Thursday, November 7, 2013

Rocky meets...Apollo

Rocky meets...Apollo

Our kitten Rocky (who has grown into a giant) now has a new buddy to play (and spar) with.  Introducing...Apollo!  Of course, he is named for Apollo Creed, Rocky's opponent/friend in the Rocky series.

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#57 Rocky (1976)

#57 Rocky (1976)

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Already reviewed: http://kaleenasmith.blogspot.com/2012/10/1976-rocky.html

#58 The Gold Rush (1925)

#58 The Gold Rush (1925)

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Another Chaplin film -I ended up watching 3 total (I've seen all 3 on the AFI list now, 1 review still to come).

 photo GoldRush_zps7e665355.jpgOddly, my favorite was probably the one rated lowest on the list (Modern Times: http://kaleenasmith.blogspot.com/2013/08/78-modern-times-1936.html), mostly because of that hilarious boat sliding off to sea and sinking incident.

In The Gold Rush, Chaplin is traveling to the West through horrible conditions, facing starvation, desperate and dangerous fellow travelers, and deadly snow storms.  Finally reaching a town, he falls in love with a girl he mistakenly believes is in love with him.

There's the classic, albeit ridiculous, scene where he's in a house teetering on a cliff and he's running back and forth trying not to plummet to his death; otherwise, not too much that was memorable other than Chaplin's character finally striking it rich against all odds.  That was a little different.

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Again, this is not my type of humor, but that doesn't mean it's not executed well.  I feel I ought to mention that.

#59 Nashville (1975)

#59 Nashville (1975)

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Haven Hamilton: Y'all take it easy now.  This isn't Dallas, it's Nashville!  They can't do this to us here in Nashville!  Let's show them what we're made of.  Come on everybody, sing!  Somebody, sing!

Nashville is a long movie at 160 minutes, and follows a group of people involved in various ways in the country music scene in Nashville, from aspiring performers to business managers to fans to successful country music stars.

Everything comes to a head in a violent ending that left me confused.  I somehow think that it was intentionally confusing, but I can't say why.  I wish I knew the point of it.  I probably shouldn't be writing reviews right now, as I'm tired and it probably shows, but I've been putting it off and should get some reviews up!

Anyway, the movie was entertaining, I just didn't understand the ending.  If someone can explain it, that would be most helpful.

There were actually a couple of songs I liked, particularly 'I'm Easy' and 'One, I Love You'. 

#60 Duck Soup (1933)

#60 Duck Soup (1933)
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Rufus T. Firefly: Awfully decent of you to drop in today.  Do you realize our army is facing disastrous defeat?  What do you intend to do about it?
Chicolini: I've done it already.
Rufus T. Firefly: You've done what?
Chicolini: I've changed to the other side.
Rufus T. Firefly: So you're on the other side, eh?  Well, what are you doing over here?
Chicolini: Well, the food is better over here.

Chicolini: Well, you remember you gave us a picture of this man and said, 'Follow him?'
Ambassador Trentino: Oh, yes.
Chicolini: Well, we get on-a the job right away and in the one hour - even-a less than one hour...
Ambassador Trentino: Yes?
Chicolini: We lose-a the picture.  That's-a pretty quick work, eh?


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I preferred Duck Soup to A Night at the Opera (http://kaleenasmith.blogspot.com/2013/08/85-night-at-opera-1935.html).  It's another Marx brothers movie (Groucho, Harpo and Chico, with the addition of straight-man Zeppo this time).  Still not really my type of humor, with all the puns and slapstick, but it was an improvement.

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Margaret Dumont (my favorite, she's quite funny), from A Night at the Opera, plays Mrs. Teasdale, a wealthy woman in the imaginary nation of Freedonia.  She, for some reason (well, the reason is she's attracted to him), insists that the inept Rufus T. Firefly (Groucho) be made leader of Freedonia, though he is ridiculous and incompetent.

