
We’ve had a good bit of snow at the end of 2007, but we just had the lightest fluffiest sweetest layer of snow frost most of Maine with about a foot of crispy cool sugar which makes an excellent bubbly chiller. Happy New Year to all!
–E and A

We’ve had a good bit of snow at the end of 2007, but we just had the lightest fluffiest sweetest layer of snow frost most of Maine with about a foot of crispy cool sugar which makes an excellent bubbly chiller. Happy New Year to all!
–E and A
I recently went to see a special screening of Ridley Scott’s newest version of Blade Runner, recently released as THE FINAL CUT. I am a huge fan of BR since it was released in 1982, and have the original version on both VHS and DVD. I have seen the studio release at least five times in a theatre, and countless times on video. I consider it one of my all-time favorites, though I last viewed over a decade ago.
I was excited when I saw that his “definitive” BR: FINAL CUT would be playing a limited engagement in Atlanta. I even considered watching the original again before going, but simply didn”t have the time.
As the theatre darkened (a bleak and threadbare movie house in Little Five Points that is often home to retrospectives and old horror marathons), a ball of fire erupted as the camera pulled back on a view of Los Angeles in 2019. The Vangelis soundtrack came in and my first thought was “Christ,that music is ghastly,did I actually like that stuff?” That aside,
The gravel-toned voiceover by Harrison Ford is gone (an addition that Warner Brother’s insisted upon for the hard-of-thinking). Now Rick Deckard keeps his thoughts to himself and both he and the film are infinitely more interesting for it.
This simple change creates a colder and lonelier place. Continue reading “Blade Runner: The Final Cut”
I think those of you who are true film buffs probably already get the IndieWire film feed, but if not, here is a link to their latest blogger’s Top 10 lists: http://www.indiewire.com/movies/2007/12/indiewires_top_3.html
These particular lists are a bit out of the mainstream (at least some of them), yet I have (for once) seen nearly ALL of the films outlined on most of the lists (the exceptions being the Sundance offerings that have yet to be released).
This prompts me to generate my OWN list of picks for the year:
1. “No Country for Old Men, directed by the Coen Bros
2. “The Diving Bell and the Butterfly,” directed by Julian Schnabel
3. “Into the Wild,” directed by Sean Penn
4. “Eastern Promises”
5. “Lust, Caution,” directed by Ang Lee
6. “The Lives of Others,” directed by Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck
7. “La Vie en Rose”
8. “Before The Devil Knows You’re Dead”
9. “The Savages”
10. “The Darjeeling Limited” directed by Wes Anderson
Honorable mention: Continue reading “Let’s All Go To The Lobby…”
On the surface, the newly-released film “The Diving Bell and the Butterfly” would seem to have nothing of interest for American audiences:
Twelve hours after seeing this film, I am still in awe. It was absolutely brilliant, and like no other film I have (perhaps) ever seen.
Your trusted narrator is far from an “American everyman” but I think many will find the beauty and imagination of this film to be stunning, as I did. Perhaps some of the current critical buzz will help it gain distribution that will allow more than film buffs to see it.
The short synopsis: Jean-Dominique Bauby, celebrity editor of Elle (FR) magazine, suffers a stroke at age 43; leaving him totally paralyzed,an exceeding rare occurrence called “Locked-In Syndrome”. Only his left eye is spared, so he must learn to live (and communicate) thru blinking. Continue reading “Le Scaphandre et le Papillon”
Kelly and I had the opportunity to see a pre-screening of THE SAVAGES with our film club last night. There has been a lot of underlying buzz for this film,I am here to say that it may be justified. Some thoughts,
Is it really any coincidence that the two estranged Savage children are named after characters in Peter Pan? I think not. Jon (Philip Seymour Hoffman) and Wendy (Laura Linney) are middle-aged and essentially alone, having apparently successfully dodged adulthood as well as any real intimacy with another individual.
They are thrust into having to deal with their father’s sudden dementia, and the emotional and financial challenges that come with that. The potential emotional fireworks that would be seen in a Lifetime Movie of the Week are quietly dispatched in favor of the sad, absurd, and funny moments in their efforts to deal with Dad (Phillip Bosco), as well as dealing together with the past. Both Hoffman and Linney are wonderful — underplaying so perfectly to bring out the crumpled, bittersweet truths of their lives and inter-dependent relationships. Continue reading “Savages”
PARANOID PARK
A San Francisco
Film Society Benefit
Plus a book signing for CINEMA NOW

On December 8, join us for a benefit screening of Gus Van Sant’s new film, Paranoid Park, which won the 60th Anniversary Award at the Cannes Film Festival this year. At once a dreamlike portrait of teen alienation and a boldly experimental work of film narrative, Paranoid Park finds Gus Van Sant at the height of his powers. Alex, a withdrawn high-school skateboarder (Gabe Nevins) struggles to make sense of his involvement in an accidental death: He recalls past events across tides of memory, and expresses his feelings in a diary that is, in fact, the movie we are watching. The extraordinary skating scenes, filmed by cinematographers Christopher Doyle and Rain Kathy Li in a lyrical mixture of Super 8 and 35mm, depict their subjects soaring in space, momentarily free of the earthly troubles of adolescence. The screening will take place at 7 pm at the Letterman Digital Arts Center Premiere Theatre in the Presidio. Tickets are on sale now ($12 SFFS members, $15 general). The screening will be preceded at 6:15 pm by a personal appearance of author Andrew Bailey signing copies of his new book, Cinema Now, a Taschen publication that examines the work and key themes of 60 filmmakers working around world today, from the cream of the crop of young Hollywood to the new wave of Asian mavericks to burgeoning auteurs from Europe and Latin America. Special thanks to IFC Films. [From SFFS publicity] Continue reading “Three Films, Five Days”
MY CHAIR
This was MY chair.

Ever since architecture school I wanted an Eames Chair, but they were too expensive. I got a good job after the Navy and we shopped for an Eames Chair, but of course, the price had gone up, still out of our reach. As my salary went up so did the chair, always just beyond our means.
When we were moving to San Francisco in the summer of 1992 — after I had moved but before Carol came with the bulk of our furniture — Carol found a used Eames Chair at a classic furniture dealer in Boston. We bought it.
Just after the turn of this century, it broke. You see, the back is attached to the seat at the arm; that connection gave way. See those two bolts just below the arm? That’s how it was fixed, but by 2003 it broke again. Irreparable.
Just before Christmas of ’03 we went shopping and settled on a leather club chair as a replacement. Continue reading “RE-Furnished”