook and Life of Pi this weekend, although surprised that Lincoln hasn't been released here yet. Saw Flight and Wreck-It Ralph two weeks ago; Wreck-It Ralph was cute, and the Pixar short before it, Paperman was excellent, I could have watched a full length feature about that. Flight, on the other hand, was a little disappointing. I'm over Denzel Washington being a bad guy that you're supposed to root for. He did it in Training Day, which I thought was great, and did it again in American Gangster, which was enh. It was about 30 minutes too long, and while I though the first 30 minutes or so were excellent, the rest kind of petered-out.
Hardest thing about this job? I MISS NEW YORK! I haven't been since July and am experiencing some serious withdrawals. Hoping to get there around Christmas to see The Mystery of Edwin Drood, Dead Accounts and the musicalization of A Christmas Story (fun fact, I was in Cleveland for 18 months and never went by the house used in the film, even though I drove by the street it's on about 1,000 times), and just spend some time in the city.
Hope everyone has a happy thanksgiving tomorrow, and have some extra turkey (dark meat, please) for me!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)