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 photo DuckDoup5_zps4a8d2f34.jpgAnd so hilarity and shenanigans ensue.  Good for a giggle, with a classic mirror gag and a song in the beginning that amuses Tyler to no end:

Rufus T. Firefly: [singing] If any form of pleasure is exhibited, report to me and it will be prohibited!  I'll put my foot down, so shall it be...this is the land of the free!  The last man nearly ruined this place he didn't know what to do with it.  If you think this country's bad off now, just wait till I get through with it!  The country's taxes must be fixed, and I know what to do with it.  If you think you're paying too much now, just wait till I get through with it!

#61 Sullivan's Travels (1941)

#61 Sullivan's Travels (1941)

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Sullivan: I want this picture to be a commentary on modern conditions.  Stark realism.  The problems that confront the average man!
LeBrand: But with a little sex in it.
Sullivan: A little, but I don't want to stress it.  I want this picture to be a document.  I want to hold a mirror up to life.  I want this to be a picture of dignity!  A true canvas of the suffering of humanity!
LeBrand: But with a little sex in it.
Sullivan: With a little sex in it.
Hadrian: How 'bout a nice musical?


I don't feel like I have much to say about Sullivan's Travels.

It was okay, I didn't mind watching it, but nothing really stuck with me, though I did like the message in the end that laughter is powerful and important.  I often don't feel like comedies get enough credit.

John L. Sullivan is a successful director who decides that his movies are not important enough.  He wants to make a serious movie.  He wants to travel around without money to learn what it's like for poor people so that he can make his movie authentic, much to the chagrin of his producers and his butler, Burrows:

Sullivan: I'm going out on the road to find out what it's like to be poor and needy and then I'm going to make a picture about it.
Burrows: If you'll permit me to say so, sir, the subject is not an interesting one.  The poor know all about poverty and only the morbid rich would find the topic glamorous.
Sullivan: But I'm doing it for the poor.  Don't you understand?
Burrows: I doubt if they would appreciate it, sir.  They rather resent the invasion of their privacy, I believe quite properly, sir.  Also, such excursions can be extremely dangerous, sir.  I worked for a gentleman once who likewise, with two friends, accoutered themselves as you have, sir, and then went out for a lark.  They have not been heard from since.

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Along the way he meets Veronika Lake's character, who falls for him, and wants to accompany him on his journey:

Sullivan: But nothing is going to stop me.  I'm going to find out how it feels to be in trouble.  Without friends, without credit, without checkbook, without name.  Alone.
The Girl: And I'll go with you.
Sullivan: How can I be alone if you're with me?

And most significantly, he learns the importance of laughter in the movies: "There's a lot to be said for making people laugh.  Did you know that that's all some people have?  It isn't much, but it's better than nothing in this cockeyed caravan."

#62 American Graffiti (1973)

#62 American Graffiti (1973)

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Steve: I thought, maybe before I leave, we could agree that...that seeing other people while I'm away can't possibly hurt, you know.
Laurie: You mean dating other people?
Steve: I think it would strengthen our relationship.  Then we'd know for sure that we're really in love.  Not that there's any doubt.

Curt: I don't think I'm gonna be going tomorrow.
Steve: You chicken fink...After all we went through to get accepted?  We're finally getting out of this turkey town and now you want to crawl back into your cell -right?  You wanna end up like John?  You just can't stay seventeen forever.


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George Lucas's American Graffiti can be blamed for transforming my husband from a man disdainful of those interested in cars into a man obsessed with cars.

The power of one movie.

It has a few similarities to The Last Picture Show: a bunch of teenagers right out of high school, wondering what to do with their lives.  Whether to stay in their hometowns or move on, whether to stay together or break up with their high school loves.  It's less controversial, with no nudity or explicit content.  There's more humor, and there are much better cars.

The whole movie takes place during one long night as the teens in the town all drive around (seemingly in loops) in their beautiful, shiny cars, socializing, getting into mischief, and trying to figure out what to do with their futures.

My favorite character was Johnny, who is trolling for girls and accidentally ends up babysitting a preteen girl for most of the night:

Johnny: Shit!  Hey, get down!
Carol: Hey, is this what they call "copping a feel"?
Johnny: What?  No, get up, N-O.  Sheezus.
Carol: What's your name?
Johnny: My name?  Mud, if anybody sees you.

Harrison Ford makes an appearance as a young guy set on racing Johnny.

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It's not remarkable, but it is amusing.